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Monthly Archives: July 2012
Cartoon of the Day
Filed under News
Pictures of the Day
There is one bright side to the extreme heat and drought plaguing Texas right now: it’s apparently been good for crape myrtle trees. Botanists around the Dallas area have noticed crape myrtle blossoms are more bountiful and colorful this year than in the past; possibly a reaction to the extreme weather conditions. Crape myrtles (Lagerstroemia indica) are native to China and were first brought to North America in the late 1700’s. They didn’t become popular in Texas until the 1920’s where they actually suffered due to the heat. But, horticulturists worked over time to breed sturdier crap myrtles and the result has been extraordinary.

The crape myrtle allee at the Dallas arboretum is in full bloom displaying the summery watermelon-red flowers. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

‘Dynamite’ crape myrtle is a cherry-red variety with an almost neon brightness. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

Young ‘Dynamite’ crape myrtles at the Dallas arboretum are in full bloom displaying the deep red flowers. Plant breeders have been working to improve this Southern favorite to make them flower longer with more vivid colors and to make them less prone to diseases. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

Crape myrtle called ‘Natchez’ with its white flowers and beautiful bark pattern at the Dallas arboretum in Dallas. Botanist Don Egolf developed this hybrid from the 1960’s to the 1980’s. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

Crape myrtle called ‘Natchez’ with its red bark pattern at the Dallas arboretum in Dallas. These hybrid trees not only exhibit superior powdery mildew resistance, but also colorful exfoliating bark in tones of tan, orange and brown. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

Crape myrtle alley at the Dallas arboretum is in full bloom displaying the watermelon red flowers. Photo by Brad Loper, Dallas Morning News.

A crape myrtle at the World Collection Park in McKinney, texas. The town recently opened the World Collection Park, planted with all known species and varieties, and 15 miles of boulevards planted with the hardy flowering trees and shrubs. Photo by Louis DeLuca, Dallas Morning News.

A scenic shot of the crape myrtle trees looking north near the intersection of Alma and Stacy in McKinney. The town recently opened the World Collection Park, planted with all known species and varieties, and 15 miles of boulevards planted with the hardy flowering trees and shrubs. Photo by Louis DeLuca, Dallas Morning News.
Filed under News
July 21 Notable Birthdays
If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”
Movie director Norman Jewison (Moonstruck, Agnes of God, And Justice for All, Jesus Christ, Superstar, Fiddler on the Roof, Rollerball) is 86.
Janet Reno, U.S. Attorney General (1993-2001), is 74.
Actor Edward Herrmann (Big Business, Beacon Hill, Reds, The Paper Chase, Mrs. Soffel, The Great Gatsby, Eleanor & Franklin) is 69.
Actor Leigh Lawson (Battling for Baby, O Pioneers!, Tears in the Rain, Tess, Love Among the Ruins, Brother Sun, Sister Moon) is 67.
Singer Cat Stevens (Stephen Demetre Georgiou, now Yusuf Islam; Wild World, Moon Shadow, Peace Train, Oh Very Young) is 64.
Cartoonist Garry Trudeau (Doonesbury) is 64.
Actor – comedian Robin Williams (Good Will Hunting, Mork and Mindy, Good Morning, Vietnam, Mrs. Doubtfire, Dead Poet’s Society, Popeye, The Fisher King, Hook, Comic Relief, Patch Adams, What Dreams May Come) is 61.
Actor – comedian Jon Lovitz (Saturday Night Live, A League of Their Own, City Slickers) is 55.
Actor Lance Guest (Lou Grant, Knots Landing, Life Goes On, The Wizard of Loneliness) is 52.
Actor Josh Hartnett (Pearl Harbor, Cracker) is 34.
Filed under Birthdays
On July 21…
365 – A powerful earthquake off the coast of Greece generated a massive tsunami that slammed into Alexandria, Egypt, killing some 5,000 people.
1899 – Author Ernest Hemingway (The Old Man and the Sea, The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls) was born in Oak Park, IL.
1920 – Violinist Isaac Stern was born in Kremenetz, Ukraine.
1925 – In Dayton, Tennessee, the so-called “Monkey Trial” ended, as John Thomas Scopes was convicted of teaching evolution in violation of state law.
1930 – The Veterans’ Administration of the United States was established.
1957 – Althea Gibson became the first Black woman to win a major U.S. tennis title, when she won the Women’s National clay-court singles competition.
1959 – A U.S. District Court judge in New York City ruled that Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence was not obscene. The ruling was upheld in U.S. appeals court one year later.
Filed under History
Retroacting
In light of yesterday’s massacre in Aurora, Colorado, every media talking head, politician and self-proclaimed expert on psychosis is speaking out. Folks from CNN and MSNBC rushed to the scene yesterday morning, hoping to corral anyone who was within a mile of the theatre and ask, ‘What did you see?’ Even Nancy Grace – who normally doesn’t care unless an adult White female goes missing or turns up dead – jumped into the fray, so you know this shit is serious.
Meanwhile, idiot extremists on both sides of the gun control debate are already lining up to take – pardon the verbiage – shots at one another. Gun control advocates say this is once again proof that firearms are too easily accessible in the U.S. Gun rights supporters – who always seem to think the 2nd Amendment to the Constitution trumps the 1st Amendment – claim that guns don’t kill, people do. In a way, they’re both right. I’ll let them engage in their usual vitriolic tangos.
But, I have to wonder; are we now going to have metal detectors in movie theatres? If we do, it’s yet another example of how the U.S. seems to behave retroactively to whatever crisis of the decade pops up. Our elected officials and law enforcement don’t always have the foresight to cogitate ahead. That’s what happens when they’re more concerned with election year politics and budget restraints.
Here are just a few examples of after-the-fact-responses.
In the fall of 1982, seven people in Chicago died after consuming cyanide-laced Tylenol. The manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson, pulled every single Tylenol product off store shelves across the country and almost went bankrupt because of it. But, they bounced back with an aggressive marketing campaign and reintroducing their products with safety seals. Other manufacturers followed suit. I’m old enough to remember when you could buy something and just open it up without worrying if it was a death sentence. Now, you occasionally have to have pugilistic hands to open a bottle cap.
On April 19, 1995, Timothy McVeigh parked a moving truck outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. A few minutes later, the truck exploded and almost completely destroyed the building; killing 168 people. Now, you can’t just drive into a building; federal or otherwise. You have to approach a guard post where they check your identification and confirm that you’re really supposed to be there. You also can’t park outside any building for too long, especially in major cities, unless you want a cop or overweight security guard giving you dirty looks first, before asking what the hell you’re doing.
Law enforcement never took animal abuse seriously until psychologists made the connection between that and serial killers. Now, anyone caught chaining a dog to a tree is threatened with jail time.
School boards always thought bullying was just kids-being-kids crap until the victims started committing suicide – or homicide. The 1999 Columbine massacre sort of drove that message home. So, schools started bullying intervention programs and installed metal detectors.
The best case scenario for an after-the-fact-response is September 11, 2001. Who would have thought someone would use jet liners as weapons of mass destruction? Actually, someone had made a concerted effort several years earlier. In February 1974, Samuel Byck tried to hijack a Delta Airlines plane from Baltimore and crash it into the White House. He wasn’t really a terrorist; he was a failed businessman with a seething hatred for Richard Nixon and a suicidal death wish. He was shot to death after a brief standoff with police. The incident received minimal press coverage because the growing Watergate mess had everyone’s attention. And, it got lost in the historical shuffle – until 09/11.
For one thing, immigration never thought that people with expired VISAs could pose a threat. People with past-due VISA bills always got harassed half to death by the banks however. So, the airlines starting checking people’s identifications more closely. Then, they started thinking that pilots should be armed and cockpit doors should be fortified with more than duct tape. Even flight attendants started wondering if they had to start carrying nunchucks instead of extra bags of peanuts. U.S. airlines could have taken a queue from Israel, which hasn’t experienced a hijacking since 1970. Their airline pilots are armed and their flight attendants are trained to fight back with whatever they have. But, over here, airline executives complained such changes wouldn’t be cost-effective, meaning they’d have to take a cut in their million-dollar paychecks. So, the Transportation Security Agency (TSA) is content with confiscating bottles of Evian and fondling people in wheelchairs.
In December 2001, Richard Reed tried to set his shoes on fire, while aboard a flight from Paris to Miami. Now, everyone has to take off their shoes.
In December 2009, Abdul Farouk Umar Abdulmutallab, a Nigerian-born Al-Qaeda operative, tried to set his explosive-underwear on fire on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit. The stuff didn’t ignite, but fellow passengers tackled him anyway, as the plane approached the airport. People feared they’d now have to tolerate underwear checks, but the TSA amazingly drew the line at that.
So, I ask again – will theatres begin installing metal detectors beside the ticket windows? All day Friday and into Saturday, theatres around the country employed extra security measures to ward off any copycat incidents – another uniquely American aberration. Here’s another question – when will we stop reacting to these events and start thinking ahead to the possibility of stuff happening? It’s not beyond the scope of reality or human intelligence. It happens all the time in business and science – people think of what could be and what could happen. Then, they act on it. It’s not a crystal ball type of mentality. It’s just being practical.
Filed under Essays
July 20 Notable Birthdays
If today is your birthday, “Happy Birthday!”
Actress Lola Albright (The Tender Trap, The Impossible Years) is 87.
Actress Sally Ann Howes (Dead of Night, The History of Mr. Polly, Chitty, Chitty, Bang, Bang, Nicholas Nickleby) is 82.
Actress Diana Rigg (Medea; King Lear, Witness for the Prosecution, The Avengers, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, In Trust and Follies; hostess: PBS’ Mystery) is 74.
Singer – songwriter Kim Carnes (Bette Davis Eyes; with Kenny Rogers: Don’t Fall in Love With a Dreamer, What About Me) is 67.
Guitarist John Lodge (Moody Blues) is 67.
Singer – songwriter – guitarist Carlos Santana (Evil Ways, Black Magic Woman, Oye Como Va) is 65.
Actress Donna Dixon (Speed Zone, Beverly Hills Madam, Dr. Detroit, Bosom Buddies, Berrenger’s) is 55.
Keyboardist Mick MacNeil (Simple Minds) is 54.
Drummer – singer – songwriter Chris Cornell (Soundgarden) is 48.
Filed under Birthdays
On July 20…
1881 – Five years after leading a rebellion against Gen. George A. Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn, Sioux leader Chief Sitting Bull surrendered to the U.S. Army.
1919 – Explorer Edmund Hillary, first to climb Mt. Everest, was born in Auckland, New Zealand.
1942 – The first members of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAACS) began training at Fort Des Moines, IA. In 1943, the name was changed to WACS (Women’s Army Corps) and the organization became a part of the U.S. Army.
1948 – President Harry S. Truman instituted a military draft, requiring nearly 10 million men to register within 2 months.
1969 – Apollo 11 landed on the moon, 4 days after it departed from Earth.
1976 – Viking I, an unmanned U.S. planetary probe, became the first spacecraft to land on Mars.
1985 – Treasure hunters began retrieving some $400 million in coins and silver ingots from the sea floor in the biggest underwater excavation in history. The bounty came from the Spanish galleon Nuestra Senora de Atocha, which had sunk 40 miles off the coast of Key West, Florida in 1622. It was located by treasure hunter Mel Fisher. The 40 tons of gold and silver and was the richest treasure find since the opening of King Tut’s tomb in the 1930’s.
Filed under History
Pictures of the Day
These are just a handful of the 25 new coral reef fish species discovered in recent years in the South China and Andaman Seas. Scientists don’t consider any of these newly-identified fish endangered. They’re all profiled in the book Reef Fishes of the East Indies, published last month by the University of Hawaii Press. All photographs from National Geographic.

Tripod Fish (Pteropsaron longipinnis) – Photograph courtesy Gerald Allen, Conservation International

A school of anthias fish feeds over a reef in Indonesia’s Komodo National Marine Park in the Coral Triangle – Photograph by Mauricio Handler, National Geographic

Scorpionfish (Pteroidichthys amboinensis) – Photograph courtesy Roger Steene, Conservation International

Giant Frogfish (Antennarius commersoni) – Photograph courtesy Roger Steene, Conservation International
Filed under News


































