Feb 8


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1837 - 1st VP chosen by Senate, Richard Johnson (Van Buren admin)
1861 - Confederate States of America organizes in Montgomery, Ala
1896 - Western Conference forms of Midwestern U, later renamed Big 10 Conf
1926 - Walt Disney Studios forms
1929 - KOY-AM in Phoenix Arizona begins radio transmissions
1960 - Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom issued an Order-in-Council, stating that she and her family would be known as the House of Windsor, and that her descendants will take the name "Mountbatten-Windsor"
1973 - Senate names 7 members to investigate Watergate scandal
1989 - 5 cm of snow falls in outskirts of Los Angeles
Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
I met with my financial advisor today to get all my income tax information. Happily or sadly I had a lot of capital gains…that means a higher tax bill. I still don’t have all the 1099’s and K-1’s, etc. to do the taxes, but am ready when they come. Then I picked up my mail, and lo and behold…a check from the Dr. who owed me money. It’s has been 6 weeks, just as promised. He didn’t include interest for keeping my money so long. Oh, well. Live and Learn, as they say. It has been cool and overcast most of the day, but not cold enough for snow, I guess. The forecast says ‘showers’ tomorrow. I’m ready.
Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
Every answer is a six-letter word, name or phrase in which the first five letters read backward and forward the same. In other words, if you drop the last letter, what's left will be a palindrome.
1.     Place to park a car:
2.     Title for a French married lady:
3.     University name in Chicago and New Orleans:
4.     High school course in Gov’t:
5.     Maker of Corolla:
6.     Brand of athletic shoe:
7.     Mount where Noah landed:
8.     Exausts, depletes [2 words]:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
AZ Centennial – Feb 14:  Did you know?…
How did Scottsdale, AZ get its name?In the early 1880s, U.S. Army Chaplain, Winfield Scott, who was lured in to help promote Phoenix and the surrounding area, was impressed with the region and paid the paltry sum of $2.50 an acre for a 640-acre (2.6 km2) stretch of land where the city is now located. Winfield's brother, George Washington Scott, became the first resident of the town, which was then known as Orangedale. The Scott brothers were known as adept farmers, capable of cultivating citrus fruits, figs, potatoes, peanuts and almonds in the desert town. Scott was known to have encouraged others to create a desert farming community in the region. The town's name was changed to Scottsdale in 1894.
How did Sedona, AZ get its name?Sedona is named after Sedona Arabelle Miller Schnebly (1877–1950), the wife of the city's first postmaster, who was celebrated for her hospitality and industriousness.
How did Tempe, AZ get its name?The city is named after the Vale of Tempe in Greece.
Daffynitions: :-)
BACHELOR — A guy who never finds out how many faults he has
CANNIBAL — Someone who is fed up with people
Found on You Tube         
James Dean-Rebel Without a Cause
Harper’s Index         
Amount paid at a Texas auction for the vanity license plate “FREEDOM”: $2,500
Joke-of-the-day
A Cajun named, Jean Paul, moved to Texas and bought a donkey from an old farmer named Ben for $100. The farmer agreed to deliver the donkey the next day.
The next day, Ben drove up and said, "Sorry, but I have some bad news.  The donkey died."
 "Well, then, just give me the money back," said Jean Paul
 "Can't do that. I went and spent it already." Replied Ben
 "OK, then. Just unload the donkey," said Jean Paul.
 "What ya going to do with him?" asked Ben.
 "I'm going to raffle him off," said Jean Paul.
 "You can't raffle off a dead donkey!" uttered Ben.
 "Sure can. Watch me. I just won't tell that he's dead," said Jean Paul.
 A month later Ben met up with the Cajun and asked, "What happened with that dead donkey?"
 "I raffled him off, I did. I sold 500-hunderd tickets at two dollars apiece and made a profit of $898," said Jean Paul.
"Didn't anyone complain?" inquired Ben.
"Just the guy who won. So I gave him his two dollars back,” said Jean Paul.

Planet Earth

Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
You can blow most tree stumps out of the ground if you use one stick of dynamite for every four inches of stump diameter. Trees with tap roots take less.
Somewhat Useless Information  
In last year's ads, commercials that did not feature celebrities as a main point did 9.2% better than those which did.
Ads with animals did substantially better than ads with celebrities, performing 21% better.
Just 5 of the ten least effective ads last year that featured celebrities were Groupon's ad featuring Timothy Hutton, Lipton's ad featuring rapper Eminem, GoDaddy.com's ad featuring Joan Rivers, SalesForce.com's ad starring Will.I.Am and Stella Artois' commercial featuring Adrian Brody.
Automotive brands such as Chevy, Ford and Dodge are typically one of the most effective advertisers. Last year, Volkswagen's "The Force" ad was the top automotive ad being 10% more effective than the average ad.
Internet brands, statistically, have never fared well. Half of the top 10 least effective Super Bowl ads featured dot.com names.
The major theme of last year's game was "Made In America." Half of the top ten ads featured companies such as Dodge, Ford and Chevy.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
SAN FRANCISCO, Colombia -- A farmer hopes his hen's enormous egg will make it into the record books.The farmer's daughter got a real surprise recently when she found the egg weighing 8.6 ounces, or about four times the normal weight of an egg.The farmer, Hernando Niño, from the Cudinmarca region north of Bogata, says he plans to contact Guinness World Records as he's never seen in his 20 years of farming anything like what his 5-year-old hen, named Franciscana, laid."The egg will stay in a glass case for people to see and so it is preserved," Niño said.
Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
5-11
Boy Scout Anniversary Week
Children's Authors & Illustrators Week
Jump Your Significant Jerk Week
Freelance Writers Appreciation Week
International Coaching Week
Just Say No to PowerPoint Week
Publicity for Profit Week
World Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Awareness Week
Congenital Heart Defect Awareness Week
International Networking Week
International Friendship Week
National Green Week
National School Counseling Week
7-14
Have A Heart for A Chained Dog Week
Risk Awareness Week
Love Makes the World Go Round; But, Laughter Keeps Us From Getting Dizzy Week
Getting Dizzy Week

Today Is                                                                      
Boy Scout Anniversary Day
Kite Flying Day
Laugh and Get Rich Day
Opera Day
<*>
Japan: Needle Mass (Ha-ri-ku-yo -: women gather their old and broken needles and take them to their temples to offer a prayer of thanks for their hard work.)
Slovenia: Culture Day
US: New Mexico: Extraterrestrial Culture Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1500’s
1575 - University Leiden founded, and given the motto "Praesidium Libertatis": Bastion of Freedom, the oldest university in the Netherlands
1600’s
1690 - French & Indian troops set Schenectady settlement NY on fire
1693 - William & Mary college is 2nd college chartered in US
1700’s
1735 - 1st opera in US "Flora," opens in Charleston, SC
1800’s
1837: During the 2nd Seminole War today there will be a battle between Seminole and American forces on the bank of Lake Monroe, near modern day Sanford, Florida. The Americans will be led by Colonel Alexander Fanning. Over 600 Seminole, led by Chiefs Philip and Wildcat, will participate in the fighting, which begins with a Seminole attack before dawn. Both sides will lose a considerable number of men. The deciding factor in the battle will be the arrival of a steam ship with a cannon. Fort Monroe was built on the site of the battle.
1887 - Dawes Act passed (Indians living apart from tribe granted citizenship) the President of the United States to survey Native American tribal land and divide it into individual allotments
1895 - Tchaikovsky/Petipa's "Swan Lake," premieres in Petersburg
1898 - John Ames Sherman patents 1st envelope folding & gumming mach (Mass)
1900’s
1910 - The Boy Scouts of America is incorporated by William D. Boyce
1918 -  "Stars & Stripes," weekly US armed forces newspaper, 1st published as weekly
1928 - Scottish inventor J Blaird demonstrates color-TV
1942 - Congress advises FDR that, Americans of Japanese descent should be locked up en masse so they wouldn't oppose the US war effort
1948 - 5th Winter Olympic games close at St Moritz, Switzerland
1967 - Peter (Asher) & Gordon (Waller) discontinue their singing partnership
1969 - Last edition of Saturday Evening Post
1975 - 1800 Unification church couples' wed in Korea
1978 - Proceedings of the United States Senate are broadcast on radio for the first time
1983 - Wayne Gretzky sets NHL all star record of 4 goals in 1 period
1983 - Champion thoroughbred Shergar kidnapped in Ireland; never found Lloyds of London pays $10.6 million insurance
1984 - 14th Winter Olympic games opens in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia
1992 - 16th Winter Olympic games opens in Albertville, France
1996 - The massive Internet collaboration "24 Hours in Cyberspace" takes place
2000’s
2002 - XIX Winter Olympics opens in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States
2008 - Nebraska bans electric chair as sole execution method

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Ted Koppel, American journalist (ABC Nightline) is 72
Jack Larson, actor (Jimmy Olsen-Superman) is 79
Nick Nolte, actor (Teachers, 48 Hrs, Rich Man Poor Man) is 71
In their 60’s
Brooke Adams, actor is 63
In their 50’s
John Grisham, writer (Client, Firm, Pelican Brief) is 57
Mary Steenburgen, actor is 59
In their 30’s
Seth Green, actor is 38
Remembered for being born on this day
Elizabeth Bishop, US poet (North & South)/Pulitzer Prize (1956) in 1911
Samuel Butler, English poet/satirist (Hudibras) (baptized) in 1612
Gary Coleman, American actor (Arnold-Diff'rent Strokes) in 1966
James Dean, stage/film actor (Giant, Rebel Without a Cause) in 1931
Dame Edith Evans, British actress in 1888
Jack Lemmon, actor (Days of Wine & Roses, Missing) in 1925
Audrey Meadows, American actress in 1922
Alejandro Rey, Argentinean actor (Carlos-Flying Nun) in 1930
Charlie Ruggles, actor (Ruggles, Aesop-Bullwinkle Show) in 1886
John Ruskin, writer/critic/artist/Gothic Revivalist (Prerafaelite) in 1819
William Tecumseh Sherman, Major General (Union Army) in 1820
Lana Turner, actress (Survivors, Falcon Crest) in 1920
Today’s Obits                                                           
William Fulbright, US politician, dies at 89 in 1995
Max Liebermann, Ger impressionist painter/graphic artist, dies at 87 in 1935
Connie Mack, baseball manager (Phila A's, 1901-50), dies at 93 in 1956
Marvin Miller, actor (Michael Anthony-Millionaire), dies of heart attack at 71 in 1985
Del Shannon, rock vocalist (Runaway), shoots self at 50 in 1990
Mary Stuart, Queen of Scots (1560-87), beheaded at 44  in 1587
Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
  1. Place to park a car: garage
  2. Title for a French married lady: Madame
  3. University name in Chicago and New Orleans: Loyola
  4. High school course in Gov’t: civics
  5. Maker of Corolla: Toyota
  6. Brand of athletic shoe: Adidas
  7. Mount where Noah landed: Ararat
  8. Exausts, depletes: uses up

Wuzzle
  • Be on time
  • Scrambled eggs
  • Two years overseas 

 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.