| 27 February |
Give Me Your Information… |
Archive for February, 2007
Dear Yahoo!: Dear Jack: The first known use of the phrase was in a Civil War soldier’s diary entry on May 3, 1864. Private Robert Knox wrote: “Great Scott, who would have thought that this would be the destiny of the Union Volunteer in 1861-2 while marching down Broadway to the tune of ‘John Brown’s Body.’” But exactly who was Scott, and why was he so darn great? World Wide Words goes on to explain Scott may have been a reference to an American general named “General Winfield Scott.” This makes a lot of sense — soldiers of this era often took the “name of then commander-in-chief for an oath.” It’s also worth noting that General Scott was a large man, weighing around 300 pounds. The word “great” would have served as a suitable (and polite) adjective. Nobody knows for sure if “General Scott” and “Great Scott” are one in the same. But of all the possibilities, this seems the most likely.
Watch this show convince an audience member to come up on stage and be subjected to a fake lie detector.
This is pretty cool. These guys film various explosions and then edit them to play in slow motion reverse.
An 80 year old woman in Florida crashed into the DMV injuring 11 people on the day she came in to renew her license. Somehow I dont think shell be driving ever again.
During the final game of an 8th grade basketball tournament a kid violently attacks his opponent. There doesnt appear to be any real provocation, something tells me this guy got a flagrant foul.
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