Feb 23


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1822 - Boston is incorporated as a city
1836 - Alamo besieged by Santa Anna; entire garrison eventually killed
1870 - Mississippi is readmitted to US
1886 - Aluminum manufacturing process developed
1916 - Congress authorizes McKinley Memorial $1 gold coin
1968 - Wilt Chamberlain becomes 1st NBAer to score 25,000 points
1983 - The United States Environmental Protection Agency announces its intent to buy out and evacuate the dioxin-contaminated community of Times Beach, Missouri
1993 - Gary Coleman wins $1,280,000 lawsuit against parents for high fees
Happy Birthday To:                      
  Returns tomorrow

Free Rambling Thoughts   
We had a good lunch today. Cheryl is busy getting ready for her Hawaii trip next month. None of us has done our taxes and none of us seems to be in a hurry to get them done. We are all enjoying the good weather in N. AZ. Next week is my birthday, so we are going fancy and doing it on my birthday. There is a cool bistro here in town that does great lunches and has become our go-to for special days. Nice. The Mexican food today was very good and so was the conversation.

Tonight is the Republican debate in Phx. I’ll be watching it…just to see if the crazy rhetoric continues. I remember the Dems four years ago, with the battle between Hillary and Barack. Either one seemed to be ready to support the American people. These guys in the Republican debate seem to be more interested in big business. Now they have moved into social issues of which they seem to know little about. Should be interesting…even though it is the 20th debate.

Last year, there was a webcam on an Eagle nest, and we were able to watch the eaglets from egg to flying. Well the cam http://www.farmyou.com/falcon_cams/index.html is back.  Not a lot happening now, but in a few weeks, it should be very exciting.

Some problems with the internet connection. Everything should be back tomorrow.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
Every answer is a familiar phrase in the form ____ to ____, as in "bored to tears" or "year to date." Each clue is a compound word or common two-word phrase in which the first part rhymes with the first word in the answer and the second part rhymes with the last word in the answer. For example, if the clue is "rear gate," the answer would be "year to date."
1.     Line drive:
2.     Small farms:
3.     White sheet:
4.     Black pool:
5.     Head lights:
6.     Flip for:
7.     Book smart:
8.     Hot curry:
9.     West hill:
10.  Cricket side:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—Orkney Islands

Found on You Tube         
Returns tomorrow
Harper’s Index         
Number of suspected leakers of classified information who have been prosecuted since Obama too office: 5
Joke-of-the-day
Larry was startled to see the nonchalant way Jason was taking the fact that his girlfriend was seen with another man. “You said you loved her and yet you saw her with another man and you didn’t knock the guy down?” “I’m waiting.” “Waiting for what?” asked Larry “Waiting to catch her with a smaller feller.”
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
You can check the fit of new pants without trying them on. With the top of the pants closed and the button snapped, the waistband should just wrap around your neck.
Somewhat Useless Information    
His name "Dickens" was a curse, possibly invented by Shakespeare. Instead of saying, "What the devil?" as a profanity, people exclaimed, "What the dickens?" The first usage of that word, according to the Oxford English Dictionary, was William Shakespeare's The Merry Wives of Windsor.
According to the New York Times, Dickens was on a train that derailed over a bridge, in the only first-class carriage that didn't plummet into a river. He not only found the key that freed his friends, he went to the carriages below and gave water and brandy to those who needed it.Dickens helped create "Urania House" where former prostitutes could learn to read and write, as well keep house. He searched prisons and workhouses for potential candidates and interviewed them personally.He probably had obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). According to a Dickens biography, the writer, said that Dickens "had a habit of rearranging furniture whenever he stayed in a hotel room and inspecting his children's bedrooms every morning, leaving behind notes when he was not satisfied with their tidiness."Dickens had written half of a novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, but left it unfinished when he died of a stroke in 1870. Dickens left no clues behind as to who killed his protagonist, although many suspect his uncle. There have been multiple radio, television, and theater reworkings of this story, each with different endings.Hans Christian Andersen was Dicken's close friend and mutual influence. Andersen even dedicated his book Poet's Day Dream to Dickens in 1853.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
BRAUNLAGE, Germany - Organizers of the 2012 Nude Luge World Championships in Germany said 25,000 people watched 30 lugers throw themselves down the slopes. The organizers said 17 men, including former Calvin Klein cover model Marcus Schenkenberg, and 13 women, including porn star Mia Magma, slid down the mountainside in Braunlage Saturday for the fourth-annual event, The Local reported Monday. The participants were required by safety rules to wear helmets, shoes and underwear, but were otherwise unclothed when they took their turns sledding. "With a lot of German beer and Jagermeister, I'll be able to keep myself warm," Schenkenberg said. A 37-year-old Hannover man was declared the winner of the event and was awarded $1,300.
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     
Curling is Cool Day
Diesel Engine Day
International Dog Biscuit Appreciation Day
Introduce A Girl to Engineering Day
Iwo Jima Day (flag raised)
National Chili Day

Brunei Darussalam: National Day
Russia: Army and Navy Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1400’s
1455 - Johannes Gutenberg prints 1st book, Bible (estimated date)
1500’s
1540 - According to some sources, the Coronado expedition begins preparations to get underway.
1700’s
1792 - Humane Society of Massachusetts incorporated (erected life-saving stations for distressed mariners)
1800’s
1813 - 1st US raw cotton-to-cloth mill founded in Waltham, Mass
1821 - College of Apothecaries organized in Phil; 1st US pharmacy college
1861 - By popular referendum, Texas becomes 7th state to secede from US
1861 - Pres-elect Lincoln arrives secretly in Wash DC to take office
1874 - Major Walter Winfield patents game called "sphairistike" (lawn tennis)
1877 - Lieutenant J.F. Cummings, and Troop C, Third Cavalry, attack a group of "hostiles" near Deadwood, Dakota Territory. One Indian is killed. 624 head of live stock are recovered.
1883 - Alabama becomes 1st US state to enact an antitrust law
1886 - London Times publishes world's 1st classified ad
1892 - 1st college student government forms at Bryn Mawr Penn
1896 - Tootsie Roll introduced by Leo Hirshfield
1900’s
1903 - Cuban state of Guantanamo leased to USA
1904 - US acquired control of the Panama Canal Zone for $10 million
1905 - Rotary Club International formed by 4 men in Chicago
1910 - 1st radio contest held (Philadelphia)
1915 - Nevada enforces convenient divorce law
1917 - February revolution begins in Russia
1927 - Pres Coolidge creates Federal Radio Commission (FCC)
1940 - Walt Disney's animated movie "Pinocchio," released
1954 - 1st mass inoculation with Salk vaccine (Pittsburgh)
1960 - Demolition begins on Brooklyn's Ebbets Field (opened in 1913)
1967 - 25th amendment (presidential succession) declared ratified
1967 - US troops begin largest offensive of Vietnam War
1970 - Holy Eucharist given by women for 1st time in Roman Catholic service
1974 - Patty Hearst, daughter of publisher Randolph Hearst, kidnapped by SLA
1975 - In response to the energy crisis, daylight saving time commences nearly two months early in the United States.
1980 - 13th Winter Olympic games close at Lake Placid, NY
1992 - 16th Winter Olympic games closes in Albertville, France
1997 - NBC TV shows "Schindler's List," completely uncensored, 65M watch
2000’s
2005 - Slovakia Summit 2005 begins, marking the first occasion when a sitting American President visits Slovakia; George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin are in attendance
2006 - Dubai Ports World agrees to postpone its plans to take over management of six U.S. ports after the proposal ignited harsh bipartisan criticism on Capitol Hill
 2007 - Japan launches its fourth spy satellite, stepping up its ability to monitor potential threats such as North Korea
2010 - Unknown criminals pour more than 2.5 million liters of diesel oil and other hydrocarbons into the river Lambro, in Northern Italy, causing an environmental disaster

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Sylvia Chase, newscaster (ABC Weekend News, 20/20) is 74
Peter Fonda, actor is 73
In their 60’s
Ed "Too Tall" Jones, NFL linebacker (Dallas Cowboys) is 61
In their 40’s
Niecy Nash, actor is 42
Under 30 years old
Dakota Fanning, actor is 18
Remembered for being born on this day
William E B Du Bois, civil rights writer (Souls of Black Folk) in 1868
Barney Dreyfuss, baseball owner (Pittsburgh Pirates) in 1865
Victor Fleming, American director (Wizard of Oz, Gone with the Wind) in 1889
George Friedrich Handel, Halle Germany, organist/composer (Messiah) in 1685
Josiah Hornblower, American statesman in 1729
Paul Tibbets, US Air Force retired Brigadier General and Pilot of B-29  "Enola Gay" over Hiroshima in 1915
Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, Japanese shogun in 1646
Today’s Obits                                                           
John Quincy Adams, 6th US pres (1825-1829), dies of a stroke at 80 in 1848
John Keats, Romantic poet, dies of tuberculosis at 25 in 1821
Stan Laurel, comedian (Laurel & Hardy), dies of heart attack at 74 in 1965
Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     Line drive:
a.     nine to five
2.     Small farms:
a.     call to arms
3.     White sheet:
a.     bite to eat
4.     Black pool:
a.      back to school
5.     Head lights:
a.     dead to rights
6.     Flip for:
a.     ship to shore
7.     Book smart:
a.     took to heart
8.     Hot curry:
a.     not to worry
9.     West hill:
a.     dressed to kill
10.  Cricket side:
a.     ticket to ride
Wuzzle
  • Are you lonesome without me?
  • Encircled
  • Wet behind the ears
 
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.