1-1-11 Saturday



Quote: There are two ways to get enough; one is to continue to accumulate more and more. The other is to desire less.—G K Chesterton

HOLY MACKEREL: 1904 Netherlands Indies colony begins opium production 
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MY FREE RAMBLING THOUGHTS
Happy New Year— May your best day of the past be your worst day of the future.

It is time to look ahead. This year will be the International Year of Forests--to raise awareness and strengthen the sustainable forest management, conservation and sustainable development of all types of forests for the benefit of current and future generations. It is the International Year of Chemistry—to commemorate the achievements of chemistry, and its contributions to humankind. It is the International Year for People of African descent. It is also World Veterinary Year 2011-- in recognition of the 250th anniversary of the foundation of the world’s first veterinary school in Lyon, France, in 1761. We are also in the middle of United Nations Literacy Decade until 2012 ; United Nations Decade on Education for Sustainable Development and Second International Decade of the World's Indigenous People until 2014; and finally it is Water for Life Decade until 2015.

In 2010 I saw the devastation of two forests with my own eyes. First: the devastating fires in Flagstaff that destroyed thousands of acres of our National Forest. It will take at least a century to rebuild the forest. Many in outlying Flagstaff are still suffering from the flooding that came with the monsoon. Second: the destruction of the rainforest in Borneo. The only way to restore their forest is to stop the 24/7 logging. It is difficult, if not impossible to stop this 3rd world nation from logging in an effort to become a developing nation.

I am looking forward to a great year with travel to England’s Hadrian’s Wall and later to Ethiopia. Both will be exciting and educational.

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∞ JEOPARDY PUZZLE—(Super-Jeopardy Answers) from 1990 COMMUNICATIONS
…answers at bottom…
→ In 1989, for this medium's 50th anniversary, a plaque was put in a museum at the site of the 1939 World's Fair
→ Communications satellite launched in 1962 that was the first privately owned Earth satellite
→ U Thant spoke to the U.N. general assembly in English, although this was his native tongue
→ The most often used letter in English text, it is also one of the quickest to send in Morse code
→ This M.I.T. linguist claims every human knows the general principles of language at birth

UNUSUAL NEWS ITEM--TAUNTON, MA
A robber walked out of a Taunton car wash and gas station with a flat-screen TV under his shirt. The robber thought he got away, but the manager of the car wash tracked him down.
The manager of Prestige Car Wash and Gas Station, Nicole Telles, showed 7NEWS the men’s restroom where the crime went down, where the 27-inch flat-screen used to hang. But police say a 20-year-old ripped it right from the mount and took off.
Telles said he hid the TV under his sweatshirt.
“I felt like, if we had all the information … the process would be a lot quicker,” said Telles.
Telles said she didn’t catch the culprit when the crime happened, but she figured she could do some detective work of her own and try to figure out who the suspect was.
Surveillance video showed the suspect using a credit card to pay for gas, and he had been at the counter as well. So Telles looked up the transaction and got his name. She then started digging into Facebook.
“I went on Facebook, searched the name — the first and last name — and he was like the third one up top. He looked like the guy, and I was like, ‘All right. Let me request him’” as a "friend," said Telles. “He accepted me, so I went through all his pictures, made sure it was him.”
She says her boss even sent him a message telling him to bring back the TV and they wouldn't call police.
“He ended up deleting me, so then we thought to ourselves that the kid doesn’t want to give it up,” said Telles.
They went to police with all of their evidence and the suspect was then arrested.

SOMEWHAT USELESS INFORMATION—
45.2% of Americans pee in the shower!
85% of American women wear the wrong bra size.

A LITTLE LAUGH
The symphony musicians had little confidence in the person brought in to be their new conductor. Their fears were realized at the very first rehearsal. The cymbalist, realizing that the conductor did not know what he was doing, angrily clashed his instruments together during a delicate, soft passage. The music stopped. The conductor, highly agitated, looked angrily around the orchestra, demanding, "Who did that? Who did that?"

N E W!!! GUINNESS WORLD RECORDS—Unusual Skill
→ The heaviest weight dangled from a swallowed sword is 25 kg (55 lb 1 oz) and was achieved by Thomas Blackthorne (UK) on the set of Lo Show Dei Record, in Italy, on 19 April 2009.
→The most Ferrero Rocher chocolates eaten in one minute is seven and was achieved by Jim Lyngvild (Denmark) live on TV2 Denmark's Go? Aften Danmark in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 10 October 2008
→The fastest time to run 100 m (328 ft) barefoot on ice is 17.35 sec set by Nico Surings (Netherlands) at the Ijssportcentrum in Eindhoven, Netherlands, on December 8, 2006.
→The fastest time to carve a face into a pumpkin is 24.03 seconds, by Stephen Clarke (USA), who broke his previous record on July 23, 2006 at Universal Studios, Orlando, Florida, USA as part of 'Food Network Challenge: Guinness World Records Week'.
→Vincent Pilkington of Cootehill, County Cavan, Republic of Ireland, plucked a turkey in 1 minute 30 seconds on November 17, 1980. His past best time was 2 minutes 44 seconds. Vincent is so enthusiastic about his skills that he even carried out 24 hours of turkey plucking to raise funds for his local Holy Family School. In this time he plucked 244 turkeys.

MATCH THE Happy New Year Phrase with the language: (answers at bottom)
Languages: AFRIKAANS ARABIC BASQUE CHINESE ESPERANTO FRENCH GERMAN HAWAIIAN IRISH GAELIC KOREAN MALAY NAVAJO SCOTTISH GAELIC VIETNAMESE

عام سعيد
ath bhliain faoi mhaise
bliadhna mhath ur
bonne année
Chúc Mừng Nǎm Mớ
ein gutes neues Jah
feliĉan novan jaron
gelukkige nuwejaar
hauoli makahiki hou
hozhi naghai
selamat tahun baru
seh heh bok mani bat uh seyo
urte berry
xin nian hao

FOUND ON ‘YOU TUBE’
htA great video of 2011 Taipei 101 New Year’s Fireworks

♫ T O P   T V   T H E M E   S O N G S  OF ALL TIME♫
Click on Song Title to see and hear
♪… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mbk81X6WHA4 Perhaps the most grating theme on this list, the Green Acrestheme song wins points for excessive emphasis on the show title, right from the first passage of the song. Who can forget the "Greeeeeeen Acres is the place for me" lead-in? Vic Mizzy knew what he was doing, because one cannot hear the phrase "Green Acres" without recalling the theme… and isn't that the point?
♪… 29. Mr. Ed "A horse is a horse of course, of course, and no one can talk to a horse, of course, that is, of course, unless that horse is the famous Mr. Ed." There are few theme songs out there that get stuck in your head as well as this highly enjoyable, fast-paced ditty from the 1960s sitcom
♪… 28. I Love Lucy Without question Lucille Ball was and still is the First Lady of Television. Her over-the-top antics as Lucy set the bar for all future female driven comedies to come. Keeping in tune with the night club swagger of her television husband Ricky Ricardo, the theme to the zany show is all big band samba blitz, a classic slice of Hollywood soniference that mixes shaking rhythms with whirling dervish horns, and an overall sense of whimsical party-styled looseness
♪… 27. WKRP The catchy theme from WKRP, which wraps up with a warbly, almost tongue-in-cheek "WKRP in Cincinatti" was just the right introduction to a wacky office comedy set at a Seventies radio station. Even if you only remember the last seconds of the theme, it is a veritable earworm that may take days to forget. In fact, just by reading this, you are probably already screwed. If you're at work, you just might want to try singing that last passage and see how many folks you can annoy.

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DAYBOOK INFORMATION
‡…THIS MONTH…‡
Apple and Apricots Month • Artichoke and Asparagus Month • Bath Safety Month • Birth Defects Month • Book Blitz Month•California Dried Plum Digestive Month • Celebration of Life Month • Cervical Cancer Screening Month • Financial Wellness Month • International Change Your Stars Month • International Creativity Month • International New Year’s Resolutions Month for Businesses • International Quality of Life Month • International Wayfinding Month • International Wealth Mentality Month • National Be On-Purpose Month • National Clean Up Your Computer Month • National Get Organized Month • National Glaucoma Awareness Monthv • National Hot Tea Month • National Mail Order Gardening Month • National Mentoring Month • National Personal Self-Defense Awareness Month • National Poverty in America Awareness Month • National Radon Action Month • National Skating Month • National Soup Month • National Volunteer Blood Donor Month • Oatmeal Month • Rising Star Month • Self-help Group Awareness Month • Shape Up US Month • Tubers and Dried Fruit Month • Thyroid Awareness Month
‡…THIS WEEK…‡
Kwanzaa 12/26-1/1
Celebration of Life Week: Diet Resolution Week: Silent Record Week: 1-7
National Lose Weight/Feel Great Week: 1-8
‡…TODAY IS…‡
New Years Day
New Year's Dishonor List Day: Since 1977, Lake Superior State University in Marie, Mich., has released its annual List of Words Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-Use,
Independence Day
Brunei from United Kingdom in 1984.
Cameroon from France in 1960
Haiti from France in 1804.
Sudan from United Kingdom in 1956.
Western Samoa from New Zealand in 1962
Cuba: Revolution Day
Italy: Constitution Day 1948
Japan: New Year (year = AD + 660)
Capetown, South Africa: Coon Carnival (Kaapse Klopse)—minstrel show
Taiwan: Foundation of the Republic Liberation Day
Tanzania: National Tree Planting Day
US: Alabama: Mobile Carnival
US: Rose Bowl Game
US: Tournament of Roses Parade Day
US: Philadelphia: Mummer's Parade
Western Christianity: The eighth day of Christmas (The eight maids a-milking are the eight Beatitudes: The text of St. Matthew: Blessed are the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. (Verse 3) Blessed are the meek: for they shall possess the land. (Verse 4) Blessed are they who mourn: for they shall be comforted. (Verse 5) Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice: for they shall have their fill. (Verse 6) Blessed are the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy. (Verse 7) Blessed are the clean of heart: for they shall see God. (Verse 8) Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God. (Verse 9) Blessed are they that suffer persecution forjustice' sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. (Verse 10))
Kwanzaa: Imani (ee-MAH-nee) is the seventh and last day. Imani means faith--pledge to believe with all our hearts and minds in our people, our parents, our good and dedicated teachers and leaders,and in the greater good of the work we do with and for one another, for the community and for the PEOPLE.
‡…Today’s Births…‡
• AUTHORS
1919 J[erome] D[avid] Salinger novelist (Catcher in the Rye)
• ATHLETES
Leoš Friedl, 33, Czech tennis player
• BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1895 J Edgar Hoover Director of US Fedreal Bureau of Investigation
• ENTERTAINERS (ACTORS/SINGERS/…)
1909 Dana Andrews actor (Battle of the Bulge, Laura)
1900 Xavier Cugat [Francisco de Asís Javier Cugat Mingall de Brue y Deulofeo] Tirona Catalonia Spain, bandleader
Michael Imperioli, 44, actor (“The Sopranos”)
Frank Langella, 70, actor (Frost/Nixon, The Twelve Chairs, Lolita)
Country Joe McDonald, 68, singer: group: Country Joe & the Fish: The F-I-S-H Cheer from Woodstock
• POLITICIANS
Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard, 72, Queen of Netherlands (1980- )
1449 Lorenzo de' Medici [The Magnificent] of Florence
1735 Paul Revere silversmith/US patriot
1909 Barry Goldwater (Senator-AZ, 1953-65, 69- )/Presidential candidate (R) 1964)
1752 Elizabeth Griscom (Betsy) Ross flag maker
• SCIENCE & RELIGION
1917 Jule Gregory Charney, American meteorologist
1888 – John Garand, American inventor—developed Caliber .30 M1, the Garand rifle became the world's first standard-issue autoloading infantry rifle
‡…Today’s Obituaries…‡
1557 Jacques Cartier French explorer (Canada), @ 65
1972 Maurice A Chevalier French actor (Can Can, Gigi), @ 83
1630 Tetsugen Doko Zen teacher (Jodo sect converted to Obaku Zen), @ 53
1998 Helen Wills Moody Roark tennis ace (31 Grand Slams), @ 92
1994 Cesar Romero US actor (Joker-Batman), @ 86
1953 Hank Williams country singer (Cold Cold Heart), mysterious heart failure@ 29
‡…Today’s Events…‡
• ARTS
1764 Eight years old Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart played for the Royal Family Versailles.
1908 1st time, ball signifying new year dropped at Times Square
1948 1st color newsreel filmed, Pasadena CA
1960 Johnny Cash plays 1st of many free concerts behind bars
• ATHLETICS
1886 1st Tournament of Roses, Pasadena CA
1935 1st Sugar Bowl & 1st Orange Bowl
1954 Rose & Cotton Bowl are 1st sport colorcasts
• BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1842 1st illustrated weekly magazine in US publishes 1st issue, New York City NY
1852 1st US public bath opens in New York City NY
1854 Lincoln University, a black college, chartered (Oxford PA)
1968 Evel Knievel fails in his attempt to jump Cæsar's Palace Fountain
• INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
1805 Lewis & Clark attend a party with the local Indians.
• POLITICS (US)
1808 Congress prohibits importation of slaves
1818 Official reopening of the White House
1861 President Lincoln declares slavery in Confederate states unlawful
1863 Emancipation Proclamation (ending slavery) issued by Lincoln
1874 New York City annexes the Bronx
1892 Ellis Island becomes reception center for new immigrants
1897 Brooklyn merges with New York to form present City of New York
• POLITICS (International)
1808 Sierra Leone becomes a British colony
1880 Building of Panamá Canal, begins
1904 Netherlands Indies colony begins opium production
1999 Eleven of the countries in the European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) gave up their own currencies and adopted the new Euro (EUR)currency: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain. (Greece followed suit on January 1, 2001.)
• SCIENCE & RELIGION
1977 1st woman formally ordained an Episcopal priest (Jacqueline Means)
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ANSWERS
∞ HAPPY NEW YEAR LANGUAGES
gelukkige nuwejaar AFRIKAANS; عام سعيد ARABIC; urte berri on BASQUE; xin nian hao CHINESE; feliĉan novan jaron ESPERANTO; bonne année FRENCH; ein gutes neues Jah GERMAN; hauoli makahiki hou HAWAIIAN; ath bhliain faoi mhaise IRISH GAELIC; seh heh bok mani bat uh seyo KOREAN; selamat tahun baru MALAY; hozhi naghai NAVAJO; bliadhna mhath ur SCOTTISH GAELIC; Chúc Mừng Nǎm Mớ VIETNAMESE

∞ JEOPARDY
→ In 1989, for this medium's 50th anniversary, a plaque was put in a museum at the site of the 1939 World's Fair
What is Television?
→ Communications satellite launched in 1962 that was the first privately owned Earth satellite
What was Telstar?
→ U Thant spoke to the U.N. general assembly in English, although this was his native tongue
What is Burmese?
→ The most often used letter in English text, it is also one of the quickest to send in Morse code
What is ‘s’ ‘…’?
→ This M.I.T. linguist claims every human knows the general principles of language at birth
Who is Noam Chomsky?

Friday Dec 31


TODAY’S QUOTEs—Henry David Thoreau

Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.

Public opinion is a weak tyrant compared with our own private opinion. What a man thinks of himself, that is which determines, or rather indicates, his fate.

Mark Twain
If you don't read the newspaper you are uninformed; if you do read the newspaper you are misinformed.

HOLY MACKEREL: 1921 Last San Francisco fire horses retired

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FREE RAMBLING THOUGHTS
Interesting afternoon at the local hospital. First to pre-op clerk who looks me up in her Apple IIe and finds that I have been there before. It’s been two years since I was there so she has to reverify all my information—that’s OK. We decided that I should spend the night in the hospital when they do the surgery, since I am about 6 miles from the hospital, live alone, and probably couldn’t drive there if I had a breathing problem. Julie, my nurse for the appt re-asked all the questions I had just answered. I ask if the computers were connected…nope. I asked her why the “III” after my name didn’t show up on my bracelet. She called and looked at me and said, it has to match your insurance card. I pulled it out and surprise, the card has the “III”. She called in someone else who took my card and ‘fixed’ my name…we’ll see. Then it’s off to tests. I should mention that it has been snowing all day and while all the places were ‘open’, only one person was at each stop so I had some waits. First was EKG. Easy but my chest is closely related to a chimpanzee and he said he could shave me, but it would take another 30 minutes. No shave…a bunch of tape all over. The EKG took all of 30 seconds. He ripped off all the tape and took a few hairs from each piece of tape. Off to the lab for blood tests. No one there. Some poor guy came in after me and looked to be in substantial pain so I headed for radiology across the hall. Chest Xray went well. The radiologist mentioned he was all alone, since the wimps had already left. He was about 45 and had two arms filled with very colorful tattoos, that were sagging a little and he was far from being ripped. Then back to the lab. Again one lady. She was very nice, a Navajo living in Doney Park…and the only one who stayed due to the snow. I was teasing her and told her she couldn’t find anything ‘bad’ in the blood. She shook the tube she had just taken and said “Well Charlie, you have the best looking blood I have seen this month.” Then I was out of the hospital. I had been told to stop taking my daily baby aspirin, but when I got home, Julie called and said I should keep taking it because I have a stent. Whatever. So I guess I’m good to go get trimmed in a couple of weeks. Whoopee!!!

The HOA has kept our drive and sidewalks mostly clean. It took some time to get the 8+” of snow off my Xterra. It has a luggage rack on top that really adds to the overall look of any Xterra. The problem is when it snows. Brushing snow out of the luggage rack is impossible, so when I start driving it flies out. This snow is very light and fluffy so it’s no big deal. However, some of the snow still turns to ice on the roof and in the next days will have chunks of ice sliding around on the roof, making a lot of noise. The first speed bump will loosen the ice from the roof, but the bars on the luggage rack won’t let it fall off. While all the roads are fairly clear, traffic was moving about 20mph—not a problem for me as I am retired and am seldom in a hurry to get anywhere. I stopped at the drive up ATM for some cash and it was frozen solid. So I had to get out of the vehicle and walk up to another ATM. With the wind, my phone told me the wind chill was -2. Maybe—the moisture in my nose did NOT freeze, so it wasn’t really cold.

∞ JEOPARDY PUZZLE—(SuperJeopardy Answers) from 1990 DESIGN
…answers at bottom…
→A schapslote is a German-painted decoration using enamel of this color on glass
→Juniper trees are sometimes used to build chests known by the name of this other wood
→The Griffin originated as a design in this "land between two rivers"
→This group of buildings formed the Great Fortified Palace of the Moorish kings of Spain
→Two of the 3 classical orders of columns developed by the Greeks

UNUSUAL NEWS ITEM: WARMINSTER, Pa. (pop: 32,000)
What was the reason two Warminster men fired a hail of rifle bullets at a shopping center, scattering fearful supermarket employees, early Tuesday morning?
The pair felt like shooting, particularly at streetlights, and didn't think anyone would be around when they fired about 40 rounds shortly after 5 a.m., police said.
"Chalk it up to doing something really stupid," said Warminster police Chief S. Michael Murphy.
An investigation revealed that Joseph B. Carr, 21, and James W. Pearson, 23, were not targeting people or businesses at Warminster Towne Center on Street Road near Norristown Road.
"They were both shocked that people would be in the shopping center at that hour," said Murphy.
The shots were fired shortly after 5 a.m., striking the ShopRite in an area where employees had been standing and also hitting a nearby Sovereign Bank.
The supermarket workers ran for cover. Bank windows were shot out, but no employees were present. While Carr and Pearson face felony charges, they are not accused of attempted homicide, despite the shots striking near people, police said. "There were other charges you could look at given the close proximity to the people, but with most of those charges you have to show some kind of intent," said Murphy.
"We couldn't draw that conclusion based on the investigation."
Carr and Pearson used a .22-caliber rifle with a scope and silencer to fire the shots. The rifle is described as being used for recreational shooting, initial firearms training and pest control.
Carr and Pearson were jailed in Bucks County Prison in lieu of 10 percent of $500,000 bail.
Charges against them include conspiracy, criminal mischief, discharging a firearm into an occupied structure and recklessly endangering another person.
In July Pearson was sentenced to five years probation on explosives-related charges for a February incident in which a bomb squad from Philadelphia police was dispatched to handle homemade bombs Pearson had made.
A police officer caught Pearson with the home-brewed ordnance, made of carbon dioxide cartridges and explosive powder, at a parking lot frequently used by fishermen on Mill Road near the Neshaminy Creek in Warwick.
Police discovered the explosives in Pearson's jacket, his car and, later, in his room at his Warminster home.

SOMEWHAT USELESS INFORMATION—
Sports shooters, especially those who use indoor small-bore rifle ranges, risk lead absorption and intoxication.
Recreational skiers can easily reach speeds of up to 40 mph, which can lead to injuries similar to those seen in car accidents.

Male testicles create 10 million new sperm cells every day, enough to repopulate the entire world in just 6 months.
All humans exist as a single cell organism for a half hour at conception.

A LITTLE LAUGH
This is a fool proof Best Friend Test. If you don't believe it, just try this-
Put your dog and your spouse in the trunk of the car for an hour.
When you open the trunk, who is really happy to see you?

I spent 20 minutes explaining life insurance options to one of our employees. After reviewing the different plans and monthly deductions, he decided to max out, choosing $100,000 worth of life insurance.
But he had one last question.
"Now," he said, "what do I have to do to collect the money?"

FOUND ON ‘YOU TUBE’

Thanks to my friend Wes for this: Awesome People

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DAYBOOK INFORMATION
♦ THIS WEEK ♦
25-31 It's About Time Week
26-1/1 Kwanzaa
♦ TODAY IS… ♦
Kwanzaa: NIA (NEE-ah) is the fifth day of Kwanzaa and it means "purpose". A pledge to build and develop communities, schools and families. A pledge to provide a strong communal foundation from which children can develop into strong and productive people.
Leap Second Time Adjustment Day
Make Up Your Mind Day
New Years Eve
No Interruptions Day
Universal Hour of Peace Day
Unlucky Day
World Peace Meditation Day
Western Christianity: The seventh day of Christmas (seven swans a-swimming represent the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit: from Isaiah 11:2-3—Wisdom, Understanding, Counsel, Fortitude, Knowledge, Piety, Fear of the Lord)
Azerbaijan: Solidarity Day
Austria: Imperial Ball
Benin: Feed Yourself Day
Congo: National Day
Indians at Mitla, Oaxaca : Noche de Pedimento/Wishing Night (My brother and sister-in-law are there to join in)
Japan: Omisoka Day/Grand Purification
Lebanon: Evacuation Day (1946)
Mauritania: People's Party Day
Scotland: Hogmanay Day Learn More
Scottish Gaelic Òg-Mhadainn/h-òg-mhaidne ('new morning')
Irish Gaelic: "theacht meán oíche" ('the arrival of midnight', pronounced 'heacht meawn eehe')
Gaelic: ochd meadhan oidhche ('eighth midnight' (eighth night from Christmas))
Manx: word Hop-tu-Naa (31 October) - the Old Gaelic new year
♫ Academy Awards Best Original Song ♫
Click on Song Title to see and hear
♪…2001 "If I Didn't Have You" — Monsters, Inc
♪…2002 "Lose Yourself" — 8 Mile
♪…2003 "Into the West" — The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
♪…2004 "Al otro lado del río" — The Motorcycle Diaries
♦Today’s Births♦
AUTHORS
Diane Halfin von Furstenberg, 65, fashion designer, author
ATHLETES
Émilie Le Pennec, 23, French gymnast
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
Dawood Ibrahim, 55, Indian crime boss
His Grace the Most Reverend Dr. Pius Alick Mvundla Ncube, 64, Zimbabwean human rights advocate
ENTERTAINERS (ACTORS/SINGERS/…)
1922 Rex Allen cowboy singer, born in Wilcox AZ
1914 Pat Brady actor (Roy Rogers Show)
1943 John Denver [Henry John Deutschendorf Jr] singer/songwriter/actor (Rocky Mountain High, Thank God I'm a Country Boy, Oh God!)
1930 Odetta [Holmes Felious Gordon] folk singer/actress (Sanctuary)
Sir Anthony Hopkins, 73, actor (Oscar for The Silence of the Lambs
Val Kilmer, 51, actor (Batman Forever, The Doors, Heat)
Ben Kingsley(Krishna Bhanji), 67, actor (Oscar for Gandhi )
Tim Matheson, 62, actor (Animal House)
Bebe Neuwirth, 52, actress (“Cheers,” “Frasier”)
1943 Pete Quaife musician: bass: group: The Kinks: You Really Got Me
Donna Summer (LaDonna Andrea Gaines). 62, singer
POLITICIANS
1738 Charles Lord Cornwallis solider/statesman "fire when ready Gridley"
1880 George C Marshall authored Marshall Plan (Nobel 1953)
1825 Francis Trowbridge Sherman Brigadier-General (Union volunteers)
1720 [Bonnie Prince] Charles Edward Stuart English pretender to throne
1908 Simon Wiesenthal Polish/Austrian nazi hunter (Wiesenthal Center)
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1864 Robert G Aitken US astronomer (Binary Stars)
♦Today’s Obituaries♦
1972 Roberto Clemente Pittsburgh Pirate slugger, plane crash @ 38
1997 Floyd Cramer pianist (Nashville Sound), cancer @ 64
1802 Francis Lewis Welsh/US merchant/signer (Declaration of Independence), @ 89
1985 Rick Nelson singer/actor (Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet), plane crash @ 45
1966 Chief Nipo Strongheart Yakima actor, authored the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924, @ 75
1993 Thomas J Watson Jr president of IBM (1956-71)/diplomat, @ 79
♦Today’s Events♦
ARTS
1907 For the 1st time a ball drops at Times Square to signal the new year
1947 Roy Rogers, ‘the King of the Cowboys’, and Dale Evans were hitched in marriage.
1961 1st performance of the Beach Boys
1995 Cartoonist Bill Watterson ends his "Calvin & Hobbes" comic strip after a decade of laughs
ATHLETICS
1950 Willie Shoemaker and Joe Culmone, both 19 years of age, became the first jockeys to ride 388 winners in a single year.
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1600 British East India Company chartered
1896 25th auto built in US
1981 CNN Headline News debuts
1997 Microsoft buys Hotmail E-mail service
2004 Official opening of Taipei 101, the tallest skyscraper at that time in the world, standing at a height of 509 metres (1,670 ft). (very cool...but I still think it sounds like a college class)
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
1794 After agreeing to a peace with the United States on November 7th, the Cherokee and Chickamaugans, and the U.S. will exchange prisoners, this will effectively end the Chickamauga War
POLITICS (US)
1852 Future President & Mrs Rutherford B Hayes marry
1970 Congress authorizes the Eisenhower dollar coin
POLITICS (International)
1564 Willem van Orange demands freedom of conscience/religion
1923 BBC begins using Big Ben chime ID
1942 Potatoes rationed in Holland
1958 International Geophyscial Year ends
1958 Cuban dictator Batista flees
1999 Control of Panamá Canal reverts to Panamá
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1492 100,000 Jews expelled from Sicily
1744 James Bradley announces discovery of Earth's motion of nutation (wobble)
1841 Alabama becomes 1st state to license dental surgeons
1861 22,990 mm (75.42 feet) of rain falls in Cherrapunji Assam, India in 1861, world record
1911 Marie Curie receives her 2nd Nobel Prize

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ANSWERS
∞ JEOPARDY
→A schapslote is a German-painted decoration using enamel of this color on glass
What is Black?
→Juniper trees are sometimes used to build chests known by the name of this other wood
What is Cedar?
→The Griffin originated as a design in this "land between two rivers"
What is Mesopotamia?
→This group of buildings formed the Great Fortified Palace of the Moorish kings of Spain
What is Alhambra?
→Two of the 3 classical orders of columns developed by the Greeks
What are ‘Ionic’, ‘Doric’, ‘Corinthian’

Thursday Dec 30


TODAY’S QUOTE—Buddha

Thousands of candles can be lighted from a single candle, and the life of the candle will not be shortened. Happiness never decreases by being shared.

HOLY MACKEREL: 1980 The Selective Service System sent a warning to Mickey Mouse at Disneyland in Anaheim, California: Register for the draft or else! The Selective Service said that Mickey was in violation of registration compliance. Of course, Mickey, age 52 at the time, sent in his registration card proving that he’s a World War II veteran.

►◄ ►◄ ►◄

FREE RAMBLING THOUGHTS
I did get all the Christmas decorations packed away for another year. I was able to get rid of some stuff and cut the number of boxes by one. Of course, as always, after everything was packed, stacked, covered I discovered a few ornaments that had decided they would rather be hiding than be on the tree. They are now sitting on top of the boxes until I am sure everything is found. I really picked a good day to do all this since we had 45+mph winds most of the day, with snow trying really hard to hit the ground, but ended up spending much of their life in the air being slammed in every direction. Roads are not bad as we only got about 6” to stick. The weatherman says maybe 2’ by tomorrow morning.

Tomorrow I go in for my pre-op conference. They said they would be open, no matter how much snow there is. I get an EKG and a lung x-ray to be sure they can do it. The doctor told me I would be out the same day, as long as my throat didn’t swell shut. The paperwork says I’m there for 23 hours. I’m sure that is so the hospital stay doesn’t start into day two. I will find out tomorrow what will actually happen. While I am not a big fan of staying in the hospital I wouldn’t mind overnight. Living alone makes life a little more difficult when it comes to things like this. I hate to have to stay at a friend’s house or have a friend stay with me at my house. I hate being dependant on any person. The surgery isn’t until the first week in January so I do have time to be extra nice to someone if I have to go home after the cutting is over.

I have a couple of New Year’s resolutions. First, I am not going to diet. Second, I’m not going to spend less time on the computer. Third, I’m going to continue to have a ‘glass half full’ philosophy on most things. Fourth, I’m going to continue to listen to the TV while I do other things around the house. Fifth, I’m going to travel outside the US. I figure these are resolutions I can keep. They are realistic. They don’t take too much work. I hope everyone who makes resolutions will be able to keep them.

∞ JEOPARDY PUZZLE—(SuperJeopardy Answers) from 1990 GEOMETRY
…answers at bottom…
→A single straight line forms an angle of this many degrees
→In a right triangle, the side opposite the right angle is called this
→To determine the area of a circle, you multiply pi X this
→Two or more circles that share the same center are said to be this
→An oblique angle is one that is either acute or this

UNUSUAL NEWS ITEM
When a woman has twins with two different fathers, it is called heteropaternal superfecundation - and may not be quite as rare as once thought. Three HS cases were found in a parentage test database of 39,000 records. The frequency of HS among dizygotic twins whose parents were involved in paternity suits is 2.4%.
A Croatian woman who slept with two men at the same time has given birth to twins with two different fathers. The 23-year-old student, who has been named only as M B, gave birth to non-identical twins in Zagreb seven months ago. However, she has revealed that DNA testing has shown the children have different fathers.
She told daily Jutarnji List, "I was shocked at getting pregnant and even more surprised when doctors told me that my two sons had different fathers." Doctors have said twins being born to different fathers is extremely rare.

SOMEWHAT USELESS INFORMATION—
↑Approximately 500 meteorites hit the Earth a year.
↑The Andromeda galaxy is on a collision course with our galaxy, speeding at 720,000 mph. The catastrophic clash will likely occur in 3 billion years. Hmmm..Guess I better start packing.

A LITTLE LAUGH
An office technician got a call from a computer user. The user told the tech that her computer was not working. She described the problem and the tech concluded that her computer needed to be brought in and serviced.
He told her, "Unplug the power cord and bring it up here and I'll fix it for you."
About ten minutes later she showed up at his door... with the electrical cord in her right hand.

FOUND ON ‘YOU TUBE’
►◄ ►◄ ►◄
DAYBOOK INFORMATION
♦ THIS WEEK ♦
25-31 It's About Time Week
26-1/1 Kwanzaa
♦ TODAY IS… ♦
Day Of Enormous Changes At The Last Minute
National Bicarbonate Of Soda Day
Falling Needles Family Fest Day: Recycle your tree before all the needles fall
Western Christianity: The sixth day of Christmas. (6 geese a laying: for the 6 days of creation)
Kwanzaa: Ujamaa (Cooperative Economics): To build and maintain our own stores, shops, and other businesses and to profit from them together.
Iran: Birthday of Iman Reza
Philippiines: Rizal Day (anniversary of his death) (1896)
♫ Academy Awards Best Original Song ♫
Click on Song Title to see and hear
♦Today’s Births♦
AUTHORS
1865 Rudyard Kipling, English writer, Nobel laureate
ATHLETES
Sanford (Sandy) Koufax, 75, Hall of Fame baseball Dodgers
LeBron James, 26, basketball: Cavaliers, Heat
1942 Jim ‘Bo’ Nance football: Boston Patriots full back NCAA Heavyweight Wrestling Champion [1963, 1965]
1941 Mel Renfro College & Pro Football Hall of Famer: Dallas Cowboys defensive back
Eldrick “Tiger” Woods, 35, golfer
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
Matt Lauer, 53, news anchor (“Today”)
Sean Hannity, 49, journalist, talk show host
ENTERTAINERS (ACTORS/SINGERS/…)
1931 Skeeter Davis [Mary Penick] Dry Ridge KY, singer (End of the World)
1928 Bo Diddley [Ellas Bates] rock 'n' roll pioneer
Davy Jones, 64, actor, singer (The Monkees)
1928 Jack Lord actor (Steve McGarrett-Hawaii 5-0, God's Little Acre)
Michael Nesmith, 68, singer, songwriter (The Monkees)
1914 Bert Parks [Jacobson] Atlanta GA, TV host (Miss America)
1939 Del Shannon [Charles Westover] rocker (Runaway)
1937 [Noel] Paul Stookey,73 , singer/musician/comedian (Peter, Paul, & Mary)
Tracey Ullman, 51, actress, singer (“The Tracey Ullman Show,” I Love You to Death
Meredith Vieira, 59, television journalist, cohost (“Today Show,” “The View”)
POLITICIANS
1884 Hideki Tojo Prime Minister of Japan; WWII war criminal
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1879 Sri Ramana Maharshi Hindu philosopher/yogi (Maharshi Research Institute)
♦Today’s Obituaries♦
1894 Amelia Jenks Bloomer suffragist (Bloomers named for her), @ 76
1832 Colonel Abijah Hammond owned large portion of Greenwich Village
1992 Ling-Ling 1st panda China gave US, @ 23 More on Pandas
1979 Richard Rodgers composer (Rogers & Hammerstein), dies at 77
♦Today’s Events♦
ARTS
1809 Wearing masks at balls forbidden in Boston
1879 Gilbert & Sullivan's "Pirates of Penzance" premieres
1954 James Arness made his dramatic TV debut on the Lux Video Theatre in The Chase. (The Gunsmoke series didn’t begin for Arness until the fall of 1955.)
ATHLETICS
1978 Ohio State dismisses Woody Hayes as its football coach
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1817 1st coffee planted in Hawaii (Kona)
1873 American Metrological Society forms (New York NY) weights, measures & money
1927 Japan dedicates 1st subway in the Orient (route under 2 miles long)
1940 California's 1st freeway (Arroyo Seco Parkway) opens between LA and Pasadena
1985 IBM-PC DOS Version 3.2 released 1993 Vatican recognizes Israel
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
1835 After gold discovery in Georgia, Cherokees are forced to move across Mississippi River
1847 During the CAYUSE War, Col. Gilliam, and 160 men, are attacked by some Indians near Wailatpu. The Indians lose 20 warriors, and lots of supplies.
POLITICS (US)
1853 Gadsden Purchase - 45,000 square miles (120,000 km) by Gila River from México for $10 million; Area is now southern Arizona & New Mexico
1918 John E Hoover decides to be called J Edgar Hoover
1963 Congress authorizes the Kennedy half dollar
POLITICS (International)
1906 Iran becomes a constitutional monarchy
1972 President Nixon halts bombing of North Vietnam & announces peace talks
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1703 Tokyo hit by Earthquake; about 37,000 die
1959 The George Washington, 1st ballistic missile sub commissioned
1973 1st picture of a comet from space (Comet Kohoutek-Skylab)

►◄ ►◄ ►◄
ANSWERS
∞ JEOPARDY
→A single straight line forms an angle of this many degrees
What is 180?
→In a right triangle, the side opposite the right angle is called this
What is the hypotenuse?
→To determine the area of a circle, you multiply pi X this
What is the radius squared?
→2 or more circles that share the same center are said to be this
What are concentric?
→An oblique angle is one that is either acute or this
What is obtuse?

Wednesday Dec 28



TODAY’S QUOTE—Aristotle

Men acquire a particular quality by constantly acting in a particular way.

BONUS QUOTE--Mahatama Gandhi
Faith is not something to grasp, it is a state to grow into.

HOLY MACKEREL: 1989 Riots break-out after Hong Kong decides to forcibly repatriate Vietnamese refugees.

FREE RAMBLING THOUGHTS
Even though there is not a cloud in the sky, the weatherman says snow tonight…and cold temps till next week. We should be having highs in the 20’s with anywhere from 6”-20” of snow by Thursday night. Maybe we are the 5th snowiest city in the US. Only time will tell how accurate the ol’ weather bureau really is. I am so glad that I don’t have to deal with the latest East Coast storm. Thankfully my brother and sister-in-law don’t have too either.

I ran some errands this morning and the sun was a shinin’ and there was little wind. So I got stuff done quickly. I guess I was ‘in the zone’ at WalMart as Jeannie was standing in the same aisle and I didn’t even see her till she said something to me. She had a great Christmas down in Phoenix. She and the grandkids went with Sue to ‘Zoo lights’ which was nice with the ‘warm’ Phoenix weather.

Whatever the weather tomorrow, I will be taking down the Christmas decorations. It is certainly time. It will give me much more room in my living room and in the back room where I store everything. I didn’t put out all my outdoor lights for fear of snow. Each of the last 4 years, they have been covered until May. So this year, no lights and no snow covering. Is there a lesson here? I really wish that all the decorations were somehow inflatable for the holidays, and could just be deflated for storage. It’s an idea. I guess I could become a better packer.

OMG. President Obama was talking with the owners of the Philadelphia Eagles about their plans for a ‘greener’ stadium. He started the conversation with thanking the owners for giving Michael Vick a second chance after such a major downfall. Faux News and Conservatives are outraged. Of course, when Bush II signed federal legislation that set up second chances for felony convicts no one spoke out. Nor did anyone get really upset when Bush II commuted the sentence for his political crony—Scooter Libby. Sure hope this stops in 2011. Both Presidents did say that the crimes were wrong. Bush decided that the trial and guilty verdict were enough to free him from prison. Obama just thanked the Eagles for giving Vick a second chance. Apples and oranges in my book.

In Chicago my brother and I had ‘brother time’ while Laura had ‘sister time’. We went a saw the new True Grit. So different than the John Wayne movie of the late 60’s. The two really can’t be compared. The new movie follows the 1968 serial novel by Charles Portis--first published in Saturday Evening Post--much more closely than the older version. The dialogue was very unexpected for me. I can’t really explain it, it was not vulgar or nasty but sounded a little like Western King James dialogue. Gotta see it to understand what I’m talking about. Laura and her sister spent the time at a spa. I’m sure they enjoyed their time together as much as I did.

Everyone I know can look back over their family history and find that in some ways it was dysfunctional. On the surface it is not readily apparent, but as you get to know the person, you find that the hidden dysfunction stories come out in conversation. I am so fortunate that my parents, my brother and I never became estranged. Maybe it’s because we were in a ‘small’ family. Laura has not been so fortunate. She isn’t estranged from anyone in the family, but her parents and some of the siblings are. This makes life a little difficult at times. Sons not talking to mom or daughters not talking to dad is hard on everyone. It is especially difficult when there is a family tragedy. Those who believe that ‘time heals all wounds’ are probably correct. The problem is of course how much time. I wasn’t there when the various riffs occurred so I don’t get it. I just know that everyone involved is placed in difficult situations, always being asked to take sides, always walking on egg shells to avoid being dragged in. Nothing I can do but listen and wonder in my mind how this is part of love.

∞ JEOPARDY PUZZLE—(SuperJeopardy Answers) from 1990 PLANTS
∞Indican, a colorless substance in this plant, turns blue in air & is used as a dye
∞The plantain is a species of this fruit
∞Among the most primitive plants with chlorophyll, it is the main plant life in both seawater & freshwater
∞Carrots are root vegetables while potatoes are examples of these underground stems
∞This cactus can grow to 50' tall & the white flower that grows on top is Arizona's state flower

UNUSUAL NEWS ITEM HADDONFIELD, N.J.
A New Jersey collector said he bought a rare Honus Wagner baseball card from an order of Baltimore nuns after an auction winner reneged on a $220,000 bid. Nicholas DePace, 57, a Haddonfield cardiologist who owns one of the most valuable sports memorabilia collections in the country, said he was contacted by auction officials Monday after the original high bidder backed out of paying the School Sisters of Notre Dame for the card, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported.
DePace, who said he originally stopped bidding on the card when the price became too high, said he changed his mind when he heard proceeds from the sale were destined for the order's ministries in 30 countries. "This is the most famous Honus Wagner card now because it's going to help thousands of people, and that's more than any other Honus Wagner card has ever done," DePace said.

SOMEWHAT USELESS INFORMATION—This and That
December 26 was traditionally known as St. Stephen’s Day, after the first Christian martyr. It is now more commonly known as Boxing Day. This expression came about because money was collected in alms-boxes placed in churches during the festive season. This money was then distributed to the poor and needy after Christmas.
AD is short for Anno Domini, or “Year of our Lord,” as proclaimed by the Roman Catholic Church. Some non-Christians prefer the alternative designation “CE” for “Common Era."
Kwanzaa is a cultural festival during which African Americans celebrate and reflect upon their heritage as the products of two worlds. It begins 26th December and lasts for seven days. Kwanzaa was founded in 1966 by Dr. Maulana “Ron” Karenga, a college professor and African American leader.
Chanukah, or Hanukkah, lasts for eight days, beginning the 25th of the Hebrew month Kislev (November-December). It celebrates the victory of Judah the Maccabee over the Syrian tyrant Antiochus over 2100 years ago.
Evergreens and trees were cherished at solstice as a natural symbol of rebirth and life amid winter whiteness. The annual Tree Festival is still celebrated among nature-based faiths such as Wicca. This tree festival was eventually adopted as use for the Christmas tree.
The oldest written reference of a festival to mark the return of the sun is made to the Mesopotamians. They held a 12-day festival to help the god Marduk tame the monsters of chaos for one more year. There are hundreds of megalithic structures throughout Europe and sacred sites in the Americas, Asia, Indonesia, and the Middle East are oriented to the solstices and the equinoxes.

A LITTLE LAUGH
En route to Hawaii, I noticed one of my passengers in the coach section of the airplane dialing her cell phone.
"Excuse me. That can't be on during the flight," I reminded her. "Besides, we're over the ocean—you won't get a signal out here."
"That's okay," she said. "I'm just calling my daughter. She's sitting up in first class."

FOUND ON ‘YOU TUBE’

DAYBOOK INFORMATION
♦ THIS WEEK ♦
25-31 It's About Time Week
26-1/1 Kwanzaa
♦ TODAY IS… ♦
Antepenultimate Day: Last second day of the year or coming before the next to the last in a series.
3rd Day of Kwanza: Ujima (ooh-GEE-mah) is the third day of Kwanzaa and means "collective work and responsibility". On this day we celebrate working together in the community to help others. For Ujima, we pledge to rebuild our communities and to help our people solve our own problems by working together to do it.
Pepper Pot Day: Hot soup served to the Continental Army
Tick Tock Day
Western Christianity: The fifth day of Christmas (Five Golden Rings: First 5 books of Old Testament that explained the fall from grace of man: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy )
Gabon : President's Birthday
Ireland: Constitution Day (1937)
US: Texas : Admission Day (28th state: 1845)
♫ Academy Awards Best Original Song ♫
Click on Song Title to see and hear
♦Today’s Births♦
ARTS
1876 Pablo Casals Spanish cellist/conductor/composer
Paula Poundstone, 51, comedienne
►ACTORS◄
Ted Danson, 63, actor (“Cheers,” “Becker,” Three Men and a Baby)
Marianne Faithfull, 64, singer, actress
Jude Law, 38, actor (Closer, Cold Mountain, The Talented Mr Ripley)
Mary Tyler Moore, 74, actress (two Emmys for “The Dick Van Dyke Show”; three Emmys for “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”; Ordinary People)
Jon Voight, 72, actor (“24”; Oscar for Coming Home; Midnight Cowboy, Deliverance
Andy Wachowski, 43, filmmaker with brother Larry Wachowski (The Matrix)
ATHLETICS
--
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1921 Robert C. Baker Inventor of the chicken nugget
Thomas Edwin (TomJarriel, 76, broadcast journalist
POLITICS
1917 Tom Bradley (Mayor-LA) (1973-93)
1809 William Ewart Gladstone (Liberal) British PM (1868-74, '80-86, '92-94)
1808 Andrew Johnson 17th President (1865-69)
1879 Billy Mitchell aviation hero general (WWI)
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1800 Charles Goodyear inventor (vulcanization process for rubber)
1776 Charles Macintosh Scotish inventor patented waterproof fabric
♦Today’s Obituaries♦
1170 Thomas Beckett archbishop, assassinated by 4 knights of King Henry II
1890 Big Foot Sioux Indian chief, @ Wounded Knee
♦Today’s Events♦
ARTS
1967 Star Trek's "The Trouble With Tribbles" 1st airs
1982 Bob Marley postage stamp issued in Jamaica
ATHLETICS
1862 Bowling ball invented
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1851 1st Young Men's Christian Association chapter opened (Boston)
1972 Life magazine ceases publication
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
1830 Nine local missionaries, issue a proclamation defending the Cherokees against the actions of Georgia. Georgia is trying to remove the Cherokee from their lands, in New Echota, today. Eventually. Georgia will pass a law sentencing anyone living in Cherokee territory to 4 years of hard labor, if they have not sworn allegiance to Georgia.
1890 Wounded Knee Battle or Massacre (depending on which version you read)
POLITICS (US)
1778 3,500 British soldiers capture Savannah, Georgia without firing a shot.
1813 British burn Buffalo New York during the War of 1812
1848 Gas lights 1st installed at White House (Polk's administration)
1852 Emma Snodgrass arrested in Boston for wearing pants
POLITICS (International)
1911 Sun Yat-sen becomes the provisional President of the Republic of China
1922 Revised Netherlands Law proclaims suffrage
1949 Hungary nationalized its industries
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1782 1st nautical almanac in US published by Samuel Stearns, Boston
1952 First transistorized hearing aid was offered for sale by Sonotone Corporation on this day.
1997 Hong Kong begins to kill all the nation's 1.25 million chickens to stop the spread of a potentially deadly influenza strain.

ANSWERS
∞ JEOPARDY
∞Indican, a colorless substance in this plant, turns blue in air & is used as a dye
What is Indigo? Learn More Here!
∞The plantain is a species of this fruit
What is a banana?
∞Among the most primitive plants with chlorophyll, it is the main plant life in both seawater & freshwater
What is Algea?
∞Carrots are root vegetables while potatoes are examples of these underground stems
What are tubers?
∞This cactus can grow to 50' tall & the white flower that grows on top is Arizona's state flower
What is Saguaro?

Tuesday Dec. 28

TODAY’S QUOTE—Justice Hugo L. Black

The Press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of the government and inform the people. Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government. And paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people.

HOLY MACKEREL: 1943 Stalin deports all inhabitants of Kalmukkie, Russia--about 70,000 killed

FREE RAMBLING THOUGHTS
I had a really nice time with my brother’s in-laws last week. Laura’s sister has two kids—one seven, one three. The boy, 7, listened to his little sister when she said ‘cut my hair’. When we arrived Sky had flowing blond locks, but by the next day she had a very cute pixie cut. Sky’s mom couldn’t see the humor so we don’t have pics between the long and short hair. Too bad. My brother and I always opened our presents on Christmas morning. It was a very orderly process. Each person got a present, opened it, thanked the giver, if present, and waited for everyone to finish their first present. Then came the second, third… always with the wait. When we were young, Santa always left a couple of presents unwrapped. We went to Laura’s father’s house for a delicious early dinner and the opening of presents with adults and 8 kids. The kids could just not be slowed down as paper, ribbon, and presents were flying around the living room. It was total chaos for about 30 minutes. All the moms were trying to figure out who gave which child what. The kids certainly didn’t know and I’m sure some relatives will be getting very generic thank you notes. You know: “Thank you very much for the Christmas present. I really wanted it and will like it for months to come.” Hopefully everyone will just be happy to get a thank you note. The other thing I will say about my Chicago relatives, they love to eat. We had two big meals every day we were there at a different house. This was my third year and now I am really part of the family. It was kinda hard to leave, knowing I won’t see them again for a year.

I didn’t see the sun for a week and was really looking forward to AZ, to see the sun. I left the hotel at 3:00 this morning, got to Phoenix about 8a and Flag about 10a. Sadly neither Chicago, Phoenix, nor Flagstaff was going to let me see the sun. Flag kinda cleared this afternoon, but even then not very sunny. The positive part of this was that Chicago never got below 30° the whole time we were there. It did not get much warmer than 35°, but we just had light snow and very little wind, so I ain’t complainin’.

I learned to use my Android phone while in Chicago. It even has GPS with oral driving directions. I still have some more learning ahead, but now feel comfortable making calls, sending and receiving texts and emails, using the calendar, Facebook and playing a few games. My much younger brother said he want one, but my the end or the trip he said he also getting a ‘dumb’ cell phone too, just for phone calls. Ah, technology.

Richard & Laura are with friends in Mexico City for the New Year, and then in mid January he goes for a job interview in VietNam. He will be working out of either New York or Miami as he finds vendors for the high end furniture line. Speaking of high end, we went to an open house in Chicago at the home of a friend of Laura had gone to the Art Institute with. They both design furniture. It was a beautiful home, and they showed us four hickory chairs they had just received from a Georgia farmer who made chairs in his spare time (Folk Architecture?). Each chair had been much more expensive, but they got them for $750 each since they bought four. They were hickory chairs with a woven seat much like rattan. They were very nice…just not my price range…ever.

∞ JEOPARDY PUZZLE—(SuperJeopardy Answers) from 1990 MUSICAL THEATRE
§Last name shared by musical theatre greats Moss & Lawrence
§The original cast album of this Broadway musical features a rose & a mask on the cover
§The title character of this comical 1956 musical almost marries Apassionata Von Climax
§1-word title of the 1980 musical which featured the following:
When the pills the doctor gave you turn your cold to the grippe /
When a stitch to save nine others comes apart with a rip /
When the rats invade your attic and start leaving your ship /
Follow my tip /
Come away on a trip /
Just join the circus...
§Gertrude Lawrence was the "lady" in the title of this 1941 musical about psychoanalysis

UNUSUAL NEWS ITEM WIGAN, England 
A British man participating in the World Pie Eating Championship set a world record by downing a saucer-sized meat pie in only 23.91 seconds. Organizers of the competition said Neil Collier, 42, bested the previous record of 35.86 seconds, set by former champion Barry Rigby, 37, at Tuesday's contest at Harry's Bar in Wigan, England, The Guardian reported Wednesday. "He just seemed to open his throat and down it went," organizer Tony Callaghan said. "He's from Bolton, mind, which is crying shame for a Wiganer to have to say, but he's certainly learned how to eat pies somewhere. Probably in Wigan." Official Iain Macauley said Collier narrowly avoided disqualification by starting to eat his pie only a fraction of a second after the starting signal was given.

SOMEWHAT USELESS INFORMATION—
∞ Sports shooters, especially those who use indoor small-bore rifle ranges, risk lead absorption and intoxication.
∞ Recreational skiers can easily reach speeds of up to 40 mph, which can lead to injuries similar to those seen in car accidents.

A LITTLE LAUGH
Flashlights used by my National Guard unit can withstand almost anything. And to prove it, they come with a lifetime warranty.
Nevertheless, nothing is indestructible, which is why the warranty also cautions, "Void with shark bites, bear attacks and children under the age of five."

FOUND ON ‘YOU TUBE’

DAYBOOK INFORMATION
♦ THIS WEEK ♦
25-31It's About Time Week
26-1/1: Kwanzaa
♦ TODAY IS… ♦
National Chocolate Day
Card Playing Day
The 2nd Day of Kwanzaa
The 2nd day of a week long festival celebrating the African American people, their culture and their history. On the second day the black candle is again lit, as well as the farthest red candle on the left. This represents the 2nd principle of Kwanzaa – Kujichagulia (koo-jee-chah-goo-LEE-ah): Self-Determination
Iowa: Admission Day (1846: 29th state: The Hawkeye State)
Western Christianity: The fourth day of Christmas. (4 Calling Birds…for Mathew, Mark, Luke, John)
Nepál: King Birendra's Birthday
Canada, United Kingdom (except Scotland), Australia, New Zealand: Boxing Day: historical--to give to the poor; modern: to return gifts--both for 'boxing up items'
Thailand: King Taksin Memorial Day (1768-1782)
South Australia: Proclamation Day, celebration started on the day following Christmas. (since 1836: became British Province)
♫ Academy Awards Best Original Song ♫
Click on Song Title to see and hear
♦Today’s Births♦
ARTS
David Archuleta, 20, singer, television personality (“American Idol”)
John Legend, 32, R&B singer, born John Stephens
1924 Rod Serling writer/host (Twilight Zone, Night Gallery)
Edgar Winter, 64, singer, musician
actors
1905 - Cliff Arquette (Charley Weaver) actor
Lou Jacobi, 97, actor (Irma La Douce)
Maggie Smith, 76, actress (Oscars for The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, California Suite
Denzel Washington, 56, actor (The Hurricane, Malcolm X; Oscars for Training Day and Glory)
ATHLETICS
James Blake, 31, tennis player
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1895 Auguste and Louis Lumiere twin brothers opened 1st commercial cinema
POLITICS
1856 - Woodrow Wilson 28th U.S. President [1913-1921]: asked Congress to declare war on Germany [Apr 2, 1917]; president of Princeton University [1902-1910]; Governor of New Jersey [1911-1913]; married to Ellen Axson [three daughters], Edith Galt; nickname: Schoolmaster in Politics
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1828 Karl L Kahlbaum German psychiatrist (catatonie)
♦Today’s Obituaries♦
1945 Theodore Dreiser novelist (An American Tragedy), @ 74
1923 Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel engineer (Eiffel Tower), @ 91
1884 Gerben Colmjon Frisian linguist/publisher, @ 56
1694 Queen Mary II of England smallpox after 5 years of rule @ 32
1984 Sam Peckinpah director, cardiac arrest @ 59
♦Today’s Events♦
ARTS
1973 - Alexander Solzhenitsyn published first volume of his Gulag Archipelago in Paris.
1983 - The Beach Boys’ Dennis Wilson drowned in Marina Del Ray, California
ATHLETICS
1905 Intercollegiate Athletic Association of US founded (becomes NCAA in 1910)
BUSINESS & EDUCATION
1732 1st known ad for "Poor Richard's Almanack" (Pennsylvania Gazette)
1849 M Jolly-Bellin discovers dry-cleaning, he accidentally upset lamp containing turpentine & oil on his clothing & sees cleaning effect
1869 William Finley Semple of Mt. Vernon, Ohio patented “the combination of rubber with other articles adapted to the formation of an acceptablechewing gum.”
1877 John Stevens applies for a patent on his flour rolling mill
1895 World's 1st movie theater opens in Paris
1912 - The first municipally-owned street cars took to the streets of San Francisco, California.
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
1791 Cherokee Chief Bloody Fellow, and others, arrive in Philadelphia to meet with President Washington. The meeting will be delayed by Secretary of War Knox until the Cherokees have been outfitted in "more proper" clothing.
POLITICS (US)
1816 American Colonization Society organizes
POLITICS (International)
1065 Westminster Abbey opens in London
1850 Rangoon Burma destroyed by fire
1950 Chinese troops cross 38th Parallel, into South Korea
SCIENCE & RELIGION
1828 6.8 earthquake strikes Echigo Japan, 30,000 killed

ANSWERS
∞ JEOPARDY
§Last name shared by musical theatre greats Moss & Lawrence
What is Hart?
§The original cast album of this Broadway musical features a rose & a mask on the cover
What is ‘Phantom of the Opera’?
§The title character of this comical 1956 musical almost marries Apassionata Von Climax
What is ‘Lil Abner’?
§1-word title of the 1980 musical which featured the following:
What is ‘Barnum’?
§Gertrude Lawrence was the "lady" in the title of this 1941 musical about psychoanalysis
What is ‘Lady in the Dark’?

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Flagstaff, Arizona, United States
I retired in '06--at the ripe old age of 57. I enjoy blogging, photography, traveling, and living life to it's fullest.