Thoughts for the Day

Today in History (September 23rd):

480 B.C.: Birthdays: Greek playwright Euripides;

63 B.C.: Birthdays: Roman Emperor Augustus;

1215: Birthdays: Mongol Emperor Kublai Khan;

1779: The USS Bonhomme Richard, commanded by John Paul Jones, defeated British frigate HMS Serapis in a battle off the coast of Scotland.

1800: Birthdays: Educator William McGuffey, author of the McGuffey eclectic readers for school children;

1806: U.S. explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark returned to St. Louis from the first recorded overland journey from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Coast and back.

1838: Birthdays: Feminist and presidential candidate Victoria Woodhull;

1846: German astronomer Johann Gottfried Galle discovered the planet Neptune at the Berlin Observatory. Neptune generally is the eighth planet from the sun.

1852: Birthdays: Surgeon William Halsted, who introduced operations for hernia and breast cancer;

1889: Birthdays: Journalist Walter Lippmann;

1897: Birthdays: Actor Walter Pidgeon;

1909: Gaston Leroux’s Phantom of the Opera was published.

1920: Birthdays: Actor Mickey Rooney;

1926: Birthdays: Jazz saxophonist John Coltrane;

1930: Birthdays: Soul singer/pianist Ray Charles;

1943: Birthdays: Singer Julio Iglesias;

1945: Birthdays: Actor Paul Petersen;

1947: Birthdays: Actor Mary Kay Place;

1949: Birthdays: Rock and roll Hall of Fame member Bruce Springsteen;

1950: Congress adopted the Internal Security Act, which provided for the registration of communists. It was later ruled unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court.

1959: Birthdays: Actor Jason Alexander;

1961: Birthdays: Actor Elizabeth Pena;

1966: A Rolling Stones’ concert at England’s Royal Albert concert hall was halted temporarily when screaming girls attacked Mick Jagger onstage. The riotous enthusiasm of the fans resulted in a ban of pop concerts at the hall.

1970: Birthdays: Singer/songwriter Ani DiFranco;

1972: Birthdays: Writer Ana Marie Cox;

1973: Juan Peron was again elected president of Argentina after 18 years in exile. His second wife, Isabel, became vice president and succeeded him when he died 10 months later.

1985: nine days of street fighting in Tripoli, Lebanon, left 183 people dead.

1991: 44 U.N. inspectors were detained in Baghdad after attempting to remove secret Iraqi plans for building nuclear weapons. They were freed five days later.

1992: The worst storm in years struck southeastern France, triggering flash flooding that left 34 people dead and 50 missing.

1993: The Israeli Knesset approved the peace agreement with the Palestinian Liberation Organization.

1999: Russian planes began three days of attacks on targets in Chechnya, in response to several bombings in Moscow and other Russian cities.
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2004: Haiti’s death toll from flooding caused by Tropical Storm Jeanne could top 2,000, a Haitian civil defense official said.

2005: 23 people were killed when a bus carrying Texas nursing home evacuees from Hurricane Rita was destroyed by fire.

2006: As observance of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began in Iraq, a bomb killed at least 35 people, mostly women lined up for kerosene in Sadr City.

2007: Yasuo Fukuda, a long-time political force and son of a former prime minister, was chosen prime minister of Japan, succeeding Shinzo Abe, who resigned amid financial scandals. The U.S. Air Force sought to determine how six nuclear warheads were accidentally shipped from North Dakota to Louisiana with no one noticing and sat unguarded for a day.

2008: A 22-year-old student killed 11 fellow adult students and himself at a western Finland vocational college 205 miles north of Helsinki.

2009: The U.S. House of Representatives voted for a 13-week, $1.4 billion extension of unemployment benefits for 27 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, where the unemployment rate was 8.5 percent or higher.

2010: The U.S. Congress enacted the Small Business Jobs and Credit Act, a multibillion-dollar package of tax breaks and government loans to aid small businesses in the United States. President Barack Obama signed the bill into law on Sept. 27. Nearly three dozen delegations, including U.S. representatives, walked out of the U.N. General Assembly meeting when Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad accused the United States of orchestrating the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington.

2011: Palestinians officially requested statehood as a full member of the United Nations in an appearance before the U.N. Security Council. Yemen President Ali Abdullah Saleh returned home after almost four months in Saudi Arabia for treatment of injuries from a bomb attack on his presidential palace. He called for a ceasefire and more talks in fighting between his forces and anti-government protesters.


Quotes

“My feeling is that there is nothing in life but refraining from hurting others, and comforting those who are sad.” – Olive Schreiner, author (1855-1920)

“The artist is the lover of Nature, therefore he is her slave and her master.” – Rabindranath Tagore, Indian Bengali poet


Louise Nevelson (1889-1988) Russian artist:

“A woman may not hit a ball stronger than a man, but it is different. I prize that difference.”

“I see no reason why I should tickle stones or waste time on polishing bronze.”

“I think all great innovations are built on rejections.”

“I think most artists create out of despair. The very nature of creation is not a performing glory on the outside, it’s a painful, difficult search within.”

“The freer that women become, the freer men will be. Because when you enslave someone, you are enslaved.”

“True strength is delicate.”

“What we call reality is an agreement that people have arrived at to make life more livable.”

“When you are doing a piece you are with it. You don’t want to wait until next week, when experience will have given you something else.”


crepitate

PRONUNCIATION: (KREP-i-tayt)
http://wordsmith.org/words/crepitate.mp3

MEANING: verb intr.: To make a crackling or popping sound.

ETYMOLOGY: From Latin crepitare (to crackle), frequentative of crepare (to rattle, crack). Earliest documented use: 1623.

USAGE: “John Grisham’s sentences thud and crepitate all over the page, and he has become a literary tycoon.” – Gene Weingarten; The Fiddler in the Subway; Simon & Schuster; 2010.

Explore “crepitate” in the Visual Thesaurus.
http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=crepitate


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