Today is the Feast day of St. Ignatius of Loyola.
Ignatius of Loyola, founder of the Society of Jesus, the Jesuit order of Catholic priests and brothers, died in Rome on this date in 1556.
July 31, 1928 -
MGM’s Leo the lion roared for the first time on this date.
He introduced MGM’s first talking picture, White Shadows on the South Seas. The film was directed by W.S. Van Dyke and starred Monte Blue. It won an Oscar in 1928-29 for Best Cinematography
July 31, 1971 -
James Taylor's cover of the Carole King song, You've Got A Friend hit #1 on the Billboard charts on this date.
Taylor heard this song for the first time in November 1970, when he played a week of shows at The Troubadour in Los Angeles. By this time, his album Sweet Baby James had taken off, and Taylor was drawing large crowds. He asked his good friend Carole King to be his opening act, and King grudgingly accepted - she wasn't used to playing her own songs live and was very nervous.
July 31, 1987 -
Timothy Dalton took on the mantle of James Bond in the John Glen helmed, The Living Daylights,
also starring Maryam d'Abo and Joe Don Baker, which premiered in the US on this date.
(Depending on how you are counting, this was the fifteenth entry in the film series.)
Joe Don Baker would later play CIA agent Jack Wade in GoldenEye and Tomorrow Never Dies. Along
with Charles Gray and Walter Gotell, Baker was one of three actors to play separate roles as
both an adversary and an ally of Bond.
July 31, 1991 -
The Jim Abrahams spoof of Top Gun, Hot Shots!, starring Charlie Sheen, Cary Elwes, Valeria
Golino, Lloyd Bridges, and Jon Cryer, premiered on this date.
During the eulogy scene, Lloyd Bridges mentioned the deaths of Moe Greene, Tataglia, Barzini,
and the heads of five families. This is a reference to the movie The Godfather.
July 31, 1992 -
Miramax Films released the Mike Newell's film Enchanted April, starring Miranda Richardson, Josie Lawrence, Joan Plowright, Alfred Molina, and Jim Broadbent in the US on this date.
The film was made for British television in 1991, but was well-produced enough to be released
in theaters in the United States in 1992.
Another book from the back shelves of the ACME Library
Today in History:
July 31, 1485 -
Morte D'Arthur by Sir Thomas Malory, was first published on this date.
Malory wrote this classic tale of knightly love and chivalry while in prison for armed assault
and rape.
July 31, 1790 -
Samuel Hopkins was issued the first patent for a process of making potash, potassium carbonate,
an ingredient used in fertilizer. The patent was signed by Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson
and President George Washington.
Since then, over 6 million patents have been granted by the US PTO.
July 31, 1944 -
Antoine de Saint-Exupery, French aviator and author best know for his novella The Little
Prince, went missing while flying in a Lockheed P-38 Lightning on a reconnaissance mission over
Marseilles, on this date.
In the days and weeks that followed, various parties speculated that Saint Exupéry was shot
down over the Mediterranean, had a flight accident, or even committed suicide. The latter
theory grew out of the fact that the flyer had felt isolated from his squadron and was
pessimistic about the future.
July 31, 1945 -
Wearing a stolen army uniform, prisoner John Giles attempted to escape from Alcatraz island by boarding an outbound cargo boat. But instead of San Francisco, the vessel heads for Angel Island, where Giles was promptly captured.
When attempting your escape from prison, do not attempt to save money by purchasing a round trip ticket. Please confirm that you have boarded the correct escape craft.
It was on this day in 1954 that human feet first stood upon the summit of Pakistan's K2 mountain, the second-tallest mountain in the world.
K2 was known to the Chinese as "Great Mountain" and to Indian and Pakistani locals as "That Big
Thing Over There." It was not until 1856, when T.G. Montgomerie of Britain's Survey of India
was logging the mountains of the Karakorum range, that it was dubbed K2. This helped
distinguish it from K1, to its left, and K3, to its right.
(K1 was later named Mount Masherbrum. K3 moved to Arizona, where ICE agents believed the mountain was assisting underage children to sneak into the country across the border.)
It was an Italian expedition led by Ardito Desio that first succeeded in ascending to the peak of K2. Team members Lino Lacedelli and Achille Compagnoni achieved that distinction on July 31, 1954.
The summit wasn't reached again until 1977, when a Japanese team with more than 1500 porters
found their way to the top.
The first American expedition reached the top in 1978 without the aid of any stinking
porters.
July 31, 1948 –
At Idlewild Field in New York, New York International Airport was dedicated by President Harry
Truman on this date.
A 30 year old Congressman John F. Kennedy suddenly had a blinding headache that day and didn't know why.
July 31, 1964 -
The American space probe Ranger 7 transmitted the first photo moon’s surface ever taken by a U.S. spacecraft, mapping the surface for a future lunar landing, on this date. Ranger 7 carried six slow-scan vidicon TV cameras capable of transmitting high-resolution television pictures of the lunar surface.
A total of 4,308 photographs were taken before Ranger 7 crashed in Mare Cognitum (Sea of Clouds). The total cost of the mission was about $170 million (your tax dollars at work.)
July 31, 1966 -
The Beatles records were burned in Birmingham, Alabama on this date -- only because John Lennon
innocently declared that the band happens to be "more popular than Jesus."
The record burning of course has the opposite effect, as sales of Beatles records dramatically increase (in part to burn them.)
July 31, 1971 -
One of the most expensive car rides occurred on this date,
Apollo 15 crew members, James B. Irwin and David R. Scott took the Lunar Roving Vehicle or "Moon Buggy" on its premiere jaunt on the surface of the Moon.
July 31, 1976 -
NASA released the famous Face on Mars photo taken by the Viking 1, on this date.
Later, after analysis of higher resolution photos from the Mars Global Surveyor, the face would
be determined to be an optical illusion,
but until then, the face would spark imaginations and lead to rampant conspiracy theories.
Tomorrow is the festival of Lammas, an ancient harvest festival, (which we will have more to say about tomorrow.)
According to Shakespeare, Guiletta Capulet was born on "Lammas Eve at night," so Juliet's birthday is July 31st (sharing her birthday with Harry Potter and his creator, J. K. Rowlings.)
July 31, 1980 (I'm going with 1980 and not getting involved in the 1979 controversy) -
Harry Potter, an orphan who discovers that he is a wizard was born on this dates.
J K Rowlings, the Harry Potter brand author, and unfortunately loony bigot, shares a birthday with her creation (born 1965). Her 'children's stories' have made her a billionaire.
Who knew an orphaned kid with a facial birthmark could make someone so much money?
July 31, 2003 -
Felix Baumgartner, became the first man to glide across the English Channel without an aircraft when he jumped from a plane thirty thousand feet above Dover, England wearing carbon fiber wings attached to his back.
He glided 23 miles across the Channel in ten minutes at a starting speed of 220 mph and slowing to a speed of 135 mph. Baumgartner finished his flight using a parachute landing in Cap Blanc-Nez, France.
And so it goes.
1 comment:
Stray shopping carts, indeed
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