July 29


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Flagstaff Almanac
Week: 31 Day: 211
Today: High   80°Low 57° Averages: High  80 °Low 52°
Records: High   94°(1995)Low 36°(1913)
Wind:   12mph;  Gusts: 22mph
Afternoon Rain  Today’s humidity:  84%

Quote of the Day

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1981 - Prince Charles of England weds Lady Diane Spencer
1975 - Ford became 1st US pres to visit Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz
1974 - Episcopal Church ordained female priests
1957 - Jack Paar's Tonight show premieres
1950 - Pee Wee Reese, hits the 3,000th Dodger home run
1945 - After delivering the Atomic Bomb across the Pacific, the cruiser USS 
            Indianapolis is torpedoed & sunk by a Japanese submarine
1938 - Comic strip "Dennis the Menace," 1st appears
1928 - Walt Disney's "Steamboat Willie" is released
1920 - Mexican rebel Pancho Villa surrenders
1899 - 1st motorcycle race, Manhattan Beach, NY
1836 - Inauguration of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris
1773 - 1st schoolhouse west of Allegheny Mtns completed, Schoenbrunn, OH
1588 - Attacking Spanish Armada defeated & scattered by English defenders
1567 - James VI is crowned King of Scotland at Stirling

Happy Birthday To:  
Returns tomorrow
Free Rambling Thoughts   
A great Saturday morning walk. Even stopped at a couple of garage sales nearby. Didn’t buy anything, but nice to see other people have junk too. Then I did some laundry. Not my favorite pastime, but something that needs to be done. The afternoon rain didn’t start until late and was preceded by a couple of hours of lightning and thunder. The cool breeze didn’t start until the rain came, but now all is good.

I’ve had the Olympics on most of the day and seen some great competition in sports I never follow. I started without Archery and prelim swimming early before my walk. Then this afternoon I watched some boxing and some rowing competition. I enjoy the races and the bouts, even when the US isn’t participating. These athletes have true dedication and sure work hard in their chosen sport just to compete at this level. I also really enjoyed the Opening Ceremony last night. It was very imaginative and went off without any visible hitches. The Brits sure put on a good show. Of course there are always the naysayers on the internet and on FB…all I can say is if ‘you can do better, let’s see what you got in 2014 o 2016’.  I guess some people don’t enjoy an imaginative presentation.

 I did finish part one of my trip into a movie. I haven’t posted it yet as I want to get all three parts done before posting. I decided to do three parts at about 7 minutes each and found some great music, from a CD made by locals in Tanzania. They should all be posted by tomorrow afternoon. Most of the work is done, now just have to let the computer and the internet machine do their thing.

Game   Center: (answers at the end of post)
What is the answer?
Complete these words by inserting the same three letters in each.TE---ER    S---ET    EAR---E
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.      gun action
2.      divide in two
3.      back in ... days
4.      observable
5.      in the alphabet, "J"
HINT: upper left to lower right letters: S-A-D-R-H
Lifestyle  Substance     
Do you remember this?

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

Folk Rock of the 1960’s
  • Buffalo Springfield, 
  • "For What It's Worth." The most memorable protest folk-rock song of           the 1960s.
  • The Mamas & the Papas:
  • "California Dreamin'." The most pleasing overtly commercial           manifestation of folk-rock, the harmonies and beguiling melody resulting in the group's          first big hit.
  • The Lovin' Spoonful:
  • "Do You Believe in Magic?" Folk-rock at its happiest, on the song that         introduced the Lovin' Spoonful to a wide audience.
  • Donovan,
  • "Sunshine Superman." The track that not only fully moved Donovan from          acoustic to electric music, but also helped trigger psychedelic rock.

Harper’s Index         
Percentage of Mormons who believe Blacks in the US face ‘a lot of discrimination’: 31Who believe Mormons do: 46
Found on You Tube 
Jacques Cousteau – Calypso        
Joke-of-the-day
Seems an elderly gentleman had serious hearing problems for a number of years. He went to the doctor and the doctor was able to have him fitted for a set of hearing aids that allowed the gentleman to hear 100%. The elderly gentleman went back in a month to the doctor and the doctor said, "Your hearing is perfect. Your family must be really pleased you can hear again." To which the gentleman said, "Oh, I haven't told my family yet. I just sit around and listen to the conversations. I've changed my will five times!"



Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
If you place your palm in front of a heat gun and it feels like a hairdryer, it's about 200 degrees F. If it's so hot you have to
Yeah, It Really Happened
CROSTHWAITE, England - The owner of a hotel in Britain said he replaced the room Bibles with copies of "Fifty Shades of Grey" to reflect the modern secular society. Jonathan Denby, owner of the Damson Dene Hotel in Crosthwaite, England, said he decided to replace the Bibles with copies of E.L. James' erotic novel because he decided the Bibles were "wholly inappropriate" for bedrooms in a secular society, NBC News reported Wednesday.
"I was thinking originally of putting in a book by Ayn Rand -- 'Atlas Shrugged' was my first thought," Denby said. "(But) because everybody is reading 'Fifty Shades of Grey,' we thought it would be a hospitable thing to do, to have this available for our guests, especially if some of them were a little bit shy about buying it because of its reputation."
The Rev. Michael Woodcock, who oversees services at St. Mary's Parish Church, told The Westmoreland Gazette he was dismayed by the hotelier's decision. "It is a great shame that Bibles have been removed from rooms and very inappropriate to have been replaced by an explicit erotic novel," he said. "The Bible remains a source of comfort and inspiration that many people do find helpful."                 
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • A meteoroid is a small particle from an asteroid or comet orbiting he Sun; a meteor is a meteoroid that is observed as it burns up in the Earth's atmosphere; "shooting star." Finally, a meteorite is a meteoroid that survives its passage through the Earth's atmosphere and impacts the Earth's surface.
  • An asteroid is a relatively small, inactive body composed of rock, carbon or metal, which is orbiting the Sun, whereas a comet is a relatively small, sometimes active object, which is composed of dirt and ice. Comets are characterized by dust and gas tails when in proximity to the Sun.
  • The first well-known UFO sighting occurred in 1947, when businessman Kenneth Arnold claimed to see a group of nine high-speed objects near Mount Rainier in Washington while flying his small plane.
  • Each year, on average there are approximately 5,000 UFO sightings reported to the National UFO Reporting Center.


Calendar Information        
Happening This Week:
27-29 
Garlic Days
World Lumberjack Championships
Single Working Women's Week

Today Is                                                                      
Cheese Sacrifice Purchase Day: you buy cheese and sacrifice some to the 
                                                                  mouse trap(s)
Lasagna Day
NASA:  52nd Anniversary of founding
National Chicken Wing Day
Rain Day

Today’s Events Through History  
2000’s
2005 - Astronomers announce their discovery of dwarf planet Eris
1900’s
1988 - Last US Playboy Club (Lansing Mich) closes
1970 - 6 days of race rioting in Hartford Ct
1968 - Pope Paul VI, in an encyclical entitled "Humanae Vitae" (Of Human Life),
           declares any artificial forms of birth control prohibited
1956 - Jacques Cousteau's Calypso anchors in 7,500 m of water (record)
1949 - BBC radio begins broadcasting
1944 - Allied air force bomb Germany for 6 hours
1938 - Olympic National Park forms
1936 - RCA shows 1st real TV program (dancing, film on locomotives, Bonwit Teller 
            fashion show & monologue from Tobacco Road & comedy)
1927 - 1st iron lung installed (Bellevue hospital, NY)
1923 - Albert Einstein speaks on pacifism in Berlin
1921 - Adolf Hitler becomes leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party
1907 - Sir Robert Baden-Powell forms Boy Scouts in England
1800’s
1874 - Major Walter Copton Wingfield patents a portable tennis court
1848 - Irish Potato Famine: Tipperary Revolt - in Tipperary, an unsuccessful nationalist
            revolt against British rule is put down by police
1847 - Cumberland School of Law founded in Lebanon, Tennessee, USA. At the end 
            of 1847 only 15 law schools exist in the United States
1837 - Henry Dodge, representing the United States, and the Chippewa Indians sign a
            treaty (7 Stat., 536.) at St. Peters, Wisconsin. The Chippewas trade large land 
            holdings for $9,500 immediately, $19,000 worth of supplies, and a release 
            from their debts
1835 - 1st sugar plantation in Hawaii begins
1700’s
1786 - 1st newspaper published west of Alleghanies, Pitts Gazette
1706 - Spaniard Juan de Uribarri is leading twenty soldiers, twelve settlers and 200 
            Indian allies from Santa Fe to rescue a band of enslaved Indians held by the 
            Cuartelejo Apaches in what is now eastern Colorado. They cross the Arkansas
            River near present day Pueblo, Colorado
1600’s
1655 - Biggest townhall in the world opens in Amsterdam
1500’s
1585 - Friese academy opens

Before 1000CE
362 - Emperor Julianus of Constantinople ends education laws

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 30’s
Stephen Dorff, actor (I Know My Name is Steven) is 39
In their 40’s
Martina McBride, country music singer and songwriter is 46
In their 50’s
Ken Burns, epic documentary maker (Civil War, Baseball) is 59
Tim Gunn, American television personality will be 59
In their 60’s
Marilyn Tucker Quayle, novelist/wife of Vice President Dan Quayle is 63
In their 70’s
Elizabeth Hanford Dole, US Secretary of Transportation (1983-87) is 76
Robert Fuller, Troy NY, actor (Laramie, Wagon Train) is 79
In their 80’s
Robert Horton, actor (Flint McCullough on Wagon Train) is 88
Nancy Landon Kassebaum, (Sen-R-Kansas) is 80
In their 90’s
"Professor" Irwin Corey, comedian (Car Wash) is 98

Remembered for being born today
Melvin Mouron Belli, Sonora California, lawyer - 1907
Clara Bow, Brooklyn New York, silent screen actress (It, Saturday Night Kid) – 1905
Richard Egan, SF California, actor (Empire, Redigo, Pollyanna) - 1921
Dag Hammarskjoeld, Sweden, 2nd UN Sect-General (Nobel 1961) - 1905
Peter Jennings, Toronto Canada, news anchor (ABC Evening News) - 1938
Benito Mussolini, [Il Duce], Forli Kingdom of Italy, Fascist Italian dictator - 1883
William Powell, Pittsburgh PA, actor (Thin Man, My Man Godfrey) - 1892
Isidor Isaac Rabi, Poland, physicist (explored atom, Nobel 1944) - 1898
Alica Hathaway Lee Roosevelt, 1st wife of Theodore Roosevelt - 1861
Booth Tarkington, US, novelist (17, Magnificent Ambersons) - 1869
Alexis de Tocqueville, France, statesman/writer (Democracy in America) - 1805

Today’s Historical Obits                                                           
Cass Elliot, singer (Mamas & Papas), dies from heart attack in 1974 at 32
Olaf II Haraldsson, King of Norway, dies in battle of Stiklestad in 1030 at 35
Raymond Massey, actor (Dr Kildare), dies of pneumonia in 1983 at 86
David Niven, actor (Rugues), dies in Switzerland of ALS in 1983 at 73
Robert A Schumann, German pianist/composer (Humoresque), dies of syphilis in 
       1856 at 46
Vincent Van Gogh, painter, dies of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, syphilis, poisoning
       from swallowed paints, temporal lobe epilepsy and acute intermittent porphyria in 
       1890 at 37

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Do you know what this word means?
Lunule: The white, crescent shaped part at the top of a nail.
What is the answer?
TEACHER, SACHET, EARACHE
5X5 boxes
SHOOT
HALVE
OLDEN
OVERT
TENTH
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.