Mar 26, 2021 Week: 13 Day: 85 Visibility: 10 miles
Local: H 48°\
L 27° Ave.
Sky Cover: 60%
Wind: 9mph/ Gusts:
20mph Nearest
Lightning: 1224mi.
Low Risk of Fire: Active fire: 449mi
Record: 73°[1988] Record: -8°[1902]
Mar.
Averages: 53°/23° (6 days with moisture)
Today’s Quote
Don't cry because it's
over. Smile because it happened.
~Dr. Seuss
Random Tidbits
A person burns
essentially the same amount of calories whether they run or walk a mile.
Running just gets a person to a destination faster.
It would take, on
average, 1 hour and 43 minutes of walking to burn off a 540-calorie Big Mac.
A Little Something to Think About
If extra-fine means ‘even finer than fine’, and extra large ‘even
larger that large’ why doesn’t extraordinary mean ‘even more ordinary than
ordinary?
If seagulls fly over the sea, do bagels fly over the bay?
Weekly Observations
Lent [Christian] |
Thru 4/3 |
Passiontide |
21-4/3 |
National Cherry Blossom Festival Link |
20-4/10 |
American Chocolate Week Link |
21-27 |
Wellderly Week |
21-28 |
National Physicians Week Link |
25-31 |
Today’s Observations
Greek Independence Day[1821]
Legal Assistants Day
Live Long and
Prosper Day
Purple Day Link
Spinach Day
My Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
It’s a windy day but no moisture yet. Roads are dry and most of the
snow has melted. More snow expected, if not today, then tomorrow…a couple of
inches.
President Biden had his first real news conference. It was very educational. I’m sure the naysayers will find fault. I didn’t
agree with all he said, but he treated the reporters with respect and answered
the questions as a politician often does.
I don’t understand why the guy made his first court appearance in Boulder
and did not have to enter a plea. Is it because more charges are pending? I
guess I have watched too many crime shows where everything is wrapped up in one
hour.
VP Harris has a noticeably big job ahead in dealing with the border
crisis. The best news was that she is going to find fixes for the root problem…in
many Central American countries. That includes poverty, gangs, corruption, and
hurricanes. After visiting many 3rd world countries and working on
the Navajo reservation, I know that things must be extremely bad for people to
flee their homeland. To be honest, many don’t know any other way of life. I’m
sure there are people that are telling them life is better in other places. Some
teach their religion as the answer, others promise to help if they pay. In
order to stop these massive caravans, we have to deal with the problems at
their home country.
Daily Puzzle
Answer: bottom of the page
A teacher writes six words on a board: “cat dog has max dim tag.” She
gives three students, Albert, Bernard and Cheryl each a piece of paper with one
letter from one of the words. Then she asks, “Albert, do you know the word?”
Albert immediately replies yes. She asks, “Bernard, do you know the word?” He
thinks for a moment and replies yes. Then she asks Cheryl the same question.
She thinks and then replies yes. What is the word?
Historical Events
1169 – Saladin became the
emir of Egypt.
1812 – A political
cartoon in the Boston Gazette coined the term “gerrymander” (named after Governor
Elbridge Gerry) to describe oddly shaped electoral districts designed to help
incumbents win reelection.
1830 – The Book of Mormon
was published in Palmyra, New York.
1895 – The Phantoscope,
an early motion picture projector that enlarged film images for viewing by
large groups, was patented (#536,569) by Charles Francis Jenkins and Thomas
Armat.
1916 – Robert Stroud (The
Birdman of Alcatraz) stabbed and killed a prison guard in Leavenworth Kansas.
He was sentenced to Alcatraz for the murder.
1920 – This Side of
Paradise by F. Scott Fitzgerald was published.
1931 – Swissair is
founded as the national airline of Switzerland. It was bankrupt in 2002.
1953 – Dr. Jonas Salk
announced that he had successfully tested a vaccine against poliomyelitis, the
virus that causes polio.
1997 – After the 1995
discovery of the comet Hale-Bopp, 39 members of the ‘Heaven’s Gate’ cult
committed suicide to more quickly join the aliens on the ‘other side’ of the
comet.
1999 – The ‘Melissa worm’
infected Microsoft word processing and e-mail systems.
2005 The Taiwanese
government calls on 1 million Taiwanese to demonstrate in Taipei, in opposition
to the Anti-Secession Law of the People's Republic of China. Around 200,000 to
300,000 attend the walk.
2006 Burma's military
junta officially names Naypyidaw, a new city in Mandalay Division, the new
capital (Yangon previous capital)
2015 Richard III of
England (1452-1485) is reburied at Leicester Cathedral in England, after being
discovered under a carpark in Leicester in 2012
2017 Anti-corruption
protests in Russia result in hundreds arrested including opposition leader
Alexei Navalny
2018 E-commence group
Alibaba Group and US car maker Ford unveil a car vending machine without sales
people 5 stories high in Guangzhou, China
2019 European Parliament
votes for changes to copyright laws, making internet companies responsible for
copyright infringements
2019 Michelle Obama's
biography "Becoming" sells over 10 million copies according to its
publisher Bertelsmann
2020 American cases of
COVID-19 exceed all other countries on this date, with 81,578 cases and 1,180
deaths (New York Times)
Birthdays Today
91 – Sandra Day O’Connor,
American lawyer and jurist
87 – Alan Arkin, American
actor
@83 – Leonard Nimoy, American actor (d.
2015)
81 – James Caan, American
actor
81 – Nancy Pelosi, Speaker
of the House
77 – Diana Ross, American
singer-songwriter
73 – Steven Tyler,
American singer-songwriter
72 – Vicki Lawrence,
American actress and singer
@71 – Guccio Gucci, Italian fashion
designer, founded Gucci (died in 1953)
@71 – Thomas Lanier Tennessee Williams III, American playwright, and poet (d. 1983; OD)
71 – Martin Short,
comedian
64 – Leeza Gibbons,
American talk show host and television personality
57 – Curtis Sliwa,
American activist, founded Guardian Angels
53 – Kenny Chesney,
American singer-songwriter
36 – Keira Knightley,
English actress
Puzzle Answer
Dog. Albert knows right away because he has one of the unique letters
that only appear once in all the words: c o h s x i. So, we know the word is
not “tag.” All of these unique letters appear in different words, except for
“h” and “s” in “has,” and Bernard can figure out what the word is from the
unique letters that are left: t, g, h, s. This eliminates “max” and “dim.”
Cheryl can then narrow it down the same way. Because there is only one unique
letter left, the letter “d,” the word must be “dog.”
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