Dec 3, 2012


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Flagstaff Almanac:  Week: 49/ Day: 338   
Today: H   53°L 25° Averages: H  45° L 18°
Records: H   62°(1946, 1910)L -5°(1991, 1905)
Wind: ave:   11mph; Gusts:  28mph Today’s ave. humidity:  59%
Quote of the Day:

Today’s Historical Highlights:
1st Covenant of Scottish Protestants form—1557
1st official US flag raising (aboard naval vessel Alfred) —1775
2,000 die from Union Carbide poison gas emission in Bhopal, India—1984
Alka-Seltzer goes on sale—1931
Edmund Halley receives MA from Queen's College, Oxford—1678
Galileo invents telescope—1621
Jefferson Davis Trial starts; 1st blacks on US trial jury—1868
Neon lights, 1st publically seen (Paris Auto Show) —1910
Paul Harvey begins his national radio broadcast—1950
Sir Thomas Herriot introduces potatoes to England, from Colombia—1586
Tennessee Williams' "Streetcar Named Desire," premieres in NYC—1947
     Happy Birthday To: ♪. ♪   
How many can you identify?…answers in Today’s Birthdays

Free Rambling Thoughts:   
Quiet Sunday, started out clear then ended up overcast. No moisture…this is not typical Flagstaff weather. We usually get snow when it clouds up like this. Strange winter for sure.
 
Watching the news on the financial cliff is like watching elementary kids arguing. Their idea was stupid so we aren’t going to listen. No, our idea is great, their idea is stupid. We aren’t going to play, we are taking all our toys back home. This has to be the most messed up Congress in our history. It doesn’t seem that either side is there for the entire nation. Each person seems to have an agenda and claim to be doing it for the voters who put them in office. Where are the statesmen and stateswomen? We would not be the country we are today, had it not been for compromise.
Game  Center: (answers at the end of post)
Duplicate Letter Puzzles
Find common words with certain letters duplicated in the given positions. V stands for a duplicated vowel, C stands for a duplicated consonant,  and _ stands for any letter
_ C C V C V
Lifestyle  Substance:     
Old Saying Explained:
GOODBYE///This is a contraction of the words God be with ye (you).
Ok, then?

TV Theme Songs you may remember:
All in the Family - "Those Were the Days" by Lee Adams and Charles Strouse
Read This Headline Carefully!!
Smokers are Productive, But Death Cuts Efficiency
NPR Hosts:

Bet You Didn’t Know…from History Channel
The largest denomination of currency ever printed by the U.S. Treasury was the 1934 $100,000 gold certificate. Used only for transactions between Federal Reserve banks, it was never released to the general public. It has Woodrow Wilson’s picture.
Harper’s Index:         
  • Percentage change since 1970 in the share of metropolitan American families residing in affluent neighborhoods: +131
  • Residing in poor neighborhoods: +106
  • In middle income neighborhoods: -34
Ruminations:
What is going on? Lemon juices are made from artificial flavors, whereas dish wash liquids are made from real lemons.
Unusual Fact of the Day:
While many think Hydrox cookies were an Oreo knock-off, Hydrox actually came first. They were first made in 1908, four years before the Oreo.
Found on You Tube: 

Joke-of-the-day:
Policeman: "Did you get the license number of the car that knocked you down?" Pedestrian: "No, but I know who it was. My mother-in-law!" Policeman: "How can you be so certain?" Pedestrian: "I’d recognize that laugh anywhere!"
Rules of Thumb:   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
BLINK-FREE GROUP PHOTO RULE…You need to take more than one photo of a group to get one without somebody blinking. For calculating the number of photos to take for groups of less than 20: divide the number of people by three if there's good light and two if the light's bad.   
Yeah, It Really Happened
MANILA, Philippines - Guinness World Records confirmed a retired woman in the Philippines collected 1,030 jigsaw puzzles to break the world record. The record keeping organization said Gina Gil Lacuna, 61, of Manila, amassed her collection at her family's bed and breakfast, The Puzzle Mansion, and shattered the record of 238 puzzles set by Luiza Figuereido of Brazil, the Philippine Daily Inquirer reported Thursday. Lacuna said she has spent three to four hours per day assembling the puzzles during the past 26 years. She said her collection is still growing and she is planning to donate some of the puzzles to cancer patients.
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • The only wood used by famed London cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale was mahogany.
  • The pecan tree is the only naturally growing nut tree in North American. It is native to the Texas, Mississippi and Mexico River Valleys.
  • The penguin is the only bird that can swim, but not fly. It is also the only bird that walks upright.
  • The Virginia opossum is the only marsupial (pouched mammal) indigenous to North America.
  • There is only one Q in a Scrabble game.
  • There's only one city in the United States named merely "Beach." It is found in North Dakota, which is a land-locked state.
  • Uranus is the only planet that rotates on its side.
  • When Pierre Trudeau wed Margaret Sinclair in 1971 he became the only Canadian Prime Minister to get married while in office. The couple divorced in 1984.
  • Woodrow Wilson was the only US president to earn a doctorate.
  • Zsa Zsa Gabor was the first - and only - recipient of a Golden Globe Award for "Most Glamorous Actress." She won the peculiar award in 1958. The category was deleted thereafter.
Calendar Information        
Happening This Week:
1-7> Cookie Cutter Week; Tolerance Week
2-8> Recipe Greetings For The Holidays Week; Clerc-Gallaudet Week; National Hand washing Awareness Week

Today Is                                                                      
Coats and Toys for Kids Day
International Day of Disabled Persons
National Roof-Over-Your-Head Day
~Illinois Admission Day (1818-21st state)
Today’s Events through History  
1st human heart transplant performed (Dr Christian Barnard, South Africa) —1967
Andrew Jackson elected 7th president of US—1828
Charles II bars Jews from settling in Stockholm Sweden—1685
Ex-president Sukarno under house arrest in Indonesia—1967
Golden State Warrior guard Latrell Sprewell, four-year, $32 million, contract 
     terminated for attacking his coach P J Carlesimo—1997
Oberlin College in Oh, 1st truly coeducational college opens—1833
Police arrests 800 sit-in students at U of Cal at Berkeley—1964
Pres Nixon commutes Jimmy Hoffa's jail term—1971
Zaldivar [Juan de] "discovers" Acoma—1598

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Bobby Allison, auto racer (3 time winner of Daytona 500) is 75
In their 60’s
Benny Hinn, televangelist is 60
Ozzy Osbourne, rock vocalist (Black Sabbath-Bark at the Moon) will be 64
In their 50’s
Daryl Hannah, actress (Splash) is 52
Julianne Moore, Fayetteville NC, actress (Magnolia, The Kids are Alright) is 52
In their 40’s
Brendan Fraser, actor (School Ties, 20 Bucks) is 44
Katarina Witt, figure skater (Olympic-Gold-1984, 88)  is 47
In their 30’s
Brian Bonsall, actor (Family Ties, Star Trek Next Generation) is 31
Under 30
Jake T. Austin, Disney actor is 18
Remembered for being born today
Joseph Conrad, Berdychiv, Poland, novelist (Lord Jim, Heart of Darkness), (1857-1924)
Samuel Crompton, English inventor (mule-jenny spinning machine) (1753-1827)
Ferlin Husky, American country singer (Born to Lose, Gone) (1925-2011)
Kim Dae Jung, South Korean President, Nobel laureate (1925-2009)
George Brinton McClellan, Major General (Union Army) (1826-1885)
Charles Alfred Pillsbury, American industrialist (1842-1899)
Gilbert Stuart, US, portrait painter (painted Washington) (1755-1828)
Andy Williams, Wall Lake Iowa, singer (Moon River, Andy Williams Show) (1927-2012)

Today’s Historical Obits                                                           
Madeline Kahn, actress [Paper Moon, Blazing Saddles]— ovarian cancer—1999—at 57
Roxie Roker, actress (Claudine)/mother of Lenny Kravitz [Helen-The Jeffersons]—cancer—1995—at 66
Emilie Juliane of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, German countess and hymn writer—1706—at 69
Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish novelist— cerebral hemorrhage—1894—at 45
St Francis Xavier, Jesuit missionary to the East—fever—1552—at 46

Answer: Duplicate Letter Puzzles
ALLELE [An allele is an alternative form of a gene]
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.