Feb. 01


FYI: Click on any blue text for a link to more information!

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1789 - Chinese troops driven out of Vietnam capital Thang Long
1814 - Lord Byron's "Corsair" sells 10,000 copies on day of publication
1884 - 1st volume of the Oxford English Dictionary, A-Ant, published
1949 - RCA releases 1st single record ever (45 rpm)
1951 - 1st telecast of atomic explosion
1978 - Harriet Tubman is 1st black woman honored on a US postage stamp
1985 - -61°F (-52°C), Maybell, Colorado (state record)
Happy Birthday To:                      
 Returns tomorrow
Free Rambling Thoughts   
I became a real home-fix-it person today. Went to Home Depot and got a new shower handle and installed it, then got the materials for a new headboard cover for my bed. I have several nice Star Quilts from the Lakota that I have no way to display. My plan is to use them as a headboard and footboard to my bed. Sure hope it comes out like I hope. No damage to the quilts, using safety pins to place hold them around some ½” PVC pipe. I saw a similar project on one of those DIY shows. We’ll see. The headboard will show the entire ‘star’ while the footboard will show half the ‘star’. Then I found some Command strips that will hold my really cool world map on the wall in my travel room. When you rent, you gotta find a way. I know the maintenance guy could have fixed the shower handle, but it was so easy I just did it.

I heard something interesting today on CNN. The Republicans will nominate somebody and the party will join and back the candidate…no matter who it is. The Dems will back Obama. The vote will be determined by the 5-6% of independents. It’s probably true…so let’s get to the vote. I’m really tired of all this nasty politics and the millions that are being spent as our country is trying to recover. As the Super Pacs spend that millions on their candidate…somebody is getting the money…TV stations, radio stations, newspapers, billboard owners, restaurants and caterers that feed all these politicians. Why isn’t that helping the economy with $$$ and jobs? I’m sure none of the Super Pac workers are not working for peanuts—even though they are Republicans.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
You are given clues for two words. Add an "L" at the end of the first word and you'll get the second one. For example, given "a fruit and a gem from an oyster," the answer would be "pear" and "pearl."
1.     Arrived; desert animal:
2.     Comfort; support for a painting:
3.     Some air pollution; eye color:
4.     Part of a church; part of a stomach:
5.     Front of a ship; walk like a cat:
6.     Covered with ivy; old records (45’s):
7.     Stick um; a soft shade:
8.     To push roughly; garden tool:
9.     Telegraph inventor; a bit of food:
10.  To take a car out on the road; worthless talk:
11.  Square to land on in Monopoly; where the choir and alter are:
12.  Actor Mason: sheriff in the old west:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
AZ Centennial – Feb 14:  Did you know?…
A person from Arizona is called an Arizonan.Phoenix originated in 1866 as a hay camp to supply Camp McDowell
New:  Daffynitions: :-)
ESOTERIC — A word known only by esoteric people
FLASHLIGHT — A case for holding dead batteries
Found on You Tube         
Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster
Harper’s Index         
  1. Chances that an American fast food customer used posted calorie information to make food-buying choice: 1 in 6
  2. Number of US states in which less than 20% of adults are obese: 0

Joke-of-the-day
An attorney, anxious to impress the judge with the detail, asked the following line of questions of a doctor who had recently performed an autopsy.
 Q: Doctor, before you performed the autopsy, did you check for a pulse?
 A: No.
 Q: Did you check for blood pressure?
 A: No.
 Q: Did you check for breathing?
 A: No.
 Q: So, then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy?
 A: No.
 Q: How can you be so sure, Doctor?
 A: Because his brain was sitting on my desk in a jar.
 Q: But could the patient have still been alive, nevertheless?
 A: Yes, it is possible that he could have been alive and practicing law somewhere.

Planet Earth

Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
To find out how many lights your Christmas tree needs, multiply the tree height times the tree width times three.
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • Clara Peller, the elderly actress who first voiced the infamous Wendy's slogan "Where's the Beef?", was later fired after cutting a commercial for spaghetti sauce where she answers her famous question by saying, "I found it."
  • Beefaroni contains vitamin A and no other vitamins.
  • Selfridges, the renowned London department store, is said to offer the world's most expensive sandwich which cost approximately $130. The ingredients are Wagyu beef, fresh lobe foie gras, black truffle mayonnaise, brie de meaux, red pepper, and mustard confit and English plum tomatoes.
  • Beefalo, also known as catalo or cattalo, is a hybrid beef animal, bred by crossing the domestic Pulled Angus with the American Bison. Texan Charles Goodnight developed the beefalo in the mid-19th century as he preferred bison meat to beef and, with this hybrid, sought to combine the flavor of the bison with the Angus' resistance to certain diseases and pests.
  • Kobe beef is an exclusive beef from the black Tajima-ushi breed of Wagyu cattle, raised according to strict tradition in Japan.
  • Acclaimed self-taught chef Fergus Henderson of St. John restaurant in London has been lauded for his "nose-to-tail" style of cooking. The menus at St John offers dishes using the most unusual parts - heart, kidneys, brain, and bone marrow - to create exceptional dishes.

Yeah, It Really Happened                 
Harare, Zimbabwe - Troops of bag-snatching, truck-looting baboons are causing chaos at a border post between Zimbabwe and Zambia in daily raids for food, News Day reported on Tuesday."Baboons are an issue that must be dealt with here because they destroy travellers’ goods," the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority station manager at the Chirundu border post, Tichaona Phiri, told the newspaper."Sometimes they bite or clap people on their faces if they try to defend their property and they can snatch ladies' handbags and even destroy cars as they search for food."The apes also tear up sacks of maize on trucks moving through the border, a committee of lawmakers was told during a visit to the site, located in a national park."These baboons can smell maize on trucks and considering their huge numbers, it is very difficult to control them," the newspaper quoted Phiri as saying."But the problem is that they behave like human beings and are very good tricksters," said Phiri.

Calendar Information  
…Happening this month: 
…Happening This Week:
20-30
Sundance Film Festival
1-5
Catholic Schools Week
Meat WeekIntimate Apparel WeekNational Cowboy Poetry Gathering WeekInternational Hoof Care Week
1-7
International Snow Sculpting WeekSolo Diners Eat Out Weekend  Women's Heart Week

Today Is                                                                      
African-American Coaches DayCar Insurance Day
Freedom Day
G.I. Joe Day
Hula in The Coola Day
National Girls & Women in Sports Day
Robinson Crusoe Day
Spunky Old Broads Day
Working Naked Day
 Today’s Other Events                                                              
1500’s
1587 - English queen Elizabeth I signs Mary Stuarts death sentence
1700’s
1709 - Alexander Selkirk [Robinson Crusoe] rescued from Juan Fernandez
1788 - 1st US steamboat patent issued, by Georgia to Briggs & Longstreet
1790 - Supreme Court convenes for 1st time (NYC)
1800’s
1810 - 1st insurance co managed by blacks (American Insurance Co of Phila)
1861 - Texas becomes 7th state to secede
1862 - Julia Howe publishes "Battle Hymn of Republic"
1865 - 13th amendment approved (National Freedom Day)
1896 - Giacomo Puccini's Opera "La Boheme," premieres in Turin
1898 - 1st auto insurance policy in US issued, by Travelers Insurance Co
1900’s
1920 - 1st commercial armored car introduced (St Paul Minn)
1935 - 1st "March of Time" newsreel premieres at the Capitol
1951 - -50°F (-46°C), Gavilan, New Mexico (state record)
1953 - "You Are There" with Walter Cronkite premieres on CBS television
1958 - 1st US satellite (Explorer I) launched
1959 - Texas Instruments requests patent of IC (Integrated Circuit)
1960 - 4 students stage 1st civil rights sit-in, at Greensboro NC Woolworth
1964 - Beatles' "I Want to Hold Your Hand," 1st #1 hit, stays #1 for 7 weeks
1965 - Martin Luther King Jr & 700 demonstrators arrested in Selma Ala
1965 - Peter Jennings, 26, becomes anchor of ABC's nightly news
1972 - Kuala Lumpur becomes a city by a royal charter granted by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia
1974 - "Good Times" (spinoff from "Maude") premieres on CBS TV
1976 - "Rich Man, Poor Man" mini-series premieres on ABC TV
1979 - Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returns to Iran after 15 yrs in exile
1979 - Patricia Hearst is released from a SF prison for bank robbery
1982 - "Late Night With David Letterman," debuts on NBC-TV
1987 - 163 day strike against Deere & Co ends, workers accept wage freeze
2000’s
2003 - Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrates during reentry into the Earth's atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts aboard
2005 - Canada introduces the Civil Marriage Act, making Canada the fourth country to sanction same-sex marriage
2009 - Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir is elected as the first female Prime Minister of Iceland, becoming the first openly gay Head of State in the modern world

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Don Everly, vocalist (Everly Bros-Wake Up Little Susie) is 75
Sherman Hemsley, actor (All in the Family, Jeffersons, Amen) is 74
In their 50’s
Anthony LaPlagia, actor (Criminal Justice, Betsy's Wedding) is 53
In their 40’s
Laura E Dern, actress (Blue Velvet, Mask, Smooth Talk) is 45
Michael C. Hall, actor is 41
Brian Krause , actor is 40
Pauly Shore, actor is  44
Remembered for being born on this day
Thomas Cole, US, romantic landscape painter (Hudson River School) in 1801
John Ford, Maine, director (Stagecoach, Air Mail, Quiet Man) in 1895
Clark Gable, actor (Gone With the Wind) in 1901
Mother Ignacia del Espiritu Santo, foundress of order in Philippines in 1663
Langston Hughes, poet/translator (Weary Blues) in 1902
Rick James, [James Johnson], rock/soul/funk vocalist ( Super Freak)
Brandon Lee, Emerson Colo, actor (Showdown in Little Tokyo)

Today’s Obits                                                           
Rene Descartes, philosopher "I think therefore I am" dies of pneumonia at 53 in 1650
Buster Keaton, [Joseph Francis], US comic (General), dies of lung cancer at 69 in 1966
May O'Donnell, American modern dancer and choreographer dies at 95 in 2004
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, novelist (Frankenstein), dies of brain tumor at 53 in 1851

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game
Numbers 1 and 8 are identical
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     Arrived; desert animal: came, camel
2.     Comfort; support for a painting: ease, easel
3.     Some air pollution; eye color: haze; hazel
4.     Part of a church; part of a stomach: nave; navel
5.     Front of a ship; walk like a cat: prow; prowl
6.     Covered with ivy; old records (45’s): viny; vinyl
7.     Stick um; a soft shade: paste; pastel
8.     To push roughly; garden tool: shove; shovel
9.     Telegraph inventor; a bit of food: Morse; morsel
10.  To take a car out on the road; worthless talk: drive; drivel
11.  Square to land on in Monopoly; where the choir and alter are: chance; chancel
12.  Actor Mason: sheriff in the old west: Marsha; marshal
Wuzzle
  • Big Deal
  • Cornerstone
  • One after another


Disclaimer: All opinions are mine…feel free to agree or disagree.
All ‘data’ info is from the internet sites and is usually checked with at least one other source, but I have learned that every site has mistakes and sadly once out the information is out there, many sites simply copy it and is therefore difficult to verify. Also for events occurring before the Gregorian calendar was adopted [1582] the dates may not be totally accurate.
  1.     And That Is All for Now 

Jan 31 2012


FYI: Click on any blue text for a link to more information!

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1627 - Spanish government goes bankrupt
1855 - Western railroads blocked by snow
1871 - Millions of birds fly over western SF, darkens sky
1876 - The United States orders all Native Americans to move into reservations
1915 - 1st (German) poison gas attack, against Russians
1919 - The Battle of George Square takes place in Glasgow, Scotland
1958 - James van Allen discovers radiation belt
1990 - The first McDonald's in the Soviet Union opens in Moscow, USSR

Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
Got my haircut…feel much better. Then ran some errands. Then did the first payment for Uganda. So excited…it’s not till January…but reservations gotta be made.

A nice cool day to be out and about. Gotta love Flagstaff.

I’m ready for the Republican Primaries to END. I guess it was a long season back in ’08 with both parties trying to get the best candidate…but I’m just not interested.

Some days I post a lot of links, other days, not so many. As a certified visual learner I need to see it.  I am constantly amazed at the things are available on You Tube. I was amazed to find the actual pictures of the Battle of George Square from 1919, the video of Ham---the first US primate in space, and the cute video of JD Salinger's short story. I hope everyone enjoys at least one of them.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
Every answer is a familiar two-word phrase in which the first word ends in the letter M and the second word starts with C. For example, given "Lysol or Comet product," the answer would be "bathroom cleaner."
1.     It might wake you up in the morning:
2.     Manhattan or NE food item:
3.     Part of a s’more:
4.     A constant brat:
5.     Below ground shelter during a tornado:
6.     A Hoover product:
7.     PE:
8.     Title for a woman who heads a meeting:
9.     Cocktail made with gin and lemon juice:
10.  What’s seen after a nuclear test:
11.  Spread for a bagle:
12.  Place in the house to keep a mop:
13.  Table salt chemically:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
AZ Centennial – Feb 14:  Did you know?…
  • At one time camels were used to transport goods across Arizona.

In 1855 Sec. of War Jefferson Davis dispatched Major Henry Wayne to Europe and the Middle East to learn about camels and purchase some for use in Arizona. Major Wayne made the trip and returned home with 33 camels which were used to create the U.S. Army Camel Corps. Actually, the camel idea did work for the Army and, for a few years before the Civil War the Camel Corps did roam the deserts of Arizona as well as the deserts of California, Nevada and Utah. In fact camels proved to be so reliable as beasts of burden in the desert that the Army imported some more and mining companies also acquired some for use in remote desert mines.
However, with the start of the Civil War, the War Department had other needs besides camels and, as troops were pulled from the West to the battle grounds of the East the camels were left behind. Some were sold and used by mining companies or circuses while others ended up being abandoned in the desert and reverting to a wild state.
  • Between the years 1692 and 1711 Father Eusebio Kino focused on area missionary work. During the time many grain and stock farms began.

New:  Daffynitions: :-)
  • BARGIN — Something that makes you think you’re saving money when you’re spending it.
  • COMMITTEE: A body that keeps minutes and wastes hours.
Found on You Tube         
Jackie Robinson Tribute
Harper’s Index         
Percent increase in armed robberies at pharmacies since 2006: 81
Joke-of-the-day
Q. How many psychiatrists does it take to change a light bulb?      A. Just one, but that light bulb really has to want to change!
Planet Earth

Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
If you are setting aside space to grow herbs for your own family, figure two square feet for each variety you plan to grow.
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • In a 2005 study, taxfoundation.org found that of the 32 states which receive more than they contribute in federal tax per dollar, 84% were Republican. Of the 18 states which contribute more than they receive in federal tax per dollar, 78% were Democratic states.
  • Roughly 90% of the tax filers who would pay more under President Obama's tax plan aren't millionaires, and 99.99% aren't billionaires.

Yeah, It Really Happened                 
After years of enduring sexist jokes and taunts from their male counterparts, women drivers can finally take heart -- a new study suggests they’re actually better at parking than men.Covert surveillance of car parks across the United Kingdom shows that, while women may take longer to park, they are more adept than men at maneuvering into a parking space, and when they park they are more likely to leave their vehicles in the middle of a parking bay.The month-long study, conducted by the U.K.’s National Car Parks, was carried out amongst 2,500 drivers and looked at various aspects of parking -- including technique, accuracy and time taken to park -- in order to produce a “parking coefficient” -- an overall score of how well a driver parks.The overall score for women drivers was higher than for male drivers. Women also fared better when it came to finding empty spaces, were more accurate in lining themselves up before starting a parking maneuver, and were more likely to use a driving instructor’s favored method of reversing into a parking spot.“Women fared better in many areas of the scoring,” the report said. “This is despite the fact that, when questioned about their beliefs, only one fifth (18%) thought they were better parkers than men and less than a third (28%) of women believed they were better parkers than their partners.”
Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
20-30
Sundance Film Festival
29-2/5
Catholic Schools Week
Meat WeekIntimate Apparel WeekNational Cowboy Poetry Gathering WeekInternational Hoof Care Week
Today Is                                                                       
  • Appreciate Your Social Security Check Day
  • Bubble Wrap Appreciation Day
  • Child Labor Day
  • Inspire Your Heart with the Arts Day
  • National Popcorn Day
  •  Nauru: Independence Day [from Australia—1968]


Today’s Other Events                                                             
1600’s
1646 - Jesuits "predict" a lunar eclipse for the Huron of Ossossane. This accurate prediction, made with the use of an almanac, will lead to many religious conversions.
1696 - Revolt of undertakers after funeral reforms (Amsterdam)
1700’s
1747 - The first venereal diseases clinic opens at London Lock Hospital.
1800’s
1842 - John Tyler's daughter Elizabeth marries in White House
1851 - SF Orphan's Asylum, 1st in California, founded
1865 - Congress passes 13th Amendment, abolishing slavery in America (121-24)
1870 - The first acts are taken to establish the White Mountain-San Carlos-Camp Apache Reserve in western Arizona territory, by the Military Division of the Pacific. Major engineer H.M.Robert forwards a map of the proposed reserve to military headquarters in San Francisco for consideration.
1900’s
1905 - 1st auto to exceed 100 mph (161 kph), A G MacDonald, Daytona Beach
1918 - A series of accidental collisions on a misty Scottish night leads to the loss of two Royal Navy submarines with over a hundred lives, and damage to another five British warships.
1928 - Scotch tape 1st marketed by 3-M Company
1936 - "Green Hornet" radio show is 1st heard on WXYZ Radio in Detroit
1948 - J D Salinger's "A Perfect Day for Banana Fish" appears in NY
1949 - 1st daytime soap on TV "These Are My Children" (NBC in Chicago)
1961 - David Ben-Gurion resigns as premier of Israel
1961 - Ham is 1st primate in space (158 miles) aboard Mercury/Redstone 2
1971 - "My Sweet Lord" by George Harrison hit #1 on UK pop chart
1972 - Aretha Franklin sings at Mahalia Jackson's funeral
1980 - Police storm occupied Spanish embassy in Guatemala City, killing 41
1982 - US male Figure Skating championship won by Scott Hamilton
1985 - South African president PW Botha offers to free Mandela if he denounces violence
2000’s
2001 - In the Netherlands a Scottish court convicts a Libyan and acquits another for their part in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 which crashed into Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988.
2007 - Suspects are arrested in Birmingham in the UK, accused of plotting the kidnap, holding and eventual beheading of a serving Muslim British soldier in Iraq.
2009 - In Kenya, at least 113 people are killed and over 200 injured following an oil spillage ignition in Molo, days after a massive fire at a Nakumatt supermarket in Nairobi killed at least 25 people

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 90’s
Carol Channing, actress (Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, Hello Dolly) is 91
In their 80’s
Ernie Banks, "Mr Cub" Chicago Cubs, Hall-of-Famer (1st baseman) is 81
In their 70’s
Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard, queen of Netherlands (1980- ) is 74
James G Watt, US Secretary of Interior (1981-83) is 74
In their 60’s
Nolan Ryan, pitcher (Mets, Angels, Astros) (7 no-hitters, 5,714 Ks) is 65
In their 50’s
Johnny Rotten, [John Lydon], rocker (Sex Pistols-God Save the Queen) is 56
In their 40’s
Minnie Driver, actor (Good Will Hunting) is 41
In their 30’s
Portia De Rossi, actor—partner of Ellen is 39
Remembered for being born on this day
Tallulah Bankhead, actress (Lifeboat, Die Die Darling) in 1903
Eddie Cantor, comedian (Eddie Cantor Comedy Theater) in 1892
James Franciscus, actor (Mr Novak, Longstreet, Hunter) in 1934
Zane Grey, American West novelist (Riders of the Purple Sage) in 1872
Benjamin Hooks, civil rights leader in 1925
Mario Lanza, actor/singer (Great Caruso, Toast of New Orleans) in 1921
Norman Mailer, NYC mayoral candidate/novelist (Naked & the Dead) in 1923
Garry Moore, [Thomas Garrison Morfit], host (I've Got a Secret) in 1915
Antonia Minor, daughter of Mark Antony and Octavia Minor in 36 BCE
Theodore William Richards, chemist (atomic weights, Nobel-1914) in 1868
Jackie Robinson, 1st black major league baseball player (Dodgers) in 1919
Franz Peter Schubert, Austrian composer (Unfinished Symphony) in 1797
Jean Simmons, actor in 1929
Stewart L Udall, St Johns Ariz, US Secretary of Interior (1961-69) in 1920

Today’s Obits                                                           
A. A. Milne, English author dies at 74 in 1956
Guy Fawkes, convicted in the "Gunpowder Plot", executed at 35 in 1606
Samuel Goldwyn, Polish/English/US film magnate (MGM), dies at 91 in 1974
Rashad Khalifa, Egyptian-born imam assassinated  at 5 in 1990
Moira Shearer, Scottish actress (The Red Shoes) and ballerina dies at 80 in 2006
PVT Eddie Slovik, 1st US executed for desertion since Civil War at 25
[Bonnie Prince] Charles E Stuart, English pretender, dies in exile at 67 in 1788
Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game
First equation: 25-8-2 = 6+4+5Second equation: 9-37+23+5 = 2-2
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     It might wake you up in the morning: alarm clock
2.     Manhattan or NE food item: clam chowder
3.     Part of a s’more: graham cracker
4.     A constant brat: problem child
5.     Below ground shelter during a tornado: storm cellar
6.     A Hoover product: vacuum cleaner
7.     PE: gym class
8.     Title for a woman who heads a meeting: madam chair
9.     Cocktail made with gin and lemon juice: Tom Collins
10.  What’s seen after a nuclear test: mushroom cloud
11.  Spread for a bagle: Cream cheese
12.  Place in the house to keep a mop: broom closet
13.  Table salt chemically: sodium chloride
Wuzzle
  • A pair of pants
  • Seven Up cans
  • Five pounds overweight

Disclaimer: All opinions are mine…feel free to agree or disagree.
All ‘data’ info is from the internet sites and is usually checked with at least one other source, but I have learned that every site has mistakes and sadly once out the information is out there, many sites simply copy it and is therefore difficult to verify. Also for events occurring before the Gregorian calendar was adopted [1582] the dates may not be totally accurate.
    And That Is All for Now 

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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.