Mar 21st


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Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1824 - Fire at Cairo ammunitions dump kills 4,000 horses
1866 - Congress authorizes national soldiers' homes
1883 – Chiricahua Apache are raiding American locations then returning to Mexico. Chato, Bonito and Chihuahua raid a mining town near Tombstone. This is just the pretext General George Crook needs to mount a raid into Mexico to find the Apache.
1925 - Edinburgh's Murreyfield Stadium officially opens
1935 - Persia officially renamed Iran
1947 - Pres Truman signs Executive Order 9835 requiring all federal employees to have allegiance to the United States
1951 - Julius & Ethel Rosenberg convicted of espionage
1970 - The first Earth Day proclamation is issued by San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto.
1975 - Ethiopia ends monarchy after 3000 years
1980 - President Jimmy Carter announces US boycott of Moscow Olympics
1983 - Only known typo on Time Magazine cover (control=contol), all recalled
Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
A beautiful sunny, cool day here in Flag. I was out and about for a couple of hours and while needing a jacket, enjoyed the day.
 My roof still has amazing, bending icicles. The bending is from the wind we experienced during the storm. Nice too look out my office window through them. Enjoy these taken from the second story office window!
Frightening earthquake outside Mexico City. A friend from my brother’s b-day party works in the city. Sure hope he is OK. Damage doesn’t seem bad, but lots of frightened people.
Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game
NPR Sunday Puzzle
Each clue is a list of three things. The answer is what they all have in common. For example, if the clues are: "a college graduate, a thermometer and longitude," the answer would be "degrees." Hint: Every answer, like "degrees," is a seven-letter plural.
1.      A kite, a marionette, an orchestra:
2.      Pool table, kangaroo, pants: pockets
3.      A word, the Post office, school’s top athlete:
4.      A disc jockey, a hospital, an ex-con:
5.      A credit card, the calvary, an ion:
6.      A jack in the box, a stream, a mattress:
7.      April, a bride to be, a locker room:
8.      A candy store, An octopus, a line at a side show:
9.      A porch, a computer, suntan lotion:
10.   The Parthenon, spreadsheet, a newspaper:
11.   A cigarette, a swimming pool, a coffee maker:
12.   Ping pong, a canoe, a fraternity member:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—

Found on You Tube         
vida de Benito Juarez (Spanish Only)
Harper’s Index         
Number of times the average British male will fall in love, according to a recent study: 3
Joke-of-the-day
While taking a routine vandalism report at an elementary school, the policeman was interrupted by a 6 year-old looking up and down his uniform, she asked. “Are you a policeman?”
“Yes,” he answered and continued writing the report.
“My mother said if I ever needed help I should ask the police. Is that right?”
“Yes, that’s right, the policeman told her.
“Well, then,” the little girl said as she extended her foot toward him, “would you please tie my shoe?”
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
A standard spherical soft contact lens will correct astigmatism up to one diopter and it is much cheaper than a toric one.
Somewhat Useless Information   
The game of jacks started out as dibstones and was played using pebbles or even sheep's knuckles. When a player captured a piece, he would call out "I've got dibs!" which led to the contemporary usage of the expression.The world's largest croquet complex is located in West Palm Beach, Florida, and covers 10 acres.The jump rope game Double Dutch is as old as the craft of rope making. In ancient Egypt and China, rope makers walked backward, twisting the various strands of rope into uniformity, while runners jumped and dodged their way across the cluttered floors supplying the spinners with hemp.Badminton originated as a child's game in India called "battledore and shuttlecock." When British soldiers took the game back with them to the UK, it became a favorite of the Duke of Beaufort and eventually took on the name of his country estate, Badminton.Hopscotch was created as a training exercise for soldiers during the Roman Empire. In order to improve their footwork, they had to traverse a 100-foot-long course in full armor.In the 14th century, billiards - or the precursor to it - was played on outdoor lawns. Eventually, folks got tired of bending over, so they moved the game indoors and reduced it to the size of a tabletop. The green felt cover is a nod to the sport's outdoor origins.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
MSNBC” You would think a drug runner would know better than to get into a car with a personalized license plate with the letters S-M-U-G-G-L-E-R. Or that she would think twice before booking a room at the Smuggler's Inn, a mere sprint from the Canadian border.
Homeland Security agents received a tip in December about a cocaine deal at a Pizza Hut in Bellingham, Wash., the SeattlePI.com reported, citing recently released court documents. They set up surveillance at the Pizza Hut and watched as a GMC Yukon with a driver and two passengers pulled in. The license plate read SMUGGLER.Agents followed the SUV to the Smuggler’s Inn, pulled it over and found, in a wrapped box, nine bricks of cocaine weighing just under 24 pounds, the P-I reported.One of the passengers, Jasmin Klair, 20, admitted that the illicit cargo was hers and agreed to cooperate with law enforcement officials, according to court documents. She explained to agents that she had been told to book at a bottom-floor room facing Canada at the Smuggler’s Inn, a bed and breakfast with rooms named "Al Capone" and "DB Cooper." Klair wanted the "Captain's Room," about 150 feet from the border.While agents interviewed her, she started receiving text messages from two men who had given her the job, the Vancouver Sun reported. Authorities prevailed on her to beckon the two men to the Smuggler’s Inn.They arrived within minutes, the Sun reported, and made a run for it when police ordered them to stop.One of the two men, Narminder Kaler, allegedly told agents that he would have received $2,000 for the deal, according to the Sun. He sorely needed it, he is alleged to have said, to pay off a $325,000 debt for losing 115 pounds of marijuana a year and a half ago.Klair, 20, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court to conspiring to distribute cocaine, the P-I reported. She will be sentenced on May 29. Kaler and Gurjit Sandhu are in jail and face similar charges, according to the P-I.

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
21-25
YoYo and Skill Toys Week
Today Is                                                                      
Fragrance Day
Kick Butts Day
International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
Memory Day
National Common Courtesy Day
Spring Fairy Fun Day
World Downs Syndrome Day

Australia: Canberra Day (commemorates Canberra’s official founding in 1913 and highlights a major festival in the territory)
Namibia:  Independence Day
(1990 from South Africa)
South Africa: Human Rights Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1300’s
1349 - 3,000 Jews killed in Black Death riots in Efurt Germany
> 
1600’s
1697 - Czar Peter the Great begins tour through West-Europe
1700’s
1788 - Fire destroyed 856 buildings in New Orleans Louisiana
1800’s
1841: According to government documents, 220 "Tallahassee Seminole" prisoners will board a boat in Tampa Bay, today. They are being sent to the Indian Territory. Fifteen of the Indians will die in transit.
1900’s
1924 - 1st foreign language course broadcast on US radio (WJZ, NYC)
1951 - 2,900,000 US soldiers in Korea
1962 - A bear becomes the 1st creature to be ejected at supersonic speeds
1968 - "Royals" chosen as the name of new KC AL franchise
1968 - Israeli forces cross Jordan River to attack PLO bases
1972 - US Supreme Court rules states can't require 1-yr residency to vote
1979 - Egyptian Parliament unanimously approve peace treaty with Israel
1984 - Part of Central Park is named Strawberry Fields honoring John Lennon
2000’s
2002 - In Pakistan, Ahmed Omar Saeed Sheikh along with three other suspects are charged with murder for their part in the kidnapping and killing of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
2004 - In Malaysia, the 11th Federal and State elections are held, returning the ruling coalition Barisan Nasional to power with an increased majority.
2006 - Immigrant workers constructing the Burj Dubayy in Dubai, The United Arab Emirates and a new terminal of Dubai International Airport join together and riot, causing $1M in damage.

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
> 
In their 60’s
Timothy Dalton, actor North Wales, (James Bond-Living Daylights) is 68
In their 50’s
Matthew Broderick, actor (War Games, Biloxi Blues) is 50 
Rosie O'Donnell, talk show host is 50
Gary Oldman, actor  is 54
> 
In their 30’s
Kevin Federline, American dancer/hip hop artist is 34
Remembered for being born on this day
Johann Sebastian Bach, Eisenach Germany, composer (Mattheus-Passion) in 1685
James Coco, actor (Man of La Mancha, Murder by Death) in 1929
Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fourier, mathematician/Egyptologist in 1768
Benito Pablo Juarez, Oaxaca Mexico, president of Mexico (1858-72) in 1806
John D Rockefeller III, billionaire philanthropist (oil) in 1906

Today’s Obits                                                           
Macdonald Carey, actor (Days of Our Lives), dies of cancer at 81 in 1994
Thomas Cranmer, archbishop of Canterbury, burned at stake at 66 in 1556
Dean Paul Martin, actor (Billy-Misfits of Science), dies in National Guard training flight  at 35 in 1987
Pocahontas, Native American, daughter of Powhatan dies in England at 21 or 22 in 1617
Dack Rambo, actor (Jack Ewing-Dallas), dies from AIDs at 52 in 1994
Michael Redgrave, actor (Goodbye Mr Chips, Mr Arkadin), dies at 77 in 1985
Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.      A kite, a marionette, an orchestra:
a.      strings
2.      Pool table, kangaroo, pants:
a.      pockets
3.      A word, the Post office, school’s top athlete:
a.      letters
4.      A disc jockey, a hospital, an ex-con:
a.      records
5.      A credit card, the calvary, an ion:
a.      charges
6.      A jack in the box, a stream, a mattress:
a.      springs
7.      April, a bride to be, a locker room:
a.      showers
8.      A candy store, An octopus, a line at a side show:
a.      suckers
9.      A porch, a computer, suntan lotion:
a.      screens
10.   The Parthenon, spreadsheet, a newspaper:
a.      columns
11.   A cigarette, a swimming pool, a coffee maker:
a.      filters
12.   Ping pong, a canoe, a fraternity member:
a.      paddles

Wuzzle
  • tenants
  • much ado about nothing
  • bib overalls 

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.