4-25-15

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Almanac: Week: 17 \ Day: 115
April Averages: 58°\27°
86004 Today: H 51°\L 31° Average Sky Cover: 80% 
Wind ave:   6mph\Gusts:  27mph
Ave. High: 61° Record High:  78° (1996) Ave. Low: 29° Record Low:  13° (1961)
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Observances Today:
Bob Wills Day
DNA Day
East meets West Day
Eeyore's Birthday Day
Hairstylists Appreciation Day
Hug A Plumber Day or Plumbers Day
International Marconi Day
License Plates Day
Malaria Awareness Day
National Dance Day
National Go Birding Day
National Herb Day
National Mani-pedi Day
National Rebuilding Day
National Zucchini Bread Day
Parental Alienation Day
Red Hat Society Day
Satchmo Days
Save The Frogs Day
Sense of Smell Day
Spring Astronomy Day
World Day for Animals in Laboratories
World Healing Day
World Penguin Day
World Tai Chi & Qigong Day
World Veterinary Day
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Observances This Week:
19-25
Administrative Professionals Week
Animal Cruelty/Human Violence Awareness Week
Bedbug Awareness Week
Coin Week
Fibroid Awareness Week
Medical Laboratory Professionals Week 
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week
National Crime Victims’ Rights Week
National Environmental Education Week
National Occupational Health Nursing Week
National Infertility Awareness Week
National Karaoke Week
National Pet ID Week 
National Princess Week  
Sky Awareness Week

22-27
Fiddler's Frolic
National Tattoo Week
US Film Festival

23-25
Gathering of the Nations Powwow
24-30
Interstate Mullet Toss
National Dance Week
National Dream Hotline
National Scoop The Poop Week

24-26
Just Pray No! Worldwide Weekend of Prayer
National & Global Youth Service Days
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Quote of the Day 

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US Historical Highlights for Today
1507 - German cartographer Martin Waldseemuller 1st to use the
  name America on his world map Universalis Cosmographia
1846 - Thornton Affair: Open conflict begins over the disputed border
  of Texas, triggering the Mexican-American War
1850 - Paul Julius Reuter, use 40 pigeons to carry stock market prices
1854 - Gadsden Purchase ratified and signed by President Franklin Pierce
1928 - Buddy, a German Shepherd, becomes 1st guide dog for a US
  citizen Morris Frank
1950 - Chuck Cooper becomes 1st black to play in NBA
1954 - Bell labs announces 1st solar battery (NYC)
1967 - Abortion legalized in Colorado
1994 - 14" of snow in Southern Calif
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Today’s World Events through History
1719 - Daniel Defoes publishes "Robinson Crusoe"
1792 - Guillotine first used in France, executes highwayman Nicolas Pelletier
1859 - Ground broken for Suez Canal
1867 - Tokyo opens for foreign trade
1886 - Sigmund Freud opens practice at Rathausstrasse 7, Vienna
1954 - British raid Nairobi, Kenya (25,000 Mau Mau suspects arrested)
1959 - St Lawrence Seaway linking Atlantic, Great Lakes opens to shipping
1971 - The Northern Ireland census is held
1993 - Russia elects Boris Yeltsin leader
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Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthday’s Today 

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My Rambling Thoughts
We have April Showers…most of the day. Decent amount of moisture. Good!
Ran some errands between showers. Found out about a new app from Walgreens that should clear up some of my renewal problems.
I’m ready for the weekend…house straightened up, floors mopped. A friend from the Rez texted and may stop by tonight. I’ll see. No big plans, except to get ready for the possible 2” of snow expected tomorrow night. It won’t last long.
Glad to read that we now have a new Attorney General…’bout time. Holder announced he was ready to leave months ago, but would wait for his successor to be confirmed. The House majority didn’t like Holder, but must not like Obama more. It’s time to get a congress that is for America.
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
After visiting my Great Aunt Annie, I travelled home in her old jalopy. The car was old and battered, it had a leak from the petrol tank, and I was stuck in second gear.
This meant that I could only travel along at a steady 30 miles per hour and managed a paltry 20 miles per gallon of fuel. 
At the start of the journey I had placed exactly 10 gallons of fuel into the tank. I knew though, that the fuel tank lost fuel at the rate of half a gallon per hour.
Just as I arrived home, the car stopped because it had run out of fuel and I had only just made it.
How far was it from my Great Aunt's to my home?

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Found on You Tube with some relevance to today
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**NEW**…Cool Facts…
~ At 17 years old, an Indian man named Jadav Payeng started planting trees on a barren sandbar. At age 47, he lives in his own 1360 acre forest which now houses rhinos, tigers, deer, apes and elephants.
~ In Japan, over 200 flavors of Kit Kat have been introduced since 2000, including cucumber, ginger ale, soy sauce, wasabi, green tea, and lemon vinegar.

**NEW**Film Facts…
~ In the “Forrest Gump” novel that the movie is based on, Forrest goes into space with NASA. Upon return, he crash lands on an island full of cannibals. He only survives because he beats the head cannibal at chess every day.
~ Seann William Scott, who played Stifler in the American Pie films, was extremely shy and nervous around women and did not have a girlfriend until he was 30 years old.

…Flagstaff, AZ History…
25 YEARS AGO - 1990
~ Kmart developers have been meeting with the city about the rezoning of their 10-acre site. Their development consultant Lane Kendrig is working on revisions with the redrafting committee.
~ Kaibab Forest Products Inc. has reduced its harvest of timber plan as required by the Forest Service need to re-inventory the old growth in the forest.

…Harper’s Index…
7: average number of daily US airstrikes in Syria since 9/23/2014

…Murphy’s Real Laws…
30.    A fine is a tax for doing wrong.     A tax is a fine for doing well. 
31.    It was recently discovered that research causes cancer in rats. 


…Unusual Fact of the Day…
The Channel Islands —Jersey, Guernsey, Alderney, and Sark— were the only parts of Britain that was occupied by the Germans during World War II.
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2 jokes for the day
In a Classroom the teacher asks; Maria, go to the map and find North America 

MARIA: Here it is. 

TEACHER: Correct. Now class, who discovered America? 

CLASS: Maria.

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A very loud Texan Engineer was visiting Australia, and talking big about all of the large civil works in the USA that he was involved in. To be polite his Australian counterpart took him on a tour of some of Sydney's larger constructions. 
First he took him to Gladesville Bridge. The Texan exclaimed, "What's that!" In reply the Australian said, "That's the Gladesville Bridge". 
"Hmmph" said the Texan, "How long and how many men did it take to build?" The Australian replied, "About 5 years with 1000 men." 
The Texan replied, "Well in Texas we would've done it in 2 years with 500 men." 
Next they went to the Sydney Opera House. "What's that" said the Texan. "That's the Sydney Opera House" was the reply. 
"Hmmph" said the Texan, "How long and how many men did it take to build?" The Australian replied, "About 10 years with 200 men." 
The Texan replied "Well in Texas we would've done it in 4 years with 200 men." 
By this stage the Australian was a little put out by the Texan's attitude so he decided to get some revenge, they walked around the Sydney Opera House and as they did the Sydney Harbor Bridge came into view. 
Immediately the Texan exclaimed, "Wow! What's that?" 
The Australian Engineer replied, "I don't know, it wasn't there yesterday."        

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Yep, It Really Happened
BERGEN, Norway (UPI) - Cats and dogs have nothing on this one. Thousands of earthworms rained down on parts of Norway, leaving scientist baffled by the appearance of the slimy invertebrates on snow-covered grounds. Biology teacher Karstein Erstad made the discovery as he was skiing in the mountains outside the coastal city of Bergen. At first he thought they crawled atop the snow from the ground beneath, but then realized the snow was too deep. "When I found them on the snow they seemed to be dead, but when I put them in my hand I found that they were alive," he said. "In many places, the snow thickness was between half a meter and a meter (1 1/2 feet to 3 feet) and I think they would have problems crawling through the cold snow." Erstad took a sample to Trond Haraldsen, an environmental expert at the Bioforsk research institute in Norway. "This is a phenomenon we know from the literature, but it is the first time in my time as a scientist that I have got the message that it has happened on the snow, "Haralsen told the Bergens Tidende. Since the incident, reports have come in from other areas of the country as far away as the Swedish border. Experts suggest the worms may have been lifted into the air by a weather system and blown miles from their original location.        
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Somewhat Useless Information
~ Although it costs less than ten cents per ounce to produce, popcorn in movie theaters will typically cost you around $5, which ounce-for-ounce is more than filet mignon! Movie theaters markup popcorn and many other concessions over 1,000 percent!
~ It costs a carrier about one-third of a cent to deliver a text message. Users, however, generally pay between 10 to 20 cents per text. That is a markup of over 6,500 percent!
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Birthday’s Today
83 - Meadowlark Lemmon, basketball star (Harlem Globetrotter)
75 - Al Pacino, actor (And Justice For All, Godfather, Scorpio)
73 - Jon Kyl, Oakland, Nebraska, US Senator (Rep-Arizona)
71-  Len Goodman, English professional ballroom dancer, dance judge (DWTS)
69 - Talia Shire, [Coppola], Lake Success NY, actress (Adrienne-Rocky)
51 - Hank Azaria, actor (The Birdcage)\voice of many characters in The Simpsons
46 - Renée Zellweger, American actress
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Remembered for being born today
Denny "Scott" Miller, actor (Wagon Train) 1934-2014@80
Ella Fitzgerald, jazz singer (Is it live or Memorex) 1917-1996@79 
Guglielmo Marconi, Bologna Italy, inventor (radio, Nobel 1909) 1874-1937@63 
Oliver Cromwell, Puritan lord protector of England 1599-1658@59 
Edward R Murrow, newscaster (Person to Person) 1908-1965@57 
John Moisant, pioneer aviator, 1st to cross English Channel with passenger and a cat 1868-1910@42 
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Historical Obits Today
George Sanders, actor (Ivanhoe), suicide-1972@65
David Merrick, American theatrical producer-2000@88
Beatrice Arthur, American comedian, actress, and singer-2009@86
Ginger Rogers, actress/dancer (Top Hat, Stage Door)-1995@83
Dorothy Provine, singer, actress, emphysema -2010@75
Art Fleming, game show host (Jeopardy), cancer-1995@70
Bobby "Boris" Pickett, singer and songwriter (Monster Mash),leukemia-2007@69
George Sanders, actor (Ivanhoe), suicide-1972@65
Anders Celsius, Swedish astronomer (Celsius temperature scale)-1744@42
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Brain Teasers Answers
I was travelling at 30mph at a rate of 20mpg, so I was using 1.5 gallons every hour for the driving itself. I was also losing 0.5 gallon every hour, so in total, I was using 2 gallons every hour. Therefore to use all of the 10 gallons I started with, I travelled for 5 hours. 
5 hours at 30mph is 150 miles.

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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.