Nov 1

 

 

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Nov 1, 2020  Week: 45 Day: 306

Local:  H 63°\ L 32°\Average Sky Cover: 5%

Wind:   9mph\Gusts:  1`4mph                       

Nearest lightning:  1558mi.; active fire:  59mi

high Risk of Fire          

Visibility:  10mi

Record: 73°[1916]   Record: 11°[1943]              

Nov Averages: 53°\23° (3 days with moisture)

 

Today’s  Quote

Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more. It turns denial into acceptance, chaos to order, confusion to clarity. It can turn a meal into a feast, a house into a home, a stranger into a friend. Melody Beattie

 

Random Tidbits

 When people talk about the War Between the States, they probably don't mean the Toledo War or the Honey War - two disputes that pitted U.S. states or states-to-be. The Toledo War was fought in 1835-36 over the Toledo Strip, claimed by both Michigan territory and the state of Ohio. Hundreds of men took up arms, but only one fighter was wounded and none killed. Ohio got the strip; Michigan received the Upper Peninsula instead.

 

A little humor

Laugh of the Day
Q:Why wasn't the cat moving?

It was on paws

 

True Things

Man's Best Friend

Veterinary researchers at the University of Helsinki have been testing whether dogs can sniff out COVID-19, and Anna Hielm-Bjorkman has the good news: They can. With almost 100% accuracy. "A dog could easily save so, so, so many lives," she told DW. A pilot program at the Helsinki Airport is having travelers wipe their wrists or neck with a cloth, which the trained dogs then sniff. They can identify the virus up to five days before any symptoms appear. People who test positive at the voluntary canine site are directed to the airport's medical unit for confirmation. Hielm-Bjorkman said travelers have been eager to participate, waiting up to an hour in line.

On the Italian island of Sardinia, farmer Cristian Mallocci welcomed a litter of five dogs on Oct. 9, Fox News reported. Among them was a special pup -- one with green fur, which Mallocci immediately named Pistachio. The other four dogs had white fur, like their mom. Green puppies are rare, but not unheard-of; scientists think it happens when the puppy makes contact with a green pigment in the womb. Pistachio's color has faded since his birth, but he'll keep his name, and Mallocci will keep him to help look after sheep on the farm.

 

Observations This Month

Adopt A Senior Pet Month Link  Link
Adopt A Turkey Month 
Link

American Diabetes Month
American Indian Heritage Month 
Link
  
Aviation History Month
Banana Pudding Lovers Month
Children's Grief Awareness Month  
Link

Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilience Month 
 Link

Diabetic Eye Disease Month
Epilepsy Awareness Month
 Link

Eye Donation Month

 

Observations This Week

Sherlock Holmes Weekend: 30-11/1  LINK October event is cancelled.

National Animal Shelter Appreciation Week: 1-7  Link   

World Origami Days: 24-11/11

National Fig Week: 1-7

Drowsy Driving Prevention Week: 1-8  Link   

Polar Bear Week: 1-7 

Give Wildlife A Brake! Week: 1-7  Link 

World Communication Week: 1-7

 

Observations for Today

All Saints' Day

National Calzone Day

Autistic Speaking Day

National Deep Fried Clams Day

Cinnamon Day  

National Family Caregiver Day

Daylight Saving Time Ends

National Family Literacy Day

Dia de Los Muertos (Day of The Dead)

National Go Cook For Your Pets Day

Extra Mile Day

National Pâté Day

Forgiveness & Happiness Day

National Sports Fan Day

Give Up Your Shoulds Day

Plan Your Epitaph Day

Hockey Mask Day

Prime Meridian Day

International Day of Prayer for The Persecuted Church

World Vegan Day

 

National Author's Day

Zero Tasking Day

National Bison Day

 

National Brush Day  

 

 

My Rambling Thoughts

There is an Indian saying: Only the White man would think by cutting off 1” at the top of the blanket and sewing it on to the bottom of the blanket will make the blanket longer. Hope you all fixed your clocks.

VP Pence came to the Flagstaff Airport yesterday afternoon. Depending on who you read, there were between 300 and 400 present. I wasn’t one of them.

Thanks to a Supreme Court decision awhile ago, tons of money is spent on political campaigns. In 2016 it is estimated that about $7billion was spent. In 2020 the estimate is $14billion. Who gets all that money? Commercial TV, radio, newspapers, AV people, venues, sign makers, banner makers, and the people who make all those caps and shirts and ties and buttons and…There must be a better way to elect our leaders. Every election year the campaign season seems to be getting longer and longer.

On The Daily Social Distancing Show, Kamala Harris was being interviewed. Trevor asked her about the problem some Republicans have in pronouncing her first name. She said that your name is the first gift given to a child by the parents. It is a gift you keep for your entire life. Anyone who makes fun of your name is simply childish. Good answer.

One of my college roommates was an Air Force brat. During High school he went to high school in Izmir, Turkey and was able to travel that area in the late 1960’s. He really enjoyed his time there. I was sad to see the destruction of so much of that area and also Greece from the earthquake yesterday.

 

Today’s Puzzle

Answer at the bottom of the page

Arnold Schwarzenegger has a long one. Michael J. Fox has a short one. Madonna doesn’t use hers. Bill Clinton always uses his. The Pope never uses his.

What is it?

 

Historical Events

1348 The Black Death reaches London on or about this date

1512 – Michelangelo’s paintings on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican, Italy were first exhibited. He started the work in 1508.

1604 – William Shakespeare’s tragedy The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice was first presented.

1611 – Shakespeare’s romantic comedy The Tempest was first presented

1755 (Earthquake & Tsunami) Lisbon, Portugal – an estimated 10,000-100,000 people were killed

1775 (Earthquake) Kashan, Iran -estimated 40,000 killed

1776 – Mission San Juan Capistrano was established

1800 John Adams becomes the first US President to live in the White House

1834 – First published reference to poker (as a Mississippi riverboat game) Originally 20 cards were used, and the 52 card deck appeared before 1850.

1848 – In Boston, the first Medical School for Women (The Female Education Society) was founded.

1848 WHSmith opens its 1st railway bookstall, at Euston Station in London

1867 – Harper’s Bazaar issue #1 was published. It was America’s first fashion-oriented magazine.

1879 – Thomas Edison signed the patent application for his electric lamp (approved on January 27 1880 Patent #223,898).

1884 – Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) was adopted universally at a meeting of the International Meridian Conference in Washington, DC.

1896 – Zulu groom and bride (a bare-breasted woman) appeared in National Geographic Magazine. The magazine began publication in October of 1888.

1922 Mustafa Kemal Ataturk takes Constantinople from Mehmed VI, proclaiming the Republic of Turkey and bringing an end to the Ottoman Empire

1924 – First US NHL franchise, Boston Bruins was founded. The Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs were the first to form and addition of the Chicago Blackhawks, Detroit Red Wings, and New York Rangers made the Original Six teams.

1928 Graf Zeppelin sets airship distance record of 6384 km

1941 Ansel Adams shoots 'Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico', one of his most famous photographs

1945 – First issue of Ebony magazine published by John H. Johnson. The first magazine he started was ‘The Negro Digest’ (later called Black World) in 1942.

1951 – Jet magazine founded by John H Johnson. In 1996, President Bill Clinton bestowed the Presidential Medal of Freedom on Johnson.

1952 – Operation Ivy – The United States successfully detonated the first large hydrogen bomb, codenamed “Mike” [“M” for megaton], in the Eniwetok atoll, located in the Marshall Islands in the central Pacific Ocean.

1959 – The Hockey Mask was created by player Jacques Plante

1967 – Cool Hand Luke starring Paul Newman, George Kennedy, and Strother Martin, was released. “What we’ve got here is a failure to communicate.”

1968 – The Motion Picture Association of America’s film rating system was officially introduced, originating with the ratings G, M, R, and X.

1979 – Federal (US) government made a $1.5 billion loan guarantee for Chrysler. The government basically ‘cosigned’ a loan to keep the company in business.

1993 – The European Union was established.

2012 – Google’s Gmail became the world’s most popular email (Electronic mail) service. Microsoft’s Hotmail was the leader before that. Although Yahoo actually has the most registered users, it is/was not used as much as the others.

2018 Palau becomes the first country to ban sunscreen and its chemicals which bleach coral reefs

 

Birthdays Today

@70 – Marcia Wallace, American actress, and comedian (d.2013; sepsis)
63 – Lyle Lovett, American Musician
60 – Tim Cook, American Businessman, current CEO of Apple Inc.
48 – Jenny McCarthy, American actress, and model

@28 – Stephen Crane, American Author (d. 1900; hemorrhages)

 

Puzzle Answer

A last name

 

Halloween

 

🎃🎃🎃👻👻👻 

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Oct 31, 2020  Week: 44 Day: 305    

Local:  H 62°\ L 29°\Average Sky Cover: 5%

Wind:   2mph\Gusts:  4mph                       

Nearest lightning:  1585mi.; active fire:  59mi

high Risk of Fire          

Visibility:  10mi

Record: 70°[1999]   Record:[1935]              

Oct Averages: 63°\32° (4 days with moisture)

👻👻👻  

Today’s  Quote

The ideal attitude is to be physically loose and mentally tight.

Arthur Ashe

🎃🎃🎃 

Random Tidbits

 Uncle Sam was a real person. Popular legend goes that Michigan meatpacker Samuel Wilson's friendliness earned him the nickname "Uncle Sam." He went on to provide meat for the troops in the War of 1812, and local Michigan troops joked that the "U.S." stamp on their supplies stood for "Uncle Sam" instead of "United States." This joke spread to all military items marked with "U.S.," and a government figurehead was born.

👻👻👻  

A little humor

The doctor said “Don’t eat anything fatty.”

I replied, “You mean like bacon and burgers?”

“No fatty, don’t eat anything.”

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True Things

Tynette Housley, 73, of Black Forest, Colo., was cited by Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials after her "pet" deer attacked and gored a neighbor who was out walking her dog on Oct. 16. The buck, now sporting two-pronged antlers, was taken in by Housley when it was just a few days old and raised as a pet. The victim tried to run first to another neighbor's home, then to her own, but the buck repeatedly knocked her down and gored her. A CPW officer euthanized the deer and took it for testing for rabies and other diseases. "We can't say it enough: Wild animals are not pets," said Frank McGee, CPW's area wildlife manager. Housley was charged with illegal possession and illegal feeding of wildlife.

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Observations This Week

Red Ribbon Week: 23-31  Link  

 

Prescription Errors Education & Awareness Week: 24-31

National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week: 25-31 Link  

World Origami Days: 24-11/11

National Massage Therapy Week: 25-31 Link  

Asexuality Week: 25-31 Link

National Respiratory Care Week: 25-31 Link 

International Magic Week: 25-31

Pastoral Care Week: 25-31 Link  

Give Wildlife a Brake! Week: 25-31  Link

Pro Bono Week: 25-31  Link

Kids Care Week: 25-31 

Sherlock Holmes Weekend: 30-11/1  LINK October event is cancelled.

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Observations for Today

Allantide Link
Beggars' Night
Books For Treats Day
Day of the Seven Billion 
Link
Girl Scout Founder's Day 
Link
Halloween/ All Hallows Eve
Magic Day
National Caramel Apple Day  
Link
National Doorbell Day 
Link
National Knock-Knock Jokes Day
National Magic Day
National UNICEF Day
Samhain 
Link
World Cities Day
World Savings Day  
Link

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My Rambling Thoughts

As the month ends, it sure feels weird not to be preparing for trick or treaters. The past 2 years I haven’t handed out candy because only a few kids showed up. Still, Halloween on a Saturday night with a full Blue Moon, it feels weird.

Politically, it is a pain to live in a swing state. Every TV channel and radio station except NPR is raking in the $$$ with several ads back to back at every break. Thankfully I have a DVR, so I don’t have to deal with all of them. Then there’s the phone calls. A few days ago I started telling them I already voted, and to remove me. Last night I got a call from the McSally camp. The phone ID said Paul Groman, but the lady said she was Prissy. I told her I had already voted. She had the nerve to ask me for whom I voted. I reminded her that this is still America and we have secret ballots. She said she was sorry if I was offended but she was just curious. I told her ‘curiosity killed the cat’ and hung up.

I saw an announcement or commercial on Facebook. It was the several from Idaho, including the Lt. Gov., sitting is a pick-up truck holding a bible and a hand gun stating that they were not sure if there really was a pandemic. It concluded that pandemic or not, no one was going to take away their individual rights. I am dumbfounded by these people’s ignorance and lack of empathy.

Clemson University is on the site of several Civil War era plantations. Using special tools they have located 604 unmarked graves on several hills on campus. They are believed to be those of slaves. The head of the research said: "Clemson is uniquely positioned to tell a story that embraces multiple perspectives, over multiple eras, in ways that we're just now really exploring and discovering ... it's not going to be the old way of talking about history ...  it's far richer than that."

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Today’s Puzzle

Answer at the bottom of the page

A woman shoots her husband. Then she holds him underwater for over 5 minutes. Finally, she hangs him. But 5 minutes later they both go out together and enjoy a wonderful dinner together. How can this be?

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Historical Events

83 – During the second Second Islamic Civil War and the Siege of Mecca, the Kaaba caught fire and burned down.

1517 – Martin Luther posted his 95 Theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany.

1913 – Dedication of the Lincoln Highway, from Times Square in New York City to Lincoln Park in San Francisco. It was the first automobile highway going across the United States.

1926 – Magician Harry Houdini died of gangrene and peritonitis that developed after his appendix ruptured (after an unexpected punch to the stomach a few days earlier).

1941 – Mount Rushmore was completed, featuring the sculpted head of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.

1968 – “October Surprise” – Just before the US elections, US President Lyndon B. Johnson announced that he had ordered a complete cessation of “all air, naval, and artillery bombardment of North Vietnam” effective November 1.

1969 – Wal-mart incorporated in Arkansas.

1987 – Based on Boston, Popular radio program Car Talk premiered on National Public Radio

1992 Roman Catholic church reinstates Galileo Galilei after 359 years

1984 Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is assassinated by her bodyguards, Satwant Singh and Beant Singh at her home in New Delhi

2011 –The date that there were 7 billion people living on Earth.

2012 The New York stock exchange opens after being closed for two days after Hurricane Sandy

2017 John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff comments in TV interview that “the lack of an ability to compromise led to the Civil War", draws criticism

2018 In landmark verdict, Pakistani Supreme Court acquits Christian woman of blasphemy against the prophet Mohammed after eight years on death row

2018 Worlds biggest statue, the Statue of Unity is unveiled of Indian independence leader Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel at 182 meters in Gujarat state

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Birthdays Today

90 – Michael Collins, American general, pilot, and astronaut
89 – Dan Rather, American journalist
@88 – Dale Evans, American singer-songwriter and actress (d. 
2001)
83 – Tom Paxton, American folk music singer-songwriter

@87 – Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese politician, 1st President of the Republic of China (Taiwan) (d. 1975)
59 – Peter Jackson, New Zealand director, producer and screenwriter
@54 – Michael Landon, actor, director, and producer (d. 1991; cancer)
53 – Vanilla Ice [Rob Van Winkle], American rapper, television personality, and real estate investor
@43 – John Candy, Canadian comedic actor (d. 1994; OD)

@26 – Brian Piccolo, American football player (d.1970; cancer)
@25 – John Keats, English poet (did.1821; TB)

20 – Willow Smith, American singer, and actress

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Puzzle Answer

The woman was a photographer. She shot a picture of her husband, developed it, and hung it up to dry.

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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.