Monthly Archives: February 2012

Quote of the Day

“I graduated from a public school where sex education consisted of an abstinence speaker that came in one day and told us that if we had sex we would die and we were encouraged to sign purity pledges.  When I came to UT, I found that there was a better way of teaching sexual health concepts that’s more inclusive, more informative.  I felt robbed because of the discrepancy between what I learned in high school and what I learned in college.”

— Katherine Eyberg, a senior at University of Texas – Austin explaining efforts to inform fellow students about contraception just in time for Valentine’s Day

I still think sex should be taken out of the schools and put back in the gutter where it belongs, don’t you?

Leave a comment

Filed under News

Valentine’s Day by the Numbers

As usual, you can blame the Romans for this holiday, too.  Ancient Romans began celebrating a ritual of purification and fertility called Lupercalia around the first century BCE (meaning a really long time ago).  The festival was held on the 15th of February in the Lupercal, a cave at the foot of the Palatine where Romulus and Remus – the founders of Rome – were nurtured by a she-wolf.

If that makes you dizzy, then consider these facts:

  • 62% of adults say they celebrate Valentine’s Day
  • $448 million spent on candy the week before February 14
  • 58 million pounds of chocolate candy bought during Valentine’s week
  • 36 million heart-shaped chocolate boxes sold for the holiday
  • 150 million Valentine’s Day cards and gifts sent each year
  • 23% of adults say they purchase flowers or plants on Valentine’s Day (61% are male, 39% are female)
  • 8 billion Sweethearts® produced annually – enough to stretch from Rome, Italy to Valentine, Arizona and back 20 times
  • $8.6 million Americans spend on wine for Valentine’s Day
  • 174,000 gallons of wine sold in the week leading up to Valentine’s Day

 

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Curiosities

Top 10 Greatest Romance Novels of All Time

Romance novels are as old as time itself.  From the moment a Neanderthal man first clubbed a desirable female over the head, people have been in love with…well, being in love!  Romance tales sweep us into the netherworld of perfect unions where every man has 6-pack abs and women never have that not-so-fresh feeling.  Ah…sweet ignorance!  Here is a list of the 100 best romance stories ever to be born of lonely hearts.

2 Comments

Filed under Curiosities

The Loving Story

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, filmmakers Nancy Buirski and Elisabeth Haviland James are releasing their 2010 HBO documentary The Loving Story with new photographs of Mary and Richard Loving, the Virginia couple who challenged the state’s ban on interracial marriages nearly half a century ago.  The Lovings went from a fortuitously named and very private duo to reluctant civil rights heroes.  They wed in June of 1958 and were arrested on the charge of violating the state’s anti-miscegenation statutes a month later.  They pled guilty in January 1959, but their sentences were suspended, as they agreed to leave the state and not return as a couple.  Not content to accept their forced exile, they engaged Bernard Cohen, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) in November 1963.  When the Virginia Supreme Court refused to hear their appeal in 1966, the U.S. Supreme Court took up the case.  In June 1967, the latter Court declared Virginia’s ban unconstitutional, essentially overturning a law that had stood since 1691.  Richard Loving died in a car accident in 1975, and Mary Loving died of pneumonia in 2008.  Their daughter Peggy provided additional pictures of her parents to Buirski and Haviland James.  In an age when the institution of marriage seems to suffer the flippancies of Newt Gingrich and Kim Kardashian, it’s necessary to remember a couple who fought so hard for the simple human right to love each other.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under News

February 14, 2012 – 310 days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip: Stockpile hydrogen peroxide.  Not for bleaching your hair!  You won’t have time for that in the aftermath of the apocalypse!  Besides, no one will care what color your hair is – not when you’re trying to survive.  Hydrogen peroxide has many more practical uses, such as a substitute for toothpaste.  It won’t give you that minty fresh taste, but then again, we’re talking basic survival here.  Hydrogen peroxide also can be used as a disinfectant and water purifier, which will be essential as chaos reigns around you.

So, with plenty of hydrogen peroxide, you can:

  • Disinfect your tap water;
  • Disinfect any wild game you might have to kill;
  • Disinfect any cuts or scrapes you might incur from killing the animal;
  • Disinfect any cuts or scrapes you might incur from preparing the animal for a meal;
  • Brush your teeth after eating.

Since cleanliness is next to godliness, you’ll want to be as clean as possible in the presence of the Mayan gods.  And, there are few things more rude and classless than smiling at God with stained teeth and then keeling over because you drank some infected water!

2 Comments

Filed under Mayan Calendar Countdown

Today’s Birthdays

TV host Hugh Downs (Today, 20/20) is 91.

Emmy Award-winning composer, conductor, arranger, musical director Elliot Lawrence (Kennedy Center Honors) is 87.

Singer Phyllis McGuire (The McGuire Sisters) is 81.

Actress Florence Henderson (The Brady Bunch) is 78.

Golf champion Mickey (Mary) Wright (U.S. Open 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964) is 77.

Journalist Carl Bernstein is 68.

Guitarist Roger Fisher (Heart) is 62.

Actress Meg Tilly (Agnes of God, The Big Chill) is 52.

Leave a comment

Filed under Birthdays

On February 14…

270Valentine, a priest in Rome under Claudius II, was executed for officiating marriages.

1779 – British explorer Captain James Cook was killed in Hawaii on his third visit to the islands.

1849Matthew B. Brady – who became known for his photographs of the Civil War – took the first photograph of a U.S. President, James K. Polk, in New York City.

1859Oregon entered the union as the 33rd state, exactly ten years and six months to the day since it was organized as a territory.

1899 – The U.S. Congress approved voting machines for use in federal elections.

1912Arizona (a name probably derived from the Papago Indian word “arizonac,” a term meaning ‘place of the young spring’) entered the union as the 48th state.

1932 – The U.S. won its first Olympic bobsled competition (both the two-man and four-man races) at the Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid, NY.

1962 – First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy gave the first televised tour of the White House.

1966Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia 76ers set a National Basketball Association record as he reached a career high of 20,884 points after seven seasons as a pro basketball player.

1972 – The musical, Grease, opened at the Eden Theatre in New York City.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under History

Cartoon of the Day

1 Comment

Filed under News

Picture of the Day

Burj Khalifa, the tallest building in the world, which stands 2,723 feet and boasts 209 stories, plus 2 parking levels in the basement, in Dubai.  Currently, the Mitsubishi Corporation is designing a high-speed “bullet elevator” to be installed in the structure.  I’ll stay with my 1-story house, thank you!  It’s easier to vacate when the power goes out.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under News

Quote of the Day

“I want to create every opportunity for women to be able to serve this country …but I do have concerns about women in front-line combat.  I think that could be a very compromising situation, where people naturally may do things that may not be in the interest of the mission because of other types of emotions that are involved.”

– GOP presidential candidate Rick Santorum expressing his views on women in military combat

He later backtracked and said he was talking about the emotions of the men in the military.  I think I understand his logic.  The men will be too upset at the sight of women alongside them in the front lines, especially if the women get hurt, because it’s the natural instinct of men to protect women at all costs (think Titanic or Valentine’s Day).  And, if men in combat are too overwhelmed with emotions at the sight of injured females, then they won’t be able to focus on the mission at hand, which will be to kill other men who are trying to do harm to Americans; e.g. Al Qaeda, PETA.  So, in a sense, placing women in combat is a liberal plot to destroy the U.S.  Of course, any woman who’s given birth knows a thing or two about pain and agony, especially Catholic women like…well, like Mrs. Santorum.

 

1 Comment

Filed under News