Mar 20--1st day of Spring


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1616 - Walter Raleigh released from Tower of London to seek gold in Guyana
1816 - US Supreme Court affirms its right to review state court decisions
1852 - Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin" published (Boston)
1864 800 Navajo, mostly women, children and old men, begin the 300 mile march to Fort Sumner and the Bosque Redondo Reservation, in east-central New Mexico. The group would pick up 146 additional NAVAJOs during the march. A powerful snow storm strikes the ill-equipped marchers during the trip. By the time they reach the new reservation, 110 Navajo will have perished.
1934 - Female Babe Didrickson pitches hitless inning for Phila A's in exhibition game against Brooklyn Dodgers
1942 - Gen MacArthur vows, "I shall return"
1954 - 1st newspaper vending machine used (Columbia Pennsylvania)
1969 - Beatle John Lennon marries Yoko Ono in Gibraltar
1984 - Senate rejects amendment to permit spoken prayer in public schools
1990 - LA Lakers retires Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's #33
2006 - Cyclone Larry makes landfall in eastern Australia, destroying most of the country's banana crop

Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
Turned out to be a great day…sun came out, snow stopped after dropping about 29”, and I have great neighbors.  There are about 9 townhouse units in our building. Our parking is right in front of the units. The HOA shovels the sidewalks and clears the parking lot very well. The only problem is that if a parking space is empty, they pile up the show against the sidewalk. With any storm, since our units basically face East, the snow just never melts. One of our neighbors is a construction guy. This morning, while I was cleaning off my ride for the third time, he was out there with a small front end tractor, removing the piles of snow against our sidewalks. He stopped and said he was tired of waiting two or more months for it to melt. I agreed and thanked him, then I took off to run some errands. When I got back he had cleared ALL the snow form all the parking spaces on our side. Very cool.
 Back at Christmas, my brother and his wife were going to a Chicago nail salon for a mani-pedi. I was with them, and decided I would try it. In my entire life, I had never done it. We actually went to two salons, since the first was not very well ventilated. Had I been alone, I would have thought they were all like that. The second salon was nice. I had a nice chat with a 20 something Vietnamese girl who cut my toenails, massaged my feet and calves, and then did my hands. My feet felt really good as did my hands. I decided today, I would try it again. I went to the mall, for a haircut, and stopped at the nail salon. A very nice older Chinese woman did it.  Again, my feet and hands are great. This is so much better than trying to cut my own toenails. I’m not like my retirement group ladies who get one every month but after about 3 months it is nice. Who knew? And yes, it is a little embarrassing for an old guy to sit there, but the massage chair lets me get over that real fast. Then I stopped at the hair salon and only had to wait about 10 minutes for my haircut. Not many people were at the mall so it was a good day all the way around. As I was leaving the all about 12:30, both the hair salon and the nail place were packed.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game
NPR Sunday Puzzle
This puzzle is called "test." Every answer is a familiar two-word phrase in which the first word starts with "T-E" and the second word starts with "S-T." For example, if the clue is "cut of beef that is often grilled or barbecued," the answer would be "tenderloin steak."
1.      Where shows are taped for broadcast:
2.      City thoroughfare between 9th and 11th:
3.      Construction material that has been heat treated to make it stronger:
4.      University in Nashville:
5.      Long time Alaska senator, defeated in ’08:
6.      A piece pounded into the ground to make a camp shelter:
7.      Sieve like device used to brew Peko or oolong:
8.      According to an old gas station slogan—You can trust the man who wears the ___:
9.      Dental procedure to align canine or molars:
10.   What Alaska and Hawaii had before 1959:
11.   A facility from which Morse code messages were once sent:
12.   Refusal of Union truck drivers to work:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—

Found on You Tube         
The Ancient World in London - Spring Equinox at Stonehenge
Harper’s Index         
Minutes of television that the average British dog watches each day: 50
Joke-of-the-day
It was the first day of school, and the first grade teacher decided to see how much her students knew about math.
 “Steven, can you tell me what is 3 and 2?”
Steven said, “That’s when you should watch very, very carefully before you swing at the next pitch.”
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
For capturing pythons, anacondas, boas and other large constrictors, it is wise to have one person for every 4 or 5 feet of snake.
Somewhat Useless Information   
Dolphins are Cetacenas. There are 32 species of ocean dolphins and 5 species of river dolphins.
Orcas grow up to 6.1 meters long and they are named as whales because their size, but they really belong to the toothed cetacean family just like dolphins do.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
Miami: They wore orange – and got fired for it.
So say four former employees of the Elizabeth R. Wellborn P.A. law firm in Deerfield Beach who were terminated after they came to work in orange shirts on Friday, the company’s pay day, the South Florida Sun Sentinel reports.
They said they’ve worn orange shirts on pay days for the past few months so they would look like a group when they went out afterward for happy hour, the newspaper reported. Janice Doble, 50, of Sunrise said she was looking forward to the gathering after a busy week.
“Orange happens to be my favorite color. My patio is orange," she told the paper. “My lipstick was orange today.”
Unfortunately for Doble and 13 other employees, an executive viewed things very differently. He told them that he understood there was a protest involving orange, and because they were all wearing the color, they were fired, the Sun Sentinel reported.
One person immediately denied being part of a protest and explained the happy hour connection, but after the law firm’s honchos discussed the matter outside the room, they returned and said everyone was fired, said Lou Erik Ambert, a litigation paralegal.
"There is no office policy against wearing orange shirts. We had no warning. We got no severance, no package, no nothing," said Ambert, 31, of Coconut Creek. "I feel so violated."
A spokeswoman for the firm said it had “no comment at this time,” according to the Sun Sentinel.

Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
18-24
National Animal Poison Prevention Week
National Inhalant and Poisons Awareness Week
19-25
Act Happy Week
American Chocolate Week
Wellderly Week
Today Is                                                                      
Alien Abduction Day
Atheist Pride Day
Bed-in For Peace Day
Corn Dog Day
Festival Of Extraterrestrial Abductions Day
First Day of Spring Ostara (Spring Equinox)
Great American Meat Out Day
Kiss Your Fiancée Day
National Agriculture Day  
National Jump Out! Day To encourage kids, and adults, to be more active
National Native HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
Proposal Day
Snowman Burning Day
Won't You Be My Neighbor Day

Persia (Iran): Now Ruz--(Persian New Year) Same day as the Vernal Equinox
Tunisia: Independence Day (1956 for France)

Today’s Other Events                                                             
Before 1000CE
141 - 6th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet
> 
1300’s
1345 - Saturn/Jupiter/Mars-conjunction: thought "cause of plague epidemic"
> 
1600’s
1627 - France & Spain signs accord for fighting protestantism
1699: Continuing his exploration up the Mississippi River, today, French explorer Lemoyne d'Iberville will visit the village of the Houma Indians.
1700’s
1760 - Great Fire of Boston destroys 349 buildings
1800’s
1815 - Napoleon enters Paris after escape from Elba, begins 100-day rule
1886 - 1st AC power plant in US begins commercial operation, Mass
1897 - 1st known intercollegiate basketball game, Yale beats Penn 32-10
1900’s
1911 - National Squash Tennis Association forms (NYC)
1933 - Dachau, 1st concentration camp, completed
1935 - "Your Hit Parade" made its debut on radio
1952 - Final ratification of peace treaty restoring sovereignty to Japan
1956 - Union workers ended a 156-day strike at Westinghouse Electric Corp
1967 - Supremes release "The Happening"
1968 - LBJ signs a bill removing gold backing from US paper money
1976 - Patricia Hearst convicted of armed robbery
1982 - Joan Jett & Blackhearts' "I Love Rock 'n' Roll" goes #1 for 7 wks
1988 - David Henry Hwang's "M. Butterfly," premieres in NYC
1991 - Supreme Court rules unanimously employers can't exclude women from jobs where exposure to toxic chemicals could potentially damage fetus
1994 - El Salvador's 1st pres election following 12-year-old civil war
1996 - Erik & Lyle Menendez found guilty of killing their parents
1996 - UK admits humans can catch CJD (Mad Cow Disease)
2000’s
2003 - Invasion of Iraq by American and British led coalition begins without United Nations support and in defiance of world opinion
2006 - Over 150 Chadian soldiers are killed in eastern Chad by members of the rebel UFDC. The rebel movement sought to overthrow Chadian president Idriss Deby

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 90’s
Carl Reiner, Bronx, comedian (2000 Year Old Man , Dick Van Dyke Show) is 90
> 
In their 70’s
Hal Linden, [Harold Lipshitz], actor (Barney Miller , Blacke's Magic) is 75
In their 60’s
Bobby Orr, Parry Sound, Ontario, HOF NHL defenseman (Boston Bruins) is 64
Pat Riley, Schenectady NY, NBA coach (Lakers, Knicks, Heat) is 67
In their 50’s
Holly Hunter, actor (Broadcast News, The Piano) is 54
Spike Lee [Shelton Jackson Lee], Atlanta, Florida, American film director (Mo Better Blues, Jungle Fever, Malcolm X) is 55
Remembered for being born on this day
Jack Barry, Lindenhurst NY, game show emcee (Joker's Wild) in 1918
Balthasar Bekker, Frisian theologist (Examiner of Comets) in 1634
John D Erlichman, Politician (Nixon aide, Watergate) in 1925
Henrik Ibsen, Norway, playwright (Peer Gynt, Hedda Gabler) in 1828
Werner Klemperer, Cologne Germany, actor (Col Klink -Hogan's Heroes) in 1920
Ozzie Nelson, Jersey City NJ, actor (Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet ) in 1906
Michael Redgrave, Bristol England, actor (Browning Version, Lady Vanishes) in 1908
Jerry Reed, Atlanta GA, singer/actor (Bat 21, Smokey & the Bandit)  in 1937
Fred Rogers, Latrobe PA, children TV host (Mr Rogers' Neighborhood) in 1928

Today’s Obits                                                           
Liz Carpenter, American feminist writer dies at 89 in 2010
Grace Hefner, mother of Hugh Hefner (Playboy), dies at 101 in 1997
Chet Huntley, newscaster (NBC Huntley-Brinkley Report), dies of lung cancer at 62 in 1974
Stewart Udall, American politician, environmentalist dies at 90 in 2010
Giuseppe [Joe] Zangara, electrocuted for assassination attempt on FDR at 33 in 1933
Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game
NPR Sunday Puzzle
Oops, yesterday’s #3 answers should have read
Mite, race, mini: ter:
a.      termite, terrace, termini
1.      Where shows are taped for broadcast:
a.      television studio
2.      City thoroughfare between 9th and 11th:
a.      tenth street
3.      Construction material that has been heat treated to make it stronger:
a.      tempered steel
4.      University in Nashville:
a.      Tennessee State
5.      Long time Alaska senator, defeated in ’08:
a.      Ted Stevens
6.      A piece pounded into the ground to make a camp shelter:
a.       tent stake
7.      Sieve like device used to brew Peko or oolong:
a.      tea strainer
8.      According to an old gas station slogan—You can trust the man who wears the ____:
a.      Texaco Star
9.      Dental procedure to align canine or molars:
a.      teeth straightening
10.   What Alaska and Hawaii had before 1959:
a.      territorial status
11.   A facility from which Morse code messages were once sent:
a.      telegraph station
12.   Refusal of Union truck drivers to work:
a.      Teamster’s strike
13.   Lying:
a.      telling stories

Wuzzle
Zeros
Terminals
Cleaning up after the kids

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.