22 July 2014
shambolic
[sham-bol-ik]
adjective (Chiefly British Informal)
– very disorganized; messy or confused: I’ve had a shambolic year, the worst ever.
Origin:
alteration of shamble (shambles, ‘a disordered place’)
Anagram
cash limbo
chasm boil
Today’s aphorism
We can bomb the world to pieces
But we can’t bomb it into peace
– Michael Franti and Spearhead, ‘Bomb the World‘
On this day
22 July 1298 – Battle of Falkirk in which the English, led by King Edward VI, defeated the Scots, led by William Wallace. It was part of the First War of Scottish Independence.
22 July 1456 – Siege of Belgrade, or Siege of Nandorfehervar, in which Hungarian troops defeated the Ottoman Turks under the leadership of Sultan Mehmed II. Since 22 July 2011, Hungary celebrates this as their National Memorial Day.
22 July 1933 – Wiley Post completes the world’s first solo flight around the world.
22 July 1946 – Irgun, a militant Zionist group under the leadership of Menachim Begin, bombs Jerusalem’s King David Hotel, which housed the British administrative headquarters for Palestine. The bombing killed 91 people and injured 46.
22 July 1968 – The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) hijacks its first plane, an El-Al Israel Airlines flight travelling from Rome to Tel Aviv, carrying 32 passengers and 10 crew. The plane was diverted to Algiers where 7 crew & 5 Israeli passengers were held hostage for 5 weeks until Israel agreed to exchange imprisoned Palestinian militants.
22 July 1983 – Dick Smith, Australian entrepreneur and adventurer, completes first solo helicopter flight around the world.
22 July 1983 – World’s coldest day recorded at Vostok, Antarctica where the temperature dropped to -89.2oC (128.6oF)