Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

The Daily F Bomb, Thursday 8/22/13

Interrogatories

Have you taken a side on the Richard III story? Innocent or guilty?

How much were teeth worth (apiece) back in the days that the tooth fairy still visited you?

Did your parents give you an allowance? How much? Did you spend it all on candy like me, or were you wiser in your purchases?

What punctuation mark or marks do you have the most difficulty with?

The Twitter Emitter

On This Day

In 1485, English king Richard III was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field. His body was only found and identified this year.

In 1642, the English Civil War officially began, though it had been going on at a small level for most of that year.

In 1848, New Mexico was annexed by the United States.

In 1864, the first 12 nations signed the first Geneva Convention. It started with the foundation of the Red Cross to provide humanitarian aid on battlefields with neutrality, and grew from there with subsequent amendments.

In 1902, Teddy Roosevelt became the first President to ride in a car. This is also the date Cadillac was founded. Coincidence?

In 1970, Derek and the Dominoes began recording their only studio album.

In 1972, Rhodesia was kicked out of the IOC (International Olympic Committee) for its racist policies.

In 1996, President Clinton signed welfare “reform” (a major component in the Republican Party’s Contract for on America) into law.

Born on This Day

1647 – Denis Papin, French physicist, mathematician, and inventor, developed pressure cooking (d. 1712)

1648 – Gerard Hoet I, Dutch painter (d. 1733)

 photo GerardHoetI.jpg

1760 – Pope Leo XII (d. 1829)

1798 – François-Antoine Bossuet, Belgian painter (d. 1889)

 photo Franccedilois-AntoineBossuet.jpg

1834 – Samuel Pierpont Langley, American astronomer (d. 1906)

1836 – Archibald Willard, American painter (d. 1918)

 photo ArchibaldWillard.jpg

1845 – Julius von Blaas, Austrian painter (d. 1922)

 photo JuliusvonBlaas.jpg

1862 – Claude Debussy, French composer (d. 1918)

1879 – Valentin de Zubiaurre, Basque painter (d. 1963)

 photo ValentindeZubiaurre.jpg

1880 – George Herriman, American cartoonist (d. 1944)

1893 – Dorothy Parker, American poet and writer (d. 1967)

1897 – Elisabeth Bergner, Austro-Hungarian actress (d. 1986)

 photo ElisabethBergnerTippling.jpg

1898 – Francine Larrimore, French born American actess (d. 1975)

1902 – Leni Riefenstahl, German director (d. 2003)

1909 – Lucille Ricksen, American actress (d. 1925)

1917 – John Lee Hooker, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (d. 2001)

1920 – Ray Bradbury, American author (d. 2012)

1922 – Micheline Presle, French actress

1925 – Honor Blackman, English actress

1934 – Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr., American general (d. 2012)

1935 – Annie Proulx, American author

1936 – Chuck Brown, American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer (d. 2012)

1947 – Donna Jean Godchaux, American singer (Grateful Dead, Heart of Gold Band, and Jerry Garcia Band)

1947 – Cindy Williams, American actress

1950 – Scooter Libby, American lawyer and political adviser

1952 – Peter Laughner, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (Rocket from the Tombs and Pere Ubu) (d. 1977)

1958 – Vernon Reid, American guitarist and songwriter (Living Colour)

1961 – Roland Orzabal, English singer-songwriter, musician, and producer (Tears for Fears and Graduate)

1961 – Debbi Peterson, American singer and drummer (The Bangles and Kindred Spirit)

1963 – Tori Amos, American singer-songwriter and producer (Y Kant Tori Read)

1967 – Layne Staley, American singer-songwriter (Alice in Chains and Class of ’99) (d. 2002)

1968 – Rich Lowry, American columnist and editor who was personally winked at by the sparkly and mesmerizing Sarah Palin. :::gag:::

1970 – Giada De Laurentiis, Italian-American chef and author

1971 – Richard Armitage, English actor

1971 – Craig Finn, American singer-songwriter and guitarist (The Hold Steady and Lifter Puller)

1978 – Jeff Stinco, Canadian guitarist (Simple Plan)

1978 – Robert Levon Been, American musician (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club)

1985 – Luke Russert, American nepotism beneficiary

Died on This Day

1241 – Pope Gregory IX, (b. 1143)

1280 – Pope Nicholas III (b. 1216)

1680 – John George II, Elector of Saxony (b. 1613)

1789 – Johann Heinrich Tischbein (the elder), German painter (b. 1722)

 photo JohannHeinrichTischbein.jpg

1793 – Louis de Noailles, French marshal (b. 1713)

1806 – Jean-Honoré Fragonard, French painter (b. 1732)

 photo Jean-HonoreacuteFragonard.jpg

1875 – Karel Ferdinand Venneman, Flemish painter (b. 1802)

 photo KarelFerdinandVenneman.jpg

1898 – Félicien Rops, Belgian artist (b. 1833)

 photo FeacutelicienRops.jpg

1904 – Kate Chopin, American author (b. 1850)

1914 – James Dickson Innes, British painter (b. 1887)

1917 – Matthis Maris, Dutch painter born (b. 1839)

1920 – Anders Zorn, Swedish painter (b. 1860)

 photo AndersZorn.jpg

1922 – Michael Collins, Irish revolutionary leader (b. 1890)

1942 – Michel Fokine, Russian dancer and choreographer (b. 1880)

1964 – Helena Makowska, Russian actress (b. 1893)

1967 – Junie Astor, French actress (b. 1911)

1973 – Louise Huff, American actress (b. 1895)

1977 – Sebastian Cabot, English actor (b. 1918)

1978 – Jomo Kenyatta, Kenyan politician, 1st President of Kenya (b. 1894)

1989 – Huey P. Newton, American activist, co-founder of the Black Panther Party (b. 1942)

2011 – Nick Ashford, American singer-songwriter and producer (Ashford & Simpson) (b. 1942)

2011 – Jerry Leiber, American songwriter (b. 1933)

Today is

National Be an Angel Day

National Punctuation Day

National Tooth Fairy Day

National Eat a Peach Day

National Pecan Torte Day


44 comments

  1. Gee

    Rained overnight, thunderstorms possible today.  Then a rain of frogs.

    Have you taken a side on the Richard III story? Innocent or guilty?

    How much were teeth worth (apiece) back in the days that the tooth fairy still visited you?

    Did your parents give you an allowance? How much? Did you spend it all on candy like me, or were you wiser in your purchases?

    What punctuation mark or marks do you have the most difficulty with?

    I plead ignorance.

    I think I got a dime a tooth.

    I got an allowance at some point.  Just pocket change, I think.  I probably bought magazines or comic books.

    I’m not always 100% sure about the placement of “.

  2. Gee

    In 1485, English king Richard III was killed at the Battle of Bosworth Field. His body was only found and identified this year.

    Hey, Monty Python fans, how’d they know it was a king?

  3. Jk2003

    Richard III:  there is a faint buzz in the back if my brain that says I know what this question is about, but nothing resembling actual knowledge is presenting itself.  Is this the king in the parking lot?

    Tooth fairy:  a dollar

    Allowance:  not really but I got paid for tasks like mowing the lawn, washing the cars or carrying in the groceries.

    Punctuation:  semicolon

  4. Have you taken a side on the Richard III story? Innocent or guilty?

    Never took a side

    How much were teeth worth (apiece) back in the days that the tooth fairy still visited you?

    I think it was a dollar…. but maybe a quarter. I dunno. It was a long time ago.

    Did your parents give you an allowance? How much? Did you spend it all on candy like me, or were you wiser in your purchases?

    I got my age squared in pennies per week. I spent some on candy, some on books.

    What punctuation mark or marks do you have the most difficulty with?

    I am okay with punctuation.

    Re your question, here is a story from Churchill. He once ended a sentence with a preposition. Someone complained and he said “This is the sort of arrant pedantry up with which I will not put”.  

  5. jlms qkw

    i am trying to not leave too early by letting my son sleep a bit later.  

    air pressure changes.  

    75f going to 91f.  there is a back to school event tonight for my daughter.  

  6. Floja Roja

    It’s the second clear day in a row. Lilly had 7 asthma attacks yesterday, so there goes my theory that it was something fog-borne.

    I haven’t checked the weather widgets, but I suspect they will tell me to expect a high in the 80s. This coming weekend would have been, in previous years, the neighborhood street fair that I had attended for years until the latest planners started trying to make it into Coachella and ended up killing it instead. That was always the hottest weekend of the year, I swear. If it’s only in the 80s on the hottest weekend, I will be happy, but something is busted.

    Answers:

    I used to be convinced, thanks to Josephine Tey and numerous other accounts, that Richard III was innocent and it was another instance of history being written by the victors. The problem is, there is no evidence after a certain point that the princes in the tower still lived, and the trail ends while Richard was still king. I still think Henry had the better motive. ;-P

    My parents were cheap, I think we just got a dime, though we tried to say the price should go up due to inflation. I spent mine on candy.

    I did get an allowance, and money for chores. When my dad was the breadwinner it was an amount I don’t recall, but I know it was measly. When my mom became the breadwinner, she felt guilty at not being home with us and we each got a fiver. That went to candy AND comic books.

    Placement of punctuation inside parentheses and quotation marks. I’m still never sure.

  7. bubbanomics

    Have you taken a side on the Richard III story? Innocent or guilty?

    GUILTY! well… just wanted to say it that way. be sure to add a monty python accent when speaking it aloud.

    How much were teeth worth (apiece) back in the days that the tooth fairy still visited you?

    zippola.  my folks didn’t do tooth fairy.

    Did your parents give you an allowance? How much? Did you spend it all on candy like me, or were you wiser in your purchases?

    lunch money.

    What punctuation mark or marks do you have the most difficulty with?

    hyphens within sentences used for emphasis vs parens.

    feeling a bit internet-hung-over from meta at another site.  still picking residual cooties off myself.

    happy thorsday.  make someone you love thor today!

  8. mayrose

    Richard III – innocent. Henry II had a much better motive to get rid of the boys since he claimed the crown through his wife’s inheritance (Elizabeth, the boy’s sister) than through conquest. Richard seems to have been a very honest and benevolent ruler. The boys were not eligible to be king because their father had pre-contracted a marriage to another woman before he married Elizabeth Woodville, which invalidated that marriage and the children became bastards. The Tudors were very efficient at disposing any and all possible claimants to the throne.

    I was lucky to get a dime, but a lot of stuff was that cheap way back then in the olden days.

    Nope, no allowance.

    Pretty ok with punctuation, but sometimes lazy.

  9.    For not being racists, Rand and Ron Paul sure do know a lot of em. #JustSayin

       – Lizz Winstead (@lizzwinstead) August 21, 2013

    And this:

       Today is the 54th anniversary of Hawaii’s admission to the Union, and the 5th anniversary of claiming their natives can’t be president.

       – Top Conservative Cat (@TeaPartyCat) August 21, 2013

    There are places that claim Glenn Greenwald is a journalist? Really?? 😉

    I don’t want to start a fight but this is why I am not one of those who think that the Clinton presidency was such a great thing.

    In 1996, President Clinton signed welfare “reform” (a major component in the Republican Party’s Contract for on America) into law.

    I think it was better than a second Bush I term but, gak, the DLC screwed over our country almost as much as Reagan did.

    Hovering … hovering ….

    – Virginia Foxx never looked so good

    – You can’t urn a living when ewer making minimum wage

    – This is what happens when you get toasted: “Perhaps calling for a speech wasn’t such a good idea after all.”

    Ha!! Thank goodness that Miss Mayta does not read the F Bomb. Meese Mehta is much more mellow about scantily clad peepuls. It is a moose trait. 🙂

  10. bfitzinAR

    Richard III – Josephine Tey and Barbara Michaels (I think she did this one under Elizabeth Peters convinced me he was innocent.  The Shakespearean “evidence” was written under the reign of someone who would not have been happy with any other verdict and you really didn’t want to make her unhappy.  (Also, Henry VII was a real “piece of work” and the dirty deed was much more his line of country anyway.)

    I got 10 cents per tooth and probably spent it on candy or a coke (or one of each) as we only got such treats on birthdays, xmas, and Halloween.  No allowance.

    Well, I refuse to give up my serial commas and my 2 spaces after the period but other than that me and punctuation get along pretty well.  🙂

Comments are closed.