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Nov
11, 2020 Week: 46 Day:316 |
Local:
H
43°\ L 11°\Average Sky Cover: 5% |
Wind: 1mph\Gusts: 4mph |
Nearest
lightning: 1122mi.; active fire: 59mi |
low Risk of Fire |
Visibility: 10mi |
Record: 72°[1973] Record: 7°[1950] |
Nov
Averages: 53°\23° (3
days with moisture) |
Today’s Quote
I'd like to say to all my fans out there,
thanks for the support. And to all my doubters, thank you very much because you
guys have also pushed me. Usain Bolt
A little humor
Notice in health food shop window:
CLOSED DUE TO ILLNESS
True Things
Train crashes on whale's tail
Transportation officials in the Netherlands
said no one was injured when a subway train crashed through a barrier and came
to rest on a giant sculpture of a whale's tail. RET, the transport operator in
the city of Rotterdam, said the subway train jumped the tracks and crashed
through buffers on its approach to the De Akkers station. Officials said the
train would have crashed to the ground about 30 feet below if it hadn't landed
atop one of two whale tail sculptures next to the tracks. The sculpture is appropriately
named "Saved by the Whale's Tail." The company said the operator was
the only person on board the train at the time of the crash and he was not
injured. Maarten Struijs, who installed the whale tail sculptures 20 years ago,
said he was surprised to see the train had not damaged the plastic artwork.
Officials said they are working on a plan to remove the train, which is in a
spot where it would be difficult to bring a heavy crane.
Observations This Week
World Origami Days: 24-11/11 |
Snowcare For Troops Awareness Week: 8-14 |
World Kindness Week: 8-14 Link Nat’l Book Awards Week: 8-14 |
|
Nat’l Radiologic
Technology Week: 8-14 Link |
Childrens' Book Week:
9-15 Link |
Perioperative Nurse Week: 8-14 Link |
Nat’l Split Pea Soup Week: 9-15 Link |
Observations for Today
Armistice
Day
Death/Duty
Day
International
Pathology Day
Forget-Me-Not
Day
National
Homunculus Awareness Day
Red
Lipstick Day
My Rambling Thoughts
Happy
Veteran’s Day. Thank you for your service. My dad served in the Navy before the
war and was drafted by the Army during WWII.
A
tad chilly early this morning but warming up to a blustering 44 by noon. I headed
out to Sam’s to get a few things, then stopped for a pedicure. I hadn’t done one
since August, so it was definitely time. Happily. they opened at 10a so I was
home by noon. The last time I was there, they didn’t open until noon.
While
the current administration is not offering much assistance to the new leaders,
it is good to remember that both have many close ties to the Senate so this
will move a little slower than usual, but will move forward.
The
guide from our Focus/HLO trip to Ethiopia posted on FB. I commented on his post
and then he answered that the current government problems are real, that it is
a dangerous time, and asked for prayers for the people. It all about ethnic strife.
So sad for such a beautiful country.
FYI:
Pfizer was not part of Trump’s Operation Warp Speed and paid for their own
research, then joined Operation Warp Speed for distribution. Also, while I don’t
really follow the stock market at all, Trump warned that it would crash if
Biden was elected. So far, it is gaining well for those with funds in the stock
market.
Back
on Oct. 20th, one of my former students from my teaching days at
Tuba was found deceased on a sidewalk in Flagstaff. Sadly, it has now been called
a homicide. He was only 53, had 4 adult children and 8 grandkids. So very sad.
Today’s Puzzle
Answer at the bottom of the page
What
is unusual about the following words: revive, banana, grammar, voodoo, assess,
potato, dresser, uneven?
Historical Events
1215
– The Fourth Lateran Council met, defining the doctrine of transubstantiation,
the process by which bread and wine are, by that doctrine, said to transform
into the body and blood of Christ.
1750
– The F.H.C. Society, also known as the Flat Hat Club, was formed at Raleigh
Tavern, Williamsburg, Virginia. It is the first American college fraternity.
1790
– Chrysanthemums were introduced to England from China by M. Cels (France).
1839
– The Virginia Military Institute was founded in Lexington, Virginia.
1851
– The first U.S. patent (Patent #8,509) for a telescope design was issued to
Alvan Clark of Cambridge, Mass.
1864
– Sherman’s March to the Sea – General William Tecumseh Sherman began burning
Atlanta, Georgia to the ground in preparation for his march south.
1918
– Armistice signed by the Allies and Germany comes into ending WW I.
1921
– President Harding dedicated the Tomb of Unknown Soldier at Arlington
Cemetery. It is also known as The Tomb of the Unknowns.
1926
– U.S. Route 66 was established. It has also been called The Will Rogers
Highway.
1930
– Albert Einstein and Leó Szilárd got the patent (#1,781,541) for their
invention, the Einstein refrigerator.
1935
-A record 72,395 feet was reached by Lt. Col. Albert William Stevens and
Captain Orvil Anderson, by helium balloon in a sealed gondola, Explorer II.
1938
– Kate Smith first sang Irving Berlin’s God Bless America on her radio show.
Irving Berlin had originally written it in 1918.
1987
– Van Gogh’s Irises sold for a (then) record 53.9 million dollars at auction
via Sotheby’s, New York.
1994
– Bill Gates bought Leonardo da Vinci’s Codex Leicester for $30,800,000. It was
an insightful overview of Leonardo’s thoughts on a variety of topics. It was
also the most expensive book or manuscript of all time.
2004
– The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) confirmed the death of Yasser
Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas was elected chairman of the PLO minutes later.
2014
An Italian appeals court overturns a manslaughter conviction against 6
scientists for failing to give adequate warning of a deadly earthquake
2014
The people of Catalonia in north-eastern Spain vote in a disputed and
non-binding poll on independence
2017
Largest Singles Day sales ever - Alibaba says its sales alone were $25.3
billion
2018
On centenary of WWI Armistice Day French President Macron urges world to reject
Nationalism in speech to under Arc de Triomphe in Paris
2019
Violent day in Hong Kong as protests continue with person set alight and
another shot amid general strike
Birthdays Today
@84 – Kurt Vonnegut, American novelist, short
story writer, essayist (d. 2007)
@87 – Jonathan Winters, American actor, and
screenwriter (d. 2013)
80 – Barbara Boxer, American journalist, and
politician
@60 – George S. Patton, American general (d.
1945; accident)
60 – Stanley Tucci, American actor, and
director
58 – Demi Moore, American actress, director,
and producer
56 – Calista Flockhart, American actress
46 – Leonardo DiCaprio, American actor, and
producer
31 – Adam Rippon, figure skater
Puzzle Answer
If
you take the first letter of each word and place it at the end, it'll spell the
same word backward