April 30, 2017

May 1

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
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May 1, 2017 Week: 18 \ Day: 121
86004 Today: H 63° \ L 23° Average Sky Cover: 0% 
Wind ave:   -mph\Gusts:  -mph Visibility: 10 mi
May Averages: 68°\34°
May Records: H: 89° (2002) L: 7 (1915)
Record High: 80°[1947]   Record Low: 17°[1972]
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‡‡Quote of the Day‡‡
I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen.
Ernest Hemingway

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‡‡Observances Today‡‡
Batman Day-comic premiers 1938
Beltane
Executive Coaching Day
Global Love Day
Keep Kids Alive! Drive 25 Day
Law Day
Lei Day-since 1928
Lemonade Day
Melanoma Monday
National Bubba Day
National Library Legislative Day
National Purebred Dog Day Link

New Homeowner's Day

School Principals' Day

Silver Star Day Link
Stepmother's Day


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‡‡Observances This Week‡‡
Children's Book Week: 1-7 

*Choose Privacy Week: 1-7  Link

National Wildflower Week: 1-7 

Screen-Free Week (Digital Detox Week) : 1-7 Link  Link
PTA Teacher Appreciation Week:1-5  


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‡‡Today’s Significant US Historical Events‡‡
 Today’s Significant International Historical Events 
<§>1300’s<§>
1328 Wars of Scottish Independence end: Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton - the Kingdom of England recognizes the Kingdom of Scotland as an independent state.
<§>1700’s<§>
1704 Boston Newsletter publishes 1st newspaper advertisement
1707 Acts of Union comes into force, uniting England and Scotland to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain
1753 Publication of Species Plantarum by Linnaeus, and the formal start date of plant taxonomy adopted by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.
1786 Mozart's opera "Marriage of Figaro" premieres in Wien (Vienna)
1795 Kamehameha, King of Hawaiʻi defeats Kalanikupule and conquors island of Oʻahu at Battle of Nuʻuanu (approx. date)
<§>1800’s<§>
1848 The Fraternity of Phi Gamma Delta is founded at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania.
1863 Confederate congress passed resolution to kill black soldiers
1867 Howard University chartered
1867 Reconstruction of South begins, black voter registration
1873 1st US postal card issued
1883 "Buffalo Bill" Cody puts on his 1st Wild West Show
1889 Bayer introduces aspirin in powder form (Germany)


<§>1900’s<§>

1901 Pan-American Exposition opens in Buffalo
1919 Mount Kelud (Indonesia) erupts, boiling crater lake which broke through crater wall killing 5,000 people in 104 small villages
1923 Hitler and Ernst Rohm attempt to break up socialist May Day demonstrates, inviting Nazis from as far away as Nuremberg to take part in the violence
1929 Police kill 19 Mayday demonstrators in Berlin
1930 Planet Pluto officially named by 11 year-old Venetia Burney
1931 Empire State Building opens in New York City

1936 Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie leaves Ethiopia as Italy invades
1939 Pulitzer Prize awarded to Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings (Yearling)
1940 The 1940 Olympics are cancelled
1941 "Citizen Kane", directed & starring Orson Welles, premieres in NY

1941 General Mills introduces Cheerios
1943 Food rationing begins in US
1944 Pulitzer prize awarded to American Martin Flavin for his novel "Journey in the Dark"
1945 About 1,000 citizens of Demmin in Germany, commit suicide provoked by occupation by Soviet Red Army
1947 Radar for commercial & private planes 1st demonstrated
1948 Glenn Taylor, Idaho Senator, arrested in Birmingham, Alabama, for trying to enter a meeting through a door marked "for Negroes"
1950 Gwendolyn Brooks is 1st African American awarded the Pulitzer Prize for poetry
1950 Mayor of Brussels reluctantly bans May Day parade
1950 Pulitzer prize awarded to Rodgers & Hammerstein (South Pacific)
1952 TWA introduces tourist class
1956 A doctor in Japan reports an "epidemic of an unknown disease of the central nervous system", marking the official discovery of Minamata disease.
1961 1st US airplane hijacked to Cuba
1961 Fidel Castro announces there will be no more elections in Cuba

1961 Pulitzer prize awarded to Harper Lee for her novel "To Kill a Mockingbird"
1963 1st American (James Whittaker) conquers Mount Everest
1967 Pulitzer prize awarded to Bernard Malamud (Fixer)
1972 North Vietnamese troops occupy Quang Tri Activities Committee
1972 Pulitzer prize awarded to Wallace Stegner (Angle of Repose)
1981 Tennis player Billie Jean King acknowledges a lesbian relationship with Marilyn Barnett - becoming first prominent sportswoman to come out
1985 US President Reagan ends embargo against Nicaragua
1991 Angolan civil war ends
1994 Charles Kuralt retires as CBS newsman (On the Road)
1999 Animated series "SpongeBob SquarePants" debuts on Nickelodeon
<§>2000’s<§>

2003 In what becomes known as the "Mission Accomplished" speech, U.S. President George W. Bush declares that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended" on board the USS Abraham Lincoln off the coast of California
2006 The Puerto Rican government closes the Department of Education and 42 other government agencies due to significant shortages in cash flow.
2012 Guggenheim Partners make the largest ever purchase of a sports franchise after buying the Los Angeles Dodgers for $2.1 billion
2014 Hundreds march through Nigerian capital calling for the release of schoolgirls abducted by Islamic militants, Boko Haram, who oppose Western education

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‡‡My Rambling Thoughts‡‡
Nice spring weather with no wind has returned to our mountain town. Not a cloud in the sky. Great day for a nice walk…finally.

Our local university (NAU), like many college campuses, is dealing with Free Speech issues. It is a sad commentary on today’s campuses that certain individuals are banned from speaking to the students because they are “too” left or “too” right for the fragile student’s minds. I would not be the person I am today had I not been able to be exposed to all sides.

I am so glad I went to Univ. of Colorado. Back then we had “National Affairs Week” where many well-known speakers came to campus for great lectures. Many classes would even assign students to go to and report on given lectures. I was able to hear John Kenneth Galbraith, Buckminster Fuller, and S. I. Hayakawa among a slew of others. The last name was then President of SF State University, a well-known linguist, and very conservative. His speech was in the big auditorium. The first few rows were filled with BSA (Black Student Alliance) protestors with signs and the rest of the auditorium had was full of students from all political persuasions. He came out on stage, with University police standing around the stage. I will never forget his opening remarks “Why are these Jungle Bunnies here?” It was a very tense situation to say the least. In the end, after University police covered the stage, some of the protestors left down the aisles chanting, and after about 20 minutes order was restored. He gave a very uninteresting speech about college President’s role in keeping order on campus. There were a few boos and jeers, but he finished his speech.

THIS IS NOT NORMAL:
I am not a fan of our current president. I did watch his rally last night. I was shocked, angry, and upset that the President of the United States read a poem, The Snake, which is based on an Aesop Fable. Before starting, he said ‘those immigrants’ are the Snake in the poem. It was degrading to all immigrants, some who have come here illegally. His delivery of the poem was NOT Presidential and was NOT what America is all about. He read it many times of the campaign trail. And he does have Free Speech, I just do not like our President spewing such garbage. Aesop must have turned over many times.

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‡‡Today’s Trivia Hive‡‡
(answers at the end of post)
When did Kim Jong-un become supreme leader of North Korea?

2005    2016    2009    2011

52.2% taking the internet quiz got it correct.

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‡‡Harper’s Index‡‡
49→Percentage of American who support the death penalty for convicted murderers

1971→Last year in which US support for the death penalty was less than 50%

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‡‡ Joke For The Day‡‡
The test scores were generally good. 
(Some of you managed a 'C'.) 

Some of you could have done better. 
(Everyone failed.) 

It's been very rewarding to teach this class. 
(I hope they find someone else to teach it next year.)


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‡‡Yep, It Really Happened‡‡
"Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned." 

Police in Oklahoma say a woman flew into a rage upon seeing her boyfriend's lover at a funeral home during a ceremony. 25-year-old Shaynna Lauren Sims is then alleged to have cut body parts from the 38-year-old woman. 

Fortunately for the victim, she was deceased. 

According to the police investigation, the 38-year-old victim who dated the suspect's boyfriend, died of natural causes. During the funeral the victim's family members noticed that the body had been vandalized. The body had numerous cuts, hair had been missing, and body parts were missing, including the woman's breasts. 

Police were called to the scene, and family members told officers that they saw Sims standing next to the casket with her hands inside. When police arrested Sims, she was in possession of a knife that contained traces of the victim's hair. 

Sims has been charged with vandalizing a corpse, burglary and illegal dissection. Her bail has been set at $20,000.        
       

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‡‡Somewhat Useless Information‡‡
The monument to General Andrew Jackson at Jackson Square was the world's first equestrian statue in which the horse had more than one foot off the base.
***
In 1872, the official colors of Mardi Gras were chosen based on an honored visitor to New Orleans: Russian Grand Duke Alexis Romanoff. The purple stands for justice, the green for faith, and the gold for power.

***
Established as the capital of the French colony of Louisiana, New Orleans was actually twice named the state capital. The title of capital city was moved from New Orleans to Donaldsonville in 1825, to Baton Rouge in 1846, to New Orleans in 1864 (during the Reconstruction period), and then again to Baton Rouge in 1879.


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‡‡Birthdays Today‡‡
@  indicates age at death
<§>90’s<§>
@92- Louis Nye,
American comedian and actor
(d. 2005)
@90- Glenn Ford,
Quebec Canada, actor (Cade's County, Big Heat, Midway)
(d. 2006)
<§>80’s<§>
@88- Malcolm Scott Carpenter,
Boulder Colo, astronaut (Mercury 7-Aurora 7)
(d. 2013)
@87- Sonny James, [James Loden],
country music singer-songwriter (Young Love), born in Hackelburg,
Alabama
(d. 2016)
@85- Jack Paar,
American television host of the Jack Paar Show, born in Canton, Ohio
(d. 2004)
@±83- Kamehameha I,
King of Hawaii (1782-1819), born in Kohala, Hawaii
(d. 1819)
<§>70’s<§>
@79- Kate Smith, American singer
(d. 1986)
78- Judy Collins,
singer (Send in the Clowns, Clouds), born in Seattle, Washington
@76- Joseph Heller,

American novelist (Catch-22, 1963 Arts & Letters Award), born in
 Brooklyn, New York
(d. 1999)
72 Rita Coolidge,
singer (Higher & Higher, We're All Alone), born in Nashville, Tennessee
<§>60’s<§>
@68- Jacob Bekenstein,
American-Israeli theoretical physicist (Bekenstein-Hawking radiation),
born in Mexico City
(d. 2015)
63- Ray Parker Jr,
rock guitarist/vocalist (Ghostbusters), born in Detroit
<§>50’s<§>
@51- Calamity Jane [Martha Jane Canary],
American frontierswoman (Wild Bill Hickok), born in Princeton, Missouri
(d. 1903)
50- Tim McGraw,
American musician and actor, born in Delhi, Louisiana
<§>40’s<§>
@49- Max Robinson,
1st African American network TV anchor (ABC), born in Richmond,
Virginia
(d. 1988)
48- Wes Anderson,
American director and writer

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‡‡Historical Obits Today‡‡
<§>80’s<§>
@85-1902 John Glover,
English chemist (production sulfuric acid)
<§>60’s<§>
@68-1700 John Dryden,
English poet and playwright, first Poet Laureate (1668-1688)
@62-1998 Eldridge Cleaver,
American activist, cancer/diabetes  
<§>40’s<§>
@47-1945 Paul Joseph Goebbels,
German Nazi Minister of Propoganda, suicide with his wife and arranges
the death of his 6 children aged

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‡‡Trivia Hive  Answers‡‡
2011
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un assumed power after his father, Kim Jong-il, passed away in 2011 following a long stint as supreme leader since 1994. Kim Jong-un is the third in a familial succession of leaders, with his grandfather, Kim Il-sung, holding highest office in North Korea since the country was established until his death. Known for his willingness to display the country's destructive power via nuclear bomb tests, Kim Jong-un has reportedly continued human rights violations started under his father and executed or removed all who could challenge his rule. Source: Biography.com

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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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