12-1-14

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
Almanac: Week: 49 \ Day: 335 
December Averages: 44°\17°
December Records: High: 68° (1950) Low: -23 (1990)
86004 Today: H 52°\L 36°
Ave. humidity: 37%     Average Sky Cover: 10%
Wind ave:   11mph\Gusts:  27mph
Ave. High: 46° Record High:  63° (1926)
Ave. Low: 18° Record Low:  -7° (1905)

Holiday Observances Today:
Independence Day (Dominican Republic-1821- from Spain)
Independence Day (Iceland-1918-from Denmark)
Independence Day (Portugal-1640-from Iberian Union with Spain)
National Day (Romania)
¤ ¤
Bifocals at the Monitor Liberation Day-for all Bifocals at the computer monitor
Civil Air Patrol Day
Cyber Monday
Day With(out) Art-since 1989-mourning all lost to AIDS
Eat a Red Apple Day
Rosa Parks Day
UN World Aids Day
World Aids Day

Observances This Week:
1-7
Cookie Cutter Week 
International Coelenterate Biology Week 
Older Driver Safety Awareness Week 


Observations This Month:
World Aids Month 
Bingo's Birthday Month-invented in 1929
Buckwheat Month 
National Drunk & Drugged Driving (3D) Prevention Month
National Write A Business Plan Month
National Tie Month 
Operation Santa Paws (1-19)
Safe Toys and Gifts Month
Spiritual Literacy Month
Take a New Year's Resolution to Stop Smoking (TANYRSS)  
Tomato and Winter Squash Month 
Universal Human Rights Month 
Worldwide Food Service Safety Month

Write a Friend Month
• • • • • • •
Quote of the Day

  
Historical Highlights for Today
1641 - Mass becomes 1st colony to give statutory recognition to slavery
1750 - First school in America to offer manual training courses opens in Maryland
1831 - Erie Canal closes for entire month due to cold weather
1835 - Hans Christian Andersen publishes his 1st book of fairy tales
1878 - 1st White House telephone installed
1896 - 1st certified public accountants receive certificates (NY)
1903 - "The Great Train Robbery", the 1st Western film, released
1909 - 1st Christmas Club payment made, to Carlisle Trust Co, Pa
1913 - 1st drive-up gasoline station opens (Pitts)
1917 - Boys Town founded by Father Edward Flanagan west of Omaha Neb
1941 - US Civil Air Patrol (CAP) organizes
1942 - Gasoline rationed in US
1943 - FDR, Churchill & Stalin agree to Operation Overlord (D-Day)
1955 - Rosa Parks arrested for refusing to move to the back of bus and give her seat to a white passenger
1957 - Sam Cooke and Buddy Holly and Crickets debut on Ed Sullivan Show
1958 - Our Lady of Angels School burns, killing 92 students & 3 nuns (Chic)
1959 - 12 nations sign treaty for scientific peaceful use of Antarctica
1959 - The 1st color photograph of Earth received from outer space
1969 - US government holds its 1st draft lottery since WW II
1978 - Pres Carter more than doubles national park system size
1988 - Benazir Bhutto named 1st female PM of a Muslim country (Pakistan)
• • • • • • •
  Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthday’s Today


My Rambling Thoughts
Finally, the house interior is ready for Christmas. My new tree is just the right size. My dad’s father passed away on Christmas Eve while out shopping when my dad was 5. So his family didn’t really celebrate much. My mom’s family didn’t have a lot of money, so Christmas was usually sparse. When they got kids they wanted more for their kids. So Christmas was always nice. Mom decorated the inside, Dad the outside. New decorations were purchased the day after Christmas and saved for the next year. I have inherited most of the family decorations, some early plastic ones dating back to the early 1950’s. I also have many handmade decorations made by friends and neighbors that have been in the family for decades. Then I have decorations I have received over the years. Amazing, when I bring them out to put on the tree, the memories that come flooding back. My mom bought a Nativity set up when I was about 8 years old…it has a ‘real manger’ made of wood and numerous paper Mache painted figures. They are still kept, wrapped in paper towels, in the same shoe box from the first year to be put out every Christmas. I also have Santa’s Bells, tied onto a piece of thick leather that was always on the front door…and it’s on my front door. I also found a red feather angel with a porcelain head that I got my mom when I was about 10 years old…I saved up the $1.29 it cost by doing chores.
I feels like Christmas and as soon as the wind dies down, I’ll to the outside.
Cards are playing, sort of and later tonight it’s the Broncos. Good Sunday.
• • • • • • •
Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
For each of the following word pairs, you are looking for a two word answer. The first is a rhyme of the first word and gives the category. The second word is a rhyme and is a specific word in that category. For example, "Kitty, Tennis" translates to "City, Venice". 

1. Fainter, Jolly
2. Slumber, Heaven
3. Reason, Printer
4. Quiver, Bongo
5. Power, Crazy
6. Handy, Muffle
7. Sticker, Frisky     

Found on You Tube with some relevance to today



           
OK Then…

• • • • • • •
Paraphernalia 4 the Brain:     
Actor Facts…
¤ Leonardo DiCaprio was named Leonardo because his pregnant mother was looking at a Leonardo da Vinci painting in a museum in Italy when DiCaprio first kicked.
¤ Jason Earles played as a teenager in Hannah Montana, but he was actually born in 1977.

December Holiday Facts
*Christmas-Christian
¤ Each year more than 3 billion Christmas cards are sent in the U.S. alone.
¤ All the gifts in the Twelve Days of Christmas would equal 364 gifts.

*Hanukkah-Jewish
Spelling of Hanukkah
The guttural sound of the Hebrew letters cannot be duplicated by the English alphabet. For this reason, there are many spellings of this holiday in English and all are correct.

*Kwanza-African-American
¤ Kwanza will celebrate its 50th Birthday in 2016!
¤ The holiday was created by Dr. Maulana Karenga in 1966 to celebrate family, culture and heritage, and is modeled after the first harvest celebrations in Africa.

Flagstaff, AZ History…
From 1889
On Friday, a four-horse wagon load of fine quail and fish caught on the Verde was brought into town.
           
Flagstaff’s Iconic 50…
The Skydome--
N 35° 10.831 W 111° 39.109
The J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome was named for the former NAU President. It is the 2nd largest clear-span timber dome in the world. The framework was designed by computer in 1977 and built entirely of glue laminated all wood beams. Note: The largest is the Tacoma Dome in WA.

Harper’s Index…
Average per capita income within 3 miles of a major US coal plant: $18,400
           
Rules of Thumb…
AVOIDING OTHER AIRPLANES
If you spot another airplane and it is above the horizon, it is above you. If it is below the horizon, it is below you. If the other airplane is at the same level as the horizon, it is at your altitude. If an approaching airplane appears motionless, it is on a collision course with you.   

Unusual Fact of the Day…
Before finishing his education, earning a doctorate, and inventing the sport basketball, Dr. James Naismith was a high school dropout.
• • • • • • •
Joke-of-the-day
Cal was out driving in the country, seeing how his new car handled the curvy roads at high speeds. As he rounded a corner, one of his tires blew. 
When he got out of the car to change the tire, he noticed that he had stopped in front of the state mental asylum. There was also a man sitting on the brick wall in front of the facility. 
The driver went about his business, not paying any attention to the guy on the fence. He first took his tire iron and jack out of the car, and got the car jacked up. Then, he removed the hubcap. Next, he removed the six lug nuts, and placed them in the hubcap for safekeeping. 
About this time, the guy on the fence decided to start a conversation. This startled the driver, and he reeled around quickly, knocking over the hubcap, and the lug nuts fell into the sewer drain.
The driver gets angry with the guy on the fence, shouting, "Now look what you made me do. Now I'm going to have to walk to town to buy some new lug nuts. Just go back inside and leave me be."
The guy on the fence says, "Why don't you just take one lug nut from each of your other three wheels, and use them on this one. That should hold it steady enough for you to drive the car to the auto parts store."
The driver asks, "That's a brilliant idea...then why are you here?"
The guy on the fence replies, "I'm just crazy, not stupid."     


Yep, It Really Happened
CINCINNATI
 Officials at the Cincinnati Zoo said a pack of Grinchy squirrels are countering their holiday cheer by taking down their festive lights. Chad Yelton of the Cincinnati Zoo said squirrels gnaw on the LED light strands workers put up for the holiday season and the animals seem intent on keeping the facility's Bear Hill from being bathed in festive illumination.
"This is by far the number one spot for squirrels," Yelton said of Bear Hill. "We've had many a night where it's completely dark." Yelton said the zoo lost 300 strands of lights in one recent year, "and most of that was on Bear Hill."
Officials said the squirrel problem has been going on for several years. Before the switch to LED lights, the squirrels would unscrew the incandescent bulbs, apparently mistaking them for nuts. Yelton said the zoo tried using hot sauce to deter the squirrels, but "they kind of laughed at it."
"You know, it didn't really do much. I think we felt good about it, but it didn't do much," he said. Steve Foltz, director of horticulture at the zoo, said the yearly attempt to safeguard the holiday lights is "a challenge who’s smarter, the squirrel or the horticulturists."
Foltz admitted that for the moment, "the squirrels win."      

Somewhat Useless Information
Johannesburg is the largest city in South Africa, by population and the provincial capital of Gauteng, the wealthiest province in South Africa.
Johannesburg is also the world’s largest city not situated on a river, lake, or coastline.
However, its streams contribute to two of southern Africa’s mightiest rivers, the Limpopo and the Orange.
¤ ¤
Comparing to amateurs, top soccer players such as Neymar, Ronaldo or Messi demonstrate 10% less brain activity during competitive matches.
Scientists have called this situation as ‘autopilot’.
After motor skill tests conducted on Neymar and several other athletes in Barcelona, results showed that Neymar displayed limited cerebral function when he rotated his ankle, which explains why the striker’s brilliance is uncannily natural.
• • • • • • •
Today’s Events through History
  800 - Charlemagne judges the accusations against Pope Leo III in the Vatican
1843 - 1st chartered mutual life insurance company opens
1913 - Continuous moving assembly line introduced by Ford (car every 2:38)
1921 - US Post Office establishes philatelic agency
1922 - 1st skywriting over US-"Hello USA"-by Capt Turner, RAF
1973 - Jack Nicklaus becomes 1st golfer to earn $2M in a year
1982 - Michael Jackson releases his album "Thriller"
• • • • • • •
Birthday’s Today
Woody Allen, [Allen Konigsberg], Bkln, actor (Annie Hall) is 79
Lee Buck Trevino, PGA golfer is 75
Bette Midler, Honolulu, actress and singer is 69
Treat Williams, actor (Hair) is 63
Bob Goen, TV host (Entertainment Tonight) is 60
Charlene Tilton, actress (Lucy Ewing-Dallas) is 56
Sarah Silverman, stand-up comedian, is 44

Remembered for being born today
Anna Comnena, Byzantine historian [1083-1153]
Rex Stout, mystery writer (Nero Wolf novels) [1886-1975]
W A "Tony" Boyle, United Mine Workers president [1904-1985]
Louis Slotin, Canadian Physicist\Chemist (Manhattan Project) [1910-1946]
Mary Martin, actress (Peter Pan) Larry Hagman's mom [1913-1990]
David Doyle, actor (Charlie's Angels) [1929-1997]
Dick Shawn, actor (Producers) [1923-1987]
Lou Rawls, Chicago vocalist (Golddigers), [1933-2006]
Pablo Escobar Gaviria, Colombian drug baron [1949-1993]
Matthew Shepard, American Hate Crime victim [1976-1998]
• • • • • • •
Historical Obits Today
David Ben-Gurion, founding father of Israel, 1973, @87
Sam Levene, actor (Purple Heart), heart attack, 1980, @75
Fred Rose, songwriter (Blue Eyes Cryin in the Rain), heart attack, 1954, @57
José Eustasio Rivera, Colombian writer, seizures, 1928, @40
• • • • • • •

Brain Teasers Answers
1. Painter, Dali
2. Number, Seven
3. Season, Winter
4. River, Congo
5. Flower, Daisy
6. Candy, Truffle
7. Liquor, Whiskey

• • • • • • •
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 contains mistakes and sadly once 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…§


11-30-14

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
Almanac: Week: 49 \ Day: 334 
November Averages: 51°\22°

Holiday Observances Today:
Cities of Life Day (celebrated by 300 cities with no death penalty)
Independence Day (Barbados-1966-from UK)
Independence Day (Yeman-1967-from UK)
• • •
Stay At Home Because You Are Well Day
Computer Security Day
National Meth Awareness Day
Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Annual Lighting

Observances This Week:
24-30
GERD Awareness Week; National Bible Week; National Game & Puzzle Week; Better Conversation Week; Church/State Separation Week; National Family Week
• • • • • • •
Quote of the Day



Historical Highlights for Today
1523 - Amsterdam bans assembly of heretics
1630 - 16,000 inhabitants of Venice died this month of plague
1731 - Beijing hit by Earthquake; about 100,000 die
1747 - Dutch State of Zealand declare governorship hereditary for women
1866 - Work begins on 1st US underwater highway tunnel, Chicago
1872 – 1st international soccer game, Scotland-England 0-0 (Glasgow)
1886 - The Folies Bergère stages its first revue
1900 - A German engineer patents front-wheel drive for automobiles
1907 - Pike Place Market dedicated in Seattle
1924 - 1st photo facsimile transmitted across Atlantic by radio (London-NYC)
1956 - 1st use of videotape on TV (Douglas Edwards & the News)
1974 - Most complete early human skeleton (Lucy, Australopithecus) discovered
1983 - Police free kidnapped beer magnate Alfred Heineken in Amsterdam
1988 - UN General Assembly (151-2) censures US for refusing PLO's Arafat visa
1993 - President Clinton signs Brady Gun Control Bill
• • • • • • •
  Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthday’s Today 

My Rambling Thoughts
Ah, the end of November and it’s ending with lots of wind. The wind has been blowing since around midnight. Weatherman is saying maybe some snow is ahead this week. I’m ready. I still have stalled out on putting up the Christmas decorations, but tomorrow is looking really good to do it. I got the living room ready today by moving some furniture a little.
Netflix is very cheap, has great movies and TV shows, and if not careful can take up way too much time. I watched 2 movies and one TV season today—all were good, but really should not be sitting in front of a TV that long. It does have a nice pause feature so I could do some other things. I kept telling myself, it was too windy to be outside and I certainly did not want to do any shopping, realizing how busy everywhere would be. I spent many a Saturday doing shopping when I was working, now I wait for a weekday and let the hard working people deal with weekend shopping.
• • • • • • •
Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
What does this mean?

Must get here
Must get here
Must get here           

Found on You Tube with some relevance to today
           
OK Then…


• • • • • • •
Paraphernalia 4 the Brain:     
Actor Facts…
¤ When Will Ferrell met RHCP drummer Chad Smith he looked him up and down and said: “You´re very handsome,” and then walked away.
¤ Heath Ledger locked himself in a hotel room for a month to prepare for his iconic role as the Joker in The Dark Knight

¤¤NEW¤¤ December Holiday Facts…
*Christmas-Christian
¤ Norwegian scientists have hypothesized that Rudolph’s red nose is probably the result of a parasitic infection of his respiratory system.
¤ The Germans made the first artificial Christmas trees out of dyed goose feathers.

*Hanukkah-Jewish
Hanukkah (The Festival of Lights)
The history of Hanukah predates Christmas. Antiochus, the Greek King of Syria, outlawed Jewish rituals and ordered the Jews to worship Greek gods. Most Jews were angry and decided to fight back. In 165 B.C.E, the Jewish Maccabees managed to drive the Syrian army out of Jerusalem and reclaim their temple. Hanukkah is the celebration of this victory. In history, Hanukkah has been a minor holiday, only gaining in popularity since the late 1800's. In Hebrew, the word "Hanukkah" means "dedication."

*Kwanza-African-American
¤ Beginning on December 26 and lasting for 7 days, Kwanzaa is an African American holiday. It reinforces community, family and good social values through seven principles.
Kwanzaa is a relatively new holiday in terms of most celebrations held at this time of year, but it is celebrated by millions and is a fast growing holiday. It first started in 1966, when Dr. Maulana Karenga thought up the idea. He was concerned at the loss of identity of The African American people, and wanted a celebration of their cultural heritage and roots. It is far more than just a celebration, though. It is a way of bringing the community together, teaching younger members to be proud of whom they are and reaffirm the commitment to family and community.
For each day there is a different principle, or theme, to think about and discuss. The ideas and origin of the Kwanzaa celebrations come from an ancient African tradition of celebrating the first fruits. The word Kwanza comes from Swahili, a widely spoken African language. The names of the seven principles and the Kwanzaa greetings are all in Swahili. This is because it does not reflect one particular African nation or group, and so can be used by all.

Flagstaff, AZ History…
25 YEARS AGO
On Sunday, it was the bullet-proof vest saved Robert Dale Soucie the first Flagstaff police officer ever shot in the line of duty. He had stopped a man of I-40 just east of Flagstaff who came out of his car shooting then fled the scene on foot.
           
Flagstaff’s Iconic 50…
Louie the Lumberjack
218 N Sitgreaves St, Flagstaff, Arizona
Meet Flagstaff's 10-foot cedar statue of Louie the Lumberjack, the brother of the two 20-foot-plus giants that stand on campus as mascots of Northern Arizona University. 
It's been 20 years since this smaller brother had seen any repairs, and it showed. 
When he was taken down from his location outside Granny's Closet, a famous restaurant on South Milton Street, it was in the nick of time to save the logger from disintegration.

These two Muffler Men were originally installed at the Lumberjack Café. When the restaurant became Granny's Closet in 1973, these statues were moved to Northern Arizona University and repainted in the school's colors. The statue that stands just outside NAU's Skydome is known as "Louie". It is believed that this statue is from 1962 and was the first Muffler Man ever produced. It was originally built by Prewitt Fiberglass Animals for someone in Sacramento that never paid for it. The Lumberjack Cafe bought the second Muffler Man a few years later. That one is now installed inside the Skydome. It has a Cowboy style body but a Bunyan style head. The NAU football team is known as The Lumberjacks.

Harper’s Index…
Portion of the US electrical-power supply that comes from coal: 2/5
           
Rules of Thumb…
FINDING A BALL IN THE ROUGH
To find a golf ball, first look ten yards past where you think you hit it out, then look ten yards short, and finally look five yards further into the rough.       

Unusual Fact of the Day…
Doves were called "turtles" long before today's turtles were known by that name.
• • • • • • •
Joke-of-the-day
A guy walked into a little corner store with a shotgun and demanded all of the cash from the cash drawer. After the cashier put the cash in a bag, the robber saw a bottle of Scotch that he wanted, behind the counter on the shelf. He told the cashier to put it in the bag as well, but the cashier refused and said, "Because I don't believe you are over 21."The robber said he was, but the clerk still refused to give it to him because he didn't believe him. At this point, the robber took his driver's license out of his wallet and gave it to the clerk. The clerk looked it over and agreed that the man was in fact over 21 and he put the Scotch in the bag. The robber then ran from the store with his loot. The cashier promptly called the police and gave the name and address of the robber that he got off the license. They arrested the robber two hours later.
           
Yep, It Really Happened
BATH, England (UPI) - The sewage company behind Britain's first poo-powered Bio-Bus said the vehicle can run up to 186 miles on one tank of fuel from human and food waste. GENeco, a subsidiary of Wessex Water, said the fuel for the 40-seat Bio-Bus is produced at the Bristol sewage treatment works, where human waste and food unfit for consumption are put through a process to create biomethane. Mohammed Saddiq, general manager of GENeco, said the company is also producing biomethane for the country's natural gas network. "Through treating sewage and food that's unfit for human consumption we're able to produce enough biomethane to provide a significant supply of gas to the national gas network that's capable of powering almost 8,500 homes as well as fueling the Bio-Bus." It takes the annual waste from about five people to create one tank of biomethane for the bus, officials said. The Bath Bus Company is running the Bio-Bus on the 20-mile A4 route between Bath, England, and the airport in Bristol, England.
           
Somewhat Useless Information
How many alligators are there in the U.S.?
It is estimated that five million American alligators are spread out across the southeastern United States and around 1.25 million alligators live in the state of Florida. By the way, Florida declared the alligator their official state reptile in 1987.
For the history, the United States is the only nation on earth where both alligators and crocodiles live together.
¤ ¤
How many pounds of bacteria does an adult human have?
There are 100 trillion of good bacteria that live in or on the human body. Researchers have now taken a detailed look at this set of bacteria that may play even bigger roles in health and disease.
An adult human has two to nine pounds of bacteria in his or her body.
They are essential for human life, needed to digest food, to synthesize certain vitamins, to form a barricade against disease-causing bacteria.
Bonnie Bassler, a Princeton University microbiologist, said that until recently the bacteria were thought to be just “passive riders.” They were barely studied, because it was hard to know much about them.  
• • • • • • •
Today’s Events through History
1016 - Cnut the Great (or Canute), King of Denmark, claims the English throne after the death of Edmund 'Ironside'
1804 - Impeachment trial of Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase begins
1886 – 1st commercially successful AC electric power plant opens, Buffalo, NY
1936 - London's Crystal Palace (built 1851) destroyed by fire
1947 - Day after UN decree for Israel, Jewish settlements attacked
1954 - 1st meteorite known to strike a woman (Liz Hodges-Sylacauga Ala)
1962 - U Thant of Burma elected 3rd Secretary-General of UN unanimously
1967 - Julie Nixon & David Eisenhower announce their engagement
1968 - A Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association march in Armagh is stopped by Royal Ulster Constabulary because of the presence of a Loyalist counter demonstration led by Ian Paisley and Ronald Bunting
1971 - The government of the Republic of Ireland states that it will take the allegations of brutality against the security forces in Northern Ireland to the European Court of Human Rights
1979 - Ted Koppel becomes anchor of nightly news on Iranian Hostages (ABC)
2004 - Longtime Jeopardy! champion Ken Jennings  finally loses, leaving him with $2,520,700 USD, television's all-time biggest game show haul.
• • • • • • •
Birthday’s Today
G[eorge] Gordon Liddy, head CIA/Watergate felon/radio host is 84
Noel Paul Stookey, singer (Peter, Paul & Mary-Wedding Song) is 77
Paul Westphal, NBA guard (Celtics, Suns) is 64
Mandy Patinkin, actor/singer (Alien Nation) is 62
Billy Idol, [William Broad], rocker (White Wedding) is 59
Bo Jackson, baseball/football player (Royals, Raiders) is 52
Ben Stiller, actor (Cable Guy) is 49
Clay Aiken, American singer is 36

Remembered for being born today
Jonathan Swift, Dublin, satirist (Gulliver's Travels), [1667-1745]
Mark Twain [Samuel Clemens], author (Tom Sawyer) [1835-1910]
John McCrae, Canadian physician, soldier, poet (In Flanders Fields) [1872-1918]
Winston Churchill, (C) British Prime Minister (Nobel 1953) [1874-1965]
Lucy Maud Montgomery, Canadian author (Anne of Green Gables) [1874-1942]
Efren Zimbalist Jr, actor (77 Sunset Strip, FBI) [1918-2014]
Shirley Chisholm, (Rep-NY) 1st black congresswoman [1924-2005]
Richard Crenna, actor (Sand Pebbles) [1926-2003]
Abbie Hoffman, aka Free, Yippie/activist/author (Steal this Book) [1936-1989]
Bill Walsh, NFL coach (San Fransisco 49ers) [1931-2007]
• • • • • • •
Historical Obits Today
Zeppo Marx, [Herbert], US comic (Marx Brothers), cancer, 1979, @78
Charlie Byrd, American jazz guitarist, 1999, @74
Tiny Tim, [Herbert Khaury], entertainer (Tip Toe), heart attack, 1996, @71
Evel Knievel, motorcycle daredevil, 2007, diabetes, 2007, @69
James Baldwin, writer (Go Tell it on the Mountain), cancer, 1987, @63
Oscar Wilde, Irish author, meningitis, 1900, @46
Paul Walker, actor (The Fast and the Furious), car accident, 2013, @40
• • • • • • •

Brain Teasers Answers
Three Musketeers
• • • • • • •
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 contains mistakes and sadly once 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.