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Today’s
Historical Highlights
1774: England passed Quartering Act,
mandating Colonists must board English troops in their homes
1863: Harriet Tubman leads Union
guerrillas into Maryland, freeing slaves
1883: Chicago's "El" opens
to traffic
1886: Grover Cleveland is 1st to wed
during presidency
1910: Pygmies discovered in Dutch New
Guinea
1928: Velveeta Cheese created by
Kraft
1968: Canadians must get government
permission to export silver
♪Happy Birthday To: ♪
Returns tomorrow
Free Rambling Thoughts
The memorial service for my former
mentor was nice. Everyone who spoke reminded me so much of how much she cared
about teaching. I have to say, she was a Southern Baptist and although it never
came out that much in her teaching, it came out today. Sadly, when one lives to
81, it is hard to find clergy who knew her well. The one at the memorial
service didn’t even pronounce her name correctly. Then he played the role of “I
knew her well’ which was a little off putting. In true SB style, he had a
captive audience and did his duty of trying to convert us all. I understand
that everyone lives their lives with their own religious beliefs, but I really
wish they wouldn’t do their converting at this time…especially since the
departed didn’t do it in her life. She will be missed. I did learn that my
other mentor is still alive and well in Italy and may get her phone number
soon. She has to be at least 90; it would be great to talk to her.
Today was our warmest day in a long,
long time. I am so glad I live at the base of a mountain, where there is always
a slight breeze to keep things cool-er. It was a bad day for pets in our
complex…a young girl about 5 came by to tell me her cat was ‘stuck in the tree’.
She said it was just a kitten and didn’t know how to get down. I checked and
assured her it would come down but all the kids had to move away from the tree.
They did and it did. Then a pre-teen came by with a picture of a cute little
white dog and asked if I’d seen it. I hadn’t. She was getting frantic. The family
is moving out, and the dog got out. About an hour later she was outside with
the dog on a leash as the family loaded up.
Game
Center: (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game—A close up picture of what?
NPR Sunday Puzzle Anagram Magic
Every answer is a two-word phrase, in
which both words start with the letter "P" and the two words are
anagrams of each other. For example, for the clue, "One hundred percent
the land of Lima," the answer would be, "Pure Peru."
1.
Couples
in the Capital of France (5 letters):
2.
A
little puzzle that is not in verse (5 letters):
3.
Less
colorful a gem from an oyster (5 letters)r:
4.
Least
colorful part of a flower (6 letters):
5.
An
aviator’s gun (6 letters):
6.
One
who sets down a package (6 letters):
7.
Social
gatherings for buccaneers (7 letters):
8.
Tweezers
for a King’s son (7 letters):
9.
Sit-in
by makers of clay pieces (7 letters):
10. Not so decorated a candy containing
nuts (7 letters):
11. Finds in a Biblical land (9 letters):
What is the word or phrase?
B B B B
A A A A
R R R R
G G GG
3x3 Word Boxes
The answer to 1 across
is the same word as the answer to 1 down; 2 across is the same as 2 down; etc.
Can you solve these Word Boxes? Each answer is 3 letters.
1.
auction purchase attempt
2.
cold water
3.
morning moisture
Lifestyle
Substance
Summer Songs of the 1960’s
Returns tomorrow
Harper’s Index
Percentage of political
ad spending during 2010 elections that would have been prohibited before
Citizens United: 72
Found on You Tube
Returns tomorrow
Planet Earth—
Joke-of-the-day
A new business was
opening, and one of the owner’s friends sent flowers for the occasion. But when
the owner read the card with the flowers, it said. “Rest in Peace”
The owner was little upset and called the florist to complain. After he had told the florist about the obvious mistake, the florist said, “Sir, I’m really sorry for the mistake, but rather than getting angry, you should imagine this: Somewhere there is a funeral taking place today, and they have flowers with a note saying, “Congratulations on your new location.”
Rules of Thumb
Easy shortcuts to make
an ‘educated’ guess
The value of an income-producing property is generally 100 to 120 times the monthly income.
Yeah, It Really Happened
RANKIN, Pa. - Police in Pennsylvania said an officer was charged with trespassing and criminal mischief for allegedly breaking into a neighbor's home to do laundry. Investigators said Rankin police Officer Jason Rocco was arrested after the owner of the home, who had not lived in the house for several months, told police he noticed the electric bill was unusually high and he visited the residence to discover the dryer running with clothes inside, WPXI-TV, Pittsburgh, reported Monday. Rocco was questioned by officers and he told them the back door to the home had already been broken and he entered the house because he "just had to do some laundry."
Somewhat Useless Information
- Johnny Gruelle, the man behind the Raggedy Ann doll, became a vocal antivaccination activist after his daughter Marcella died from what he claimed was a reaction to a smallpox vaccine she received. He even used the doll in posters promoting his stance.
- The British version of G.I. Joe is called Action Man.
- In 1976, Ideal Toys released a Joey Stivic doll, sold under the name "Archie Bunker's Grandson." It was the first anatomically correct male doll sold in the United States.
- Mattel recalled their Cabbage Patch Snacktime Kids dolls in January 1997 after it was discovered that in addition to the supplied plastic food, the dolls also gobbled up the long hair of their "mommies" and didn't stop until they reached the scalp.
- The first Ken dolls, introduced two years after Barbie hit the market, had a fuzzy, glued-on crew cut. Unfortunately, the hair rubbed off easily, and Ken's male-pattern baldness made Barbie look like she was dating her father.
- In 1999, Mattel launched Rad Repeatin' Tarzan, a doll with a spring-loaded arm that waved up and down when Tarzan yodeled his trademark yell. However, when Tarzan was still encased in his restrictive box on toy store shelves, his arm moved up and down over his loincloth region only, and enough parental complaints eventually got hte doll recalled and revamped.
For AZ centennial celebration: town names
Naco, AZ: in Cochise County, population is 833, the
area was originally settled by OpataIndians, Naco means
"cactus" in the Opata, home
to the Turquoise Valley Golf Course, one of the oldest courses in Arizona, with
a clubhouse dating back to the 1930s, the racial makeup of the CDP was
52.82% White,
0.24% Black or African
American, 0.36% Native
American, 42.98% from other
races, and 3.60% from two or more races. 82.47% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of
any race.
Nazlini, AZ: (Navajo: Názlíní) "Flows in crescent shape", population is 397, the racial makeup of the CDP was 99.24% Native American and 0.76% from other races. 1.76% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race.
Nazlini, AZ: (Navajo: Názlíní) "Flows in crescent shape", population is 397, the racial makeup of the CDP was 99.24% Native American and 0.76% from other races. 1.76% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race.
Nutrioso, AZ: in Apache County, Nutrioso's name is derived
from the Spanish word "Nutria"
("Otter")
the first settlers in the area either killed an otter and a bear
("Oso" in Spanish) and took the name from that incident, Nutrioso
rose in importance as Mormon refugees relocated here after other nearby
settlements were attacked by Native American
Calendar Information
Happening This Week:
27-6/2
Hurricane Preparedness Week
Black Single Parents Week
2-8
Black Single Parents Week
International Clothesline Week
National Business Etiquette Week
National Headache Awareness Week
International Clothesline Week
National Business Etiquette Week
National Headache Awareness Week
(World) Dystonia Awareness Week
Today Is
Drawing Day or Pencil Day
National Bubba Day
National Cancer Survivors
Day
National Rocky Road Day
National Trails Day
Yell "Fudge" at
the Cobras in North America Day
Today’s Other Events
1700’s
1763: Pontiac's Rebellion: At what is
now Mackinaw City, Michigan, Chippewas capture Fort Michilimackinac by
diverting the garrison's attention with a game of lacrosse, then chasing a ball
into the fort
1788: Forces under General John Sevier,
will attack the Cherokee village of Hiwassee. The American forces will be
victorious, with many of the Cherokee fleeing the area. The village will be
burned.
1800’s
1835: P T Barnum & his circus
begin 1st tour of US
1851: 1st US alcohol prohibition law
enacted (Maine)
1857: James Gibbs, Va, patents
chain-stitch single-thread sewing machine
1899: Black Americans observed day of
fasting to protest lynching
1900’s
1919: Pulitzer prize awarded to Carl
Sandburg (Cornhuskers)
1920: Pulitzer prize awarded to
Eugene O'Neill (Beyond the Horizon)
1924: If they were not already based on
treaty provisions, all American Indians become U.S. citizens today.
1933: FDR authorizes 1st swimming
pool built inside the White House
1953: Coronation of Queen Elizabeth
II in Westminster Abbey
1959: Allen Ginsberg writes his poem
"Lysergic Acid," SF
1964: Rolling Stones 1st US concert
tour debuts in Lynn, Mass
1975: 1st time snow fell in London in
June
1975: VP Rockefeller finds no pattern
of illegal activities at CIA
1979: John Paul II becomes 1st pope
to visit a communist country (Poland)
1981: Barbara Walters asks Katharine
Hepburn what kind of tree she would be
1988: 61st Natl Spell Bee: Rageshree
Ramachandran wins spelling elegiacal
1989: 10,000 Chinese soldiers are
blocked by 100,000 citizens protecting students demonstrating for democracy in
Tiananmen Square, Beijing
1994: 67th National Spelling Bee: Ned
Andrews wins spelling antediluvian
2000’s
2003: Europe launches its first
voyage to another planet, Mars. The European Space Agency's Mars Express probe
launches from the Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan
2004: Ken Jennings begins his 74-game
winning streak on the syndicated game show Jeopardy!
Today’s Birthdays
Remembered for being born on this day
Johnny Weissmuller, actor (Tarzan)/100m swimmer (Oly-5
gold-1924, 28) in 1904
In their 70’s
Stacy Keach, actor (Mickey
Spillane's Mike Hammer) is 71
In their 60’s
Jerry Mathers, Sioux City Iowa, actor (Beaver-Leave
It To Beaver) is 64
In their 50’s
Kyle Petty, American race car driver is
52
In their 40’s
Today’s Obits
Stephen Boyd, actor (Fantastic Voyage, Ben-Hur),
dies of heart attack in 1977 at 45
Simon Byrne, Irish bare-knuckle prize fighter
dies due to brain injury during fight in 1833 at 37
Imogene Coca, American actress dies in 2001 at 92
Charles Pete Conrad Jr, Phila, USN/astro (Gem 5 11, Ap 12,
Skylab 2) in 1930
Marquis de Sade, 1st known sadist/writer (Justine) in
1740
Bo Diddley (Ellas Otha Bates), American musician
dies of heart failure in 2008 at 79
Ebenezer Erskine, Scottish religious dissenter dies
in 1754 at 74
Mel Ferrer, American actor, film director and
film producer dies in 2008 at 90
Lou Gehrig, 1st baseman (NY Yankee), dies of ALS
in 1941 at 37
Rex Harrison, actor (My Fair Lady), dies of cancer
in 1990 at 82
Shane O'Neill, Irish chieftain, slain by
rivals in 1567 at 37
Andres Segovia, Spanish composer/guitarist, dies in
1987 at 94
Answers
Brain Game: Close Up Picture
What is the word or phrase?
Up for grabs
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.
Couples
in the Capital of France (5 letters): Paris Pairs
2.
A
little puzzle that is not in verse (5 letters): Prose Poser
3.
Less
colorful a gem from an oyster (5 letters)r: Paler Pearl
4.
Least
colorful part of a flower (6 letters): Palest Petals
5.
An
aviator’s gun (6 letters): Pilot’s Pistol
6.
One
who sets down a package (6 letters): Parcel Placer
7.
Social
gatherings for buccaneers (7 letters): Pirates
Parties
8.
Tweezers
for a King’s son (7 letters): Prince’s Pincers
9.
Sit-in
by makers of clay pieces (7 letters): Potter’s Protest
10. Not so decorated a candy containing
nuts (7 letters): Plainer Praline
11. Finds in a Biblical land (9 letters):
Palestine Penalties
3x3 boxes
BID
ICE
DEW
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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