23 February 2017 – shebeen

23 February 2017

shebeen

[shuh-been]

noun, Scot., Irish English, South African.

1. a tavern or house where liquor is sold illegally.

Origin of shebeen

Irish, English
1780-1790; Irish síbín illicit whiskey, place where such whiskey is sold (ellipsis from teach síbín shebeen house), orig., a unit of measure < English chopin1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for shebeen

Historical Examples

shebeen, an unlicensed place where spirituous liquors are illegally sold.
The Slang Dictionary
John Camden Hotten

“‘Twas at Micky’s shebeen that they had the first encounther wid the inimy,” said old Martin.
Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 148, January 20th 1915
Various

shebeen or sheebeen; an unlicensed public-house or alehouse where spirits are sold on the sly.
English As We Speak It in Ireland
P. W. Joyce

A reconciliation took place, and in due time it was determined that Peter, as he understood poteen, should open a shebeen house.
Phil Purcel, The Pig-Driver; The Geography Of An Irish Oath; The Lianhan Shee
William Carleton

The gabble and laugh were again heard loud and hearty, and the public and shebeen houses once more became crowded.
The Hedge School; The Midnight Mass; The Donagh
William Carleton

There was a bitter taste in his mouth, and a pain in his ear where somebody’d hit him during a shebeen brawl the night before.
The Buttoned Sky
Geoff St. Reynard

Schele de Vere derives it from the French cabane, but it seems rather more likely that it is from the Irish shebeen.
The American Language
Henry L. Mencken

On reaching St. John’s he would go to a shebeen that he knew, in a narrow and secluded back street, and there rent a room.
The Harbor Master
Theodore Goodridge Roberts

In this lane at the time to which we allude the widow Mulready kept the shebeen shop, of which mention has before been made.
The Macdermots of Ballycloran
Anthony Trollope

Anagram

bee hens
she been


Today’s quote

I read, I study, I examine, I listen, I think, and out of all that I try to form an idea into which I put as much common sense as I can.

– Marquis de Lafayette


On this day

23 February 1836 – the Battle of the Alamo commences. It was a 13 day siege and a pivotal point in the Texas Revolution, in which Mexican forces attacked Texan forces stationed at the Alamo Mission. All 100 Texans were killed. Several months earlier, all Mexicans had been driven out of Mexican Texas.

23 February 1896 – the Tootsie Roll is invented.

23 February 1915 – death of Robert Smalls, African American who was born into slavery in Beaufort, South Carolina. When he was a teenager, his master sent him to Charleston to work. Smalls ended up working on boats and became adept at all manner of work around wharves and boats, including stevedore, rigger, sail maker and wheelman (essentially a pilot, although slaves were not granted that title). During the Civil War, he was asked to steer a lightly armed Confederate vessel, the CSS Planter. One evening, after the white crew members disembarked, Smalls dressed in the captain’s uniform and commandeered the vessel with the help of seven other slaves, sailing towards Union ships. On the way, he picked up his wife and child, as well as the families of the other slave crewman. As they neared the Union ships, Smalls flew a white bed-sheet from the mast as a symbol of surrender. Smalls was treated as a hero by the Union. He later successfully petitioned President Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, to allow black men to fight for the Union. Stanton signed an order allowing 5,000 black men to enlist with Union forces. Smalls was made pilot of the USS Keokuk. After the Civil War, Smalls returned to Beaufort and bought his former master’s house. Smalls became a businessman, operating a store for freed men. He also became politically active, joining the Republican Party. In 1868 Smalls was elected to the State House of Representatives. He worked on passing the Civil Rights Bill and in 1868, the Republican government enacte the Civil Rights Act, which gave citizenship to all Americans, regardless of race. Smalls was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1874, and served two terms.In 1912, Smalls famously described the Republican Party as, ‘the party of Lincoln … which unshackled the necks of four million human beings‘. In 1913, Smalls stopped a lynch mob from lynching two black men, after he warned their mayor that blacks he’d sent through the city would burn the town down if the mob wasn’t stopped. The mayor and sheriff stopped the mob. Smalls inspirational life went from slave, to hijacker, to defector, to politician and civil rights campaigner. Born 5 April 1839.

23 February 1944 – the Soviet Union begins the forced deportation of Chechen and Ingush people from the North Caucasus to Central Asia.

23 February 1954 – Polio vaccines first become available.

23 February 1958 – Five time Formula 1 racing car driver, Juan Manuel Fangio, is kidnapped by Cuban rebels led by Fidel Castro. The Batista Dictatorship had established a non-Formula 1 race (the Cuban Grand Prix) in 1957, so the rebels were hoping to embarrass Batista by forcing him to cancel the race. The race went ahead and the captors let Fangio listen to it on the radio. Fangio was released unharmed. Castro’s forces overthrew Batista in January 1959 and cancelled the race that year.

23 February 1987 – the light from Supernova 1987A reaches Earth, 170,000 years after it exploded. The supernova was 1 million trillion miles away.

23 February 2010 – death of Cuban plumber and activist, Orlando Zapata. Zapata was arrested in 2002 by Cuban police for contempt. In 2003 he was arrested during a crackdown on dissidents, for undertaking a hunger strike aimed at securing the release of prisoners. He was sentenced to 36 years imprisonment. Amnesty International recognised him as a ‘prisoner of conscience’. In December 2009 he began a hunger strike which ultimately led to his death. Born 15 May 1967.

22 February 2017 – morass

22 February 2017

morass

[muh-ras]

noun

1. a tract of low, soft, wet ground.
2. a marsh or bog.
3. marshy ground.
4. any confusing or troublesome situation, especially one from which it is difficult to free oneself; entanglement.

Origin of morass

Dutch, Middle Dutch, Old French

1645-1655; < Dutch moeras, alteration (by association with moer marsh; cf. moor1) of Middle Dutch maras < Old French mareis < Germanic. See marsh

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for morass

Contemporary Examples

His life became a morass of anger and self-destruction: suicide attempts, gang activity.
Carmine Galasso’s ‘Crosses’: Childhoods Robbed by the Church
The Daily Beast
March 10, 2013

CEO waded into the morass and basically declared himself Scientology Enemy No. 1.
Rupert Murdoch Attacks Scientology Because It Once Courted His Son Lachlan
Paula Froelich
July 1, 2012

The facts on the ground are anything but auspicious for America injecting itself into an intra-Arab morass, writes Lloyd Green.
Obama’s Syrian “Red Line” Could Return Us To The Mistakes of Iraq
Lloyd Green
May 4, 2013

The facts on the ground are anything but auspicious for America injecting itself into an intra-Arab morass.
Obama’s Syrian “Red Line” Could Return Us To The Mistakes of Iraq
Lloyd Green
May 4, 2013

He can bring about two states living in peace and security, or continue the drift into the morass of an unsustainable occupation.
Come Clean, Mr. Prime Minister
Stephen Robert
May 31, 2012

Historical Examples

I should think some of them might lead less frequently to bramble and morass.
A Woman of Genius
Mary Austin

He knew every inch of the land, the river, the morass, and the commanding hill.
Lafayette
Martha Foote Crow

Humor alone could accomplish Munchausen’s feat, and draw itself by its own hair out of the morass.
Library of the World’s Best Literature, Ancient and Modern, Vol. 16
Various

The street had been transformed into a morass of sticky mud by the storm.
L’Assommoir
Emile Zola

The Pennsylvania regiment to which the Wyoming troops belonged, occupied the strip of woods near the morass.
In the Days of Washington
William Murray Graydon

Anagram

so rams
mars so


Today’s quote

I am a deeply superficial person.

– Andy Warhol


On this day

22 February 1512 – Death of Amerigo Vespucci in Seville, Spain. Italian explorer, financier, navigator and cartographer. Vespucci believed that Christopher Columbus’s discovery of the ‘New World’ or ‘East Asia’ (now known as the Bahamas) and the land mass beyond it, was not part of Asia, but a separate ‘super-continent’. America is named after Vespucci. Born 9 March 1454 in Florence, Italy.

22 February 1962 – birth of Steve Irwin, ‘The Crocodile Hunter’, Australian wildlife expert and television personality. (Died 4 September 2006).

22 February 1987 – death of Andy Warhol. (Born Andrew Warhola). American artist who was a pioneer of pop art. American writer, Gore Vidal, once said, ‘Andy Warhol is the only genius I’ve ever known with an IQ of 60‘ Born 6 August 1928.

21 February 2017 – ptarmigan

21 February 2017

ptarmigan

[tahr-mi-guh n]

noun, plural ptarmigans (especially collectively) ptarmigan.

1. any of several grouses of the genus Lagopus, of mountainous and cold northern regions, having feathered feet.

Origin of ptarmigan

Scots Gaelic

1590-1600; pseudo-Greek spelling of Scots Gaelic tarmarchan, akin to Irish tarmanach

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ptarmigan

Historical Examples

The Iceland falcon and the ptarmigan have pretty much the same habitat, the one preying upon the other.
Poachers and Poaching
John Watson

The net was of service, not only for fish and beluga, but also for ptarmigan and foxes.
Short Sketches from Oldest America
John Driggs

At one time or another Elstead probably told the officers of the ptarmigan every detail of his strange twelve hours in the abyss.
The Plattner Story and Others
H. G. Wells

He knew clearly what was to be done, and this he did by promptly eating the ptarmigan.
White Fang
Jack London

Eider-ducks, looms, and dovekies are abundant, as well as hares and ptarmigan.
In the Arctic Seas
Francis Leopold McClintock

Among birds, the ptarmigan is a fine example of protective colouring.
Little Masterpieces of Science:
Various

But that is the substance of the extraordinary story that Elstead related in fragments to the officers of the ptarmigan.
The Plattner Story and Others
H. G. Wells

The rise of the ptarmigan had another effect, on which the travellers had not counted.
The Big Otter
R.M. Ballantyne

The ptarmigan struggled against him, showering blows upon him with her free wing.
White Fang
Jack London

The only ornament which he allowed himself was the white wing of a ptarmigan.
The Prairie Chief
R.M. Ballantyne

Anagram

trim pagain
pig mantra
taping ram
A prim gnat


Today’s quote

There is not one big cosmic meaning for all, there is only the meaning we each give to our life, an individual meaning, an individual plot, like an individual novel, a book for each person.

– Anais Nin


On this day

21 February 1903 – birth of Anais Nin, French-Cuban author. Died 14 January 1977.

21 February 1965 – assassination of Malcolm X (born Malcolm Little), also known as El-Hajj Malik El-Shabazz, African-American Muslim minister and human rights activist. He campaigned for the rights of African-Americans. At the age of 20, while in prison, he joined the ‘Nation of Islam’, a group that preached black supremacy. He eventually became disillusioned with it and its leader, Elijah Muhammad. On 8 Mach 1964, he publicly announced he had the Nation of Islam. Malcolm X founded Muslim Mosque Inc and the Organisation of Afro-American Unity. He converted to Sunni Islam, revoked black supremacy and preached equal rights. He was assassinated on 21 February 1965 by three members of the Nation of Islam; Talmadge Hayer (also known as Thomas Hagan), Norman 3X Butler and Thomas 15X Johnson. All three were convicted, although Butler and Johnson maintained their innocence. Born 19 May 1925.

20 February 2017 – dada

20 February 2017

dada

[dah-dah]

noun, ( sometimes initial capital letter)

1. the style and techniques of a group of artists, writers, etc., of the early 20th century who exploited accidental and incongruous effects in their work and who programmatically challenged established canons of art, thought, morality, etc.

Origin of dada

1915-1920; < French: hobby horse, childish reduplication of da giddyap

Related forms

dadaism, noun
dadaist, noun
dadaistic, adjective
dadaistically, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dada

Contemporary Examples

Was one of dada ‘s fathers really such a mystery or did he show his true self in his art?
Man Ray Revealed
Philip Gefter
November 11, 2009

At Performa, Shana Lutker revisits a wild dada play that featured a nose and some lips.
A Performance Like a Punch in the Face
Blake Gopnik
November 19, 2013

The other day we got in the car and I had a CD on, and he said, “ dada, is that James Brown?”
Kentucky’s Finest Antihero: Walton Goggins on Justified’s Chameleon Villain
Allen Barra
February 10, 2014

Anagram

A dad


Today’s quote

Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have the exact measure of the injustice and wrong which will be imposed on them.

– Frederick Douglass


On this day

20 February 1895 – death of Frederick Douglass, considered to be the father of the American civil rights movement. Douglass was a social reformer,orator, writer, statesmen and preacher. He was born circa February 1818.

20 February 1967 – birth of Kurt Cobain. Lead singer, guitarist and lyricist for Nirvana. Died approximately 5 April 1994.

20 February 2005 – death of Hunter S. Thompson, American writer and gonzo journalist. Born 18 July 1937.

19 February 2017 – intercalate

19 February 2017

intercalate

[in-tur-kuh-leyt]

verb (used with object), intercalated, intercalating.

1. to interpolate; interpose.
2. to insert (an extra day, month, etc.) in the calendar.

Origin of intercalate

Latin

1605-1615; Latin intercalātus past participle of intercalāre to insert a day or month into the calendar, equivalent to inter- inter- + calā- (stem of calāre to proclaim) + -tus past participle suffix

Related forms

intercalative, adjective
unintercalated, adjective

Synonyms

1. interject, introduce, insinuate.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for intercalate Expand

Historical Examples

The rule was to intercalate a day in every fourth year (quarto quoque anno).
Plutarch’s Lives Volume III.
Plutarch

To prevent this it was customary at regular intervals to intercalate days or months.
History of Astronomy
George Forbes

The present appears the fittest place in which to intercalate remarks concerning them.
Luck or Cunning
Samuel Butler

So far it would suffice, in accounting for the facts, to intercalate between A and B a few terms, which would remain discrete.
The Foundations of Science: Science and Hypothesis, The Value of Science, Science and Method
Henri Poincar

‘They answered, “Thous hast dared to fix intercalations and new moons, by which nonconformity has arisen between Babylon and Palestine”.’
The Talmud, Introduction: Chapter 2
Translated by Joseph Barclary LLD
Hebrew Literature: Talmudic Treatises, Hebrew Melodies, and The Kabbalah …
By Epiphanius Wilson

Anagram

lacerate tin
racial tenet
clarinet tea
earn tactile
near lattice
certain tale
React Entail
Antic Relate
Tacit Leaner
Attic Leaner
Clan Iterate
Talc Retinae
A treacle tin


Today’s quote

Nothing gives a fearful man more courage than another’s fear.

– Umberto Eco


On this day

19 February 1950 – Cyprus independence is granted with the signing of a joint agreement by Britain, Greece and Turkey.

19 February 1980 – death of Ronald Belford ‘Bon’ Scott, Scottish-born Australian rock musician. Most famous as the lead-singer of legendary hard rock band, AC/DC. Scott died after choking on his own vomit following a heavy drinking session. Born 9 July 1946.

19 February 2006 – Hamas leader, Ismail Haniya, becomes Prime Minister of Palestine following Palestinian Legislative Council elections.

19 February 2008 – Fidel Castro retires as leader of Cuba after 49 years at the helm, following the revolution he led in 1959. At 81 years old, Castro had been unwell.

19 February 2016 – death of Umberto Eco. Italian writer, philosopher and semiotician. Author of novels, including ‘The Name of the Rose’, ‘Foucalt’s Pendulum’, ‘The Island of the Day Before’, ‘The Prague Cemetery’. Born 5 January 1932.

18 February 2017 – hauteur

18 February 2017

hauteur

[hoh-tur; French oh-tœr]

noun

1. haughty manner or spirit; arrogance.

Origin of hauteur

1620-1630; French, equivalent to haut high (see haughty ) + -eur -or1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for hauteur

Contemporary Examples

For all his reputation for hauteur, I would forever after remember this evidence of Vidal’s graciousness and self-confidence.
Putting Words in Gore Vidal’s Mouth—a Copywriter Recalls the 1982 Senate Campaign
Robert Chandler
August 5, 2012

Historical Examples

“I will not pretend to misunderstand your meaning,” he said, slowly and with hauteur.
The Mystery Girl
Carolyn Wells

He was also accused of hauteur and of an unsoldierly reserve with his brother officers.
White Lies
Charles Reade

I never heard a speaker or actor who could give such a sting to hauteur or the taunt.
Complete Prose Works
Walt Whitman

Then aloud he demanded, with hauteur : “Who do you wish to see, lady?”
A Little Miss Nobody
Amy Bell Marlowe

Into the manner of young Mr. Stuart Farquaharson came now the hauteur of dignified rebuke.
The Tyranny of Weakness
Charles Neville Buck

The hauteur of being one of the élite of Joralemon again flashed out.
The Trail of the Hawk
Sinclair Lewis

“I have always been that,” declared William, with just a touch of hauteur.
Miss Billy
Eleanor H. Porter

Of all nations on earth, they require to be treated with the most hauteur.
The Writings of Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson

“Not specially,” she said, with a sudden accession of hauteur.
The Mystery Girl
Carolyn Wells

Anagram

urea hut


Today’s quote

But which is the stone that supports the bridge?

– Kublai Khan


On this day

18 February 1294 – death of Kublai Khan, of the Mongol Empire. He was the grandson of Genghis Khan. In 1271, Kublai Khan established the Yuan Empire ruling over modern-day Mongolia, China and Korea. He became the first non-Chinese Emperor to conquer all of China. He was born on 23 February 1215.

18 February 1965 – Australian Freedom Rides led by Charles Perkins. The Freedom Rides were inspired by the Freedom Rides in America. Perkins and 33 others travelled by bus to numerous towns in New South Wales challenging and protesting against discrimination and segregation. They picketed pools, parks and pubs where aborigines were expected to be segregated. Some of the protests turned violent, such as in Moree and Walgett when locals attacked the protesters. One of the protesters was Jim Spigelman who became Lieutenant Governor of New South Wales and later, Chief Justice of New South Wales. Charles Perkins became the first aborigine to graduate from university.

17 February 2017 – willowwacks

17 February 2017

willowwacks

[wil-oh-waks]

noun, New England.

1. a wooded, uninhabited area.

Also, willywacks.

Origin of willowwacks

of uncertain origin

Dictionary.com

Example

The lonely willowwacks of New England provided an atmospheric location for the fertile imagination of horror writer, Stephen King.

Anagram

laws lick wow
awl wick owls


Today’s quote

What can be more stupid than to be in pain about future things and absent ones which at present are not felt?

– Giordano Bruno


On this day

17 February 1600 – death of Giordano Bruno, Italian Dominician friar, philosopher, mathematician, poet and astrologer. Bruno wrote extensively on the art of memory. proposed that the stars were distant suns and could have planets of their own with life on them. He also stated that the Communion couldn’t transform into the body of Christ (Transubstantiation). He also rejected other core Catholic tenets including the Trinity, eternal damnation, the divinity of Christ, and the virginity of Mary. For his scientific and religious views, he was charged with heresy and burned at the stake. Many regard him as the first martyr for science. Born 1548.

17 February 1933 – End of Prohibition, when the US Senate passes the Blaine Act.

17 February 1934 – birth of Barry Humphries, Australian comedian, famous for characters such as Dame Edna Everage and Sir Les Patterson.

17 February 2007 – Sylvester Stallone is held by Australian Customs for a couple of hours after prohibited items were confiscated from his baggage.

16 February 2017 – dapper

16 February 2017

dapper

[dap-er]

adjective

1. neat; trim; smart:
He looked very dapper in his new suit.
2. lively and brisk:
to walk with a dapper step.
3. small and active.

Origin of dapper

late Middle English Middle Dutch
1400-1450; late Middle English daper < Middle Dutch dapper nimble, stalwart; cognate with German tapfer brave

Related forms

dapperly, adverb
dapperness, noun
undapper, adjective

Synonyms

1. spruce, modish, jaunty, natty.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dapper

Contemporary Examples

A dapper man with a Georgian charm, Crumpton is sometimes called the “American James Bond.”
CIA’s Henry Crumpton on the Heroes You’ll Never Know
Miranda Green
November 14, 2012

There, the actor—dressed like a dapper, blood-soaked zombie—took on the Michael Jackson classic “Thriller.”
Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s 9 Best Musical Performances: Jimmy Fallon, Lady Gaga, More
Marlow Stern
September 26, 2013

The young actor has also gained marks for his dapper red-carpet style, which he credits to fashion designer Tom Ford.
Nicholas Hoult on ‘Warm Bodies,’ ‘X-Men,’ Jennifer Lawrence & More
Marlow Stern
January 31, 2013

Among the ghosts in that alluring photo is Harold L. “Doc” Humes, dapper in suit, vest, and bow tie.
Plimpton’s Crazy Co-Conspirator
Ronald K. Fried
December 7, 2008

One of the few exceptions is James Lindon, dapper director of PaceWildenstein, who always wears something interesting.
Venice by Foot
Bettina Von Hase
June 9, 2009

Historical Examples

It was Lasalle, and with him was a lame gentleman, very neatly dressed in black with dapper ruffles and cuffs.
The Exploits Of Brigadier Gerard
Arthur Conan Doyle

The dapper little officer in khaki was Aguinaldo, and this is the story of how I saw him.
Bamboo Tales
Ira L. Reeves

They went to where they found the dapper warriors standing in the court in a great press of welcoming knights.
The Nibelungenlied
Unknown

Major Forsyth arrived in time for tea, red-faced, dapper, and immaculate.
The Hero
William Somerset Maugham

A genial gentleman, the druggist, white-coated and dapper, stepping affably about the fragrant-smelling store.
Half Portions
Edna Ferber

Anagram

rapped
per pad


Today’s quote

It is part of the price of leadership of this great and free nation to be the target of clever satirists. You have given the gift of laughter to our people. May we never grow so somber or self-important that we fail to appreciate the humor in our lives.

– President Lyndon B. Johnson


On this day

16 February 1923 – the burial chamber of King Tutankhamen in Egypt is opened, after it was recently discovered by British archaeologist, Howard Carter. The tomb was 3,000 years old.

16 February 1936 – The left-wing Popular Front is elected to power in Spain. The Popular Front was a coalition of numerous Communist and Socialist parties, including the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), Communist Party of Spain (PCE), Worker’ Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), Republican Left (IR) and Republican Union Party (UR). The pact which enabled the formation of the Popular Front was supported by Galician (PG) and Catalan nationalists (ERC), the Workers’ General Union (UGT) and the anarchist trade union, Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT). The Popular Front had defeated the National Front (a coalition of right-wing parties) in the elections, and was formed to combat the rising tide of right-wing Fascism throughout Europe. In July 1936, conservative monarchists led by General Francisco Franco instigated a military coup that started the Spanish Civil War. Franco received backing from Mussolini and Hitler, while some of the left-wing forces, including the International Brigade (formed of volunteers from all over Europe) received backing from Stalin. British author, George Orwell, a democratic socialist, travelled to Spain and fought with the POUM because he wanted to help defeat Fascism. It was only be chance that Orwell didn’t join the International Brigade. The POUM (an anti-Stalinist Communist Party) was declared an illegal organisation in 1937 by the government in an effort by Communist forces to purge Troskyists, forcing Orwell to flee or face imprisonment. Orwell wrote of his Spanish Civil War experience in Homage to Catalonia. His experience made him a life-long anti-Stalinist and committed Democratic Socialist. In April 1939, Franco’s forces defeated the Popular Front, installing him as President. Franco ruled Spain with a military dictatorship until his death in 1975.

16 February 1959 – Fidel Castro sworn in as Prime Minister of Cuba after leading a successful revolution against the President Batista.

16 February 1983 – Ash Wednesday bush-fires burn more than 4,000km2 of land in South Australia and Victoria, killing 75 people (47 in Victoria and 28 in South Australia), destroying more than 3,700 buildings, and more than 2,500 people lost their homes.

15 February 2017 – samovar

15 February 2017

samovar

[sam-uh-vahr, sam-uh-vahr]

noun

1. a metal urn, used especially by Russians for heating water for making tea.

Origin of samovar

1820-1830; Russian samovár, equivalent to samo- self (see same ) + -var, noun derivative of varítʾ to cook, boil

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for samovar

Historical Examples

The samovar was brought in, and over hot tea and buns we speedily became acquainted.
In Search of a Siberian Klondike
Homer B. Hulbert

The maid brought in the samovar, and the conversation was interrupted.
Foma Gordyeff
Maxim Gorky

They have been ready since midnight, and the samovar also; you will drink a glass of tea, Excellencies.
The Red Symbol
John Ironside

Anagram

am savor
mars ova


Today’s quote

It seems, in fact, as though the second half of a man’s life is made up of nothing, but the habits he has accumulated during the first half.

– Fyodor Dostoevsky


On this day

15 February 1989 – the last Soviet troops leave Afghanistan after a 10 year occupation referred to as the Soviet Union’s ‘Vietnam’. The Soviets had invaded on 24 December 1979 in response to Afghan insurgents (armed by the United States) who had been attacking Soviet troops. The occupation lasts for 10 years and results in the deaths of between 600,000 and 2,000,000 Afghan civilians, as well as 6,000,000 refugees who fled to Pakistan and Iran. The cost of the Afghan occupation is a significant factor that led to the economic collapse of the Soviet Union. During the Soviet occupation, the United States funded Afghan resistance in the form of the Mujahideen and other militant Islamic groups, out of whom emerged Al Qaeda and the Taliban. The Afghan people continue to suffer and to comprise a significant portion of global refugee numbers because of the involvement of the USSR and the USA during this period.

14 February 2017 – bonce

14 February 2017

bonce

[bons]

noun, British Slang.

1. head; skull.

Origin of bonce

1860-1865; perhaps to be identified with bonce a large playing marble, perhaps representing dial. pronunciation of bounce; compare dial. (Yorkshire) bouncer large earthenware marble

Dictionary.com

Example

He dodged a bonce to the head.

Anagram

be con


Today’s quote

If evolution is outlawed, only outlaws will evolve.

– Jello Biafra


On this day

14 February – Valentine’s Day

14 February – International book giving day, focussing on giving books to children.You can participate by 1) give a book to a friend or family member, 2) leave a book in a waiting room for children to read, or 3) donate a gently used book to a local library, hospital or shelter, or to an organization that distributes used books to children in need internationally. http://bookgivingday.com

14 February 1779 – death of Captain James Cook, British explorer. Made three major voyages in which he discovered many of the islands of the south pacific, including the east coast of Australia. Cooktown, Queensland, is named after him. The house he grew up in was relocated from Yorkshire, England, to Melbourne, Australia and is open to visits (now known as Captain Cook’s Cottage and is situated in Fitzroy Gardens, Melbourne). Died 14 February 1779 after being stabbed by Hawaiians who credited their Chief Kalanimanokahoowaha (Kanaina) with the kill. Captain Cook’s body was then subjected a funeral ritual that was normally reserved for a Chief. Born 27 October 1728.

14 February 1929 – St Valentine’s Day massacre when Chicago gangster, Al Capone’s Italian gang killed seven of Bugs Moran’s Irish gang.

14 February 1966 – Australia introduces decimal currency, replacing pounds, shillings and pence with dollars and cents.

14 February 1989 – Police raid Rocking Horse Records in Brisbane, Queensland (which had long been seen as a Police State under the leadership of Premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen). 4ZZZ (another target of police raids during the 1980s) described the raid thus, ‘On this day in 1989 – Police raid long time 4ZZZ supporters Rocking Horse Records, then located at 158 Adelaide Street in the city. An undercover officer from the Licensing branch, came into the store seeking out rude records for a “wild valentine’s day party”, followed later that day by four uniformed police who raided the store. Owner Warwick Vere was charged with exhibiting and selling obscene material under the Vagrants, Gaming and Other Offences Act, but ultimately found not guilty. Albums included The Dead Kennedys “Give me Convenience” (featuring the classic ‘Too Drunk to F**k’), Guns n Roses “Appetite for Destruction” (available at many major chain stores at the time), the Hard-Ons “Dick Cheese” and The Champs “Do the Shag” (an instrumental album from the early 60s). In an interview with Gavin Sawford for Time Off Magazine, Dead Kennedy’s Jello Biafra commented: “if these attempts to shut down record stores because an instrumental band mention a type of carpet on their record helps to galvanise people to vote out the present administration, then by all means let’s see some more raids”.’ They also took a Sonic Youth album with the song, Master-Dik. Jello Biafra went on to state, ‘now if I’m a robber or a rapist in Brisbane, I should call the cops and report obscene records on the other side of town in store before I go out and commit a crime that harms real people, because obviously the cops don’t care about those kind of crimes’.