Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“A
parent is only as happy as their saddest child.”
Nichole
Helget
Trivia
question of the day:
Where
was Genghis Khan buried? Answer at the end of the blog.
I
have been telling y'all about the homeless man that is working a
certain intersection in Pensacola. On the way out of town coming
home I saw him again. He was on the north sidewalk on Gregory Street
riding a bicycle headed for his favorite intersection...with his Lab
on a leash trotting along side. I don't know where he is sleeping
but he is coming from the direction of a block square park with
plenty of trees. In fact there is a gazebo in case it rains. Is
this a miserable life? I ain't sure.
This
Date in History May 4
1970
Two days before in Kent, Ohio over 2,000 college students began
rioting on the Kent State University campus to protest the Vietnam
War in general and the United States incursion into Cambodia in
particular. The Governor of Ohio called out the National Guard to
control the crowds and the presence of the Guard dispersed the crowd.
The next day scattered rioters were dispersed with tear gas. On
this date the rioters gathered in a few crowds and the National
Guardsmen donned gas masks and fixed bayonets after the crowds began
throwing rocks. For an unknown reason the Guardsmen opened fire
killing 4 and wounding 8 students. The closest was 40 yards away and
the farthest was 250 yards. After a period of shock and first aid
the rioters were again told to disperse by the commander of the
National Guard. At this the rioters gathered and took steps at the
Guardsman and a bloodbath appeared to be on the horizon but members
of the Kent State faculty ran out in front of the rioters and was
able stop their advance and persuaded them to go home. The Commander
of the National Guardsmen that were there along with a few others
went on trial for this massacre but the state of Ohio chose to drop
all charges. I guess that was the best thing to do. The sooner the
time of healing starts the better it will be.
1979 On this date
Margaret Thatcher is elected as the first female Prime Minister in
the history of Great Britain. She earned the nickname of “Iron
pants Maggie” for her unbending attitude. She was no dummy either.
She graduated from Oxford and was the first woman to be president of
the Oxford Conservative Association. She has a degree in chemistry
and is a licensed attorney. She failed in her first attempt at
Parliament but attracted a lot of attention with the number of votes
she garnered. In 1959 she was elected to Parliament from the
Finchley district in the northern district of London. From here she
rose in prominence an eventually was elected Prime Minister. She
earned the nickname “Iron Pants” during the 1982 encounter with
Argentina over the disputed Falkland Islands when the Argentinians
invaded the Falklands. There was some guessing that the Argentinians
had chosen wait until Maggie came to power before attempting to take
the Falklands, a British Protectorate, because they did not think a
woman would be as aggressive as a man. They were wrong. Maggie sent
a message to the Argentinians that they had two weeks to get back
home. That is about how long it would take the British military to
mobilize their Navy and Marines and get down there. They did not go
home and sure enough, two weeks later the British Navy and Marines
arrived at the Falklands. In a week they had sent the Argentinians
back to the house.
1776 On this date the state of Rhode Island, the home of the most the
radical of religious dissidents, are the first state to declare
themselves independent from the heel of King George III of England.
It was Rhode Island that served as the mercantile center of the slave
trade in the 18th
century. It was West Indies molasses that was brought to the Rhode
Island distilleries and made into rum and then taken to West Africa
and traded for slaves. Those slaves that survived the crossing were
brought to Rhode Island and traded to the West Indies for molasses.
That’s right folks; all the slaves that came to America did not
come to Charleston, SC, Savannah, GA, or Annapolis, MD and sent to
cotton plantations. Anyway, the Rhode Islanders were close to the
last in adopting the United States Constitution. They are just a
belligerent bunch up there.
1948
A twenty-five year old author named Norman Mailer delivered what
is acknowledged to be one of the best novels about World War II in
The Naked and the Dead.
Norman was raised in Brooklyn, NY in 1923 and attended Harvard but
enlisted in the army during World War II. After being discharged in
1946 Mailer attended the Sorbonne in Paris, France. He wrote The
Naked
and the Dead about
his personal experiences in the war. Even though Norman is known as
a two-fisted drinker and an advocate of male superiority, he has won
a Pulitzer Prize for non-fiction and a National book award about a
peace march that he attended. He is a very talented but violent
writer. He stabbed his wife while they were attending a party.
Born today:
1796
US educator Horace Mann. He said “Trying to teach students
without inspiring them is like hammering on cold iron.”
1825
English botanist Thomas Huxley. He said “Try to learn something
about everything and everything about something.” I am trying,
Tom, I am trying.
1905
US impresario Lincoln Kirstein. He said “Bringing ballet into
the United States is like trying to raise a palm tree in South
Dakota.”
1937
US guitarist Dick Dale. He said “I will never die. I will just
explode right before your very eyes on stage.”
1941
US journalist George Will. He said “Football combines the two
worst features of American life; violence and committee meetings.”
Died today:
1969
English writer Sir Osbert Sitwell. He said “In reality, killing
time is a misnomer. It is time that is killing us.” Now I am
depressed.
1975
Member/leader of the Three Stooges, Moe Howard. He said “We are
not nearly as violent as western movies.” That’s right Moe, but
you made a quantum leap toward silliness.
1984
British sex goddess Diana Dors. She said “I am the first sex
symbol from England since Lady Godiva.” Perhaps, but Lady Godiva
had a prettier dress.
1989
US Attorney General from California Evelle Younger. He said “An
incompetent attorney can delay a trial for months. A competent
lawyer can delay one for even longer.”
Answer
to trivia question:
It
was a trick question, no one knows where Genghis Khan was buried. A
small escort party carried his corpse from his place of death and
killed all people that they encountered along the way numbering close
to a million to keep his burial site a secret. It is assumed he was
buried near his birthplace in Mongolia. This man has the distinction
of being the most prolific child producer ever documented...at least
1,000 and maybe as many as 2,000. He was busy.
Thanks for
listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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