π Day-3-14-15

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Almanac: Week: 11 \ Day: 072 
March Averages: 50°\23°
86004 Today: H 60°\L 40° Average Sky Cover: 45% 
Wind ave:   2mph\Gusts:  7mph
Ave. High: 50° Record High:  69° (2007) Ave. Low: 22° Record Low:  -9° (1962)
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Observances Today:
International Ask A Question Day
International Day of Action for Rivers
International Fanny Pack Day
Learn about Butterflies Day
National Potato Chip Day
National Urban Ballroom Dancing Day
Pi Day (as in the math pie = 3.14159265 etc.)
Observances This Week:
      8-14
…Universal Women's Week

…National Agriculture Week
…Teen Tech Week
…Girl Scout Week
…Stand Up! LGBT Awareness Week
      11-17

…Turkey Vultures Return to the Living Sign

      13-15

…National Rattlesnake Roundup

…American Council on Education
       14-22

…National YoYo and Skills Toys Days

…American Chocolate Week  
Campfire USA Birthday Week

…Health Information Professionals Week

…National Animal Poison Prevention Week
…National Button Week
…National Inhalant and Poisons Awareness Week
Termite Awareness Week
…International Brain Awareness Week
…Shakespeare Week
…Flood Safety Awareness Week
…Act Happy Week
…Wellderly Week
…Wildlife Week
…World Folktales & Fables Week

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Quote of the Day 

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US Historical Highlights for Today
1493 - Columbus writes a letter today describing the generous nature of the Indians he has encountered. He will describe them as "men of great deference and kindness."
1743 - 1st American town meeting (Boston's Faneuil Hall)
1794 - Eli Whitney patents the cotton gin machine revolutionizing cotton industry in the southern US states
1812 - Congress authorizes war bonds to finance War of 1812
1870 - California legislature approves act making Golden Gate Park possible
1833 - Secretary of War has the Indian Department issue orders, again, to U.S. Marshals to remove whites from Creek lands.
1888 - 2nd largest snowfall in NYC history (21")
1900 - US currency goes on gold standard after Congress passes the Currency Act
1903 - 1st national bird reservation established in Sebastian, FL
1913 - John D. Rockefeller gives $100 million to Rockefeller Foundation
1923 - Pres Warren G Harding becomes 1st president to pay taxes
1930 - Phoenix Planning and Zoning Commission laid out city to accommodate a population of 226,000 inhabitants
1931 - 1st theater built for rear movie projection (NYC)
1933 - Civilian Conservation Corp begins tree conservation
1936 - Federal Register, 1st magazine of the US government, publishes 1st issue
1950 - FBI's "10 Most Wanted Fugitives" program begins
1951 - During Korean War, US/UN forces recapture Seoul
1956 - Satchel Paige signs with the Birmingham Black Barons (Negro League)
1958 - Recording Industry Association of American created
1964 - Jack Ruby sentenced to death for Lee Harvey Oswald's murder
1967 - JFK's body moved from temporary grave to a permanent memorial
1993 - 3,000th performance of "Nunsense"

Today’s World Events through History
1689 - Scotland dismisses William III & Mary Stuart as king & queen
1826 - General Congress of South American States assembles at Panama
1869 - Defeat of Maori leader Titokowaru in New Zealand
1885 - Gilbert & Sullivan's comic opera "Mikado" premieres in London
1913 - South African Supreme Court declares that marriages not celebrated according to Christian rites and/or not registered by the Registrar of Marriages, are invalid; all Muslim and Hindu marriages are therefore declared invalid
1958 - South Africa government prohibits the African National Congress
1972 - Two IRA members shot dead by British soldiers in the Bogside area of Derry
1984 - Gerry Adams, head of Sinn Féin, is seriously wounded in an assassination attempt in central Belfast
1992 - Soviet newspaper "Pravda" suspends publication
1995 - 1st time 13 people in space
2013 - Xi Jinping is named as the new President of the People's Republic of China
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  Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthday’s Today 

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My Rambling Thoughts
Saturday is Pi day…an annual celebration of π. Big day for trivia buffs and nerds:
3-14-15@9:26:53:59. This only happens once a century…so enjoy…
A lot of big puffy clouds moved across the sky in our little mountain town, but still a very nice day.
Did some cleaning and straightening around the house…just in case I have weekend visitors. Not expecting any, but if I didn’t, some would arrive for sure.
The AZ house, led by a state rep that represents the area I live in has really gone bonkers…again. As I was reading about the bill, I learned, much to my dismay, that the 2nd amendment—guns—is a “God-given” right. Thanks to that bill, if it passes the Senate and gets signed by the Governor, anyone with a conceal permit will be able to carry inside most public buildings—except schools and universities—if the building does not have a metal detector and each and every public access entrance. Prior to this bill, a sign stating ‘No Firearms allowed’ was enough…but no more. As my Rep made a rambling statement that criminals don’t read signs and she will feel safer knowing that those with conceal permits will be there to protect her. My only comment to this craziness is ‘What Would Jesus Do?’
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Can you decipher this:


L NCH
L NCH

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Found on You Tube with some relevance to today
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America Facts…
-- One million Americans, about 3,000 each day, take up smoking each year. Most of them are children.
--Americans throw out 4.5 pounds of trash a day - twice that of 40 years ago.

Ant Facts…
-- The abdomen of the ant contains two stomachs. One stomach holds the food for itself and second stomach is for food to be shared with other ants.
--An ant brain has about 250 000 brain cells. A human brain has 10,000 million so a colony of 40,000 ants has collectively the same size brain as a human.

Car Facts…
-- Outside of the bedroom, the most common place for adults in the U.S. to have sex is the car.
--It would take more than 150 years to drive a car to the sun.

Charity Facts…
-- When the 2013 government shutdown threatened the closing down of a national program giving medical attention and meals to children, John D. Arnold donated $10 million of his own money to keep it afloat.
--The United Arab Emirates donated a laptop to every high school student in Joplin, Missouri, after the city had been devastated by a tornado.

Flagstaff, AZ History…
75 YEARS AGO--1940
--Glen Curtis Davis, who was arrested by State Highway Patrolman S. Hinton, pleaded guilty in Justice of Peace Max W. Miller's Court on Wednesday to the misdemeanor of operating a motor vehicle on the left side of the highway. Offered the choice of two days in jail or a $2.50 fine, he paid and was released.
--Helmar Magee was arrested on Sunday by Highway Patrolman Li Stor for exceeding the speed limit in a 20 mph zone. Justice Miller found him guilty, waived his time spent and fined him $1.
--There were nearly 1,000 participants in the second annual Snow Carnival at the Snow Bowl held this past weekend, with 800 skiers and spectators on the final day of the event.
--A total of $1,215 has now been contributed to the Iron Lung Fund.
--Babbitt’s Lumber Co. is offering a 4-room, carefree home plan that may be expanded to 5 rooms by using the attic. You will like the plan and it’s easy to own. Stop in and check it out.

Harper’s Index…
1
Riank of the Super Bowl amoung TV programs viewed by US women
90
Number of times NFL players have been arrested for domestic violence since 2000

Unusual Fact of the Day…
Because it's growing about half an inch a year, a person climbing Mount Everest today would have to go 27 inches further to reach the peak than Sir Edmund Hillary did in 1953.
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2 jokes for the day
Q: Why couldn't the pony speak? 

A: Because, he was a little horse.

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A man goes to the police station wanting to speak to the burglar who broke into his house the night before. 

"You'll get your chance in court" says the desk sergeant. 
"No, no, no!" Says the man. "I want to know how he got into the house without waking my wife. I've been trying to do that for years!"    

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Yep, It Really Happened
A water bottle filled with liquid silicone, red plastic cups, needles and syringes, and Krazy Glue to close the wound; These were to tools of the trade of the self-proclaimed 'Michelangelo of Buttocks Injections'. 

You might also know her as Padge-Victoria Windslowe. She made the news in 2012 when she was arrested for the death a 20-year-old London dancer and college student who was the victim of a botched injection. 
The trial just concluded.
45-year-old Windslowe has had quite a colorful career. She described herself as a serial entrepreneur who once ran a transgender escort service and a Gothic hip-hop performer who called herself the Black Madam.
But it was as a "body sculptor" that, in her own mind, she really excelled. "I was the best," Windslowe testified, "and I don't mean that to be cocky." 
Unfortunately her medical training consisted of tips she said she picked up from overseas doctors who performed her sex change operation and a physician-client of her escort service who became her lover.
This less-than-professional background is undoubtedly what led her to inject nearly half a gallon of industrial-grade silicone into the buttocks of the 20-year-old student, which led to her heart stopping. 
The jury took less than four hours to reject a lesser man-slaughter charge and convict her of third-degree murder, which involves malice but not premeditation.
Windslowe faces 20 to 40 years in prison.        

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Somewhat Useless Information
--Each U.S. state and territory is free to ignore daylight savings time, so residents of Arizona (except those on the Navajo Nation), Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and other territories didn't move their clocks this past weekend.

--Germany and its allies in World War I were the first countries to adopt daylight saving time as a way to conserve energy for the war effort. Britain, other countries in Europe, Canada and the US followed suit.
--Farmers were among the biggest opposition groups to daylight saving time when it was first proposed in the British Parliament in 1908. They often set their day to the sun, so everyone else moving their schedules forward gave them less time to peddle their wares.
--The origin of daylight saving time is commonly attributed to Benjamin Franklin, who wrote an essay in 1784 about how changing time could save energy.
--Studies show that Americans use the extra hour of daylight to go out and enjoy themselves. Leisure facilities such as golf courses have reported increased business, whereas Nielsen ratings for American TV show as much as a 10-15% drop in the number of viewers watching even the most popular shows.
--Cities once kept their own time and in 1965, there were 130 cities in the US with populations of 100,000 or more and 59 of them did not observe daylight saving time.
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Birthday’s Today
87 - Frank Borman, astronaut (Gem 7, Ap 8)/CEO (Eastern Airline)
82 - Michael Caine, [Maurice J Micklewhite], actor (Alfie)
82 - Quincy Jones Jr, composer/singer (We Are The World)
70 - Michael Martin Murphey, country singer (Wildfire)
67 - Billy Crystal, actor, writer, producer (Soap, City Slickers)
67 - Tom Coburn, American politician, junior senator from OK
31 - Jordan Taylor Hanson, singer (Hansons-MMMMbop)
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Remembered for being born today
1800-1874@74 - James Bogardus, US inventor/builder (made cast-iron buildings)
1833-1910@77 - Lucy Hobbs Taylor, 1st US woman dentist
1864-1900@37 - [John] Casey Jones, RR engineer (Ballad of Casey Jones)
1879-1955@76 - Albert Einstein, theoretical physicist\Nobel (theory of relativity)
1912-2001@89 - Les Brown, American bandleader (d. 2001)
1914-2000@86 - Lee Petty, American race car driver (d. 2000)
1916-2009@92 - Horton Foote, author, playwright and screenwriter
1920-2001@81 - Hank Ketcham, cartoonist (Dennis the Menace)
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Historical Obits Today
Peter Graves [Aurness], American actor-2010@83
George Eastman, Kodak-camera, suicide-1932@77
Murat B "Chic" Young, US comic strip artist (Blondie), 1973@72
Karl Marx, German philosopher (Communist Manifesto), pleurisy-1883@64
Edward Abbey (environmental author), dies after surgery-1989@62
Susan Hayward, actress (Young & Willing), brain cancer-1975@56
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Brain Teasers Answers
Take you out to lunch.
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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 contains mistakes and sadly once 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.