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Nov. 6,
2019 Week: 44 Day: 310
86004: H 65° \ L 32° \ Average Sky Cover: 5%
Nearest
active fire: 87mi. Nearest lightning: 993mi
Wind: 9mph\Gusts:
13mph Visibility: 10 mi
Record
High: 72°[1934] Record Low: 7°[1935]
Nov. Averages: 53°\23° (3
days with moisture)
Today’s Quote
“The environment is in us,
not outside of us.
The trees are our lungs,
the rivers our bloodstream,
and what you do to the environment,
ultimately, you do to yourself.”
~ Ian Somerhalder
Random Tidbit
In
colonial times and into the early decades of the 19th century, most teachers
were men. From the 1820s to 1830s, as more public schools (called Common
Schools) were built and more men were siphoned off by more prestigious
professions, women began to take over the schoolroom. The feminization of
teaching not only change how society perceived women, but how women perceived
themselves.
Observances This Week
World Origami Days
1-7
Drowsy Driving
Prevention Week Link
Give Wildlife A Brake! Week Link
National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week Link
National Fig Week
Polar Bear Week
Give Wildlife A Brake! Week Link
National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week Link
National Fig Week
Polar Bear Week
World
Communication Week
2-6
National Patient
Accessibility Week
6-8
Observances for Today
Button Day Link
Fountain Pen Day Link
Love Your Lawyer Day Link
International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict
Marijuana Recreational Legalization Day (Colorado & Washington) Link
Marooned without a Compass Day
Fountain Pen Day Link
Love Your Lawyer Day Link
International Day for Preventing the Exploitation of the Environment in War and Armed Conflict
Marijuana Recreational Legalization Day (Colorado & Washington) Link
Marooned without a Compass Day
National Jersey Friday Link
National Medical Science Liaison Awareness & Appreciation Day
National Nachos Day Link
Saxophone Day
National Medical Science Liaison Awareness & Appreciation Day
National Nachos Day Link
Saxophone Day
My Rambling Thoughts
A
nice fall day. Yesterday and today the grounds crew was here cleaning up the 1+
inch of long pine needles on the front areas, sidewalks and giving all the
bushes a nice haircut. Yesterday they cleaned the gutters of pine needles. Now,
at least until the next big wind, the area is free of pine needles. All of this
cleaning stirred up a lot of dust that settled on all our vehicles. No problem,
they blew off the dust on all the vehicles too. Great crew.
I
read of a new study that found that water on airlines is pretty bad. They
suggest never drinking coffee or tea on a flight, to use sanitizer…not water…in
the restrooms, and if you drink water on a flight, only drink sealed bottled
water. Turns out they refill their water tanks wherever they land and on international
flights the water could make you sick. The article didn’t mention ‘ice’.
I’m
horrified at the bomb plot of the Synagogue in Pueblo, CO. The guy deserves a
fair trial, and if he’s found guilty, he should have to attend services at the
Synagogue for at least 5 years. The best way to stop White Supremacy is through
education.
Whenever
I travel, I use the post office’s Mail Hold option. I always say I’ll pick it
up at the PO, but they almost always deliver it when I return. Today I got an
email from the friendly PO that they have upgraded their mail hold. Now to use
Mail Hold one has to ‘register’ and create a user name and password and answer
2 security questions. I guess there are lots of people out there putting holds
on other people’s mail or the USPS has become overly paranoid.
Today’s Puzzle
Answer at the bottom of this page
What does this represent?
P
NOASE
Y
Historical Events
1572 - A supernova was observed in constellation known as Cassiopeia. Queen
Cassiopeia was the wife of Cepheus, King of Aethiopia and mother of Princess
Andromeda in Greek mythology.
1789 - Pope Pius VI appointed Father John Carroll as the first Catholic
bishop in the United States. He is also known as the founder of Georgetown
University.
1860 - Abraham Lincoln (R-Ill) elected 16th American President. His
election prompted seven southern slave states to form the Confederacy before he
took the office.
1861 - Jefferson Davis was elected to 6-year term as Confederate president.
After the war was over, Davis was captured and he was accused of treason but
was not tried and was released after two years.
1862 - The direct telegraphic link between New York and San Francisco was
established.
1869 - First intercollegiate football (soccer) game (Rutgers 6, Princeton
4). There were two games that season, and each team won one game. At that time,
American Football was closer to the game of rugby.
1947 - Meet the Press was first televised as a local program in Washington
DC. Meet the Press began on radio in 1945 as American Mercury Presents: Meet
the Press.
1954 - #1 Hit: Rosemary
Clooney - This Ole House
1961 - #1 Hit: Jimmy
Dean - Big Bad John
1962 - The United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution condemning
South Africa's apartheid policies and called for all UN member states to cease
military and economic relations with the nation.
1965 - #1 Hit: The
Rolling Stones - Get Off of My Cloud
1965 - Cuba and the United States formally agreed to begin an airlift for
Cubans who want to go to the United States.
1971 - #1 Hit Cher -
Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves
1975 - Good Morning America premiered on ABC
1976 - #1 Hit: Steve
Miller Band - Rock'n Me
1982 - #1 Hit: Joe
Cocker and Jennifer Warnes - Up Where We Belong
1990 - Arsenio Hall earned his star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame. Joanne
Woodward, Olive Borden, Ronald Colman, Louise Fazenda, Preston Foster, Burt
Lancaster, Edward Sedgwick, and Ernest Torrence were the first to get stars, in
1956.
1993 - #1 Hit: Meat
Loaf - I'd Do Anything for Love (But I Won't Do That)
2001 - 24 premiered on FOX - Starring Kiefer Sutherland as Counter
Terrorist Unit (CTU) agent Jack Bauer.
2005 - Broadway Show - Jersey Boys (Musical)
2012 - US territory Puerto Rico voted to become a US State.
2012 - Tammy Baldwin (D) became the first openly gay politician to be
elected to the United States Senate.
Birthdays Today
@94 – Adolphe Sax, Belgian-French instrument designer invented the
saxophone,
(died in 1894)
@87 – Jonathan Harris, American actor Lost in Space
(died in 2002)
@86 – Zig Ziglar, American soldier, businessman, and author
(died in 2012)
@85 – Ray Conniff, American composer and conductor
(died in 2002)
@78 - James Naismith, Canadian YMCA coach, invented
basketball,
(died in 1939)
@77 – John Philip Sousa, American commander, composer,
and conductor
(died in 1932)
75 – Lani Hall, American singer, lyricist, author and producer
73 – Sally Field, American actress
71 – Sidney Blumenthal, American journalist and activist
@67 – Glenn Frey, American Singer/Songwriter, guitarist and
actor
(died in 2016; pneumonia)
64 – Maria Shriver, American journalist and author
59 – Harold Ross, American journalist and publisher, co-
founded The New Yorker
(died in 1951, heart failure)
53 – Peter DeLuise, American actor and director
@51 – Charles Dow, American journalist and economist
(died in 1902)
49 – Ethan Hawke, American actor, director and screenwriter
47 – Thandie Newton, English actress and singer
41 – Ida Lou Anderson, American orator and professor
(pioneer in the field of radio
broadcasting,
(died in 1941; polio)
30 – Emma Stone, American actress
@27 – Pat Tillman, American football player and soldier
(died in 2004; shot by friendly fire
in Afghanistan)
Puzzle answer:
Pay through the nose.
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