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Today’s Historical
Highlights
- 1813 - British burn Buffalo, NY during War of 1812
- 1845 - Texas admitted as 28th state
- 1851 - 1st American Young Men's Christian Association chapter opened (Boston)
- 1852 - Emma Snodgrass arrested in Boston for wearing pants
- 1930 - Fred P Newton completes longest swim ever (1826 miles), when he swam in the Mississippi River from Ford Dam, Minn, to New Orleans
- 1972 - Life magazine ceases publication
- 1982 - Bob Marley postage stamp issued in Jamaica
♫Happy Birthday To: ♫
Free Rambling
Thoughts
I ran a few errands
today…fridge was empty from the trip. Weather was great, and stores were not
too crowded. Can’t believe it was almost 60° today….and it’s December…I’m not
complaining, just observing.
I also caught up on
email, pictures, etc. I had some great pics of the Laura’s sister’s kids. They
are such fun…as are the mom and dad. Kids certainly make Christmas. I’d post
some, but mom and dad are a little shy about FB pics. I get it.
There is all this hoopla
about the Iowa caucus…OK, but any registered voter—Rep, Dem, Independent, can
cast a vote. I had stopped listening to the Republican candidates back in August.
So many were making such outlandish statements, spouting incorrect historical
facts, and IMHO trying to see who was the farthest out there on the fringe. Now
I heard that the average caucus voter is 65 years old. Nothing against old-er
people, but in the latest census, those 65+ made up 12% of the total
population. We have a voice, but we don’t pick the President. So it’s only the
news reporting crazies that are following the Iowa caucus.
Lifestyle Substance
(any
answers at the end of post)
NPR Sunday Puzzle
Each
word you are given conceals the name of a U.S. president in left-to-right
order, but the letters are not consecutive. For example, given the clue
"hairdressing, in seven letters," the answer would be
"Harding."
1.
Blue
fish: 4 letters:
2.
Daydreams:
5 letters:
3.
Monochrome:
6 letters:
4.
Storyteller:
5 letters:
5.
Transfixion:
5 letters:
6.
Triumphant:
6 letters:
7.
Registrant:
5 letters:
8.
Maldistribution:
7 letters:
9.
How
so ever: 6 letters:
10. Pot luck: 4 letters:
11. Culmination: 7 letters:
12. Talkfest: 4 letters:
13. Papier mache: 6:
Wuzzles What concept or
phrase do these suggest?
Rules of Thumb
Easy shortcuts to make
an ‘educated’ guess
- Back in the days when every firearm was made by hand and every firearm was a muzzle-loader, the starting powder charge for a new firearm was determined thusly: Place the proper sized bullet in your palm and pour just enough powder over it to cover it completely. That amount of powder twill be a safe starting charge that can be adjusted for accuracy. Works today with modern muzzle-loaders too!
Harpers Index
- Percentage of Americans who think the federal government has too much power: 58
That lobbyists do: 71
Yeah, It Really
Happened
OGDEN, UT - Two people
cited for allegedly shoplifting in Ogden, Utah, in turn discovered just minutes
later they were victims of theft, police said. Korin Vanhouten, 47 and Eldon
Alexander, 36, were stopped shortly after leaving a WinCo by a police officer
who suspected they left without paying for cotton swabs, makeup and batteries,
the Ogden Standard-Examiner reported Friday. The officer cited them for
shoplifting. When the pair returned to Alexander's pickup truck in the store's
parking lot, they noticed someone had entered the unlocked truck and stole a
stereo amplifier, a drum machine and cigarettes. Police Lt. Tony Fox said he
had never seen anything like it in his entire career. The items the two were
suspected of shoplifting were worth $26, while the worth of their stolen
possessions was about $60, Fox estimated. Police were investigating.
Joke-of-the-day
An Israeli doctor says:
"Medicine in my country is so advanced that we can take a kidney out of
one man, put it in another, and have him looking for work in 6 weeks."
A British doctor says:
"That is nothing; we can take a lung out of one person, put it in another,
and have him looking for work in 4 weeks."
A Canadian doctor says:
"In my country, medicine is so advanced that we can take half a heart out
of one person, put it in another, and have them both looking for work in 2
weeks."
A Nigerian doctor, not to
be outdone, says: "You guys are way behind...... We just took a man with
NO brain, made him President, and now the whole country is looking for work.
New! Old-er
people in the News
March
11th, 2008 - Florida cops last Saturday administered a solid tasering to a
65-year-old man who decided to go for a naked wander through a Sarasota
neighbourhood.
According
to Tampa Bay Online, Duncan Kirk (right), of Bradenton, was spotted in his
birthday suit about 7.30pm making his way through locals' back gardens. When
deputies duly arrived, he was found "sitting inside a home's screened-in
patio", as Sgt Darin Bankert later explained.
The
old timer then decided to make a run for it, but was quickly apprehended. He
resisted officers' attempts to cuff him, even when hit with a dose of gel-based
pepper spray, so cops tasered him twice.
Kirk
was charged with "prowling and resisting arrest with violence", and
released on Sunday from Manatee County Jail after coughing $1,200 bail.
Somewhat Useless
Information
- Emily Dickinson (1830-1886), America's most famous female poet, published only seven poems in her lifetime; all were published anonymously and against her will. It wasn't until after her death, at 56, that her nearly 2000 poems were discovered.
- Sharks and rays share the same kind of skin: instead of scales, they have small tooth-like spikes called denticles. The spikes are so sharp that shark skin has long been used as sandpaper.
- During the first 90 years of this century, the USA dominated the race for the title of the tallest building in the world. In 1974 Chicago's Sears Tower was completed, and generally seen as the 'tallest building' in the world. Sears Tower held on to that title for over 20 years.
- More than 50 percent of the people who are bitten by venomous snakes in the United States and who go untreated still survive.
- A mile on the ocean and a mile on land are not the same distance. On the ocean, a nautical mile measures 6,080 feet. A land or statute mile is 5,280 feet.
- To clean tarnished copper bottoms of pots and pans, spread a little ketchup onto the bottom. Let it sit for about one minute. Wipe it clean and rinse.
Found on You Tube
Calendar Information
…Happening
This Week:
25-31
It's About Time Week
26-1/1 Kwanzaa
29th:
Nia (Purpose): To make our collective vocation the building and developing of
our community in order to restore our people to their traditional greatness.
Today
Is
- Pepper Pot Day: commemorates the creation of this thick spicy soup, which was served to the Continental Army during the cold, harsh winter of 1777-1778
- Mongolia: 100th anniversary of National Liberation Revolution from Qing Dynasty
Today’s
Other Events
1100’s
1170 - Thomas
Becket: Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, is assassinated inside
Canterbury Cathedral by followers of King Henry II
1700’s
1778 - English
troops occupy Savannah, Georgia
1782 - 1st
nautical almanac in US published by Samuel Stearns, Boston
1800’s
1812 - The USS
Constitution under the command of Captain William Bainbridge, captures the HMS
Java off the coast of Brazil after a three hour battle
1830: Nine local
missionaries, issue a proclamation defending the Cherokee against the actions
of Georgia. Georgia is trying to remove the Cherokee from their lands, in New
Echota
1835 - The
Treaty of New Echota is signed, ceding all the lands of the Cherokee east of
the Mississippi River to the United States
1837 - Steam-powered
threshing machine patented, Winthrop, Maine
1848 - Gas
lights 1st installed at White House (Polk's administration)
1862 - Bowling ball
invented 1885 - Gottlieb Daimler patents 1st bike (Germany)
1890 - US 7th
Cavalry massacre 200+ captive Sioux at Wounded Knee, SD
1900’s
1911 - Proclamation
restores "Dei Gratia" (by the grace of God) from Canada's coins
1911 - Sun Yat-sen
becomes the first President of the Republic of China
1913 - 1st
movie serial, "Adventures of Kathlyn," premieres in Chicago
1929 - Police
arrest Sukarno & 100s PNI-leaders
1947 - Ship
carrying Jewish immigrants driven away from Palestine
1948 - US State Dept
announces work on placing objects into Earth orbit
1983 - US announced
withdrawal from UNESCO
1989 - Wayne Gretzky
& Martina Navratilova, named athletes of decade by AP
1997 - Hong Kong
begins slaughtering all its chickens to prevent bird flu
1998 - Leaders
of the Khmer Rouge apologize for the 1970s genocide in Cambodia that claimed
over 1 million
Today’s
Birthdays
In their 30’s
Jude Law, actor is 39
Diego Luna, actor is 32
In their 40’s
Winona Ryder,
[Horowitz], actress (Heathers, Edward Scissorhand) is 40
In their 50’s
Herman Ronald Frazier,
Phila, 400m/4x400m runner (Olympic-gold-1976) is 57
In their 60’s
Ted Danson, actor is 64
Richard Dreyfuss, actor
(Jaws, Nuts, Mr Holland's Opus) is 64
Peter Green, [Peter
Greenbaum], rocker (Fleetwood Mac) is 65
Kate Jackson, actress
(Rookies, Charlie's Angels) is 63
Denny Laine, [Brian
Hines], rock guitarist (Moody Blues, Wings) is 67
Melba Moore, [Beatrice],
singer/actress (Ellis Island) is 66
In their 70’s
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf,
President of Liberia is 73
Mary Tyler Moore, actor,
comedian is 75
Jon Voight, actor is 73
Remembered for being
born on this day
James Boswell, Scotland,
Samuel Johnson's biographer, born in 1740
Fanny Brice, singing
comedienne (Ziegeld Follies, Baby Snooks) born in 1891
Charles Ebbets,
(namesake of Ebbets Field, Brooklyn) born in 1859
[Paul] Joseph Goebbels,
Nazi propagandist born in 1897
Bernard Gordon, American
writer and producer born in 1918
Edmund Halley,
astronomer (Halley's Comet) born in 1656
Bela Lugosi, Hungarian horror
actor (Dracula, Body Snatcher) born in 1884
William Henry ‘Bill’ Mauldin,
political cartoonist (Pulitzer-1945, 59) born in 1921
Today’s
Obits
Euell Gibbons, American
outdoorsman & proponent of natural diet dies of aneurysm at 64 in 1975
[Maurice] Harold
MacMillan, PM of Great-Britain (1957-63), dies at 92 in 1986
Answers
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.
Blue
fish: 4 letters: Bush
2.
Daydreams:
5 letters: Adams
3.
Monochrome:
6 letters: Monroe
4.
Storyteller:
5 letters: Tyler
5.
Transfixion:
5 letters: Nixon
6.
Triumphant:
6 letters: Truman
7.
Registrant:
5 letters: Grant
8.
Maldistribution:
7 letters: Madison
9.
How
so ever: 6 letters: Hoover
10. Pot luck: 4 letters: Polk
11. Culmination: 7 letters: Clinton
12. Talkfest: 4 letters: Taft
13. Papier mache: 6: Pierce
Wuzzle
- Missing link
- Unfinished tasks
- Big bully
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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