I saw the headline, looked up the word. OK, clicked on story. First bullet?
CNN had a remarkable string of chyrons — the headline-esque text used to supplement news broadcasts — after President Donald Trump spent most of Monday’s coronavirus briefing lashing out at his perceived foes — airing a video that was described as propaganda and claiming he had “total” authority as president.
Elvis never did a concert outside the US or Canada . The main reason was his manager Tom Parker (real name Andreas Cornelis van Kuijk from the Netherlands ) was an illegal immigrant and was afraid if he left the US he would be caught when he came back in and he did not want Elvis to do overseas concerts.
When you move your computer mouse, the mouse sends data to your computer telling it how far you moved it, as in 14 mouse units to the left and 17 mouse units up. The computer then positions the cursor on the screen appropriately.
One “mouse unit” (the smallest amount of movement that the mouse can detect) is called a Mickey.
Most of the place names using ‘Columbia’ were not named directly for Christopher Columbus, but for Columbia, a personification of the New World. If you’ve ever watched old Three Stooges shorts, or possibly other productions of the old Columbia Pictures, you’ve seen Columbia in the introductory credits.
I worked with a guy who taught Elvis how to shoot his rifle in the Army. He got no special treatment and did not want any. He was treated like everyone else.
Lon Warneke (the Arkansas Hummingbird) was the only man ever to play in the major leagues (192-121 as a pitcher) and also umpire in All-Star and World Series games.
He later became a county judge in Arkansas. One time the defendants in his courtroom were several boys who’d stolen some boxes of what they thought were chocolates and ate them all, only to find out they were actually chocolate-flavored laxatives. Warneke told them they’d been punished enough.
Well according to Wikipedia, Acoma Pueblo has no firm, verifiable establishment date; the earliest, as attested/claimed by the Acoma people themselves, would date to 1144 for the oldest brick structures there (the site has been continuously inhabited for far longer, but we’re talking about “oldest man-made structure in North America” here). And if we’ll allow for St. Bernard’s original construction date in Spain to count, even though it was obviously dissassembled and reassembled, does not include everything from the original site, and has been scattered slightly in reassembly as well - then it was completed in 1141.
Missed it by that much!
But honestly, Acoma Pueblo is much more impressive as being continuously inhabited.
Not a bridge in London but the London bridge – the one that was erected in 1831 to replace the one of “London Bridge is falling down” fame.
Rumor had it that Robert McCulloch, of chainsaw fame and guy who developed Lake Havasu City, thought he was buying the Tower Bridge but he hotly denied it.
Although the whole bridge was bought, what you see now is a facade on a concrete understructure. The rest of the bridge was cut into one-inch cubes for souvenirs. Property owners in Lake Havasu City, including my family, were sent one but ours disappeared sometime in the last fifty years.
It was built on the neck of a peninsula then after completion a canal was dug under it to turn the peninsula into an island and make an excuse to have it in the first place.
On this day in 2017, the White Sox’s starting outfield all shared the same last name – Garcia. Avisail in left, Euery in center and Willy in right. Not even three Alous, in San Francisco, started the same game in the outfield.