Aug 1


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

Flagstaff Almanac
Week: 31 / Day:  214
Today: High   76°Low 56°
Records: High   91°(1977)Low 43°(1997)
 Averages: High   80°Low 52°
Wind:   2mphGusts: 31mph
Afternoon Rain  Today’s humidity:  66%

Quote of the Day

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
2007 - The I-35W Mississippi River Bridge spanning the Mississippi River in 
            Minneapolis, MN, collapses during the evening rush hour
1993 - Reggie Jackson enshrined in Baseball Hall of Fame
1988 - Rush Limbaugh begins his national radio show
1982 - Greg Louganis, US becomes 1st diver to score 700 (752.67) in 11 dives
1976 - 21st Olympic games close at Montreal Canada
1976 - Flash flood in Big Thompson Canyon Colo on Route 34, kills 139
1968 - The coronation is held of Hassanal Bolkiah, the 29th Sultan of Brune
             -still in power
1957 - 1st commercial building heated by Sun (Albuquerque NM)
1957 - US & Canada create North American Air Defense Command (NORAD)
1946 - Pres Harry Truman establishes Atomic Energy Commission 
1943 - Japan declares Burma Independence under U Ba Maw
1941 - The first Jeep is produced
1911 - Omar N Bradley (18) begins education in West Point
1907 - Bank of Italy opens 1st branch at 3433 Mission Street, SF
1855 - Castle Clinton in NYC opens as 1st US receiving station for immigrants
1831 - London Bridge opens to traffic
♪   Happy Birthday To♪ 
How many can you identify…answers in ‘Today’s Birthdays’
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
More afternoon rain…very nice. Enjoying the cooler weather and the smell of rain. Kids in the neighborhood are out in force after the rain stopped….a real break for parents, I’m sure.

I can’t believe how fast the summer is going by. Tuba friends are back at work. Here it is August already. I was glad to see that we have gotten 3.23” of moisture this month and that is above the average. Since Jan 1 we are still about 3” below normal, so I guess our drought continues.

My friend Martha is doing a talk in Prescott on Thursday, and I’ll be going down there with her. She is talking about adoption, her own search, and similar issues. Should be a good talk at the Prescott Library. It is an evening talk, so it will be a late day in getting back to Flagstaff.

Still watching the Olympics…so nice. More great swimming and diving competition and then gymnastics. More tonight…these games are great! The big controversy is over Chinese swimmer Ye Shiwin, a 16 year old girl who is swimming faster than men. Lots of questions, with few answers. Drug tests are negative, but many just can’t believe she can swim that fast. The Chinese are claiming that she is just that good, while others think that the Chinese may have found a non-detectable non-natural improvement. Time will tell.

Game   Center: (answers at the end of post)
What is the answer?
Complete these words by inserting the same three letters in each.M---EW    M---ER    EV---OER
5X5 Word Boxes
The answer to 1 across is the same word as the answer to 1 down; 2 across is the same as 2 down; etc. Can you solve these Word Boxes? Each answer is 5 letters.
1.      instrument
2.      metal mass
3.      spy
4.      present occasion
5.      waterlogged mammal
Hint:  upper left to lower right letters are: P-N-E-C-R
Lifestyle  Substance     
Do you remember this?

Do you know what this word means?
What is this not so common name of a common object?Gynecomastia
My Latest Adventure—

Great Overlooked Folk-Rock Songs
  • Fred Neil,"The Dolphins." The greatest song by the singer-songwriter most known for "Everybody's Talkin'," mixing oceanic dolphin imagery with allusions to failed love.
  • Judy Collins,"Hard Lovin' Loser"  Yet another hit single that should have been, from her In My Life album. A great cover of a Richard & Mimi Farina song with an ascending harpsichord riff, barrelhouse honky-tonk piano, and convincing rock'n'roll vocals that totally outdistances the original.
  • Richard & Mimi Farina,"Reno Nevada" The husband-and-wife duo's best song, a moody meditation on loss and chance, with a hypnotic minor-key melody and winding, wordless backup vocals by Mimi Farina. Later covered masterfully by Fairport Convention in the late 1960s for the BBC.
  • The Bluethings,"Doll House" With its veiled references to the sad life of a prostitute, the best song from the only album by Kansas' Bluethings, the great lost folk-rock band. Guaranteed to appeal to fans of the mid-1960s Byrds and Beau Brummels.

Harper’s Index         
Portion of the $62 million raised by major presidential Super PACs in 2011 that came from the top 22 givers: 1/2
Found on You Tube 

Joke-of-the-day
A seaman meets a pirate in a bar, and they take turns to tell their adventures on the seas. The seaman notes that the pirate has a peg leg, hook, and an eye patch. Curious, the seaman asks "So, how did you end up with the peg-leg?"
The pirate replies "I was swept overboard into a school of sharks. Just as my men were pulling me out, a shark bit my leg off".
"Wow!" said the seaman. "What about the hook"?
"Well...", replied the pirate, "We were boarding an enemy ship and were battling the other sailors with swords. One of the enemy cut my hand clean off."  "Incredible!" remarked the seaman. "How did you get the eye patch"?
"A seagull dropping fell into my eye", replied the pirate.
"You lost your eye to a seagull dropping?" the sailor asked.
"Well..." said the pirate, "That was my first day with the hook." 
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
A plume of snow blowing from a peak higher than 7,000 meters means a wind of at least 100 miles per hour on the summit.
Yeah, It Really Happened
SEATTLE - A Washington state school bus driver said at his sentencing hearing he groped teenage girls and women because he had consumed too much caffeine.
Kenneth Sands, 51, who was charged with five counts of fourth-degree assault, told the judge at his Tuesday sentencing he had consumed too much caffeine prior to the events of Oct. 18, KOMO-TV, Seattle, reported Thursday.
"That caused a psychotic episode," Sands said. "My son-in-law and daughter had never seen that kind of behavior from myself." The Lewis County sheriff's office said Sands, a driver for the Rainier School District, was attending a volleyball game in Onalaska Oct. 18 as a spectator, not a driver, when he allegedly touched a 46-year-old woman's breasts three times and grabbed her buttocks when she tried to get away from him. He also allegedly grabbed a 15-year-old girl's buttocks outside of a bus after the game and slapped a 16-year-old girl's behind as she was boarding the vehicle. The sheriff's office said Sands got onto the school bus and touched a girl in an inappropriate manner before being kicked off by the driver. Sands was sentenced to 30 days in jail for each count.               
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • The early Olympic Games were celebrated as a religious festival from 776 B.C. until 393 A.D., when the games were banned for being a pagan festival (the Olympics celebrated the Greek god Zeus). In 1894, a French educator Baron Pierre de Coubertin, proposed a revival of the ancient tradition, and thus the modern-day Olympic Summer Games were born.
  • The first Olympics covered by U.S. television was the 1960 Summer Games in Rome by CBS.

Calendar Information        
Happening This Month:
American Adventures Month
American Indian Heritage Month  
American History Essay Contest
Black Business Month
Cataract Awareness Month
Celery, Fennel and Cactus Month
Children's Eye Health & Safety Month
Children's Vision & Learning Month
Get Ready for Kindergarten Month
Golf Month
Happiness Happens Month
Motorsports Awareness Month
National Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders Awareness Month 
National Immunization Awareness Month
National Panini Month 
National Minority Donor Awareness Month
National Spinal Muscular Atrophy Awareness Month
National Runaway Prevention Month
National Truancy Prevention Month
National Water Quality Month
National Win With Civility Month
Neurosurgery Outreach Month
Orange and Papaya Month
Psoriasis Awareness Month
What Will Be Your Legacy Month
Happening This Week:
1-7 
International Clown Week
Simplify Your Life Week
Rock for Life Week

Today Is                                                                      
Girlfriend's Day
Lughnasa: a traditional Gaelic holiday
National Minority Donor Awareness Day
Respect for Parents Day
Rounds Resounding Day
Spiderman Day
US Air Force Day
World Wide Web Day

Bahamas, Trinidad, Tobago: Emancipation Day 
            (1834-UK ends slavery)
Benin (in West Africa): Independence Day
(1960 from France)
Jamaica: Abolition of Slavery Day (1834)
US: Colorado: Admission Day
(1876-38th state)
Zambia: Youth Day    

Today’s Events Through History  
2000’s
2001 - Bulgaria, Cyprus, Latvia, Malta, Slovenia and Slovakia join the European 
            Environment Agency
2001 - Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore has a Ten Commandments 
            monument installed in the judiciary building, leading to a lawsuit to have it 
            removed and his own removal from office
1900’s
1995 - Westinghouse purchases CBS-TV network
1985 - 15.4 cm rainfall at Cheyenne, Wyoming (state record)
1975 - Helsinki Pact guaranteeing boundaries, rights signed by 35 nations
1972 - 1st article exposing Wategate scandal (Bernstein-Woodward)
1960 - Chubby Checker releases "The Twist"
1955 - 1st microgravity research begins
1953 - California introduces sales tax (for education)
1953 - Northern Rhodesia becomes part of Federation of Rhodesia & Nyasaland
1950 - Territory of Guam created
1944 - Adam Clayton Powell elected 1st black congressman from East
1944 - Anne Frank's last diary entry; 3 days later she is arrested
1936 - Adolph Hitler opens 11th Olympic Games in Berlin
1933 - NRA (National Recovery Administration) forms
1933 - Death penalty for anti fascists in Germany
1914 - Emperor Wilhelm II declares war on his nephew tsar Nicolas II (WW I)
1903 - 1st coast-to-coast automobile trip (SF-NY) completed
1800’s
1869 - 1st voyage down Colorado River 1901 - Burial within SF City limits prohibited
1867 - Blacks vote for 1st time in a state election in South (TN)
1852 - SF Methodists establish 1st black church, Zion Methodist
1700’s
1794 - Whiskey Rebellion begins
1793 - France becomes 1st country to use the metric system
1790 - 1st US census (population of 3,939,214; 697,624 are slaves)
1739 - Several Shawnee Chiefs sign a peace treaty with British Pennsylvania 
            authorities not to become allies with any other country. The British agree to 
            enforce previous treaties banning the sale of rum to the Indians
1735 - Agreement covering "amity and commerce" is reached by representatives of 
            the British in New York, and Western Abenaki, Housatonic, Mohegan and 
            Scaghticoke Indians
1711 - Surrounded Czar Peter the Great flees Azov
1600’s
1619 - 1st black Americans (20) land at Jamestown, Virginia

Before 1000CE
30 BC - Octavian (later known as Augustus) enters Alexandria, Egypt, bringing it under
              the control of the Roman Republic

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 30’s
Tempestt Bledsoe, actress (Vanessa Huxtable-Cosby Show) will be 39
In their 40’s
Coolio [Artis Leon Ivey Jr.], Monessen Pennsylvania, rapper is 49

In their 70’s
Ian Hogg, notable British actor on BBC is 75

In their 90’s
Jeffrey Segal, actor/playwright (Vanity Fair, Rest in Pieces) is 92

Remembered for being born today
Dom DeLuise, Bkln NY, comedian (End, Cannonball Run, Fatso) – b.1933
Jerry Garcia, SF, rocker (Grateful Dead-Uncle Joe's Band) - b.1942
Mary Harris ‘Mother’ Jones, American labor organizer - b.1837
Meir Kahane, American founder of the Jewish Defense League - b.1932
Francis Scott Key, composer (Star-Spangled Banner) - b.1779
John F Mahoney, developed penicillin treatment of syphilis - b.1889
Andrew Melville, Scottish theologian and religious reformer - b.1545
Herman Melville, New York, author (Moby Dick, Billy Budd) - b.1819
Maria Mitchell, 1st US woman astronomer on Nantucket Island b.-1818

Today’s Historical Obits                                                            
Philip Abelson, American physicist, Nobel Prize Laureate dies in 2004 at 91
Corazon Aquino, Former President of the Philippines dies of cardiac arrest 
          in 2009 at 76
Paddy Chayefsky, screenwriter (Network, Hospital) dies of cancer in 1981 at 58
Jacques Clément, French assassin of Henry III of France killed by 
         court attendants in 1589 at 22
King Fahd of Saudi Arabia dies of pneumonia in 2005 at 82
Frank Little, American labor organizer lynched in Butte MT in 1917 at 38 
Francis Gary Powers, US U-2 pilot, dies in private plane crash in 1977 at 47
John Ross (aka. Kooweskoowe), Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation 
         dies in 1866 at 76
Trindad Silva, actor (Hill St Blues), dies in an auto accident in 1988 at 38
Anne Stuart, queen of England (1702-14), dies  of suppressed gout  in 1714
        at about 49

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Do you know what this word means?
abnormal development of large mammary glands in males—man boobs
What is the answer?
The missing letters are I-L-D: MILDEW, MILDER, EVILDOER
5X5 boxes
PIANO
INGOT
AGENT
NONCE
OTTER
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 

July 31


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

Flagstaff Almanac
Week: 31 / Day: 213
Today: High   72°Low 57°
Records: High   92°(1943)Low 40°(1913) 
Averages: High 80°Low 52°
Wind:  3mph;  Gusts: 17mph
Some clouds  Today’s humidity:  88%

Quote of the Day

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
2007 - Operation Banner, the presence of the British Army in Northern Ireland, and 
            longest-running British Army operation ever, comes to an end
1981 - 42 day old, 2nd major league baseball strike ends
1972 - Thomas Eagleton withdraws as Democratic VP candidate
1970 - Chet Huntley retires from NBC, ends "Huntley-Brinkley Report"
1970 - Black Tot Day: The last day of the officially sanctioned rum ration in the
            Royal Navy
1960 - Elijah Muhammad, leader of Nation of Islam, calls for a black state
1958 - Anti-Chinese uprising in Tibet
1928 - 1st woman to win a track and field Olympic gold medal, Halina Konopacka 
             of Poland
1876 - US Coast Guard officers' training school established (New Bedford MA)
1779 - General John Sullivan leads an expedition in retaliation against the Iroquois’ 
             actions in the Wyoming Valley Massacre.
781 - The oldest recorded eruption of Mt. Fuji 

Happy Birthday To:   How many can you identify…answers in Today’s Birthdays
                      
Free Rambling Thoughts   
We had a lot of rain last night and a few clouds today, but no rain where I live. Some showers would have been nice.

The Olympics is in full swing, and I’m enjoying watching lots of events. This level of competition is great to watch. There are so many athletes giving 100% for the moments of success. Even those who don’t medal have a great deal of class through their emotions. Watching the Chinese in the swimming and diving is great…they have never been this good in the water events. With 5 channels on my cable carrying events, there will lots more to watch. My only complaint (whine) is that NBC seldom shows medal ceremonies unless the US in on the podium. I think it would be good for all Americans to hear other National Anthems and see other athlete’s emotions during the medal ceremony. In 2012 we are global and it’s time to see how alike we are. With 5 channels, it seems one of them could be devoted to the medal ceremony.

Game   Center: (answers at the end of post)
What is the answer?
What do the following words have in common?
REST  PIECE  BAND  LAND  STAND
5X5 Word Boxes
The answer to 1 across is the same word as the answer to 1 down; 2 across is the same as 2 down; etc. Can you solve these Word Boxes? Each answer is 5 letters.
1.      inclosure, plural
2.      volatile liquid
3.      communications device
4.      wood projection
5.      ring
Hint: upper left to lower right letters are: S-T-O-O-A
Lifestyle  Substance     
Do you remember this?

Do you know what this word means?
What is this not so common name of a common object?
Ferrule
My Latest Adventure—

Great Overlooked Folk-Rock Songs
  • Phil Ochs,"I Ain't Marchin' Anymore" (1966 electric single version). Ochs had previously done this protest classic as a solo acoustic track. For a 1966 non-LP single, it was totally redone as a galvanizing electric number, with bursts of bagpipes at the beginning and end, and roadhouse piano runs throughout. Inexplicably only released in England, this could have been a hit if it had been promoted properly.
  • The Byrds,"I Knew I'd Want You." The B-side of "Mr. Tambourine Man," this is one of many gorgeously melodic, sensitively sung early Byrds songs written by Gene Clark that could have qualified for this list.
  • Bob Dylan,"If You Gotta Go, Go Now." Recorded in January 1965, but only released as a European single in 1967, and then later (in an alternate take) on his Bootleg Series Vol. 1-3box. A great hard-rocking number with an infectious chorus that could have been a big hit. (And in fact a pop-oriented cover by Manfred Mann got to #2 in 1965 in Britain; an even more unlikely French-language cover by Fairport Convention, "Si Tu Dois Partir," made #21 in the UK in 1969.) The decision not only not to put it out as a single, but not to release it at all, is one of many such curious decisions on the part of Dylan and Columbia throughout the singer's career. Incidentally, Manfred Mann and Fairport Convention were not the only well-known performers to give the song an airing. Warren Zevon, as half of the folk-rockish duo Lyme & Cybelle, covered it on an obscure 1966 single that seemed to be trying its hardest to make it into a clapalong good-time pop song, while the Flying Burrito Brothers put it on their second album.
  • The Jefferson Airplane,"Today." Perhaps the greatest folk-rock ballad ever, and a hit single that should have been, but never got released as a 45. From their classic Surrealistic Pillow album, with Jerry Garcia contributing guitar.

Harper’s Index         
Cost of one day course at the Institute for Civility in Government in Houston: $50
Found on You Tube 
Oleg Popov       
Joke-of-the-day
A police officer sees a man driving around with a pickup truck full of penguins. He pulls the guy over and says, "You can't drive around with penguins in this town! Take them to the zoo immediately."The guy says okay, and drives away. The next day, the officer sees the guy still driving around with the truck full of penguins -- and they're all wearing sunglasses. He pulls the guy over and demands, "I thought I told you to take these penguins to the zoo yesterday?" The guy replies, "I did. Today I'm taking them to the beach!"
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
If a choking person can verbally request the Heimlich maneuver, he or she doesn't need it.
Yeah, It Really Happened
PALM BAY, Fla. - Police in Florida said a man arrested on robbery charges told them he was upset because his fiancée refused to have sex with him.
Palm Bay police said James Seehaus, 25, used a white cloth to make his BB gun appear to be a real gun when he robbed a 7-Eleven store in Palm Bay June 28, Florida Today reported Wednesday. Seehaus was pulled over by a police officer responding to the robbery and the officer discovered the BB gun in the suspect's car and $55 in his wallet. Seehaus, who was identified as the robber by the store's clerk and another witness, said the $55 belonged to the convenience store, police said. Seehaus, who was charged with armed robbery and theft, told police he committed the crime because he was upset about his fiancée’s refusal to have sex with him and he needed to buy car insurance.               
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • Opened in 1927, Sid Grauman's Chinese Theatre is a Tinseltown landmark, with a "who's who of celebrities" inscribed in slabs of concrete in the sidewalk out front. Less well known is the foreign-themed movie house Sid built five years prior: Grauman's Egyptian Theatre, located just down the street on Hollywood Boulevard.
  • The initials of the AMC theater chain stand for American Multi-Cinema. In 1963, Stanley Durwood opened the first multiplex, a single theatre offering movies on two or more screens, in Kansas City, Missouri. The first megaplex was the 24-screen AMC Grand in Dallas, opened in 1995.
  • An antitrust suit against Paramount led to a 1948 Supreme Court decision that forced movie studios nationwide to divest their movie theater holdings. Studios had begun keeping their popular releases away from competing theater chains, to the detriment of Hollywood. Paramount alone had to sell off its interests in nearly 1,400 theaters.
  • The Nickelodeon television network got its name from a term used for movie theaters of the early 20th century; such establishments typically charged five cents - a nickel - for admission.
  • Just as Denver's landmark Mayan Theatre was due for demolition in 1986, the city's Museum of Natural History opened a new display of centuries-old Mayan artifacts from Mexico. A local group stepped in and saved the historic 1930 theatre, which underwent a $2 million facelift.
  • In 1953, movie theaters nationwide began to employ new tricks in an attempt to regain the audiences they had lost to television. The Cinemascope technique combined an extra-wide image with stereophonic sound, neither of which could be duplicated on TV sets of the era.

Calendar Information        
Today Is                                                                      
Anniversary - US Patent Office-1790  
Parent's Day
Uncommon Instruments Awareness Day (Here’s a list)

Today’s Events Through History  
2000’s
2006 - Fidel Castro hands over power temporarily to brother Raúl Castro 
1900’s
1984 - US men's gymnastics team won team gold medal at LA Summer Olympics
1971 - Apollo 15 astronauts take 6½ hour electric car ride on Moon
1964 - US Ranger 7 takes 4,316 pictures before crashing on Moon
1961 - Israel welcomes its 1,000,000th immigrant
1953 - Dept of Health, Education & Welfare created
1948 - Pres Harry Truman dedicates Idlewild Field (Kennedy Airport), NY
1942 - U boats sank 96 allied ships this month
1941 - U boats sink 21 allied ships this month
1940 - 38 U boats sinks this month
1938 - Archaeologists discover engraved gold and silver plates from King Darius 
            in Persepolis
1932 - George Washington quarter goes into circulation
1922 - 18-year-old Ralph Samuelson rides world's 1st water skis (Minn)
1912 - US government prohibits movies & photos of prize fights (censorship)
1800’s
1865 - The first narrow gauge mainline railway in the world opens at Grandchester, 
            Australia
1809 - 1st practical US railroad track (wooden, for horse-drawn cars), Phila
1700’s
1774 - Joseph Priestley discovers oxygen
1763 - Captain James Dalyell, and 280 soldiers attack Pontiac's village at 2:30 am this
           morning. Pontiac is informed of Dalyell's plans, so he sets up an ambush at the 
           Parent's Creek bridge with 400 Indians. When Dalyell's troops approach the 
           bridge, the Indians attack. Twenty soldiers, including Dalyell, and seven Indians 
           are killed in the fighting. The creek, near Detroit, is now called Bloody Run.
1751 - Fire in Stockholm destroys 1,000 houses
1703 - Daniel Defoe is placed in a pillory for the crime of seditious libel after publishing
            a politically satirical pamphlet, but is pelted with flowers

1500’s
1588 - English fleet beats Spanish Armada

Before 1000CE
768 - [Phillip] begins & ends his reign as Catholic Pope
30 BC - Battle of Alexandria: Mark Antony achieves a minor victory over Octavian's 
              forces, but most of his army subsequently deserts, leading to his suicide

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 40’s
Dean Cain, actor (Clark-Lois & Clark) is 46
J.K. Rowling, Gloucestershire England, writer (Harry Potter) is 47
In their 50’s
Michael Biehn, Anniston AL, actor (Rampage, Hog Wild, Aliens, Abyss) is 56
Wesley Snipes, actor, film producer, and martial artist, is 50
In their 60’s
William Bennett, US Secretary of Education (1985-88)/drug tsar is 69
Gary Lewis, Jerry's son, singer, (& The Playboys-This Diamond Ring) is 66
Barry Van Dyke, actor (Battlestar Galactica, Diagnosis Murder) is 61

In their 80’s
Oleg Popov (Оле́г Константи́нович Попо́в), Russian clown is 82

Remembered for being born today
Ted Cassidy, Pittsburgh PA, American actor (Lurch-Addams Family) - 1932
Gabriel Cramer, Swiss mathematician (paradox of Cramer) - 1704
John Ericsson, US, inventor (screw propeller)/shipbuilder-USS Monitor - 1803
Milton Friedman, Brooklyn New York, economist (Nobel 1976) - 1912
Curt Gowdy, Green River Wyo, sportscaster (ABC) - 1919
Isaak Ouwater, Amsterdam painter/cartoonist - 1748
Elmo Roper, pollster (Roper Poll) - 1900

Today’s Historical Obits                                                           
Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Muslim Jurisprudent dies in 855 at 75
St Ignatius of Loyola, founder of Society of Jesus (Jesuit), dies of malaria
       in 1556 at 64
Franz Liszt [Ferencz], Hungarian pianist/composer, dies of pneumonia in 1886 at 74
Na'od, Emperor of Ethiopia killed fighting Muslims in 1508 at 14
Jim Reeves, US country singer, dies in private plane crash in 1964 at 40
Robert Taft, (Sen-R-Oh) "Mr Republican", dies of cancer in 1953 at 63

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Do you know what this word means?
The metal band on a pencil
What is the answer?
Each can be preceded by HEAD to form a new word.
5X5 boxes
SEPTA
ETHER
PHONE
TENON
ARENA
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.