Mar 10


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
   418 - Jews are excluded from public office in the Roman Empire
1862 - US issues 1st paper money ($5, $10, $20, $50, $100, $500 & $1000)
1864 - Grant is named commander of the Union armies
1933 - Nevada becomes 1st US state to regulate narcotics
1969 - James Earl Ray pleads guilty in murder of Martin Luther King Jr
1977 - Rings of Uranus discovered during occulation of SAO

Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
A lazy Friday after a late night watching movies. Relaxing. Our own environmental issue—reclaimed water to make snow—is just not going away. The ski resort owners are planning to make artificial snow this week, so that means another court order. Lil’ Flag so wants to be a ‘ski destination’ they won’t give up. The city manager renewed the authorization to use reclaimed water for snow for another 5 years. The manager says that there are over 60 contracts for reclaimed water on the books, and a public hearing for the ski area was not needed. He failed to mention that the other contracts are used to water grass and each has to have signs throughout the watered area have to have signs that say that it is not potable water and not to drink it or get wet with it. Somehow the snow thing seems a little different…it’s hard to ski and not get wet and to ‘eat’ a little snow now and again. Maybe the new ski gear will be hazardous suits with masks that don’t allow wet snow to get into the skiers mouth. And at the end of the day, just stand in an outdoor shower with the suit on to get all the gunk off your suit. Yeah, that will work at a ski area. 
At the same time, the Snowboard Festival that closed several residential and business streets for four days drew lots of participants and observers but didn’t make much money for anybody and cost overrides cost our little town important dollars. Some business did report more foot traffic to their stores and a few reported increased sales.
 Then the news that our outdoor entertainment venue that is owned by a Phoenix company missed its revenue predictions by 2/3. Big promises from Big City…and we fell for it. We didn’t lose money on this one, just didn’t get our pot filled as much as promised. The local guy who had previously ran the venue didn’t get his contract renewed because he had more realistic figures for profit. Ahh—the dreams of a small town wanting to join the big time. 
I did spend some time preparing for tomorrows Cyber security presentation. I’ll be ready to lead the discussion.

Game   Center   (answers at the end of post)
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
Each answer starts with a clue for a six-letter word. If you drop the first letter and read the remaining letters backward, you'll get a five-letter word that answers a second clue. For example, if the clues are "flower parts" and "roofing material," the answers would be "petals" and "slate." (Remove the "p" of "petals" and read the rest backward to get "slate.")
1.      To state positively; a lock of hair:
2.      A hotel employee who carries bag; an old fashion that is in again:
3.      Calamitous; a prop for Groucho Marx:
4.      A big number; section in supermarket with milk and butter:
5.      Attic; Latin for earth:
6.      The lowest part: all for one and one for all for example:
7.      A Leftist European political party; the look on a villain’s face:
8.      2 words: means or signifies; one of the five senses:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—Mayan

Found on You Tube         
Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad
Harper’s Index         
Percentage increase in the number of Chinese students applying to US graduate schools this year: 21
Joke-of-the-day
A male frog goes to a psychic. The psychic tells him, "You are going to meet a beautiful young girl who will want to know everything about you."
The frog becomes excited, "This is great! Will I meet her at a party?"
 "No," says the psychic, "in her biology class." 
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
To determine where the sidewalks for a new building on campus should be, construct the building without sidewalks and wait for one year. Then put the sidewalks on the paths the students have made.
Somewhat Useless Information    
According to Catherine Durant, her husband saw the inspiration for the Chevrolet "bow tie" logo not on some French wallpaper (as legend has it) but in a newspaper ad while they were vacationing in Hot Springs, Virginia. Researchers believe the company responsible was an Atlanta-based coal supplier known as Coalettes.
The familiar Mercedes-Benz logo is a three-pointed star designed by Gottlieb Daimler to represent the dominance of his company's motors across land, on sea, and in the air.
Prior to 1933, the distinctive intertwined "RR" grille logo of Rolls-Royce was red. Upon the passing of founder Sir Henry Royce, the logo's color was permanently changed to black as a symbol of mourning.
What consumers call "hood ornaments," those in the automobile business refer to as "mascots." These were originally designed as decorative alternatives to the traditional exposed radiator caps that stuck out in front of the hood. Among logos displayed in this fashion is the "Ram" icon of Dodge Trucks.
Franz Reimspiess was the engineer at Volkswagen who submitted the classic "VW" logo design in a 1930s company-wide competition. Reimspiess's winning entry earned him about 35 dollars.
Cadillac redesigned its emblem in 1998, omitting the six ducks that had appeared in it since the company's inception. The merlettes had "come to life" in an advertising campaign for the automaker's ill-fated Catera, and the company wanted to distance itself from that failure.
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
Seattle, WA- A Seattle-area corrections officer has been charged with bigamy after his two wives learned about each other on Facebook, prosecutors say.
Alan O’Neill, 41, married his first wife in 2001, when he was known as Alan Fulk, according to The News Tribune of Tacoma.  The couple split up eight years later, and Fulk moved out, but the pair never divorced, the newspaper reported.Last December, he reportedly petitioned to have his name changed to O’Neill before marrying his second wife.The first wife allegedly learned about the second wife when Facebook recommended the two women become “friends,” Prosecutor Mark Lindquist told The News Tribune.O’Neill, who has worked as a Pierce County corrections officer for five years, has been placed on administrative leave and is scheduled to appear in court March 22 on the felony charge.Lindquist told the newspaper that the first wife alerted authorities to the dual marriages after he asked her to keep quiet about it while he fixed the situation.Apparently, she wasn’t convinced.“It’s not the crime of the century, but it is a crime,” Lindquist told the newspaper.
Calendar Information        
…Happening This 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
5-11
National Sleep Awareness Week
8-11
World Rattlesnake Round-up
8-14
Universal Women's Week
Today Is                                                                      
Army Day
Festival Of Life In The Cracks Day
Genealogy Day
Harriet Tubman Day
International Day of Awesomeness
International Fanny Pack Day
Land Line Telephone Day
Mario Day: a gamer holiday for the video game: Mar10 looks like Mario
Name Tag Day
US Paper Money Day
Women & Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
Before 1000CE
241 BC - First Punic War: Battle of the Aegates Islands - The Romans sink the Carthaginian fleet bringing the First Punic War to an end
1600’s
1681 - English Quaker William Penn receives charter from Charles II, making him sole proprietor of colonial American territory Pennsylvania
1700’s
1762 - French Huguenot Jean Calas, who was wrongly convicted of killing his son, dies after being tortured by authorities; the event inspired Voltaire to begin a campaign for religious tolerance and legal reform
1800’s
1801 - First census in Great Britain
1849 - Abraham Lincoln applies for a patent; only US president to do so
1865: The Ponca sign a treaty regarding 30,000 acres of land (14 stat.675).
1876 - 1st telephone call made (Alexander Graham Bell to Thomas Watson)
1900’s
1902 - A United States court of appeals rules that Thomas Edison did not invent the movie camera
1910 - China ends slavery
1922 - KLZ-AM in Denver CO begins radio transmissions
1930: Today, under authority of an act passed by Congress (24 stat. 388-89) on February 8, 1887, an executive order will be issued which will extend the trust period on land allotments made to members of the "Prairie Band of Potawatomi Indians in Kansas."
1945 - Japan declares Vietnam Independence
1945 - The Army Air Force firebombs Tokyo, and the resulting firestorm kills more than 100,000 people, mostly civilians
1951 - FBI director J Edgar Hoover declines post of baseball commissioner
1962 - Due to it's no black policy, Phillies leave Jack Tar Harrison Hotel & move to Rocky Point Motel, 20 miles outside Clearwater, Florida
1963 - Wilt Chamberlain of NBA SF Warriors scores 70 points vs Syracuse
1966 - North Vietnamese capture US Green Beret Camp at Ashau Valley
1971 - Senate approves amendment lowering voting age to 18
1975 - Dog spectacles patented in England
1982 - The United States places an embargo on Libyan petroleum imports because of their support of terrorist groups
1991 - Eddie Sutton is 1st NCAA coach to lead 4 schools into playoffs
2000’s
2000 - The NASDAQ Composite stock market index peaks at 5132.52, signaling the beginning of the end of the dot-com boom
2006 - Mass unrest by the PCC started in São Paulo (the biggest city in Brazil) which would eventually kill more than 152 people
Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Wayne Dyer, psychologist (Universe Within You) is 72
Chuck Norris [Carlos Ray], OK, martial arts actor (Missing in Action) is 72
Gary Owens, announcer (Laugh-in) is 77
In their 50’s
Sharon Stone, actress (Basic Instinct, Sliver, Casino) is 54
Shannon Tweed, actress, PMOY is 55
In their 40’s
Jasmine Guy, actress (Whitley-Different World) is 49
In their 30’s
Shannon Miller, Rolla MO, gymnast (Oly2 gold-2 silver/3 bronze-92, 96) is 35
Under 30 years old
Carrie Underwood, country singer (Temporary Home ) is 29
Remembered for being born on this day
Jethro Burns, country singer (Homer & Jethro) in 1920
Samuel Ferguson, Irish poet in 1810
Barry Fitzgerald, Dublin Ireland, actor (Acad Award-Going My Way) in 1888
Osama bin Laden, Islamic militant in 1957
John Playfair, Scotland, clergyman/geologist/mathematician in 1748
Jakob Wassermann, Germany, novelist (My Life as German & Jew) in 1873
Joseph Williamson, English philanthropist and tunnel builder in 1769

Today’s Obits                                                           
Konstantin Chernenko, party leader/pres of USSR (1984-85), dies at 73 in 1985
Glenn Cunningham, US world record miler dies at 78 in 1988
Charles Gordon Curtis, inventor of (Curtis-steam turbine), dies at 92 in 1953
Andy Gibb, singer, dies of heart infection at 30 in 1988
Corey Haim, Canadian actor dies of accidental OD at 38 in 2010
Ray Milland, actor (Lost Weekend-Acad Award 1945), dies at 81 in 1986
Herman Tarnower, doctor (Scarsdale Diet), killed by Jean Harris, his wife at 69 in 1980
Harriet Tubman, abolitionist, conductor on Underground RR, dies at 93 in 1913

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.      To state positively; a lock of hair:
a.      assert; tress
2.      A hotel employee who carries bag; an old fashion that is in again:
a.      porter; retro
3.      Calamitous; a prop for Groucho Marx:
a.      tragic; cigar
4.      A big number; section in supermarket with milk and butter:
a.      myriad; dairy
5.      Attic; Latin for earth: garret  ;terra
6.      The lowest part: all for one and one for all for example:
a.      bottom; motto
7.      A Leftist European political party; the look on a villain’s face:
a.      greens; sneer
8.      2 words: means or signifies; one of the five senses:
a.       gets at: taste
Wuzzle
  • Script writer
  • Three strikes against him
  • Eisenhower


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 

Followers

Total Pageviews

Blog Archive

About Me

My photo
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.