Thoughts for the Day

Today in History (February 9th):

1621: Gregory XV becomes Pope, the last Pope elected by acclamation.

1773: Birthdays: William Henry Harrison, ninth president of the United States.

1775: The American colony of Massachusetts declared in rebellion by the British Parliament.

1825: After no presidential candidate won the necessary majority, the House of Representatives elected John Quincy Adams the sixth president of the United States.

1891: Birthdays: Actor Ronald Colman.

1900: The solid silver trophy known as the Davis Cup was first put up for competition when American collegian Dwight Filley Davis challenged British tennis players to compete against his Harvard team.

1909: Birthdays: Former Secretary of State Dean Rusk; Actor Carmen Miranda.

1914: Birthdays: Country singer Ernest Tubb; Baseball entrepreneur Bill Veeck.

1922: Birthdays: Actor Kathryn Grayson.

1923: Birthdays: Irish playwright Brendan Behan.

1928: Birthdays: Television journalist Roger Mudd.

1930: Birthdays: Evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong.

1940: Birthdays: Nobel laureate South African author J. M. Coetzee.

1942: Birthdays: Singer/songwriter Carole King.

1943: In a major World War II strategic victory, the Allies retook Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands from the Japanese. Birthdays: Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz; Actor Joe Pesci.

1944: Birthdays: Author Alice Walker.

1945: Birthdays: Actor Mia Farrow.

1949: Birthdays: Actor Judith Light.

1950: U.S. Sen. Joseph McCarthy, R-Wis., charged the U.S. State Department was infested with communists, touching off the infamous McCarthy era.

1953: Birthdays: Actor Ciaran Hinds.

1955: Birthdays: Actor Charles Shaughnessy.

1963: Birthdays: Country singer Travis Tritt.

1964: The Beatles appear on television’s The Ed Sullivan Show. An estimated 73 million people watched.

1971: An earthquake shook Los Angeles and killed 64 people. Satchel Paige became the first Negro League player voted to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

1981: Birthdays: Actor Tom Hiddleston.

1984: Soviet President Yuri Andropov, in power 15 months, died at age 69.

1987: Robert McFarlane, former Reagan administration national security adviser, was hospitalized for an overdose of Valium just hours before he was to testify to a presidential commission about the Iran-Contra scandal.

1990: The U.S. stock of Perrier water was recalled because of levels of benzene in violation of EPA standards. The recall was extended worldwide.

1991: Lithuanians overwhelmingly voted to secede from the Soviet Union in an independence plebiscite ruled illegal by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

1992: 30 people were reported killed in Senegal in the crash of a plane chartered by Air Senegal for Club Mediterranean.

1994: In Cairo, PLO chief Yasser Arafat and Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres initialed an agreement that resolved contentious issues in the Middle East peace talks.

1996: A bomb exploded in a London rail station, killing two and wounding 100. The IRA announced that the Northern Ireland cease-fire was over.

2001: Nine people were killed when the U.S. submarine USS Greenville collided with a Japanese fishing boat off the coast of Hawaii. The accident took place during a surfacing drill.

2005: Hospitalized Pope John Paul II, recovering from flu-related respiratory problems, missed celebrating mass to begin Lent for the first time in 26 years.

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2008: The U.S. space shuttle Atlantis delivered a $2 billion science lab to the International Space Station, doubling the station’s zero-gravity research capacity.

2009: With the death toll expected to reach 200, Australian officials blamed arsonists for at least a portion of their country’s worst brushfire rampage.

2010: U.S. President Barack Obama signed a memorandum setting up a federal task force to tackle childhood obesity. Vice President Goodluck Jonathan became Nigeria’s acting president by vote of the National Assembly, temporarily succeeding ailing President Umaru Yar Adua.

2011: Prosecutors in Milan sought to try Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi on charges of allegedly having sex with an underage prostitute.

2012: Washington state lawmakers approved a bill that would legalize same-sex marriage, putting Washington on the path toward becoming the seventh state to do so. After a yearlong study, the Pentagon announced that women in the United States military will be permanently assigned to battalions although combat remained off limits for females.


Quotes

“I believe love is primarily a choice and only sometimes a feeling. If you want to feel love, choose to love and be patient.” – Gordon Atkinson

“Unhappiness is not knowing what we want and killing ourselves to get it.” – Don Herold

“Yesterday is not ours to recover but tomorrow is ours to win or lose.” – Lyndon B. Johnson, U.S. President

“The big difference between sex for money and sex for free is that sex for money costs less.” – Brendan Francis

“Never cut what you can untie.” – Joseph Joubert, essayist (1754-1824)



William Henry Harrison (1773-1841) American President:

“I believe and I say it is true Democratic feeling, that all the measures of the Government are directed to the purpose of making the rich richer and the poor poorer.”

“I contend that the strongest of all governments is that which is most free.”

“There is nothing more corrupting, nothing more destructive of the noblest and finest feelings of our nature, than the exercise of unlimited power.”

“The people are the best guardians of their own rights and it is the duty of their executive to abstain from interfering in or thwarting the sacred exercise of the lawmaking functions of their government.”

“Sir, I wish to understand the true principles of the Government. I wish them carried out. I ask nothing more.”

“But I contend that the strongest of all governments is that which is most free.”

“The plea of necessity, that eternal argument of all conspirators.”

“There is nothing more corrupting, nothing more destructive of the noblest and finest feelings of our nature, than the exercise of unlimited power.”

“We admit of no government by divine right….The only legitimate right to govern is an express grant of power from the governed.”



jollification

PRONUNCIATION: (jol-ih-fuh-KAY-shuhn)

MEANING: (noun), Merrymaking; festivity; revelry.

ETYMOLOGY: Jollification is from jolly (from Old French joli, jolif, “joyful, merry”) + Latin -ficare, combining form of facere, “to make.”

USAGE: “The office’s new jollification committee had such a small budget that they could only festoon the office with multi-colored streamers twice a week.”



poseur

PRONUNCIATION: (poh-ZUHR)
http://wordsmith.org/words/poseur.mp3

MEANING: (noun), One who behaves in an affected manner to impress others.

ETYMOLOGY: From French poseur (poser), from poser (to pose), from Latin pausa (pause). Earliest documented use: 1869.

USAGE: “Is Alain de Botton the biggest pseud and poseur of all time, or a brilliant writer who asks intriguing questions?” – Lynn Barber; The Way Words Work; The Age (Melbourne, Australia); Apr 5, 2009.

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


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