logo
Today in History: March 27, Will Smith slaps Chris Rock during Oscars telecast

Today in History: March 27, Will Smith slaps Chris Rock during Oscars telecast

Boston Globe27-03-2025
In 1912, in Washington D.C., first lady Helen Herron Taft and the wife of Japan's ambassador to the United States, Viscountess Chinda, planted the first two of 3,000 cherry trees given to the US as a gift by the mayor of Tokyo.
Advertisement
In 1939, the first NCAA men's Division I basketball championship game was held, with the University of Oregon defeating Ohio State, 46-33.
In 1964, Alaska was hit by a magnitude 9.2 earthquake (still the strongest on record in North America) and tsunamis that together claimed over 130 lives.
In 1968, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man to orbit the Earth in 1961, died when his MiG-15 jet crashed during a routine training flight near Moscow; he was 34.
In 1973, 'The Godfather' won the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1972, but its star, Marlon Brando, refused to accept his Oscar for Best Actor and, in what would become one of the Oscars' most famous moments, sent in his place actor and activist Sacheen Littlefeather, who spoke out about the depiction of Native Americans in Hollywood.
In 1975, construction began on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline. The 800-mile (1,290-kilometer) pipeline was completed just over two years later.
In 1977, in aviation's deadliest disaster, 583 people were killed when a KLM Boeing 747, attempting to take off in heavy fog, crashed into a Pan Am 747 on an airport runway on the Canary Island of Tenerife.
In 1980, 123 workers died when a North Sea floating oil field platform, the Alexander Kielland, capsized during a storm.
In 2022, Will Smith slapped Chris Rock on stage at the 94th Academy Awards ceremony, winning the Oscar for Best Actor just minutes later. (Smith later resigned from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and received a 10-year ban from the Oscars.)
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete
Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete

A federal judge on Wednesday allowed four football players to compete at West Virginia this season, the latest ruling in one of a long line of cases challenging the NCAA's eligibility rules. U.S. District Judge John Preston Bailey issued a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed by defensive lineman Jimmori Robinson, running back Tye Edwards, safety Justin Harrington and wide receiver Jeff Weimer. They were previously denied appeals to play, then challenged the NCAA's rule that sets a five-year limit for players to compete over four seasons. Each of the players attended junior colleges that weren't members of any NCAA divisions. They contended those years shouldn't have counted against the five-year limit. Eligibility cases involving more than two dozen college football players are playing out in courts nationwide. Wednesday's ruling comes two days after a federal court in California denied efforts to play this season by Southern Cal offensive lineman DJ Wingfield and UCLA wide receiver Kaedin Robinson. 'The nationwide case law reveals a clear split,' Bailey wrote. In acknowledging a lack of guidance from higher courts on the subject, Bailey said he aligned his ruling with those made in favor of separate appeals by Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia, Rutgers safety Jett Elad and former Nevada wide receiver Cortez Braham Jr., now at Memphis. Bailey agreed with the rulings in each of those cases that determined the NCAA's eligibility rules were commercial in nature and therefore subject to antitrust scrutiny under the Sherman Act. Bailey made a similar ruling in late 2023 in favor of college basketball players who previously were denied the chance to play immediately after transferring a second time. That lawsuit had alleged the NCAA transfer rule's waiver process violated federal antitrust law. In some cases involving college football players where NCAA eligibility rules were upheld, 'it is apparent, however, that those decisions were grounded in a pre-NIL world,' Bailey wrote, citing name, image and likeness compensation deals that commenced in July 2021. 'In the current era of NIL compensation, eligibility rules are commercial in nature,' Bailey wrote. He added that athlete eligibility 'is even more commercial now' following the so-called House settlement earlier this year that cleared the way for schools to start paying millions to their athletes. At West Virginia, the four players have not participated in fall practices. Weimer is the only one not currently listed on the roster. Jimmori Robinson is the most accomplished. Last season at UTSA, he amassed 10 1/2 sacks and 17 tackles for loss as a linebacker and was named the American Athletic Conference's defensive player of the year. He would provide immediate help at a hybrid-linebacker position on a West Virginia defense that is undergoing a complete makeover under new coach Rich Rodriguez. There are still unanswered questions about Robinson's status. During arguments in court in Wheeling on Tuesday, an NCAA lawyer contended that Robinson had academic issues at UTSA, according to multiple reports. An attorney for Robinson said the defense team was aware of the academic situation but declined to be more specific in court. A West Virginia athletics spokesperson declined comment Wednesday both on Bailey's ruling and on Robinson's eligibility. An NCAA spokesperson didn't immediately return an email seeking comment. ___ AP college football: and Sign up for the AP's college football newsletter:

Today in Boston Celtics history: Jerryd Bayless, Si Green, Quinn Buckner born
Today in Boston Celtics history: Jerryd Bayless, Si Green, Quinn Buckner born

USA Today

time18 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Today in Boston Celtics history: Jerryd Bayless, Si Green, Quinn Buckner born

Today in Boston Celtics history, guard alum Jerryd Bayless was born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1988. Bayless played his NCAA basketball with the Arizona Wildcats for a single season before he entered the 2008 NBA Draft, where he was picked up with the 11th overall pick by the Indiana Pacers. The Phoenix native never suited up for the Pacers, dealt to the Portland Trail Blazers soon after the draft was over. He also played for the (then) New Orleans Hornets (now, Pelicans), Toronto Raptors, and Memphis Grizzlies before the latter ball club sent Bayless to Boston in a trade that netted the Celtics 3-and-D wing Courtney Lee. Bayless would play just one season for the Celtics, playing 41 games and starting 14 of them. He averaged 10.1 points, 2.1 rebounds, and 3.1 assists while with the Celtics, leaving in free agency next summer to sign with the Milwaukee Bucks. Other birthdays It is also the birthday of former Celtic guard Sihugo Green, born in New York City in 1933. An alum of Duquesne, Green was the No. 1 overall pick of the 1956 NBA Draft, taken by the (then) Rochester Royals (now, Sacramento Kings). The New Yorker played for the Royals after their move to Cincinnati, the St. Louis Hawks before they relocated to Atlanta, and the defunct Chicago Packers, Zephyrs, and the also-defunct Baltimore Bullets before joining the Celtics via trade in 1965. The last stop of his career, Green averaged 3.2 points and 1.1 rebounds per game as a Celtic, retiring afterward. Finally, it is also the birthday of ex-Celtic guard Quinn Buckner, born today in 1954 in Phoenix, Illinois. Buckner played college ball with the Indiana Hoosiers, where he won an NCAA championship, and was drafted seventh overall in the 1976 NBA Draft by the Bucks. He was dealt to the Celtics in 1982, and won a title in his second of three seasons with Boston. The Indiana alum would average 4.8 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 2.8 assists, traded to the Indiana Pacers in 1983.

Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete
Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete

Associated Press

time19 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Judge allows 4 West Virginia football players fighting NCAA eligibility rules to compete

A federal judge on Wednesday allowed four football players to compete at West Virginia this season, the latest ruling in one of a long line of cases challenging the NCAA's eligibility rules. U.S. District Judge John Preston Bailey issued a preliminary injunction in a lawsuit filed by defensive lineman Jimmori Robinson, running back Tye Edwards, safety Justin Harrington and wide receiver Jeff Weimer. They were previously denied appeals to play, then challenged the NCAA's rule that sets a five-year limit for players to compete over four seasons. Each of the players attended junior colleges that weren't members of any NCAA divisions. They contended those years shouldn't have counted against the five-year limit. Eligibility cases involving more than two dozen college football players are playing out in courts nationwide. Wednesday's ruling comes two days after a federal court in California denied efforts to play this season by Southern Cal offensive lineman DJ Wingfield and UCLA wide receiver Kaedin Robinson. 'The nationwide case law reveals a clear split,' Bailey wrote. In acknowledging a lack of guidance from higher courts on the subject, Bailey said he aligned his ruling with those made in favor of separate appeals by Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia, Rutgers safety Jett Elad and former Nevada wide receiver Cortez Braham Jr., now at Memphis. Bailey agreed with the rulings in each of those cases that determined the NCAA's eligibility rules were commercial in nature and therefore subject to antitrust scrutiny under the Sherman Act. Bailey made a similar ruling in late 2023 in favor of college basketball players who previously were denied the chance to play immediately after transferring a second time. That lawsuit had alleged the NCAA transfer rule's waiver process violated federal antitrust law. In some cases involving college football players where NCAA eligibility rules were upheld, 'it is apparent, however, that those decisions were grounded in a pre-NIL world,' Bailey wrote, citing name, image and likeness compensation deals that commenced in July 2021. 'In the current era of NIL compensation, eligibility rules are commercial in nature,' Bailey wrote. He added that athlete eligibility 'is even more commercial now' following the so-called House settlement earlier this year that cleared the way for schools to start paying millions to their athletes. At West Virginia, the four players have not participated in fall practices. Weimer is the only one not currently listed on the roster. Jimmori Robinson is the most accomplished. Last season at UTSA, he amassed 10 1/2 sacks and 17 tackles for loss as a linebacker and was named the American Athletic Conference's defensive player of the year. He would provide immediate help at a hybrid-linebacker position on a West Virginia defense that is undergoing a complete makeover under new coach Rich Rodriguez. There are still unanswered questions about Robinson's status. During arguments in court in Wheeling on Tuesday, an NCAA lawyer contended that Robinson had academic issues at UTSA, according to multiple reports. An attorney for Robinson said the defense team was aware of the academic situation but declined to be more specific in court. A West Virginia athletics spokesperson declined comment Wednesday both on Bailey's ruling and on Robinson's eligibility. An NCAA spokesperson didn't immediately return an email seeking comment. ___ AP college football: and Sign up for the AP's college football newsletter:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store