Mar 7


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1798 - The French army enters Rome: the birth of the Roman Republic
1862 - The Battle of Pea Ridge takes place through tomorrow. Many Indians will be fighting on both sides of the Civil War battle.
1911 - US sent 20,000 troops to Mexican border
1939 - Guy Lombardo & Royal Canadians 1st record  "Auld Lang Syne"
1942 - 1st cadets graduated from flying school at Tuskegee
1974 - 1st general striking in Ethiopia
1975 - Senate revises filibuster rule, allows 60 senators to limit debate
Thomas Aquinas, Italian theologian/saint, dies after long illness at 48 in 1274
Aristotle, Greek philosopher dies of natural causes at about 61 in 322 BCE

Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
Wind, wind, and more wind. I went out to get new tires and succeeded, but had to maneuver with 50+MPH winds everywhere. Tires for my Xterra weren’t cheap, but now I am safer, and the old ones lasted 6 years, so not that bad. And the new ones are guaranteed for the life of the tread not to separate. 
Super Tuesday…wow…4 years ago I really cared about the results…this year, not so much.
Some good news from AZ today—our governor said that the sheriff’s birth certificate issue is a non-issue. Good for her. 
Been getting ready for our discussion group on cyber security. Very frightening stuff. Our electrical grid, power grid, land line telephones, banks, cell phones, gas pumps, just about everything are tied into some kind of internet grid. Hackers within and outside the US are busy trying to disrupt them. A few months ago, a hacker was able to get into the NASA computers and steal lots of stuff. The US had a hand in gaining access to the Iranian nuclear plants and planting some bugs. It’s amazing how this world has become do dependent on computers. And how scary it is that every computer is open to hackers.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game
NPR Sunday Puzzle
For each clue, the answer is a four-letter word. The word is an anagram of one of the words in the clue. For example, if the clue is "main line through Egypt," the answer would be "Nile," because Nile is a rearrangement of the letters in "line."
1.      Group that acts in a play:
2.      Cheese made in Holland:
3.      Person one likes very much:
4.      Musical tone:
5.      Clothing item worn inside a shoe:
6.      Overrule as a Congressional vote:
7.      Bit of land that lies in the ocean:
8.      Vile:
9.      Ayes:
10.   Wander over:
11.   What freezers do when the electricity is turned off:
12.   Drinks for sale at a pub:
13.   Source of money used by clubs:
14.   Last thing added to buttered popcorn:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—Mayan

Found on You Tube         
 Lord Snowdon's photographs
Harper’s Index         
Estimated percentage of Americans aged 17 to 24 who are ineligible to join the military: 75Of some 32 million Americans now in this group, the Army deems the vast majority too obese, too uneducated, too flawed in some way, according to its estimates for the current budget year. The Census Bureau estimates that the overall pool of people who would be in the military's prime target age has shrunk as American society ages. There were 1 million fewer 18- to 24-year olds in 2004 than in 2000, the agency says.
Joke-of-the-day
The Top 10 Signs You Have A Bad History Teacher
Constantly gets Indonesia and Outdonesia confused.
As incentive for learning, when you name a state capital, you get to take a shot.
Insists that one of Popes during the Roman empire was Pope Bubba.
Thinks that Mussolini was Hitler's favorite pasta.
Counts Puerto Rico, Mexico and Canada as "technically" U.S. States.
Tells you that its Napoleon that's the ice cream that comes in 3 flavors in one box.
Insists that the Great Depression could have been stopped with the right amount of Lithium.
Threatens to renact Salem Witch Trials/Burnings if homework is not turned in on time.
Claims that it was Martin and Lewis that were the great explorers of the West.
Credits David Hasselhoff and not Democracy for the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
Homeowners should plan on paying about $100 a month for a repair fund. Total net housing cost can be 40-45 percent more than the base mortgage.
Somewhat Useless Information    
Real cellophane, as opposed to "cello" or polypropylene, is made from natural cellulose that comes from wood. Cellophane is a natural product and is 100% compostable with nearly zero environmental impact.
Cellophane also has high permeability that allows moisture to pass thus preventing condensation and reducing the risk of mold.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
A New York woman has filed a lawsuit against her former Roman Catholic college in Boston, claiming administrators didn't do enough to help her when she complained that her roommate was having too much sex in their dorm room.Lindsay Blankmeyer said in a federal lawsuit that she suffered from depression and attention deficit disorder before she enrolled at Stonehill College, but was driven into a suicidal depression after school officials wouldn't give her reasonable housing alternatives to get her away from her roommate at the school in Easton, Mass.Blankmeyer said her roommate had sex with her boyfriend while she was trying to sleep just feet away and also participated in "sexually inappropriate video chatting" while Blankmeyer was in the dorm room. After trying unsuccessfully to persuade school officials to force her roommate to move out or to give her an acceptable private room, Blankmeyer ended up living at a hotel, according to the lawsuit filed earlier this week.
"Stonehill refused Lindsay's request for a single room and in the following weeks and months Lindsay fell into a dark and suicidal depression requiring her to take a leave of absence from school and undergo extensive psychiatric and medical treatment," the lawsuit states.Stonehill spokeswoman Kristen Magda said the college responded "swiftly and professionally" to Blackmeyer's complaints about her roommate, first trying to resolve the dispute through mediation with a residence director, then by giving Blankmeyer "multiple options" for campus housing, including a private room."At no time did the student notify college staff that her concerns involved her roommate's sexual activity," Magda said Friday.In the lawsuit, Blankmeyer says the college offered her two options, one was moving to another dorm where she would live in a room that was previously used as a study lounge and was a "small cubicle-like space." The other option was to move to a dorm with a reputation as a "party dorm" to live with a girl Blankmeyer did not know.

Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
1-7
National Cheerleading Week
National Ghostwriters Week
National Write A Letter of Appreciation Week
Universal Human Beings Week
3-18
Iditarod Race
4-10
Celebrate Your Name Week
National Consumer Protection Week
National Procrastination Week
National Schools Social Work Week
National Words Matter Week
Professional Pet Sitters Week
Save Your Vision Week
Read an E-Book Week
Return The Borrowed Books Week
Teen Tech Week
Women in Construction Week
5-8
American Council on Education
5-9
Newspaper in Education Week
National School Breakfast Week
Share A Story - Shape A Future Week
5-11
National Sleep Awareness Week
Today Is                                                                      
Cereal Day
Learn What Your Name Means Day
National Be Heard Day
National Crown Roast Of Pork Day
World Math Day

Australia/Tasmania: Eight Hour or Labor Day
Guam: Discovery Day / Magellan Day (1521)
Iceland: Bun Day (Children are armed with a colorful tissue wrapped wand and will be rewarded with a cream bun for each spank given to your parents before they get out of bed. You shout "Bolla, bolla!" ("Bun, bun!") as you wake your parents. Afterwards you all go downstairs for bollur/cream puffs for breakfast.)


Today’s Other Events                                                             
Before 1000CE
321 - Roman Emperor Constantine I decrees that the dies Solis Invicti (sun-day) is the day of rest in the Empire.
1500’s
1560 - Christian fleet under Gian Andrea lands at Djerba, N Africa
1600’s
1644 - Massachusetts establishes 1st 2-chamber legislature in colonies
1700’s
1774 - British close port of Boston to all commerce
1778 - Capt James Cook 1st sights Oregon coast, at Yaquina Bay
1782 - Monrovian missionaries had converted many Delaware, Majocam, and Mimsee Indians to Christianity. They had established villages in Pennsylvania in 1746, but moved to the Muskingum River in Ohio in 1773 after their old villages were attacked by other Indian tribes.
1800’s
1843 - 1st Catholic governor in US, Edward Kavanagh of Maine, takes office
1896 - Gilbert & Sullivan's last operetta "Grand Duke," premieres in London
1900’s
1917 - 1st jazz record "Dixie Jazz Band One Step," recorded by Nick LaRocca Original Dixieland Jazz Band, released by RCA Victor
1926 - 1st transatlantic telephone call (London-NY)
1933 - Game of "Monopoly" invented
1939 - Glamour magazine begins publishing
1945 - Yugoslavia government of Tito forms
1955 - Mary Martin as "Peter Pan" televised
1971 - Egypt refuses to renew the Suez cease fire
1981 - 1st homicide at Disneyland, 18 year old is stabbed to death
1993 - Diff'rent Stroke actor Todd Bridges arrested for stabbing a tenant
1994 - The Supreme Court of the United States rules in Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc. that parodies of an original work are generally covered by the doctrine of fair use
1996 - Magic Johnson is 2nd NBA player to reach 10,000 career assists
2000’s
2004 - New Democracy wins the national elections in Greece.
2005 - Mass protest outside the National Assembly of Kuwait building for women's voting rights in Kuwait
2007 - British House of Commons votes to make the upper chamber, the House of Lords, 100% elected

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Willard Scott, weather forecaster (Today Show) is 78
Lord Snowdon, [Anthony Armstrong-Jones], London, photographer is 72
Daniel J Travanti, actor (Frank Furillo-Hill St Blues) is 72
In their 60’s
Peter Wolf, rock singer (J Giels Band-Centerfold, Freeze Frame) is 66
In their 40’s
Wanda Sykes, comedian, actor is 48
Remembered for being born on this day
Anthony Comstock, anti-vice crusader/philatelist in 1844
Robert Roy MacGregor (Rob Roy), Scottish folk hero in 1671
William Rockhill Nelson, founder of The Kansas City Star and patron of Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in 1841
Ephraim Williams, American philanthropist in 1715

Today’s Obits                                                           
Stanley Kubrick, American film director dies of heart attack at 70 in 1999
Divine, [Harris Milstead], female impersonator (Pink Flamingos), dies of enlarged heart at 42 in 1988
Hinsdale Smith, developer of roll-down auto windows, dies at 88 in 1959
Alice B. Toklas, American companion to Gertrude Stein dies in poverty at 89 in 1967

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game
Oops: yesterdays answer: the list on the left begin with a vowel, the ones on the right, a consonant.
 Today’s answer

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.      Group that acts in a play:
a.      cast
2.      Cheese made in Holland:
a.      edam
3.      Person one likes very much:
a.      chum
4.      Musical tone:
a.      note
5.      Clothing item worn inside a shoe:
a.      hose
6.      Overrule as a Congressional vote:
a.       veto
7.      Bit of land that lies in the ocean:
a.      Isle
8.      Vile:
a.      evil
9.      Ayes:
a.      yeas
10.   Wander over:
a.      rove
11.   What freezers do when the electricity is turned off:
a.      thaw
12.   Drinks for sale at a pub:
a.      ales
13.   Source of money used by clubs:
a.      dues
14.   Last thing added to buttered popcorn:     
a.      salt
Wuzzle
  • Three months overdue
  • Exterminate
  • Off and on relationship

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.