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Daily Bread for 5.12.14

Good morning.

Monday in Whitewater will be a day of eighty degrees and likely thunderstorms. Sunrise today is 5:35 AM and sunset 8:08 PM. The moon is in a waxing gibbous phase with ninety-five percent of its visible disk illuminated.

Whitewater’s Planning Commission meets tonight at 6 PM.

456px-Florence_Nightingale_CDV_by_H_Lenthall

It’s Florence Nightingale’s birthday:

Florence NightingaleOMRRC … 12 May 1820 – 13 August 1910) was a celebrated English social reformer and statistician, and the founder of modern nursing. She came to prominence while serving as a nurse during the Crimean War, where she tended to wounded soldiers. She was known as “The Lady with the Lamp” after her habit of making rounds at night.

Early 21st century commentators have asserted Nightingale’s achievements in the Crimean War had been exaggerated by the media at the time, to satisfy the public’s need for a hero, but her later achievements remain widely accepted. In 1860, Nightingale laid the foundation of professional nursing with the establishment of hernursing school at St Thomas’ Hospital in London. It was the first secular nursing school in the world, now part of King’s College London. The Nightingale Pledge taken by new nurses was named in her honour, and the annual International Nurses Day is celebrated around the world on her birthday. Her social reforms include improving healthcare for all sections of British society, improving healthcare and advocating for better hunger relief in India, helping to abolish laws regulating prostitution that were overly harsh to women, and expanding the acceptable forms of female participation in the workforce.

Nightingale was a prodigious and versatile writer. In her lifetime much of her published work was concerned with spreading medical knowledge. Some of her tracts were written in simple English so they could easily be understood by those with poor literary skills. She also helped popularise the graphical presentation of statistical data. Much of her writing, including her extensive work on religion and mysticism, has only been published posthumously.

Puzzability‘s new weekly series is entitled, Just Drop It! –

This Week’s Game — May 12-16
Just Drop It!
Sometimes, it goes without saying. For each day this week, we started with a word that contains the two-letter chunk IT and deleted it to get a new word. The two-word answer phrase, described by each day’s clue, is the longer IT word followed by the shorter word.
Example:
Einstein from England
Answer:
Britain brain
What to Submit:
Submit the two-word phrase, with the IT word first (as “Britain brain” in the example), for your answer.
Monday, May 12
Courteous resident of Warsaw

The ‘Movers and Shakers’ Who Aren’t

I sometimes write about Janesville’s politics, because the more one sees how confused they are, the more one feels obliged to contend for a better way in our own politics.

Just Friday, the Gazette‘s editorialist took a stand (subscription req’d) against the false hopes that a big-talking developer and smarmy politician are spreading about the return of GM to Janesville.

The editorial is more than welcome – the developer-politicain duo are a carnival act, a spectacle for gawkers.

Sadly, though, here’s how the editorial ends: “If this idea materializes, we’d be surprised, and so would many other movers and shakers in this community.”

Oh, brother. So the editorialist thinks that an appeal to the authority of many other ‘movers and shakers’ confirms the case against these gentlemen’s hollow promises?

Here’s where the editorialist is lost: (1) the case against false promises stands on its own, (2) an appeal to the supposed authority of others is unconvincing without a sound case, (3) few people are so arrogant as to declare themselves among ‘many other movers and shakers,’ and (4) few people infelicitously use the term ‘movers and shakers’ in any event.

If all Janesville’s self-claimed important people were half what they thought they were, they wouldn’t live in a city filled with bad deals, lies, false promises, white-collar welfare, and alienated residents.

The best one can say is that those movers and shakers are moving in the wrong direction, and shaking for fear that someone will say as much.

Make the good case, on the merits, and defy all opposition thereafter in defense of it.

The rest impresses no one.

Daily Bread for 5.11.14

Good morning.

Mother’s Day in Whitewater brings a high of seventy-seven, with a four-in-ten chance of afternoon thunderstorms.

On this day in 1947, B.F. Goodrich publicizes a true automotive innovation:

…the B.F. Goodrich Company of Akron, Ohio, announces it has developed a tubeless tire, a technological innovation that would make automobiles safer and more efficient.

Pneumatic tires–or tires filled with pressurized air–were used on motor vehicles beginning in the late 1800s, when the French rubber manufacturer Michelin & Cie became the first company to develop them. For the first 60 years of their use, pneumatic tires generally relied on an inner tube containing the compressed air and an outer casing that protected the tube and provided traction. The disadvantage of this design was that if the inner tube failed–which was always a risk due to excess heat generated by friction between the tube and the tire wall–the tire would blow out immediately, causing the driver to lose control of the vehicle.

The culmination of more than three years of engineering, Goodrich’s tubeless tire effectively eliminated the inner tube, trapping the pressurized air within the tire walls themselves. By reinforcing those walls, the company claimed, they were able to combine the puncture-sealing features of inner tubes with an improved ease of riding, high resistance to bruising and superior retention of air pressure. While Goodrich awaited approval from the U.S. Patent Office, the tubeless tires underwent high-speed road testing, were put in service on a fleet of taxis and were used by Ohio state police cars and a number of privately owned passenger cars.

The testing proved successful, and in 1952, Goodrich won patents for the tire’s various features. Within three years, the tubeless tire came standard on most new automobiles. According to an article published in The New York Times in December 1954, “If the results of tests…prove valid in general use, the owner of a 1955 automobile can count on at least 25 per cent more mileage, easier tire changing if he gets caught on a lonely road with a leaky tire, and almost no blowouts.” The article quoted Howard N. Hawkes, vice president and general manager of the tire division of the United States Rubber Company, as calling the general adoption of the tubeless tire “one of the most far-reaching changes ever to take place in the tire industry.” The radial-ply tire, a tubeless model with walls made of alternating layers–also called plies–of tough rubber cord, was created by Michelin later that decade and is now considered the standard for automobiles in all developed countries.

There were similar designs before, but Goodrich received and successfully defended Patent No. US2859792 A.

On this day in 1955, Milwaukee formally loses a basketball team:

1955 – Milwaukee Hawks Relocate to St. Louis
On this date the NBA approved transferring the financially strapped Milwaukee Hawks to St. Louis. The Hawks stayed in St. Louis until 1968, then moved to Atlanta. [Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Online]

Daily Bread for 5.10.14

Good morning.

Saturday in Whitewater looks to be beautiful, with sunny skies and a high of seventy-one. Sunrise is 5:38 AM and sunset 8:06 PM. The moon is in a waxing gibbous phase with eighty-two percent of its visible disk illuminated.

The results of Friday’s FW poll, Friday Poll — Toronto’s Mayor Rob Ford: Optimist or Reprobate? are now in: 78.57% of respondents doubted Ford’s supposed break with a troubled past.

Perhaps you’ve never seen a rabbit eating raspberries. You’re one click away from changing that:

On this day in 1869, America goes truly transcontinental:

The First Transcontinental Railroad (known originally as the “Pacific Railroad” and later as the “Overland Route“) was a 1,907-mile (3,069 km) contiguous railroad line constructed between 1863 and 1869 across the western United States to connect the Pacific coast at San Francisco Bay with the existing Eastern U.S. rail network at Council Bluffs, Iowa, on theMissouri River. The rail line was built by three private companies: the original Western Pacific Railroad Company between Oakland and Sacramento, California (132 miles (212 km)), theCentral Pacific Railroad Company of California eastward from Sacramento to Promontory Summit, Utah Territory (U.T.) (690 miles), and the Union Pacific Railroad Company westward to Promontory Summit from the road’s statutory Eastern terminus at Council Bluffs on the eastern shore of the Missouri River opposite Omaha, Nebraska (1,085 miles).[1][2][3]

Opened for through traffic on May 10, 1869, with the driving of the “Last Spike” with a silver hammer at Promontory Summit,[4] the road established a mechanized transcontinental transportation network that revolutionized the settlement and economy of the American West by bringing these western states and territories firmly and profitably into the “Union” and making goods and transportation much quicker, cheaper and much more flexible from coast to coast.

Friday Poll — Toronto’s Mayor Rob Ford: Optimist or Reprobate?

368px-Rob_Ford_Mayor


Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, the admittedly crack-smoking and heavy-drinking chief executive of that large city, now finds himself in rehab after yet another revelation that he’s still an addict.

After checking himself into in rehabilitation, here’s how Ford described his initial experience in that facility:

“I feel great,” he said. “Rehab is amazing. It reminds me of football camp. Kind of like the Washington Redskins camp I went to as a kid. I am working out every day and I am learning about myself, my past and things like that.”

He’s also looking ahead:

Of course, I am coming back and I am going to kick butt,” Ford told the paper. “I will be on the ballot for mayor in October, guaranteed, and I will do well. On Oct. 28, there will be no need to change the locks. There will be no need to clean out my office because I am coming back.”

So, what do you think, from this distance: does Rob Ford strike you as a sunny optimist, or more like an incorrigible reprobate?

Daily Bread for 5.9.14

Good morning.

Morning showers on Friday will give way to a partly sunny day with a high of sixty-nine.

On this day in 1914, Pres. Wilson proclaims a holiday:

President Woodrow Wilson issues a presidential proclamation that officially establishes the first national Mother’s Day holiday to celebrate America’s mothers.

The idea for a “Mother’s Day” is credited by some to Julia Ward Howe (1872) and by others to Anna Jarvis (1907), who both suggested a holiday dedicated to a day of peace. Many individual states celebrated Mother’s Day by 1911, but it was not until Wilson lobbied Congress in 1914 that Mother’s Day was officially set on the second Sunday of every May. In his first Mother’s Day proclamation, Wilson stated that the holiday offered a chance to “[publicly express] our love and reverence for the mothers of our country.”

On 5.9.1950, the first event at the Arena:

First Sporting Event Held at Milwaukee Arena
On this date, in the first sporting event at the new Milwaukee Arena, Rocky Graziano scored a fourth-round TKO over Vinnie Cidone in a middleweight fight that drew 12,813 fans. The new Milwaukee Arena actually opened on April 9, 1950, but with a civic celebration rather than a sports event. [Source: Milwaukee Journal].

Puzzability concludes its Cine-Ma series with Friday’s game:

This Week’s Game — May 5-9
Cine-Ma
It’s a Mom-and-Popcorn operation this Mother’s Day week. For each day, we started with the title of a movie and replaced all the letters with asterisks, except for letters that spell out the word MOTHER. (Those letters may appear elsewhere in the title as well.)
Example:
***M**  O*  T**  HE*R*
Answer:
Crimes of the Heart
What to Submit:
Submit the movie title (as “Crimes of the Heart” in the example) for your answer.
Friday, May 9
M**  ***  ***O**  TH***ER****