Sunday 31 July 2016

A Word Within A Word Puzzle

Can you find the word within a word for each set of clues listed below? The dashes beside each clue tell you how many letters are in the word you are to find. (ex. A young lion…in skin diving gear = ScubA)

1. A snooze…in a hiking bag: __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __
2. An armed conflict…in one who lacks courage: __ __ __ __ __ __
3. A line of seats…in a king’s headdress:__ __ __ __ __
4. A brooch…in a statement of belief:__ __ __ __ __ __ __
5. A math term…in a fireman’s climbing apparatus:__ __ __ __ __ __

 

Answers Below

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1. KnapSACK
2. COwarD
3. CrowN
4. OpinION
5. LaddER

 

 

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Friday 29 July 2016

Which way is the man Facing ? #OpticalIllusion

Can you see which way this man is facing?

It may appear he is looking straight at you – but take a closer look and you may just see him looking the other way.

which_way_is_the_man_facing_optical_illusion

If you have not seen it yet it was really popular on the internet last year, with the image -created using Photoshop- leaving many confused.

German photographer and artist Tim Wehrle shared the photo on his Instagram page timwehrle  encouraging his followers to share it if they see the illusion.

It’s all about how different people interpret the illusion, with the image receiving over 1,000 likes.

So why does it leave us confused?

Tim Says “What I wanted to achieve with my picture was to create a picture that the viewer has to think about and take his time to figure it out first,” he explained.

“In addition to that, my goal was to publish a unique picture people have to think about and interpret it the way they want to.”

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Improve Your Memory #TakeABreak

Taking regular breaks is crucial to studying.

It gives your mind a chance to digest and organize the information that you have absorbed. Even a 10 minute break every hour can be a huge help. Studying by cramming for long periods without taking breaks can lead to overload, and less recolition of what you have tried to absorb.

Spacing out your learning will actually decrease the total amount of study time that you need to learn a subject. Additionally, taking a break between studying two different subjects will help prevent confusion, especially if the two subjects are similar.

Take my word for it, I studied at the Open University for six years.

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Thursday 28 July 2016

Come Unstuck and Fall Down

Do not #fall down completing our puzzles like #Pope Francis

We have an upto date solutions page when ever you come unstuck, visit http://ift.tt/2atvMSh

Example Round Ball Solution

round ball instructions

Just to say, was OK

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Fall and Break Riddle

Fall and Break

Can you guess the two things?

Heres your riddle:

 

I break, she falls. I break, she falls.

Who am I, and who is she?

Answer Below

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I am day, and she is night.

Back to Top

 

 

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Wednesday 27 July 2016

Universe II Wooden Puzzles

A New Type Of Puzzle To Me

While searching the internet I came across some new type of wooden puzzles I had not encountered before.

They are a type of take apart / disentanglement puzzle similar in construction to the popular 3d Puzzles we sell here http://ift.tt/2acX10a

universe_ii_wooden_puzzle

They come in a set of four and this is the desription on the PuzzleMaster website;

Challenge your brain with this 4 puzzle set made by Mi-Toys. Consists of 4 different difficulty levels ranging from “Simple” to “Unbelievable”.  “For ages 6+”

If you have tried these let me know, its always good to keep abreast of developments in the puzzling world.

 

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Tuesday 26 July 2016

Today in History for 26th July 2016

#KevinSpacey Birthday Today  – what else happened?

Historical Events

1309 – Henry VII is recognized King of the Romans by Pope Clement V
1891 – Henry James’ “American” premieres in London
1903 – 1st automobile trip across the United States (SF-NY) completed by Horatio Nelson Jackson and Sewall K. Crocker
1946 – Aloha Airlines began service from Honolulu International Airport
1964 – US union leader James Hoffa sentenced for fraud
1994 – Cambodia’s Red Khmer surprise attack on train, kills 13

 

Famous Birthdays

1829 – August Beernaert, Belgian premier (1884-94) (Nobel-1909)
1927 – M H W Wells, CEO (Charterhouse Japhet)
1957 – Hart Hanson, American television writer and producer
1959 – Kevin Spacey, actor (Dad, Henry and June, Darrow), born in South Orange, New Jersey
1965 – Jim Lindberg, American musician (Pennywise)
1974 – Dan Konopka, American musician (OK Go)

 

Famous Deaths

1677 – Michael Franck, composer, dies at 68
1826 – Freidrich Wilhelm Weis, composer, dies at 82
1867 – King Otto of Greece (b. 1815)
1995 – Laurindo Almeida, composer/guitarist, dies at 76
2005 – Jack Hirshleifer, American economist (b. 1925)
2015 – Bobbi Kristina Brown, daughter of Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown, dies in a coma at 22

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How does Etch a Sketch Work?

Etch A Sketch is a game that many of use grew up with.

 

Especially for the many of us that are creative in nature, I have also found that many puzzle fans also love retro toys.  In this neat video which is very technical you will be amazed that its just not the case of turning the knobs – which will suit all us geeks that like to know the inside and outs of everything.

 

How does an Etch a Sketch Work?

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Monday 25 July 2016

Jog When You Tackle Puzzles

#Exercise Can improve your #Memory

Many scientific studies have shown that routine exercise and staying physically in shape can improve memory and slow down normal age related memory decline. There are several reasons why this might be the case.

First, a healthy cardiovascular system is better able to deliver a steady supply of oxygen rich blood to the brain. This increased blood flow can lead to increased numbers of synapses. These extra synapses act like a cognitive reserve that can help to delay the onset of common memory disorders.

A second benefit for physical exercise is that it decreases cholesterol and hypertension which can damage the tiny blood vessels in your brain and cause memory problems.

A third benefit comes from the proper regulation of blood sugar levels in the body, which can be improved by loosing weight. It has been shown that improved blood sugar regulation can result in better memory. In one study, people with poor blood sugar regulation were discovered to have a smaller hippocampus, which is essential for good memories.

Lastly, during exercise the brain releases neurotrophins which strengthen neurons and encourage new growth.

A minimum of thirty minutes of exercise each day is the recommended amount necessary to stay in good physical shape. Here are some simple suggestions for ways to add a little exercise into your daily life: take the stairs instead of the elevator, ride your bike to work, jog on a treadmill while watching TV.

 

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Sunday 24 July 2016

What am I Riddle – Wait

Can you guess what I am? #Riddle

 

I’m never there when you need me,

For me you’ll have to wait,

I’ll provide a wealth of knowledge,

But always just too late,

What am I?

 

Answer Below

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HINDSIGHT

 

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Moving Clock Face Optical Illusion

Watch the Clock and what do you see

Move your eyes away slightly and it has a mind of its own!!

moving_clock_face_optical_illusion

 

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Friday 22 July 2016

Smile and Laughing Therapy

A smile and Laugh a day keeps the stress away

If you are having a hard time getting motivated to do something and you need a pick me up, try smiling or laughing out loud.

laugh

When you smile or laugh, your brain gets fooled into thinking that it is happy, and releases the corresponding neurochemicals.

It may sound silly, but it can actually improve your mood and get you thinking more creatively.

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The UKs Speaking Clock

Time to find out about the speaking clock

The service has a long and storied history and even today in the age of near ubiquitous smartphones and the internet it’s still called an astounding thirty million times per year.

Prior to the introduction of the UK speaking clock service in 1936, it’s noted that people wanting to know the time who didn’t have a clock or watch handy would simply call the exchange operator and ask, resulting in operators spending much of their time doing this, instead of routing calls.

Speaking Clock Opporator

With exchange operators being inundated with calls from people just wanting to know the time, it was evident from almost the moment telephones were first introduced and made available to the British public in the last years of the 19th century that an automated speaking clock system was needed.  Unfortunately, the technology to record human voices wasn’t widely commercially available until around the mid-1920s. Even then, it would take until the mid-1930s for the Post Office, who controlled the telephone system in the UK at the time, to begin designing a machine that would accurately tell you the time audibly.

The speaking clock machine eventually constructed by the Post Office was relatively large and contained “state of the art” technology including using several electric motors, glass discs, various valves, and photocells. This system was evidently good enough that the service wasn’t upgraded until 1963, nearly three decades after it was originally introduced.

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Ethel Cain and the Speaking Clock Machine

With the system designed, a voice was needed.  As such the Post Office held a competition to “the girl with the golden voice”. No men were considered for the role as the telephone orientated jobs were still seen as a strictly female gendered profession back then.  The winner of the contest would not only become the voice of the speaking clock, but also be given a prize of 10 guineas or about £700 today, a somewhat paltry sum given the billions (after adjusting for inflation) the service has earned in the ensuing decades since its genesis.

The woman chosen for the gig was one Ethel Jane Cain, a telephonist.

Of course lots has changed since then and things has become a little more modern, but I will leave yourselfs to do some of your own research if you want to know more.

 

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Wednesday 20 July 2016

Today in History for 20th July 2016

Historical Events

1913 – Turkish troops take Adrianopel and Erdine from Bulgaria
1928 – The government of Hungary issues a decree ordering Gypsies to end their nomadic ways, settle permanently in one place, and subject themselves to the same laws and taxes as other Hungarians.
1950 – “Arthur Murray Party” premieres on ABC TV (later DuMont, CBS, NBC)
1958 – King Hussein of Jordan breaks off diplomatic relations with UAR
1976 – Vietnam War: The US military completes its troop withdrawal from Thailand.
1995 – The Regents of the University of California vote to end all affirmative action in the UC system by 1997.

Famous Birthdays

1909 – Eric Rowan, South African cricketer (prolific batsman pre- and post-WWII)
1938 – Diana Rigg, Doncaster England, actress (Emma Peel-Avengers, Hospital)
1962 – Giovanna Amati, Italian racing driver
1975 – Judy Greer, American actress
1978 – Pavel Datsyuk, Russian ice hockey player
1981 – Damien Delaney, Irish footballer

Famous Deaths

1937 – Guglielmo Marconi, Italian engineer/marquis (radio, Nobel 1909), dies of a heart attack at 63
1942 – Patric Cobb, British sea officer, dies in battle
1951 – Mustafa Shuqri Ashu, tailor/murderer of king Abdullah, shot to death
1982 – Okot p’Bitek, Ugandan poet (b. 1931)
1983 – Frank Reynolds, news anchor (ABC Evening News), dies at 59
1987 – Richard Egan, actor (Big Cube, Amsterdam Kill), dies at 63

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How the two halfs of our brain work – when not connected

The left and Right Side of our brains carry out different functions

In split-brain patients, the corpus callosum, which connects the left and right hemispheres of the cerebral cortex, has been surgical severed. This surgery is performed very rarely to help control severe epilepsy, it is done to stop the unwanted electrical activity travelling across the hemispheres which can cause the person to go unconscious.

By studying these patients, Dr. Roger Sperry made some remarkable discoveries about the human brain, for which he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1981. What he found was that consciousness exists independently in the two different hemispheres and that the two sides can operate independently. The left side of the brain contains the speech center and can express itself verbally and logically, while the right side of the brain is more visually oriented.

In one of the experiments, an object was shown to the left visual field (which connects to the right side of the brain). Because the right hemisphere cannot process language, the patient was unable to say what the object was. However, they were able to pick up the matching object with their left hand. This is because the right hemisphere of the brain knew what the object was and could tell the left hand to pick it up, it just couldn’t express it with language.

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Goat in Sheeps Clothing Optical Illusion

Find the Goat hidden within the rows of sheep

This optical illusion is similar to the popular wheres wally diagrams and books.  Within this picture is a goats head and you have to find it.

It is hard to find within the rows of sheep, but once found you will see how your eyes have tricked you when scanning the picture before you had spotted it.

 goat_in_sheep_optical_illusion

 

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Tuesday 19 July 2016

Today in History for 19th July 2016

Historical Events

1525 – Catholic German monarchy form Union of Dessau
1860 – 1st railroad reaches Kansas
1879 – Doc Holliday kills for the first time after a man shoots up his New Mexico saloon.
1936 – Indians’ Bob Feller makes his major league debut in relief
1944 – Allied troops occupy Faubourg de Vaucelles, at Caen
1992 – NYC Ballet star Peter Martins, arrested for beating his wife

Famous Birthdays

1822 – Augusta of Cambridge, Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1916)
1854 – Daniel Josephus Jitta, Dutch High Court lawyer
1919 – Patricia Medina, actress (High-Low), born in Liverpool, England (d. 2012)
1922 – George McGovern, (Sen-D-SD)/pres candidate (D-1972), (d. 2012)
1940 – Vikki Carr [Florencia Vicenta de Casillas Martinez Cardona)], singer (Let it Be Him), born in El Paso, Texas
1972 – Ebbe Sand, Danish footballer

Famous Deaths

1847 – Johann Wilhelm Wilms, composer, dies at 75
1939 – Tom Hayward, cricketer (35 Tests for England, 1999 runs), dies
1970 – Barry Wood, singer (Your Hit Parade), dies at 61
1981 – Louis Cheslock, composer, dies at 81
1993 – Elmar Klos, Czech director (Shop on Main Street), dies at 83
2009 – Henry Surtees, British racing driver. (b. 1991)

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M C Escher Lying on the Beach Optical Illusion

Monday 18 July 2016

Today in History for 18th July 2016

Events 18th July 2016

Historical Events

1656 – -20] Battle at Warsaw: Swedish king Karel X Gustaafbeats Johan II Kasimir and occupies Warsaw
1814 – British capture Prairie du Chien (Wisc)
1926 – The South Africa author and journalist, Herman Charles Bosman, shoots and kills his stepbrother David Russell during a quarrel
1984 – 21 people are killed and 19 are injured in a massacre in a San Ysidro, California McDonalds restaurant, ending with the shooting of its perpetrator, James Oliver Huberty
1986 – Royals announce that manager Dick Howser, 50, has a brain tumor
2010 – 139th British Golf Open: Louis Oosthuizen shoots a 272 at St Andrews

Famous Birthdays

1823 – Leonard Fulton Ross, Brigadier General (Union volunteers), (d. 1901)
1862 – Victor, Prince Napoleon (Napoleon V), French pretender to throne
1893 – Richard Dix, St Paul MN, actor (10 Commandments, Cimarron)
1925 – Jaime de Mora y Aragon, actor/publicist (Last Judgement)
1929 – Dick Totten Button, figure skater (Olympic-gold-48, 52), born in Englewood, New Jersey
1947 – Kurt Mann, Roslyn NY, actor (Bad Penny)

Famous Deaths

1100 – Godfried IV van Bouillon, count of Antwerp, dies
1833 – Joseph Comb, missionary to Moluccas, dies at 63
1938 – Vladimir M Kirshon, Russian playwright, executed at 35
1980 – Naoomal Jeoomal, cricketer (3 Tests for India 1932-34, 108 runs), dies
1993 – John Beck, US producer (Harvey, Singing Nun), dies at 83
1994 – Gottfried Reinhardt, [Goldmann], German/US director, dies at 83

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I eat you on the beach Optical Illusion

Tw0 people on the beach but with some worked out placing, and a sense of humour creates a great effect of one person eating the other.

I_eat_you_optical_illusion

 

With clever photograph and some advanced planning, and the use of near and far some great shots can be captured that create a new meaning from the one taken.

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Your Mirror Image

When you look at a mirror, you are looking into the mirror

Your focal length in a mirror is your distance away from the mirror, plus the distance of the object away from the mirror. When you look at an object in a mirror, you are seeing a virtual image the exact distance it is away from the mirror. So, if you are standing 1 foot away from a mirror, and focus on your face, you are actually focusing at 2 feet.

To try this out, put a piece of tape on a mirror, about eye level. Standing in front of the mirror, focus your eyes on the tape, now your face is out of focus. Focus now on your face, and the tape is out of focus.

 

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Saturday 16 July 2016

Guess the word and behead it

When you behead a word, you remove the first letter and still have a valid word. You will be given clues for the two words, longer word first.
Example: Begin -> Sour, acidic
Answer: The words are Start and Tart.

 

1. Pleasant -> Frozen water
2. More recent -> Pitcher for water
3. Noble gas -> Indefinitely long period of time
4. Almost -> Ahead of time; at the beginning of a period of time
5. Not at any time -> At any time
6. None of two choices -> One of two choices
7. Limited width or scope -> Projectile shot from a bow
8. One, for example -> Brown, earthy colour

 

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Answer
1. Nice -> Ice
2. Newer -> Ewer
3. Neon -> Eon
4. Nearly -> Early
5. Never -> Ever
6. Neither -> Either
7. Narrow -> Arrow
8. Number -> Umber

 

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Today in History for 16th July 2016

Historical Events

1883 – 7th Wimbledon Mens Tennis: William Renshaw beats E Renshaw (2-6 6-3 6-3 4-6 6-3)
1945 – 1st test detonation of an atomic bomb, Trinity Site, Alamogordo, New Mexico as part of the US Manhatten Project
1955 – “Golden Horseshoe Revue” 1st of 50,000+ performances, Disneyland
1990 – 400 die in a (7.7) earthquake in Philippines
1999 – John F. Kennedy Jr., his wife Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, and sister-in-law Lauren Bessette are killed in a plane crash off the coast of Martha’s Vineyard. The Piper Saratoga aircraft was piloted by Kennedy.
2001 – “Jurassic Park III”, starring Sam Neill and William H Macy, premieres in the US

Famous Birthdays

1725 – Georg Simon Lohlein, composer
1904 – Goffredo Petrassi, Zagarolo Italy, composer (Beatitudines)
1935 – Tom Rosenthal, publisher/British broadcaster
1945 – Diana Warwick, leader (Association of University Teachers)
1966 – Chip Lohmiller, NFL kicker (NO Saints)
1973 – Stefano Garzelli, Italian cyclist

Famous Deaths

1590 – Bartholomaeus a Martyribus, [Fernandez], pontiff of Portugal, dies
1782 – Louise Ulrike, queen of Sweden/wife of Adolf Frederik, dies at 61
1879 – Edward Deas Thomson, Australian politician (b. 1800)
1955 – Jean de Merode, [Marie-Louise Courtenay], Belgian princess, dies at 81
1992 – “Gorgeous” George, [Arena], wrestler, dies at 84
1996 – Adolf von Thadden, German politician, (b. 1921)

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Friday 15 July 2016

Hidden Mobile Phone on the Carpet

Can you find the mobile phone on the Carpet?

I dropped my Cell phone on the carpet, but now can not find it.  Perhaps you could have a look for me and let me know if you can see it. (not really) but this is quit a tough one to see, but once you have spotted it its obvious.  Good Luck in your search.
carpet_hidden_cell_phone

 

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Today in History for 15th July 2016

Historical Events

1501 – Explorer Pedro Cabral back in Lisbon
1954 – 110°F (43°C) at Balcony Falls, Virginia (state record)
1963 – Paul McCartney is fined £17 for speeding
1968 – Commercial air travel begins between US and USSR
2009 – A 7.9 Magnitude earthquake registers 160km west of Invercargill, New Zealand, creating a small tsunami.
2013 – 18 people are killed and 47 are injured in a riot following a boxing match in Indonesia

Famous Birthdays

1818 – Heinrich Esser, composer
1909 – John Cochrane, South African cricket pace bowler (one Test 1931)
1913 – Abraham Sutzkever, Yiddish language poet and memoirist.
1924 – David Cox, warden (Nuffield College, Oxford)
1938 – Carmen Callil, publisher
1980 – Jonathan Cheechoo, professional ice hockey player

Famous Deaths

1416 – John, Duke of Berry, captain of Paris, dies
1983 – Eddie Foy Jr, actor (Eddie-Fair Exchange), dies of cancer at 78
1989 – Laurie Cunningham, English footballer (b. 1956)
1990 – Alison Leggatt, actress (Day of Triffids, Cows), dies at 86
1992 – Chingiz Mustafayev, Azerbaijan’s most noted journalist (b. 1960)
2015 – Wan Li, Chinese reform politician, dies at 98

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Wednesday 13 July 2016

Today in History for 13th July 2016

On this Day Historic Events, Famous Birthdays and Famous Deaths

Historical Events

1863 – Battle of Bayou La Fourche, LA
1958 – 13th US Women’s Open Golf Championship won by Mickey Wright
1984 – Jeff Beck quits Rod Stewart’s tour after 7 shows
1999 – 70th All Star Baseball Game: AL wins 4-1 at Fenway Park, Boston
2012 – 19-30 people are killed after a train collides with a truck in Malelane, South Africa
2015 – Greek Credit Crisis: Eurozone agrees conditional deal to lend €86bn over 3 years if Greece passes reforms.

Famous Birthdays

1877 – Karl Erb, German tenor
1883 – [Louis C] Marcel Berckmans, painter/actor (Potasch and Perlemoer)
1922 – Anker Jørgensen, Danish politician, Prime Minister of Denmark (1972-3, 75-82), born in Copenhagen (d. 2016)
1948 – Ronald K Machtley, (Rep-R-Rhode Island)
1948 – Don Sweet, CFL, NFL place kicker (Montreal, Green Bay), born in Vancouver, Canada
1954 – Ray “Candles” Bright, Australian cricket slow-left armer (1977-86)

Famous Deaths

1683 – Arthur Capell, 1st Earl of Essex, English statesman (b. 1631)
1755 – Edward Braddock, British general, dies in battle at Pittsburgh
1973 – Willy Fritsch, German actor (Spies, Women in the Moon), dies at 72
1989 – Arnaldo Ochoa Sanchez, Cubans general, executed
2010 – Manohari Singh, Indian saxophonist and part of R.D. Burman’s band (b. 1931)
2011 – Allan Jeans, Australian football player and coach (b. 1933)

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Tuesday 12 July 2016

Today in History for 12th July 2016

Historical Events

1909 – 16th Amendment approved (power to tax incomes)
1949 – Dutch KLM Constellation crashes near Bombay, 45 die
1950 – Hague Council of Annulment convicts German war criminals W Lages, FH Van de Funten and F Fischer to death
1972 – Twelve years after the banning of the ANC and Pan Africanist Congress, a new political movement, the Black People Convention is formed after a three day long conference in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
1973 – A fire destroys the entire 6th floor of the National Personnel Records Center of the United States.
1992 – Betsy King wins LPGA Phar-Mor in Youngstown Golf Tournament

Famous Birthdays

1895 – R Buckminster Fuller, architect/inventor (geodesic dome)
1902 – Gunther Anders, writer
1930 – Gordon Pinsent, Canadian actor, director, and writer
1945 – Dimitar Penev, Bulgaria soccer player/union coach (Lokomotiv/CSKA)
1962 – Stein Jorgesen, sprint kayak (Olympics-96), born in Los Angeles, California
1978 – Michelle Rodriguez, American actress

Famous Deaths

1712 – Richard Cromwell, English Lord Protector (1658-59), dies at 85
1962 – Roger Wolfe Kahn, American band leader (b. 1907)
1966 – D T Suzuki, Zen Buddhism scholar, dies in Tokyo Japan at 96
1990 РJọo Saldanha, Brazilian journalist and football manager (b. 1917)
1996 – Gottfried von Einem, composer, dies at 78
2010 – Harvey Pekar, American comic book writer (b. 1939)

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Amazing Story of the the Filet-O-Fish Sandwich

The Filet-O-Fish is a curious item on the McDonald’s menu

It receives virtually no advertising whatsoever, yet still continues to be sold by the chain despite the fact that it seems like nobody ever orders one and it’s been a problem item for years for the company due to difficulty in finding a sustainable, tasty source of fish meat at the volume the behemoth needs, as well as the fact that it requires a separate fryer to cook in than their other items. As it turns out, they keep it around because the Filet-O-Fish is actually intended to be eaten by a very specific kind of customer- people who abstain from eating non-seafood meat for religious reasons.

According to McDonald’s executives, approximately 23% of the Filet-O-Fish sandwiches sold by the chain each year are sold during Lent. While the exact rules vary somewhat from region to region, in general, Catholics traditionally abstain from eating most meats on Fridays and Saturdays during this period. In some regions, the requirement is even that members of the Church avoid non-seafood meat on every single Friday of the year.

Fish-Fillet

Moving on, or rather, back, the genesis of the Filet-O-Fish came way back in the early days of the future fast-food king. (See: Who is McDonald in McDonald’s?) In 1960, at a small McDonald’s restaurant in Monfort Heights, Ohio, the owner of the franchise, a man called Lou Groen, was struggling to keep his restaurant open.

No stranger to troubles, or hard work, Groen had been kicked out of his home by his father as a teenager. (His mother abandoned the family when he was 3 years old to pursue an ill-fated career as an actress in Hollywood.) Homeless during the Great Depression, with no real skills to speak of, and occasionally having to steal food to survive, Groen did eventually find work, and then continued to better his situation by simply working harder than everyone else around him.

Fast-forward a couple decades and he found himself the president of the Cincinnati Restaurant Association. It was in this position that he had a chance encounter with one Ray Kroc, the god-king of the McDonald’s empire, which led to Groen taking his life’s savings, as well as borrowing some money from a few friends, and starting a McDonald’s franchise in 1959.

Unfortunately for Groen, this was a time when pretty much no one had heard of McDonald’s and he was competing with a lot of other restaurants that sold more or less the exact same thing he sold- burgers.

As a result of all this, this hardworking father of two was barely able to keep the then-fledgling franchise location open. As Groen would later recall: “I was struggling. The crew was my wife, myself, and a man named George. I did repairs, swept floors, you name it.”

Needless to say, despite working from sunup to sundown and relying on the free labor of his family, times were tough- especially on Fridays, a day which would normally be the most lucrative day of the week for most restaurants. You see, Groen’s restaurant was located in an area that was 87% Catholic. At the time in the United States, most Catholics abstained from eating land or air-based meat products every Friday of the year, not just during certain days of the week during Lent as is more common today. The result? According to Groen, his restaurant barely grossed $75 a Friday. After factoring in franchising cuts, product costs, building bills, etc, he might as well have just started closing on Fridays.

What confused Groen was that other restaurants in the area, like Big Boys locations, which offered more or less the same fare as he did, seemed to be doing fine, both in general and on Fridays. So he decided to do a little recon to see what they were doing differently. What Groen found was that, in addition to standard items like hamburgers and the like, they also sold fish, which as noted can be eaten in lieu of other meats by Catholics on Fridays. (Aside- interestingly, according to the Archbishop of Westminster, Vincent Nichols, vegetarian or vegan Catholics, who already observe this tradition by default, are advised to abstain from another food on Fridays during Lent as penance.)

With this information in hand, Groen went back to his restaurant and began workshopping a new idea for a fish-based sandwich. After a lot of experimenting, he came up with a recipe for a battered halibut patty that would form the basis of the Filet-O-Fish. But operating under the McDonald’s banner, he couldn’t just put it on the menu. So, in 1961 Groen tried to pitch the idea to Ray Kroc, who immediately shot him down. Not pulling any punches, Groen later stated Kroc told him: “You’re always coming up here with a bunch of crap! I don’t want my stores stunk up with the smell of fish.”

With his restaurant about to go under and his ability to provide for his children at stake, Groen persisted, eventually convincing Kroc to let him trial the fish burger for a single day, but Kroc had a few stipulations. First, Groen had to figure out how to make the sandwich cheaper since corporate wanted to sell it for 25 cents (about $1.98 today). This was a problem considering Groen’s halibut patties cost approximately 30 cents to make. Groen addressed this by substituting the halibut for cheaper Atlantic cod and adding a single slice of cheese for extra flavor. Secondly, the sandwich would be in direct competition with another sandwich created by Kroc personally- The Hula Burger.

The Hula Burger, which was also envisioned by Kroc as a way of luring those who otherwise didn’t want to eat certain meats to the restaurant, literally consisted of a piece of grilled pineapple on a cold bun with a single slice of cheese as garnish…

Despite sounding questionably appetizing, Kroc was convinced that it would be a huge seller and confidently proposed a challenge. Both items would be added to the menu of a McDonald’s restaurant on Good Friday of 1962, and whichever sandwich sold more would be permanently added to the broader McDonald’s menu. This would make it the first new item to be added to said menu since McDonald’s became a nationwide franchise.

When Good Friday of that year rolled around, as Groen predicted, his Filet-O-Fish was a huge hit, selling 350 sandwiches in his franchise location that day. As for Kroc’s pineapple burger, Groen stated,

I called in (McDonald’s) and asked, “How many sandwiches did (Kroc) sell?” They said “I can’t tell you.” They asked “How many did you sell?” I said “350!” Then they said “It’s on the menu!”

While Groen never found out how many of the Hula Burgers were sold, the rumour mill has it that the number was around a half a dozen sandwiches. Kroc also later noted, of those few who did buy it, their almost universal response to seeing it was something to the effect of “I like the pineapple, but where’s the burger?”  Where indeed.

With ample evidence that there was considerable demand for fish-based sandwiches, Kroc gave Groen permission to begin selling the Filet-O-Fish permanently. However, initially Groen sold the sandwich using his original, more expensive, Halibut recipe right up until the Filet-O-Fish was introduced to other McDonald’s franchises in 1963, at which point he was forced to switch to the cheaper Atlantic cod recipe. Eventually McDonald’s substituted even cheaper fish as stocks of Atlantic cod dwindled, resulting in pressure being placed on the company to search for a more sustainable option. (Finding a sustainable source of fish has been an ongoing problem for McDonald’s given the huge volume needed for even their lowest selling menu items. They currently use Alaskan pollock, having recently been forced away from Hoki, which was completely phased out in 2013.)

Despite being responsible for the first new item added to the McDonald’s menu in its young nationwide history (predating the better known Big Mac by about a half decade), Groen received no money for creating the sandwich. That said, he credited the Filet-O-Fish sandwich with saving his franchise, selling a whopping 2,324 of the Filet-O-Fish in the first month alone.

As business began to boom, he ultimately was able to purchase more McDonald’s locations, eventually owning some 43 franchises by the time he retired in the 1980s, combined grossing $60 million per year in sales (about $130 million today) and employing over 3,000 people. Needless to say, he retired a very wealthy man, though, given his hardworking nature, he chose not to settle down until his body made him, continually dabbling in various business ventures until a few years before his death on May 30, 2011 at the age of 93.  As he said in an interview in 2005 while recovering from back surgery (and shortly thereafter breaking his hip while on vacation):

I’m at life at 88 years of age and I’m bored. I see opportunities all around me. I drool. But Father Time is telling me, ‘Buddy, you’ve had your fling. Forget about it.’

 

Bonus Facts:

  • The Filet-O-Fish is also relatively popular with fast-food fans of other faiths, not just Catholics, such as Muslims and Jews, as the sandwich can technically be considered (by most, but not all) to be both Halal and Kosher.
  • Though the Filet-O-Fish remained a staple item of the McDonald’s menu for decades, in 1996, the company quietly removed it from the menu, hoping nobody would notice or care. Apparently customers did and the company was inundated with angry complaints for years. When they introduced a “deluxe” version of the sandwich to appease customers hungry for cheaply farmed fish burgers, customers still complained, demanding the original Filet-O-Fish they were used to, forcing the company to reintroduce it to the menu in 1998… to the delight of the 1 person we all know who actually eats these things.
  • According to Geoffrey Giuliano, an actor who once played Ronald McDonald in the 1970s, he was under strict instructions to never tell children what McDonald’s food was made of, simply being required to say its burgers grew “in a patch” somewhere and were picked whole. In addition to this, Giuliano was also ordered to never eat McDonald’s food in costume (so as to not ruin his make-up) and was so sickened by what he saw in a private tour of a McDonald’s factor he became a vegetarian.
  • Funny enough, Giuliano’s first acting gig prior to playing Ronald McDonald was The King. AKA, Burger King’s mascot.

 

 

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Monday 11 July 2016

Today in History for 11th July 2016

Historical Events

1156 – Siege of Shirakawa-den in Japan.
1347 – Heir to the Bohemian throne elected German anti-king Charles IV
1405 – Chinese fleet commander Zheng He sets sail to explore the world for the first time
1906 – The Gillette-Brown murder inspires Theodore Dreiser’s An American Tragedy.
1973 – Brazilian Boeing 707 crashes near Paris, 122 killed
1976 – In pre-game promo at Atlanta County Stadium, 34 couples wed at home plate followed by Championship Wrestling “Headlocks and Wedlocks”

Famous Birthdays

1861 – George William Norris, (Rep/Sen-Neb) (Lame duck-amendement)
1895 – Dolly Wilde, English socialite (d. 1941)
1930 – Harold Bloom, American literary critic
1932 – Alex Hassilev, actor and musician (Limeliters), born in Paris, France
1957 – Pete Murphy, rocker (Love Hysteria)
1966 – Mel Appleby, rocker (Mel and Kim-Coming to America)

Famous Deaths

1921 – Gabriel Lippmann, French physicist, dies at 75
1950 – Timotei Popovici, composer, dies at 79
1980 – Boleslaw Woytowicz, composer, dies at 80
1994 – Alan David Melville, polymath, dies at 82
2014 – Tommy Ramone [Erdélyi Tamás], Hungarian-American punk rock drummer/bassist (Ramones), dies of bile duct cancer at 65
2015 – Satoru Iwata, Japanese CEO of Nintendo (Nintendo DS and Wii), dies of cancer at 55

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How many steps Puzzle

Monk Steps

Math brain teasers require computations to solve.

A monk has a very specific ritual for climbing up the steps to the temple. First he climbs up to the middle step and meditates for 1 minute. Then he climbs up 8 steps and faces east until he hears a bird singing. Then he walks down 12 steps and picks up a pebble. He takes one step up and tosses the pebble over his left shoulder. Now, he walks up the remaining steps three at a time which only takes him 9 paces. How many steps are there?

Answer Below

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There are 49 steps.

He climbs halfway, which is step 25. He hears the bird singing on step 33. He picks up the pebble on the 21st step and tosses it on the 22nd step. The remaining 27 steps are taken three at a time which is 9 paces.

 

 

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What is Creativity ?

Do you understand Creativity ?

Creativity is a mental activity that results in the development of innovative or insightful ideas that change a field of knowledge in a certain way. This means that creativity is a relative term. An idea that was very creative a hundred years ago would probably not be called creative by today’s standards. In order for something to be creative, it must contribute something new to society. Thus, an idea cannot be called creative until society judges it to be creative.

In another definition Creativity is the act of turning new and imaginative ideas into reality. Creativity is characterised by the ability to perceive the world in new ways, to find hidden patterns, to make connections between seemingly unrelated phenomena, and to generate solutions.

In “Creativity” by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi, the author describes three different types of creativity.

The first type of creativity is actually an incorrect definition and pertains to people who are interesting and fun to be around. They have stimulating ideas and appear to be intelligent, witty people. These people may produce creative ideas that contribute something new to society, but not necessarily. For clarity we will call these people “brilliant” instead of creative.

The second type of creativity is called “personal creativity” and refers to people who are insightful and produce ideas that would be classified as creative, but they are either ahead of their time or keep their ideas to themselves.

The third type of creativity refers to people or ideas that change our culture in significant ways. Thomas Edison and his light bulb would be a good example of a truly creative person and his creative idea.

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Sunday 10 July 2016

Meaningfulness Effect on Memory

How well do you remember? #memory

One aspect that affects your ability to remember something is how meaningful the information is to you. A doctor is more likely to remember medical facts than a lawyer, who is in turn more likely to remember legal information. What this means is that the more you know about a topic, the faster you will learn additional information. The familiarity and meaningfulness of the information will provide cues to help your memory.

You can use this to help make material that you want to learn more meaningful. If the topic you are trying to learn is unfamiliar, try relating it to something familiar. As you study, see if you can find similarities to something that you are very knowledgeable about. The more familiar things that you can associate with a particular fact, the more ways that you will have to remember that fact.

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Today in History for 10th July 2016

Historical Events

1914 – Boston Red Sox purchase Babe Ruth from Baltimore Orioles
1932 – Jack Burnett gets 9 hits, Eddie Rommel relieves in 2nd 18-17 victory in 18 as his A’s beats Indians in longest relief job
1982 – Rangers Larry Parrish hits his 3rd grand slam of the week
1988 – Terry-Jo Myers wins LPGA Mayflower Golf Classic
1997 – Louise Woodward’s trial begins in Mass, Nanny murder trial
2015 – 23 people are killed and 50 are injured in a stampede at a free clothing drive in Mymensingh, Bangladesh

Famous Birthdays

1888 – Giorgio De Chirico, Greece, Metaphysical painter (Soothsayer)
1940 – Mills Watson, actor (Harper Valley PTA, BJ and Bear), born in Oakland, California
1941 – Jake Eberts, film producer (Chariots of Fire, Dances with Wolves), born in Montreal, Quebec (d. 2012)
1949 – John Whitehead, American singer and record producer
1972 – Peter Serafinowicz, British comedian and actor
1984 – Maria Julia Mantilla Garcia, Miss World 2004

Famous Deaths

1103 – Erik I Ejegod, the good hearted, King of Denmark (1095-1103), dies
1680 РLouis Mor̩ri, French encyclopedist (b. 1643)
1683 РFran̤ois-Eudes de M̩zeray, French historian (b. 1610)
1908 – Phoebe Knapp, American hymn writer (b. 1839)
1937 – Attilio Brugnoli, composer, dies at 56
1979 – Arthur Fiedler, orchestra leader (Boston Pops), dies at 84

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Saturday 9 July 2016

Double Word Meanings Puzzle

Can you guess the double meaning word

Below are words or phrases grouped in pairs. There is a different word that fits in the middle of each set that can be defined by both sides. Your task is to find those words.

Example:
Flower ________ Stood
Answer: Rose

1. Enclosure for animals – __________ – Writing instrument
2. Male sheep – __________ – Collide into something
3. To shove one thing inside another – __________ – A collection of miscellaneous items
4. Not specific or definite – __________ – Military officer of very high rank

Answers below

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1. Enclosure for animals – Pen – Writing instrument
2. Male sheep – Ram – Collide into something
3. To shove one thing inside another – Stuff – A collection of miscellaneous items
4. Not specific or definite – General – Military officer of very high rank

 

 

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Today in History for 9th July 2016

Historical Events

1916 – 1st cargo submarine to cross Atlantic arrives in US from Germany
1957 – 24th All Star Baseball Game: AL wins 6-6 at Sportsman’s Park, St Louis
1968 – 15.68″ (39.83 cm) of rainfall, Columbus, Miss (state 24-hour record)
1975 – The National Assembly of Senegal passes a law that paves way for a (albeit highly restricted) multi-party system.
1985 – South Africa police arrested Dutch ANC’er Klaas de Jong
1991 – All star MVP: Cal Ripken Jr (Balt Orioles)

Famous Birthdays

1766 – Jacob Perkins, Newburyport Massachusetts, American Inventor
1916 – Joe Liggins, US composer (Pink Champagne)
1927 – Red Kelly, Canadian ice hockey player
1930 – Buddy Bregman, orchestra leader (Eddie Fisher Show), born in Chicago, Illinois
1932 – John Paul Getty II, US/British oil magnate/billionaire (Getty Oil)
1969 – Jerry Drake, NFL defensive linesman (Arizona Cardinals)

Famous Deaths

1639 – Entonius Walaeus, calvinist theologist, dies at 65
1978 – Aladar Zoltan, composer, dies at 49
1979 – Cornelia Otis Skinner, dies at 78
1979 – Betty Evans Grayson, softball pitcher (Hall of Fame 1959), dies at 53
1979 – Janardhan Gnanoba Navle, cricketer (2 Tests for India), dies
2010 – Vonetta McGee, American actress, dies from cardiac arrest at 65

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Thursday 7 July 2016

Today in History for 7th July 2016

Historical Events

1863 – Orders barring Jews from serving under US General Ulysses S. Grant are revoked
1878 – Social-Democratic United forms in Amsterdam
1943 – German Submarine U-951 sunk by depth charges, off Cape St. Vincent in the North Atlantic
1953 – Che Guevara sets out on a trip through Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador.
1973 – Balt Orioles pull their 4th triple play (5-4-3 vs Oakland)
1980 – Institution of sharia in Iran.

 

Famous Birthdays

1906 – Harry Von Zell, sidekick (George Burns Show)
1931 – Stanley Brock, Bkln, actor (Ivan-He’s the Mayor)
1943 – Joel Siegel, American film critic (d. 2007)
1969 – Joe Sakic, Canadian NHL center (Colorado Avalanche, Canada 1998-2002), born in Burnaby, British Columbia
1970 – Erik Zabel, German cyclist
1980 – Michele Kwan, Torrance California, figure skater (Oly-94, Oly-silver-98)

Famous Deaths

1713 – Henry Compton, Bishop of Oxford and privy councillor (b. 1632)
1794 – Pascal Boyer, composer, dies at 51
1966 – Carmelita Geraghty, dies of heart attack at 65
1983 – Herman Kahn, US futurist/nuclear strategist, dies at 71
1996 – Albrecht Luitpold Michael Wittelsbach, duke of Bavaria, dies at 91
2002 – Dhirubhai Ambani, Indian business tycoon (b. 1933)

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Positive Thinking

The Power of Positive Words on the Mind

Often we hear about the merits of positive thinking, but does this really make any difference or is it just hype?

Whether you are defining a problem statement, having a brainstorm, or just tossing around some ideas, try to use positive words. Our minds can process positive statements faster than negative statements. Take the two questions below as examples. Which one is easier to understand?

1. Should we allow drunken people to drive?

2. Should we not allow drunken people to drive?

The second question takes a little longer to understand because you have to process the ‘not’ and flip your answer around. If you avoid using negatives, you will have a faster and more efficient thinking process.

 

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Cylinder or Square ? Optical Illusion

Cylinder or Square – you decide

Put some square blocks in front of a mirror and you will be amazed at what is reflected back.

In real life, they appear to be groups of square shaped tubes. However, when placed in front of a mirror, they appear to be cylinders! The one on the left in this picture even appears to be a series of interlocking cylinders!

cylinder or square optical illusion

If you think this ambiguous cylinder illusion is just a clever Photoshop job, you would be wrong. It’s definitely very real, and there’s video evidence to support it! It was even a finalist for the Best Illusion of the Year Contest in 2016!

Check it out, and prepare to have your mind blown…

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Wednesday 6 July 2016

Today in History for 6th July 2016

On This Day

Historical Events

1609 – Majesteitsbrief: Emperor Rudolf II grants Bohemia freedom of religion
1903 – George Wyman arrives in NYC by motorcycle 51 days out of SF
1975 – Susie McAllister wins LPGA Wheeling Ladies Golf Classic
1992 – Fay Vincent institutes plans to realign NL
1993 – John F. Kennedy Jr, gives notice of quitting as ADA in Manhattan
2008 – 122nd Wimbledon Men’s Tennis: Rafael Nadal beats Roger Federer (6-4 6-4 6-7 6-7 9-7)

Famous Birthdays

1814 – Justus McKinstry, Brigadier General (Union volunteers), (d. 1897)
1890 – Andrew Sandham, cricketer (Test cricket’s 1st triple centurion)
1911 – Laverne Andrews, American singer (Andrews Sisters), born in Mound, Minnesota (d. 1967)
1922 – Francisco Moncion, dancer
1925 – Huub H Jacobse, member of Dutch 2nd chamber (Liberal)
1978 – Tamera Mowry, twin actress (Sisters)

Famous Deaths

1973 – Otto Klemperer, German/US conductor, dies at 88
1976 – Fritz Lenz, German geneticist (b. 1887)
1977 – Oedoen Partos, composer, dies at 69
1993 – Ruth Lady Fermoy, maternal grandmother of Princess Diane, dies at 84
1995 – Helene Johnson, American Harlem Renaissance poet, dies at 87
2009 – Leo Mol, Ukrainian Canadian artist and sculptor (b. 1915)

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Tuesday 5 July 2016

Today in History for 5th July 2016

Historical Events

649 – St Martin I begins his reign as Catholic Pope
1933 – German party Catholic Center disbands
1935 – Chicago Cubs are 10½ games back in NL, and go on to win the pennant
1961 – KUSD TV channel 2 in Vermillion, SD (PBS) begins broadcasting
1968 – “Manifest of 1000 words” published in Prague
2006 – North Korea missle tests: at least two short-range Nodong-2 missiles, one SCUD missile and one long-range Taepodong-2 missile.

 

Famous Birthdays

1546 – Johann Steuerlein, composer
1904 – Franz Adolf Syberg, composer
1930 – Tommy Cook, Duluth MN, actor (Missile to the Moon)
1950 – Huey Lewis [Hugh Anthony Cregg III], American musician (Huey Lewis and the News), born in New York City
1964 – Mark H Lascells, grandson of English princess Mary
1969 – John Leclair, St Albans VT, NHL forward (Team USA, Philadelphia)

 

Famous Deaths

1803 – William Jackson, (Jackson of Exeter), English composer and organist, dies at 73
1862 – Heinrich Georg Bronn, German geologist (b. 1800)
1905 – Carel V Gerritsen, free thinker, dies
1908 – Jonas Lie, Norwegian author (b. 1833)
1969 – Ben Alexander, dies at 58
2004 – Rodger Ward, American race car driver (b. 1921)

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A Look At Long Term Memory

Long-term memory differs from Short-Term Memory in several ways.

From a practical point of view, it is mostly permanent and has an almost unlimited capacity. The recollection of childhood memories through hypnosis or other methods shows the permanence and large capacity of long-term memory. Additionally, it cannot be disrupted by things that can affect short-term memory. From a biological point of view, each type of memory has a different nerve chemistry and is affected differently by various drugs and diseases.There are three types of long-term memory. The first is called “Procedural Memory.” This is how you remember skills such as riding a bike or dialing a phone. The second type of memory is called “Semantic Memory.” It helps you remember facts such as the color of your hair or your mother’s name. The last type of memory is called “Episodic Memory.” This kind is how you remember personal memories such as your last birthday party.

Each type of memory can benefit from different memory techniques. Most students are interested in improving and using their semantic memory. Elderly people are frequently more interested in their episodic memories and babies are very active in using their procedural memories.

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What Am I – Jul 05, 2016)

Can you guess what I am

In my physical manifestation, my figure is of a neutral hue.
As a calculation, one of me is almost certainly less than half of you.On your face, I am motionless and mute.
To describe the cold, I am complete and absolute.Of proximity, I am always of a close pitch.
For punishment, I taunt you even after I’ve put you in your ditch.

What am I?

Answer Below

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A stone.

As a measurement of weight, a stone is equal to 14 pounds, or about 6.35 grams.

In phrase, something might be described as “stone-faced”, “stone cold”, or only a “stone’s throw” away.

A public stoning, which is already a cruel way to die, might seem even more imprudent when you consider its victims are laid to rest underneath a headSTONE.

The title is both a hint and a pun and so kills two birds with one stone.
Hide

 

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Monday 4 July 2016

Three Rs of Remembering and better memory

How to Remember better

In order to remember something, three things must happen. First, you must receive and learn a piece of information. This is the “Recording” step. Second, you must store this information in your brain (the “Retaining” step). Lastly, you must “Retrieve” the information out of your brain in a useful way.

The mind has a huge capacity to record and retain memories but it is not so good at retrieval. In fact, most memory failures occur at the retrieval step. Unfortunately, there is not much that you can do to directly improve retrieval, but learning good techniques for recording and retaining information will indirectly improve retrieval because the information will be more organized.

A good analogy is a library. If the books were randomly put onto shelves, it would be impossible to find anything. The library records each book in the card catalog and organizes the shelves so that retrieving a particular book is an easy task.

Proper “Recording” improves “Retrieval.” Using good memory techniques will help you improve the way you organize information in your mind.

 

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Was the 4th July really Independence Day?

Signing the Declaration of Independence

#4thJuly or Not

While it is often said that the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776, this isn’t actually correct. In fact, nobody signed it on the 4th. This is contradictory to Thomas Jefferson’s, John Adams’, and Benjamin Franklin’s account of events. On top of their accounts, the public congressional record of events back their story. So how do we know it didn’t happen this way?

To begin with, the Secret Journals of Congress that were eventually made public in 1821 paint a different story. They contain an entry stating, on August 2nd: “The declaration of independence being engrossed & compared at the table was signed by the Members.”

Now if this was the only evidence, one might lean towards a typo in the journal and believing the aforementioned three individuals and public congressional record. However, one of the other signers of the declaration, Thomas McKean, denied the July 4th signing date and backed it up by illustrating a glaring flaw in Jefferson’s, Adams’, and Franklin’s argument- namely, that most of the signers were not members of congress on July 4th and thus wouldn’t have been there to sign it. As McKean said in 1796: “No person signed it on that day nor for many days after.”

Further evidence comes from the interesting fact that the parchment version of the Declaration of Independence that is on display and kept in the United States National Archives wasn’t actually written until July 19th; this being a copy of the approved text that was announced to the world on July 4th, with about 150-200 copies being made on paper and distributed on that date (26 of which are still around today, thus pre-dating what is now generally thought of by most as the “original”).

This little tidbit also came from the Secret Journals of Congress which has an entry on July 19th stating: “Resolved that the Declaration passed on the 4th be fairly engrossed on parchment with the title and stile of ‘The unanimous declaration of the thirteen united states of America’ & that the same when engrossed be signed by every member of Congress.”

So, in the end, this signed document probably would have been copied by Timothy Matlack, Jefferson’s clerk, rather than penned by Jefferson himself, and certainly couldn’t have been signed on July 4th.

It’s also interesting to note that John Adams thought that July 2nd, not July 4th, would be celebrated in the future in the United States.  On July 3, 1776, in a letter to his wife, Abigail, Adams noted:

The second day of July, 1776, will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of this continent to the other, from this time forward forever more.

So why did he think July 2nd would be Independence Day and how did July 4th end up getting the nod instead?  Because July 2nd is when the Second Continental Congress voted to approved a resolution of independence. Although nobody voted on or signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4th,  that was the date the Declaration was announced to the world, and why it was ultimately chosen as Independence Day.

If you liked this article, you might also enjoy subscribing to our new Daily Knowledge YouTube channel, as well as:

Bonus Facts:

  • Thomas Jefferson was chosen to write the Declaration of Independence over the much more qualified and more skilled writer Ben Franklin.  The reason behind this, according to Ormand Seavey, editor of Oxford’s edition of Ben Franklin’s autobiography, was that Franklin was known to put very subtle satire in just about everything he wrote and, quite often, nobody but he was smart enough to comprehend it until much later.  Knowing this document would likely be examined closely by the nations of the world at that time, they chose to avoid the issue by having the much less gifted writer, Jefferson, write it instead, with Franklin and three others to help Jefferson draft it.
  • The drafters were known as the “Committee of Five”.  They were appointed to write a statement that presented to the world the colonies’ case for independence.  These five consisted of John Adams, Roger Sherman, Ben Franklin, Robert Livingston, and Thomas Jefferson.
  • Both Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died on July 4th, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.  Adam’s last words were, “Thomas Jefferson still survives”.  He didn’t know that Jefferson had died a few hours before.  The two were extremely bitter enemies for much of their political life, but in retirement laid aside their differences and became very close friends.
  • One other U.S. President, James Monroe, died on July 4th, 1831, five years after Adams and Jefferson.   President Calvin Coolidge, on the other hand, was born on July 4th.
  • There is in fact writing on the back of the Declaration of Independence.  It reads: “Original Declaration of Independence, dated 4th July 1776”.  This writing appears on the bottom of the document, upside down.  We of course know that this signed version wasn’t written until July 19th, but the founding fathers probably wanted to commemorate the official date of the announcement with this copy, which was meant to last, being written on parchment instead of paper like all the other copies at that time.
  • Rather than give a formal response to the declaration, the British instead secretly commissioned John Lind to write a response entitled “Answer to the Declaration of the American Congress”.  One of the main thrusts of the response was criticizing one of the colonists’ statements and the blatant hypocrisy it demonstrated: “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”.  All the while the same drafters of the declaration and the colonists were slave owners, denying their slaves rights and certainly rarely granting liberty or the opportunity for the slaves to pursue their own happiness.
  • This criticism was obviously valid and had been something that had been discussed heatedly by the Continental Congress.  The original declaration even included a section concerning slavery, blaming the British for their part in the original slave trade and listing this as a reason the colonists no longer wanted to be part of Great Britain.  It is generally thought that many in the congress would have liked to see the end of slavery with the birth of the nation; they were quite aware of the hypocrisy of “all men are created equal…” and the injustice of slavery.  However, this would have devastated certain of the colonies economically which could have crippled the burgeoning nation; thus, the issue was pushed aside for a later generation to address (note: this wasn’t the only key point in American history where many American leaders felt that slavery should be abolished and came very close to doing so; but  in the end, for economics’ sake, chose to push the issue aside and let another generation deal with this great American hypocrisy).
  • There are still 26 of the original copies of the Declaration of Independence that still exist today; 21 of which are owned by American institutions; 2 are owned by British institutions; and 3 are owned privately.  These surviving copies, printed on paper, are collectively known as “the Dunlap broadside”.  They are a subset of an original 150-200 copies printed on paper on the night of July 4th and thus are considered to be “original” copies, distinguished from the many thousands of copies that have been made since that date.
  • The first public reading of the Declaration of Independence occurred in the yard of Independence Hall on July 8th, read by John Nixon.
  • The current case that contains the Declaration of Independence is made from titanium and aluminum with gold plated framing and a bullet proof window so people can see it.  The inside is airtight and filled with argon gas and a controlled amount of humidity.  The Charters of Freedom and the Bill of Rights are also encased in this exact same way.
  • Being the head of the Continental Congress, John Hancock was the first to sign the document, doing so with a flourish, which has since made his name synonymous with “signature”.
  • There is currently a hand print on the bottom left of the Declaration of Independence.  Nobody knows how or when it got there.  Unfortunately, attempting to clean it off would very likely damage the fragile document.
  • Jefferson and the other four delegates charged with drafting the Declaration of Independence leaned heavily on the English Declaration of Rights as a model for their own declaration.  The English Declaration of Rights of 1689 formally ended the reign of King James II.
  • Following the announcement of the Declaration and the eventual parchment version being signed, the document itself was neglected after the revolution.  Even early celebrations of Independence Day ignored the original statement of that independence.  It was the act that was thought important, not the text.  Indeed, even while drafting the constitution, the document itself wasn’t used as a source, in terms of ideals, for how it should be drawn up.   Even the French Declaration of Rights of Man and Citizen in 1789 borrowed from George Mason’s Declaration of Rights instead of the Declaration of Independence’s view on this, even though Jefferson himself was in Paris and was consulted on the French Declaration.  It wasn’t until political parties formed that anyone really thought anything of the actual text.   Once that happened, Jefferson’s supporters used the fact that he wrote it to their political advantage.  This created heated back and forth over the document’s authorship itself and eventually resulted in it being more prominently thought of in terms of importance of the text.  However, even then, it wasn’t until the 1850s that the document itself became important for more than historical reasons.  Once again centering around the “all men are created equal…” paragraph, now being used to proclaim worker’s, women’s, and once again, slave’s rights.
  • The latter usage of the text was taken up by Abraham Lincoln in 1854.  He felt that the founding fathers expected that slavery would be a dying institution in the new United States.   He also felt that the Declaration of Independence was one of the founding documents of the nation and not just a simple statement declaring secession from Britain.  He used this view frequently in his arguments against slavery: “Nearly eighty years ago we began by declaring that all men are created equal; but now from that beginning we have run down to the other declaration, that for some men to enslave others is a ‘sacred right of self-government.’ … Our republican robe is soiled and trailed in the dust. Let us repurify it. … Let us re-adopt the Declaration of Independence, and with it, the practices, and policy, which harmonize with it. … If we do this, we shall not only have saved the Union: but we shall have saved it, as to make, and keep it, forever worthy of the saving.”  Lincoln’s view that the Declaration was one of the founding documents in terms of defining the nation eventually became the nation’s view, even though it was not predominately so before him.  This was an extremely important development in America’s history in terms of interpreting the constitution.  Many things in the constitution were previously seen one way, but in the light of the text in the Declaration of Independence being now considered important, were now seen another way.
  • July 4th, 1054 saw the brightest known super-nova’s light reach Earth.  This dead star is now the Crab Nebula.  It shone brightly in the sky from July 4th, 1054 to July 27th, 1054.
  • Jefferson didn’t just write the Declaration of Independence, he also re-wrote the Bible to his liking.  Jefferson didn’t hold with the supernatural elements of the Bible.  He thus set about making his own Jeffersonian translation that basically excluded every part he didn’t agree with.  In his view, separating the wheat from the chaff.

 

 

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Sunday 3 July 2016

Magic Eye for the 4th of July!

Can you see the hidden image?

magic eye for fourth of july

 

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Today in History for 2nd July 2016

Historical Events

1858 – Partial emancipation of Russian serfs
1944 – Field Marshal von Kluge replaces General von Rundstedt
1951 – “Bob and Ray show” premieres on NBC radio
1951 – Leidse astronomers discover radio signal out of Milky Way system
1955 – 10th US Women’s Open Golf Championship won by Fay Crocker
1957 – 1st submarine designed to fire guided missiles launched, Grayback

 

Famous Birthdays

1652 – Guillielmus “Willem” Kerricx, Flemish sculptor (Rozenkrans)
1893 – Ralph Hancock, Welsh garden designer (Rockefeller Center) (d. 1950)
1907 – Leo O’Brien, cricketer (Australian batsman in 5 Tests 1932-36)
1932 – Ken McMillan, American actor (Malone, Concrete Beat), born in Brooklyn, New York
1962 – Brandel Eugene Chamblee, PGA golfer (1994 Honda-3rd), born in St Louis, Missouri
1967 – Debee Ashby, Coventry England, topless model (There’s Girl in My Soup)

 

Famous Deaths

1591 – Vincenzo Galilei, Italian composer (b. 1520)
1743 – Spencer Compton earl of Wilmington, English minister of Finance, dies
1918 – Mohammed V Resjad, sultan of Turkey (1909-18), dies
1973 РFerdinand Sch̦rner, German field marshal (b. 1892)
1984 – Paul Dozois, Quebec politician (b. 1908)
1994 – Ralph C Rinzler, folklorist (Greenbriar Boys), dies at 59

 

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Red, White, and Blue Moving Patriotic Illusion!

This one will trip you out even more than some crazy fireworks shows this 4th of July! In fact, it kind of reminds me a little of fireworks.

Being red, white, and blue, it does make a nice little patriotic illusion for the holiday weekend. I hope you guys enjoyed! And, as always, don’t forget to rate today’s illusion with the stars below!

red white and blue patriotic illusion

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