July 14, or Dr. Spock's Book and Kuzma - Damian Day
Zodiac Sign Cancer
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Cancer, July 14. Born on this day are convincing - and how!
If their strong and credible image is not enough to win over an opponent, they fill the gap with inimitable charm.
Some of them have an interlocutor to themselves from the very first meeting. The rest win hearts in exactly the opposite way: their approach is insinuating and invisible.
Those of them who at first give the impression of conservative or even colorless personalities, with their professionalism and objectivity, invariably achieve trust afterwards.
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Cancer men born on July 14:
- characterized by the following features:
- artistic,
- imaginative,
- adventurous,
- persistent.
- Cancer men, for the most part, are prone to excessive exaggeration of life problems - their depression and negative attitude can greatly spoil the impression.
- Refined, restless and ambiguous, Cancers can look capricious and speculate on their sophistication and mystery.
- But at the same time, Cancer men are loyal and faithful, especially in matters of love - they can fanatically idealize the object of their adoration.
Cancer women born on July 14:
- characterized by the following features:
- homely,
- gentle,
- affable.
Cancer women are divided into two types.
- The first is affectionate, shy and somewhat frigid women who amaze with their humility and readiness to cringe.
- The second, on the contrary, are bright, emotionally unstable, with high self-esteem.
Both types are suspicious, sensitive to criticism, prone to excessive drama, impressionable.
The first edition of Dr. Benjamin Spock's book "Child Care and Education" was published
July 14, 1946
Dr. Benjamin Spock
July 14, 1946
Dr. Benjamin Spock
During his long life, the famous American pediatrician Benjamin Spock wrote 13 books. However, it was the encyclopedia for parents - "A book of common sense about a child and care for him" brought worldly fame to a modest child doctor and a little-known psychoanalyst.
The first edition of this book was published on July 14, 1946. Benjamin Spock's best-selling book was read by millions of mothers. For the first year, 750,000 copies were sold without preliminary advertising. This sales volume continued for many years, bringing Spock's book in America to second place in popularity after the Bible. By the end of the century, the total circulation of the book exceeded 50 million. The book was translated into 42 foreign languages, including Thai, Tamil and Urdu.
However, not all ideas of Dr. Spock have passed the test of time. Some of them were even later recognized as extremely dangerous.
It is known that Spock introduced such moments as feeding by the hour, which led to the loss of milk in women and, accordingly, to the development of companies for the production of artificial mixtures.
The theory that children do not need to "pamper" with motion sickness, if they start to cry, has led, in the opinion of many modern psychologists, to the disruption of education in several generations, when the child perceives information from the mother at the tactile level.
Today is a summer Slavic holiday, dedicated to the day of memory of two unmercenaries - brothers Cosmas ( Kuzma) and Damian.
On Kuzminki, raspberries, gooseberries (which were added to dinner dishes, for example, to fried chicken) were harvested, haying were continued.
Kuzminki holiday was called "female brothery." The hostesses, redoing their affairs around the house and garden, in the evening went to the festive gatherings, which it was customary to pick up the clothes. Peasant women treated each other with the first berries, vegetables, mushrooms, homemade beer and liqueur. The feast was accompanied by songs, the exchange of useful tips and heart-to-heart talk.
1099 - Crusaders led by Gottfried of Bouillon began the storming of Jerusalem, which fell the next day.
1789 - Paris rebels stormed the prison-fortress Bastille, a symbol of royal despotism, and freed seven prisoners. This event is considered the beginning of the Great French Revolution and is celebrated as the national holiday of France. True, the majority of the jubilant people today no longer refer to this holiday as revolutionary. People no longer care what happened over 200 years ago. Something great is celebrated for every Frenchman, bright, joyful and patriotic.
1793 - born George Green, English mathematician and self-taught physicist, the first to acquaint British scientists with successes in mathematical analysis achieved by their "continental" colleagues, the author of fundamental works in mathematical physics, the creator of a number of mathematical "tools" without which modern theoretical physics impossible, the founder of the Cambridge school of mathematical physics.
1795 - the area of the name of the French Revolution, where the guillotine had recently stood, which took the life of Robespierre and its 22 supporters, received a new name - the Place de la Concorde. It happened on the sixth anniversary of the Bastille. In general, the square was architecturally decorated in 1763 and was given the birth name of Louis XV, at the same time they set up its equestrian statue. The king, who said that “after us even a flood,” lasted on a stone pedestal for 26 years.
1867 - in the Redhill, Surrey (Great Britain), Alfred Nobel demonstrated dynamite for the first time.
1903 - Irving Stone was born, an American writer, famous biographical novels about the life of Vincent Van Gogh, Jack London, Sigmund Freud, Charles Darwin and others.
1910 - William Hanna was born, an American animator, together with Joseph Barbera who created Tom and Jerry.
1914 - born Joe Schuster, a Canadian artist who painted Superman.
1916 - Tristan Tzara published the Dadaist manifesto in Zurich. Dadaism, formed among the anarchist intelligentsia of Switzerland as a protest against the 1st World War, was a kind of artistic irrational brataism and expressed in meaningless combinations of words and sounds, in scrawl, wall inscriptions, pseudo-drawing, a set of random objects.
1918 - Ingmar Bergman, Swedish film director, was born.
1933 - first cartoon by Max Fleischer about sailor Popeye - “Popeye The Sailor”.
1946 - first edition of Dr. Benjamin Spock’s book ''Child Care and Upbringing'' was published. This book has become a desktop already for the fourth generation of parents. It is said that only the Bible was published in the same large quantities in the world.
1952 - American company ''General Motors'' announced that they are the first in the world to start installing air conditioners in cars.
1953 - Didier Marouani (Ekama), French musician, composer was born.
1955 - In Anaheim, California, south of Los Angeles, the American "King of Animation" and the successful film business owner Walt Disney held a televised opening ceremony of the "Disneyland", a grand theme park for children (and their parents), embodying life is a magical land of cute characters from his famous cartoons. By 1985, 250 million visitors had visited Disneyland. In 1971, the second American "Disneyland" appeared in Florida, in 1983 - a similar park opened near Tokyo, in 1992 - near Paris.
1966 - Matthew Fox, American actor (“Lost”) was born.
1967 - Convention, establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization signed.
1976 - death penalty is abolished in Canada.
Holidays
In Folks
Summer Kuzminki
Today is a summer Slavic holiday, dedicated to the day of memory of two unmercenaries - brothers Cosmas ( Kuzma) and Damian.
On Kuzminki, raspberries, gooseberries (which were added to dinner dishes, for example, to fried chicken) were harvested, haying were continued.
Kuzminki holiday was called "female brothery." The hostesses, redoing their affairs around the house and garden, in the evening went to the festive gatherings, which it was customary to pick up the clothes. Peasant women treated each other with the first berries, vegetables, mushrooms, homemade beer and liqueur. The feast was accompanied by songs, the exchange of useful tips and heart-to-heart talk.
Also on July 14...
1789 - Paris rebels stormed the prison-fortress Bastille, a symbol of royal despotism, and freed seven prisoners. This event is considered the beginning of the Great French Revolution and is celebrated as the national holiday of France. True, the majority of the jubilant people today no longer refer to this holiday as revolutionary. People no longer care what happened over 200 years ago. Something great is celebrated for every Frenchman, bright, joyful and patriotic.
1793 - born George Green, English mathematician and self-taught physicist, the first to acquaint British scientists with successes in mathematical analysis achieved by their "continental" colleagues, the author of fundamental works in mathematical physics, the creator of a number of mathematical "tools" without which modern theoretical physics impossible, the founder of the Cambridge school of mathematical physics.
1795 - the area of the name of the French Revolution, where the guillotine had recently stood, which took the life of Robespierre and its 22 supporters, received a new name - the Place de la Concorde. It happened on the sixth anniversary of the Bastille. In general, the square was architecturally decorated in 1763 and was given the birth name of Louis XV, at the same time they set up its equestrian statue. The king, who said that “after us even a flood,” lasted on a stone pedestal for 26 years.
1867 - in the Redhill, Surrey (Great Britain), Alfred Nobel demonstrated dynamite for the first time.
1903 - Irving Stone was born, an American writer, famous biographical novels about the life of Vincent Van Gogh, Jack London, Sigmund Freud, Charles Darwin and others.
1910 - William Hanna was born, an American animator, together with Joseph Barbera who created Tom and Jerry.
1914 - born Joe Schuster, a Canadian artist who painted Superman.
1916 - Tristan Tzara published the Dadaist manifesto in Zurich. Dadaism, formed among the anarchist intelligentsia of Switzerland as a protest against the 1st World War, was a kind of artistic irrational brataism and expressed in meaningless combinations of words and sounds, in scrawl, wall inscriptions, pseudo-drawing, a set of random objects.
1918 - Ingmar Bergman, Swedish film director, was born.
1933 - first cartoon by Max Fleischer about sailor Popeye - “Popeye The Sailor”.
1946 - first edition of Dr. Benjamin Spock’s book ''Child Care and Upbringing'' was published. This book has become a desktop already for the fourth generation of parents. It is said that only the Bible was published in the same large quantities in the world.
1952 - American company ''General Motors'' announced that they are the first in the world to start installing air conditioners in cars.
1953 - Didier Marouani (Ekama), French musician, composer was born.
1955 - In Anaheim, California, south of Los Angeles, the American "King of Animation" and the successful film business owner Walt Disney held a televised opening ceremony of the "Disneyland", a grand theme park for children (and their parents), embodying life is a magical land of cute characters from his famous cartoons. By 1985, 250 million visitors had visited Disneyland. In 1971, the second American "Disneyland" appeared in Florida, in 1983 - a similar park opened near Tokyo, in 1992 - near Paris.
1966 - Matthew Fox, American actor (“Lost”) was born.
1967 - Convention, establishing the World Intellectual Property Organization signed.
1976 - death penalty is abolished in Canada.
2015 - The New Horizons AMS flew near Pluto, the minimum distance was 13691 km from its center.
2016 - in Nice, a truck driven by an ISIS terrorist hit a crowd.
2017 - Ann Golon died (b. 1921), French writer, author of a series of historical novels about Angelica.
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