May 31, 2016

Jun 1

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
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6.1.16 Week: 22 \ Day: 153
June Averages: 79°\41°
86004 Today: H 78° \ L 37° Average Sky Cover: 70% 
Wind ave:   4mph\Gusts:  19mph Visibility: 8 mi 
[controlled burns]
Record High: 88°[1977]   Record Low: 24°[1923]
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Quote of the Day
There is much pleasure to be gained from useless knowledge. ~Bertrand Russell

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Observances Today                           
Buddha Birthday


Global Day of Parents Link

Heimlich Maneuver Day
National Go Barefoot Day
Jerusalem Day (Yom Yerushalayim - Israel) 
National Go Barefoot Day
National Olive Day  Link
National Running Day Link  
National Tailors Day 
Oscar The Grouch Day Link
Say Something Nice Day Link
Solar Eclipse

Stand For Children Day Link
•••
Anniversary – CNN-1980

Anniversary - Heimlich Maneuver-1975
Admission Day (Kentucky-1792-15th)
Admission Day (Tennessee-1796-16th)
Independence Day (Samoa-1962-from NZ)
International Children's Day (China)

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Observances This Week
  1-5
Great American Brass Band Week
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US Historical Highlights for Today
1638 1st earthquake recorded in US, at Plymouth, Mass
1657 1st Quakers arrives in New Amsterdam (NY)
1660 Mary Dyer is hanged for defying a law banning Quakers from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
1789 1st US congressional act becomes law (on administering oaths)
1808 1st US land-grant university founded-Ohio Univ, Athens, Ohio
1813 Capt John Lawrence utters Navy motto "Don't give up the ship"


1843 Sojourner Truth leaves NY to begin her career as antislavery activist1868 Treaty of Bosque Redondo is signed allowing the Navajos to return to their lands in Arizona and New Mexico. After the "long walk" to the Bosque Redondo Reservation in New Mexico, the NAVAJOs suffered from the poor conditions on the reservation, and from homesickness for their old lands. After numerous visits from Washington representatives, General Sherman visited the NAVAJO. They again asked to go back to their old lands. They promised the keep the peace and the old treaties. Sherman talked with them, and he listened to them. With a new treaty in hand, Sherman says he will let them go, if they sign, and obey, the new treaty. The NAVAJOs agree, even though they will lose some of their land as a part of the new agreement. On this date, Barboncito, Armijo, Delgadito, Herrero Grande, Manuelito, and others sign the new treaty.
1877 US troops authorized to pursue bandits into Mexico
1880 1st pay telephone installed
1888 California gets its 1st seismograph
1905 Lewis & Clark Centennial Exposition opens in Portland, Oregon
1921 Race riot in Tulsa Oklahoma (21 whites & 60 blacks killed)
1927 Peace Bridge between US & Canada opens
1934 A legal definition of "Indian" is made today.
1938 Protective baseball helmets 1st worn by batters
1947 Photosensitive glass developed
1949 1st magazine on microfilm offered to subscribers (Newsweek)
1961 FM multiplex stereo broadcasting 1st heard
1968 Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs Robinson" hits #1
1971 Ed Sullivan's final TV show on CBS
1978 The first international applications under the Patent Cooperation Treaty are filed.
1979 Los Angeles passes its first homosexual rights bill
1993 Brooklyn NY begins recycling
1996 Woody Harrelson is arrested in Lee County, Kentucky, after he symbolically planted four hemp seeds to challenge the state law which did not distinguish between industrial hemp and marijuana
2008 A fire at the backlot of Universal Studios Hollywood destroys several icons from movies, such as Courthouse Square, the clock tower from Back to the Future, and the King Kong exhibit on the studio tour.
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World Historical Highlights for Today
4000 BC Approximate domestication of the horse in the Eurasian steppes near Dereivka, central Ukraine (hypothesis only)
1215 Beijing, under control of Jurchen ruler Emperor Xuanzong of Jin, is captured by the Mongols under Genghis Khan, ending the Battle of Beijing
1495 First written record of Scotch Whisky appears in Exchequer Rolls of Scotland, Friar John Cor is the distiller
1533 Anne Boleyn crowned queen of England
1845 Homing pigeon completes 11,000 km trip (Namibia-London) in 55 days
1958 The Clean Air Act comes into force in Ireland
1966 George Harrison is impressed by Ravi Shankar's concert in London
1998 - The Irish and British Governments search for common ground on the parades crisis, amid growing indications that the summer marching season will push the North to the brink of open sectarian warfare
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My Rambling Thoughts
Great news on the blood drawing front. I am only 1.2% above the cutoff. That means that end of these draws is getting near.
We are suffering from some controlled lightning strike burns and a couple of prescribed burns within 10 miles of the city. Not a really big deal, but don’t enjoy the smell of the smoke.
While I have been retired for almost 10 years, I still get my days mixed up when there is a Monday holiday. Weird. Every day is Saturday for me, so why would a holiday mess up my internal calendar?
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Difficulty: 2.75
Five Spoonerisms
Language brain teasers are those that involve the English language. You need to think about and manipulate words and letters.
A spoonerism is a pair of words that can have the initial sounds switched to form new words. For example, "churning bear" is a spoonerism for "burning chair" (note that the pairs do not have to be spelled the same - only sound the same). From the definitions below, can you figure out the spoonerism pairs?

1. Thumper's cellphone...mis-named nerve.
2. Where to buy a mallard...jammed portal.
3. Grizzly relative...two pin-lovers.
4. Sad iguana...Merlin slam-dunking.
5. Wasp accelerates...Half a six-pack.

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…Harper’s Index…
27-Percentage of likely Republican primary voters who support shutting down US mosques.
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…Instagram Photo of the Day… 

earthpix Gorgeous colors in Colmar, France | Photo by @ilhan1077 
Check out our Facebook for more awesome travel photography. Link is in the bio@earthpix.

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2 jokes for the day
I was on the subway, sitting on a newspaper when a guy comes over and asks, "Are you reading that?"

I didn’t know what to say. So I said, "Yes."

I then stood up, turned the page, and sat down again.

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In a software design meeting, we were using typical technical jargon to discuss a data exchange interface with a vendor.

One co-worker said the programming we had ordered was delayed because the vendor was suffering from a "severe non-linear waterfowl issue."

Curious, the team leader raised his eyebrows and asked, "What exactly is that?"

The programmer replied, "They don't have all their ducks in a row."

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Somewhat Useless Information
The most popular holidays for barbecuing are, in order, July 4th (71 percent), Memorial Day (57 percent), and Labor Day (55 percent).

Technically, to barbecue means to slow-cook meat at a low temperature for a long time over wood or charcoal. What most people do in their back yards is more commonly referred to as grilling. 

Charcoal briquettes aren't actual charcoal, but a combination of charcoal and other ingredients molded into easy-to-light lumps. Kingsford Charcoal, for example, by far the most popular brand in the US, is made up of bits of charcoal, coal, starch (as a binder), sawdust, and sodium nitrate (to make it burn better).

There is no definitive history about how the word "barbecue" originated - or why it's sometimes used as a noun, verb, or adjective. Some say the Spaniards get the credit for the word, derived from their "barbacoa" which is an American-Indian word for the framework of green wood on which foods were placed for cooking over hot coals. Others think the French were responsible, offering the explanation that when the Caribbean pirates arrived on our Southern shores, they cooked animals on a spit-like devise that ran from "whiskers to tail" or "de barbe a' queue."
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Birthdays Today
“[ ]” indicates age at death
[88] John Masefield,
British writer and poet (Salt-Water Ballads), Poet Laureate (1930-67), born in Ledbury, Herefordshire (d. 1967)
[86] Andy Griffith,
Mount Airy NC, actor (Andy Griffith Show, Matlock), (d. 2012)
[82] Edmund Ignatius Rice,
Irish founder of the Christian Brothers and Presentation Brothers (d. 1844)
82- Pat Boone,
Florida, singer/actor (April Love, Cross & Switchblade)
79- Morgan Freeman,
Academy award winning actor (Driving Mrs Daisy, Glory), born in Memphis, Tennessee
[76] Brigham Young,
American religious leader (Mormon church), born in Whitingham, Vermont (d. 1877)
[73] Carl Bechstein,
German piano inventor
63- Diana Canova,
West Palm Beach Fla, actress (Corrine-Soap)
60- Lisa Hartman Black,
singer/actress (Tabitha, Knots Landing), born in Houston, Texas
43- Heidi Klum,
German supermodel, born in Bergisch Gladbach, North Rhine-Westphalia
[36] Marilyn Monroe [Norma Jean Mortenson],
American actress (Some Like It Hot), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 1962)
35- Amy Schumer,
American comedian, writer ad producer (Inside Amy Schumer), born in New York
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Historical Obits Today
@92-1952 John Dewey,
US philosopher (Common Faith)
@88-2014 Ann B. Davis,
American actress, [Alice-Brady Bunch]
@87-1968 Helen Keller,
blind & deaf/author (Let us Have Faith)
@81-2001 Hank Ketcham,
American cartoonist (Dennis the Menace)
@771868 James Buchanan,
15th US president (1857-61), repertory failure
@71-2008 Yves Saint Laurent,
French fashion designer, brain cancer
@67-1985 Richard Greene,
actor (The Adventures of Robin Hood-TV), heart attack
@67-1965 Curly Lambeau,
First coach of the Green Bay Packers, heart attack
@67-1571 John Story,
English Catholic martyr, executed at Tyburn by being hung, drawn and quartered
@40-1996 Ray Combs,
TV host (Family Feud), suicide
@25-1975 Steve Prefontaine,
5K (Olympics-4-1972), car crash
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Brain Teasers Answers
1. Bunny phone...funny bone.
2. Duck store...stuck door.
3. Polar bear...bowler pair.
4. Weeping lizard...leaping wizard.
5. Bee throttles...three bottles.

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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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