26 April 2023
Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 17 Day 115 \ Ave. Sky Cover 15% \ Visibility 32 miles Flagstaff Today 68° \31° Wind
14mph \ Gusts 43mph
Air Quality: Moderate \ High Risk of fire \ Nearest active fire 234mi \ Nearest
Lightning 177mi
Apr. Averages for Flagstaff: 60° \ 27° \3
Days of moisture
Sunshine and lots of WIND
Today’s
Quote
Weekly
Observations
21-5/2 Festival of Ridvan (Baha'i)
22-27 International Wildlife Film Week
22-29 National Dance Week
22-30 National
Park Week
Administrative Professionals Week
23-29 Disability Book Week
Fibroid
Awareness Week
National
Infertility Awareness Week
National
Karaoke Week
Medical
Laboratory Professionals Week
National
Crime Victims Rights Week
National
Library Week
National
Pediatric Transplant Week
National
Princess Week
Mule
Days
Sky
Awareness Week
24-30 National Infant Immunization Week (NIIW)
National Scoop The Poop Week
24-28 National Playground Safety Week
National Youth Violence Prevention Week
24-30 Spring
Astronomy Week
World Immunization Week
26-29 American Quilters Society Week
Daily Observations
Administrative Professionals Day or Secretary's Day Link
Alien Day
Alien Day Link
Audubon Day Link
Denim Day Link
Hug An Australian Day
International Chernobyl Disaster Remembrance Day
International Guide Dogs Day Link
International Noise Awareness Day
International Noise Awareness Day Link
Lesbian Visibility Day
Lesbian Visibility Day Link
National Dissertation Day Link
National Help A Horse Day
National Library Outreach Day
National Pretzel Day Link
Pretzel Day Link
Richter Scale Day
Stop Food Waste Day Link
Walk at Lunch Day
Walk at Lunch Day Link
World Intellectual Property Day
World Intellectual Property Day Link
World Pinhole Photography Day
My
Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
Spring
= wind here in the high desert.
I
heard an interesting report about ‘Reverse Verification’. In normal verification one takes one item and
proves or disproves it through investigation. In reverse verification, one
takes a known established thing and verifies it by simply questioning its
validity. This is the blueprint for much of conservative media. Trump and
Tucker have been doing this a lot. McCarthy, back in the day, also did this. Reverse
verification is all around. Just keep your eyes open when you see/hear it.
I
didn’t even know there are “desert elephants”. Thanks, National Geographic for educating
me. Not many are left, but those that are around are fascinating. They are the same
species as the African Savana elephants but have made adjustments to the desert
life.
In
old-time USA, everyone could have an opinion. In today’s America, there are way
too many who think their opinion is the only one that matters. Sad.
Harry
Belafonte gave us great music and advocacy during his 96 years. RIP
Enjoy…
Toys
Remembered…
Simon
In the
1960s, Ralph Baer, a military engineer, would spend his free time developing
early video games, dreaming of a system that would allow gameplay on a
television. He eventually succeeded and in 1971, Baer and his employer Sanders
Associates received the first-ever video game patent for the Magnavox Odyssey,
which went on sale in 1972.
In 1976,
Baer, who was now working as a consultant for toy company Marvin Glass and
Associates, took inspiration from an Atari arcade game called Touch Me, where
players had to repeat a bright light and annoyingly loud musical sequence. Over
the next two years, Baer worked on a portable game with four pleasing bugle
horn notes. Originally called Follow Me, the new game was licensed by Milton
Bradley as Simon, after the children’s game Simon Says.
In 1978,
Simon debuted at the disco palace Studio 54 in New York City. That Christmas
season, stores reported long lines of people hoping to nab one of the highly
desired machines, despite its original price of $25 (around $90 in 2022). While
Simon could only play one sequence, was bulky, and required many D batteries,
it was a huge step forward in home electronic gaming. The popularity of Simon
was boosted by its coincidental connection to Steven Spielberg’s 1977 film
Close Encounters of the Third Kind. During the science-fiction classic’s
finale, aliens communicate using a sequence of musical notes and lights on
their spaceship that resembles Simon’s gameplay.
By the end
of the 1980s, 10 million Simons were sold despite many knock-offs of the
original game entering production. Newer versions of the game, including Simon
Optix, where users wear a virtual reality-style headset to play, have brought
the game to new audiences — but the retro appeal of the original remains.
Moon Facts…
The Moon is not actually round.
While it might appear as a perfect sphere
all the way from here, the shape of the Moon is closer to that of a lemon.
Believed to be a piece of ancient Earth that broke off, the forming Moon was
susceptible to the tidal forces and gravity, which pulled on the lunar crust,
heating it up and stretching it at the poles that lined up with Earth. This resulted
in two small bulges at either end, making it similar to a lemon shape.
State
Names Origins…
Florida
The Sunshine State is justly
named in part after the bright and colorful plant life that can be found
throughout the Florida peninsula. In April 1513, famous Spanish explorer Juan
Ponce de León made his first European expedition to Florida, landing near what
is now St. Augustine (America’s oldest city). It’s believed that the region’s
spectacular plant life and the fact that the date was very close to Easter
(or Pascua in Spanish) inspired the name Pascua
Florida after one of Spain’s celebrations of the religious holiday,
the Feast of Flowers. Every year, on April 2, Florida celebrates de León’s
discovery with its official
state day, Pascua Florida Day. You don’t need to wait until then to
experience Florida’s beauty, however, as its stunning flora and unique natural
sites like the Everglades can be enjoyed year round.
Historical
Events
v 1954 – Polio vaccine trials began.
v
April 26,
1968 Birthday (fictional) Lorelai Gilmore, TV Mom
v 1986 – A nuclear reactor accident at the
Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic in the
Soviet Union, created the world’s worst nuclear disaster.
Birthdays
Today
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