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Jul. 14, 2019
Week: 29 \ Day: 195
86004: H 82° \ L 52° \ Average Sky Cover: 25%
Nearest
wildfire: 136mi. Nearest lightning: 120mi
Wind: 7mph\Gusts:
7mph
Visibility: 10 mi
Record High: 92°[1902] Record Low: 38°[1962]
Jul Averages:
82°\542° (8 day with rain)
Today’s Quote
We first make our habits,
and then our habits make us.
John Dryden
Random Tidbits
There
have been a few states that never managed to make the cut and become
incorporated into the United States we know today. Some of these state names
were quite inventive and the dedicated residents who petitioned for them were
very frustrated when the states never manifested.
Absaroka
It
was named after the Absaroka Range of the Rocky Mountains, which claimed parts
of South Dakota, Montana, and Wyoming. Residents of this area attempted to
secede in 1939.
More Observances This Month
Air-Conditioning
Appreciation Days (7/3 to 8/15) Link
Alopecia Month for Women
Bereaved Parents Awareness Month
Bioterrorism/Disaster Education & Awareness Month
Cell Phone Courtesy Month Link
Day of the Knife (July 25 to August 22) Link
Dog Days (7/3 to 8/11) Link
Eye Injury Prevention Month Link
Family Golf Month Link
Fragile X Awareness Month Link
Get Ready For Kindergarten Month
Hemochromatosis Screening Awareness Month Link
Herbal/Prescription Interaction Awareness Month
Alopecia Month for Women
Bereaved Parents Awareness Month
Bioterrorism/Disaster Education & Awareness Month
Cell Phone Courtesy Month Link
Day of the Knife (July 25 to August 22) Link
Dog Days (7/3 to 8/11) Link
Eye Injury Prevention Month Link
Family Golf Month Link
Fragile X Awareness Month Link
Get Ready For Kindergarten Month
Hemochromatosis Screening Awareness Month Link
Herbal/Prescription Interaction Awareness Month
Observances This Week
6-28
Tour de France
7-14
Creative Maladjustment Week
National Farriers Week
Sports Cliché Week
8-14
Nude Recreation Weekend
14-20
Everybody Deserves A Massage Week
Observances for Today
National Macaroni and Cheese Day Link
My Rambling Thoughts
It
has been a while…I had a great time on the Trans-Siberian Railroad trip from
Moscow to Beijing. I’ll be doing highlights of the trip for the next few days.
I
started out in Flagstaff, took the shuttle to Phoenix airport, then to Denver
to meet up with our group of 18. Focus Travel had great accommodations, thanks
to Joe Green and his staff at Tumlare. From Denver it was off to Chicago, Frankfort,
then to Moscow.
We
stayed in Moscow for a day and a half, with two city tours before meeting the
train crew. Moscow was amazing. Turns out Kremlin in Russian means fortress. I
can assure you it was and still is amazing. Red Square was nice too. The city
has lots of Soviet area grey, block buildings that are offices, apartments, and
stores. There are also some great churches with spectacular architecture. Our
guide gave us a good history of the city and the surrounding area. The food was
delicious. Lots of perogies with many different fillings.
I
was very impressed with the number of Cultural Venues throughout all of Russia…Opera
Houses, Ballet Theaters, Symphony Halls, Children’s museums, nice playgrounds,
and many beautiful parks. The people were very friendly and accommodating to
our questions. Lots of stylish dressers throughout the city. Our time is Moscow
let us see many highlights and leave with a good feeling about the Russian
people.
We
finally got to our train, met our guide, Vlad. He was with us until we got on
the plane in Beijing. Our group of 18, the largest American group anyone
remembers, picked up a couple from New Delhi for our daily tours. He is a
radiologist, she is OBGYN. The have two daughters and are awaiting
grandchildren. Our train car had two toilet rooms, a small shower room with a
little warm water and lots of cold water. Our ‘room’ was small, two benches to
sit on, storage underneath, and the bench-back folded down at night for a very
hard bed. A table came out under the window for storage of small bags, phones,
chargers, etc. While in Russia, we traveled day and night through five time
zones. The train also had a French group, Portuguese group, a German couple, a
Spanish group. Each car had a husband/wife team to be sure we were comfortable
24/7, a great kitchen staff, two dining cars, and a bar/lounge car. The train
was not luxurious, but was comfortable, most of the time. Russia seems to run
by RR, so there were frequent stops so long trains of fuel or lumber could switch
to our track. Most large cities had five or more tracks running through the
train yard.
Our
group became very close during the trip, since we ate together, slept in the
same train car, and all showered in the same small shower where you had to sign
up for a time, with 15 minutes between shower times so the water could heat up.
Note: it seldom heated up. All along the train ride we saw vast open, green
spaces, mountains, farms, huge rivers, small villages, and so much more. This
adventure was certainly a once-in-a-lifetime experience for everyone experiencing
the Trans-Siberian RailRoad.
More
to come.
Today’s Puzzle
Answer at the bottom of this page
Use exactly two threes (3) and two eights (8)
to get the number 24. You can use multiplication (×), division (÷), addition
(+), subtraction (-) signs, and brackets. You cannot use any advanced
arithmetic operations, such as exponential, factorial, etc.
Today’s Highlighted Historical Events
1700’s
1714 Battle of Aland, Russian fleet overpowers
larger Swedish fleet
1789 Bastille Day - the French Revolution
begins with the fall of the Bastille Prison
1798 1st direct US federal tax on states-on
dwellings, land and slaves
1800’s
1832 Opium exempted from federal tariff duty
1853 US President Franklin Pierce opens World
Fair - Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations in New York
1864 Gold is discovered in Helena, Montana
1900’s
1914 Robert Goddard is granted the first
patent for liquid-fueled rocket design
1927 1st commercial airplane flight in Hawaii
1946 Dr Benjamin Spock's "Common Sense
Book of Baby & Child Care" published
1969 The United States $500, $1,000, $5,000
and $10,000 bills are officially withdrawn from circulation.
1987 Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North concludes
6 days of Congressional testimony
1987 Taiwan ends 37 years of martial law
2000’s
2015 Harper Lee's 2nd novel "Go Set A
Watchman", an early 1957 version of "To Kill A Mocking Bird"
goes on sale in 70 countries
2015 Arms deal agreed between 6 world powers
and Iran limiting Iranian nuclear arms but ending sanctions
2018 Russian covert agent Maria Butina
arrested by the FBI in Washington, D.C.., charged with being unregistered
foreign agent
Highlighted Birthdays Today
0’s
1857 Frederick Louis Maytag, American
businessman, head of Maytag, born in Elgin, Illinois (d. 1937-@79, heart
disease)
1862 Florence Bascom, American geologist and
1st woman hired by the US Geological Survey, born in Williamstown,
Massachusetts (d. 1945-@82)
1906 Tom Carvel, ice cream mogul (Carvels) (d.
1990-@94)
1913 Gerald Ford [Leslie King], 38th US
President (R: 1974-77) and 41st US Vice President (R: 1973-74), born in Omaha,
Nebraska (d. 2006@93)
1921 Leon Garfield, English children's author
(d. 1996-@74)
59-Jane Lynch, Actress, Game Show host
Highlighted Historical Obits Today
80’s
@87-2005 Cicely Saunders, English Nurse,
physician and writer who founded the first modern hospice, dies of cancer
60’s
@65-1965 Adlai Stevenson II, US ambassador to
UN (1961-65), Governor of Illinois (1949-53) and Democratic presidential
candidate (1952, 56), dies of heart attack
20’s
@21-1881 Billy the Kid [William H Bonney],
American frontier outlaw, shot by sheriff Pat Garrett and dies of gunshot
wounds
Puzzle answer:
8 ÷ (3 – 8 ÷ 3) = 24
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