Today’s Famous Birthdays

If yours is today also, “Happy Birthday!” 

Sandra Day O’Connor, 1st woman nominated and appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, is 82.

 

Actor – director Leonard Nimoy (Star Trek) is 81.

 

Actor Alan Arkin (Catch-22; The Russians are Coming, The Russians are Coming) is 78.

 

Basketball Hall of Famer Wayne ‘The Wall’ Embry (Cincinnati Royals, Boston Celtics, Milwaukee Bucks; first African-American GM in major league sports) is 75.

National Horse Racing Hall of Famer Braulio Baeza (1st horse jockey to go over $3 million in purses in one year) is 72.

Actor James Caan (The Godfather, Rabbit Run, Brian’s Song) is 72.

 

Author Erica Jong (Fear of Flying, Becoming Light, How to Save Your Own Life) is 70.

Journalist – author Bob Woodward (helped expose the Watergate scandal) is 69.

Singer – actress Diana Ross (The Supremes) is 68.

 

Keyboardist Richard Tandy (Electric Light Orchestra) is 64.

 

Singer Steven Tyler (Aerosmith) is 64.

 

Actress – singer Vicki Lawrence (The Carol Burnett Show, Mama’s Family) is 63.

 

Bass guitarist Fran Sheehan (Boston) is 63.

 

Actor – comedian Martin Short (Saturday Night Live, The Three Amigos) is 62.

 

Curtis Sliwa (founder, Guardian Angels) is 58.

 

TV hostess Leeza Gibbons (Entertainment Tonight) is 55.

 

Actress Jennifer Grey (Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, Dirty Dancing, The Cotton Club) is 52.

 

Former professional football player Marcus Allen (Kansas City Chiefs, LA Raiders; 1981 Heisman Trophy Winner) is 52.

 

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On March 26…

1812 – A massive earthquake struck Caracas, Venezuela, killing an estimated 26,000 people. 

1885 – The first commercial moving-picture film was produced in Rochester, NY, by the Eastman Kodak company.

 

1920 – F. Scott Fitzgerald published his first novel, This Side of Paradise.

 

1951 – The U.S. Air Force approved its new flag, which included the coat of arms, 13 white stars and the Air Force seal on a blue background.

 

1953 – Dr. Jonas Salk announced a new vaccine against poliomyelitis, the virus that causes polio.

 

1979 – Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin sign a peace treaty at the White House, ending 3 decades of hostilities between their countries and establishing formal diplomatic and commercial ties.

 

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Cartoon of the Day

 

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Picture of the Day

Sunset Clamming

Photographed January 2009, Xiapu, Fujian, China, by Jia Han Dong of Parsippany, NJ.  Courtesy Smithsonian Institution.

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Quote of the Day

 

“Etch-A-Sketch will have to remain neutral.  We want what’s best for America.” 

– Martin Killgallon, an executive for the company Ohio Art, after its product became the focus of a misstatement by Mitt Romney. 

 

I have to agree.  Let’s not disrespect Etch-A-Sketch by dragging it into the presidential race.  Etch-A-Sketch provides 2 things politicians don’t: purpose and happiness.

 

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‘Dark Shadows’ – The Movie

I was surprised to learn about this recently.  Mentally disturbed filmmaker Tim Burton has brought the legendary ‘Dark Shadows’ series to the big screen, starring – you guessed it – his favorite actor, the equally disturbed Johnny Depp.  Depp portrays Barnabas Collins, a vampire who rises from his crypt in the family mausoleum, after being released by a grave-robbing drifter, and joins his contemporary relatives on their gigantic Maine estate.  ‘Dark Shadows,’ which ran from 1966 – 1971, was the first prime time soap opera and the first to feature a gothic theme.  It was unprecedented for its time and instantly gained a cult following – no pun intended.  The original series returned to television in the early 1980’s, when I discovered – and fell in love with – it.  The Burton movie obviously plays with the storyline’s horror-tinted and sexually-charged overtones.

 

 

 

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Useful Dog Tricks

Dogs are such incredible animals!  Give me dogs over people any day!

 

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March 25, 2012 – 270 days Until Baktun 12

Survivalist Tip:  As utility services are likely to go down when the apocalypse hits, make certain you have bags of charcoal on hand.  Charcoal has been used for centuries as a cooking aid in most societies around the world; except what is now the Middle East where they used either goat dung or the foreskins of infant males.  The indigenous peoples of the Americas have a long history with wood charcoal, its original form, where they used it for cooking, heating and long-distance text messaging.  Smoke from charcoal-induced flames will ward off insects, spiders, celebrities and other varmints that manage to survive the upheaval.  As I’ve stated repeatedly, we don’t know how long power will be out, so charcoal will help you get through the cold and darkness.  Besides, charcoal-basted chocolate is heavenly!

 

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Celebrating Texas’ Tejano Heritage

In This March 7, 2012, photo from Austin, Texas, workers erect a monument to Tejano settlers, Spanish and Mexican explorers who trail-blazed what would become the Lone Star State.The massive granite and bronze memorial is set to be officially unveiled March 29 on the South lawn of the state Capitol. (AP Photo/Will Weissert)

This week Texas’ Tejano settlers – that is, the state’s original inhabitants, after the Indians – will finally be recognized.  State leaders will dedicate a granite and bronze memorial to the Spanish explorers who established vast communities long before the likes of Stephen F. Austin or Sam Houston were even born.  Since 2002, the Texas Tejano organization has endeavored to get the true story of our state’s history to include the Spanish settlers.  Spaniards had reached Texas by the 1580’s; the entire southwestern region of what is now the United States and all of México formed what was then called “Nuevo España,” or “New Spain.”  They built entire towns, complete with churches and functioning governments, and later began intermarrying with the region’s indigenous peoples.  They took a term that various native peoples used for friend – tejas, tayshas, texias and thecas are among the varied translations – and used it to create the state’s name.  None of it is something Texas schoolchildren have traditionally learned, but that’s changing.  One of my own paternal ancestors, Marcos Alonzo de la Garza – Falcon, was born in Spain around 1550 and arrived in South Texas some 30 years later; so the event this week in Austin has personal significance for me.  I’m definitely glad, though, that México lost Texas to the United States in 1836.  But, the Lone Star state’s expansive and diverse history can’t be denied.

 

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Is the Real Story of Palestine Being Told?

I’m sure anyone in the Middle East, outside of Israel, would answer this question with a resounding ‘no.’  While the question of Palestine sovereignty is one of the most pressing issues on the international stage, author and human rights activist Susan Abulhawa looks at it from a literary standpoint.  She and her family are refugees from the 1967 ‘Six Day War,’ and one might expect her to be filled with rage towards Israel.  But, as a writer, Abulhawa knows fully that literature, like art and music, can be used as a tool to create dialogues about even the most controversial of matters and build bridges between communities that have always built walls instead.  Her book Mornings in Jenin is a fictional telling of her family’s own experiences with forced relocation, but the story takes place in the aftermath of Israel’s 1948 independence.  Many people probably don’t want to talk about it, or worst, pretend there’s no real problem at all.  But, we’ve seen what happens when people stop talking and start fighting.  They end up with the problems that plague the Middle East.  I think we should stop listening to the region’s political leaders and start listening to its writers and other artists.  Often, their resolutions don’t involve blood and bombs.

 

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