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100 YEARS AGO: Sending Out Signals
The International Radiotelegraphic Convention adopts three dots, three dashes and three dots—SOS in Morse code—as the standard wireless distress signal, on November 3, 1906. Chosen because it is easy to send and hard to misinterpret, the signal, which doesn't actually stand for anything—not even Save Our Ship—can't save the Titanic, which sends out SOSs in 1912. In 1999 a global satellite system replaces SOS on all large ships.
130 YEARS AGO: Modest Maestro
Johannes Brahms, 43, debuts his Symphony No. 1 in C minor in Karlsruhe, Germany, on November 4, 1876. Critical of his own work and burdened by his reputation as the next Beethoven, Brahms has worked for 15 years on the piece, which he deems "long, and not exactly lovable." The critics are kinder, praising its "Homeric simplicity" and quickly dubbing the dramatic work "Beethoven's Tenth." The form conquered, Brahms produces three more symphonies in the next ten years. He dies in 1897, at age 66.


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