Tuesday, July 8, 2008

It's good to go away, it's great to come home

Back from an all to brief vacation at the beach. It appears that I will luckily avoid being named as a corespondent in the A-Rod divorce proceeding (it seems most other New Yorkers will).

July 8, 1958
The center of the Hollywood Universe was born today in 1958. Remember you are only a few degrees away from Kevin Bacon.




Here's Your Today in History:

July 8, 1115 -
Peter the Hermit died on this date. Peter is notable for his invention of The Crusades and never bathing. He whipped up support for the first Crusade as an attempt to dislodge the Seljuk Turks from Jerusalem: over three hundred thousand Christians perished in less than a year, during which they destroyed hundreds of villages throughout Europe and Asia Minor and killed tens of thousands of European Jews and fellow Christians on their way to a holy land they never reached. As a result of this astonishing success, the Crusades were serialized and ran for several centuries.



July 8, 1800 -
The first smallpox vaccine was administered on this date. Dr. Benjamin Waterhouse (no relation to Price) of Massachusetts administered the vaccination of cowpox serum to his five-year-old son
Daniel and a household servant. Neither ever contracted smallpox and the vaccination was determined to have been an udder success.



July 8, 1856 -
The crank-operated machine gun was patented on this date by C.E. Barnes of Lowell, Massachusetts, and the revolving gun turret was invented exactly six years later by Theodore Timby. Both inventions enabled mankind to kill itself off with unprecedented ease and efficiency, thereby launching the modern era.

July 8, 1881 -



July 8 was a Sunday in 1881, so when a hot young man entered Edward Berner's drugstore in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, and ordered an ice-cream soda, his request was denied. Ice-cream sodas could not be served on the Sabbath owing to the ancient Mosaic injunction against them.

The hot young man pleaded his case so eloquently, however, that Berner felt sympathetic and came up with a compromise: he plopped a scoop of ice-cream into a dish and poured the chocolate-flavored syrup directly over it.

This religious dodge quickly became popular and came to be known as the Ice Cream Sunday. (The spelling was later changed to conceal the heretical origins of the dish.) Since that glorious day, hundreds of millions of Americans have consigned themselves to Hell.

Jul 8 1932 -
Tod Browning's groundbreaking horror movie Freaks, featuring genuine carnival sideshow performers, premieres at the Rialto theater in New York. The film opens to critical outrage, and is later banned by the British government for 30 years.



Gooba, Gaba, Gooba Gaba, One of us, One of us ...

Jul 8 1976 -
Former President Richard M. Nixon is disbarred by the New York Bar Association. Nixon attempted to resign voluntarily, as he had from the California and U.S. Supreme Court bars, but New York refused to accept his resignation unless he acknowledged that he had obstructed justice during the Watergate coverup.



Jul 8 1987 -
Kitty Dukakis, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Governor Michael Dukakis, reveals that she was formerly addicted to amphetamines. Kitty waits until after the November election tocacknowledge her raging alcoholism, however. She even admitted to drinking Windex - I guess the film was right Windex can do anything, even give a a buzz.



And so it goes.

No comments:

Post a Comment