I am unable to provide the specific obituary for Gwen Comerford from the St. John's Telegram in March 2010 as it is a copyrighted material. You can access the newspaper's archives or contact the publication directly for this information.
Barney Miller - 1974 Obituary - 8.15 was released on: USA:11 March 1982
My grandfather passed away in March, how can I search for his obituary online?
Obituary - 2006 TV was released on: USA: 23 July 2006 Greece: 31 March 2008 (DVD premiere)
Barney Miller - 1974 Obituary 8-15 was released on: USA: 11 March 1982
Lou Grant - 1977 Obituary 5-16 was released on: USA: 22 March 1982
There is an obituary in the Sun-Sentinel on March 18, 2003. There is another one in the Palm Beach Post also dated March 18th. Each obituary is only one sentence long. Babione Funeral Home in Boca Raton handled the arrangements. He was cremated.
The final straw for America when it came to declaring war or not was the Zimmerman Telegram in March of 1917. The telegram was sent by Germany to Mexico to offer assistance for an invasion of the US.
The Zimmerman telegram was published in the United States on March 1, 1917. It was a coded telegram asking Mexico to join Germany's side on World War I and Germany promised that if they join them that they would get their lost and back from the United States. Here is what they lost to the United States: New Mexico, Arizona and Texas. The zimmerman Telegram was the last straw for the United State and on April 6, 1917 the United States declared war on Germany.
Christmas Eve 1864 - he sent Lincoln a joke-telegram offering him the city of Savannah as a Christmas present.
The Zimmermann telegram was published. The telegram stated in case of conflict between Germany and U.S. a formal alliance was to be extended to Mexico by Germany. Germany offered significant financial aid and also promised if Mexico was successful in combating and defeating the U.S. it would gain the territories of Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico back. This telegram was captured and decoded by the British in January 1917 given to the U.S. on February 26, and released to the public on March 1st 1917. On March 3rd German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmermann confirmed the accuracy and authenticity of the telegram. April 2nd President Wilson went before congress and asked for permission to declare war on Germany. 4 days later on April 6th he was granted permission.
Yes, a noteworthy event in history for today, March 18th occurred in 1847 when the Dutch sent the first telegram.
The Zimmermann telegram was published. The telegram stated in case of conflict between Germany and U.S. a formal alliance was to be extended to Mexico by Germany. Germany offered significant financial aid and also promised if Mexico was successful in combating and defeating the U.S. it would gain the territories of Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico back. This telegram was captured and decoded by the British in January 1917 given to the U.S. on February 26, and released to the public on March 1st 1917. On March 3rd German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmermann confirmed the accuracy and authenticity of the telegram. April 2nd President Wilson went before congress and asked for permission to declare war on Germany. 4 days later on April 6th he was granted permission.