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Daily Bread for 3.18.14

Good morning.

Sunrise today is 7:02 AM and sunset 7:05 PM. The moon is in a washing gibbous phase with ninety-six percent of its visible disk illuminated. We’ll have a partly sunny day today with a high of forty-five.

Common Council and the Planning Commission meet jointly tonight at 6:30 PM on campus.

Yesterday, I kindly received some recommendations for music from the Celtic band The Pogues. I listed to, and liked, all of the recommended songs (Body of an American, Fairytale of New York, Misty Morning Albert Bridge, The Broad Majestic Shannon, Rainy Night in Soho, NW3).

Here’s The Body of an American

On this day in 1953, the Braves announce that they’re moving to Wisconsin:

1953 – Braves Move to Milwaukee
On this date the Braves baseball team announced that they were moving from Boston to Milwaukee. [Source: The History Net]

Here’s Puzzability‘s Tuesday game:

This Week’s Game — March 17-21
Irish Stew
We’re going for brogue this St. Patrick’s Day week. For each day, we started with a word or phrase, added the seven letters in IRELAND, and rearranged all the letters to get the name of a famous person. Both pieces are described in each day’s clue, with the shorter one first.
Example:
Affirmative answer; Rescue Me star
Answer:
Yes; Denis Leary
What to Submit:
Submit both pieces, with the shorter one first (as “Yes; Denis Leary” in the example), for your answer.
Tuesday, March 18
La Cage aux Folles attire; author of the memoir It’s Always Something

Monday Music, Part 2: Pharrell Williams, Happy

A longtime reader wrote in this morning, and teased me over my post of the Cranberries’ Roses (on the theory that it was a melancholy song). I picked that song because Delores O’Riordan has a fine voice, and an Irish singer seemed fitting on St. Patrick’s Day.

Still, a sad song wasn’t meant to suggest that I’m sad. I’m not.

So, for someone who’d like something happier, here’s Pharrell Williams with Happy:

Daily Bread for 3.17.14

Good morning.

St. Patrick’s Day in Whitewater will be mostly cloudy with a high of thirty-three.

st-patricks-day-2014-4879006277042176.2-hp
Google has a doodle on its search page today with a link to information about the holiday. I’m not of Irish ancestry, but yet still I know – as do most people – that this holiday isn’t meant to be about over-drinking.

In Chicago, residents dyed part of the Chicago River green for the holiday. Embedded below is a time-lapse video of their work:

On this day in 1941, Milwaukee’s airport gets its name:

1941 – General Mitchell Field Named
On this date Milwaukee’s airport was named to honor the city’s famous air-power pioneer, General William Mitchell. [Source: History Just Ahead: A Guide to Wisconsin’s Historical Markers edited by Sarah Davis McBride]

This week’s Puzzability series is called Irish Stew. Here’s Monday’s game:

This Week’s Game — March 17-21
Irish Stew
We’re going for brogue this St. Patrick’s Day week. For each day, we started with a word or phrase, added the seven letters in IRELAND, and rearranged all the letters to get the name of a famous person. Both pieces are described in each day’s clue, with the shorter one first.
Example:
Affirmative answer; Rescue Me star
Answer:
Yes; Denis Leary
What to Submit:
Submit both pieces, with the shorter one first (as “Yes; Denis Leary” in the example), for your answer.
Monday, March 17
Private eye, in film noir; author of The Satanic Verses

Daily Bread for 3.16.14

Good morning.

Sunday will see gradually sunnier skies and a high of twenty=three in Whitewater.

Tracked_landing_vehicles_(LVTs)_approach_Iwo_Jima;fig14

‘Tracked landing vehicles (LVTs), jam-packed with 4th Marine Division troops, approach the Line of Departure at H-hour on D-day. In the center rear can be seen the control vessels which attempted to maintain order in the landing. Department of Defense Photo.’
Via Wikipedia

On this day in 1945, fighting on Iwo Jima ends, assuring that the island was wholly in American hands:

…the west Pacific volcanic island of Iwo Jima is declared secured by the U.S. military after months of fiercely fighting its Japanese defenders.

The Americans began applying pressure to the Japanese defense of Iwo Jima in February 1944, when B-24 and B-25 bombers raided the island for 74 days straight. It was the longest pre-invasion bombardment of the war, necessary because of the extent to which the Japanese–21,000 strong–fortified the island, above and below ground, including a network of caves. Underwater demolition teams (“frogmen”) were dispatched by the Americans just before the actual invasion to clear the shores of mines and any other obstacles that could obstruct an invading force. In fact, the Japanese mistook the frogmen for an invasion force and killed 170 of them.

The amphibious landings of Marines began the morning of February 19, 1945, as the secretary of the Navy, James Forrestal, accompanied by journalists, surveyed the scene from a command ship offshore. The Marines made their way onto the island–and seven Japanese battalions opened fire, obliterating them. By that evening, more than 550 Marines were dead and more than 1,800 were wounded.

In the face of such fierce counterattack, the Americans reconciled themselves to the fact that Iwo Jima could be taken only one yard at a time. A key position on the island was Mt. Suribachi, the center of the Japanese defense. The 28th Marine Regiment closed in and around the base of the volcanic mountain at the rate of 400 yards per day, employing flamethrowers, grenades, and demolition charges against the Japanese that were hidden in caves and pillboxes (low concrete emplacements for machine-gun nests). Approximately 40 Marines finally began a climb up the volcanic ash mountain, which was smoking from the constant bombardment, and at 10 a.m. on February 23, a half-dozen Marines raised an American flag at its peak, using a pipe as a flag post. Two photographers caught a restaging of the flag raising for posterity, creating one of the most reproduced images of the war. With Mt. Suribachi claimed, one-third of Iwo Jima was under American control.

On March 16, with a U.S. Navy military government established, Iwo Jima was declared secured and the fighting over. When all was done, more than 6,000 Marines died fighting for the island, along with almost all the 21,000 Japanese soldiers trying to defend it.

Daily Bread for 3.15.14

Good morning.

Sunrise this Saturday is 7:07 AM and sunset is 7:01 PM. The moon is in a waxing gibbous phase with 99% of its visible disk illuminated. Today’s high will be thirty-five.

Of Friday’s poll, over 80% of respondents thought that Rod Sommerville of Australia was sensible when he had a beer while waiting for medical assistance after receiving a snake bite.

We’re at the Ides of March, famous to us as an expression for a long-ago assassination:

“Beware the Ides of March,” the soothsayer urges Julius Caesar in Shakespeare’s Tragedy of Julius Caesar (act I, scene ii). Despite the forewarning, Caesar is stabbed in the back by his friend Marcus Brutus. Caesar falls and utters his famous last words, “Et tu, Brute?” (And you, Brutus?)

Shakespeare’s source for the play was Thomas North’s Lives of the Nobel Grecians and Romans, which detailed the murder of Caesar in 44 B.C. Caesar’s friends and associates feared his growing power and his recent self-comparison to Alexander the Great and felt he must die for the good of Rome. North’s work translated a French version of Plutarch, which itself had been translated from Latin. Shakespeare’s version was written about 1599 and performed at the newly built Globe Theater.

Ides, Kalends, Nones – simply terms of the Roman calendar that might have had no special meaning to us but for Shakespeare’s play about a certain act on a certain day.

On this day in 1862, more Wisconsinites do their part for the Union:

1862 – (Civil War) 17th and 18th Wisconsin Infantry Regiments Mustered In
The 17th and 18th Wisconsin Infantry regiments mustered in at Madison and Milwaukee, respectively. Both regiments would move from the lower Mississippi Valley into Tennessee and Georgia, participate in Sherman’s March to the Sea, and converge on Virginia at the end of the war. Before they mustered out, the 17th would lose 269 men and the 18th, 225.

Friday Poll: Australian Has a Beer After a Snake Bite


One reads that a venomous snake bit an Australian man, and the man decided to have a beer while waiting for medial assistance:

What do you do when you’ve been bitten by one of the deadliest snakes in the world? Crack open a beer, of course.

That’s what Rod Sommerville, 54, of Australia, had in mind after he was nipped by a eastern brown snake in his backyard last month.

After the bite, the Queensland man said he went inside and called emergency services, according to local reports. He then apparently grabbed a beer from the fridge and sat down to enjoy the brew while he waited for the ambulance to arrive.

Sommerville reasoned that panicking would have made it worse.

“I said to myself, ‘if I’m going to [die], I’m going to have a beer,'” he told the Rockhampton Morning Bulletin….

The beer-drinking man was picked up by emergency services and treated with an anti-venom at a local hospital. Although he had an adverse reaction to the medication, Sommerville survived the incident.

So – sensible to open that beer can, or reckless?  I wouldn’t normally advocate drinking after an injury, but in this case I think Sommerville’s actions helped him stay calm, and there’s a certain admirable defiance behind drinking that beer, there and then.   For me, he’s sensible.

What do you think?

800px-Brown_snake_-_victoria_australia

EASTERN BROWN SNAKE

Daily Bread for 3.14.14

Good morning.

Whitewater’s work week ends with partly sunny skies and a high of forty-seven.

It’s Albert Einstein’s birthday (born this day in 1879).

On this day in 1979, the Bucks set a team record:

1979 – Bucks Set Scoring Record
Milwaukee set a team scoring record for a regulation-length game with 158 points against New Orleans. [Source: Bucks.com, Official Site of the Milwaukee Bucks]

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Puzzability‘s Easy as Pi series concludes today, on Pi Day:

This Week’s Game — March 10-14
Easy as Pi
This Friday is Pi Day: 3.14. For each day this week, we’re celebrating by starting with a word and adding the two-letter chunk PI (before, within, or after) to get a new word. The two-word answer phrase, described by each day’s clue, is the shorter word followed by the PI word.
Example:
Noisy bird that’s a sorcerer
Answer:
Mage magpie
What to Submit:
Submit the two-word phrase, with the PI word second (as “Mage magpie” in the example), for your answer.
Friday, March 14
Editorial viewpoint of a satirical news source

What happens when a supercomputer runs a food truck?

Food trucks are good for a community, but are they better when a supercomputer runs them? Let’s see:

We know Watson has some Jeopardy skills, but putting IBM’s supercomputer in the kitchen? That’s a little different. Here at SXSW, the company’s set up a “Cognitive Cooking” food truck in partnership with the Institute for Culinary Education (ICE). Using Watson’s recipe system, which combines three elements (ingredient, cuisine and type of dish) to create unconventional new fare, chefs here in Austin are churning out delicacies such as ceviche fish and chips and Vietnamese apple kebabs.




Via IBM puts Watson in charge of its SXSW food truck, we taste-test (video) @ Engadget.