January 15, 2026

16 Jan

 

 


 

Week 3  Day 16 Flag Today  55°/33°

Wind 6 mph Gusts 12 mph

Active Fire: 261 miles away Risk of fire: Moderate 

Nearest Lightning: 1274 miles away

Air Quality: Fair  

Jan Averages: Temps: 44°\18° Moisture:  10 Days

 

Monthly Observations

International Child-Centered Divorce Month
International Creativity Month
International New Years Resolutions Month for Businesses
International Quality of Life Month

International Wayfinding Month
International Wealth Mentality Month
Learn to Ski and Snowboard Month 
Link
Manuary
Menudo Month  
Link

Weekly Observations

Cuckoo Dancing Week: 11-17
Home Office Safety and Security Week: 11-17  
National Mocktail Week: 11-17

Idiom Week: 11-17
National Soccer Coaches of America Week: 14-17  
Link

Daily Observations

Appreciate A Dragon Day
Civil Service Day
Fig Newton Day 
Link  Link
Hat Day
International Fetish Day
Isra Al Mi'Raj (Muslim)

National Nothing Day
National Quinoa Day

Religious Freedom Day Link 
Without A Scalpel Day 
Link  Link
Zeta Phi Beta Day

Today’s Quote                                                       

 


Today’s Meme

 



Today’s Thoughts

A nice day here.

I headed out early to get some groceries. I was going to wash my vehicle, but the train had stopped so I couldn’t make the turn. No problem, I’ll do it tomorrow.

I believe that ICE is not helping in Minnesota. The people have a right to PEACFULLY protest. When the protestors throw things it is no longer peaceful. I get that it is tense there. Restoring order is not easy. ICE, the protestors, and the residents are all human beings. Everyone should let the peaceful protests continue and arrest those who are not peaceful. Here is the problem: what is the current definition of peaceful? It appears that neither side can agree on the definition. Until they agree, this current mess will continue.      

Trivia

Baby Formula Has Actually Been Around For More Than 150 Years

Baby formula - a manufactured supplement for breast milk - is a fairly modern invention, but probably not as modern as you think: It was invented in the 1800s.

The first supplements for a mother's milk were other women, known as “wet nurses,” who filled in to feed babies for wealthy mothers, or those who were unable to breastfeed. Wet nursing began as early as 2000 BCE, and was common in Europe and America during the 1700s. (Brunettes rather than blond or red-headed women were preferred as wet nurses because their milk was thought to be more nutritious.)

In the 1800s, attention turned instead to finding substitutes for breast milk. The first option considered was milk from animals such as cows, goats, horses, and donkeys, served fresh, heated, or diluted. Before baby bottles and rubber nipples were invented, infants were fed via spoon, or a container like a cow's horn covered with cloth, paper, or a sponge to serve as a nipple.

Doctors noticed, however, that infants fed cow's milk had a higher mortality rate and digestive problems. In 1838, German scientist Johann Franz Simon analyzed both types and found that cow's milk had more carbohydrates and less protein than human milk. In 1860, German chemist Justus von Leibig created the first commercial baby food, a powder that consisted of wheat and malt flours and potassium bicarbonate meant to be mixed with warmed cow's milk.

In the 1870s, Nestle's Infant Food, made from malt, cow's milk, sugar, and wheat flour, diluted with water, was sold in the US. Other companies created their own formulas, and the ingredients, or percentage of ingredients, changed in the following decades based on findings from doctors and scientists about the most optimal nutrition for babies. Other improvements included pasteurization (to kill bacteria) and evaporation (to make milk more digestible).

In the early 1900s, manufacturers tried making infant formula more like human milk, adding ingredients like maltose, dextrin, calcium, phosphorous, cod liver oil, and other animal and vegetable fats. One such product was called “Similac” because it was supposed to be “similar to lactation.” Later additions included soy and iron. 

The number of women who breastfeed reached a low in the 1960s when people thought formula was more nutritious, and companies provided formula for free to new mothers in hospitals.

In the US, the Infant Formula Act of 1980 set standards for ingredients, testing, and manufacturing. In more recent decades, companies have developed special formulas for infants who are premature, lactose-intolerant, or have other medical problems or needs.

Historic Events

Today’s historical events

Birthdays with some quotes

 André Michelin (1853-1931 @78)

French industrialist, tire manufacturer (Michelin) and publisher of the Michelin Guide, born in Paris

 

John Hamilton, American actor (The Adventures of Superman - "Perry White"), born in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania (d. 1958 @71; heart failure)

Fulgencio Batista (1901-1973;

@72, heart attack)

Dictator and President of Cuba (1933-44, 1952-59), born in Banes, Cuba

Ethel Merman (1908-1984; @76, brain cancer)

American Tony and Grammy Award-winning stage and screen singer ("There's No Business Like Show Business"), and actress (It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World), born in Astoria, New York City

Jay Hanna "Dizzy" Dean, American Baseball HOF pitcher (MLB All-Star 1934–37; World Series & NL MVP 1934 St Louis Cardinals), born in Lucas, Arkansas (d. 1974; @64, heart attack)

Dian Fossey, American zoologist (Gorillas in the Mist), born in San Francisco, California (d. 1985; @53,murdered)

Jim Berry, American cartoonist (Berry's World), born in Chicago, Illinois (d. 2015; @83)

Susan Sontag (1933-2004 @71, myelodysplastic syndrome)

American writer, philosopher and political activist (The Benefactor), born in New York City

 

A. J. Foyt(91 years old)

American auto racer (Indianapolis 500, 1961, 1964, 1967, 1977; 24 Hours of Le Mans, 1967; Daytona 500, 1972; 24 Hours of Daytona, 1983, 1985; 12 Hours of Sebring 1985), born in Houston, Texas

 

Ronnie Milsap [Millsaps], (82 years old)

American country singer ("It Was Almost Like a Song"; "Any Day Now"), born in Robbinsville, North Carolina

 

1944 Jim Stafford, (82 years old) American singer-songwriter ("Spiders & Snakes"; "My Girl Bill"), born in Eloise, Florida

John Carpenter(78 years old)

American film director (Halloween, The Thing), born in Carthage, New York

 

1950 Debbie Allen, (75 years old) American dancer, choreographer, actress (Fame -"Lydia"), producer, and director (A Different World), born in Houston, Texas

 

1959 Sade [Helen Folasade Adu], (67 years old)

Nigerian-born British singer-songwriter, arranger, and record producer ("Soldier of Love"; "Smooth Operator"), born in Ibadan, Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria

Kate Moss(52 years old)

British supermodel (Calvin Klein, Atelier Versace AW95), born in Croydon, England

Lin-Manuel Miranda(46 years old)

American composer and playwright (In The Heights; Hamilton), born in New York City

 

 

…The End for today…

               

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