Mar 6


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Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1788 - The First Fleet arrives at Norfolk Island in order to found a convict settlement
1831 - Edgar Allen Poe removed from West Point milt academy
1857 - Dred Scott Decision: Supreme Court rules slaves cannot be citizens
1899 - "Asprin" patented by Felix Hoffmann Bayer registers aspirin as a trademark
1964 - Elijah Muhammad renames Cassius Clay, Muhammad Ali
1992 - Founding of the Council of the Baltic Sea States
Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
Sad news today…Martha’s brother Mickey passed away this morning. He was a great musician and shared his music with anyone who wanted it. He has been in poor health the last few years, but always kept a positive attitude. He will be missed my many. Time for new tires on my ride…not from driving, but from age. They are six years old and the mechanic says they are starting to separate. Guess I’ll be busy tomorrow and by the end of the day much poorer. This is the first time I’ve had tires get too old, so I can’t really complain. A friend sent me a video in preparation for my Uganda trip. It is  gorilla-human contact.. I don’t expect anything like this on my trip but sure got me excited about my trip next January.
 Flag has another wind advisory for tomorrow. Whee!!!! 35+mph winds with 55+mph gusts. Sadly, no precipitation is expected until maybe Wednesday.
Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
This puzzle is in honor of Michigan's Upper Peninsula. Because U.P. is short for Upper Peninsula, each answer has "U" and "P" in it. The first clue is: "U" and "P" are the initials of a common two-word phrase naming something holding a street lamp. What is it?
1.      Something holding a street light:
2.      2 word phrase, starts with ‘u’, ends with’p’ and provides black light:
3.      4 letter word that ends with ‘up’ and the ‘p’ is silent:
4.      The letters ‘u’ and ‘p’ rhyme with loopy and soupy, what kind of doll do they rhyme with:
5.      Foreign currency that rhymes with ‘u’, ‘p’:
6.      Part of a newspaper, add ‘up’ after the first letter and the word means ‘holds up’:
7.      Common 6 letter exercise that contains 2 u’s and 2 p’s:
8.      What Greek classical name starts with the syllable ‘u’ and ends with the syllable ‘p’:
9.      Civil war general that has an ‘h’ in his name, change the ‘h’ to ‘up’ and name another hero:
Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—Mayan

Found on You Tube         
 Perry Como Live - Kewpie DollDifferent Types of Kewpie Dolls
Harper’s Index         
Estimated annual cost of rust and other corrosion to the Defense Department each year: $23,000,000,000
Joke-of-the-day
A farm boy accidentally overturned his wagonload of corn. The farmer who lived nearby heard the noise and yelled over to the boy, "Hey Willis forget your troubles. Come in and visit with us. I'll help you get the wagon up later."
"That's mighty nice of you," Willis answered, "but I don't think Pa would like me to."
"Aw come on boy," the farmer insisted.
"Well okay," the boy finally agreed, and added, "but Pa won't like it."
After a hearty dinner, Willis thanked his host. "I feel a lot better now, but I know Pa is going to be real upset."
"Don't be foolish!" the neighbor said with a smile. "By the way, where is he?"
"Under the wagon."
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
To make an alcoholic punch, figure one of sour, two of sweet, three of strong, 4 weak.
Somewhat Useless Information    
In Japan, "drive-in" refers to a rest area.
In the German-speaking world, the term "drive-in" is often used instead of "drive-through" when referring to restaurants that offer those services.
At their peak in the baby boomer years after World War II, there were more than 4,000 drive-in movie theaters across the U.S. Today, there are fewer than 500 still in operation.
In 2003 and 2004, people began to organize "guerrilla drive-ins" and "guerrilla walk-ins" in parking lots and empty fields. The movie showings were often organized online, and participants met up at pre-determined locations to watch films projected on bridge pillars or warehouse walls.
Starting in 1933, when the first drive-in theater opened, Variety magazine used the term "Ozoner" to describe an outdoor movie theatre in which patrons viewed a film from their automobile. The term was also used to describe the people that attend drive-in movie theaters.
Richard Hollingshead Jr.'s motive behind the invention of the drive-in was actually to sell more auto products, as this was his business in the 1930s. He wanted to establish a place where people could park their cars, enjoy a meal, and watch a movie outdoors.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
NANTES, France — A Frenchman took Google to court Thursday over a photo published online by its Street View application showing him urinating in his front yard which he believes has made him the laughing stock of his village in rural northwest France.The man, who is aged around 50 and lives in a village of some 3,000 people in the Maine-et-Loire region, is demanding the removal of the photo, in which locals have recognized him despite his face being blurred out.He also wants about $13,300 in damages."Everyone has the right to a degree of secrecy," his lawyer, Jean-Noel Bouillard, told Reuters. "In this particular case, it's more amusing than serious. But if he'd been caught kissing a woman other than his wife, he would have had the same issue."Google's Street View, covering some 30 countries and available in France since 2008, enables users of Google Maps to also view photos of streets taken by its camera cars, which have cameras hoisted on frames on their roofs.The man thought he was hidden from view by his closed gate as he relieved himself in November 2010. But Google's lens caught him from above his gate as it passed by. Bouillard did not explain why the man chose to urinate outside.Google's lawyer in the case, named by local daily Ouest France as Christophe Bigot, was not immediately reachable, but the newspaper said he was pleading that the case should be declared null and void.The court, in the nearby city of Angers, is due to give its verdict on March 15.
 Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
1-7
National Cheerleading Week
National Ghostwriters Week
National Write A Letter of Appreciation Week
Universal Human Beings Week
3-18
Iditarod Race
4-10
 Celebrate Your Name Week
National Consumer Protection Week
National Procrastination Week
National Schools Social Work Week
National Words Matter Week
Professional Pet Sitters Week
Save Your Vision Week
Read an E-Book Week
Return The Borrowed Books Week
Teen Tech Week
Women in Construction Week
5-8
American Council on Education
5-9
Newspaper in Education Week
National School Breakfast Week
Share A Story - Shape A Future Week
5-11
National Sleep Awareness Week
Today Is                                                                      
Namesake Day
National Frozen Food Day
Peace Corp Birthday
Sofia Kovalevskaya Math Day [first major female mathematician in Russia
Unique Names Day
U.S. Snowshoe Day

Ghana: Independence Day (1957 from UK)

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1500’s
1521 - Magellan discovers Guam
1600’s
1646 - Joseph Jenkes, MA, receives 1st colonial machine patent
1700’s
1775 - 1st Negro Mason in US initiated, Boston
1777-  70 SHAWNEE warriors, led by Chief Blackfish, will attack some settlers near Harrodsburg, Kentucky. One of the men, James Ray, managed to escape and warn the settlement of the war party. The SHAWNEE will attack Harrodsburg tomorrow.
1800’s
1808 - 1st college orchestra in US founded, at Harvard
1834 - Toronto incorporated
1836 - 3,000 Mexicans beat 182 Texans at the Alamo, after 13 day fight
1873: After hearing from Hooker Jim of the "trap" at the Fairchild ranch, Captain Jack has his sister Mary Write a letter to the commissioners. The letter states Captain Jack's wish for both sides to forget the killings on both sides and for the slate to be wiped clean. Captain Jack wants no more killing, but he will not give up his people to be hanged. He states he has not asked for the whites who have killed his people (Mocdoc).
1886 - 1st US nurses' magazine, The Nightingale, 1st appears, NYC
1900’s
1918 - US naval boat "Cyclops" disappears in Bermuda Triangle
1922 - Babe Ruth signs 3 years at $52,000 [2010USD $670357] a year NY Yankee contract
1950 - Silly Putty invented
1962 - US promise Thailand assistance against communist aggression
1964 - Tom O'Hara runs world record mile (3:56.4)
1966 - Barry Sadlers' "Ballad of the Green Berets" becomes #1 (13 weeks)
1970 - Beatles release  "Let it Be" in UK
1972 - Jack Nicklaus, passes Arnold Palmer as golf's all-time money winner
1978 - Hustler publisher Larry Flynt shot & crippled by a sniper in Ga
1982 - NBA highest scoring game: San Antonio beat Milwaukee 171-166 (3 OT)
1997 - Picasso's painting Tête de Femme is stolen from a London gallery, and is recovered a week later
2000’s
2006 - South Dakota Governor Mike Rounds signs a bill into legislation that would ban most abortions in the state
2007 - Former White House aide I. Lewis Libby, Jr. is found guilty on four of five counts of perjury and obstruction of justice trial

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 90’s
Lewis Gilbert, London England, director/actor (You Only Live Twice) is 92
In their 80’s
Thomas S Foley, (Rep-D-WA, 1965-94)/majority whip/speaker of house is 83
Alan Greenspan, economist/presidential advisor (FRB) is 86
In their 60’s
Martin Kove, actor (Cagney & Lacey) is 66
David Gilmore, Cambridge England, guitarist (Pink Floyd) is 68
Rob Reiner, Bronx NY, actor/director (All in the Family, Stand By Me) is 67
Mary Wilson, vocalist (Supremes-Where Did Our Love Go) is 68
In their 50’s
Tom Arnold, actor is 53
In their 40’s
D.L. Hughley, comedian is 49
Shaquille O'Neal NBA center (Magic, Lakers, Oly-gold-96) is 40
Remembered for being born on this day
Cyrano de Bergerac, famous nose, playwright (Voyage to the Moon) in 1619
[Walter] Furry Lewis, father of the blues in 1893
Ed McMahon, TV host (Johnny Carson Show, Star Search) in 1923
Michelangelo, Italian painter (David) in 1475

Today’s Obits                                                           

Louisa May Alcott, US author (Old-fashioned Girl), dies of autoimmune disease, or acute mercury exposure at 55 in 1888
Jim Bowie, American pioneer and soldier dies at Alamo at 40 in 1836
Pearl S[ydenstricker] Buck, author (Good Earth-Nobel 1938), dies at 80
Davy Crockett, US pioneer killed at Alamo at 49 in 1836
Nelson Eddy, US baritone/actor (Phantom of the Opera), dies after stroke at 65 in 1967
William Hopper, actor (Paul Drake-Perry Mason), dies after stroke at 55 in 1973
Georgia O'Keefe, US painter (Flowers), dies at 98 in 1986
Ayn Rand, author-philosopher (Atlas Shrugged), dies in NY at 77 in 1982
John Philip Sousa, US composer (Stars & Stripes Forever ), dies at 77 in 1932

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.      Something holding a street light:
a.      utility pole
2.      2 word phrase, starts with ‘u’, ends with’p’ and provides black light:
a.      ultraviolet lamp
3.      4 letter word that ends with ‘up’ and the ‘p’ is silent:
a.       coup
4.      The letters ‘u’ and ‘p’ rhyme with loopy and soupy, what kind of doll do they rhyme with:
a.      Kewpie
5.      Foreign currency that rhymes with ‘u’, ‘p’:
a.      rupee
6.      Part of a newspaper, add ‘up’ after the first letter and the word means ‘holds up’:
7.                     supports
8.      Common 6 letter exercise that contains 2 u’s and 2 p’s:
a.      push ups or pull ups
9.      What Greek classical name starts with the syllable ‘u’ and ends with the syllable ‘p’:
a.      Euterpe—muse of music
10.   Civil war general that has an ‘h’ in his name, change the ‘h’ to ‘up’ and name another hero:
a.      superman
Wuzzle
  • Right here and now
  • Preadolescent
  • Oddball

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.