December 31, 2015

New Year's Day 2016

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!

1.1.16 Week: 01 \ Day: 1
January Averages: 43°\16°
86004 Today: H 35° \ L 14° Average Sky Cover: 0% 
Wind Chill-drop temp by 10°
Wind ave:   11mph\Gusts:  23mph
Ave. High: ° Record High: °[] Ave. Low: ° Record Low: °[]
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Quote of the Day 

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Observances Today:                        
Asarah B'Tevet
Copyright Law Day
Commitment Day
Ellis Island Day
Euro Day
First Foot Day Link Link
Global Family Day Link
Mummer's Parade
New Year's Dishonor List Day
Polar Bear Plunge or Swim Day Link (Cony Island NY & Vancouver, BC)
Rose Bowl Game
Tournament of Roses Parade Day
World Day of Peace Link
Z Day

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Independence Day-Haiti-1804 from France  
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Observances This Week:
1-8
Celebration of Life Week Link
Diet Resolution Week 
Silent Record Week
New Year's Resolutions Week

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US Historical Highlights for Today
1673 - Regular mail delivery begins between NY & Boston
1788 - Quakers in Pennsylvania emancipate their slaves
1797 - Albany replaces NYC as capital of NY
1818 - Official reopening of the White House
1842 - 1st illustrated weekly magazine in US publishes 1st issue, NYC
1852 - 1st US public bath opens, in NYC
1853 - 1st practical fire engine (horse-drawn) in US enters service
1862 - 1st US income tax (3% of incomes > $600, 5% of incomes > $10,000)
1863 - Emancipation Proclamation issued by Lincoln to free slaves in confederate states
1874 - New York City annexes the Bronx
1892 - Ellis Island becomes reception center for new immigrants
1893 - 1st US college extension courses for credit, Univ of Chicago
1898 - Brooklyn merges with NY to form present City of NY
1899 - Cuba liberated from Spanish rule by the US, American occupation continues till 1902
1902 - 1st Rose Bowl: Michigan beats Stanford 49-0
1907 - US President T. Roosevelt shakes a record 8,513 hands in 1 day
1928 - 1st US air-conditioned office building opens, San Antonio
1934 - Alcatraz officially becomes a federal prison
1935 - 1st Orange Bowl: Bucknell beats Miami (FL), 26-0
1936 - 1st newspaper to microfilm its current issues, NY Herald Tribune
1948 - 1st color newsreel filmed (Pasadena, California)
1985 - US's 1st manadatory seat belt law goes into effect (NY)
1985 - The Internet's Domain Name System is created.
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World Historical Highlights for Today
1965 - International Cooperation Year begins
1972 - International Book Year begins
1974 - World Population Year begins
1975 - International Women's Year begins
1979 - International Year of the Child begins
1980 - International Decade of Water & Sanitation begins
1981 - International Year for the Disabled begins
1985 - International Youth Year begins
1986 - International Peace Year begins
1987 - International Year of Shelter for Homeless begins
1988 - Year of the Reader begins
1989 - Year of the Young Reader begins
1992 - International Space Year begins
1994 - International Year of Family
1995 - International Year of Tolerance
1999 - International Year of Elderly
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45 BC - The Julian calendar takes effect for the first time.
1 - Origin of Christian Era
630 - The Prophet Muhammad sets out toward Mecca with the army that captures it bloodlessly.
1502 - Portuguese navigators discover Rio de Janeiro
1583 - 1st day of the Gregorian calendar in Holland & Flanders
1600 - Scotland begins its numbered year on January 1 instead of 25 March.
1610 - German astronomer Simon Marius 1st discovers the Jupiter moons, but does not officially report it, Galileo does on July 1 1610
1651 - Charles II Stuart crowned king of Scotland
1758 - The International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature establish the "starting point" for standardized species names across the animal kingdom. This naming system is based on the binomial nomenclature laid out in Carolus Linnaeus 10th edition of Systema Naturae.
1785 - "Daily Universal Register" (Times of London) publishes 1st issue
1801 - The Irish Parliament votes to join the Kingdom of Great Britain, forming the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
1818 - Mary Shelley's "Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus" is published anonymously by the small London publishing house of Lackington, Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones
1846 - Yucatan declares independence from Mexico
1880 - Building of Panama Canal, begins
1896 - Wilhelm RΓΆntgen announces his discovery of x-rays      
1912 - Sun Yat-sen forms Chinese Republic
1917 - T. E. Lawrence joins the forces of the Arabian sheik Feisal al Husayn, beginning his adventures that will lead him to Damascus by October, 1918
1970 - The Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR), an infantry regiment of the British Army, comes into existence
2002 - Euro banknotes and coins become legal tender in twelve of the European Union's member states.
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Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthdays Today 

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My Rambling Thoughts
Ready for a quiet NYE in our little mountain town. Beautiful sky but chilly with the wind to end this crazy year. Ready for 2016.
Flipped on the news to see the fire in Dubai. The hotel there is way out of my price range, but I do remember seeing it on my two trips there with Focus Travel. A fire of this size, in these times, is very suspicious.
Have a great new year, and may your best day of 2015 be your worst day of 2016.
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Bark At The Moon
Language brain teasers are those that involve the English language. You need to think about and manipulate words and letters.
Difficulty 3 out of 4
What emotion is an anagram of a homonym of an antonym of a homonym of an anagram of wolf?
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…Bet You Didn’t Know…
The first advanced anti-tobacco campaign in the modern world was started by the Nazis.
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…Civil War Facts You May Not Know…
People remember the men who fought in the war, but many don't realize that hundreds of women dressed up as men to fight as well.
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…Grammar Craziness…
The English language includes an interesting category of words and phrases called contronyms (also spelledcontranyms, or referred to as autoantonyms) — terms that, depending on context, can have opposite or contradictory meanings. When you use these words, be sure the context clearly identifies which meaning is intended:
2. Aught: All, or nothing
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…Harper’s Index…
2 Number of people fatally shot by British police in the past three years
2.4 Average number of people fatally shot by US police each day so far this year
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…Instagram Photo of the Day… 

natgeoA young girl in her Sunday dress rides her mother's mule on the way home from a full day at a country market near Jacmel, Haiti. Their home is in the mountains stretched out across the distant horizon. Photo by @fotokonbit 
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2 jokes for the day
Duck Talks With The Bartender -

A duck walks into a pub and orders a pint of beer and a ham sandwich.
The bartender looks at him and says, "Hang on! You're a duck."
"I see your eyes are working," replies the duck.
"And you can talk!" exclaims the bartender.
"I see your ears are working, too," says the duck. "Now if you don't mind, can I have my beer and my sandwich please?"
"Certainly, sorry about that" says the bartender as he pours the duck a pint. "It's just we don't get many ducks in this pub. What are you doing around this way?"
"I'm working on the building site across the road," explains the duck. "I'm a plasterer."
The flabbergasted bartender cannot believe the duck and wants to learn more, but takes the hint when the duck pulls out a newspaper from his bag and proceeds to read it.
So, the duck reads his paper, drinks his beer, eats his sandwich, bids the barman good day and leaves.
The same thing happens for two weeks.
Then one day the circus comes to town.
The ringmaster comes into the pub for a pint and the bartender says to him:
"You're with the circus, aren't you? Well, I know this duck that could be just brilliant in your circus. He talks, drinks beer, eats sandwiches, reads the newspaper and everything!"
"Sounds marvelous," says the ringmaster, handing over his business card. "Get him to give me a call."
So the next day when the duck comes into the pub the bartender says, "Hey Mr. Duck, I reckon I can line you up with a top job, paying really good money."
"I'm always looking for the next job," says the duck. "Where is it?"
"At the circus," says the bartender.
"The circus?" repeats the duck.
"That's right," replies the bartender.
"The circus?" the duck asks again. "With the big TENT?"
"Yeah!" the bartender replies.
"With all the animals who live in CAGES, and performers who live in CARAVANS?" says the duck.
"Of course," the bartender replies.
"And the tent has CANVAS sides and a big canvas roof with a hole in the middle?" persists the duck.
"That's right!" says the bartender.
The duck shakes his head in amazement, and says: "What would they want with a plasterer???"
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Emergency Landing -

Rajiv and Priya are flying to Australia for a two-week vacation to celebrate their 40th anniversary.
Suddenly, over the public address system, the Captain announces, "Ladies and Gentlemen, I am afraid I have some very bad news. Our engines have ceased functioning and we will attempt an emergency landing. Luckily, I see an uncharted island below us and we should be able to land on the beach. However, the odds are that we may never be rescued and will have to live on the island for the rest of our lives."
Thanks to the skill of the flight crew, the plane lands safely on the island.
An hour later, Rajiv turns to his wife and asks, “Priya, did we pay our deposit cheque yet to ICICI Bank?”
“No, sweetheart” she responds.
Rajiv, still shaken from the crash landing, then asks, “Priya, did we pay our ICICI Bank Mastercard yet?”
“Oh no! I’m sorry. I forgot to send the cheque,” she says.
“One last thing, Priya. Did you remember to send cheques for the auto loan to them too this month?” he asks.
“Oh, forgive me, Rajiv,” begged Priya. “I didn’t send that one, either.”
Rajiv grabs her and gives her the biggest hug in 40 years. Priya pulls away and asks him, “So, why did you hug me?”
“Rajiv answers, “They’ll find us!”    
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Yep, It Really Happened
JEONGEUP, South Korea - A South Korean teacher is facing child abuse charges for allegedly eating a live hamster in front of his students to teach them "how dear life is," police said. Police said the 44-year-old teacher, identified by the surname Yu, allegedly chewed a live hamster and swallowed it May 11 at the boarding school in Jeongeup while seven children were present. Yu, who also allegedly used abusive language in front of the students, allegedly told police he had caught students abusing hamsters and wanted to teach them "how dear life is" by making them watch him eat one of the rodents. Police said Yu left the facility after complaints from colleagues and he was arrested after parents of the students contacted authorities. Yu was charged with child abuse and released from custody, police said. The teacher publicly apologized to the children and their parents. "I couldn't control the situation and couldn't stand it," he told Yonhap News. "While watching the hamsters die from teasing, I thought I should teach the children it was wrong to make light of life." Yu said he would not have eaten the hamster if he had known his actions would be considered child abuse.
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Somewhat Useless Information
7 Wonders of the Modern World.

Empire State Building. Finished in 1931, it towers 1,250 ft over New York City. Until the first tower of the World Trade Center was finished in 1972, it was the world's tallest building. 

Itaipu Dam. Built by Brazil and Paraguay on the Parana River, the dam is the world's largest hydroelectric power plant. Completed in 1991, it took 16 years to build this series of dams whose length totals 7,744 m. It used 15 times more concrete than the Channel Tunnel. 

CN Tower. In 1976, the tower became the world's tallest freestanding structure. It looms about one-third of a mile high (1,815 ft) above Toronto, Canada. A glass floor on the observation deck lets you look 342 m down to the ground. 

Panama Canal. It took 34 years to create this 50-mile-long canal across the Isthmus of Panama. The amount of digging required and the size of its locks helped make it the most expensive project in American history at that time-and the most deadly: About 80,000 people died during construction (most from disease).

Channel Tunnel. Known as the Chunnel, it links France and England. It is 31 mi long, and 23 of those miles are 150 ft beneath the seabed of the English Channel. High-speed trains whiz through its side-by-side tubes. 

Netherlands North Sea Protection Works. Because the Netherlands is below sea level, a series of dams, floodgates, and surge barriers have been built to keep the sea from flooding the country during storms. The biggest part of the project was a two-mile-long moveable surge barrier across an estuary finished in 1986. It is made of 65 concrete piers each weighing 18,000 tons. It has been said that the project is nearly equal in scale to the Great Wall of China.

Golden Gate Bridge. Connecting San Francisco and Marin County in 1937, for many years this was the longest suspension bridge in world. Experts thought that winds, ocean currents, and fog would make it impossible to build. It took about four years to complete the beautiful 1.2-mile-long bridge. It is held by 80,000 mi worth of steel wire, and the cables that link the two towers are 36.5 inches in diameter the biggest ever made.

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Birthdays Today
“()” indicates age at death
(91) - J[erome] D[avid] Salinger, novelist (Catcher in the Rye), born in NYC, New York(d.2010)
(89) - Barry Goldwater, (Sen-R-Az, 1953-65, 69- )/Pres candidate (R) 1964) (d.1998)
86 - Ty Hardin, actor (Riptide, Bronco), born in NYC, New York
(83) - Paul Revere, silversmith/US patriot (British are coming) (d.1818)
(82) - Alfred Stieglitz, American photographer/art dealer (Camera Work), born in Hoboken, New Jersey(d.1946)
(77) - J. Edgar Hoover, first Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (1924-72), born in Washington, D.C. (d.1972)
(74) - Betsy Ross [Elizabeth Griscom], seamstress widely credited with making the first American flag(d.1836)
74 - Country Joe McDonald, California, rock guitarist/vocalist (& the Fish) (d.)
47 - Morris Chestnut, actor (Boyz N the Hood)
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Historical Obits Today
@92-1998 - Helen Wills Moody, American tennis player (31 Grand Slams)
@86-1994 - Cesar Romero, US actor (Joker-Batman)
@85-2013 - Patti Page [Clara Ann Fowler], American pop singer
@82-2015 - Donna Douglas, American actress (Elly May Clampett-The Beverly Hillbillies)
@80-2005 - Shirley Chisholm, 1st African American Congresswoman and presidential candidate
@29-1953 - Hank Williams, country singer (Cold Cold Heart), alcohol
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Brain Teasers Answers
The anagram of wolf is fowl. The homonym of fowl is foul. The antonym of foul is fair. The homonym of fair is fare. The anagram of fare is fear, which is the emotion.
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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 ╫╫╫╫

December 30, 2015

New Year's Eve 2015

FYI: This blog is now at a new address. Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!

December 31, 2015  Week: 53/01 \ Day: 265
December Averages: 44°\17°
86004 Today: H 37° \ L Average Sky Cover: 0% 
Wind ave:   6mph\Gusts:  15mph
Ave. High: 42° Record High: 62°[1945] Ave. Low: 16° Record Low: -16[1911]
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Quote of the Day 

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Observances Today:                        
First Nights

Leap Second Time Adjustment Day
Look On The Bright Side Day Link
Make Up Your Mind Day
New Year's Dishonor List
No Interruptions Day
Universal Hour of Peace Day

World Peace Meditation Day
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Observances This Week:
26-1/1
Kwanzaa
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US Historical Highlights for Today
1783 - Import of African slaves banned by all of the Northern US states
1794 - After agreeing to a peace with the United States on November 7th, today the CHEROKEE and CHICKAMAUGA Indians, and the U.S. will exchange prisoners, this will effectively end the CHICKAMAUGA War.
1831 - Gramercy Park is deeded to New York City. 1879 - Cornerstone laid for Honolulu's Iolani Palace (only royal palace in US)
1879 - Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera "Pirates of Penzance" premieres in NYC
1890 - Ellis Island (NYC) opens as a US immigration depot
1897 - Brooklyn's last day as a city, it incorporates into NYC (1/1/1898)
1904 - The first New Year's Eve celebration is held in Times Square, then known as Longacre Square, in New York, New York.
1914 - About 300 Arizona saloons did a rush business as they prepared to permanently close at midnight in accordance with the new prohibition amendment.
1935 - Charles Darrow patents Monopoly
1943 - NYC's Times Square greets Frank Sinatra at Paramount Theater
1946 - Pres Harry Truman officially proclaims end of WW II
1950 - Jockeys W Shoemaker & Joe Culmone set record of 388 wins in a year
1953 - Willie Shoemaker shatters record, riding 485 winners in a year
1955 - The General Motors Corporation becomes the first U.S. Corporation to make over $1 billion USD in a year.
1961 - Beach Boys play their debut gig under that name
1977 - Ted Bundy escapes from jail in Colorado
1981 - CNN Headline News debuts
1984 - US leaves UNESCO
1990 - Sci-Fi Channel on cable TV begins transmitting
1995 - Cartoonist Bill Watterson ends his "Calvin & Hobbes" comic strip
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World Historical Highlights for Today
1600 - British East India Company chartered
1695 - A window tax is imposed in England, causing many shopkeepers to brick up their windows to avoid the tax.
1745 - Bonnie Prince Charlies army meets with de Esk
1857 - Queen Victoria chooses Ottawa as new capital of Canada
1901 - In the first election under their new constitution, Cuba elects a Congress and their first president, Tomas Estrada Palma
1911 - Marie Curie receives her 2nd Nobel Prize
1945 - Ratification of United Nations Charter completed
1958 - Cuban dictator Batista tells his Cabinet he is fleeing the country
1958 - International Geophyscial Year ends
1999 - Boris Yeltsin resigns as President of Russia, leaving Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as the acting President.
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Birthdays Today:
How many can you identify? Answers below in Birthdays Today 

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My Rambling Thoughts
What a great time in Chicago with brother and sister-in-law and all the other in-laws. Amazing weather for December…little rain, quite a bit of sun, not a lot of wind. Great food at all the parties. Nice to see the nieces and nephews who have really grown, as it has been 2 years since I saw them. Lots of nice presents from many relatives and in-laws. I got to meet a new fiancΓ©, a new girlfriend, and a 3 year old nephew. Then almost all the out of towners planned to leave on the 28th. Weather became a real issue. My brother and his wife made it out before 8a at O’Hare. A brother-in-law had an 8a flight from Midway cancelled. He didn’t get out until Wed. As I arrived at the airport at 10:15 for a 12:30 flight, I got a text that it had a 20 min delay. By the time I checked my luggage it was a 2 hour delay. When I got to the gate, I saw another flight heading out at 11:30. Just as I headed to that gate, a lady got off the plane with all her stuff. I asked if there was any room, and there was…one seat thanks to the lady who left. While I was entering the plane, I got a text that my original flight had been cancelled. After about an hour we had to deplane, but didn’t give up. The pilot really wanted to get to Atlanta. An hour later we re-boarded. Three hours later they started the deicing procedure. When that was finished, about 30 minutes, the tug that pulls the plane out of the stall got stuck. From the window I saw 2 guys with snow shovels go behind the plane to get the tug out of the snowbank. Finally we were on the runway and headed for Atlanta. I had called to get another flight before I got on the plane the first time. The new flight was to be at 8a. When we landed in Atlanta I called to confirm the flight and found that Delta had added a flight that would get into Phoenix at midnight. I took it. I missed the last shuttle (12M) to Flag by about 15 minutes, but got on the 6a one. The airport was deserted at 1:30. I called at least a dozen motels and they either had no rooms or didn’t have a shuttle. I got to spend the night in baggage claim. Slept a little, walked a little, and watched all the workers clean and mop. The shuttle arrived at 6a and I was home by 9:30a. Tired but glad to be home. Took a 3 hour nap and went to bed at 9p. Got up with a little cold, but I’m home, happy, ready for the New Year.
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Exit and Entrance
Riddles are little poems or phrases that pose a question that needs answering. Riddles frequently rhyme, but this is not a requirement.
If you throw me from the window,
I will leave a grieving wife.
Bring me back, but in the door, and
You'll see someone giving life!


What am I?

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…Bet You Didn’t Know…
Australia's 31,000-mile-long (50,000 kms) coastline is connected by over 10,000 beaches. That means you can go to a new beach every day for over 27 years!
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…Grammar Craziness…
The English language includes an interesting category of words and phrases called contronyms (also spelled contranyms, or referred to as autoantonyms) — terms that, depending on context, can have opposite or contradictory meanings. When you use these words, be sure the context clearly identifies which meaning is intended:

Apology: A statement of contrition for an action, or a defense of one
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…Harper’s Index…
261 Number of celebrities, politicians and athletes currently under investigation by British police for sexual abuse
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…Instagram Photo of the Day… 

earthpix Room with a view. Mount Robson, British Columbia | Photo by@walasavagephoto 

Check out the link in the bio @earthpix and follow our facebook page for more amazing images from around the globe!

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2 jokes for the day
How Do You Describe Me? -
Wife: "How would you describe me?"
Husband: "ABCDEFGHIJK."
Wife: "What does that mean?"
Husband: "Adorable, beautiful, cute, delightful, elegant, fashionable, gorgeous, and hot."
Wife: "Aw, thank you, but what about IJK?"
Husband: "I'm just kidding!"
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Last Joke From My Grandpa -
We were all in the hospital for the last time with our family and at some point my Aunt asked who of us want coffee. We were all die hard coffee drinkers and we all agreed so my aunt said "ok, I’ll bring full tray".
My Grandpa lifted his head for the last time and said "rather bring the coffee in a cup, it's so hard to drink from the tray"
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Yep, It Really Happened
BOGOTA - Authorities in Colombia said a woman was arrested at an airport in the capital when her breast implants were found to contain 3.3 pounds of liquid cocaine. Authorities said Paola Deyanira Sabillon, 22, drew the attention of security staff at El Dorado International Airport when she appeared nervous in line and X-rays determined she had recently undergone surgery on her breasts. Sabillon, who is from Honduras and was preparing to fly to Spain, told investigators she received breast implants filled with an unknown substance she had been hired to transport. The implants were removed at a Bogota hospital and Sabillon was treated for an infection stemming from the original surgery, which is believed to have taken place at a clinic in Pereira, Colombia. The substance inside the implants was determined to be cocaine, authorities said. 
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Somewhat Useless Information
The Emmy Awards finally gave daytime shows their own category in 1974. The first show to win for Outstanding Daytime Drama was The Doctors, which beat out rivals Days of Our Lives and General Hospital.


If you think soap operas got their name from the soap companies that advertised heavily during the programs, then you're correct. Advertisers knew that housewives and stay-at-home moms were a perfect, captive audience for their goods.



The Young and the Restless star Jeanne Cooper underwent a facelift in 1984. She pitched producers the idea of including real filmed footage of the surgery in the show, as if her character (Katherine Chancellor) had experienced the same procedure, and they incorporated it into the soap's storyline. 



In the first deal of its kind, the soap opera Passions announced in April 2007 that it wasn't being cancelled after all, but that the show would leave NBC and continue airing new episodes as an exclusive to subscribers of the DirecTV satellite service.



The familiar theme song for the long-running daytime soap Days of Our Lives was co-written by Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart, who were best known for penning many late-1960s pop hits, including The Monkees' "Last Train to Clarksville."



Bo Derek may have been a 10 in the movies, but her 1998 evening soap opera Wind on Water lasted only two episodes before NBC pulled the plug.

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Birthdays Today
“()” indicates age at death
(84) - Henri Matisse, Le Cateau-CambrΓ©sis, Nord, impressionist painter (Odalisque), (d. 1954)
(78) - George Marshall, Uniontown Pa, authored Marshall Plan (Nobel 1953), (d. 1959)
(78) - Rex Allen, Wilcox Az, cowboy singer (Dr Baxter-Frontier Doctor) (d. 1999
78 - Anthony Hopkins, Port Talbot, Glamorgan, actor (Elephant Man, QB VII, Magic, Bounty)
(77) - Odetta [Odetta Holmes], American folk singer (Sanctuary), actress and civil rights activist, born in Birmingham, Alabama (d. 2008)
72 - Ben Kingsley, Scarborough England, actor (Gandhi, Betrayal, Maurice)
(70) - Jason Robards Sr, Hillsdale Mich, actor (Acapulco) (d.1963)
68 - Tim Matheson, California, actor (Animal House, Fletch, Up the Creek)
(67) - [Bonnie Prince] Charles Edward Stuart, English pretender to throne (d.1788)
(66) - Jacques Cartier, French explorer who claimed what is now Canada for France, born in St. Malo, Brittany (d. 1557)
(63) - Donna Summer, singer (Love to Love You Baby, On the Radio), born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 2012)
62 - James Remar, actor (48 Hours, Rent-a-Cop, Cotton Club), born in Boston, Massachusetts
57 - Bebe Neuwirth, Princeton NJ, actress (Lilith-Cheers, Damn Yankees)
(56) - Rosalind Cash, American actress (Omega Man, Wrong is Right), born in Atlantic City, New Jersey (d. 1995)
56 - Val Kilmer, actor (Top Secret, Top Gun, Willow)
(53) - John Denver, NM, American country singer (Rocky Mt High), (d.1997)
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Historical Obits Today
@75-1966 - Chief Nipo Strongheart, Yakima actor (Pony Soldier)
@64-1997 - Floyd Cramer, pianist (Nashville Sound), cancer at 64  
@45-1985 - Rick Nelson, singer/actor (The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet), plane crash
@38-1972 - Roberto Clemente, slugger (Pitts Pirate), plane crash
@ 68-2013 -James Avery, American actor, complications from surgery
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Brain Teasers Answers
The letter 'n'.


wiNdow - widow
door - doNor

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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.
πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„And That Is All for Now πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„ πŸŽ„