March 29, 2017

Mar 30

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
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March  30, 2017 Week: 12 \ Day: 89
86004 Today: H 55° \ L 35° Average Sky Cover: 5% 
Wind ave:   7mph\Gusts:  23mph Visibility: 10 mi
March Averages: 50°\23°
March Records: H: 73° (2007) L: -16 (1966)
Record High: 70°[1971]   Record Low:[1998]
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❆❆Quote of the Day❆❆
Henry J. Kaiser
Problems are only opportunities in work clothes.
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❆❆Observances Today❆❆
Doctors Day  Link

Grass Is Always Browner On The Other Side Of The Fence Day

Pencil Day

Torrents Day Link

World Bi-polar Day Link
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❆❆Observances This Week❆❆
26-4/1
NanoDays Link

Health Information Professionals Week Link
International Phace Syndrome Awareness Week
National Cleaning Week
National Protocol Officer's Week
Pediatric Nurse Practitioner Week

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❆❆Today’s Significant US Historical Events❆❆
  Today’s Significant International Historical Events 
1422 Ketsugan, Zen teacher, performs exorcisms to free Kaizoji temple
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1778 Playwright Voltaire crowned with laurel wreath
1796 Carl Friedrich Gauss, German mathematician, discovers the construction of the heptadecagon (17 sides)
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1822 Congress combined East & West Florida into Florida Territory
1842 Ether used as an anaesthetic for 1st time by Dr Crawford Long (Ga)
1858 Pencil with attached eraser patented (Hyman L Lipman of Philadelphia)
1867 US buys Alaska from Russia for $7,200,000 (2 cents an acre - Seward's Folly)
1870 15th Amendment to the US constitution is adopted, guarantees right to vote regardless of race
1870 Texas becomes last confederate state readmitted to Union
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1909 Queensboro Bridge opens, linking Manhattan & Queens
1910 Mississippi Legislature founded The University of Southern Mississippi.
1935 Newfoundland changes time to 3½ hrs W of Greenwich, repeats 44 sec
1959 Dalai Lama flees China and is granted political asylum in India



1965 Vietnam War: A car bomb explodes in front of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, killing 22 and wounding 183 others.

1969 Loyalists bomb water and electricity installations in Northern Ireland in the hope that the attacks would be blamed on the IRA and on elements of the civil rights movement, which was demanding an end to discrimination against Catholics

1981 Pres Reagan shot & wounded by John W Hinckley III
1987 Vincent van Gogh's "Sunflowers" sells for a record 22.5 million pounds ($39.7 million)
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2012 MasterCard and Visa announce a massive breach in security with over ten million compromised credit card numbers
2013 North Korea declares it is at a state of war with South Korea
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❆❆My Rambling Thoughts❆❆
Recent blood test showed that I need to cut down on one of my Thyroid meds. Good news. Picked it up at Walgreens, as usual. The tech said the pharmacist needs to talk to you. Hmmm? So I wait and he finally comes out.
Pharmacist: Is it was a new med.
Me: No, just a smaller dose.
P: Have you ever taken it before?
Me: Yes, a year ago.
P: OK, thanks.
Me: How come you I had to wait to see you?
P: AZ law requires that a pharmacist must meet with every patient who gets a new med. So I’ll be seeing you on every script that isn’t a refill.
Me: New law?
P: Old law that is being newly enforced. The fine is $500/script.
Me: OK, enjoy your day.
Note: It used to be that the tech would note it was a new med and ask if you wanted to see the Pharmacist. Guess our brilliant legislators figure the people are too dumb or too shy to  say 'yes I want to see the pharmacist'.

I have supported the idea that Congress has term limits, just like the President. I think now I am going to support the idea that anyone elected as President or VP must have some government experience. Probably the same for Congress. We are living a dream/nightmare with so many powerful people who have zero government experience. The businessman leader tells the people that he has done this or that with an executive order, when in fact, the order does little or nothing. One cannot simply overturn a law with an executive order, thank goodness. One can overturn a previous executive order with another executive order. A president can issue an executive order to make March 30th of each year to be a day that Americans should not eat candy. It is not a law. The next president can issue a new executive order that says March 30th will be a normal day. That is not a law either. However; when a President issues an executive order that removes constraints on coal production; he has to realize that there are laws, passed by Congress that set rules about coal production. Too bad the neophyte in the oval office doesn’t know that.  Worse yet, the poor coal miners hear about his executive order and assume coal will become king again. NOT!
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❆❆Today’s Trivia Hive❆❆
(answers at the end of post)
What U.S. state bears the slogan "The Land of Enchantment?"
California
Texas
New Mexico
Arizona

 65.8% taking the internet quiz got it correct.
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❆❆Harper’s Index❆❆
63→Minimum number of super delegates at the Democratic National Convention who were registered lobbyists
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❆❆ Joke For The Day❆❆
My cooking has always been the target of family jokes. One evening, as I prepared dinner a bit too quickly, the kitchen filled with smoke and the smoke detector went off. Although both of my children had received fire-safety training at school, they did not respond to the alarm. 

Annoyed, I stormed through the house in search of them. I found them in the bathroom, washing their hands. Over the loud buzzing of the smoke alarm, I asked them to identify the sound.

"It’s the smoke detector," they replied in unison.

"Do you know what that sound means?" I demanded.

"Sure," my oldest replied. "Dinner’s ready."

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❆❆Yep, It Really Happened❆❆
*--- It's The Way He Would Have Wanted to Go ---*

A deceased man got a bizarre and seductive send-off when women started twerking on his coffin. A video of the incident from Mexico showed mourners gathering to pay their respects to the man before he was laid to rest. While the wooden coffin was sitting on top of two motorcycles, women got on top and began twerking. Reggae music was blasting while the upbeat crowd seemed to be enjoying the show. At first, one woman began dancing and twerking on the coffin. A female onlooker grabbed the dancer's skirt, exposing her underwear. She then spanked the dancer's backside and threw water on her. A second woman in tight leggings then joined her and also twerked on top of the coffin. The video was posted with the caption: 'When Brayan dies.' The video has been seen more than 36,500 times.            

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❆❆Somewhat Useless Information❆❆
The most famous naval battle of the War of 1812 was the Battle of Boston Harbor fought on 1 June 1813. It was a duel between two frigates, which ultimately humiliated the proud and cocky U.S. navy.

The bloodiest ship-to-ship action of the age of sail was fought between the American frigate USS Chesapeake and the British frigate HMS Shannon during the War of 1812. In an engagement that lasted less than 15 minutes, the British lost 23 killed and 56 wounded, while the Americans lost 48 killed and 99 wounded. Between the wounded of the ships' two companies, another 23 died of their wounds in the two weeks following the action.

During the court-martial that followed the capture of USS Chesapeake by HMS Shannon, Midshipman William Sitgreaves Cox, the junior-most officer on the Chesapeake, was charged with cowardice, disobedience of orders, desertion from quarters, neglect of duty, and unofficer like conduct. He had taken the injured captain below-deck during the battle and could not regain the deck when the British boarded the Chesapeake. 

In the end, Mr. Cox was only convicted of unofficer like conduct, and neglect of duty for leaving the deck when he knew, or should have known, that a boarding action was imminent, since every other officer above him was either injured or out-of-action and Cox was technically in command of Chesapeake. 

Cox's family tried for nearly 140 years to exonerate his name. Finally, in 1952, Cox's great grandson, succeeded in bringing the matter to the attention of the House Armed Services Committee which reviewed the historical facts of the case and recommended his reinstatement.

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❆❆How our states were named❆❆
Mississippi
The state is named for the Mississippi River. You may have heard that mississippi means "the Father of Waters" and you may have heard that from no less a source than novelist James Fenimore Cooper or President Abraham Lincoln (who wrote in a letter after the Civil War after Union victories during the Civil War, "the Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea"). I hate to pee on Honest Abe's parade, but the word, a French derivation of the Ojibwa messipi (alternately misi-sipi or misi-ziibi) actually means "big river." It may not sound as dramatic as Lincoln's preferred translation, but whatever the meaning, the name caught on. As French explorers took the name down the river with them to the delta, it was adopted by local Indian tribes and replaced their own names, and the earlier Spanish explorers' names, for the river.
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❆❆Birthdays Today❆❆
@  indicates age at death
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90- Peter Marshall
TV game show host (Hollywood Squares), born in Huntington, West Virginia
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@86- Marc Davis
American Disney animator (d. 2000)
@86- Richard Dysart
Brighton Mass, actor (Leland MacKenzie-LA Law) (D 2015)
@82- Francisco Jose de Goya
Fuendetodos Spain, painter/etcher (Naked Maja) (D 1828)
80- Warren Beatty
actor (Bonnie & Clyde, Shampoo, Dick Tracy), born in Richmond, Virginia
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72- Eric Clapton
English singer and guitarist (Tears in Heaven), born in Ripley, Surrey, England
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67- Robbie Coltrane
Scottish actor (Harry Potter films) and comedian, born in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire
60- Paul Reiser
American actor (My 2 Dads, Diner, Aliens, Mad About You), born in NYC, New York
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@58- Anna Sewell
English author (Black Beauty), born in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk (d. 1878)
55- M C Hammer
[Stanley Kirk Burrell], rapper (Hammer Time), born in Oakland, California
53- Ian Ziering
American actor ("Beverly Hills 90210"), born in West Orange, New Jersey
52- Piers Morgan
editor (Daily Mirror)
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49- Celine Dion
Canadian singer (I'm Your Woman), born in Charlemagne, Quebec
46- Mark Consuelos
Zaragosa Spain, actor (Mateo Santos-All My Children)
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38- Norah Jones
American singer and pianist, born in Brooklyn, New York
@37- Vincent van Gogh
Dutch artist, painter and pioneer of Expressionism (The Potato Eaters, Irises), born in Groot-Zundert, Netherlands (d. 1890)
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❆❆Historical Obits Today❆❆
@101-2002 Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother of the United Kingdom
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@95-2004 Alistair Cooke
English-born journalist
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@86-1986 James Cagney
actor (Yankee Doodle Dandy)
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@72-1992 Manolis Andronicos
Greek archaeologist who discovered ancient royal Macedonian tombs in northern Greece
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@61-1840 George (Beau) Brummell
Dandy, syphilis
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@58-2004 Michael King
New Zealand historian and author (Penguin History of New Zealand), car crash
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❆❆Trivia Hive  Answers❆❆
New Mexico
Prior to 1932, New Mexico's nickname was "the Sunshine State." After this slogan was taken by Florida, the state decided to change its official motto to "The Land of Enchantment," with the first license plates featuring the new slogan appearing in 1941. In 1989, the state designated the song "Land of Enchantment - New Mexico," written by Martin Murphy, Chick Raines and Don Cook, as the official ballad of New Mexico. Source: Encyclopedia of New Mexico 
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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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