Terry Jacks

It’s FRIDAY boys and girls!!

Today is Boganda Day, a public holiday in the Central African Republic. This day honours Barthélemy Boganda, the nation’s first prime minister on the anniversary of his death on this day in 1959.

Barthélemy Boganda was a leading nationalist politician and the driving force in the creation of the Central African Republic in 1958.

Before his political career, Boganda had become the first African Roman Catholic priest in Ubangi-Shari, a French colony that is now part of the CAR. He became involved in politics and in 1946 he was elected to the French National Assembly, becoming the first representative of the CAR in the French government.

His strident anticolonial views led to him becoming disillusioned with the French political system and leaving the priesthood in 1949; and forming his own political party, the Social Evolution Movement of Black Africa.

Hugely popular, Boganda became the president of the Grand Council of French Equatorial Africa (which also included Chad, Gabon, and the French Congo) in 1957. His vision was for a pan-African movement to unite several African states.

Boganda became the first prime minister of the Central African Republic on 1 December 1958. Boganda’s rule proved to be short-lived; he died in a plane crash on March 29th 1959 under suspicious circumstances and did not live to see his country gain full independence from France in August 1960, with his cousin David Dako becoming the country’s first President.


apostrophe wrong

Not nice…

THINK HARD before you post your Easter family photo.


Tipping Culture…

at self-checkout…


NO Regerts

Today is the birthday, in 1946, of Canadian singer, songwriter Terry Jacks who had the 1974 UK & US No.1 single ‘Seasons In The Sun’. The song was originally intended for The Beach Boys, with Jacks serving as producer for the recording. However, after the group decided not to release it, Jacks decided to record it himself in late 1973. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWdQbxNEFEs

Posted by Tom in Humor, Music, sixties and seventies