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Some countries like Germany, Zimbabwe, Iraq, Iran just have a bad reputation. There are, of course, others I won’t get into (I’m looking at you North Korea). But other countries like Holland, Canada and most of Scandinavia are looked at as the good side of our small, orbiting pile of rock. Yet these nations aren’t [...]
Posted by Eric Yosomono on Thursday, April 12, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under History · Tagged adolf hitler, Bhutan, Bosnia, Eric Yosomono, Gaijinass.com, Germany, Ireland, Island Of Run, Jeju, korean war, leopold II, Nazi Germany, New Amsterdam, North Korea, norway, Norwegian Navy, Nutmeg, Nutmeg Island, Poland, REpublic of Ireland, Sarajevo, Serbia, South Korea, South Korean government, Sweden, Switzerland, The Netherlands
Any soccer fanatic knows that this sport has a way of rousing the emotions within us—either while talking about the sport, watching it on television, or most commonly, while playing it. Though this may be far truer for some of us than others, we’ve all experienced these feelings, ranging from elation to rage, or have [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Tuesday, August 23, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under People, Sports · Tagged 1962 World Cup, Battle of Old Trafford, Captain, Chile, Chuck Norris, English footballers, Eric Cantona, Eric Cantona Kung-fu, FIFA 100, food fight, football, Football in France, Football in the United Kingdom, Gennaro Gattuso, Ken Aston, Kieron Dyer, Lee Bowyer, Manchester United, Mexico, Misconduct, Netherlands, Newcastle, player, Portugal, Rafa Marquez, Santiago, Santiago Metropolitan Region, soccer, Sport in Europe, Sports, tackle, the 2002 World Cup, The Netherlands, United States, War_Conflict, Wayne Rooney, world cup
The first of April is widely recognized and celebrated as All Fools’ Day. The master of irony, Mark Twain, once said that “April 1. is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are on the other three hundred and sixty-four”. Believe it or not, some of the biggest companies and governments get [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Friday, April 1, 2011 at 12:04 pm
Filed under Holidays, Humor · Tagged April Fools' Day, Associated Press, Asterix, Astronomer, AUSTRALIAN ASSOCIATED PRESS PTY LIMITED, author, Barry Cunliffe, BBC Radio, BBC Radio 2, Belgium, British Broadcasting Corporation, British Foreign Office, Brussels, Brussels-Capital Region, comics, Congress, Constantine, correspondent, Dallas, Edward Kennedy, European Union, favorite food, Feralmone, Fiction, France, Guinea, Hitler, Human Interest, Information Highway, Internet usage, John Dvorak, Joseph Boskin, Jovian-Plutonian gravitational effect, King, Lannion, Minister, National Public Radio, Netherlands, normal food, notable history professor, Obelix, Oxford University, Patrick Galliou, Patrick Leahy, Patrick Moore, PC Magazine, Poland, president, Professor, Rene Goscinny, reporter, Rich Little, Richard Nixon, Sveriges Television, Sveriges Television Aktiebolag, Sweden, Texas, The Guardian, The Netherlands, the Times, THE TIMES HERALD COMPANY, Tristan Garel Jones, twitter, Twitter Inc, United Kingdom, United States, University of Brest
In war, there are winners and losers. Sometimes an army is defeated because they simply faced a larger and more powerful foe. Other times they lose because of some bizarre set of circumstances no one could have foreseen, or because they were simply outwitted by a cunning adversary. Sometimes an army is even dealt a [...]
Posted by Jeff Danelek on Tuesday, February 15, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under History, People · Tagged 1st Earl Haig, Admiral, adolf hitler, Africa, aggressive and capable commander, Ambrose Burnside, Army, artillery officer, author, bad General, bad officer, Baghdad, Bataan, Bataan,Philippines, Battle of Passchendaele, Battle of the Somme, Battle of Verdun, British Army, British Expeditionary Force in France, British knights, Busan,South Korea, Butcher, Caen, Colorado, Colorado,United States, commander, competent military commander, Confederate Army, Congress, cuba, decent military governor, Denver, Denver,Colorado,United States, Doug MacArthur, Douglas Haig, Douglas MacArthur, egypt, El Alamein, El Alamein,Matruh,Egypt, Erwin Rommel, Field Marshall, France, French Army, French government, General, George Armstrong Custer, George B. McClellan, George McClellan, German army, Germany, good military leader, Guinea, Gunichi Mikawa, head, Honor, incompetent commander, Iran, Iraq, Islamic Republic of Iran, Japan, Japanese Navy, Joe Hooker, Joseph Stalin, Korea, Kuwait, Leyte Gulf, Libbie, Like Hitler, Lincoln, Marshall Bernard Montgomery, Marshall Erwin Rommel, Mexican Army, Mexico, military commander, military leader, military officer, Military personnel, military strategist, Military strategy, Napoleon, Netherlands, Newfoundland Regiment, North Africa, North Korean Army, officer, PEARL HARBOR, Persian Gulf, Philippines, president, presidential election, Pusan, quality commander, Robert Georges Nivelle, Robert Nivelle, Roosevelt, Ruhr Valley, Saddam Hussein, Santa Anna, Santa Anna,Texas,United States, satellite state, Sicily, Sicily,Italy, Solomon Islands, The Netherlands, the Philippines, truman, Union army, Union General, United Kingdom, United Nations, United States, United States Navy, War_Conflict, Washington, Washington,United States, www.ourcuriousworld.com
By definition, a marathon is a long-distance running event that is officially listed at 26 miles long. The marathon dates back all the way to the time of the Greeks when a messenger named Pheidippides supposedly ran for miles and miles from a battlefield near the town of Marathon to Athens to announce the Persians [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Tuesday, November 16, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre · Tagged altitude sickness, Amman,Amman Governorate,Jordan, Arctic Circle, Association of International Marathons and Distance Races, Athens, Athens,Greece, average runner, Badwater, Badwater,California,United States, Boston Marathon, Boston,Massachusetts,United States, British Columbia, British Columbia,Canada, California, California,United States, Chicago,Illinois,United States, Devil’s Golf Course, Distance Races, famous marathons, greenland, hardest marathons, India, Indus Valley, Inez-Anne Haagen, Jan Turner, Marathons, Midnight Sun Marathon, Moroccan Desert, nepal, Netherlands, New York City,New York,United States, norway, olympic games, Olympic sports, Omsk,Russia, Qiang Tong, runner, Running, South Africa, Sports, St. George Marathon, Stockholm, Stockholm,Södermanland,Sweden, the Midnight Sun Marathon, The Netherlands, Tibetan Plateau, Tony Hunt, tough races, Tromsø Bridge, Ultramarathon
Halloween is one of the creepiest times of the year. The holiday was molded from ancient Celtic practices, religious rituals, and European folk traditions. Halloween is a time for celebration, candy, and ghostly superstition. The day has long been thought of a time when the dead come alive and watch over the land. These spirits [...]
Posted by Bryan Johnson on Friday, October 22, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, History, Holidays, Travel · Tagged Africa, Albert, America, Americas, author, Battle of Okinawa, BBC, Blue Bell, Blue Bell Hill, British Broadcasting Corporation, Bryan Johnson, buffalo, Bund, Burke, Camp Scott, canada, Canadian National Railway, Canadian National Railway Company, castle site, Chidester Mill, Clinton, commander, Corll Candy Company, counselor, Crime, Crime in the United States, David Brooks, Dean, Dean Corll, Doris Denise Milner, Doylestown, Durham, East Africa, Eastern Air Lines, Eastern Air Lines Inc, Edinburgh, Egypt Road Bridge, Elmer Wayne Henley, emperor, Energy, energy surrounding, england, Europe, France, Gene Leroy Hart, Germany, Girl Scout camp, Great Britain, Guadalupita, halloween, Hare, Heights Boulevard, Heights Elementary School, Hirohito, Houston, Houston Heights, Human height, Inc., Indian Ocean, Japan, Japanese government, Japanese military, Jefferson County, Ku Klux Klan, L-1011, Lake Sam Rayburn, large archeological site, large mining boom, law indicating, Liberty Township, Lori Lee Farmer, mainstream media, Mariana Islands, Maud Hughes Bridge, Maud Hughes Road Bridge, Mayes County, Mayes County Jail, Medway, MERCAT TOURS, metal warehouse, Mexico, Michele Guse, Missouri, Mount Tapochau, Mun, Netherlands, New Jersey, New Mexico, Norrie Rowan, North Bridge, Northern Mariana Islands, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oklahoma police, Pacific Ocean, Passaic County, PERA Building, priest, prince, Richard Cross, Richard Kuklinski, Rogue Hollow Bridge, Rogues’ Hollow Bridge, Saipan, Salem, Santa Fe River, Saskatchewan, Scotland, Screaming Bridge of Maud Hughes Road, Snake creek, South America, South Bridge, Spring creek, St. Louis, State Highway, Stockholm, Sweden, Södermanland, Tanzania, Texas, The Netherlands, Tim Kerley, transportation, United Kingdom, United States, United States Army, United States' Commonwealth Day, USD, Weird NJ, West Milford, Yellowstone River, Yi script
The lights have gone out in South Africa and the trophy has gone back to Spain for the next four years. So while we all relive all the excitement that the world’s largest sporting event has to offer, we reflect on the players who made the World Cup the dramatic clash of nations it always [...]
Posted by Loni Perry on Monday, July 26, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under People, Sports · Tagged Andrés Iniesta, Arjen Robben, Barcelona, brazil, David Villa, FIFA, football, Football in Spain, footballer, Golden Boot awards, Iker Casillas, left winger, Luis Suarez, Maicon, Manchester United, Mesut Ozil, midfielder, Netherlands, soccer, South Africa, Spain, Spain national football team, Spanish Cup, Sports, the 2006 World Cup, the 2010 FIFA Club World Cup, the 2010 FIFA World Cup, the 2010 UEFA Champions League, the FIFA World Cup, The Netherlands, the World Cup, Thomas Mueller, top 10 soccer players, top 10 word cup players, UEFA Euro, UEFA European Football Championship, Uruguay, Wayne Rooney, Wesley Sneijder, World Cup title, World Cup tournament, Xavi
As one of the most influential directors of all time, many of Alfred Hitchcock’s films have become permanent classics of the cinema. Psycho, Rear Window, Vertigo, North by Northwest, and The Birds are just some of his most popular titles. Audiences all over the world know his movies, but few people know just how many [...]
Posted by Shell Harris on Thursday, June 10, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged academy awards, aircraft factory worker, alfred hitchcock, Amsterdam, auteur, bad tempered bartender, Balestrero, Barry Kane, best directors, Blackmail, Bob Rusk, Boulder Dam, british films, California, cary grant, Charlotte Inwood, Christian Dior, Christian Dior S.A., cinematic devices, Detective, director of the suspense/thriller genre, director of thrillers, Entertainment_Culture, Erica Burgoyne, Eve Gill, ffolliot, ffollliiot, film, Foreign Correspondent, Frenzy, George Sanders, Grand Hotel, Greater London, Henry Fonda, Hitchcock, Hitchcockian, http://forgottenclassicsofyesteryear.blogspot.com/, I Confess, Jane Wyman, Joel McCrea, John Forsythe, Johnny Jones, Jonathan Cooper, Lifeboat, local police Chief Constable, London, Marlene Dietrich, Michael William Logan, mid-Atlantic, Mount Rushmore, Mystery films, Nathaniel Hood, Netherlands, New York, New York City, North by Northwest, North Holland, Northwest, Notorious, Paramount films, Patricia Martin, priest, Psycho, Rear Window, reluctant billboard model, reporter, Richard Blaney, Robert Tisdall, Romance films, Rope, Sam Marlowe, Scotland Yard, Scott Ffolliot, Shadow of a Doubt, Spellbound, Spy films, Statue of Liberty, Strangelove, Strangers on a Train, Taxi Driver, The Birds, The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog, The Netherlands, The Trouble with Harry, The Wrong Man, top ten Hitchcock, TopTenz.net, United Kingdom, United States, United States Navy, Van Meer, Vertigo, Young and Innocent
Music is truly a gift. A gift for those who are talented enough to provide it, and a gift to all of us who are able to listen to it and enjoy the sounds we love to hear. In today’s world, the number of musical genres is truly over the top. From metal, to techno, [...]
Posted by Ash Grant on Thursday, May 27, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Music · Tagged A Bigger Bang Tour, AC/DC, Angus Young, Bad World Tour, bands, Belgium, best concerts, best tours ever, Blood on the Dance Floor, Boston, britney spears, California, Chile, concert tours, Cyndi Lauper, Entertainment_Culture, Fenway Park, Forty Licks, Germany, Hard Candy, hawaii, Interpol, john mayer, Kanye West, Leipzig, lenny kravitz, Licks Tour, live music, Malcolm Young, Massachusetts, metallica, Michael Jackson, Motley Crue, Muse, Music, Music groups, O2 Arena, opening act, Pearl Jam, People, Poland, PopMart Tour, Portugal, REM, Rolling Stones, Saxony, Snow Patrol, successful concerts, Switzerland, The Best of 1980–1990, the Black Eyed Peas, The Netherlands, The O2 arena, The Rolling Stones, Tina Turner, top ten concerts, top ten tours, tours concerts, U2, United States