December 20, 2016

Dec 21

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
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12.21.16 Week: 51 \ Day: 356
December Averages: 44°\17°
86004 Today: H 47° \ L 15° Average Sky Cover: 20% 
Wind ave:   4mph\Gusts:  9mph Visibility: 10 mi
Record High: 61°[1969]   Record Low: -6°[1967]
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Quote of the Day
Where the senses fail us, reason must step in.
~Galileo Galilei
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Observances Today                                              
Ann & Samantha Day (Summer & Winter Solstices. Also June  21)   Link
Celebrate Short Fiction Day (Always on Winter Solstice)
Chanukah (Jewish)
Crossword Puzzle Day
Forefathers Day
Free Shipping Day  
Link  (3rd Thursday at Participating Retailers)
Global Orgasm Day Link (Always on Winter Solstice and Summer Solstice)
Humbug Day
International Dalek Remembrance Day Link
Look on the Bright Side Day
National Flashlight Day (Shortest Day of The Year)
National Homeless Persons' Remembrance Day Link
National Re-gifting Day Link
Phileas Fogg Win A Wager Day
Short Girl Appreciation Day (Shortest day of the year)
World Peace Day/Winter Solstice
Winter Solstice - the shortest day of the year 11:28 AM EST
Yalda
Yule
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Observances This Week
14-1/5        Christmas Bird Count Week Link 
14-28 Halcyon Days (Always 7 days before and 7 days after the Winter Solstice)
16-24 Las Posadas (Mexico 12/16-24)
17-23 Saturnalia:  ancient Roman festival honoring Saturn, God of Agriculture
18-24 Gluten-free Baking Week Link 
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Today’s Significant US Historical Events
  Today’s Significant International Historical Events 
1598 Battle of Curalaba: the Mapuche people led by Pelentaru revolt and inflict a major defeat on Spanish troops in southern Chile
1620 103 Mayflower pilgrims land at Plymouth Rock [OS=Dec 11]
1784 John Jay becomes 1st US Secretary of State (foreign affairs)
1829 1st stone arch railroad bridge in US dedicated, Baltimore
1849 1st US skating club formed (Philadelphia)

1864 General Sherman conquers Savannah, Georgia
1866 Cheyenne, Arapho, Sioux, Fetterman Massacre, Wyoming
1891- 1st game of basketball, based on rules created by James Naismith, played by 18 students in Springfield, Mass.
1898 French Scientists Pierre and Marie Curie discover radium
1909 1st junior high school established (Berkeley California)
1913 1st crossword puzzle (with 32 clues) printed in NY World
1919 J. Edgar Hoover deports anarchists/feminist Emma Goldman to Russia
1929 1st group hospital insurance plan offered (Dallas Tx)
1932 Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers, 1st joint movie (Flying Down to Rio)
1933 Fox Films signs Shirley Temple, 5, to a studio contract
1937 The first full-length animated feature film and the earliest in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series, "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs", premieres at the Carthay Circle Theatre
1956 Martin Luther King Jr. and others sit in the new integrated bus
1959 Tom Landry accepts coaching job with Dallas Cowboys (stays until 1988)
1962 US & Cuba accord, releases Bay of Pigs captive
1968 Apollo 8 (Borman, Lovell & Anders) 1st manned Moon voyage
1991 Soviet Union formally dissolves as 11 of 12 republics sign treaty forming Commonwealth of Independent States
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My Rambling Thoughts
Getting last minute trip stuff done. Getting excited too.

Media made such a big deal about the Electoral College, then when it voted, the lead story on CNN started out with ‘Now that the ceremonial Electoral College votes are calculated…’ Come on, we knew it was ceremonial for decades. Election Day is the big day, but this year, they made EC Day the big day, but it wasn’t…as they finally admitted, it was ceremonial. Now let’s move on. The new President has a lot of work to do trying to bring us back to a unified country.
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Brain Teasers
(answers at the end of post)
Eye Rhymes 5
Language brain teasers are those that involve the English language. You need to think about and manipulate words and letters.

In each sentence below, two words are incomplete. The two words end in the same three letters, so they look like they should rhyme, but they don't. See if you can figure out the missing letters in each sentence.
Example: One symptom of bronchitis is a ro___ co___. (The two words are: rough & cough.)

1. When you g___ up, I will let you climb the ship's p___.
2. Do you want to be a ri___ swimmer or an ocean di___?
3. The strongest oarsman in the boat is a po___ ro___.
4. The cheap tickets didn't al___ them to go be___ deck.

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Today’s Trivia Hive
(answers at the end of post)
What famous snack company is legally barred from calling its popular offering "chips"?
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…Harper’s Index…
44→Percentage of Canadian marijuana users who believe that the drug has no effect on their ability of safely drive a car
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2 jokes for the day
A young American tourist goes on a guided tour of a creepy old castle. At the end of the tour, the guide asks her how she enjoyed it. She admits to being a bit worried about seeing a ghost in some of the dark, cob-web filled, rooms and passages.

"Don't worry," says the guide. "I've never seen a ghost all the time I've been here."

"How long is that?" asks the girl.

"About three hundred years."
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On their 25th wedding anniversary, a husband took his wife out to dinner. Their teenage daughters said they'd have dessert waiting for them when they returned.

After the couple got home, they saw that the dining room table was beautifully set with china, crystal and candles, and there was a note that read: "Your dessert is in the refrigerator. We are staying with friends, so go ahead and do something we wouldn't do!"

"I suppose," the husband responded, "we could vacuum."
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Somewhat Useless Information
China is the world's largest producer of tea. In 2009, China produced 1,359,000 tonnes; India was second with 979,000 tonnes.

Britain is the second-largest nation of tea drinkers per capita. Ireland is the first.

The United Kingdom drinks about 165 million cups of tea a day, or 62 billion cups per year.

The United States invented both the tea bag and iced tea in 1904. Many tea lovers consider the tea bag as one of the worst inventions of the 20th century. Tea brewed with loose tea is generally considered to be richer than tea made from bags.

The most expensive tea in the world is a rare Chinese tea called Tieguanyin, which is around $1,500/lb. The tea is named after the Buddhist deity Guan Yin (Iron Goddess of Mercy). It is an oolong tea.

Historically, tea has been viewed as a health drink. Recent studies suggest that tea, especially green tea, helps reduce some forms of cancer, helps bad breath, reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease, reduces blood pressure, helps with weight control, kills bacteria and virus, acts as an anti-inflammatory, and has neuroprotective power.
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Origin of Some Christmas Traditions
X-mas
While some rather ignorant groups in the Americas believe that the abbreviation “x-mas” is an attempt by the “dirty liberals” to “keep the Christ out of Christmas”, the true origins have a strong basis in Christianity. In the abbreviation, the X stands for the Greek letter Chi, the first letter of the Greek word for Christ. Jesus’ name has also been abbreviated as XP, a combination of the first and second letters of the Greek word for Christ. From XP comes the labarum, a holy symbol in Orthodox Christianity that represents Jesus.
The term X-mas has been used since the 16th century, though it gained prominent usage in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the modern world, X has been taken to be used as an abbreviation for any word with Christ or the “krys” sound in it, even in words which have no etymological connection. Chrysanthemum, for example, is sometime shortened to “xant” on florist’s signs, and crystal has sometimes been abbreviated as “xtal”. 

Stockings
Many people know of Saint Nicholas being the basis of Santa Claus, but the practice of stocking-stuffing can be traced back to his charitable donations in the 4th century. Nicholas believed that childhood should be savored and enjoyed – but in a time where boys and girls younger than 10 had to work to support their families, this wasn’t always possible.
He therefore gave what he could in homemade food, clothes, and furniture. The bishop even gave out oranges, which would have been very rare and expensive in Lycia, where he lived. The problem became where to leave these gifts so that the children would find them. According to legends, he then saw girls’ stockings hanging above the fireplace, and ol’ Saint Nick (to paraphrase) thought “Why the hell not?”. From then on, children would hang stockings up hoping that Saint Nicholas would visit them that night.
Beyond St. Nick, the practice can be traced back to Scandinavian countries that still held their Pagan beliefs. Children would leave their shoes full of carrots, straw, or other similar foods for Odin’s mythic horse, Sleipnir. When Sleipnir ate the food, Odin would leave candy or other treats in their place.
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Birthdays Today
§  indicates age at death
§93- Sylvester Pat Weaver, TV Executive (started Today show), born in Los Angeles [d2002]
§91- Werner von Trapp, member of the Trapp Family Singers (d. 2007)
§88- Kurt Waldheim, Austrian 4th Secretary-General of the United Nations (1972-81) and 9th President of Austria (1986-92), born in Sankt Andrä-Wördern, Austria (d. 2007)
§82- Paul Winchell, ventriloquist (Jerry Mahoney, Knucklehead Smith), born in NYC, [d2005]
§85- Joe Paterno, American college hall of football coach (Penn State) and Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of 1986, born in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2012)
§85 Ed Nelson, American actor (Peyton Place, A Long Came a Spider), born in New Orleans, Louisiana, (d. 2014)
81- Phil Donahue, TV talk show host (The Phil Donahue Show), born in Cleveland, Ohio
79- Jane Fonda, actress (Barbarella, Klute), physically fit, born in NYC, New York
§76- Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield, British Prime Minister (Tory: 1868, 1874-80) and writer, born in London (d. 1881)
74- Hu Jintao, General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (2002-12) and President of the People's Republic of China (2003-13), born in Taizhou, Jiangsu
68- Samuel L. Jackson, actor (Amos & Andrew, White Sand, Pulp Fiction), born in Washington, D.C.
62- [Christine] Chris Evert, tennis champion (18 singles Gram Slams, 3 doubles titles), born in Fort Lauderdale, Florida
59- Ray Romano, American actor (Everybody Loves Raymond, Ice Age), born in Queens, New York
§52- Frank Zappa, rocker (Mothers of Invention, Catholic Girls), born in Baltimore [d1993]
§51- Thomas Becket, Cheapside, archbishop of Canterbury (1162-1170), born in London, England (d. 1170)
§51 Carl Wilson, rock vocalist and guitarist (Beach Boys), born in Hawthorne California (d. 1998)
51- Andy Dick, actor (Matthew-Newsradio), born in Charleston, South Carolina
50-Kiefer Sutherland, canadian actor, director, producer
§38- Florence Griffith Joyner, runner (Olympic-3 gold-1988), born in Los Angeles [d1998]
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Historical Obits Today
@66-2001 Dick Schaap, American sports journalist, surgery complications
@60-1945 George S. Patton, American WWII general (Sicily, Italy and Normandy) known as "Old Blood & Guts", congestive heart failure
@54-1933 Knud J V Rasmussen, Danish Pole explorer (Thule), pneumonia/food poisoning
@47-1974 Richard Long, actor (Nanny & Professor), heart attacks
@44-1940 F. Scott Fitzgerald, American author (Great Gatsby, Zelda), heart attack
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Brain Teasers Answers
1. grow prow
2. river diver
3. power rower
4. allow below
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Trivia Hive  Answers
 Pringles…dehydrated potatoes, not ‘chips’ of potatoes
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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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