6-22-14

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Flagstaff Almanac: Day: 173 / Week: 26 
June Averages: 78° \ 42°
Today: Average Sky Cover: 10%
    H 82° L 54° Ave. humidity: 28%
    Wind: ave:   5mph; Gusts:  28mph  
    Average High: 80° Record High:  94° (1954)
    Average Low: 44° Record Low:  31° (1947)
         
Quote of the Day

 

 
Today’s Historical Highlights
1559 - Jewish quarter of Prague burned & looted
1675 - Royal Greenwich Observatory established in England by Charles II
1745 - Bonnie Prince Charles sails to Scotland
1844 - Influential fraternity Delta Kappa Epsilon is founded at Yale University.
1847 - Doughnut created
1873 - Prince Edward Island joins Canada
1874 - Game of lawn tennis introduced
1915 - BMT, then Brooklyn Rapid Transit, begins subway service
1939 - Princess Elizabeth meets Prince Philip of Greece
1940 - France falls to Nazi Germany; armistice signed, France disarms
1940 - 10,000 Afrikaner women march in protest of South Africa's involvement in WWII
1944 - US President Franklin Roosevelt signs "GI Bill of Rights" 
1970 - President Nixon signs 26th amendment (voting age lowered to 18)
1982 - Manhattan institutes bus-only lanes
1985 - "Smuggler's Blues" by Glenn Frey peaks at #12
1990 - Nelson Mandela addresses the United Nations Special Committee against Apartheid in New York, saying that nothing, which has happened in South Africa, calls for a revision of the position that the Organization has taken in its struggle against apartheid; he adds that a democratic, non-racial SA is within reach
1992 - 2 skeletons excavated in Yekaterinburg identified as Tsar Nicholas II & Tsarina Alexandra
  Today’s Birthdays:   
How many can you identify? Answers in Today’s Birthdays below
My Free Rambling Thoughts   
What a great first day of summer. The Geek Squad called at 7:45a to say they would be at my house about 10a. They arrived at 9:50 and were finished with the setup by 10:25. Amazed at how they were able to program everything so quickly. It has a great picture and works very well. It is much bigger than my last TV, which is also nice.
Tonight our discussion group meets to talk ‘US Trade’. Not a subject I am really up on, but the articles gave me a good basic understanding of what has been going on since WWII. It was good to see how all the changes have been good for the US, and how a few have hurt the US in the short time, but helped us in the long run. Should be a lively group as the leader tonight is a staunch libertarian and I’m sure he will disagree with many of the pros mentioned in the article. Always good to hear the many sides of a topic.
Game  Center (answers at the end of post)
Brain Teasers
Boy: Can I dig a hole?
Dad: Well sure, why not?
Boy: Can I climb a tree?
Dad: Yes, sir!
Boy: Can I jump off the roof?
Dad: Of course!
Boy: Can I fly in the sky?
Dad: Yes, son, you can!
Boy: Can I go into space?!
Dad: Erm. No, I'm sorry, son. You can't do that.
What is the conversation talking about?
Lifestyle  Substance:     
Found on You Tube with some relevance to today
OK Then…
Harper’s Index 
Factor by which a straight Canadian male teen is more likely to attempt suicide if his school dos not have a gay-straight alliance: 2
Unusual Fact of the Day
Printing the phrase "In God We Trust" on U.S. currency was a mandate handed down by Abraham Lincoln's Treasury Secretary Salmon Chase. During his presidency, Theodore Roosevelt attempted to remove the slogan because he, as a devout Christian, felt that putting God on money was a sacrilege.
**NEW**Trivia about AZ…
Arizona is a right-to-work state. The law states no person shall be denied the opportunity to obtain or retain employment because of non-membership in a labor organization.
**NEW**Interesting facts about Islam…
"Islam" means "Peace through the submission to God".
Presidential Fun Facts…
Rutherford Birchard Hayes: Graduated Kenyon College (1842) and Harvard Law School (1845). On September 8, 1880 Hayes arrived in San Francisco to become the first president to visit the West Coast. He was the first president to graduate from law school. Mrs. Hayes, Lucy Ware Webb, was known as "Lemonade Lucy" because she refused to serve alcohol in the White House. The first telephone was installed in the White House by Alexander Graham Bell himself. The first Easter egg roll on the White House lawn was conducted by Hayes and his wife. He kept his campaign pledge and refused to run for a second term.
Pen Names of famous authors…
Samuel Langhorne Clemens-Pen names: Mark Twain, Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass, Josh
Clemens assumed a number of pen names before settling on Twain, after years of working on Mississippi riverboats where the term "mark twain" was shouted out as a way to mark the depth of the river, as measured on a rope. In Life on the Mississippi, Twain explains, "I was a fresh new journalist, and needed a nom de guerre; so I confiscated the ancient mariner's discarded one, and have done my best to make it remain what it was in his hands."
Facts about SPACE…
Moons, Moons and Moons
It is said that earth has a number of moons. The most recent estimates assert that the earth has at least 4 moons. The views of the experts are again different in this regard.
Joke-of-the-day
Three men wanted to cross a river. They had no idea how to cross it, so one man knelt down on his knees and prayed "Lord give me the power and strength the cross the river." suddenly the man became very strong and swam across the river. The next man thought: if it worked for him, it'll work for me. So he knelt down and prayed "Lord give the skills and the strength to cross the river." the man built a canoe and rowed himself across the river. The last man thought: if it worked for both of them, I know it'll work for me. So he also knelt down and prayed "Lord give me the wisdom and knowledge to cross the river." He turned into a woman and walked across the bridge. 
Rules of Thumb:   
RUNNING A CLUB
Don't expect more than one-third of any professional-club members to attend a meeting. Build up a large membership so there are enough members around to make up for those who are away or otherwise engaged.
Yeah, It Really Happened
WASHINGTON (UPI) - It was right there all along -- a massive reserve of water buried deep in the Earth.
Scientists have long theorized a mass of hidden water was somewhere below, but a group of geologists from Northwestern University are the first to offer evidence.
The geologists found the water while studying a vast stretch of Earth's mantle called the transition zone. The vast underground region extends across much of North America. The water, enough to fill the oceans three times over, is hiding in a mineral called ringwoodite some 400 miles beneath Earth's crust.
Steve Jacobsen, who co-authored the study detailing the discovery, says the water explains a lot about why our planet looks and acts the way it does.
"Geological processes on the Earth's surface, such as earthquakes or erupting volcanoes, are an expression of what is going on inside the Earth, out of our sight," Jacobsen said.
"I think we are finally seeing evidence for a whole-Earth water cycle, which may help explain the vast amount of liquid water on the surface of our habitable planet," he explained. "Scientists have been looking for this missing deep water for decades."
By studying seismograph records and conducting a number of lab experiments that replicated deep-Earth pressures and their effects on rock, Jacobson was able to show that water could be fused into and trapped by the crystalline structure of ringwoodite.
The study was published this week in the journal Science.
Somewhat Useless Information   
According to scientists Bing Bang occurred about 13.798 ± 0.037 billion years ago, which is considered to be the age of the universe.
Bing Bang Theory is a cosmological model on the development of the universe first proposed by Georges Lemaitre, a Belgian catholic priest.
Lemaitre was a priest, as well as astronomer teaching physics at the Université catholique de Louvain and called his ‘hypothesis of the primeval atom’.
~~
Could you imagine your life eating nothing but pizza? Dan Janssen, a 38-year-old woodworker from Maryland, has eaten only pizza for 25 years and he’s still alive!
During his teenage years he decided to give up “regular food” due to religious reasons and he started eating only pizza. “I’ve been eating pizza exclusively every day of my life for the past 25 years, and I’m not just talking about a slice of pizza every day. I usually eat an entire 14″ pizza, and I only eat cheese pizza. I never get sick of it. If I go to one pizza shop or another brand, it’s like eating a completely different meal”, Dan Janssen said.
Calendar Information        
This Week’s Observances:
14-22
Worldwide Knit (and crotchet) in Public Week
22-28
Carpenter Ant Awareness Week
Fish Are Friends, Not Food! Week
Lightning Safety Awareness Week
National Mosquito Control Awareness Week
Watermelon Seed Spitting Week
Today Is  
Global Smurfs Day
National Chocolate Eclair Day
Stupid Guy Thing Day
~~
Antifascist Struggle Day (Croatia-
1941-to rid the country of Germans/Italians occupying forces)
Today’s Events through History  
1870 - 1st Boardwalk in America invented
1911 - King George V crowned king
1936 - Virgin Islands receives a constitution from US (Organic Act)
1943 - WEB DuBois becomes 1st Black member of National Institute of Letters
1947 - 12" rain in 42 mins (Holt, MO)
1977 - Walt Disney's "Rescuers" released
1983 - "Monty Python's The Meaning of Life," released in France
Today’s Birthdays                                                           
Kris Kristofferson, singer/actor (Amerika) is 78
Lindsay Wagner, LA Ca, actress (Bionic Woman) is 65
Meryl Streep, actress (Sophie's Choice) is 65
Cyndi Lauper, singer (Girls Just want to have Fun) is 61
Clyde "Glide" Drexler, NBA Guard (Rockets, Trailblazers) is 52
Amy Brenneman, actress (Janice-NYPD Blue) is 50
Kurt Warner, American football player is 43
Carson Daly, American television personality is 41
Remembered for being born today
1757-1798 - George Vancouver, surveyed Pacific coast from SF to Vancouver Island
1856-1925 - Henry Rider Haggard, author (King Solomon's Mine, She, Dawn)
1903-1934 - John Dillinger, Indianapolis Indiana, notorious bank robber 
1906-2001 - Anne Morrow Lindbergh, author/aviator, (Gift from the Sea) 
1906-2002 - Billy Wilder, director (Some Like It Hot, Apartment, Stalag 17)
1907-1958 - Mike Todd, film producer
1918-2005 - Cicely Saunders, Nurse, physician ,founded the 1st modern hospice
1922-2002 - Bill Blass, fashion designer (Nancy Reagan)
1928-2014 - Ralph Waite, actor and director (Cool Hand Luke, The Waltons)
1941-2006 - Ed Bradley, CBS news correspondent (60 Minutes)
1948-1988 - "Pistol" Pete Maravich, NBA star (Atlanta Hawks)
1954-1977 - Freddie Prinze, comedian/actor (Chico & the Man)
Today’s Historical Obits                                                           
Dody Goodman, comedienne, 2008, @93
Fred Astaire, actor/dancer (Royal Wedding, Let's Dance), 1987, @88
Ann Landers (Esther Pauline Friedman), columnist, 2002, @83
Pat Nixon, 1st lady, 1993, @81
George Carlin, American comedian, actor, heart failure, 2008, @71
Dennis Day, actor/tenor (Jack Benny Show), ALS, 1988, @71
David O Selznick, producer (Gone With the Wind), heart attack, 1965, @63
Judy Garland, actress (Wizard of Oz, Easter Parade), overdose, 1969, @47
Brain Teasers                                         
The sky is the limit
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.