2006-Jul-14, Friday
Engh...hit me again...
2006-Jul-14, Friday 10:36 am
Gosh, but today has been bad. I just haven’t been feeling well for a while, and what happens tonight? The power goes out. Around 1:30ish someone crashed into the telephone pole at the front of our street. We didn’t get the power back till just after 7 this morning =.= We still don’t have cable either. I’ve been passing the time by watching Fruits Basket. Over-all a terrible night. Let’s face it, half the battle for a good-night’s sleep is staying asleep. I tossed and turned all night through. I feel so tired and my stomach’s really starting to get on my nerves. I hope work passes quickly today -.-
Oh yeah...we have a mandatory ‘sound’ meeting tonight at church. Yay...I hope it doesn’t last too long.
Other things on the radar: Mom and I are going to window shop Saturday, our main stop being Bed, Bath and Beyond. Also, we want to go see the new POTC movie (who doesn’t?). I’ve also been kinda working on my little Jellies™. I’ve been trying to make new faces for them. I’m no artist by any means, but anime faces are pretty easy to draw, so that always works best.
Ok /sigh. Guess that’s all for this post. Must go put on that wretched make up. Ta.
Your Love Number is 1 |
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Your Daily Reference
2006-Jul-14, Friday 11:12 pm
On This Day: Friday July 14, 2006
This is the 195th day of the year, with 170 days remaining in 2006.
Fact of the Day: The Flintstones
The Flintstones was the first animated television sitcom created for adults and one of the first cartoons to air during prime time. Created by Hanna-Barbera Studios in 1960, the show was based on "The Honeymooners" television program. The original title for the show was "The Flagstones," but was changed to "The Flintstones" to avoid confusion with the characters in the popular "Hi and Lois" comic strip, the Flagstones.Holidays
- France: Bastille Day.
- Feast day of St. Marcellinus or Marchelm, St. Camillus de Lellis, St. Ulric of Zell, and St. Deusdedit of Canterbury.
Events
- 1099 - During the First Crusade, Christian knights from Europe captured Jerusalem and began massacring the city's Muslim and Jewish population.
- 1789 - The French Revolution began as Parisian revolutionaries and mutinous troops stormed and dismantled the Bastille, a royal fortress that had come to symbolize the tyranny of the Bourbon monarchs.
- 1798 - Congress passed the Sedition Act, making it a federal crime to publish false, scandalous, or malicious writing about the United States government.
- 1867 - Alfred Nobel demonstrated dynamite for the first time at a quarry in England.
- 1868 - Alvin J. Fellows of New Haven, Connecticut patented the tape measure.
- 1914 - Robert H. Goddard of Worcester, Massachusetts patented liquid rocket fuel.
- 1933 - Germany outlawed all political parties except the Nazi Party.
- 2000 - A Florida jury ordered five major tobacco companies to pay smokers a record $145 billion in punitive damages.
Births
- 1834 - James McNeill Whistler, American-born painter, designer.
- 1858 - Emmeline Pankhurst, British suffragist, founder of the Women's Social and Political Union.
- 1903 - Irving Stone (Tennenbaum), American novelist.
- 1904 - Isaac Bashevis Singer, Polish author.
- 1910 - William Hanna, American cartoonist.
- 1912 - Woody Guthrie, American folk singer and songwriter.
- 1913 - Gerald R. Ford (Leslie King, Jr.), 38th President of the United States of America (1974-77).
- 1917 - Douglas Edwards, American newscaster, TV's first evening news anchor.
- 1918 - Ingmar Bergman, Swedish movie director.
- 1927 - John Chancellor, American radio/TV newscaster.
Deaths
- 1965 - Adlai Stevenson, United States political leader who helped found the United Nations.