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Jun. 2, 2019 Week: 22 \ Day: 153
86004: H 70° \ L 40° \ Average
Sky Cover: 15%
Nearest wildfire: 10mi. Nearest lightning: 232mi
Wind: 5mph\Gusts: 9mph
Visibility: 10 mi
Record High: 86°[1977] Record
Low: 22°[1955]
Jun Averages: 78°\42° (1 day with rain)
Today’s Quote
Be not simply good - be good for
something.
Henry David Thoreau
Random Tidbits
The
May pole is thought by some to (not so subtly) represent the masculine, while
the decorations of flowers, wreaths and ribbons are thought to symbolize the
feminine. Although many scholars assert that sometimes a tree is just a tree -
the pole was not a phallic symbol, but rather a nod to the sacred nature of the
tree.
Persecution
of May Day festivities began as early as the 1600s, and in 1640 the Church
ruled against the debauchery when the British Parliament banned the traditions
as immoral. A much tamer version was brought back in 1644 under the rule of
Charles II.
Some
beliefs held that May Day was the last chance for fairies to travel to the
Earth
Observances This Month
Adopt-A-Cat
Month Link Link
Adopt A Shelter Cat Month
African-American Music Appreciation Month Link
Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month Link
Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome Awareness Month (APS) Link
Audio Book Appreciation Month
Beautiful in Your Skin Month Link
California Avocado Month Link
Cancer From The Sun Month
Caribbean-American Heritage Month
Cataract Awareness Month
Celibacy Awareness Month
Child Vision Awareness Month
Children's Awareness Month
Country Cooking Month Link
Adopt A Shelter Cat Month
African-American Music Appreciation Month Link
Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month Link
Antiphospholipid Antibody Syndrome Awareness Month (APS) Link
Audio Book Appreciation Month
Beautiful in Your Skin Month Link
California Avocado Month Link
Cancer From The Sun Month
Caribbean-American Heritage Month
Cataract Awareness Month
Celibacy Awareness Month
Child Vision Awareness Month
Children's Awareness Month
Country Cooking Month Link
Observances This Week
Ramadan 5/5-6/4
National African Violet Week:
26-6/2
Black Single Parents Week: 28-6/3
Bed Bug Awareness
Week: 2-8
Black Single Parents Week: 2-8
Community Health Improvement Week (CHI): 2-8 Link
End Mountain Top Removal Week: 2-8 Link
National Business Etiquette Week: 2-8
National Headache Awareness Week: 2-8 Link
National Sun Safety Week: 2-8 Link
Pet Appreciation Week: 2-8 Link
Black Single Parents Week: 2-8
Community Health Improvement Week (CHI): 2-8 Link
End Mountain Top Removal Week: 2-8 Link
National Business Etiquette Week: 2-8
National Headache Awareness Week: 2-8 Link
National Sun Safety Week: 2-8 Link
Pet Appreciation Week: 2-8 Link
Observances for Today
National Animal
Rights Day Link
National Bubba Day
National Cancer Survivors Day Link
National Gun Violence Awareness Day
National Rocky Road Day
National Bubba Day
National Cancer Survivors Day Link
National Gun Violence Awareness Day
National Rocky Road Day
National Rotisserie Chicken
Day Link
Yell "Fudge" at the Cobras in North America Day
Children's Awareness Memorial Day
Yell "Fudge" at the Cobras in North America Day
Children's Awareness Memorial Day
My Rambling Thoughts
It’s
been a busy few days. We had our weekly lunch on Thursday. Good conversation.
Then a friend from my old working days called and was passing through town. Friday,
we did the tourist thing around Flag and had a very nice dinner. Very enjoyable
after many years. And the weather was perfect for moving around town.
Our
Focus Travel leader had a fall and hurt her pelvis. Hoping she has a speedy recovery.
On
June 1, 1868, the Navajo signed a treaty that ended their incarceration and set
up the Navajo Nation. Last week it was
announced that the Navajo Nation Museum will be able to display one of the
three remaining copies of the original treaty. Lots of stipulations, but still
a great accomplishment for the tribe.
There
is a wildfire close to Flag. It is burning old dead ground cover, making lots
of smoke. As of now, the Forest Service is just letting it burn. Smoke settles
in at night but dissipates after sunrise. At various times, I can smell it at
my house. It’s one of the downsides to
being surrounded by National Forest.
Since
most educated Americans realize that tariffs cost the citizens I have some simple
questions that need to be answered: Why am I being punished? Who gets the
tariffs that are collected? What does the receiver of the tariffs do with all
that money? I remember learning that before income tax came into being, most of
the US government’s funding came from tariffs. The new tariffs on good coming
from Mexico are insane. Why? Imagine that a tariff is placed on something you
make. You then charge the consumer more for the product. Then imagine that the
President says he will lift the tariff when you stop something you have no
control over and he doesn’t even tell you when he will be satisfied enough to
stop the tariff. It just doesn’t make any sense.
PUZZLE OF THE DAY
Answer at the bottom of this page
Monday, six friends went camping. Tuesday,
John, Jack, and James cooked some mushrooms. Wednesday came and they ate the
mushrooms. Thursday found them dead. Exactly one friend survived, how come?
Today’s Significant Historical Events
1700’s
1763 Pontiac's Rebellion: At what is now
Mackinaw City, Michigan, Chippewas capture Fort Michilimackinac by diverting
the garrison's attention with a game of lacrosse, then chasing a ball into the
fort
1800’s
1835 P. T. Barnum & his circus begin 1st
tour of US
1855 The Portland Rum Riot occurs in Portland,
Maine
1863 Harriet Tubman leads Union guerrillas
into Maryland, freeing slaves
1873 Construction begins on Clay St (San
Francisco) for world's 1st cable railroad
1875 Alexander Graham Bell makes first sound
transmission
1896 Guglielmo Marconi applies to patent the
radio, accepted 2 July 1897
1900’s
1910 Pygmies discovered in Dutch New Guinea
1919 Pulitzer prize awarded to Carl Sandburg
(Cornhuskers)
1920 Pulitzer prize awarded to Eugene O'Neill
(Beyond the Horizon)
1924 President Calvin Coolidge signs the
Indian Citizenship Act, declaring all Native Americans to be American citizens
1928 Kraft, building on the original 1918
design, rolls out Velveeta cheese
1953 Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in
Westminster Abbey, London, England
1986 Regular TV coverage of US Senate sessions
begins
1988 61st National Spell Bee: Rageshree Ramachandran
wins spelling elegiacal
1989 10,000 Chinese soldiers are blocked by
100,000 citizens in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, protecting students
demonstrating for democracy
2000’s
2004 Ken Jennings begins his 74-game winning
streak on the syndicated game show Jeopardy!
2015 US Congress passes new legislation to
reform National Security Agency procedures, restricting gathering of phone
records
2017 "Wonder Woman" directed by
Patty Jenkins released, earns over $100 million in North American in its
opening weekend - domestic record for a female director
Birthdays Today
0’s
1731 Martha Washington,
(d. 1802: @70)
1st US First Lady (1789-97),
born in Kent County, Virginia
1740 Marquis de Sade,
(d. 1814: @74)
French philosopher and writer (Justine). The
words sadism and sadist are derived from his name.,
born in Paris, France
1840 Thomas Hardy,
(d. 1928: @87)
poet and novelist (Far from the Madding
Crowd),
born in Higher Bockhampton, Dorset
1857 Edward Elgar,
(d. 1934: @74: cancer)
English composer (Coronation Ode, Pomp and
Circumstance),
born in Lower Broadheath, Worcestershire
1904 Johnny Weissmuller,
(d. 1984: @79: pulmonary edema)
American actor (Tarzan), swimmer (5 Olympic
gold 1924, 28),
born in Freidorf, Romania
1930 Charles Pete Conrad Jr,
(d. 1999: @69: motorcycle accident)
USN/astro (Gem 5 11, Ap 12, Skylab 2),
born in Philadelphia
80’s
82- Sally Kellerman,
actress (M*A*S*H, Back to School),
born in Long Beach, California
70’s
78- Charlie Watts,
drummer (Rolling Stones),
born in London, England
80’s
51-Andy Cohen,
TV host
40’s
47- Wayne Brady,
American actor and comedian
(The Wayne Brady Show, Whose Line Is It
Anyway?),
born in Columbus, Georgia
Historical Obits Today
90’s
@99-2018 Paul D. Boyer,
American biochemist and Nobel Prize Laureate
for research on the "enzymatic mechanism underlying the biosynthesis of
adenosine triphosphate (ATP)" (1997)
@92-2001 Imogene Coca,
American actress
80’s
@82-1990 Rex Harrison,
English actor (My Fair Lady),
dies of cancer
70’s
@79-2008 Bo Diddley,
Ellas McDaniel (born Ellas Otha Bates)
American musician
@74-1882 Guiseppi Garibaldi,
Italian general and nationalist (Risorgimento)
who helped unify Italy
40’s
@45-1979 Jim Hutton,
actor (Ellery Queen),
dies of liver cancer
30’s
@37-1941 Lou Gehrig,
American Baseball Hall of Fame first baseman
(6 x World Series, 2 x AL MVP),
dies of motor neurone disease (ALS)
Puzzle answer:
The six friends are called John, Jack, James,
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. John, Jack, James, and Tuesday cooked the
mushrooms. Wednesday joined them and they ate the mushrooms. Thursday was the
one to find them dead, so he is the survivor.
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