Mar 19


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

Today’s  Historical  Highlights
1644 - 200 members of Peking imperial family/court commit suicide
1748 - English Naturalization Act passes granting Jews right to colonize US
1822 - Boston, Mass incorporated as a city
1883 - Jan Matzeliger invents 1st machine to manufacture entire shoes
1917 - US Supreme Court upheld 8-hr work day for railroad employees
1942 - FDR orders men between 45 & 64 to register for non military duty
1975 - Penn is 1st state to allow girls to compete with boys in HS sports
1979 - House of Reps begins live TV broadcasts via C-SPAN
1993 - Supreme Court Justice Byron R White announced plans to retire
2004 - 3-19 Shooting Incident: Taiwanese president Chen Shui-bian is shot just before the country's presidential election on March 20
Happy Birthday To:                      
 
Free Rambling Thoughts   
The weatherman was correct…lots of snow. Woke up to a foot, and it’s been snowing most of the day…must be up to about 18” here. We sure need the moisture, but wish it hadn’t come all at once. Well most will melt by June. Highways into and out of Flag have been closed on and off since last night. All schools will be closed tomorrow, adding another day to their spring break. Most city stuff is closed tomorrow too. I have to laugh a little as some in this town think we should be a ski destination. Real ski destinations don’t shut down with a foot and a half of snow. They make sure everyone can get to the mountain, if it is safe, they keep restaurants, and entertainment venues open. They keep the streets and sidewalks open so people can spend their hard earned money at the local businesses. Not my problem as I just enjoy watching the snow fall, the birds feed, and the trees load up with snow.
My Colorado blue spruce is really weighed down and is a much narrower tree than usual…it’s really beautiful and will do fine..it’s from Colorado after all. I had planned to get a haircut sometime this weekend or on Monday…Guess those plans are shot all to hell. I’ll be a little shaggy until my hair cutter returns to work next weekend. 
The home show is this coming weekend…and surprise…it’s free all weekend. That’s one way to get people to come back...good business plan. Friday has always been free for old-er folks, but now everyone can join in. Can’t wait to get there.

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

NPR Sunday Puzzle
You are given three four-letter words. Think of three letters that can precede each of them to complete familiar seven-letter words. For example, given "each," "rove" and "lode," the answer would be "imp" for "impeach," "improve" and "implode."
1.      Riot, grin, lice:
2.      Gain, rack, rage:
3.      Mite, race, mini:
4.      Roof, lace, tile:
5.      Verb, pane, fuse:
6.      Soon, arch, eyed:
7.      Loon, last, dish:
8.      Dual, nite, sped:
9.      Rice, size, able:
10.   Loin, suit, pose:

Wuzzles  What concept or phrase do these suggest?

Lifestyle  Substance     
Planet Earth—

Found on You Tube         
The Big 5 | Animals
Harper’s Index         
Number of ‘designer vagina’ operations piad for by the British National Health Service last year: 2,000
Joke-of-the-day
A man goes to the police station wanting to speak to the burglar who broke into his house the night before. ‘You’ll get your chance in court,’ says the desk sergeant.
‘No, no, no! says the man. ‘I want to know how he got into the house without waking my wife. I’ve been trying to do that for years!’
Rules of Thumb   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
Gram for gram, it costs about 10 times as much to properly dispose of laboratory chemicals than it did to buy them in the first place.
Somewhat Useless Information   
Psycho is the first movie to show a woman (Janet Leigh) in just a bra and slip. 
Not long before filming began, Colin Clive broke a leg in a horse riding accident. Consequently, most of Dr. Frankenstein's scenes were shot with him sitting.
 The Blob was originally going to be called The Glob. The name was changed when it was discovered that cartoonist Walt Kelly had already used that title. 
The mask in Scream is based on an Edvard Munch painting entitled "The Scream." 
Some theatergoers watching The Blair Witch Project experienced nausea from the handheld camera movements and actually had to leave to vomit. In some Toronto theatres, ushers asked patrons who where prone to motion sickness to sit in the aisle seat and to try not to "throw up on other people."
Yeah, It Really Happened                 
ELKHART, Ind. - An Indiana woman said she found what she believes to be a feather in one of the chicken McNuggets she purchased from McDonald's. Raquel House said she bought the four-piece McNuggets Tuesday from the McDonald's on Cassopolis Street in Elkhart and she discovered the feather-like object when she took a bite from the second nugget, WBND-TV, South Bend, reported Thursday. "I started to feel like there was hair in my mouth, and that's when I saw that there was white hair on my tongue; and I looked at my food, and there was feathers coming off the nugget," House said. She said the incident has left her feeling nauseous. "I was really upset, I mean, now I've kind of calmed down but to me this is just being a responsible citizen in our community and that's just letting people know what's going on," House said. Harry Smith, owner of the McDonald's franchise in Elkhart, said Tuesday the matter is being investigated. "We take matters regarding food safety and quality very seriously and caution anyone from jumping to conclusions. Upon learning about this claim, we immediately began the process of collecting the facts. Our customer's health and safety is paramount," he said.
Calendar Information        
…Happening This Week:
13-19
Campfire USA Birthday Week
18-24
National Animal Poison Prevention Week
National Inhalant and Poisons Awareness Week
19-25
Act Happy Week
American Chocolate Week
Wellderly Week (Well Elderly)
Today Is                                                                      
Let's Laugh Day
National Chocolate Caramel Day
National Quilting Day
Operation Iraqi Freedom Day (2003)
Perigean Spring Tides
Poultry Day
Purim (Jewish - begins at sundown)
Swallows Return to San Juan Capistrano Day

Iran: National Day of Oil
US: Florida: Save the Florida Panther Day

Today’s Other Events                                                             
1200’s
1279 - A Mongolian victory in the Battle of Yamen ends the Song Dynasty in China
> 
1500’s
1571 - Spanish troops occupy Manila 1628 - Massachusetts colony founded by Englishmen
1600’s
1687 - Explorer Robert Cavelier de La Salle, searching for the mouth of the Mississippi River, is murdered by his own men
1700’s
1775 - 4 people buried by avalanche for 37 days, 3 survive (Italy)
1800’s
1831 - 1st US bank robbery (City Bank, NY/$245,000)
1840: The Southern Cheyenne hold several white prisoners. They request a meeting to discuss peace, and to trade prisoners. Today, 65 Comanche, including Muguara, and 11 other Chiefs, bring 1 prisoner, Matilda Lockhart, to the San Antonio council house. They tell the white representatives, Hugh McCloud (Adjutant General of the Texas Army), William Cooke, and William Fisher, that each prisoner must be released through an additional meeting. Lockhart was mutilated, while in Comanche hands, and this incenses the whites. Armed men surround the Indians, and tell them they will be hostages until all white prisoners are released. A fight erupts, and 7 whites, and 33 Comanche, including all of the Chiefs, are killed. The other Comanche are captured, but the story gets back to their tribe.
1895 - Los Angeles Railway established to provide streetcar service
1900’s
1915 - Pluto photographed for 1st time (although unknown at the time)
1925 - Angelo G Roncalli (Pope John XXIII) becomes a bishop
1928 - "Amos & Andy" debuts on radio (NBC Blue Network-WMAQ Chicago)
1938 - Toronto Maple Leafs score 8 goals in 5 minutes
1949 - 1st museum devoted exclusively to atomic energy, Oak Ridge, Tn
1956 - Biggest NBA margin of victory - Minn Lakers-133, St Louis Hawks-75
1958 - Britain's 1st planetarium opens at Madame Tussaud's in London
1968 - Howard University students seize administration building
1969 - Chicago 8 indicted in aftermath of Chicago Democratic convention
1978 - 50,000 demonstrate in Amsterdam against neutron bomb
1984 - John J O'Connor named 8th archbishop of NY
1985 - "Spin Magazine" begins publishing
1987 - Bonnie Blair skates ladies world record 500 m (39.43 sec)
1988 - 2 British soldiers lynched in Belfast North Ireland
1994 - Largest omelet (1,383sq ft) made with 160,000 eggs in Yokohama Japan
1996 - Winnie Mandela divorces Nelson after 38 years of marriage
2000’s
2001 - The Bank of Japan issued a monetary policy known as quantitative easing, which stimulated the Japanese economy after the burst of the dot-com bubble.
2002 - U.S. invasion of Afghanistan: Operation Anaconda ends (started on March 2) after killing 500 Taliban and al Qaeda fighters with 11 allied troop fatalities.
2008 - GRB 080319B: A cosmic burst that is the farthest object visible to the naked eye was briefly observed

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 70’s
Ursula Andress, actor (She, Sensuous Nurse) will be 76
In their 60’s
Glenn Close, actor (The Big Chill, Fatal Attraction) is 65
Mario J. Molina, Mexican chemist, Nobel laureate (Antarctic ozone hole) is 69
Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, LBJ's daughter is 68
Sirhan Sirhan, Palestinian-born assassin is 68
In their 50’s
Bruce Willis, actor (Moonlighting, Die Hard) is 57
Remembered for being born on this day
Tige Andrews, American actor (Capt Adam Greer-Mod Squad) in 1920
J Jay Berwanger, 1st Heisman Trophy winner (1935) in 1914
William Jennings Bryan, "The Great Commoner" orator/statesman in 1860
Wyatt Earp, sheriff (OK Corral) in 1848
Adolf Eichmann, Ruhr Germany, Nazi Gestapo officer in 1906
Johannes Magnus, last Catholic Archbishop of Sweden in 1488
Roy Roberts, actor (Petticoat Junction, Lucy Show) in 1900
Aleksei M Romanov, 1st Romanov tsar of Russia in 1629
Earl Warren, (Gov-R-Ca)/14th supreme court chief justice (1953-69) in 1891
William Morton Wheeler, American entomologist, myrmecologist, pioneer in ethology in 1865

Today’s Obits                                                           
King Alexander III of Scotland dies after fall from horse at 45 in 1286
Edgar Rice Burroughs, sci-fi author (Tarzan of the Apes), dies at 74 in 1950
John Campbell, 1st Earl of Breadalbane and Holland, Scottish royalist dies at 81 in 1717
Sir Arthur C. Clarke, English science fiction author and inventor dies at 91 in 2008
Luther Ingram, American soul singer and songwriter dies of heart failure at 70 in 2007
Charles K. Johnson, President of the Flat Earth Society dies at 77 in 2001
Rene-Robert Cavelier La Salle, Fren explorer (Louisiana), killed at 43 in 1687
Anne Klien, fashion designer, dies of breast cancer at 50 in 1974
Jeff Ward, drummer (9 Inch Nails), commits suicide at 30 in 1993

Answers                                                                                                                                            
Brain Game

NPR Sunday Puzzle
1.      Riot, grin, lice:
a.      Cha: chariot, chagrin, chalice
2.      Gain, rack, rage: bar:
a.      bargain, barrack, barrgage
3.      Mite, race, mini: ter:
a.      termite, terrace, miniter
4.      Roof, lace, tile: rep:
a.      reproof, replace, reptile
5.      Verb, pane, fuse: pro:
a.      proverb, propane, profuse
6.      Soon, arch, eyed: mon:
a.      monsoon, monarch, moneyed
7.      Loon, last, dish: bal:
a.      balloon, ballast, baldish
8.      Dual, nite, sped: gra:
a.      gradual, granite, grasped
9.      Rice, size, able: cap:
a.      caprice, capsize, capable
10.   Loin, suit, pose: pur:
a.      purloin, pursuit, purpose
Wuzzle
  • Apple turnover
  • Once around the clock
  • Rising inflation


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.