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FYI: Any
Blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
Sep 20, 2020 Week: 39 Day: 264 Local: H 80° \ L 45° \ Average Sky Cover: 10%
Wind: 7mph\Gusts: 12mph Nearest
lightning: 479mi.; active fire: 59mi.
high Risk of Fire Visibility: 10mi
Record: 83°[2000] Record: 23°[1971] Sep Averages: 74°\42° (5 days with rain)
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Today’s Quote
"It
does not matter how slowly you go
as
long as you do not stop."
-Confucius
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Random
Tidbits
Close but no cigar
Carnival
games nowadays give out stuffed animals as prizes, but in the late 19th
century, the games were targeted to adults, not kids. Instead of getting a
giant teddy bear, winners might get a cigar. If they almost won but didn’t earn
that prize, they’d be “close, but no cigar.” By the 1930s, the phrase extended
beyond fairgrounds to everyday close shots.
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A little
humor
From Actual Medical Records
The patient experienced sudden
onset of severe shortness of breath with a picture of acute pulmonary edema at
home while having sex which gradually deteriorated in the emergency room.
Patient has chest pains if she
lies on her left side for over a year.
Sunday Bonus:
My child will not eat fish, what
can I replace it with?
A cat, cats love fish.
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True Things
A
99-year-old California woman broke two Guinness World Records when she piloted
a plane and gave a flight lesson in the air. Robina Asti, 99, was named the
world's oldest flight instructor and active pilot after she gave her final
flight lesson Sunday at NextGen Flight Academy at Riverside Municipal Airport.
"I love getting people to experience what it's like to lift off this
Earth," Asti told local news. "It is so good." Asti said she
wanted to show that senior citizens are still capable of making valuable
contributions. The flight instructor took the world's oldest pilot record from
an Iowa man who flew a plane at the age of 98.
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Observations
This Week
Hummingbird Ce
National
Guitar Flat-Picking Days: 16-20 Link (Virtual) |
International Women's
E-Commerce Days: 20-26 |
Constitution Week: 17-23 |
|
Hummingbird Celebration:
17-20 Link |
National
Employ Older Workers Week: 20-26 Link |
National Ballroom Dance
Week: 18-27 Link |
National
Farm & Ranch Safety & Health Week: 20-26 |
Clean Up The World
Weekend: 18-20 Link |
Natl
Historically Black Colleges/Univ. Week: 20-26 |
Farm Animal Awareness
Week: 19-25 |
National Indoor Plant Week:
20-26 |
Build A Better Image Week:
20-26 |
National Rehabilitation
Awareness Week: 20-26 |
Child Passenger Safety
Week: 20-26 Link |
National Singles Week:
20-26 |
Deaf Dog Awareness Week:
20-26 Link |
Prostate Cancer Awareness
Week: 20-26 |
International Clean Hands
Week: 20-26 |
Tolkien Week: 20-26 |
Internat’l Interpreters-Translators
Week: 20-26 |
World Reflexology Week: 20-26 |
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Observations
for Today
Bay to Breakers
Race Link Note:
Oldest Footrace in America! Moved
from May due to COVID-19 |
National Punch
Day / Rum Punch Day |
International
Doodle Dog Day Link Moved
from May 2 due to COVID-19 |
National String
Cheese Day Link |
National Fried Rice Day Link |
|
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My
Rambling Thoughts
Nice warm day. I started the morning with a nice walk around the
neighborhood.
Today, in 1971, I started my BIA career. I had my swearing in Gallup
then a 3+ hour drive to Shonto. The beginning was a bit rough. I had student
taught in 6th grade, and another guy I met at Gallup student taught
in 4th grade. Upon arrival the retired Navy principal assigned me to
3rd grade and the other guy to 7th grade. I stayed 5
years at Shonto, he stayed one year. Then we were taken to the housing area. We
were each assigned a furnished one-bedroom apartment. The principal opened the
first apartment, and discovered, much to his surprise, that someone lived
there. After some 2-way radio conversation, I was assigned the empty apartment
next door. There was no TV, only KOMA at night on the radio, and the nearest phone
was in front of the school. It took about a month to get a phone in my apartment,
and TV arrived in year 3 with one channel and a 30’ antenna my dad put up.
I probably survived the Shonto experience because I had spent 3
summers on my uncle’s ranch with no radio…except KOMA, and one TV station and
no phone for the first summer. The other 2 summers there was a phone on a 5-party
line. His ring was one short, two long, one short.
This is also the day that my father passed at 80 years old in
1994. I was fortunate enough to make it to Denver before he passed. My mom,
brother, and I were all at his side when he peacefully passed. Still miss him.
At his funeral a few days later, there was a small snowfall…a sign, according
to Navajo tradition, of a great man.
The Flagstaff school district put all sports on hold indefinitely due
to positive Covid tests on one high school football team. Smart move.
The passing of Assoc. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg is very sad. She
made a real mark on our country during her life. I have never been a fan of the
Trump administration, nor of the current US Senate. When Conservative Scalia
passed, Mitch said that February was too close to the Nov. election, and he
would let the next President pick the judge. And he did that. Now, when liberal
Ginsberg passed, he waits about 40 minutes after the announcement to say the
Senate will vote on Trump’s nominee before the election. He just wants to keep his
conservatives in power. It has nothing to do with the constitution, the law, or
normal protocol. As if our country isn’t divided enough, this will only further
divide us. So disappointed, mostly saddened, and just a tad angry.
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Today’s
Puzzle
Answer at the bottom of the page
I can be long or I can be short.
I can be grown and I can be bought.
I can be painted or left bare.
I can be round or square.
What am I?
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Historical
Events
451 Roman General Flavius Aetius defeats Attila the Hun at The
Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (Chalons-sur-Marne), halting Hun invasion of
Roman Gaul
1848 The American Association for the Advancement of Science is
created.
1884 Equal Rights Party nominates female candidates for US
President and Vice President
1904 Orville & Wilbur Wright fly a circle in their Flyer II
1932 Gandhi begins hunger strike against treatment of untouchables
1960 – The Flintstones debuted on ABC
1963 JFK proposes a joint US-Soviet voyage to the moon
1973 – An estimated 90 million people watched ‘The Battle of the
Sexes.’ Billie Jean King defeated Bobby Riggs in a televised tennis match at
the Astrodome in Houston, Texas.
1976 Playboy releases Jimmy Carter's interview that he lusts for
women
1993 – Vicki Van Meter took off from Maine, landing in San Diego
three days later, becoming the youngest female pilot to fly across the U.S.
2001 In an address to a joint session of
Congress and the American people, US President George W. Bush declares a
"war on terror"
2009 – Barack Obama appeared on five Sunday news/talk shows on the
same day: CBS’s Face the Nation, ABC’s This Week, CNN’s State of the Union with
John King, NBC/MSNBC’s Meet The Press and on Univision.
2015 Pope Francis meets Fidel Castro in Havana, on the 1st day of
his tour of Cuba
2019 Students from 185 countries stage the world's largest-ever protest
on climate change culminating in Manhattan rally led by Greta Thunberg
2019 Researchers for SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence) propose that aliens may have bugged earths co-orbitals (nearby
orbiting rocks) in "The Astronomical Journal"
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Birthdays
Today
@90 – Upton
Sinclair, American
novelist, critic, and essayist (d. 1968) |
72 – George
R.R. Martin, American
novelist, short story writer |
86 – Sophia
Loren, Italian actress |
@69 – Jay Ward,
American
animator, producer, (d. 1989; renal
cancer) |
@85 – Anne
Meara, American comedic actress, playwright
(d.2015) |
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Puzzle
Answer
A fingernail
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