FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 5.3.15

Good morning, Whitewater.

Sunday in town will be partly sunny, with a high of eighty. There’s a one-in-five chance of morning showers. Sunrise is 5:54 and sunset 7:58, for 14h 12m 44s of daytime. We have a full moon today.

Friday’s FW poll asked whether Molly Schuyler’s scarfing of three steak dinners in twenty minutes, as part of a food-eating contest, was an example of vile gluttony or valiant competition. A clear majority of respondents, 73.68%, labeled Ms. Schuyler’s efforts vile gluttony.

On this day in 1952, Lt. Col. Joseph Fletcher does something no one had, indisputably, ever done before:

HighFlight-OperationOilDrum1

A ski-modified U.S. Air Force C-47 piloted by Lieutenant Colonel Joseph O. Fletcher of Oklahoma and Lieutenant Colonel William P. Benedict of California becomes the first aircraft to land on the North Pole. A moment later, Fletcher climbed out of the plane and walked to the exact geographic North Pole, probably the first person in history to do so.

In the early 20th century, American explorers Robert Peary and Dr. Frederick Cook, both claiming to have separately reached the North Pole by land, publicly disputed each other’s claims. In 1911, Congress formally recognized Peary’s claim. In recent years, further studies of the conflicting claims suggest that neither expedition reached the exact North Pole, but that Peary came far closer, falling perhaps 30 miles short. In 1952, Lieutenant Colonel Fletcher was the first person to undisputedly stand on the North Pole. Standing alongside Fletcher on the top of the world was Dr. Albert P. Crary, a scientist who in 1961 traveled to the South Pole by motorized vehicle, becoming the first person in history to have stood on both poles.

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