Feb 20


FYI: Click on any blue text for a link to more information!

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1746 - Bonnie Prince Charlie occupies Castle of Inverness
1811 - Austria declares bankruptcy
1872 - Luther Crowell patents a machine that manufactures paper bags
1872 - Silas Noble & JP Cooley patents toothpick manufacturing machine
1895 - Congress authorizes a US mint at Denver, Colorado
1944 - Batman & Robin comic strip premieres in newspapers
1960 - Jimi Hendrix, rock and roll guitarist, plays his first gig
1962 - John Glenn is 1st American to orbit Earth (Friendship 7)
1971 - Natl Emergency Center erroneously orders US radio & TV stations to go off the air. Mistake wasn't resolved for 30 minutes
1975 - Margaret Thatcher elected leader of British Conservative Party

Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
OK, I get it, it might snow, it might not snow. The day started with an overcast sky, then blue sky, then overcast and snow, then blue sky, then overcast and snow. Crazy. A nice day to watch the bird feeder.  Lots of birds eating lots of seed and suet. They seem to know that more snow is coming tonight. I hope my readers are trying most of the puzzles, even when I make a mistake. They are all placed here to keep the mind active. Some I like, some I don’t…but I try them all. I figure the one’s I don’t like will help me too.
Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game
NPR Sunday Puzzle
Every answer is a word, name or familiar phrase with alternating A's. For example, if the clue is "Woody Allen movie," the answer is "Bananas."
1.     Group of wagons traveling through the desert:
2.     A knight at King Arthur’s roundtable:
3.     Islamic month of fasting:
4.     Capital of Venezuela:
5.     Language of Barcelona:
6.     Sleepwear:
7.     A hard road surface:
8.     Distant: 2 word phrase:
9.     Marathon runner Alberto, who won NYC marathon 3 times:
10.  Telly who was on the telly:
11.  July 1st as celebrated North of the Border:
12.  Light summer headwear (2 words):
13.  Body of water adjoining Cuba’s capital:
14.  Largest city in Eastern Afghanistan:
15.  A light multi-hulled boat used for fishing:
16.  Connects Atlantic and Pacific ocean:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—Orkney Islands

Found on You Tube         
The 44 Presidents of United States of America
The US Presidents Song
Harper’s Index         
Percentage of gays in the military who are ‘out’ to at least some of their unit, according to the advocacy group OutService: 78
Joke-of-the-day
A man visiting a graveyard saw a tombstone that read: “Here lies John Smith, a lawyer and an honest man.” “How about that!” he exclaimed. “They’ve got three people buried in one grave.”
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
It takes almost twice as long to find something in your coat pockets when you are not wearing your coat. If you have a flight jacket or parka with more than four pockets, you can usually save time by putting it on just to look through the pockets.
Somewhat Useless Information Happy President’s Day  
In 1889, at the age of 24, Warren G. Harding had a nervous breakdown and spent several weeks in a sanitarium.
Thomas Jefferson had a pet mockingbird named "Dick" which he kept in the White House study. The bird often rode on Jefferson's shoulder and was trained to take small bites of food held between Jefferson's lips at mealtime!
In June 1886, Grover Cleveland took 21-year-old Frances Folsom as his wife, making him the first President to be married in the White House. He was also the first President to have a child born there.
William Howard Taft was the only President of the United States to also serve as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. In fact, Taft never really wanted to be President. He preferred law to politics and always aspired to serve on the Supreme Court. But his wife -- who wanted to be first lady -- had other ambitions for him. After four uncomfortable years as President, Taft left the White House and became a Professor of Law at Yale. In 1920, Taft finally realized his true dream when President Harding made him Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, a position which he held until just before his death in 1930.
Only two future U.S. Presidents signed the Declaration of Independence: Thomas Jefferson and John Adams.
In 1860, Abraham Lincoln ran for President with the campaign slogan "Vote Yourself a Farm", referring to the Republican party's promise to support legislation granting free homesteads to settlers of the Western frontier. Four years later, during the Civil War, he ran for re-election with the slogan "Don't swap horses in the middle of the stream".
Yeah, It Really Happened                
LEOMINSTER, Mass. - Police in Massachusetts said an accused purse snatcher was arrested after he bummed a cigarette from his alleged victim two days later. Leominster police said the woman, whose purse was taken at knifepoint Saturday at the Heritage Gardens apartment complex, recognized Malek Matos, 25, of Fitchburg, when he asked her for a cigarette Monday outside the Registry of Motor Vehicles, the Worcester Telegram reported Thursday. The woman told RMV employees and they called police. Matos was arrested and charged with armed robbery. He was ordered held in lieu of $5,000 bail.
Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
14-21
National Condom Week
National Nestbox Week to provide bird houses for winter
NCCDP Alzheimer's & Dementia Staff Education Week
19-25 
National Entrepreneurship Week
Brotherhood / Sisterhood Week
Build A Better Trade Show Image Week
National Engineers Week
National Pancake Week
National Justice for Animals Week
National Future Farmers of America Week
Read Me Week
Texas Cowboy Poetry Week

Today Is                                                                      
Fasching: Germany’s Carnival before Ash Wednesday
Love Your Pet Day
Northern Hemisphere Hoodie Hoo Day
Pisces Begins
Presidents Day
World Day for Social Justice

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1400’s
1472 - Orkney and Shetland are left by Norway to Scotland, due to a dowry payment
1600’s
1673 - 1st recorded wine auction held (London)
1700’s
1725 - 10 sleeping Indians scalped by whites in NH for £100 a scalp bounty
1745 - Bonnie Prince Charlie’s troops occupy Fort August, Scotland
1800’s
1805 - Kagohami talks of a 120-year-old man to Lewis and Clark
1809 - Supreme Court rules federal government power greater than any state
1832 - Northeastern District Choctaw Chief, Peter Pitchlynn, and his followers, arrive in  Fort Smith, in western Arkansas, . Floods, cold weather, low rivers, and mud have delayed their trip considerably.
1893 - A Congressional Act modifies the White Mountain-San Carlos-Camp Apache Reserve, in western Arizona Territory. It is amended further on June 10, 1896. At its' largest, it comprises 2,866 square miles, and be occupied by Arivaipa, Chillion, Chiricahua, Coyotero, Membreno, Mogollon, Mohave, Pinal, San Carlos, Tonto, and Yuma-Apache tribes.
1872 - Hydraulic electric elevator patented by Cyrus Baldwin
1900’s
1927 - Golfers in SC arrested for violating Sabbath
1929 - American Samoa organizes as territory of US
1931 - Congress allows California to build Oakland-Bay Bridge
1949 - 1st International Pancake Race held (Liberal Ks)
1950 - Dylan Thomas arrives in NYC for his 1st US poetry reading tour
1952 - "African Queen" opens at Capitol Theater in NYC
1978 - Egypt announces it is pulling its diplomats out of Cyprus
1986 - LA Dodger Orel Hershiser is 1st to win a $1M salary by arbitration
1998 - UN Sec-Gen Kofi Annan lands in Baghdad, for peace negotiations
2000’s
2005 - Spain becomes the first country to vote in a referendum on ratification of the proposed Constitution of the European Union, passing it by a substantial margin, but on a low turnout

Today’s Birthdays     
In their 80’s
Sidney Poitier, actor, (Porgy & Bess, A Raisin in the Sun) is 85
Gloria Vanderbilt, don't my jeans look great (poor little rich girl) is 88
In their 70’s
Buffy Sainte-Marie, folksinger (Now That the Buffalo Are Gone) is 71
Bobby Unser, auto racer (1968, 75, 81 Indianapolis 500) is 78
In their 60’s
J[erome] Geils, rock guitarist (J Geils Band-Centerfold) is 66
Ivana Trump, ex-wife of Donald Trump (1st Wives Club) is 63
In their 50’s

In their 40’s
Charles Barkley, NBA forward (Phoenix, Rockets, Oly-gold-96) is 49
Cindy Crawford, model, actor is 46
French Stewart, actor (Harry Solomon-Third Rock From the Sun) is 48
Remembered for being born on this day
Ansel Adams, photographer (1966 ASMP Award) in 1902
Amanda Blake, [Beverly], actress (Kitty Russell-Gunsmoke) in 1921
Kurt Cobain, rock vocalist (Nirvana)/husband of Courtney Love in 1967
John Daly, South Africa, newscaster/TV game show host (What's My Line) in 1914
Jackie Gleason, comedian (Ralph Kramden-Honeymooners) in 1916
Larry Hovis, Wapito Wash, comedian (Gomer Pyle, Hogan's Heroes) in 1936
Cecil H King, Irish/British daily newspaper publisher (Daily Mirror) in 1901
Thomas Osborne, Duke of Leeds, English PM (1690-94)/founder (Tories) in 1632
Benjamin Waugh, American minister; founder of the NSPCC (children’s charity) in 1839

Today’s Obits                                                           
Frederick Douglass, escaped slave, anti-slavery leader, dies at 77 in 1895
Curt Gowdy, American sportscaster dies at 87 in 2005
Alexander Haig, American soldier and politician dies at 86 in 2010
Joseph Hume, social reformer, dies at 78 in 1855
Ferruccio Lamborghini, Italian auto-designer (Miura), dies at 77 in 1993
Robert E Peary, US pole explorer (North Pole, 6/4/1909), dies at 63 in 1922
Hunter S. Thompson, American journalist and author, suicide at 68 in 2005
Walter Winchell, writer/actor (Dondi, Love & Hisses), dies at 74 in 1972
Dick York, actor (Bewitched), dies of emphysema at 63 in 1992

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game
TownTowelOutlawWombatNetworkOutwardWoodcutTheme: doubled
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     Group of wagons traveling through the desert:
a.     caravan
2.     A knight at King Arthur’s roundtable:
a.     Galahad
3.     Islamic month of fasting:
a.     Ramadan
4.     Capital of Venezuela:
a.     Caracas
5.     Language of Barcelona:
a.     Catalan
6.     Sleepwear:
a.     pajamas
7.     A hard road surface:
a.     macadam
8.     Distant: 2 word phrase:
a.     far away
9.     Marathon runner Alberto, who won NYC marathon 3 times:
a.     Salazar
10.  Telly who was on the telly:     
a.     Savalas
11.  July 1st as celebrated North of the Border:
a.     Canada Day
12.  Light summer headwear (2 words):
a.     Panama hat
13.  Body of water adjoining Cuba’s capital:
a.     Havana Bay
14.  Largest city in Eastern Afghanistan:
a.     Jalalabad
15.  A light multi-hulled boat used for fishing:
a.     catamaran
16.  Connects Atlantic and Pacific ocean:
a.     Panama Canal

Wuzzle
  • Times Square
  • Turned upside-down
  • That’s beside the point


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.