Sep 23, 2012


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

Flagstaff Almanac…  
Week: 39/ Day  267:  Today: High   78°Low 41°
Records: High   83°(1949)Low 20°(1912)
Averages: High  71°…Low 40°
Wind: average:   2mph;  Gusts:  24mph
Today’s average humidity:  40%

Quote of the Day…

Today’s  Historical  Highlights…
2004 - At least 1,070 in Haiti reported killed by floods due to Hurricane Jeanne1977 - Cheryl Ladd replaces Farrah Fawcett on Charlie's Angels1973 - Former Argentine President Juan Peron returns to power1962 - ABC's 1st color TV series-Jetsons
1957 - White mob forces 9 black students who had entered a Little Rock high school in Arkansas to withdraw1941 - General de Gaulle forms government in exile in London1897 - 1st frontier days rodeo celebration (Cheyenne Wyoming)1862 - Lincoln's Emancipation is published in Northern Newspapers1839 - The Cherokee Nation's Supreme Court is established
   Happy Birthday To: ♪.. 
How many can you identify?…answers in Today’s Birthdays

Free Rambling Thoughts…   
Lots to do on this first day of Fall. Kept myself busy most of the day. Still more to do.
 This summer sure went by fast. I guess it’s time to start watching for snow. Next week is the average week we get our first snow here in Flagstaff. Sure doesn’t feel like it, but at 7000’ things can and do change very fast. Of course I know that there will still be many warm days ahead, even after the first snow. Happy to see that both Colorado and NAU, my two Alma matres, won their football games. I watched the last quarter of the CU game and it was amazing, down to the last few seconds. NAU wasn’t on TV but won be a big 10-point margin.
Game  Center: (answers at the end of post)
What is the rhyming answer?
Answer the following clue in two rhyming words (e.g. an obese feline is a fat cat) If only one number is given, the answer is a word featuring internal rhyme (e.g. voodoo)
a public meeting on the subject of propriety (7,5)
Rebus…
Can you figure out what this means?

Lifestyle  Substance…     
Do you remember this?

Read This Headline Carefully!!
Safety Experts: School Bus Passengers Should Be Belted
Do you know what this word means?
What is this not so common name of a common object?
Yips
Gorilla:

Great Melodies…:
Overture to William Tell--Gioachino Rossini
This is a particularly long overture to an opera, lasting about 12 minutes. It is in 4 parts (last part above), and the last three are very well known: a depiction of a storm, with a famous trombone passage; the morning after the storm, “a call to the cows,” and “a call to arms.” It is now said as a joke that a musicologist is someone who can listen to this finale and not think of The Lone Ranger, because the producers chose the finale as its theme. It’s primarily anapestic (short-short-LONG), which is an instant galloping horse rhythm.
Harper’s Index…         
  • Total advertising revenue of the US newspaper industry in 2011: $23,900,000,000
  • Of Google: $36,500,000,000

Unusal Fact of the Day…
The average piano has about 230 strings. Each string averages about 165 pounds of tension, with the combined pull of all strings equaling over eighteen tons.
Found on You Tube… 
Tribute to Chief Dan George[1899-1981]
"Checkers" Speech
Joke-of-the-day…
“What am I supposed to do with this?” grumbled the motorist as the police clerk handed him a receipt for his traffic violation. “Keep it,” the clerk advises. “When you get four of them, you get a bicycle.”
Rules of Thumb…   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
 ODD NUMBERS ARE MORE BELIEVABLE…Odd numbers are more believable than even, even more believable than those divisible by 5.   
Yeah, It Really Happened…
NEW YORK - A New York college student said he suffered a sprained neck when he was struck by a mattress that fell about 30 stories to the sidewalk. Jesse Scott Owen, 18, said he was walking in the city around 12:45 p.m. Tuesday when the mattress fell from a building and hit him on the head, the New York Daily News reported Wednesday. "This was the most absurd thing that ever happened to me," the King's College freshman said. He said the impact knocked him unconscious. "I woke up and people were putting me on the mattress," he said. "I asked where the mattress came from and they said, 'You were knocked out by it.'" Witnesses said the mattress may have been carried by winds from the rooftop spa of the Setai Wall Street. A manager at the Setai did not respond to an email requesting a comment, the Daily News said. Owen was taken to the New York Downtown Hospital with a sprained neck and a possible herniated disc.            
Somewhat Useless Information…   
  • In 1978, the USPS began offering first-class stamps marked with a letter code "A" instead of its denomination, 15 cents. The code advanced with rate increases as follows: "B" (18 cents, in 1981), "C" (20 cents, later in 1981), "D" (22 cents, 1985), "E" (25 cents, 1988), "F" (29 cents, 1991), "G" (32 cents, 1994), and finally "H" (33 cents, 1999). The series was then discontinued.
  • Few Americans take advantage of the Media Mail rate available at the local post office. Media items (books, audio, and video recordings, CDs and DVDs, and more) that are not considered advertising materials may be sent at a much cheaper rate than first-class mail.
  • By sending an envelope and money for postage to the postmaster at a post office where a stamp is being issued, you can receive free First Day Covers, which are specially postmarked "first day of issue" and are considered collectible.
  • In 1975, a unique tie-in allowed post offices in both the United States and the Soviet Union to sell two pairs of stamps with the same design. They were issued in honor of the Apollo-Soyuz space mission that year, in which crafts from the two nations linked together and shared time in space. 
  • Canada uses two-letter postal abbreviations just like the United States. Here's the list: Alberta (AB), British Columbia (BC), Manitoba (MB), New Brunswick (NB), Newfoundland and Labrador (NF), Northwest Territories (NT), Nova Scotia (NS), Nunavut (NU), Ontario (ON), Prince Edward Island (PE), Quebec (PC or QC), Saskatchewan (SK), and Yukon Territory (YT). 
  • Flat-rate Priority Mail is a bargain for items that fit the post office's requirements. If a 70-pound item fits into one of the two flat-rate box sizes provided by the USPS, you can send it cross-country for under $10. Using Priority Mail to send a larger item of the same weight will cost many times as much over the same distance.

Calendar Information…        
Happening This Week:
22-29: Banned Books Week / National Dog Week / National Keep Kids Creative Week / Remember to Register to Vote Week / International Women's E-Commerce Days
Today Is…                                                                      
Celebrate Bi-sexuality Day
Checkers Day [pull out the Game board]
Dogs In Politics Day [for 1952 Nixon Speech]Hug a Vegetarian DayInnergize Day (Day after the Autumn Equinox)
Libra BeginsLove Note DayRestless Legs Awareness Day
~Saudi Arabia: Kingdom Unification (1932)
Today’s Events Through History…  
2000’s
2002 - The first public version of the web browser Mozilla Firefox ("Phoenix 0.1") is 
            released
1900’s
1979 - Jane Fonda & 200,000 attend anti-nuke rally in Battery Park, NYC
1976 - Ford-Carter TV debate
1969 - 1st broadcast of "Marcus Welby MD" on ABC-TV
1964 - "Fiddler on the Roof" with Zero Mostel premieres in NYC
1957 - "That'll Be Day" by Buddy Holly & Crickets reaches #1
1926 - Gene Tunney beats Jack Dempsey in 10 for heavyweight boxing title
1908 - University of Alberta opens
1800’s
1879 - Richard Rhodes invented a hearing aid called the Audiophone
1845 - 1st baseball team, NY Knickerbockers organize, adopt rule code
1806 - Lewis & Clark return to St Louis from Pacific Northwest
1700’s
1779 - John Paul Jones' "Bon Homme Richard" defeats HMS Serepis
1600’s
1642 - Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass, 1st commencement
1500’s
1519 - Hernán Cortés and his army arrive at the gates to the Mexican city of Tlascala.
            A large crowd turns out to the the Spaniards.
1400’s
1459 - Battle of Blore Heath, the first major battle of the English Wars of the Roses, 
            is fought at Blore Heath in Staffordshire
  
Today’s Birthdays…                                                           
In their 30’s
Matthieu Descoteaux, Canadian ice hockey player is 35
In their 50’s
Jason Alexander, actor (George-Seinfeld) will be 53
In their 60’s
Julio Iglesias, Spain, singer (Of All the Girls I Loved Before) is 69
Paul Petersen, Glendale California, actor (Jeff Stone-Donna Reed Show) is 67 
Mary Kay Place, actress/country singer (Mary Hartman!) will be 65
Bruce Springsteen, [Boss], Asbury NJ, rock musician (Born in the USA) is 63
In their 90’s
Mickey Rooney, American actor is 92
Remembered for being born today
William Archer, Scotland, writer (Green Goddess), critic b. 1856
Ray Charles [Robinson], Albany Ga, singer/pianist (Georgia) b. 1930
Kublai Khan of the Mongol Empire b. 1215
Walter Lippmann, NYC, journalist/political writer (Men of Dystany) b. 1889
John Lomax, Miss, folk song collector/ethnomusicologist b. 1867
William C McCool, San Diego California, Lt Cmdr USN/astronaut b. 1961
William H McGuffey, educator (McGuffey Readers) b. 1800
Walter Pidgeon, New Brunswick Can, actor (Mrs Miniver, Madame Curie) b. 1897

Today’s Historical Obits…                                                           
Cliff Arquette, comedian (Charlie Weaver)—stroke—1974—at 68
Robert Bloch, screenwriter (Psycho)—cancer—1994—at 77
Bob Fosse, choreographer (All the Jazz)--heart attack—1987—at 60
Sigmund Freud, Austrian neurologist and creator of psychoanalysis—1939—at 83
Chief Dan George, actor (Harry & Tonto, Little Big Man)—1981—at 82
John Wesley Powell, US geologist (Grand Canyon)—1902—at 68
William Marsh Rice, American philanthropist and university founder—1900—at 84 

Answers…                                                                                                                                            
Do you know what this word means?
Half physical ailment, half psychological/ psychosomatic condition: the golfer's equivalent of the writer's block
What is the rhyming answer?
Decorum forum
Rebus
See for yourself
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.