Tuesday, May 5, 2015

It's Tango no Sekku Day in Japan

But I know many of you could care less that it's Children's Day; when families celebrate the healthy growth and happiness of children.

Please take a moment from cutting those limes and getting that sea salt ready for the massive margarita you all have to make to celebrate this day.  For those of you who don't know - it's not Mexican Independence Day (that's September 16th) - it's the celebration of their victory over the French.



If you need another reason to celebrate the day - A US patent was issued for the first bottle with a screw cap and a pour lip to Edward A. Ravenscroft, Glencoe, Illinois (No 2,039,345,) on this date.  Abbott Laboratories of North Chicago manufactured the bottles.

And remember, there is no truth to the rumor that Mexican's are pissing into your Coronas,



It's just a stupid urban myth


May 5, 1891 -
The Music Hall (Carnegie Hall) opened in NYC on this date with Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, noted Russian composer and secret sodomite, as guest conductor.



It was quite a celebration. Andrew Carnegie’s new Music Hall opened with a five-day music festival on this date.


Today in History:
May 5, 2349 BC -
Noah's Ark
landed on Mount Ararat on this date, according to calculations by James Ussher, Archbishop of the Church of Ireland.



According to the good bishop, Noah heard about the two for one Margaritas at Senor Swanky's.


May 5, 1821 -
Napoleon
died on the island of St. Helena on this date. Some suspect from arsenic poisoning.




More likely, he died from stomach cancer as did his father.

But then who knows, I wasn't there, were you?


May 5, 1925 -
High school teacher John T. Scopes was arrested on this date for teaching evolution by authorities in Dayton, Tennessee, as part of a publicity stunt to make the town famous.



Since Scopes admitted teaching the theory, he was found guilty, and the law remained on the books in the backward state until 1967.


May 5, 1945 -
Mrs Elsie Mitchell and five neighborhood children were killed while attempting to drag a Japanese balloon out the woods in Lakeview, Oregon on this date. Unbeknownst to Mitchell and the children, the balloon was armed, and it exploded soon after they began tampering with it.



They were the only people killed in action on the US mainland during World War II.


 May 5th, 1955,
On this bright and sunny spring day, The United States decided to blow an American city into oblivion in order to test a new cooking method. At 5:10 am on this date, a nuclear bomb assigned to Operation Cue (a.k.a. ‘Apple-2’ or Operation Teapot) was detonated at Area 1 of the Nevada Test Site. A collection of structures, buildings (one containing a freezer full of Birds Eye frozen cod fillets, along with frozen chicken pot pie, frozen french fried potatoes, and other chilled foods) even mannequins were designed to measure the effects of an atomic weapon used against urban centers.



According to officials,   “Frozen food samples from the stations at 1270 and 2750ft were found to be definitely radioactive, particularly the cod fillets.”  Shockingly, the food samples were eaten; no surprise, they didn't take good.  Developers of microwaves felt this was not a practical method for quick and efficient cooking.  No word on the survival rate of the taste testers.


May 5, 1961 -
Alan B. Shepard
was the first American in space, with a fifteen minute suborbital flight. He was forced to piss himself in his suit prior to launch, as it lacked an evacuation system.



He and his soiled space suit were launched in the 2,000-lb. capsule Freedom 7 from Cape Canaveral, Florida, by a Mercury-Redstone 3 rocket. The flight traveled 302 miles at a speed relative to the ground of of 4,500 mph.

Aren't you glad you know that now.


May 5, 1994 -
Michael Fay
, an American teenager, was charged along with others for vandalism in Singapore. Fay’s original sentence was four months in jail, a large fine and six caning strokes. With the enormous amount of media coverage in the United States and the intervention of U.S. President Bill Clinton, this was reduced to approximately 3 months in jail, and four strokes.

Although, in the U.S., this is considered unusual and harsh punishment for vandalism, U.S. public support for the whacking was overwhelming (running 90% in Fay’s home town of Dayton, Ohio).  Mr. Fay was obviously a popular kid back home.

Also, many a strapping hairless youth from Chelsea would have gladly dropped trou, spread their firm, waxed buttock, exposing their bleached anus, and manly taken four and twenty lashes with barely a whimper and asked for more.



And so it goes.

No comments: