FYI November 22, 2018

On This Day

 
 
1307 – Pope Clement V issues the papal bull Pastoralis Praeeminentiae which instructed all Christian monarchs in Europe to arrest all Templars and seize their assets.
Pastoralis praeeminentiae was a papal bull issued by Pope Clement V on 22 November 1307 to all Christian monarchs. It ordered the arrest of all Knights Templar and to seize their properties on behalf of the church. Clement was forced to support the campaign against the Templars by Philip IV of France, who owed them a great deal of money and had initiated the first arrests against the Templars on 13 October 1307.[1]

Despite the papal request, not all the monarchs complied immediately, most notably, Edward II of England who at first refused to believe the allegations, but later carried out the order.

Following the arrests, a period of trials was sanctioned against the Templars, enforced by torture and pain-induced confessions.

 
 
 
 

Born On This Day

 
 
1900 – Helenka Pantaleoni, American actress and humanitarian, co-founded U.S. Fund for UNICEF (d. 1987)
Helen Tradusa “Helenka” Adamowska Pantaleoni (November 22, 1900 – January 5, 1987) was a Polish American silent film actress and humanitarian. She was the founding director of the U.S. Committee for UNICEF, a role that she held for 25 years. Her granddaughter is American actress Téa Leoni.

Family and career
Pantaleoni was the daughter of Polish musicians Józef (July 4, 1862 – May 8, 1930) and Antonina (née Szumowska) Adamowski (born February 22, 1868, Lublin, Poland – died August 18, 1938, Rumson, New Jersey). After studying piano in Poland Antonina became the only known female pupil of Ignacy Jan Paderewski in Paris between 1890 and 1895, when she left for the United States. Józef was a cellist and a member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.[1] Antonina, Józef, and Józef’s brother Tymoteusz (aka Timothee), made up the Adamowski Trio.

After touring Europe and the United States her parents settled in Brookline, Massachusetts, where Helenka was born.[2] She attended Miss Winsor’s School in Boston.[3] She studied dramatics and appeared in plays presented by the Junior League and the Vincent Club.[4] “In 1917, on the occasion of Paderewski’s presence in Boston in connection with aid for war victims, she appeared in a specially written play entitled “The Spirit of Poland,” which was given at Jordan Hall in Boston.[5] In the 1920s, she appeared in silent films[6] as well as on Broadway.[7][8] She subsequently became head of the Children’s Theatre Department of the Junior League of New York.[9]

She married Guido Pantaleoni, Jr., in 1935. Guido, a New York lawyer, was a widower with three children (Guido, Nina, and Hewitt).[10][11] He was a graduate of Milton Academy, Harvard University and Harvard Law School. Guido was a nephew of Italian economist and politician Maffeo Pantaleoni. He and Helenka had two sons, Anthony and Michael. In 1935, Guido and C. Frank Reavis, Jr., founded the New York law firm Reavis & Pantaleoni.[12]

Guido volunteered for service during World War II. As a Lieutenant Colonel attached to the Office of Strategic Services he was killed in action in Sicily in August 1943, leaving Helenka with five children to raise. Guido Pantaleoni died behind enemy lines while serving in the special forces.[13] He is memorialized in the Sicily-Rome American Cemetery.[14] Helenka Pantaleoni founded the Paderewski Fund for Polish Relief in 1941.[15] She served the fundraising arm of the American Red Cross during World War II. After the war, she continued to serve in fundraising for the Polish Relief Commission.[16]

Helenka helped to found the U.S. Fund for UNICEF in 1947,[17] and served as the organization’s president from 1953 until her retirement in 1978.[18] Her service as president of the U.S. Committee for UNICEF was unpaid. The Executive Director of UNICEF, James P. Grant, wrote in 1994:

For 26 years, from 1953 through 1978, she served as volunteer president of the U.S. Committee. While she headed the Committee more than $113 million was turned over to UNICEF in the name of the American people …[19]

Honors
1966: Awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Wheaton College (Massachusetts).[20]
1975: Awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters degree from Smith College.[21]
2007: UNICEF inaugurated an annual Helenka Pantaleoni Award for humanitarian service.[22]

Personal information
Helenka’s uncle Tymoteusz (aka Timothee) was the first conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra. Her brother Tadeusz Adamowski played for Poland’s National Hockey Team in the 1928 Olympics. Her stepson, Hewitt, was an American professor and ethnomusicologist. Her son Anthony (father of actress Téa Leoni) is Chair of the Board of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF,[23] and is of counsel to Fulbright & Jaworski, the successor of the New York City law firm that his father founded in 1935. Her granddaughter Téa has served as a Goodwill ambassador for UNICEF since 2001 and is a member of the Board of Directors of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF.

Filmography

1923
Second Fiddle Role: Cragg’s Daughter
1924
Grit Role: Annie Hart
 
 
 
 

FYI

 
 

By Maura Hohman: Cancer Claims Two-Thirds of LFO — What Devin Lima and Rich Cronin Said About Their Health Battles

Lyte Funkie Ones (LFO) was an American pop and hip hop band consisting of vocalists Devin Lima (born Harold Lima, March 18, 1977 – November 21, 2018) and Brad Fischetti (born September 11, 1975). The band was formerly a trio that also featured lead singer and primary songwriter Rich Cronin, and initially disbanded after his death in 2010, but Lima and Fischetti reunited LFO as a duo in 2017. Before Lima joined the group in 1999, the third member was Brian Gillis (known as “Brizz”), who was with the group from its start in 1995. The band is best known for their hit songs “Summer Girls,” “Girl on TV,” and “Every Other Time.” The band has sold over four million records worldwide.

Read more ->
 
 

 
 

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