January 29, 2017

Jan 30

Last post until late Feb.

FYI: Any blue text is a link. Click to check it out!
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January  30, 2017 Week: 05 \ Day: 30
86004 Today: H 35° \ L 29° Average Sky Cover: 0% 
Wind ave:   0mph\Gusts:  13mph Visibility: 10 mi
January Averages: 43°\17°
January Records: H: 66° (1971) L: -30 (1937)
Record High: 66°[1971]   Record Low: -19°[1979]
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❆❆Quote of the Day❆❆
My religion is very simple. My religion is kindness.
Dalai Lama
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❆❆Observances Today❆❆
Croissant Day Link
Inane Answering Message Day

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❆❆Observances This Week❆❆
29-2/4
Childrens Authors and Illustrators Week
Catholic Schools Week

Meat Week
Tax Identity Theft Week

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❆❆Today’s Significant US Historical Events❆❆
   Today’s Significant International Historical Events 
   1487 Bell chimes invented

   1607 Massive flooding in England destroys around 200 square miles of coastline and results in approximately 2,000 casualties

   1647 Scots agree to sell King Charles I to English Parliament for £400


1781 Articles of Confederation ratified by 13th state, Maryland

1806 The original Lower Trenton Toll Bridge, which spans the Delaware River between Morrisville, Pennsylvania and Trenton, New Jersey, is opened. 
1815 Burned US Library of Congress re-established with Thomas Jefferson's 6,500 volumes
   1818 John Keats composes his sonnet "When I Have Fears"
   1820 British explorer Edward Bransfield aboard Williams sights Trinity Peninsula, Antarctica claims for Britain
   1826 The Menai Suspension Bridge, considered the world's first modern suspension bridge, connecting the Isle of Anglesey to the north West coast of Wales is opened.
1835 Richard Lawrence misfires at President Andrew Jackson in Washington, D.C. in 1st attempted assassination of a US President

1847 Yerba Buena renamed San Francisco
   1873 "Around the World in 80 Days" by Jules Verne is published in France by Pierre-Jules Hetzel
1894 Pneumatic hammer patented by Charles King of Detroit

   1911 1st rescue of an air passenger by a ship, near Havana, Cuba
1922 World Law Day 1st celebrated
   1928 1st radio telephone connection between Netherlands & US
1928 Eugene O'Neill's "Strange Interlude" premieres in NYC

1931 Charlie Chaplin's "City Lights" premieres at Los Angeles Theater
1933 "Lone Ranger" begins a 21-year run on ABC radio
   1935 Ezra Pound meets Benito Mussolini, reads from a draft of "Cantos"
1946 1st issue of Franklin Roosevelt dime
   1948 5th Winter Olympic Games open in St Moritz, Switzerland
   1948 Mahatma Gandhi assassinated by Nathuram Godse

   1952 Korean War truce talks deadlock
1956 Elvis Presley records his version of "Blue Suede Shoes"
1956 KRMA TV channel 6 in Denver, CO (PBS) begins broadcasting
1956 Martin Luther King Jr.s home bombed
1957 US Congress accepts "Eisenhower-doctrine"
1958 1st 2-way moving sidewalk in service, Dallas Tx
1961 JFK asks for an Alliance for Progress & Peace Corps
1961 KAET TV channel 8 in Phoenix, AZ (PBS) begins broadcasting
1962 2 members of Flying Wallendas' high-wire act killed when their 7-person pyramid collapsed during a performance in Detroit
   1965 State funeral of Winston Churchill at St Paul's Cathedral in London. Largest ever state funeral.
   1972 'Bloody Sunday': 27 unarmed civilians are shot (of whom 14 were killed) by the British Army during a civil rights march in Derry; this is the highest death toll from a single shooting incident during 'the Troubles'
1982 Richard Skrenta writes the first PC virus code, which is 400 lines long and disguised as an Apple boot program called "Elk Cloner".
1989 Five Pharaoh sculptures from 1470 BC found at temple of Luxor

1989 Olympian, Bruce Kimball, is sentenced to 17 years in prison for killing 2 teenagers in a drunk driving accident
1989 The American embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan closes.
1994 Dan Jansen skates world record 500m (35.76)
1995 Kevin Eubanks officially becomes band leader of "Tonight Show"

1995 Workers from the National Institutes of Health announce the success of clinical trials testing the first preventive treatment for sickle-cell disease.

   2016 Boko Haram militants on motorcycles attack Dalori village near Maiduguri, Nigeria, killing at least 65 and injuring 136
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❆❆My Rambling Thoughts❆❆
Taking a break from this posting until late February. I will be cruising SE Asia.  See you later.
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❆❆Brain Teasers❆❆
(answers at the end of post)
Blank Change 4
Language brain teasers are those that involve the English language. You need to think about and manipulate words and letters.

In the four sentences below, are two blanks. You must fill them in with words that are either anagrams, synonyms, antonyms, or homonyms. You can only use each of these one-time each sentence. Can you figure out each word?


1. The golfer has yelled out "____," ____ times today.

2. They began to ____ scones, and drink ____.

3. She used one ____ to look down at her wrist and see her ____.

4. He ran ____ the dog in order ____ not get bitten by it.

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❆❆Today’s Trivia Hive❆❆
(answers at the end of post)
What philosopher pioneered a method of teaching based on cooperative argument and question and answer sessions?
Aristotle
Socrates
Sophocles
Herodotus

60.9% taking the internet quiz got it correct.
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❆❆Harper’s Index❆❆
2→Number of children that British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has knocked to the ground during athletic matches
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❆❆2 Jokes For The Day❆❆
My boyfriend and I broke up.

He wanted to get married... I didn't want him to.

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A lawyer named Strange passed away. His friend asked the tombstone maker to inscribe on his tombstone, "Here lies Strange, an honest man, and a lawyer." 

The inscriber insisted that such an inscription would be confusing, for a passerby would tend to think that three men were buried under the stone.

However, he suggested an alternative. He would inscribe, "Here lies a man who was both honest and a lawyer." 

That way, whenever anyone walked by the tombstone and read it, they would be certain to remark, "That's Strange."

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❆❆Yep, It Really Happened❆❆
*---- Woman Flew Through Tornado in Bathtub ----*

An incredibly lucky woman rode out a killer Texas tornado in a bathtub. The National Weather Service forecast office described an 800-yard-wide tornado packing winds of 130 mph that tore off the roof of a storage building and tossed a party barge 200 yards into a grove of trees. But one woman who took shelter in a bathtub got the ride of her life when the tornado lifted the tub out of the home and deposited it in the woods with the woman still in the tub. Except for some cuts and bruises the woman was not injured. In the absence of an underground storm shelter, meteorologists frequently tell people to shelter in a bathtub during a tornado because it is heavy and typically well-secured. And in this case they weren't wrong. Unfortunately, her house was totaled.    

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❆❆Birthdays Today❆❆
@  indicates age at death
92- Dorothy Malone, American actress (At Gunpoint, Night & Day, Peyton Place), born in Chicago, Illinois

87- Gene Hackman, actor (Bonnie & Clyde, Under Fire, The French Connection), born in San Bernardino California
@86 Dick Martin, actor/comedian (Laugh-In, Carbon Copy), born in Detroit, [D 2008]
@85 Gelett Burgess, author (Purple Cow) [D 1951]
@84 Emilio G. Segrè, Italian physicist and Nobel laureate (discovered the elements technetium, astatine and the sub-atomic antiparticle antiproton), born in Tivoli, Italy (d. 1989)
@81 David Wayne, Traverse City Mich, actor (Andromeda Strain, Adams Rib) [D 1995]
80- Boris Spassky, USSR, world chess champion (1969-72)
80- Vanessa Redgrave, actress (Blow-Up, Julia, Orient Express), born in London, England

@78 John Ireland, actor (Rawhide, Gunfight at OK Corral), born in Vancouver, British Columbia [D 1992]
75- Dick Cheney, 46th US Vice President, born in Lincoln, Nebraska
@73 Max Theiler, South African and American virologist who developed vaccine for Yellow Fever (Nobel Prize 1951), born in Pretoria (d. 1972)

68- Peter Agre, American microbiologist and Nobel laureate, born in Northfield, Minnesota
65- Phil Collins, England, singer/drummer (Genesis-Against All Odds)
@63 Franklin Roosevelt, 32nd US President (Democrat: 1933-1945), born in Hyde Park, New York (d. 1945)
59- Brett Butler, comedienne (Grace-Grace Under Fire), born in Montgomery, Alabama

43- Christian Bale, Wales, actor (Empire of the Sun, Little Women)
@42 Payne Stewart, American PGA golfer (1983 Walt Disney), born in Springfield, Missouri (d. 1999)

37- Wilmer Valderrama, American actor (FEZ-that 70’s Show)
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❆❆Historical Obits Today❆❆
@95-2016 Ken Sailors, professional basketball player (popularized and may have invented the jump shot)
@91-2015 Carl Djerassi, Austrian-born American chemist, father of the contraceptive pill

@89-2007 Sidney Sheldon, American author, playwright, and screenwriter
@89-1999 Ed Herlihy, American broadcaster
@84-1836 Betsy Ross [Elizabeth Griscom], American seamstress widely credited with making the first American flag
@83-1991 John McIntire, actor (Virginian, Psycho)

@78-1948 Mahatma Gandhi, India's political and spiritual leader, assassinated by Hindu extremists

@76-2009 Ingemar Johansson, Swedish heavyweight professional boxing champion of the world, pneumonia/dementia
@76-1948 Orville Wright, US aviation pioneer, heart attack
@75-1951 Ferdinand Porsche, German car inventor (Porsche), stroke
@72-1934 Frank Nelson Doubleday, American publisher

@48-1649 Charles I, King of Great Britain (1625-49), beheaded for treason

@33ish-1838 Osceola, chief of Seminole, infection
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❆❆Brain Teasers Answers❆❆
1. The golfer has yelled out "FORE," FOUR times today. (homonyms)

2. They began to EAT scones, and drink TEA. (Anagrams)

3. She used one EYE to look down at her wrist and see her WATCH. (Synonyms)

4. He ran FROM the dog in order TO not get bitten by it. (Antonyms)

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❆❆Trivia Hive  Answers❆❆
Socrates
The Socratic Method, named after Greek philosopher Socrates (470-399 BC) is a school of learning where students are encouraged to engage in friendly debate, conversation and questioning to challenge existing preconceptions and foster critical thinking skills. Source: criticalthinking.org
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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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