December 08, 2025

9 Dec

 

 

 

 


 

Dec. Averages: Temps: 43°\20° Moisture:4 Days moisture 0.7”

Flagstaff Today 49°: 23° Week 50 Day 343

Wind: 7 mph Gusts 9 mph                    Nearest lightning: 1329 miles away

Active Fire: 213 miles away Risk of Fire: Low

Air Quality: Fair Sunshine

 

 



Weekly Observations

3-10

Clerc-Gallaudet Week

4-24

Andisop (Meterological Fiddling Link

 

7-13

National Hand Washing Awareness WeekLink 
Recipe Greetings For The Holidays Week

8-14

Computer Science Education Week Link )

 

Daily Observations

Birdseye Frozen Food Day
Cremation Day
International Anti-corruption Day

 

Internat’l Day of Commemoration & Dignity of The Victims of The Crime of Genocide & The Prevention of This Crime
Weary Willie Day  Link
World Techno Day 
Link

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 



My Thoughts for the day

Another nice weather day. It looks like some record high temps are instore for our little mountain town. That’s OK with me.

I got good news from the Oncologist this morning. I have completed the infusion process for my blood issues. I still will be taking the horse pills until July, but I’m OK with that.

After that good news, I delivered Christmas Cookies to the front people and the nurses who do the infusion and phlebotomy. Then more cookies for the blood draw office and the vascular team that stick me. I ended with a delivery at Walgreen’s pharmacy. Everyone was pleased to get tasty cookies.

The Broncos beat the Raiders and are sitting nicely for the playoffs. The Cards lost again and must decide about their future play for next season.

I got a note from my colleague Camille. She said she was bored so she spent the Thanksgiving holiday in the hospital and rehab after she fell. She says she is doing well, is home, and can’t wait to be able to drive again. I wished her all the best with her recovery. 

Wild West Myths that never happened…

Native Americans Were Constantly Attacking Settlers

Popular culture paints Native Americans as relentless attackers of wagon trains and homesteads. The truth is far more nuanced. While conflict did occur, it was not the daily reality for most settlers, as clarified by the Independent Institute.

Many tribes sought peaceful coexistence and even traded extensively with settlers. Violence often arose only after treaties were broken, land was seized, or resources were threatened. In many cases, Native Americans were defending their homelands against encroachment.

Constant attacks became a political narrative, one that justified military campaigns and westward expansion. In reality, Native Americans suffered most from disease, displacement, and forced assimilation rather than endless battles. This reshaped entire cultures and communities across the continent. 

Cities that changed their names…

Leningrad → Saint Petersburg (Russia)

It’s a city with three names and three centuries of reinvention. Founded by Peter the Great in 1703 as his “window to the West,” Saint Petersburg became Petrograd during World War I to sound less German, then Leningrad in 1924 after the death of Lenin. When the Soviet Union crumbled, residents voted to restore the original name in 1991.
The return to Saint Petersburg wasn’t rejection, but reconciliation; a way to honor history without erasing it. Today, its palaces and canals whisper all three eras at once, proof that names change, but identity endures.
 

Random Thoughts…

What would my title be if I were a book?


The color red represents Valentine’s Day, and so are red roses and red hearts… Would it be unusual if, instead of red, a different color was chosen for Valentine’s Day? And why the color red? Why does the color red bring up images of love in our minds?


The only building you left without entering was the hospital where you were born.


The sounds made by dinosaurs were created by humans. 

Historic Events

1803 - The 12th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was passed by the U.S. Congress. With the amendment Electors were directed to vote for a President and for a Vice-President rather than for two choices for President.
1854 - Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem, "The Charge of the Light Brigade," was published in England.
1884 - Levant M. Richardson received a patent for the ball-bearing roller skate.
1907 - Christmas Seals went on sale for the first time, in the Wilmington, DE, post office.
1960 - Sperry Rand Corporation unveiled a new computer known as "Univac 1107."
1975U.S. President Gerald R. Ford signed a $2.3 billion seasonal loan authorization to prevent New York City from having to default.
1990 - The first American hostages to be released by Iran began arriving in the U.S.
1994 - Representatives of the Irish Republican Army and the British government opened peace talks in Northern Ireland.

Birthdays

Judi Dench(91 years old)

1934 British actress (Henry V, Wetherby, Skyfall), born in York, England

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Beau Bridges (84 years old), American actor (Hotel New Hampshire, 5th Musketeer), born in Los Angeles, California

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Tom Kite(76 years old)

 American golfer (US Open 1992; 19 PGA Tour titles, The Tradition 2000), born in McKinney, Texas

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John Malkovich(72 years old)

1953 American actor (The Killing Fields; Dangerous Liaisons), born in Christopher, Illinois

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Donny Osmond (68 years old), American singer (Osmond Brothers, Donnie & Marie), born in Ogden, Utah

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Felicity Huffman(63 years old)

1962 American actress (Desperate Housewives), born in Bedford, New York

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Kurt Angle(57 years old)

1968 American 220 lbs freestyle wrestler (Olympic gold 1996), born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

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Stacey Abrams (52 years old), American politician, lawyer and voting rights activist, born in Madison, Wisconsin

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McKayla Maroney(30 years old)

1995 American artistic gymnast (Olympic gold and silver medals 2012) famous for her "not impressed" expression that became a meme, born in Aliso Viejo, California

 

 

John Milton(d.1674 @65, gout)

English poet and puritan (Paradise Lost), born in London, England

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Clarence Birdseye(d.1956 @69; heart attack)

American inventor and founder of the modern frozen food industry (Birdseye), born in Brooklyn, New York

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1898 Emmett Kelly, American circus clown (Weary Willie), born in Sedan, Kansas (d. 1979@80)

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1899 Jean de Brunhoff, French children's book author (Babar the Elephant), born in Paris (d. 1937; @37, TB)

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Margaret Hamilton(d.1985; @82)

American character actress (The Wizard of Oz), born in Cleveland, Ohio

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Grace Hopper(d.1992; @85)

American computer scientist and US Navy admiral who invented the first compiler for a universal computer programming language and is credited with coining the phrase 'debugging’, born in New York City

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Douglas Fairbanks Jr.(d. 2000; @90)

American actor (Prisoner of Zenda; Gunga Din), and decorated US naval officer (WWII Beach Jumpers), born in New York City

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Thomas Phillip "Tip" O'Neill Jr., American politician and 47th speaker of the house (D-Ma: 1977-86), born in Cambridge, Massachusetts (d. 1994; @81)

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Kirk Douglas [Issur Danielovitch](d.2020; @103)

American actor (Spartacus, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral), born in Amsterdam, New York

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Redd Foxx [John Sanford], American comedian and actor (Sanford & Son; Redd Foxx Show), born in St Louis, Missouri (d. 1991; @68, heart attack)

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Richard "Dick" Van Patten, American actor, businessman, and animal welfare advocate (Tom Bradford in 8 is Enough), born in Queens, New York (d. 2015; @86)

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Buck Henry [Henry Zuckerman], American Emmy Award-winning screenwriter (Get Smart; The Graduate; The Owl and the Pussycat), actor (1st 10-time host of SNL; The Man Who Fell to Earth), and director (Heaven Can Wait), born in New York City (d. 2020; @89) 

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1942 Dick Butkus, American College-Pro Football HOF linebacker (Uni of Illinois; NFL Defensive Player of the Year 1969, 70; 5×First-team All-Pro; 8xPro Bowl; Chicago Bears), sportscaster (CBS, ESPN) and actor (My Two Dads), born in Chicago, Illinois (d. 2023) [1]

 

…The End for today…

           

December 07, 2025

8 Dec

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dec. Averages: Temps: 43°\20° Moisture:4 Days moisture 0.7”

Flagstaff Today 50°: 22° Week 50 Day 342

Wind: 2 mph Gusts 9 mph                    Nearest lightning: 1173 miles away

Active Fire: 213 miles away Risk of Fire: Low

Air Quality: Moderate Sunshine

 

 



Weekly Observations

3-10

Clerc-Gallaudet Week

4-24

Andisop (Meterological Fiddling Link

 

7-13

National Hand Washing Awareness Week Link 
Recipe Greetings For The Holidays Week

8-14

Computer Science Education Week Link )

Daily Observations

AFL-CIO Day Link (1886)
Green Monday 
Link )
National Crossword Solvers Day

National Day of Lard
Pretend To Be A Time Traveler Day
Toilet Paper Appreciation Day  
Link  

Today’s Quotes                                                             


Today’s Memes

 




My Thoughts for the day

A few days of warmth ahead. Nice!

The National Park Service has hopped on the Trump train and quickly fastened their seatbelts. First is was charging very high fees for foreigners to visit any of our National Parks. Now they are hitting the Americans who visit the parks. For decades, MLK day was a free day and recently Juneteenth was added as a free day. Those days are no longer free days, but they added Trump’s birthday as a free day. It makes little sense.

I’m still thinking about Merida for Christmas, but I am leaning toward seeing my brother at a different time. Travel at this time of year is so unpredictable. I did many snowy/icy drives to Denver, cold and ice in Chicago, airline cancellations for many years. I’ll see. 

Wild West Myths that never happened…

The Wild West Ended Abruptly

Many believe the Wild West ended suddenly with the closing of the frontier in 1890. In reality, the transition was gradual, as discussed in the Paradox Interactive Forums. Railroads, telegraphs, and growing cities slowly reshaped the region over decades.

The U.S. Census Bureau declared the frontier “closed” in 1890, but frontier culture and challenges persisted well into the 20th century. Ranching, mining, and settlement continued to evolve rather than vanish overnight.

A dramatic ending may sound appealing, but in truth the West blended into modern America over time, leaving behind both legends and realities. The culture of independence and exploration carried forward well beyond the official “end.” 

Cities that changed their names…

Saigon → Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnam)

When the Vietnam War ended in 1975, the victory brought unity… And transformation. The southern capital of Saigon, once a French colonial gem and later a battleground, was renamed Ho Chi Minh City the following year, honoring the revolutionary leader who had dreamed of a free Vietnam. The name change carried emotion and politics in equal measure.
Yet, even today, “Saigon” hasn’t disappeared. It’s whispered by taxi drivers, printed on cafes, and spoken with affection by older generations. The two names coexist: one for officialdom, the other for the heart.
 

Random Thoughts…

We know our parents for the majority of our lives, whereas they only know us for a part of theirs.

Someone was born at this exact time, and someone died at this same instant.

Even though our brain has never experienced such things, it can create a situation in its head as if they have.

Ketchup is the jam if the tomato is a fruit. 

Historic Events

1776 - George Washington's retreating army in the American Revolution crossed the Delaware River from New Jersey to Pennsylvania.

1854 - Pope Pius IX proclaimed the dogma of the Immaculate Conception. The theory holds that Mary, mother of Jesus, was free of original sin from the moment she was conceived.

1886 - At a convention of union leaders in Columbus, OH, the American Federation of Labor was founded.

1941 - The United States entered World War II when it declared war against Japan. The act came one day after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Britain and Canada also declared war on Japan.

1949 - The Chinese Nationalist government moved from the Chinese mainland to Formosa due to Communists pressure.

1987 - U.S. President Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev signed a treaty agreeing to destroy their nations' arsenals of intermediate-range nuclear missiles.

1993 - U.S. President Clinton signed into law the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Birthdays

Jimmy Lai(78 years old)

Hong Kong-British businessmanentrepreneur (founder of Giordano, Next Digital, Apple Daily), and pro-democracy activist, born in Canton, China

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Kim Basinger(72 years old)

American actress (Never Say Never Again; 9½ Weeks, Batman), born in Athens, Georgia

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Ann Coulter (64 years old), American author, political commentator, and attorney, born in New York City

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Teri Hatcher (61 years old), American actress (Lois & Clark, Desperate Housewives), born in Sunnyvale, California

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Nicki Minaj(43 years old)

Trinidadian-American rapper and singer (Super Bass, Starships), born in Saint James, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago

 

 

Horace(d.8 BC; @56)

Roman Republican poet (Odes), born in Venosa, Italy

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Jan Ingenhousz, Dutch-English physiologist (discovering photosynthesis) and personal physician of Maria Theresa, born in Breda, Staats-Brabant, Dutch Republic (d. 1799 @68)

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Eli Whitney(d.1825@58, prostate cancer)

American inventor (Cotton Gin), born in Westborough, Massachusetts

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William C. Durant, American industry pioneer, founded General Motors, Frigidaire, born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1947 @85)

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Diego Rivera(d.1957; @70)

Mexican painter (En el Arsenal) and husband of Frida Kahlo, born in Guanajuato, México

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1894 Elzie C. Segar, American cartoonist (Popeye), born in Chester, Illinois (d. 1938; @43, leukemia)

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James Thurber, American humorist, playwright, and cartoonist (Men, Women & Dogs; The Male Animal; The Secret Life of Walter Mitty), born in Columbus, Ohio (d. 1961@66, blood clot)

Richard Llewellyn, Welsh novelist (How Green Was My Valley), born in Hendon, Middlesex, England (d. 1983@76, heart attack)

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Lee J. Cobb [Leo Jacoby], American actor (Virginian, 12 Angry Men, On the Waterfront), born in New York City (d. 1976; @64, heart attack)

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Sammy Davis Jr.(d.1990; @64, throat cancer)

American vaudeville, stage, and screen singer ("The Candy Man"), dancer, actor (Ocean's 11), and Rat Pack member, born in New York City

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Maximilian Schell(d.2014; @83 )

Swiss-Austrian actor and director (Odessa File, Julia), born in Vienna, Austria

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 (Clerow) "Flip" Wilson, American Grammy Award-winning comedian, and Emmy Award-winning writer and TV personality (The Flip Wilson Show), born in Jersey City, New Jersey (d. 1998; @64, liver cancer)
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David Carradine, American actor (Kung Fu, Mean Streets, Kill Bill V.1 & 2), born in Hollywood, California (d. 2009; @72, accidental suicide)

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1937 James MacArthur, American actor (Danny Williams-Hawaii 5-0), born in Los Angeles, California (d. 2010; @72)

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Jim Morrison(d.1971; @27, OD)

American singer-songwriter (The Doors) and poet, born in Melbourne, Florida

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Gregg Allman(d.2017;@69; liver cancer)

American Hammond organist, guitarist and vocalist (The Allman Brothers Band - "Whipping Post"), born in Nashville, Tennessee

 

…The End for today…