Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Fathom
the hypocrisy that Obama wants everyone to prove they are insured,
but people do not have to prove they are citizens.”
Ben
Stein
A
while back a new car wash opened in the small South Carolina town of
Moncks Corner. The owner decided that it would be good advertising
if he had strippers in Bikinis washing the cars on opening day. One
of the first cars to arrive was city police squad car. Unfortunately
a photo of the squad car with five or six top notch exotic dancers in
Bikinis washing the car appeared on Facebook. The city cop was fired
before dark. The peculiar part was that one of the supposed exotic
dancers doing the washing was not a dancer at all, she was a city cop
and she was not fired. I have seen the photo and let me tell you,
that girl can get a job at any strip joint if she gives up on law
enforcement. What puzzles me is why the cop driving the car was
fired and she was not. The driver was just trying to keep the squad
car clean and the girl doing the washing (off duty) was trying to
make a little extra money. The chief of police said that the girl
did not break any of the city’s rules and regulations. That
indicates to me that there is a rule or regulation in Monck’s
Corner that says, “Squad cars cannot be washed by women in bikinis
with kick-ass bodies.” There are some strange laws out there,
y’all.
Back
in 2007 two Charlotte city cops were gunned down and killed from
ambush by a career criminal. The alleged shooter was captured and
has been in the joint ever since. As you might suspect, the city and
county prosecutors got together with city cops and piled up an
enormous amount of evidence and trial began a while back. The
prosecutors called any and everybody that had ever known the slain
cops including their families and nearly all the city cops to
testify. To this minute, the alleged shooter has yet to utter a
word. I see that pesky needle in his future.
This
Date in History September 27
1925
Construction of the famous road race course Nuburgring in Germany
is begun. This race course was world renown as the toughest course
in the world with its 13 miles and 72 corners. Not only that, the
course had an elevation change of 1,000 feet up and down. The
drivers called it “Fighting the Dragon”. The course is no longer
in use but during its time it claimed the lives of 22 drivers.
1935 Judy Garland
signed with MGM at the age of 13. I have written about the tragic
life of this woman before but here are some more tidbits. She was
born in Grand Rapids, Minnesota to parents that owned a movie
theater. Before the movies Judy (known then as Frances Gumm) and her
sisters would get on stage and do a vaudeville act. Her name was
changed to Judy Garland at the age of 10. Judy finally was cast in a
couple of fluffy movies with Mickey Rooney which was moderately
successful but her real break came with The
Wizard of Oz.
She married Band Leader Davis Rose in 1941 and divorced him in 1945.
That same year she married movie director Vincente Minnelli and her
daughter Liza came from this union but she divorced Vincente in 1951.
Judy got bad on the sauce and uppers and virtually disappeared from
view. In the late 50s she had a triumphant return when she played to
a packed house at the Palladium in London to rave revues. She was in
a couple of hit movies like A
Star in Born
and A
Judgment in Nuremberg
for which she received and Oscar nomination. In 1969 Judy died of an
overdose of sleeping pills. She was 47.
1983
On this day the Broadway show A
Chorus Line
broke all records for the longest running Broadway show ever with
3,389 performances. The show is about the behind the scene lives of
the people involved with producing a chorus line type show.
1991
Oona O’Neill Chaplin died. Oona was the wife of the famous movie
star Charlie Chaplin. The funny part of this marriage was that she
was 18 and Charlie was 54 when they were wed. Charlie made many
movies in the US but on one occasion he had left the US on vacation
and was not allowed back in because the government thought he was a
communist sympathizer. Look at what we have coming into out country
today, for crying out loud. Anyway, Oona and Charlie moved to
Switzerland and raised 8 children. Charlie sired 8 children after
the age of 54.
Charlie
died in 1977.
1864
This is a dark day for the Confederacy when Confederate guerrilla
William “Bloody Bill” Anderson raided and pillaged the small
village of Centralia, Missouri killing 22 unarmed Union soldiers in
the process. There was a train pulling into Centralia during the
raid which had 120 Union soldiers aboard. Anderson saw them and
started an escape, but it ain’t an escape. He went a few miles out
of town and set a trap for the Union soldiers in pursuit and killed
all 120 of them then he rode back into town and does some more
pillaging.
1996
A stamp honoring the author F. Scott Fitzgerald is issued by the
USPS. What can one say about Fitzgerald? He was born to a wealthy
family in St Paul, Minnesota was sent to a fancy boarding school and
then to Princeton. He could not seem to find himself so he joined
the army during WWI. He was stationed in Montgomery, Alabama where
he met his future wife Zelda. He proposed to her but she refused
thinking that he could not support her in the lifestyle to which she
was accustomed. Does that sound familiar to you divorced guys out
there? Later on Fitzgerald wrote a successful book and started
making a lot of money. Guess who contacted him and said that she had
changed her mind, yes it was Zelda. So Scott and Zelda were wed and
set about on a life of fun, frolic and oceans of booze. Even though
Scott was making tons of money, they were sinking further and further
into debt so they move to Paris to try to ease their living expenses.
While there they met Earnest Hemingway and other writers that
encouraged Scott to more writing. It was there that he delivered his
masterpiece The
Great Gatsby.
Even more money starts rolling in but to no avail, they found out
that it was just as expensive in Paris as it was in the US. About
this time Zelda in beginning to show signs of terminal weirdness.
They came back to the US where Zelda completely wigged out and has to
be put in a mental facility where she stayed the rest of her days.
Scott moved to Hollywood to try screenwriting. He fell in love with
a gossip columnist, stopped drinking and straightened out his life
then promptly dropped dead of a heart attack at the age of 44.
Moral: Don’t stop drinking.
1869
It seems the fine citizenry of Ellis County, Kansas are fed up with
the soldiers, buffalo hunters and drovers coming into town, getting
drunk and raising general hell, so they hired James Butler Hickok
better known as “Wild Bill” as sheriff to calm things down. It
was well known throughout the west that Bill didn’t play, you had
better do exactly what he said immediately upon receipt. It was also
known that Bill was a deadly shot with either hand and was as quick
on the draw with either, also. On this night Bill was told that Sam
Strawhun and several of his drunken buddies were shooting up John
Bitter’s Beer
Hall
in Hays City. Bill and his deputy went into the bar and told the
drunks to stop. Strawhun made a move toward Bill and Bill stopped
him and the brawl with one shot to the forehead of poor Sam. Sam hit
the deck as dead as fried chicken. The next day a drunken soldier
tried to resist Bill’s arrest and Bill capped him too. The
citizens of Ellis County decide that they ain’t ready for Bill and
at re-election time they elect Bill’s deputy instead of him. Bill
then headed for the Dakotas and fame.
Thanks
for listenin I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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