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Apr 9, 2019 Week: 15 \ Day: 99
86004: H70 ° \ L 31° \ Average Sky Cover: 5%
Wind: 3mph\Gusts: 6mph Visibility: 10 mi
Nearest wildfire: 347mi. Nearest lightning: 1041mi
Record High: 75°[1989] Record
Low: 9°[1953]
Mar Averages: 59°\28°
(3 days with
rain)
Today’s Quote
When people talk to me about
the weather,
I always feel they mean
something else.
-- Wilde
Random Tidbits
Atkins and
Taylor made preliminary measurements of the Redwoods using professional laser
equipment based on goniometry, and found not one, not two, but three trees that
were taller than the Stratosphere Giant.
The tallest
of the lot, named Hyperion, was found to be a good 10ft taller than the Giant,
standing at a whopping a 379 ft.
When Atkins
and Taylor announced their discovery, a team of scientists led by Humboldt
State University ecologist Steve Sillett arrived at the park to measure it
again. They were aiming for more accuracy, so they used a tape. They actually
climbed to its very top and dropped the tape to the ground. The epic stunt was
filmed for National Geographic.
Observances This Week
Hate Week: 4-10
National Robotics Week: 6-14 Link
Bat Appreciation Week: 7-13
Consider Christianity Week: 7-13
National Blue Ribbon Week: 7-13 Link (Child Abuse)
National Crime Victims Rights Week: 7-13 Link
National Library Week: 7-13
National Public Health Week: 7-13
National Volunteer Week: 7-13
National Window Safety Week: 7-13
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week: 7-14 Link
Passion Week: 7-13
Passiontide: 7-20
American Indian Awareness Week: 8-12 Link
National Dental Hygienest Week: 8-12 Link (Second Week)
National Work Zone Safety Awareness Week: 8-12 Link
National Youth Violence Prevention Week: 8-12 Link
The Masters Tournament: 8-14
Undergraduate Research Week: 8-12 Link
Week of The Young Child: 8-12 Link
National Robotics Week: 6-14 Link
Bat Appreciation Week: 7-13
Consider Christianity Week: 7-13
National Blue Ribbon Week: 7-13 Link (Child Abuse)
National Crime Victims Rights Week: 7-13 Link
National Library Week: 7-13
National Public Health Week: 7-13
National Volunteer Week: 7-13
National Window Safety Week: 7-13
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week: 7-14 Link
Passion Week: 7-13
Passiontide: 7-20
American Indian Awareness Week: 8-12 Link
National Dental Hygienest Week: 8-12 Link (Second Week)
National Work Zone Safety Awareness Week: 8-12 Link
National Youth Violence Prevention Week: 8-12 Link
The Masters Tournament: 8-14
Undergraduate Research Week: 8-12 Link
Week of The Young Child: 8-12 Link
Observances for Today
Appomattox
Day Link
Free Cone Day (Ben & Jerrys) Link
Jenkins Ear Day
Jumbo Day (Elephant came to US and created the word for big in our language.)
Name Yourself Day
Free Cone Day (Ben & Jerrys) Link
Jenkins Ear Day
Jumbo Day (Elephant came to US and created the word for big in our language.)
Name Yourself Day
National Be
Kind To Lawyers Day Link
National Cherish An Antique Day
National Chinese Almond Cookie Day
National Cherish An Antique Day
National Chinese Almond Cookie Day
National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day
National Library Workers Day
National Library Day Link
Winston Churchill Day
National Library Workers Day
National Library Day Link
Winston Churchill Day
My Rambling Thoughts
This spring
weather is fantastic. Great day for a long walk.
Taxes…Got good
news as I am getting a nice chunk of money back. I know it my money, owed to
me, and that the Feds got to hold it for a long time, with no interest…but…I
still would rather overpay than have to pay a bill.
Good news:
Happy to hear that
the American woman kidnapped in Uganda has been released, along with her guide.
Looks like the Tour Company paid a ransom, but the amount was not announced.
Still want to hear the whole story. I
wonder why the Canadian tourist in the vehicle weren’t taken and why was the
unarmed guide taken. I’ve been on a good number of safaris with Focus and there
always the guide, and the ‘wing man’ (the guy who sat on the front fender). I
wonder how there was just a guide? And how was he unarmed? On every safari, at
least one of the guys was armed.
NYU School of
Medicine is tuition free. Very positive story on 60 minutes last night. Great
for students who now can spend their time studying medicine and not having to
work on the side to pay the tuition. Great for America.
Not Good News:
Not a big fan of
the DHS Secretary and her family separation mess, but now that she is fired, someone
worse is sure to rise to the top. I’m just confused about another action: the
firing of the head of the Secret Service. It seldom happens when a lower level person
screws up (letting a potential spy into Mar Lago) that the head guy is fired.
This is staying very crazy.
PUZZLE OF THE DAY
Answer at the bottom of this page
The police found a murdered man in a car. The windows
of the car were raised, the doors were locked, and the keys were inside, in the
man’s hands. The man was shot several times with a gun, but there were no holes
anywhere on the car. How is this possible?
Today’s Significant Historical Events
1600’s
1682 Robert La Salle claims lower Mississippi
(Louisiana) for France
1700’s
1731 British mariner Robert Jenkins' ear cut off
by Spanish Guarde Costa in the Caribbean, later catalyst for war between
Britain & Spain
1768 John Hancock refuses to allow two British
customs agents to go below deck of his ship, considered by some to be the first
act of physical resistance to British authority in the colonies
1800’s
1833 1st US tax-supported public library in
Peterborough, Noew Hampshire
1900’s
1914 "World, the Flesh & the
Devil", 1st color film, shown in London
1923 In 'Adkins vs Children's Hospital', the US
Supreme Court finds that the minimum wage law for women and children, adopted
by the District of Columbia, is unconstitutional
1947 Atomic Energy Commission confirmed
1963 Winston Churchill becomes 1st honorary US
citizen
1968 Martin Luther King Jr., buried in Atlanta
2000’s
2003 Baghdad falls to U.S. forces, ending the
invasion of Iraq, but resulting in widespread looting
2017 Twitter footage of passenger forcibly
removed from United Airlines flight in Chicago after flight overbooked causes
outrage
Birthdays Today
1898 Paul Robeson,
(d. 1976: @77: stroke)
American singer (Old Man River), actor and civil
rights activist,
born in Princeton, New Jersey
1903 Ward Bond,
(d. 1960: @75: heart attack)
American actor (Wagon Train, It's a Wonderful
Life),
born in Benkelman, Nebraska
1903 Gregory Pincus,
(d. 1967:@64: rare blood disorder)
American biologist and inventor (birth control
pill),
born in
Woodbine, New Jersey
1905 J. William Fulbright,
(d. 1995: @89)
American senator from Arkansas, known for
opposition to the Vietnam War),
born in Sumner, Missouri
1926 Hugh Hefner,
(d. 2017: @91)
American magazine publisher and businessman
(Playboy),
born in Chicago, Illinois
1932 Carl Perkins,
(d. 1998: @65: throat cancer)
American singer and songwriter (Blue Suede
Shoes),
born in Jackson, Tennessee
<><><><>
80’s
86- Jean-Paul Belmondo,
French actor (Casino Royale, Magnifique),
born in Paris, France
80- Michael Learned,
American actress (Olivia in The Waltons, Nurse),
born in Washington, D.C.
60’s
65- Dennis Quaid,
American actor (Big Easy, Dreamscape, Right
Stuff),
born in Houston, Texas
50’s
56- Joe Scarborough,
American television personality,
born in Atlanta, Georgia
53- Cynthia Nixon,
American actress (Sex and the City),
born in
NYC, New York
20’s
29- Kristen Stewart,
American actress (Bella Swan-The Twilight Saga),
born in Los Angeles, California
Historical Obits Today
80’s
@89-1959 Frank Lloyd Wright,
American architect (Guggenheim) recognized as
"the greatest American architect of all time"
60’s
@65-1626 Francis Bacon,
English statesman and philosopher,
dies from pneumonia
30’s
@35-1976 Phil Ochs,
American anti-war folk singer (Draft Dodger
Rag),
commits suicide
Puzzle answer:
The car was convertible, with the top retracted
back.
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