Ridley’s Believe It Or Not For November 7, 2018 Jeff Sessions
has resigned at the request of the president and Trump chose not to elevate Rod
Rosenstein and instead selected Matthew Whitaker as Acting Attorney General
prompting predictable howls from Schumer and his lap dogs that Whitaker recuse
himself from the Mueller witch-hunt, after $5 billion has been spent the Blues
have regained control of the House and the Reds have increased their number of
seats in the Senate (Trump campaigned only for a few House members who won
while those who did not embrace his endorsement lost); two gubernatorial candidates
Walker and Abrams have refused to concede after their race has been called
against them and Blue Nelson in Florida is demanding a recount against Red
Scott; Trump in a really contentious press conference especially with
grandstanding pseudo journalist Jim Acosta but expressing hope that he will be
able to work in a bipartisanship manner with Nancy Pelosi (remains to be seen
but keep your fingers crossed but if gridlock, Blues will own it 2020); on the why bipartisanship may be a
hopeless goal, a SUNY professor Laura Ebert
has been arrested for stealing pro Red signs from a neighbor’s lawn (so typical
of the left to stifle freedom of speech); on the illegal alien front, Motel 6
which had been sued for providing to ICE information about illegal alien guests
has settled a lawsuit by them for $7.6 million; in a there is a God moment Red
candidate for the House wounded Navy Seal veteran Crenshaw mocked by Nothing
But Cack Network’s SNL as looking like a hitman in a porno movie won in his House
race; Emanuel’s announcement that he
will not seek reelection has not curbed the gun violence as through November 6,
2018, 2612 people mostly of color have been shot by mostly people of color, of
whom 430 have died (for 3 days in a row no gunshot murder victims but still when
will Chicago get serious about this carnage or is this the case of true racism
as a Blue run city turns a deaf ear and a blind eye to the slaughter of mostly
people of color by mostly people of color).
As always,
I hope you enjoy today’s holidays and observances, a music link to Francis
Craig and his Orchestra, factoids of interest for this day in history, the
fact that you are not nociceptive to those around you and a relevant quote from Leonard Coatsworth
on the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, secure in the
knowledge that if you want to find a gift for any memorable events like college
graduations, birthdays, weddings, or anniversaries, you know that the
Alaskanpoet can provide you with a unique customized poem at a great price
tailored to the event and the recipient. You need only contact me for
details.
1. National Canine Lymphoma Awareness Day—created by noted
dog trainer and dog show competitor Terry Simnons in 2015 following the death
of his dog from lymphoma to create awareness of the disease and to promote
research in finding a cure.
2. National Notary Public Day—created in 1975 to honor the contributions of notaries to insure
the identity of people signing documents
used in transactions and celebrated on this day as it marks the day in the colonies
in 1639 when Thomas Fugil became the first notary in American Colonies.
3. 1947 Number One Song— the number one song in 1947 on a run of 12 weeks in that
position was “Near You” by Francis Craig and his Orchestra. Here is a
recording of the song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CbZLpAMnclQ
4. Word of the Day—today’s word of the day as we moved from words beginning with
“m” to words beginning with “n” is “nociceptive” which means causing pain which a Blue led House will
try to do to the Trump agenda.
5. Different Strokes and Pregnancy Don’t Mix—celebrating the
birth on this day in 1964 of child star Dana Plato who starred in Different Strokes but was released when
she became pregnant and spiraled into drugs, divorced and lost custody of her
child and died of an overdose at age 34.
On this day in:
a. 1910 in a preview of Fed Ex in the future the Wright Brothers
air freighted a shipment of a bolt of silk from Dayton, Ohio to Max Moorehouse’s
department stored in Columbus, Ohio.
b. 1940 the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapsed in a little over 4
months after its completion but fortunately no one was killed when the bridge
fell into the Narrows.
c. 1973 Congress overturned President Nixon’s veto of the War
Powers Resolution which limited the ability of the nation to wage war without
Congressional approval.
d. 1991 Magic Johnson announced that he was infected with the
AIDS virus and retired from the NBA.
e. 1994 student run radio station WXYC at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill produced the first radio internet broadcast.
Reflections on the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
collapse: “I saw the Narrows bridge die today, and only by the grace of God,
escaped dying with it. . . ."I drove on the bridge and started across. In
the car with me was my daughter's cocker spaniel, Tubby. The car was loaded
with equipment from my beach home at Arletta.
"Just as I drove past the towers, the bridge began to sway violently from side to side. Before I realized it, the tilt became so violent that I lost control of the car. . . . I jammed on the brakes and got out, only to be thrown onto my face against the curb.
"Just as I drove past the towers, the bridge began to sway violently from side to side. Before I realized it, the tilt became so violent that I lost control of the car. . . . I jammed on the brakes and got out, only to be thrown onto my face against the curb.
Around me I could hear concrete cracking. I started back to the car
to get the dog, but was thrown before I could reach it. The car itself began to
slide from side to side on the roadway. I decided the bridge was breaking up
and my only hope was to get back to shore.
On hands and knees most of the time, I crawled 500 yards or more to
the towers . . . . My breath was coming in gasps; my knees were raw and
bleeding, my hands bruised and swollen from gripping the concrete curb . . . .
Toward the last, I risked rising to my feet and running a few yards at a time .
. . . Safely back at the toll plaza, I saw the bridge in its final collapse and
saw my car plunge into the Narrows."
I saw Clark Eldridge (Toll Bridge Authority engineer), his face white
as paper. If I feel badly, I thought, how must he feel?
With real tragedy, disaster and blasted dreams all around me, I
believe that right at this minute what appalls me most is that within a few
hours I must tell my daughter that her dog is dead, when I might have saved
him."
Leonard Coatsworth News
Editor Tacoma Tribune.
Please enjoy the poems on events of interest on my twitter account below (if you like them, retweet and follow me) and follow my blogs. Always good, incisive and entertaining poems on my blogs—click on the links below. Go towww.alaskanpoet.blogspot.com for Ridley’s Believe It Or Not—This Day in History, poems to inspire, touch, emote, elate and enjoy and poems on breaking news items of importance or go to www.Alaskanpoethistory.blogspot.com for just This Day in History.
Please enjoy the poems on events of interest on my twitter account below (if you like them, retweet and follow me) and follow my blogs. Always good, incisive and entertaining poems on my blogs—click on the links below. Go towww.alaskanpoet.blogspot.com for Ridley’s Believe It Or Not—This Day in History, poems to inspire, touch, emote, elate and enjoy and poems on breaking news items of importance or go to www.Alaskanpoethistory.blogspot.com for just This Day in History.
© November 7, 2018, Michael P. Ridley aka the Alaskanpoet
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