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Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

The Daily F Bomb, Tuesday 12/17/13

Interrogatories

Do you have any annual celebrations that aren’t on the mainstream radar? Besides your own birthday, that is.

Do you consider yourself patriotic? How patriotic? Love it or leave it, or change it or lose it?

Did you start to misbehave in class when the teacher left the room, or were you a virtuous child? What sort of things did you get up to?

What is your favorite book store, and why?

The Twitter Emitter

On This Day

In 1538, Henry VIII of England was excommunicated by Pope Paul III for dumping wife number one for wife number two and pillaging all the monasteries.

In 1777, the United States was formally recognized by France. I wonder if she would still recognize us?

In 1862, General Ulysses S. Grant (probably inspired by Ferdinand and Isabella) issued what was called General Order No. 11, which expelled Jews from Tennessee, Mississippi, and Kentucky. This was revoked a few weeks later by President Lincoln, and when Grant ran for President years later he claimed he signed the order without reading it. The order was ostensibly to stop a black market in cotton that Grant suspected “teh Jooz” of being behind.

In 1967, Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt disappeared while swimming near Portsea, Victoria and was presumed drowned.

In 1969, The United States Air Force closed _Project Blue Book, its study of UFOs, declaring that sightings generally resulted from “A mild form of mass hysteria, Individuals who fabricate such reports to perpetrate a hoax or seek publicity, psychopathological persons, and misidentification of various conventional objects.” Fox Mulder was not amused.

In 1969, musician Tiny Tim married Miss Vicki on Johnny Carson’s show. They had a daughter (Tulip Victoria) and divorced after 8 years.

In 1989, the first episode of The Simpsons (not counting the shorts that were shown on The Tracy Ullman Show) was broadcast.

In 1997, the very brave U.K. passed a law banning all kinds of guns (and this was the second such bill passed during Tony “Poodle” Blair’s reign).

Born on This Day

1667 – Jean-Baptiste Bosschaert, Flemish still-life painter (d. 1746)

1770 – (baptism date) Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer and pianist (d. 1827)

1775 – François Marius Granet, French painter (d. 1849)

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1819 – Jean Baptiste van Moer, Belgian painter (d. 1884)

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1853 – Herbert Beerbohm Tree, British actor/theater manager (d. 1917)

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1859 – Paul César Helleu, French artist (d. 1927)

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1859 – Ettore Tito, Italian painter (d. 1941)

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1875 – Henri Émilien Rousseau, French Orientalist painter (not to be confused with the famous Henri Rousseau)  (d. 1933)

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1881 – Jan Sluyters, Dutch painter (d. 1957)

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1883 – Raimu, French actor (d. 1946)

1887 – Josef Lada, Czech illustrator and painter (d. 1957)

1900 – Katina Paxinou, Greek actress (d. 1973)

1929 – William Safire, American columnist (d. 2009)

1930 – Bob Guccione, American magazine publisher (d. 2010)

1935 – Cal Ripken, Sr., American baseball coach (d. 1999)

1936 – Tommy Steele, English singer and actor

1937 – Art Neville, American musician (The Neville Brothers)

1942 – Paul Butterfield, American musician (d. 1987)

1945 – Chris Matthews, American journalist, serial interrupter

1949 – Paul Rodgers, English singer (Free; Bad Company)

1958 – Mike Mills, American musician (R.E.M.)

1974 – Giovanni Ribisi, American actor

1980 – Eli Pariser, American political blogger and activist

1987 – Chelsea Manning, incarcerated American soldier

Died on This Day

1686 – Liéve Pietersz Verschuier, Dutch painter (b. 1630)

1765 – Ercole Graziani II, Italian painter (b. 1688)

1830 – Simón Bolívar, Venezuelan military leader (b. 1783)

1833 – Kaspar Hauser, German foundling (b. 1812)

1957 – Dorothy L. Sayers, English mystery writer and personal favorite of mine (b. 1893)

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1978 – Don Ellis, American jazz band leader (b. 1934)

1992 – Dana Andrews, American actor (b. 1909)

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1998 – Allan D’Arcangelo, American artist (b. 1930)

2004 – Tom Wesselmann, US Pop artist (b. 1931)

2009 – Jennifer Jones, American actress (b. 1919)

2010 – Captain Beefheart, American musician (b. 1941)

2011 – Kim Jong-il, wacky North Korean leader (b. 1941)

Today is

Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn

National Maple Syrup Day

National Underdog Day


17 comments

  1. freedapeople

    Baby, it’s COLD outside hereabouts. 0 degrees Fahrenheit!

    Do you have any annual celebrations that aren’t on the mainstream radar? Besides your own birthday, that is.

    In addition to Christmas and Easter, we celebrate Michaelmas (9/29) and St John’s Day (6/24). The Christian year has four holidays in line with the seasons.The mainstream only has 2, which is a shame.

    Do you consider yourself patriotic? How patriotic? Love it or leave it, or change it or lose it? Yes, I love this country, even though it infuriates me at times. It can and must improve to fulfill its mission as the first country ever not based on blood or ethnicity, but ideals. Otherwise the sacrifices of the native Americans, African Americans and others were in vain.

    Did you start to misbehave in class when the teacher left the room, or were you a virtuous child? What sort of things did you get up to? Sometimes. My misbehavior was limited to talking and ti daydreaming. I found school very boring because I learn very quickly and there were no gifted and talented programs where I was.

    What is your favorite book store, and why?

    A local, independent bookstore called The Toadstool. I love it because it is independent. I think it is a bad idea to have only big chains selling books. At some point, they could exercise control of our reading material, even with the internet.

  2. Floja Roja

    I celebrate all of my weird holidays, of course. Right now I am gearing up for the Saturnalia celebration by eating my children.

    I don’t really consider myself to be patriotic because that word has right wing and nationalistic connotations for me. I love a lot of stuff about this country, but I can’t love it just because it is my country. That’s an accident of birth.

    It was chaos at my school whenever the teacher stepped out, and the second she came back in, we were silent little angels with haloes. I was really good with my scissor and rubberband slingshot.

    I love Powells, but for a more modest store, the neighborhood store, Skylight Books, is just fabulous. And they have a cat, which is a rule. You can’t be a good bookstore without at cat.

  3. Gee

    Do you have any annual celebrations that aren’t on the mainstream radar? Besides your own birthday, that is.

    Do you consider yourself patriotic? How patriotic? Love it or leave it, or change it or lose it?

    Did you start to misbehave in class when the teacher left the room, or were you a virtuous child? What sort of things did you get up to?

    What is your favorite book store, and why?

    Back in college, my gang used to celebrate what we called Public Landing Day every December 29.  (I think we did manage to observe it for about three years.)  Public Landing is a very tiny town in Maryland, on the Atlantic Ocean.  One of our number lived there and we’d go visit after Christmas.

    I’m a change it or lose it guy.  I shy away from the word “patriotic,” because it sounds belligerent.

    Virtuous.

    Treehorn in Santa Rosa, CA.  Stuffed full of goodness, yet perfectly organized.  (Please tell me it’s still there.)

  4. Gee

    One year, Erwin Schrödinger was my Secret Santa. That was a Christmas to remember!

    I read a lot, but there’s a big gap in my knowledge about this guy (and his cat).  Must read up so I can get the jokes.

  5. Gee

    In 1777, the United States was formally recognized by France. I wonder if she would still recognize us?

    In the sense of “Your mother wouldn’t recognize you?”

  6. Gee

    In 1969, musician Tiny Tim married Miss Vicki on Johnny Carson’s show. They had a daughter (Tulip Victoria) and divorced after 8 years.

    I never knew they had a kid.  Wonder how her life’s been.

  7. bubbanomics

    Do you have any annual celebrations that aren’t on the mainstream radar? Besides your own birthday, that is.

    nope.

    Do you consider yourself patriotic? How patriotic? Love it or leave it, or change it or lose it?

    if i could afford it, i’d probably move to europe.

    Did you start to misbehave in class when the teacher left the room, or were you a virtuous child? What sort of things did you get up to?

    I was excellent at sound effects as a kid (and dreamt of being in movies till Moog brought forth his electronic synthesizer that unholy job destroyer) and could mimic the school’s bell perfectly.  I had to use this power carefully as to avoid detection.  wtih subs i could get us out five minutes early, but with regular teachers i had to be more conservative.

    What is your favorite book store, and why?

    Arcana Books.  used to be on the promenade in SM, moved to Culver City.  Full of wonderful art and design books.

    phoning it in so no tune till later…

  8. jlms qkw

    i celebrate certain christian holidays that are not really mainstreamed – christian new year 4 sundays before christmas, all the weeks of lent, pentecost, reformation.  also our baptism birthdays, and my daughter’s coming-home day, which is son’s baptism birthday.  

    yes. gradual improvement over time?

    virtuous, but i talked too much.  i had a detention once, and when the teacher left the room i erased my name from the board.  all of my classmates (all 17 of them) were amazed at my audacity but told on me anyway.  

    king’s english, about 3 blocks away.  local and convenient.  

  9. Avilyn

    Do you have any annual celebrations that aren’t on the mainstream radar? Besides your own birthday, that is.  I celebrate the equinoxes and the solstices.

    Do you consider yourself patriotic? How patriotic? Love it or leave it, or change it or lose it?  I’m not sure I know what I’d consider ‘patriotic’.  I like this country, but think it can be improved.  Not sure I’d want to live anywhere else, except maybe Scotland (where my husband’s family is from).  

    Did you start to misbehave in class when the teacher left the room, or were you a virtuous child? What sort of things did you get up to?  Nah, I was good.  Mostly I read books in class.

    What is your favorite book store, and why?  When I was a kid, it was Wind Chimes, which was a used bookstore that gave credit for books you brought in to them.  These days, it’s Lyrical Ballad; another used bookstore that’s in what used to be a bank (complete with vault).  It’s one of those old bookstores that is bigger on the inside than it looks on the outside.

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