FYI: Blue text is a link… click on any blue text for
more information!
Today’s “geez“
- 1799 - Metric system established in France
- 1869 - Women suffrage (right to vote) granted in Wyoming Territory (US 1st)
- 1896 - 1st intercollegiate basketball game (Wesleyan beats Yale 4-3)
- 1902 - Women are given the right to vote in Tasmania
- 1911 - Calbraith Rogers completes 1st crossing of US by airplane (84 days)
- 1948 - UN General Assembly adopts Universal Declaration of Human Rights
♪♪ Happy Birthday To:♪♪
Free Rambling Thoughts
*I don’t know the author
of the quote on yesterday’s blog…it popped up on FB, I liked and tried to find
out who wrote it to no avail. Also, in
yesterday’s NPR puzzle, #8 should have said ‘pool’ to follow the TOP concept…sorry
for the typo.
We had another nice day
here in Flag…a little nippy this morning, but nice the rest of the day. I was
able to do some shopping for Christmas…and now am almost finished. Good thing
as there aren’t many days left.
Arizona will be
celebrating its centennial on February 14, 2012. I’ve started a countdown on
this blog. Watch for a change in the
almanac at the beginning of the blog tomorrow. I haven’t finished the look, but
am getting there. I probably should put a countdown to Christmas, but figure
everyone knows it’s just around the corner.
NPR Sunday Puzzle (answers
at the end of post)
Every answer is a
compound word or familiar two-word phrase, in which the first word has a long O
for its vowel sound and the second word one of the U sounds. For example, given the clue "a traditional Christmas
entrée," the answer would be "roast goose."
1.
A
mushroom:
2.
Area
in a building to hang hats:
3.
To
teach as kids not in a public school:
4.
A
basic jump in figure skating:
5.
A
pithy sign some carries who is against nuclear weapons:
6.
Songs
from Broadway:
7.
Footwear
for walking in the Arctic:
8.
Snoopy
in Peanuts when he is wearing dark glasses:
9.
Place
to pay to cross a bridge:
10. If it takes a long time for you to explode
in anger:
11. A session for taking pictures:
Wuzzles What concept or
phrase do these suggest?
Rules of Thumb
Easy shortcuts to make
an ‘educated’ guess
- A hospital should have four to four and a half beds for every thousand people in the community it serves.
Hmmmmm
- Chance that a US high school biology teacher is an advocate of evolution: 1 in 4
Somewhat Useless
Information
- In 1978, Xavier Roberts, an artist and businessman from Georgia, created a doll that he first named "Little People." In 1982 the name changed to the Cabbage Patch Kids.
- Babyland General Hospital is known as the "birthplace" of Cabbage Patch Kids Dolls. Located in Cleveland, Georgia, co-creator Xavier Roberts converted an old health care clinic into a retail unit and miniature theme park dedicated to the dolls.
- In 1984, during the height of the Cabbage Patch Kid popularity, over 20 million dolls were adopted. By the end of the 20th century, 95 million dolls had been sold.
- The size of the standard Cabbage Patch Kid is 15 to 16 inches in length. There have been many variations of dolls through the years, including a "newborn" that measured 11 inches long.
- In 1984, the Cabbage Patch Kid doll retailed for $30, the same price new versions sold for in 2010. An original 1980s doll still in its box can be worth $100 or more.
- No two Cabbage Patch Kids are identical, but all of them have round, chubby faces made of plastic. Roberts' signature is located on the left buttock of the cloth body.
Yeah, It Really Happened
BEIJING -- Five Chinese
officials have been suspended from their jobs after they were observed sleeping
or reading newspapers during a video conference on stamping out laziness at
work, state media reported Friday.
The officials, all
high-level workers at tax bureau in the northern province of Shanxi, were
supposed to be participating in a meeting to push better work discipline, the
official Xinhua news agency reported.
It did not say for how
long they would be suspended.
The campaign is to
remind officials they cannot leave their posts, play games or "attend
recreational activities" during office hours, Xinhua added.
Chinese officials
frequently have to sit through long, tedious meetings and listen to turgid
reports on the latest missives from Beijing on Communist theory or other dry
subjects.
But sensitive to public
opinion, especially stories of lazy or corrupt bureaucrats carried by massively
popular microblogging sites, the government has also tried to instill a greater
sense of duty into its officials.
A Laff or at least smile
A woman walked up to a
little old man rocking in a chair on his porch. "I couldn't help noticing
how happy you look," she said. "What's your secret for a long happy
life?"
"I smoke three packs of cigarettes a
day," he said. "I also drink a case of whiskey a week, eat fatty
foods, and never exercise."
"That's amazing," said the woman,
"how old are you?"
"Twenty-six," he said.
~*~Bonus~*~
While attending a
Marriage seminar dealing with communication, Jack and his wife, Barb, listened
to the instructor. “It is essential that husbands and wives know the things
that are important to each other.” He addressed the man, “can you describe your
wife’s favorite flower?”
Jack leaned over,
touched his wife’s arm gently and whispered, “Its Pillsbury isn’t it?”
Searchin YouTube I found
Daybook Information
…Happening This Week:
4-10
Clerc-Gallaudet Week:
6-12
National Handwashing Awareness Week
10-17
Human Rights Week
Today Is
- Festival For The Souls Of Dead Whales
- Day Of The Horse
- Dewey Decimal System Day
- Human Rights Day
- International Shareware Day
- Nobel Prize Day
- Lunar Eclipse
~*~
- US: Mississippi Admission Day (20th state in 1817)
- Thailand: Constitution Day (1932 for Kingdom of Siam)
Today’s Events
Arts
1927 - Grand Ole
Opry makes its 1st radio broadcast, in Nashville, TN
Nobel Peace Prizes Awarded on this day
2011 -Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Leymah
Gbowee, Tawakkol Karman
2010 -Liu Xiaobo still in Chinese Prison
2009- Barack H. Obama
2008 -Martti Ahtisaari
2007- Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC), Albert Arnold (Al) Gore Jr.
2006- Muhammad Yunus, Grameen Bank
2005- International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) , Mohamed ElBaradei
2004- Wangari Muta Maathai
2003 -Shirin Ebadi
2002 -Jimmy Carter
2001- United Nations (U.N.) , Kofi
Annan
2000 -Kim Dae-jung
1999- Médecins Sans Frontières
1998- John Hume, David Trimble
1997- International Campaign to Ban
Landmines (ICBL) , Jody Williams
1996- Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, José
Ramos-Horta
1995 -Joseph Rotblat, Pugwash
Conferences on Science and World Affairs
1994 -Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres,
Yitzhak Rabin
1993 -Nelson Mandela, Frederik Willem
de Klerk
1992 -Rigoberta Menchú Tum
1991 -Aung San Suu Kyi
1990 -Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbachev
1989- The 14th Dalai Lama (Tenzin
Gyatso)
1988- United Nations Peacekeeping
Forces
1987- Oscar Arias Sánchez
1986- Elie Wiesel
1985- International Physicians for the
Prevention of Nuclear War
1984- Desmond Mpilo Tutu
1983- Lech Walesa
1982- Alva Myrdal, Alfonso García
Robles
1981- Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
1980- Adolfo Pérez Esquivel
1979- Mother Teresa
1978- Mohamed Anwar al-Sadat, Menachem
Begin
1977- Amnesty International
1976- Betty Williams, Mairead Corrigan
1975- Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov
1974- Seán MacBride, Eisaku Sato
1973- Henry A. Kissinger, Le Duc Tho
1972- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1971- Willy Brandt
1970- Norman E. Borlaug
1969- International Labour
Organization (I.L.O.)
1968- René Cassin
1967- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1966- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1965- United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF)
1964- Martin Luther King Jr.
1963- Comité international de la Croix
Rouge (International Committee of the Red Cross) , Ligue des Sociétés de la
Croix-Rouge (League of Red Cross Societies)
1962- Linus Carl Pauling
1961- Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl
Hammarskjöld
1960- Albert John Lutuli
1959- Philip J. Noel-Baker
1958- Georges Pire
1957- Lester Bowles Pearson
1956- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1955- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1954- Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
1953- George Catlett Marshall
1952- Albert Schweitzer
1951- Léon Jouhaux
1950- Ralph Bunche [1st
Black Amreican]
1949- Lord (John) Boyd Orr of Brechin
1948- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1947- Friends Service Council (The
Quakers) , American Friends Service Committee (The Quakers)
1946- Emily Greene Balch, John Raleigh
Mott
1945- Cordell Hull
1944- Comité international de la Croix
Rouge (International Committee of the Red Cross)
1943- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1942- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1941- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1940- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1939- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1938- Office international Nansen pour
les Réfugiés (Nansen International Office for Refugees)
1937- Cecil of Chelwood, Viscount
(Lord Edgar Algernon Robert Gascoyne Cecil)
1936- Carlos Saavedra Lamas
1935- Carl von Ossietzky
1934- Arthur Henderson
1933- Sir Norman Angell (Ralph Lane)
1932- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1931- Jane Addams (first woman to
share prize), Nicholas Murray Butler
1930- Lars Olof Jonathan (Nathan)
Söderblom
1929- Frank Billings Kellogg
1928- No Nobel Prize was awarded this year.
1927- Ferdinand Buisson, Ludwig Quidde
1926- Aristide Briand, Gustav
Stresemann
1925- Sir Austen Chamberlain, Charles Gates
Dawes
1924- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1923- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1922- Fridtjof Nansen
1921- Karl Hjalmar Branting, Christian
Lous Lange
1920- Léon Victor Auguste Bourgeois
1919- Thomas Woodrow Wilson
1918- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1917- Comité international de la Croix
Rouge (International Committee of the Red Cross)
1916- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1915- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1914- No Nobel Prize was awarded this
year.
1913- Henri La Fontaine
1912- Elihu Root
1911- Tobias Michael Carel Asser,
Alfred Hermann Fried
1910- Bureau international permanent
de la Paix (Permanent International Peace Bureau)
1909- Auguste Marie François
Beernaert, Paul Henri Benjamin Balluet d'Estournelles de Constant, Baron de
Constant de Rebecque
1908- Klas Pontus Arnoldson, Fredrik
Bajer
1907- Ernesto Teodoro Moneta, Louis
Renault
1906- Theodore Roosevelt [1st
American]
1905- Baroness Bertha Sophie Felicita
von Suttner, née Countess Kinsky von Chinic und Tettau
1904- Institut de droit international
(Institute of International Law)
1903- William Randal Cremer
1902- Élie Ducommun, Charles Albert
Gobat
1901- Jean Henry Dunant, Frédéric
Passy
Athletes
1810 - Tom Cribb
(GB) beats Tom Molineaus (US-Negro) in 1st interracial boxing championship (40
rounds)
1961 - Houston Oiler
Billy Cannon gains record 373 yards against Titans
1992 - NHL awards
franchises to Mimai & Anaheim (for 1994-95)
Business
1672 - NY Gov
Lovelace announces monthly mail service between NY & Boston
1915 - 10,000,000th
model T Ford assembled
Education
1836 - Emory College
(now Emory University) is chartered in Oxford, Georgia
Indigenous People
1834 - William Marshall,
representing the United States, and Potawatomi will sign a treaty today at
Tippecanoe. Six sections of land will be traded annual payments of $1000 [USD2010:$21,553.76],
and a small amount of supplies.
1836 - The second part
of the fifth group of "friendly" Creek, approximately 1600 in number,
arrive at Fort Gibson, in eastern Indian Territory. The total of both groups
will be 2237. The gains will come from stragglers of earlier groups.
Politics [International]
1745 - Bonnie Prince
Charlie’s army draws into Manchester
1936 - King Edward
VIII abdicates throne to marry Mrs Wallis Simpson
Politics [US]
1690 - Mass Bay
becomes 1st American colonial government to borrow money
1864 - General
Shermans armies reach Savannah & 12 day siege begins
1898 - Spanish-American
War ends; US acquires Philippines, PR & Guam
1971 - William H
Rehnquist confirmed as Supreme Court justice
Religion
1520 - Martin Luther
publicly burned papal edict demands
Science
1684 - Isaac
Newton's derivation of Kepler's laws from his theory of gravity, contained in
the paper De motu corporum in gyrum, is
read to the Royal Society by Edmund Halley
Today’s Birthdays
Artists: [Authors, Composers]
1805 - William Lloyd
Garrison, abolitionist publisher (The Liberator)
Athletes
Mark Aguirre, NBA
forward (Detroit Pistons) is 52
Entertainers [Actors, Singers…]
1929 - Dan
Blocker, actor (Tiny-Cimarron City, Hoss-Bonanza)
1923 - Harold Gould,
actor (He & She, Martin-Rhoda, Big Bus)
Tommy Kirk, actor (Old
Yeller,Joe Hardy, Disney movies & Mousketeer) is 70
1914 - Dorothy
Lamour, [Mary Kaumeyer], actress (Road to Bali)
Nia Peeples, dancer, TV
host is 50
Raven-Symon, actor is 26
Entrepreneurs & Educators
1851 - Melvil[le
Louis K] Dewey, created Dewey Decimal System for libraries
1787 - Thomas
Hopkins Gallaudet, pioneer of educating the deaf
1911 - Chet
Huntley, newscaster (NBC Huntley-Brinkley Report)
Bobby Flay, TV chef, restaurateur
is 47
Political Figures
1394 - King
James I of Scotland
Scientists & Theologians
--
Today’s Obits
1909 - Red
Cloud [Maȟpíya Lúta ], Lakota chief, dies at 87
"I am poor and naked, but I am the chief of the nation. We do not want riches but we do want to train our children right. Riches would do us no good. We could not take them with us to the other world. We do not want riches. We want peace and love."
"They made us many promises, more than I can remember, but they never kept but one; they promised to take our land, and they took it."
"The Great Spirit raised both the white man and the Indian. I think he raised the Indian first. He raised me in this land, it belongs to me. The white man was raised over the great waters, and his land is over there. Since they crossed the sea, I have given them room. There are now white people all about me. I have but a small spot of land left. The Great Spirit told me to keep it."
2005 - Eugene
McCarthy, U.S. Senator, presidential candidate dies at 89
1967 - Otis Redding,
singer (Dock of Bay), dies in plane crash at 26
1979 - Fulton J
Sheen, bishop (Life is Worth Living), dies at 84
Answers
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.
A
mushroom: toadstool
2.
Area
in a building to hang hats: coat room; cloak room
3.
To
teach as kids not in a public school: home school
4.
A
basic jump in figure skating: toe loop
5.
A
pithy sign some carries who is against nuclear weapons: no nukes
6.
Songs
from Broadway: show tunes
7.
Footwear
for walking in the Arctic: snow shoes, snow boots
8.
Snoopy
in Peanuts when he is wearing dark glasses: Joe Cool
9.
Place
to pay to cross a bridge: toll booth
10. If it takes a long time for you to explode
in anger: slow fuse
11. A session for taking pictures: photo
shoot
Wuzzle
- Sits tight
- Many different ways
- Water (H to O)
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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