Jun 20, 2021 Week: 26
Day: 171 |
Visibility: 10 miles Ave. Sky Cover: 45% |
Local: H 91°\ L 56° |
Wind: 7mph/ Gusts: 11mph |
EXTREME Risk of Fire:
Active fire: 23mi Nearest Lightning: 4mi. |
Jun Averages: 70°/42° (1 day w/moisture) |
Today’s Quote
Many a trip continues
long after movement in time and space have ceased. John Steinbeck |
Random Tidbits
Rice is the seed
harvested from the long, grass-like stalk of the Oryza sativa plant (Asian
rice) or the Oryza glaberrima (African rice).
As a cereal grain, it is
the most widely consumed staple food for a large part of the world's human
population, especially in Asia.
From East Asia, rice was
spread to South and Southeast Asia. Rice was introduced to Europe through
Western Asia, and to the Americas through European colonization.
Humor: Robots
Party for one
One night in Hamburg, Germany, one Amazon Alexa took the evening’s
entertainment into its own, er, hands. At about 1:50 a.m., this particular
Alexa started playing music at such exceedingly high volume that neighbors were
forced to call the police. The police arrived and knocked, but, of course, no
one was there to answer the door. They broke in and pulled the plug on the
device. As a parting gift, they left a new lock on the door, for the homeowner
to discover when he returned. He was forced to head to the police station to pick
up the new key—and pay the considerable locksmith bill. He and his Alexa have
since parted ways, after this “U-turn” in their relationship.
True Things
The Foreign Press
Diplomats and their
families from the Russian embassy in Pyongyang, North Korea, worked around
extreme COVID-induced travel restrictions by pushing themselves across the
border in a rail trolley to reach their home country on Feb. 25, the BBC
reported. The group of eight, including children, traveled 32 hours by train
and two hours by bus to reach the Russian border, but trains and wagons cannot
enter or leave North Korea, so the embassy's third secretary, Vladislav
Sorokin, completed the last half-mile of the journey by pushing the trolley
filled with the group and their baggage on train tracks over the Tumen River,
where they were met by Russian officials at the border station. [BBC,
2/26/2021]
Weekly Observations
National Hermit Week |
13-20 |
Meet A Mate Week |
14-20 |
National Week of Making Link |
17-23 |
Animal
Rights Awareness Week Link Link |
20-26 |
Today’s Observations
American Eagle Day Link International Nystagmus Awareness
Day Link National Hike With A Geek Day Link National Vanilla Milkshake Day Midsummer World
Productivity Day
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My Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
Parts of our mountain town got some rain, sadly, none here at my
place. It is still hot and dry.
I cleaned the bedroom, flipped the mattress, and got ready for the
first day of summer tomorrow. Washed two loads of linens, now just waiting for
them to dry.
A recent survey shows that 1 in 4 parents of children 6-12 refuse
to sign consent for the vaccine even after the child has asked for it. We will never get to herd immunity if this
trend continues. I’m sure glad I’m not working in a school. I would have a hard
time dealing with the non-vaccine parents as it would be exposing all the other
children.
As we pull out of Afghanistan, we must protect those who served as
translators, guides, and their families. The pro-American Afghans helped and if
we don’t evacuate them, they will be dead. The US has done this in every war
and this one is no different. Congress needs to appropriate funds NOW so they
can get out by the Sept. deadline. If we do not evacuate them, the next time we
get into a conflict/war, word will spread rapidly that we don’t protect locals
who help us. Vets are pushing Congress to do this, but so many in Congress don’t
think it is necessary. So short-sighted and sad.
2 New Puzzles Everyday
Answer: bottom of the page
FIVE
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SOMEWHERE RAINBOW |
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Historical Events
1214 – The University of Oxford received its Royal charter.
1782 – Congress adopted the Great Seal of the United States, with the
Bald Eagle clutching both an olive branch and thirteen arrows.
1837 – Queen Victoria, age 18, ascended the British throne following
the death of her uncle, King William IV. She ruled for 63 years to 1901.
1840 – Samuel Morse received the patent (#1647) for the telegraph.
1893 – Lizzie Borden was acquitted of the murders of her father and
stepmother.
1944 – The German experimental MW 18014 V-2 rocket reached an altitude
of 176 km, becoming the first man-made object to reach outer space.
1945 – The United States Secretary of State approved the transfer of Wernher
von Braun (and other Nazi rocket scientists) to America.
1948 – Toast of the Town, a variety series hosted by Ed Sullivan,
premiered on CBS. It was later renamed The Ed Sullivan Show.
1963 – The United States and the Soviet Union agreed to establish a
“hotline” communication system between the two nations.
1975 – Hollywood’s first major summer ‘must see’ blockbuster, Jaws,
opened in theaters.
1988 Supreme Court upholds a law that made it illegal for private
clubs to discriminate against women and minorities
1990 Nelson Mandela lands in NYC to begin a tour of US
1991 The Bundestag (German parliament) decides to move the capital
from Bonn back to Berlin
1995 Space probe Ulysses begins 2nd passage behind the Sun
2018 US President Donald Trump signs Executive Order ending
family separation at the border for illegal immigrants
2019 Chinese President Xi Jinping meets Kim Jong-un in Pyongyang, the
first Chinese president to visit North Korea in 14 years
2020 Highest-ever temperature recorded in the Arctic circle,
38C (100F) in Verkhoyansk, Siberia
Birthdays Today
@86 – Danny Aiello,
American actor (d. 2019)
79 – Brian Wilson, American singer-songwriter and producer [Beach
Boys]
75 – Bob Vila, American television host
72 – Lionel Richie, American singer-songwriter
69 – John Goodman, American actor
54 – Nicole Kidman, American-Australian actress
53 – Robert Rodriguez, American director, producer, and screenwriter
@50 – Errol Flynn,
Australian-American actor (d. 1959; heart attack)
@45 – Audie Murphy,
American lieutenant and actor, Medal of Honor recipient (d. 1971; private plane
crash)
Puzzles Answer
High five Somewhere over the rainbow