September 29, 2015

9-30-15

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Sept  30, 2015  Week: 40 \ Day: 273
September Averages: 74°\42°
86004 Today: H 83° \ L 49° Average Sky Cover: 40% 
Wind ave:   4mph\Gusts:  14mph
Ave. High: 69° Record High: 83°[1980] Ave. Low: 37° Record Low: 24°[1907]
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Observances Today:                         
Ask A Stupid Question Day Link 
Banned Websites Awareness Day  Link  
Blasphemy Day  Link
International Translation Day Link

National Mulled Cider Day Link
National Women's Health & Fitness Day 

Independence Day (Botswana-1966-from UK)
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Quote of the Day 

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US Historical Highlights for Today
1730 - In British Court in London, seven Cherokee leaders sign the "Articles of Agreement" with the Lords Commissioners. It is a formal alliance covering allegiance, peace and the return of captives.
1846 - Anesthetic ether used for 1st time by American dentist Dr William Morton who extracts a tooth
1862 - First Battle of Newtonia (American Civil War), Newton County, Missouri
1865 - According to a report dated today, the following number of Indians were present at the Fort Sumner, New Mexico reservation in September: 402 Apache, 7,318 Navajo.
1898 - City of NY established
1920 - Time Square Theater opens at 217 W 42nd St NYC
1935 - The Hoover Dam, astride the border between the U.S. states of Arizona and Nevada, is dedicated by FDR
1936 - William Neal died at age 87. Neal carried mail between Tucson and Mammoth for 42 years and built the Mountain View Hotel at Oracle in 1894.
1953 - Earl Warren appointed Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court
1960 - Flintstones premieres (1st prime time animation show)
1980 - Ethernet specifications published by Xerox working with Intel and Digital Equipment Corporation.
1997 - Hooters agrees to pay $2 million in discrimination suits
2014 - A case of Ebola Virus reaches Dallas, Texas
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World Historical Highlights for Today
1929 - 1st manned rocket plane flight (by auto maker Fritz von Opel)
1946 - Joachim von Ribbentrop & Hermann Goering sentenced to death by Nuremberg trial
1950 - 1st congress of International Astronautical Federation opens in Paris
1970 - A Protestant man is shot and killed by Loyalists in Belfast, North Ireland
2005 - The controversial drawings of Muhammad are printed in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten.
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Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthdays Today 

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My Rambling Thoughts
Getting last things ready for my trip to CO. Vehicle washed by pros, gas tank filled, cash withdrawn, iPod got some new tunes and a new audiobook for the drive, newspaper put on hold,  checked weather for wedding site…rain the whole time we’re there. Leaving early tomorrow morning. Back next week, sometime. Therefore, this the last blog for a few days. Checked the glove box and found my adapter to let the iPod stuff come through the car speakers. Real old school, but still works nicely.
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Can you determine the professions/jobs described below? Each clue is an anagram of the answer.

One Word
1. Stamp on
2. For trees
3. Remit sin
4. Menial cop
5. Court poser

Two Words (first word is "a" or "the")
6. Dints teeth
7. He tots income
8. Sit, chat, pay, sir
9. I seen at birth cot
10. Their art's caustic

Two Words
11. Spirit shaper
12. Poles gather a report

Bonus (two jobs, middle word is "and")
13. Mass dress alteration


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Found on You Tube with some relevance to today
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…Amazing Facts…
At 15 years old, Jack Andraka invented a method of diagnosing pancreatic cancer, thus helping to save the lives of millions of people around the world. It is 168 times faster, 26,000 times cheaper, 400 times more sensitive, and has a 99% success rate.

The Rain Man (Laurence Kim Peek) was the only savant known to science who could read two pages of a book simultaneously - one with each eye.
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…Facebook Fact…
In 2011, more than a third of all US divorce filings contained the word 'Facebook'.

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…Harper’s Index…
7 – percentage of applicants admitted last year to Stanford’s business school, the most selective in the country

0.24 – to the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad
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…Instagram Photo of the Day… 

Earthpix Lion cub and the super moon eclipse | Photo by Burrard Lucas
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…Strange Superstitions from Around the World…
3. In Egypt:
Owls are said to be unlucky in Egypt, as they bring bad news for the one who happens to see or hear the bird (via Superstitions Of)
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…Unusual Fact of the Day…
The first British bungee jump occurred on April Fool’s Day, 1979. Dressed in a tux and hugging a bottle of champagne, 33-year-old David Kirdke did a back-flip off the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol. The crowd, who thought they were witnessing a suicide attempt, watched him plunge 250 feet toward the Avon, but to their surprise, never saw him hit water.
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2 jokes for the day
Q. What is a snake's favorite subject?

A. Hissssssssstory

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Mike, Jack, and Gary go for a hike in the woods.
They are out about an hour enjoying the sights when they come around a sharp bend in the trail and spot a bear just in front of them feeding off some vegetation next to the trail.
The bear lets out a menacing growl when it notices the hikers.
Mike says "jump up and down, make some noise to scare it away".
Jack says “that won't work, we need to play dead".
They both ask Gary “what do we do?"
There is no reply. Turning around they see Gary far down the trail behind them.           

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Yep, It Really Happened
Quito, Ecuador – the three gentle grammar pedants (one an environmental lawyer calling himself ‘Agente Punto Rinal’ i.e. ‘Agent Period’) devoted to ridding Quito of poorly written street graffiti, have been patrolling the capital since Nov. 2014, identifying misplaced commas and other atrocities and making sneaky corrective raids with spray paint. Punto Final told the Washing Post that he acts out of “moral obligation’—that ‘punctuation matters, commas matter, accents matter.” As police take vandalism seriously in Quito, the three must act stealthily, in hoodies and ski masks, with one always standing lookout.   
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Somewhat Useless Information
In South America, scientist have discovered deliberately made 'skull holes' that may have been made to treat painful headaches, brain disease, or to let 'evil spirits' out of the head. Called 'trepanation,' the process of making those holes was incredibly painful. The high number of trepanized skulls suggests that this brain surgery was commonplace.
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Contrary to the popular belief that humans use just 10 percent of their brain capacity, humans actually use virtually every part of the brain, and most of the brain is active all the time.
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Birthdays Today
“()” indicates age at death
(87) - Lester Garfield Maddox, (Gov-D-Ga)/restaurant owner d.2003
(86) - Deborah Kerr, actress (The King & I, Night of Iguana), d. 2007
84 - Angie Dickinson, [Angeline Brown], Kulm ND, actress (Police Woman)
80 - Johnny Mathis, SF, voclaist (Chances Are, 12th of Never)
72 - Marilyn McCoo, Jersey City NJ, host/singer (Solid Gold, 5th Dimension)
(70) - William Wrigley Jr., industrialist (Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company) d. 1932
(65) - Jody Powell, press mouthpiece (Jimmy Carter) d.2009
61 - Barry Williams, actor (Greg-Brady Bunch)
(59) - Truman Capote, American author (In Cold Blood) d.1984
58 - Fran Drescher, actress (Cadillac Man, Nanny)
54 - Crystal Bernard, Garland TX, actress (Amy-It's a Living, Helen-Wings)
54 - Eric Stoltz, actor (Anaconda, Pulp Fiction, Mask)
35 - Martina Hingis, Kosice Slovakia, tennis star (1997 Aust/US/Wimb)
(25) - Frankie Lymon, rocker (The Teenagers-Why do Fools Fall in Love) d.1968
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Historical Obits Today
Edith Roosevelt, First Lady (Teddy Roosevelt), 1948@87
Edgar Bergen, ventriloquist (Charlie McCarthy), kidney failure-1978@75
George Kirby, comedian/impressionist (Pearl Bailey), Parkinson’s-1995@71
Toohoolhoolzote, prophet of Nez Perce indians, in battle-1877@57ish
James Dean, actor (Rebel Without a Cause), car crash-1955@24
Anwar al-Awlaki, American-born terrorist\Islamist militant, hellfire missles-2011@40
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Brain Teasers Answers
1. Postman
2. Forester
3. Minister
4. Policeman
5. Prosecutor
6. The dentist
7. The economist
8. A psychiatrist
9. The obstetrician
10. The caricaturists
11. Parish priest
12. Telegraph operators
13. Seamstress and tailor

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Disclaimer: All opinions are mine…feel free to agree or disagree.
All ‘data’ info is from the internet sites and is usually checked with at least one other source, but I have learned that every site contains mistakes and sadly once the information is out there, many sites simply copy it and is therefore difficult to verify. Also for events occurring before the Gregorian calendar was adopted [1582] the dates may not be totally accurate.

And That Is All for Now

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