4/30/13


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Flagstaff Almanac:  Week: 18/ Day: 120   Today: H 75°L 36°
Wind: ave:   6mph; Gusts:  25mph  Ave. humidity:  27%
*Averages: H  63° L 32° Records: H 76°(1992)L 7°(1970)
~Fire Weather Warning~
Quote of the Day



Today’s Historical Highlights
"A Tale Of Two Cities" is first published in literary periodical, continues in weekly 
     installments until Nov 26…1859
"Arthur Godfrey Time" begins a 27 year run on CBS radio…1945
1900 - Casey Jones dies in a train wreck on the Cannonball Express…1900
1st practical typewriter finished by Italian Pellegrini Turri…1808
1st US national holiday, on centennial of Washington's inauguration…1889
42 million watch "Ellen" admit she is gay…1997
Boulder Dam renamed in honor of Herbert Hoover…1947
Dept of Navy forms…1798
Fort Defiance, in northwestern Arizona, was the first fort to be build in NAVAJO 
    country is attacked…1860
George Washington inaugurated as 1st president of US…1789
Ice cream cone makes its debut…1904
Last US helicopter leaves US embassy grounds, Saigon surrenders…1975
Mr Potato Head is 1st toy advertised on television…1952
US troops invade Cambodia…1970
World Wide Web is born at CERN…1993

     Happy Birthday To: ♪. ♪   
How many can you identify?…answers in Today’s Birthdays



Free Rambling Thoughts   
Busy day picking up scripts, getting cash, getting mail hold, stopping local paper, and preparing for my cruise. Tomorrow will be packing day and then on Wednesday it’s off to the boat. Right now, I will be flying into a Denver snowstorm…not a big storm, but snow none the less. Getting pretty excited. Still a lot to do before I leave. Also found out that there is a cool tour of Montreal that I will be taking…if our tour operator calls back. I called today, but only got voice mail and she didn’t call back…maybe she had Monday off.
 
I am also looking forward to getting away from the hum-drum daily news cycles. Today the big thing is surveillance cameras and internet spying. Should the government operate more cameras around the country…or are police and private cameras enough? Should Google and other websites have to report people who visit terrorist sites or bomb making sites? Is it better to be proactive, or waiting until the event occurs then backtracking? While I do enjoy technology, I also know that technology in the wrong hands is very dangerous. While I am not a conspiracy crazy person, I don’t like the idea of lots of government intervention…it might be good now, but not sure about the future. Our current leader promised to close Guantanamo prison…he didn’t…and now after years of being held captive and in many cases tortured, many prisoners are on a hunger strike. Some are being force fed. They seem to see this as the only way to ‘escape’. Our free country doesn’t always follow through with our laws.   

Game  Center (answers at the end of post)
Brain Teasers
When you behead a word, you remove the first letter and still have a valid word. You will be given clues for the two words, longer word first.
Example: Begin -> Sour, acidic; Answer: The words are Start and Tart.
1. Mark left after healing -> Vehicle 2. To have hit -> Vehicle 3. Intelligent -> Individual store 4. Tiny -> Large retail complex 5. Take illegally -> Bluish green 6. Clean the floor -> Cry 7. Expressed in words -> Give assistance 8. Talk -> Highest level; summit


*****
Hint
The shorter words start with these letters:
1. C
2. T
3. M
4. M
5. T
6. W
7. A
8. P

Lifestyle  Substance:     
Found on You Tube with some relevance to today

Origins of Phrases
Fuddy-duddy
Meaning
A stuffy or foolishly old-fashioned person.
Origin
If any term sounds old and English, it must be this one. As so often, intuition is found to be inadequate as fuddy-duddy appears to be of American origin, possibly via Scotland, nor is it especially old. The first record that I can find of it is from the Texas newspaper The Galveston Daily News, 1889:
"Look here; I'm Smith - Hamilton Smith. I'm a minister and I try to do about right ... I object to being represented as an old fuddy-duddy."
That usage - without any accompanying explanation - seems to suggest that the readership would have been expected to have been familiar with it. That is quite possible, there are several citations in American newspapers from the end of the 19th century that relate to a pair of fictional wags called Fuddy and Duddy. A string of their rather weak gags was printed in the Boston Evening Transcript. Here's an example from a November 1895 edition:
Fuddy: So Miss Dandervecken is going to marry an Englishman. A lord, I suppose?
Duddy: Well, no, not exactly: but I understand that he's often as drunk as a lord.
Whether or not the expression 'fuddy-duddy' was already known and the names were taken from it, or whether it was the other way round, we can't now tell. The coincidence in the dates of the arrival of the two characters and the phrase does suggest that there was a connection of some kind.
Duddy was a Scottish term meaning ragged - duds having been used to refer to rough tattered clothes since the 15th century. That usage continued for some centuries and is still heard occasionally, notably in the popular 19th century traditional song The Blackleg Miner:
He grabs his duds and down he goes
To hew the coal that lies below,
There's not a woman in this town-row
Will look at the blackleg miner.
Fud, or fuddy, was a Scots dialect term for buttocks. In 1833, the Scots poet James Ballantyne wrote The Wee Raggit Laddie:
Wee stuffy, stumpy, dumpie laddie,
Thou urchin elfin, bare an' duddy,
Thy plumpit kite an' cheek sae ruddy
Are fairly baggit,
Although the breekums on thy fuddy
Are e'en right raggit.
The full-on Scots dialect in that sentimental, Burns influenced rhyme is difficult to translate precisely. The gist of the meaning is:
Poor scruffy little lad, bare and ragged, your wet belly and red cheeks are swollen and the trousers on your buttocks are torn.
There is a British term - 'duddy fuddiel', which is also recorded from around the same date. William Dickinson's A glossary of words and phrases pertaining to the dialect of Cumberland, 1899, has:
"Duddy fuddiel, a ragged fellow."
There may be a link between 'duddy fuddiel' and 'fuddy-duddy' but, as they don't mean exactly the same thing, we can't be certain.
One thing we can be sure about; that the cartoon character Elmer Fudd inherited the name from the phrase. 'Fuddy-duddy' was in general circulation in the US well before the character was created in around 1940 and the expression accords with his old-fashioned and obsessive temperament.
In a rather sad sequel to the Boston Transcript's role in the coining of 'fuddy-duddy', Time magazine reported in 1939 that a survey commissioned by the paper found that, "the most frequent word used by advertisers to describe the paper was fuddy-duddy". The Transcript ceased trading soon afterwards.
Ok, then?



Harper’s Index    
Minimum number of engineers and technicians it has kidnapped to run Radio Zeta [Mexican Drug Cartel] and other telecommunications outlets: 21
Ruminations:
So many have an irrational fear of wasting a good outfit on an insignificant day.
Picture of the Day: Myramar

Unusual Fact of the Day
A ten-gallon hat actually holds a little less than one gallon of water.
Joke-of-the-day
A brilliant magician was performing on an ocean liner. But every time he did a trick, a talking cat in the audience would scream, "It's a trick. It's not magic. You're a big phony!"
Then one night during a storm, the ship sank while the magician was performing. And who should end up in the same lifeboat together, all alone, but the talking cat and the magician! For three days, they glared at each other, neither one saying a word to the other. Finally the cat sighed and said, "All right, smart-aleck. You and your darn tricks. What did you do with the ship?"
Rules of Thumb:   
Easy shortcuts to make an ‘educated’ guess
SELLING SOFTWARE
 A new hardware product will start to sell two to three months sooner than a new software product. That's because hardware is built to solve obvious needs, like lack of memory. Software is designed to solve less obvious needs. No one believes software will work until they read a product review.   
Yeah, It Really Happened
80-year-old Miriam Tucker who was attending a charity event in Florida accidentally swallowed a $5,000 diamond she had just won.
Organizers of the event placed $10 cubic zirconia stones in the bottom of 399 of 400 champagne glasses. The prized diamond was placed in the last.
Tucker told local media that she didn't want to put her finger in the glass to get the jewel. Instead she took a few sips of champagne. As she was talking and laughing with other women at the table, she realized she swallowed the jewel.
"What a dumb thing," she said.
Meanwhile, organizers and jewelers Joy Pierson and Andy Meyer were puzzled that no one came forward with the diamond.
As they hovered near the table, Tucker eventually spoke up. "She said she swallowed what was in her glass," Pierson said.
Event chairwoman Gina Roth insisted that Tucker follow her to a hospital for an X-ray. The diamond didn't show up, but Tucker already had a colonoscopy scheduled.
She told Dr. Bruce Edgerton what happened and he retrieved the diamond, put it in a bio-hazard bag and gave it to Tucker's daughter. After the procedure, they went to a jewelry store and had the diamond cleaned, tested and verified.
How would you like to be that jeweler.
"It's an amazing story," said Tucker. She plans to bequeath it to her 13-year-old granddaughter, where the diamond will "stay in the family with a story to go with it."
Somewhat Useless Information   
  • In the first century AD, the Roman Emperor Nero developed a taste for a frozen dessert. He ordered runners to pass buckets of snow from the mountains along the Appian Way down to Rome. The snow was flavored with red wine and honey to be served at banquets.
  • The Chinese may have been the inventors of ice cream. In the first millennium AD, Marco Polo returned to Venice from his trip to the Far East, with ancient recipes for concoctions made of snow, fruit juice and fruit pulp.
  • In 1984, President Ronald Reagan officially designated July as National Ice Cream Month and the third Sunday of the month would be celebrated as National Ice Cream Day. More ice cream is sold on Sunday than any other day of the week.
  • Wall's was the first company to sell ice cream from tricycles. In 1924, this new marketing concept was launched with the slogan "Stop me and buy one." To "equalize the seasonality," the Wall's company would complement their summer ice-cream season with a winter sausage one.
  • The top five most popular ice cream flavors in the U.S. are vanilla, chocolate, Neapolitan, strawberry, and cookies n' cream, in that order. Vanilla accounts for nearly 1/4 of all sales.
  • In 1924, the average American ate eight pints a year. According to the International Dairy Foods Association, the figure had jumped to 48 pints a year by 1997.

Calendar Information        
Happening This Week:
24-30
National Pro-Life T-shirt Week
National Scoop The Poop Week
Fiddler's Frolic

Gathering of the Nations Powwow
26-5/4
National Dance Week
National Dream Hotline
National & Global Youth Service Days
National Pie Championships
Air Quality Awareness Week

Screen-Free Week 

Today Is                                                                      
Beltane-Celtic halfway between the spring equinox and the summer solstice
Bugs Bunny Day
Díá De Los Niños / Díá De Los Libros Day to get kids to read books
Hairstylist Appreciation Day
International Jazz Day
National Go Birding Day
National Honesty Day
Walpurgis Night traditional spring festival in large parts of Central and Northern Europe, exactly six months from All Hallows' Eve.
World Healing Day
US: Louisiana Purchase Day
US: Louisiana: Admission Day (1812-30th state)
US: Spank Out Day –since 1998 to find other ways to discipline children

Today’s Events through History  
1st French colonists in US: Jean Ribault & colonists arrive in Florida…1562
Camp Grant Massacre of Apaches in Arizona Territory, perpetrated by white & 
     Mexican adventurers; 144 die…1871
Emperor Galerius legal recognizes Christians in the Roman Empire…311
Islamic conquest of Hispania: Moorish troops led by Tariq ibn-Ziyad land at Gibraltar 
     to begin their invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (Al-Andalus)…711
La Salle stays with the TAENSA Indians for 4 days, on Lake Saint Joseph in Louisiana. 
     He will sign a peace treaty with them…1682
U.S. media release American soldiers abusing and sexually humiliating Iraqi prisoners 
     at Abu Ghraib prison…2004
US annexes Hawaii…1900

Today’s Birthdays                                                           
In their 80’s
Cloris Leachman, actress (Last Picture Show, Phyllis) is 87
Willie Nelson, country singer (On the Road Again) is 80

In their 70’s
Bobby Vee, singer (Devil or Angel, Night has a Thousand Eyes) is 70

In their 50’s
Stephen Harper, Prime Minister of Canada is 54
Isiah Thomas, NBA forward (Detroit Piston; 1990 NBA playoff MVP) is 52

In their 40’s
Adrian Pasdar, actor (C Oliver Resor-Feds, Top Gun) is 48

In their 30’s
Kirsten Dunst, actress (Interview with the Vampire, Spider-Man) is 31

Remembered for being born today
Eve Arden, actress (Connie-Our Miss Brooks) [1908-1990]
Jill Clayburgh, actress (Unmarried Woman, Semi-Tough) [1944-2010]
Gary Collins, TV actor [1938-2012]
Mary Scott Lord Dimmick Harrison, 1st lady [1858-1948]
Johnny Horton, American musician [1925-1960]
Juliana, Queen of Netherlands [1909-2004]
Al Lewis, actor (Leo-Car 54, Grandpa-Munsters) [1923-2006]
Alice B. Toklas, American companion of Gertrude Stein [1877-1967]

Today’s Historical Obits                                                           
Adolph Hitler, German dictator (1936-45)…suicide…1945…at 56
John Luther (Casey) Jones…in Cannonball Express train wreck…1900…at 37
Sergio Leone, Italian director (Good, Bad & Ugly)…heart attack…1989…at 60
Muddy Waters [McKinley Morganfield], blues singer/guitarist (Mad Love)…heart failure…1983…at 70
Tom Poston, actor (Bob Newhart Show)…2007…at 85
Elmo Roper, pollster (Roper Poll)…1971…at 70
Inger Stevens, actress (Katy-Farmer's Daughter)…suicide…1970…at 35
Beatrice Potter Webb, British writer (My Apprenticeship)…1943…at 85

Answer: Brain Teasers
1. Scar -> Car 2. Struck -> Truck 3. Smart -> Mart 4. Small -> Mall 5. Steal -> Teal 6. Sweep -> Weep 7. Said -> Aid 8. Speak -> Peak
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.