Monthly Archives: May 2012

May 8 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Author – naturalist David Attenborough (Life on Earth, Trials of Life) is 86.

 

Comedian – actor Don Rickles (Kelly’s Heroes, CPO Sharkey, Beach Blanket Bingo) is 86.

 

Author Thomas Pynchon (V., Slow Learner: Early Stories) is 75.

Singer Toni Tennille (Captain & Tenille) is 72.

 

Actor James Mitchum (In Harm’s Way, Code Name: Zebra, Hollywood Cop) is 71.

Drummer Alex Van Halen (Van Halen) is 59.

 

Actor David Keith (The Great Santini, Take This Job & Shove It, An Officer and a Gentleman) is 58.

 

Actress Melissa Gilbert (Little House on the Prairie, The Miracle Worker, Her Own Rules) is 48.

Leave a comment

Filed under Birthdays

On May 8…

1541 – Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto reached the Mississippi River, south of present-day Memphis, TN.

 

1847 – Robert W. Thomson of England patented the rubber tire on this day.

1848 – Playwright Oscar Hammerstein I was born in Sceczin, Germany.

 

1879 – George Selden of Rochester, NY applied for the first automobile patent, or what he called a “road engine.”

1884 – Harry S. Truman, the 33rd U.S. President, was born in Lamar, MO.

 

1945 – Great Britain and the U.S. celebrate Victory in Europe, or V-E Day.  The Allied Forces had achieved victory in Europe with the unconditional surrender of Germany.

 

1973 – The American Indian Movement (AIM) ended its 71-day siege of Wounded Knee, site of the infamous 1890 massacre of 300 Sioux by the U.S. Army, and surrendered to federal authorities.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under History

Quote of the Day

“If this is going to be a Christian nation that doesn’t help the poor, either we’ve got to pretend that Jesus was just as selfish as we are, or we’ve got to acknowledge that He commanded us to love the poor and serve the needy without condition and then admit that we just don’t want to do it.”

–Satirist Stephen Colbert, quoted in an article on Gov. Rick Perry and God.

Leave a comment

Filed under News

In Memoriam Maurice Sendak 1928 – 2012

Maurice Sendak at his Ridgefield, CT, home with his German shepherd, Herman, in 2006.

Renowned children’s author Maurice Sendak died today in Danbury, Connecticut, at age 83.  Widely considered one of the 20th century’s most important children’s writers, Sendak’s works pulled picture books out of the quaint wholesome world of nursery rhymes and plunged them into the dark, yet beautiful recesses of the human mind.  His most famous, Where the Wild Things Are, was also his first.  It upended the traditional concepts of children’s literature when first published in 1963, inciting controversy and even censorship.  People at the time thought they knew how children’s minds functioned and subsequently what was best for them.  Sendak made people realize that the human psyche wasn’t so straightforward and perfectly defined.

Born in Brooklyn, New York, Sendak was a frail child who said he witnessed a number of real-life horrors: the Great Depression, World War II and the Nazi Holocaust, in which many of his European relatives perished.  He even recalled the kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh’s baby in 1932 and feared such a tragedy could happen to him.  His myriad illnesses as a youngster relegated him to lonely days and nights in bed where he would write and draw.  At age 20, he found a job building window displays for F.A.O. Schwartz and, through the store’s children’s book buyer, he met Ursula Nordstrom, the editor for children’s books at Harper & Row.  Their meeting commenced a long and studious business relationship whereupon Sendak illustrated books by many well-known children’s authors.  But, Where the Wild Things Are is the one project that established his career as a self-made children’s author.  In his later years, he also designed and built theatrical sets, many of them productions inspired by his books.  His last book, Mommy?, came out in 2006.

I remember when I first read Where the Wild Things Are.  I fell in love with it, and it actually remains one of my favorite books.  I still have an original copy.  I wasn’t frightened by the hideous-looking monsters that populated the dreams of its central character, Max; in fact, I found them fascinating.  I even identified with Max, although my parents never sent me to bed without dinner.  But, as an only child, shy and introverted, my mind often created fantastic images and characters.  Yet, I think other children could make a connection with Max who didn’t cower in fear at the thought of hairy, snaggle-toothed monsters lurking in his bedroom.  He established his supremacy over them, and they made him their king.

Sendak, who was gay, leaves no heirs.  His last work, My Brother’s Book, is an ode to his late brother, Jack, and will be published next February.

Leave a comment

Filed under News

May 7, 2012 – 227 Days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip: If the thought of eating worms to survive is sickening, then you’d better hope you can stay indoors when the apocalypse hits.  As strange – even repulsive as it seems – worms are a good source of protein.  Ancient peoples all over the world have used them in their diets.  The Mayans used to fry them with chili peppers and then take a chocolate enema.  Contemporary survivalist courses in the military often talk about living off of various insects, including worms.  I’ve actually only consumed a worm once in my life – after almost completely downing a bottle of tequila.  My fellow frat brothers saved the worm just for me.  I felt special and loved.

Pound for pound, though, worms have higher protein content than most animal products.  Mealworms are a great starter worm for the uninitiated.  They can be found in any bait and tackle shop, specialty sellers, or garden center.  If you choose the latter place to get them, try to buy a plant first, or they’ll call security when they see you crawling around looking for worms.  You can even raise them, if you’re so inclined.  People all over Latin America and Asia do this; they even sell them to locals and occasionally the adventurous tourist.  You can eat them raw, or – as I stated above – cook them somehow with another ingredient.  If you feel like getting your protein and caffeine at once, you could even dip them into warm chocolate.

Regardless, don’t turn up your nose at the thought of consuming insect larvae.  The Mayan deities strike down anyone who thinks they’re too good to eat something that comes from the blessed Earth.  Just remember, though, no matter where or how you’re buried, worms will work their way into your body somehow.  You might as well enjoy some while you’re still alive.

Leave a comment

Filed under Mayan Calendar Countdown

May 7 Notable Birthdays

If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”

 

Writer – producer – director Amy Heckerling (Clueless, Look Who’s Talking series, National Lampoon’s European Vacation, Fast Times at Ridgemont High) is 58.

Actor Michael E. Knight (All My Children, Hexed, Date with an Angel) is 53.

Leave a comment

Filed under Birthdays

On May 7…

1789 – The first Presidential Inaugural Ball was held in New York City.

1833 – Composer Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Germany.

 

1840 – Composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Votkinsk, Russia.

 

1901 – Actor Gary Cooper was born in Helena, MT.

 

1912 – Columbia University approved final plans for awarding the Pulitzer Prize in several categories.

1912 – The first airplane equipped with a machine gun flew over College Park, MD.

1915 – On its return trip from New York to Liverpool, England, the British ocean liner, Lusitania, was torpedoed by a German U-boat off the coast of Ireland, killing 1,198 lives people.

 

1919 – Eva (Evita) Peron, Argentina’s spiritual leader and wife of former president Juan Peron, was born in Buenos Aires.

 

1960 – Leonid Brezhnev was selected president of the Soviet Union.

 

1994 – Almost 3 months after it was stolen from an Oslo museum, police recovered Edvard Munch’s The Scream.

Leave a comment

Filed under History

Cartoon of the Day

Thanks to fellow blogger Guitarmonk for this one.  It says a lot about the state of the world today.

Leave a comment

Filed under News

Pictures of the Day

I still can’t get over the beauty of the “Super Moon” this past weekend, so here are some more photos of it from various locations around the world.

Space Needle – Seattle, Washington

Manila, Philippines

Lisbon, Portugal

 

Loctudy, France

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Lotus Temple – New Delhi, India

Veszprem, Hungary

West Orange, New Jersey

Aalborg, Denmark

 

 

Leave a comment

Filed under News

Quote of the Day

“During the conversation, Ms. Brunstetter said her husband was the architect of Amendment 1, and one of the reasons he wrote it was to protect the Caucasian race.  She said Caucasians or whites created this country.  We wrote the Constitution.  This is about protecting the Constitution.  There already is a law on the books against same-sex marriage, but this protects the Constitution from activist judges.”

– Chad Nance, a freelance journalist in Winston-Salem, NC, paraphrasing a comment made by Jodi Brunstetter, wife of North Carolina State Sen. Peter Brunstetter, about North Carolina’s “Amendment One,” which would outlaw same-sex marriage in the state.

Jodi Brunstetter conceded using the word “Caucasian,” but now says she was misquoted.  Wow – even the spouses of politicians have learned how to play the victim!

Leave a comment

Filed under News