April 01, 2026

2 Apr

 


          


      

Week 14  Day 92 Flag Today  46°/35°                             Wind 21 mph Gusts 35 mph

Active Fire: 348 miles away Risk of fire: Very Low     Nearest Lightning: 136 miles away

Air Quality: Fair Sunshine Very Windy

April Averages: Temps: 60°\35°

 

Monthly Observations

Autism Awareness Month Link
Beaver Awareness Month
Car Care Month
Celebrate Diversity Month
Child Abuse Prevention Month

 

(International) Cesarean Awareness Month
Community Spirit Days (1-30)
Confederate History Month
Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia Action Month 
Link
Couple Appreciation Month

Weekly Observations

3/22-4/4

Passiontide
1-7

APAWS Pooper Scooper  Week
Golden Rule Week
Laugh at Work Week
Medication Safety Week
Testicular Cancer Awareness Week (aka Get A Grip Day!) 
 Link

1-8

Explore Your Career Options Week
2-9

Pesach or Passover

Daily Observations

International Children's Book Day
National Burrito Day
National Employee Benefits Day 
 Link 
National Ferret Day 
Link
National Love Your Produce Manager Day
National Peanut Butter and Jelly Day 
Link
National Walking Day

Nickelodeon Day
Pesach
Pharmacists in Public Health Day
Reconciliation Day
World Autism Day 
Link
World Autism Awareness Day
 Link

Today’s Quotes                                                                 

 



Today’s Memes

 




Today’s Thoughts

The changing of seasons always brings wind to our town. Today is no different. It was nice to wake up to rain this morning. The sky cleared and the rain stopped about 9:30 this morning. We need more rain.

Shonto closed the school yesterday after someone visited the campus who tested positive for measles. The school is now cleaning all the buildings on campus. All staff had to stay at work and help with the cleaning. It seems to me the unvaccinated staff should have been sent away.

A judge ruled that the construction of the ballroom must stop. Of course, there will be many appeals. Just before the ruling, the administration announced there will be a massive military bunker under the ballroom. The bunker should have remained a state secret, rather than notifying our enemies where it is.

This morning the Supreme Court heard arguments on Birthright citizenship. Trump made history by being the first president to attend arguments before the Supreme Court. It was noted that he listened to the government’s arguments but left before the justices could question the lawyers on the other side. Many are suggesting that this was an intimidation tactic to remind the judges who were appointed by Trump that Trump wants to end birthright citizenship. 

Real Hoaxes

The Dreadnought Hoax (1910)

In 1910, members of the Bloomsbury Group, including Virginia Woolf, disguised themselves as Abyssinian royalty to tour HMS Dreadnought. Their makeup, costumes, and invented language were convincing enough to secure honors and a formal inspection.

Afterward, newspapers splashed the prank across front pages.

The episode embarrassed the Royal Navy, though no lasting harm occurred. It revealed vulnerabilities in deference to status and uniform, and it showed how ceremonial settings can short-circuit verification.

The pranksters sent thank-you telegrams in mock dialect, deepening the farce.

Retellings sometimes romanticize the hoax, but its best lesson is procedural: trust, but verify, even when guests arrive with apparent credentials. Institutions adapted by tightening identification and interpretation protocols.

Humor can reveal real weaknesses, and this hoax did so vividly. For readers, it is a reminder that authority signals are only as strong as the checks behind them.

Polite skepticism protects both hospitality and security.

 

The False Spanish Prisoner Con (1800s–early 1900s)

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, victims worldwide received letters about a wealthy nobleman secretly imprisoned in Spain. The writer promised a cut of hidden funds if the recipient advanced fees or provided banking help.

The narrative appealed to greed and empathy, creating urgency with confidential tones.

This Spanish Prisoner con is the ancestor of modern advance-fee frauds, including infamous email scams. Scammers tailored details to local contexts, used convincing stationery, and demanded secrecy to prevent verification.

Once fees were sent, more obstacles appeared, each requiring extra payment.

The scheme teaches durable lessons about social engineering. Unsolicited opportunities with outsized rewards deserve deep skepticism.

Independent verification, refusal to rush, and never paying upfront for uncertain promises are practical defenses. Authorities today advise reporting such approaches and using bank-level security practices.

Technology changes delivery methods, but psychological levers stay remarkably stable. Recognizing patterns is your best protection. 

Rare Native American Facts

Cahokia Was a Massive Ancient City

There used to be a huge city near what’s now St. Louis called Cahokia and, around 1250 AD, it had a population larger than London at the time. The city had giant earthen mounds and a complex society with trade networks stretching across the continent, which was why Cahokia was so important for culture & commerce in North America. Today, we only have the monumental structures that continue to fascinate archeologists.

 

Mount Rushmore Is on Sacred Land

Mount Rushmore might be one of the most famous American landmarks, but most people don't realize it's actually carved into the Black Hills of South Dakota, a sacred region for the Lakota Sioux and other tribes. In the 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, the U.S. government promised the Black Hills to the Lakota people, but they broke the treaty after discovering gold in 1874. The tribes have fought hard to have the land returned, yet nothing has really changed. 

Historic Events

 April in History

Birthdays

Linda Hunt (81 years old)

American actress (Bostonians, Eleni, Silverado), born in Morristown, New Jersey

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Emmylou Harris (79 years old)

American country singer ("Together Again"; "Blue Kentucky Girl"), born in Birmingham, Alabama

☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼

Christopher Meloni (65 years old)

American actor (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit; Runaway Bride), born in Washington, D.C.

☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼

Pedro Pascal (51 years old)

1975 Chilean-American actor (Game of Thrones; Narcos; The Mandalorian), born in Santiago, Chile

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Charlemagne (742-814 AD; @65)

1st Holy Roman emperor (800-14), born in Liège, Frankish Kingdom

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Giacomo Casanova (1725-1798; @73)

Italian writer, adventurer and famous lover, born in Venice, Italy

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Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875; @70)

Danish author of 150 fairy tales (The Ugly Duckling, The Snow Queen), born in Odense, Denmark

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Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi (1834-1904; @70. TB)

French sculptor (designed the Statue of Liberty), and painter, born in Colmar, France

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Walter Chrysler (1875-1940; @65, stroke)

American automotive pioneer (Chrysler Corporation) and thoroughbred breeder, born in Wamego, Kansas

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Alec Guinness (1914-2000; @86)

British actor (The Ladykillers, The Bridge on the River Kwai), born in London, England

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Robert "Dabbs" Greer, American actor (Gunsmoke, The Green Mile, Little House on Prairie), born in Fairview, Missouri (d. 2007; @90)

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Jack Webb, American screenwriter, director and actor (Dragnet, Sunset Boulevard), born in Santa Monica, California (d. 1982; @62, heart attack)

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Marvin Gaye (1939-1984; @44, shot)

American soul singer-songwriter ("It Takes Two"; What's Going On"; "Let's Get It On"), born in Washington, D.C.

☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼☼

Leon Russell [Claude Russell Bridges], American musician and singer-songwriter ("Tight Rope"; "Delta Lady"; "Carney"), born in Lawton, Oklahoma (d. 2016; @74, heart attack)

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Rodney King (1965-2012; @47, accidental drowning)

African American motorist beaten by Los Angeles police officers, born in Sacramento, California

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Ron Palillo, American actor (Arnold Horshack-Welcome Back Kotter), born in New Haven, Connecticut (d. 2012; @63, heart attack)

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…The End for today…

               

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