Jan 27, 2012


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1825 - U.S. Congress approves Indian Territory (in what is present-day Oklahoma), clearing the way for forced relocation of the Eastern Indians on the "Trail of Tears."
1924 - Lenin placed in Mausoleum in Red Square
1948 - 1st locomotive to carry 1,000,000 pounds (450,000 kg) operates
1961 - "Sing Along with Mitch" [Miller] premieres on NBC TV
♫Happy Birthday To: ♫                     
Free Rambling Thoughts   
A really good lunch…but not at the hamburger joint…The place was a little too loud for the ladies taste. I’ll try it later. We went to a nearby restaurant, Busters, and had a great lunch, along with good conversation, and some of the best service I’ve had in a long time. The Soup of the Day was ‘mushroom and barley’ which sounded a little odd, but it was actually very good. It was in a beef broth with lots of mushrooms, some fresh veggies, and barley….Yummmmmmy.

It was a nice day to be out and about. We could actually stand outside, in the sun, without a jacket while we waited for one in our party to arrive. I did have on a long sleeve shirt, but it was very nice. I made a couple of stops after lunch, and again, nice to walk across the various parking lots without freezing. The high clouds made one of the best sunsets in a long time….bright orange clouds with a light blue background. Flag is a great place to live.

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

NPR Sunday Puzzle
Every answer is a familiar, two-word phrase with the initials I-D. For example: "A fake gem for a ring." The answer is "Imitation Diamond."
1.     July 4th:
2.     Theory as alternative to evolution:
3.     Cause of anemia:
4.     Water, oil, vinegar, spices for salad:
5.     Cocaine, heroin:
6.     Classic song ‘to fight the unbearable sorrow’:
7.     Plastic girl you have to blow up:
8.     Lawyer’s plead to avoid death penalty:
9.     Person who chooses fabric, accessories for a room:
10.  It is approximately 180° longitude:
11.  Something dug to carry water to crops:
12.  Things listed on IRS forms to lower taxes:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
AZ Centennial is in 19 days:  Did you know?…
  • The battleship USS Arizona was named in honor of the state. It was commissioned in 1913 and launched in 1915 from the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
  • World War II brought many military personnel to train at Luke and Thunderbird fields in Glendale.
  • Rising to a height of 12,643 feet, Mount Humphreys north of Flagstaff is the state's highest mountain
  • Arizona, among all the states, has the largest percentage of its land set aside and designated as Indian lands
Found on You Tube         
75 mph wind on Mt. Humphreys
Top of Mt. Humphreys
Harper’s Index         
Percentage of US college grades that are ‘A’: 43
Joke-of-the-day
A man placed some flowers on the grave of his departed mother and started back for his car, parked on the cemetery road. His attention was diverted to a man kneeling at a grave.The man seemed to be praying with profound intensity, and kept repeating, "Why did you die? Why did you die?"The first man approached him and said, "Sir, I don't want to interfere with your private grief, but this demonstration of hurt and pain is more than I've ever seen before. For whom do you mourn so deeply? Your Child? A parent? Who, may I ask, lies in that grave?"The mourner answered, "My wife's first husband! ... Why did you die? Why did you die?"
Planet Earth

Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
A spark needs 25,000 volts for every inch of air it has to jump.
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • Bamboo is the fastest-growing woody plant on the Earth, growing as fast as 47.6 inches in a 24-hour period.
  • Many bamboos only flower at intervals as long as 60 or 120 years, and the flowering occurs simultaneously with all plants in the population. Subsequently, the plants produce flowers, which then produce seeds, and then die off. A new crop requires ten years to grow to full maturity.
  • Some of the world's top inventors found uses for bamboo. Thomas Edison tried over 100 varieties of bamboo for the filament in his first electric bulb, and the only one that worked was the Kyoto bamboo. Also, the needle in Alexander Graham Bell's first phonograph was made of bamboo.
  • Research in China's Qinling Mountains showed giant pandas can consume, on average, 40 pounds of fresh bamboo leaves per day.
  • The shakuhachi, a Japanese end-blown flute, was traditionally made from bamboo. It means "1.8 feet," referring to its size, and was used in classic Japanese music often associated with Zen Buddhism or meditation.
  • Because the bamboo is made up of more water than normal trees, it releases 35% more oxygen than trees.

Yeah, It Really Happened                
PARIS - A French presidential hopeful said he witnessed allied troops landing in Normandy but the event happened 17 years before he was born. The problem with the account Herve Morin delivered to supporters in Nice was that the invasion took place in 1944 and he wasn't born until 1961, France 24 reported Tuesday."You, some among you with gray hair, witnessed the storming of the Provence beach," Morin told supporters. "I saw the landing of the allied troops in Normandy." Morin's blooper made him the talk of the micro-blogging site Twitter.
Comments used the hashtag #MorinMcFly in a reference to the time traveling Marty McFly played by Michael J Fox in the "Back To The Future" movies, The Local reported. "Herve Morin will be seeing President Abraham Lincoln today for a working meeting" joked one tweeter. Morin registers only 1 percent in opinion polls and some members of his own New Centre party want him to quit the presidential race and back President Nicholas Sarkozy, the report said.
Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
20-30
Sundance Film Festival
21-27
World Leprosy WeekNational Activity Professionals WeekKid Film FestivalNational Nurse Anesthetists WeekClean Out Your Inbox WeekNational Handwriting Analysis WeekNational Medical Group Practice WeekNational Nuclear Science WeekNo Name Calling WeekNational Take Back Your Time Week
Today Is                                                                      
Auschwitz Liberation Day
Fun at Work Day
Holocaust Memorial Day [1945 liberated by Russia]
International Day of Commemoration in Memory of the Victims of the Holocaust
Mozart DayNational Pre-school Fitness Day
Punch the Clock Day
Thomas Crapper Day
Viet Nam Peace Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1300’s
1302 - Dante becomes a Florentine political exile
1500’s
1556 - Willem of Orange becomes knight of Guilder Flies
1600’s
1662 - 1st American lime kiln begins operation (Providence RI)
1700’s
1710 - Czar Peter the Great sets 1st Russian state budget
1785 - 1st US state university chartered, Athens Georgia
1800’s
1823 - Pres Monroe appoints 1st US ambassadors to South America
1870 - After accepting 15th amendment, VA is readmitted to Union
1880 - Thomas Edison patents electric incandescent lamp
1888 - National Geographic Society organizes (Wash DC)
1900’s
1915 - US Marines occupy Haiti
1918 - "Tarzan of the Apes," 1st Tarzan film, premieres at Broadway Theater
1926 - US Senate agrees to join World Court
1944 - Leningrad liberated from Germany in 880 days with 600,000 killed
1945 - Nazi occupiers forbid food transport to West (The Netherlands)
1948 - 1st tape recorder sold
1964 - Margaret Chase Smith (Sen-R-Maine) tries for Republican Pres bid
1967 - Apollo 1 fire kills astronauts Grissom, White & Chaffee
1970 - Movie rating system modifies "M" rating to "PG"
1976 - "Laverne & Shirley" spinoff from "Happy Days" premieres on ABC TV
1983 - World's longest subaqueous tunnel (53.90 km) opens, Honshu-Hokkaid
1984 - Michael Jackson is burned during filming for Pepsi commercial
1989 - Kevin Johnson (Phoenix) begins NBA free throw streak of 57 games
1991 - Superbowl XXV: NY Giants beat Buffalo Bills, 20-19 MVP: Ottis Anderson
1992 - Pres candidate Bill Clinton (D) & Genifer Flowers accuse each other of lying over her assertion they had a 12-year affair

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 40’s
Bridget Fonda, actor is 48

In their 50’s
Keith Olbermann, American news presenter is 53
Mimi Rogers, actor is 56
Richard Young, singer (Kentucky Headhunters-Davy Crockett ) is 57 [ Theme I grew up with]

Remembered for being born on this day
Abbas I, "the Great," shah of Persia (1587-1629) in 1556
Lewis Carroll, [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], auth (Alice in Wonderland) in 1832
Soong Ching-ling, Chinese wife of Sun Yat-sen in 1893
Troy Donahue, actor (Surfside Six, Cockfighter, Hawaiian Eye) in 1936
Samuel Gompers, Dutch/US 1st president (American Federation of Labor) in 1850
William Randolph Hearst Jr, newspaper publisher (Hearst Publishing) in 1908
Skitch Henderson, Birmingham England, orchestra leader (Tonight Show) in 1918
Jerome Kern, Broadway composer (Showboat, Roberta) in 1885
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Austria, musical prodigy/composer (Figaro) in 1756
Joe Perry, AAFC/NFL Hall of Fame fullback (SF 49ers, Balt Colts) in 1927
Donna Reed, actor (From Here to Eternity, Wonderful Life) in 1921
Art Rooney, NFL team owner (Pittsburgh Steelers) in 1901
Sabu, [Dastagir], India, actor (Elephant Boy, Drum) in 1924
David Seville, [Ross Bagdasarian], Fresno California, (Alvin & Chipmunks) in 1919
Today’s Obits                                                           
Ali, the final Sunni Rashidun and first Shia Imam in 661
John James Audubon, conservationist (Audubon Society), dies at 65 in 1851
Mahalia Jackson, gospel singer (He Got the Whole World), dies of diabetes and heart failure at 60 in 1972  
L Ron Hubbard, novelist/founder (Church of Scientology), dies at 74 in 1986
Jack Paar, American television show host dies at 86 in 2004
Tige Andrews, American actor dies at 87 in 2007
John Updike, American Novelist dies at 77in 2009
J. D. Salinger, American novelist dies at 91 in 2010

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     July 4th: Independence Day
2.     Theory as alternative to evolution: intelligent design
3.     Cause of anemia: iron deficiency
4.     Water, oil, vinegar, spices for salad: Italian dressing
5.     Cocaine, heroin: illegal drugs
6.     Classic song ‘to fight the unbearable sorrow’: Impossible Dream
7.     Plastic girl you have to blow up: inflatable doll
8.     Lawyer’s plead to avoid death penalty: insanity defense
9.     Person who chooses fabric, accessories for a room: interior designer
10.  It is approximately 180° longitude: International Dateline
11.  Something dug to carry water to crops: irrigation ditch
12.  Things listed on IRS forms to lower taxes: itemized deductions
Wuzzle
Upside down cake
Long underwear
White elephant

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 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Followers

Total Pageviews

Blog Archive

About Me

My photo
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.