June 8


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights

♪Happy Birthday To: ♪ 

 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
A nice day, but I am suffering from a summer cold with stuffy nose and light cough. Boring. Our retirement group had a nice lunch downtown today. None of us likes to try and park downtown, so we took one vehicle and actually easily found a spot. Downtown is OK, but I still have little reason to go there. We had a good lunch at Heritage Square, in the center of downtown. The place, which was a high end hamburger joint, was cash only...interesting. We walked around to several stores and they too would only take plastic with a $10 purchase. It’s their choice but I find it strange.

I heard an interesting story today regarding tax breaks for the wealthy and for big corporations. Someone asked why the existing tax breaks have not created jobs to get us out this mess. There was a long silence…then some mumble jumble about more time being needed. I’m not buying the time thing.

Game   Center: (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game—A close up picture of what?

NPR Sunday Puzzle The Nouveau-Fame Name Game
Given names of people who became famous during the past twelve months, whom you probably never heard of before 2007. The player tells why they're famous.
NOTE: This is an old-er puzzle
1.     Lisa Nowak: NASA:
2.     Nicholas Sarkozi:
3.     Sanjaya Malakar:
4.     Joey Chestnut: 66: 12 minutes:
5.     Mark Ecko: $750,000 paid:
6.     Julian Gibbons: school teacher:
7.     Andrew Mayer: student: ‘Don’t Taze me bro”
8.     Charles Simonyi: paid $20 million: for ride on space shuttle
9.     Trouble: Maltese Dog: $12 million inheritance from Leona Hensley

What is the answer?
Which of the following words is the odd-one-out?IBIS IBEX ORYX SIKA ZEBU
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.              tree species
2.              sheltered side
3.              adult males
Lifestyle  Substance     
Summer Songs of the 1960’s
  • Running Bear
  • , Johnny Preston 1960 Billboard Hot 100 Peak: #1 (3 weeks)

Harper’s Index         
Width, in feet, of the narrowest home in NYC: 9.5
Found on You Tube 
        The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour
Planet Earth—

Joke-of-the-day
Peter was telling a friend that he had just lost his job. “Why did the foreman fire you?” the friend asked in surprise.“Oh,” Peter said, “you know how foreman are. They stand around with their hands in their pockets watching everybody else work.”“We all know that,” replied his friend. “But why did he let you go?”“Jealousy,” answered Pete. “All the other workers thought I was the foreman.”
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
The value of a finished pond is roughly three times the cost of constructing it.
Yeah, It Really Happened
WHISTLER, British Columbia - Police in Whistler, British Columbia, say officers shot and killed a black bear that swatted a man on the head as he relaxed in a backyard hot tub. The 55-year-old Coquitlam man had his back to the woods while soaking in the hot tub Sunday afternoon when a blow from behind knocked him over in the tub, police said in a statement Monday. When he turned around, he found himself staring at the bruin. He yelled at the animal and made his way into the house to call police. Police found the bear about 100 yards away in the forest and shot it. The man was treated for cuts on his head.
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • After making a touchdown one Sunday afternoon in 1960, Tommy McDonald of the Philadelphia Eagles heaved the football into the stands instead of handing it to the ref. Sports historians refer to that gesture as the first "post-touchdown celebration."
  • In 1965, wide receiver Homer Jones of the New York Giants pounded the ball at the ground after a touchdown - the first reported "spike." Eight years later, Isaac Curtis of the Cincinnati Bengals put a new spin on the spike when he tossed the ball backward over his shoulder after crossing the goal line.
  • In 1973, Elmo Wright celebrated his touchdown with a high-stepping, running-in-place interlude before spiking the ball. The next season, Billy "White Shoes" Johnson turned the end into a cabaret as he performed his own version of the Funky Chicken after scoring.
  • In 2003, wide receiver Joe Horn of the New Orleans Saints was fined $30,000 after an end-zone call to his mother during a game against the Giants. After he scored a touchdown, a teammate handed him a cell phone that had been concealed in the padding around the goal post.
  • It was the Washington Redskins and the collective high-five performed by their "Fun Bunch" that finally made the NFL clamp down on excessive end-zone celebrations after the 1984 season.
  • U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice is a lifelong football fan. Her favorite touchdown celebration is the Ickey Shuffle, popularized by running back Elbert "Ickey" Woods of the Cincinnati Bengals.
  •            

For AZ centennial celebration: town names
  • Tacna, AZ: in Yuma County, population is 555, total area of 1.9 square miles, the racial makeup of the CDP was 66.67% White, 1.08% Black or African American, 0.72% Native American, 0.54% Asian, 25.41% from other races, and 5.59% from two or more races. 50.81% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race.
  • Tempe, AZ: in Maricopa County, also known as Hayden's Ferry during the territorial times, , population of 161,719, Hohokam initially lived in this area and built canals to support their agriculture, Pioneer Darrell Duppa is credited with suggesting Tempe's name, adopted in 1879, after comparing the Salt River valley near a 300-foot (91 m)-tall butte, to the Vale of Tempe near Mount Olympus 
  • Tombstone, AZ: in Cochise County, population is 1,562, 4.3 sq mi (11.1 km2), from about 1877 to 1890, the town's mines produced USD $40 to $85 million in silver bullion,, one of the last wide-open frontier boomtowns in the American Old West, "The only rock you will find out there will be your own tombstone", where the now-famous Gunfight at the O.K. Corral took place
  • Tumacacori, AZ: in Santa Cruz County, population is 393, area of 6.2 square miles, Tumacacori is the site of a Franciscan mission that was built in the late 18th century, takes its name from an earlier mission site founded by Father Eusebio Kino in 1691, The racial makeup of the CDP was 76.98% White, 0.18% Black or African American, 1.05% Native American, 1.58% Asian, 17.57% from other races, and 2.64% from two or more races. 58.00% of the population is Hispanic or Latino of any race.


Calendar Information        
Happening This Week:
2-8
   Black Single Parents Week
   International Clothesline Week
   National Business Etiquette Week
   National Headache Awareness Week
   (World) Dystonia Awareness Week
4-9
   National Sun Safety Week
   National Tire Safety Week
7-10
   Superman Week

Today Is                                                                      
Banana Split Day
Name Your Poison Day
National Caribbean American HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
Upsy Daisy Day
World Ocean Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
Before 1000CE
65: Jews revolt against Rome, capturing fortress of Antonia in Jerusalem

1700’s
1786: Commercially made ice cream 1st advertised (Mr Hall, NYC)
1789: James Madison introduces a proposed Bill of Rights in the U.S. House
1800’s
1829: 1st UK municipal swimming pool outside of London, opens in Liverpool
1861: People of Tennessee vote to secede from Union
1889: Cable Cars begin service in LA
1896: 1st car is stolen
1900’s
1915: William Jennings Bryan quits as Secretary of State
1918: Nova Aquila, brightest nova since Kepler's nova of 1604, discovered
1936: 1st parking meters are invented
1940: Discovery of element 93, neptunium, announced
1949: Siam changes name to Thailand
1953: Segregated lunch counters in DC forbidden by Supreme Court
1962: Jim Beatty runs world record 2 mile (8:29.8)
1966: Topeka, Kansas is devastated by a tornado that registers as an "F5" on the Fujita Scale: the first to exceed US$100 million in damages
1968: James Earl Ray, alleged assassin of Martin Luther King Jr, captured
1969: "Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour," last airs on CBS-TV
1988: Nippon Airways announces that painting eyeballs on Jets cut bird collisions by 20%
1991: Victory parade held in Wash DC (Persian Gulf War)
2000’s
2004: Transit of Venus (between Earth & Sun) occurs

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
Remembered for being born on this day
Giovanni D Cassini, Perinaldo, France, discoverer (4 moons of Saturn) in 1625
Robert Preston, Newton MA, actor (Music Man, Mame, Last Starfighter) in 1918
Suharto, general/president Indonesia in 1921
Byron R ‘Whizzer’ White, Ft Collins, NFLer/Supreme Court Justice (1962-93) in 1917
Frank Lloyd Wright, Richland Center Wisc, master builder (Guggenheim) in 1867

In their 80’s
Barbara Pierce Bush, Flushing, New York, US 1st lady (1989-93) is 87
Jerry Stiller,  comedian (Frank Constanza-Seinfeld) is 83
In their 70’s
James Darren (James William Ercolani), Phila, actor (TJ Hooker, Diamond Head, Venus in Furs) is 76
Chuck Negron, singer (3 Dog Night-Joy to the World) is 70
Joan Rivers, [Molinsky], Bkln, comedienne (Late Show, Hollywood Sq) is 79
Nancy Sinatra, Jersey City, singer (Boots are Made for Walkin') is 72
In their 60’s
Boz Scaggs, [William Royce], Dallas Tx, rocker (Steve Miller Band) is 68
In their 50’s
Keenan Ivory Wayans, NYC, comedian (In Living Color) is 54
In their 40’s
Julianna Margulies, Spring Valley NY, actress (Carol Hathaway-ER) is 46
In their 30’s
Kanye West,  American rapper and record producer is 35

Today’s Obits                                                            
Cochise (Apache K'uu-ch'ish "oak") Chiricahua Apache leader dies of cancer in 1874 at about 69
Christiaan Huygens, inventor/astronomer (ring of Saturn), dies in 1695 at 66
Andrew Jackson, (D) 7th pres (1828-37), dies TB in 1845 at 78
William F Jenkins (nom de plume: Murray Leinster), author (Time Tunnel, Land of Giants), dies in 1975 at 78
Mohammed, prophet of Islam (Koran), dies (according to tradition) of fever in 632 at 62
[Leroy] Satchel Paige, US baseball pitcher, dies of heart attack in 1982 at 75
Thomas Paine, writer (Age of Reason, Common Sense), dies in 1809 at 72
Robert Taylor, actor (Death Valley Days), dies of lung cancer in 1969 at 57

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game: Close Up Picture

What is the answer?
The IBIS is a bird, all others are mammals
NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.     Lisa Nowak: NASA: diaper driving Astronaut to confront her rival
2.     Nicholas Sarkozi: President: of France
3.     Sanjaya Malakar: American Idol guy with all the hair
4.     Joey Chestnut: 66: 12 minutes:
5.     Mark Ecko: $750,000 paid:
6.     Julian Gibbons: school teacher:
7.     Andrew Mayer: student: ‘
8.     Charles Simonyi: paid $20 million:
9.    Trouble: Maltese Dog:
3x3 boxes
ELM
LEE
MEN
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.