Thoughts for the Day

Today in History (October 7th):

1576: Birthdays: British writer John Marston.

1728: Birthdays: Signer of the Declaration of Independence Caesar Rodney.

1849: Birthdays: Poet James Whitcomb Riley.

1870: Birthdays: Grand Ole Opry star Uncle Dave Macon.

1879: Birthdays: Labor activist Joe Hill.

1885: Birthdays: Danish atomic physicist Niels Bohr.

1905: Birthdays: Actor Andy Devine.

1911: Birthdays: Singer/bandleader Vaughn Monroe.

1913: For the first time, Henry Ford’s entire Highland Park automobile factory was run on a continuously moving assembly line.

1916: In the most lopsided football game on record, Georgia Tech humbled Cumberland University, 222-0.

1917: Birthdays: Actor June Allyson.

1927: Birthdays: Actor/singer Al Martino.

1931: Birthdays: South African archbishop and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu.

1942: Birthdays: Television personality Joy Behar.

1943: Birthdays: Oliver North, the former White House aide who became the center of the Iran-Contra controversy.

1949: Less than five months after Britain, the United States and France established the Federal Republic of Germany in West Germany, the Democratic Republic of Germany (East Germany) was proclaimed within the Soviet occupation zone.

1951: Birthdays: Rock ‘n’ roll Hall of Fame member John Mellencamp.

1952: Birthdays: Russian President Vladimir Putin.

1955: Birthdays: Classical cellist Yo-Yo Ma.

1959: Birthdays: Recording executive and television personality Simon Cowell.

1968: The U.S. movie industry adopted a film ratings system for the first time: G (for general audiences), M (for mature audiences), R (no one under 16 admitted without an adult) and X (no one under 16 admitted). Birthdays: Singer Toni Braxton.

1982: Cats opened on Broadway. The play ran continuously until Sept. 10, 2000.

1985: Four Palestinian terrorists commandeered the Italian cruise ship Achille Lauro with 511 passengers and crew off Egypt and threatened to blow it up unless Israel freed Palestinian prisoners. The hijackers, who surrendered in Port Said two days later, killed an American passenger. A mudslide in Ponce, Puerto Rico, killed an estimated 500 people in the island’s worst disaster of the 20th century.

1991: Iran freed U.S. telecommunications engineer John Pattis, ending five years of captivity on charges of spying for the CIA. U.N. inspectors discovered an Iraqi nuclear weapons research center intact. Slovenia and Croatia formally declared secession from Yugoslavia.

1992: U.S. President George H.W. Bush and the leaders of Mexico and Canada signed the North American Free Trade Agreement, creating the world’s largest trading bloc.

1994: U.S. President Bill Clinton announced he was sending the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marines in response to an Iraqi military buildup along the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border.

1997: Scientists announced they had found one of the most massive stars known behind a dense dust cloud in the Milky Way that had previously concealed it, 25,000 light-years from Earth.
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1999: American Home Products, the makers of the diet drug combination known as fen-phen, agreed to a $3.75 billion settlement of a class-action lawsuit stemming from the drugs’ use, which was linked to heart valve problems.

2000: Vojislav Kostunica was sworn in as Yugoslavia’s president.

2001: In the war on terror, the United States and Britain began a series of nightly attacks on targets in Afghanistan. In a pre-recorded tape, Osama bin Laden warned, America will not live in peace until peace came to Palestine and until the army of infidels depart the land of Muhammad.

2003: Californians voted to recall Democratic Gov. Gray Davis and elected actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, as their new governor.

2004: At least 56 people were killed and about 100 others injured when three bombs exploded at Egyptian resort areas near the Israeli border. Cambodian King Norodom Sihanouk abdicated the throne.

2005: The International Atomic Energy Agency and its director general, Mohamed ElBaradei, were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

2006: Three former congressional pages joined two others in accusing former U.S. Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., of making sexual approaches over the Internet. Foley resigned when the first of the reports surfaced.

2008: A federal immigration raid on a poultry processing plant in South Carolina netted the arrest of about 300 people as part of a 10-month criminal investigation into alleged illegal employment practices. Anti-government protests in Thailand turned violent with two deaths and more than 400 injuries in fighting with security forces.

2009: A majority of U.S. residents said it was important to keep Iran from developing nuclear weapons, even if it meant taking military action, a survey by the Pew Research Center indicated. A statue of the remarkable Helen Keller, showing her at the moment the blind and deaf 7-year-old got a sense of language, was unveiled at the U.S. Capitol.

2010: The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Liu Xiaobo, an opponent of the Chinese regime imprisoned for seeking democratic reforms. The U.S. economy lost 95,000 jobs in September as the nation’s unemployment rate stayed at 9.6 percent. Reports blamed a decline in new jobs created by private companies and a rapid drop in government work. U.S. first lady Michelle Obama headed Forbes magazine’s list of the world’s most powerful women.

2011: The U.S. unemployment rate held steady at 9.1 percent in September for the third consecutive month. The Labor Department said 103,000 jobs had been added, more than expected but less than economists said was needed to keep up with population growth. Three women, two from Liberia and one from Yemen, were awarded the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize for their work on behalf of women’s rights.



Quotes

“Diligence is the mother of good fortune.” – Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish novelist (Don Quixote)

“Who knows what Columbus would have discovered if America hadn’t got in the way.” – Stanislaw J. Lec, poet and aphorist (1909-1966)



“Mother” Charleszetta Waddles (1912-2001) US nun:

“You can’t give people pride, but you can provide the kind of understanding that makes people look to their inner strengths and find their own sense of pride.”

“God knows no distance.”

“I believe that you cannot go any further than you can think. I certainly believe if you don’t desire a thing, you will never get it.”

“You can have all the intelligence in the world and don’t have enough stamina. I have seen some very bright, bright women who do not have the stamina for husbands.”

“You don’t have to look poor, you know, you don’t have to look down. For money is a medium of exchange, and that’s all; but it is not a mind regulator unless you allow it to be.”



inveigh

PRONUNCIATION: (in-VAY)
http://wordsmith.org/words/inveigh.mp3

MEANING: verb intr.: To complain or protest with great hostility.

ETYMOLOGY: From Latin invehi (to attack with words), from invehere (to carry in). Ultimately from the Indo-European root wegh- (to go or to transport in a vehicle) that also gave us deviate, way, weight, wagon, vogue, vehicle, vector, envoy, and trivial. Earliest documented use: 1486.

USAGE: “The rabbi inveighed against anyone possessing the popular smartphone. ‘A religious person who owns this impure device is an abomination and a disgusting, vile villain,’ he said.” – Jeremy Sharon; Rabbi Strikes Against iPhone; The Jerusalem Post (Israel); Sep 14, 2012.

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


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