Monday, November 30, 2020

Stay Home Because You're Well Day - November 30, 2020

 DIANE'S CORNER ... 

Celebrate Stay Home Because You're Well Day


Isn’t it a shame to waste your day off feeling sick? When you finally get some time away from the monotony of the office, isn’t it better to actually enjoy it? Of course it is! And that’s the thinking behind ‘Stay Home Because You’re Well Day’.

History of Stay Home Because You’re Well Day

Thomas and Ruth Roy created Stay Home Because You’re Well Day under the name of Wellcat Holidays and Herbs. They have stated that it exists so that, “we can all call in “well,” instead of faking illness, and stay home from work.” The point of this holiday is to take a moment to just slow down and enjoy life, seeing as how it has become so very hectic over the recent years, what with the endless barrage of phone calls, text messages, emails, voicemails, etc. that we are faced with on an everyday basis. And who can argue with that?


Photographer and architect, Yener Torun, represents a more fresh, colorful side of Istanbul. Yener found fame through his immediate success on Instagram, with over 151K loyal followers to date. We were dazzled by the colors and shapes he captures in his snapshots.

Joke of the Day

thanks for a child's opinion, Bev

KETCHUP 

A woman was trying hard to get the ketchup out of the jar. During her struggle the phone rang so she asked her 4-year-old daughter to answer the phone. 'Mommy can't come to the phone to talk to you right now. She's hitting the bottle.'

Word of the Day

yeanling

MEANING:

noun: The young of an animal, especially of a sheep or a goat.
adjective: New-born; infant.


ETYMOLOGY:
From yean (to give birth to a young), from Old English geeanian, from eanian (to bear young) + -ling (small, young, inferior). Earliest documented use: 1644.


USAGE:
“In residence therein is a handsome chestnut colt the Lewises bought for $200,000 as a yeanling. His name is Charismatic.”
Larry Bortstein; Battle-Tested Kentucky Derby; Orange County Register (Santa Ana, California); Apr 30, 1999.

Idiom of the Day


What does 'All the rage' mean?

If something's all the rage, it is very popular or fashionable at the moment.

This Day in History

1782 - The United States and Britain signed preliminary peace articles in Paris, ending the Revolutionary War.


1858 - John Landis Mason received a patent for the first pepper shaker with a screw-on cap.


1906 - George Parker Bidder, President of the Marine Biological Association (UK) released a glass bottle with a message into the North Sea. The bottle spent 108 years and 38 days at sea before it was found on the shores of Germany in 2015.


1940 - Lucille Ball and Cuban musician Desi Arnaz were married.


1954 - In Sylacauga, AL, Elizabeth Hodges was injured when a meteorite crashed through the roof of her house. The rock weighed 8½-pounds.


1965 - The Colorado State government declared this day to be Rolling Stones Day.

1993 - U.S. President Clinton signed into law the Brady Bill. The bill required a five-day waiting period for handgun purchases and background checks of prospective buyers.

2001 - For the first time in it's history, McDonald's teamed up with a retail partner on its Happy Meal promotions. Toys R Us provided plush figures from it's Animal Alley.


2003 - In New York, a block of East 2nd Street was officially renamed Joey Ramone Place.

2004 - In Stockholm, Sweden, the Carl Larsson painting "Boenskoerd" ("Bean Harvest") was sold at auction for $730,000. The work had been in a private collection for more than a century. The Larsson work "Vid Kattegatt" ("By Kattegatt") sold for $640,000 at the same auction.


DAILY SQU-EEK



If You Were Born Today, November 30

You have the ability to light up a room when you enter it. Others gravitate to you naturally because you are very easy to like. Your charm is multi-layered. One of its main ingredients is your versatility. You love people and can easily imitate others, and your many faces appeal to many! As multi-talented and multi-faceted as you are, you are also very shrewd and determined. While you may seem to have a finger in many pies, you are not scattered in focus. Bored easily, you need movement and activity in your life in order to keep stimulated. The good news is you are capable of creating it, and don't rely on others to entertain you. Famous people born today: 

1667 Jonathan Swift, Irish author and satirist (Gulliver's Travels, A Modest Proposal), born in Dublin, Ireland (d. 1745)

1817 Theodor Mommsen, German historian and scholar (Imperial Lives, Nobel Prize in Literature 1902), born in Garding, Duchy of Schleswig (d. 1903)

1835 Mark Twain [Samuel Clemens], American author (Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn), born in Florida, Missouri (d. 1910)

1869 [Nils] Gustaf Dalén, Swedish physicist and industrialist (AGA, Nobel Prize in Physics 1912), born in Stenstorp, Sweden (d. 1937)

1872 John McCrae, Canadian physician, soldier and poet (In Flanders Fields), born in Guelph, Ontario (d. 1918)

1874 Winston ChurchillBritish Prime Minister (Conservative: 1940-45, 1951-55) during World War II and winner of the 1953 Nobel Prize in Literature, born in Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England (d. 1965)

1874 Lucy Maud Montgomery, Canadian author (Anne of Green Gables), born in Clifton, Prince Edward Island (d. 1942)

1924 Shirley Chisholm, 1st African American Congresswoman (Rep-D-NY) and presidential candidate, born in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2005)

1929 Dick Clark [Richard Wagstaff Clark], American radio and television personality (American Bandstand), born in Mount Vernon, New York (d. 2012)

1985 Kaley Cuoco, American actress (The Big Bang Theory), born in Camarillo, California

1985 Chrissy Teigen, American model, born in Delta, Utah


thanks, Nina


READERS INFO
1.
(Not So) Totally Useless Facts of The Day:

The Three Stooges were a famous vaudeville and comedy act team that began performing in 1922. Throughout its history, the trio of stooges consisted of Moe, Larry, Curly, Shemp, and Curly Joe. Of these, Curly was the ballroom dancer. Jerome “Curly” Howard, younger brother to both Moe and Shemp, was a skilled basketball player in addition to being an accomplished dancer.

Worldwide, there are over 100 different flavors of Pringles potato chips, or potato crisps, if you prefer. Certain flavors are only available in certain markets. Currently, you can find Pringles being sold in over 140 countries. So take your pick, you have flavors such as Paprika, Onion Blossom, Prawn Cocktail, Grilled Shrimp, Honey Mustard, Hot & Spicy Wonton, just to name a few.

Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia (hIp-o-pOt-o-mOn-strO-sEs-quIp-i-dEli-o-phObiA). That’s a long word. It’s an ironic word as well. Especially when you learn the meaning of it. The word Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia means: the fear of long words. Ain’t that a kick in the pants?

2.
2016 -
Michael "Jim" Delligatti  (August 2, 1918 – November 29, 2016)

The Pittsburgh-area McDonald’s franchisee who created
the Big Mac nearly 50 years ago died in 2016. 
Delligatti’s franchise was based in Uniontown when he invented the chain’s signature burger with two all-beef patties, "special sauce," lettuce, cheese, pickles and onions on a sesame seed bun. He also created the Egg McMuffin breakfast sandwich in 1970.


3.
Coronavirus Style by Sylvia, CAN DO Correspondent
About Nature Identical Oils

Nature Identical essential oils are blends of essential oils, various extracted aromatic compounds, and constituents of essential oils or synthetic chemicals. They may be a rectified blend of components that mimic the chemical structure of the original oil. They are to pure essential oils what nutritional supplements are to whole foods, somewhat comparable to getting your nutritional needs met through supplements rather than food.

The synthetic constituents used mimic the chemical spectrometry of natural constituents from the plant. They smell like their natural equivalents but contain on average noticeably fewer complete constituents found in the oil they copy, and may have unknown chemical additives. Synthetic oils do not have a direct counterpart in nature in terms of ingredients but are chemically copied and mixed. Often they are called ‘scented oils’ or ‘scent oils’ and are typically less expensive.

Nature Identical essential oils are generally used in industry for fragrance purposes as they are less expensive and tend to be more fragrant than essential oils in their pure form. Using nature identical oils can solve a common problem for product formulators who don’t want to use completely synthetic fragrances. They can help product formulators achieve that intense fragrance but in a way that is somewhat safer, much cheaper, and can technically be considered somewhat natural.

However, they are not considered appropriate for food use (they are used to flavor teas and other foods in some Middle Eastern Countries) or any kind of clinical aromatherapy. Conventional wisdom says that if your goal is to create something of therapeutic value then you should never use anything but pure essential oils. Having certification on the oils you purchase for aromatherapy will include a lot-specific GCMS (Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry) analysis from reputable purveyors, especially important if buying through a retailer or multi-level marketing representative (who usually cannot provide this important technical information that so necessary for clinical applications).

Why is this important? Because disreputable bulk sellers are usually from countries that do not meet the same health and safety standards as in Europe or North America, and have been known to adulterate lots of ‘pure’ essential oils with synthetic constituents. These fraudulent lots are sold only after initial test samples of pure high-quality oils representing those lots have been provided and passed mass spectrometer testing by the purchaser, and have been approved for purchase. Then the incoming shipment of oils may be of much inferior quality not at all matching the original approved samples.

Aromatherapists have unwittingly used such products on their patients, so be sure to make your purchases through reputable sources only.


Pictures of the Day

An electric match is a device that uses an externally applied electric current to ignite a combustible compound. This image is a collage of three photographs depicting an electric match at the moment of ignition in the centre, together with the same match before detonation on the left and after detonation on the right. To ignite the match, a suitable electric voltage is applied to a heating element, typically a loop or coil of thin wire, which is encased in a quantity of a flammable pyrotechnic initiator fluid, which then ignites.

The Contents of a Dutch Police Car
An overhead view 



knit
thanks, Ivy
The Best of the Worst Ugly Sweaters
Knit Patterns of the Day: 
thanks, Valerie, Canadian Correspondent

Christmas Tree Dishcloth

Knit Dog Coat


crochet
thanks, Rose
Winter Wonderland Tree Skirt

crochet
thanks, Bertha
Rose

crochet
How to Crochet a Mini Stocking Advent Calendar


RECIPE
thanks, Shelley, New York Food Correspondent


Quarantine Cooking Recipes
thanks, Debbie
thanks, Sandy


VEGAN/ VEGETARIAN RECIPE

Both vegetarian and vegan diets may provide health benefits, including reduced body weight, lower cholesterol levels, and decreased risk of cardiovascular disease. However, it is important for vegetarians and vegans to ensure that they are meeting all of their nutritional requirements.

thanks, Alice
COUSCOUS PUDDING
(Serves 4)

Experiment with different types of dried fruit for variety.

11/2 cups water
5 ounces couscous (a little less than 1 cup)
1/2 cup dried fruit (raisins, chopped figs or dates, for example)
11/2 cups soymilk or other milk alternative
1/4 cup maple syrup
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
2 Tablespoons cornstarch

Bring water to a boil in a small pot. Add couscous and dried fruit. Cover pot, remove from heat, and allow to sit 5 minutes.

Meanwhile, in a separate medium-size pot, heat remaining ingredients over medium-high heat until the pudding starts to thicken (about 3 minutes). While heating, stir often with a whisk. Once pudding thickens, remove from heat and add cooked couscous mixture. Mix well. Pour pudding into a serving dish and chill for at least 1 hour before serving.


COPYCAT RECIPE 
thanks, Jenny
Copycat Disneyland Chili Lime Corn on the Cob


SWEETS
thanks, Shelley, New York Food Correspondent

Blender Chocolate Mousse Recipe



ADULT COLORING



FUN

thanks, Maria

You probably can’t find every mask in this picture


answer:



CRAFTS
thanks, Kathy

thanks, 
Craft Stick Christmas Trees


PUZZLE

true picture couldn't be found
Butterfly O Jigsaw Puzzle


WORD SEARCH


ballot
begin
belt

clock
close
continue
could

demon
extreme

fewer

gleam
green
guileless

hickory

kindly
locker
lousy

management
mere

paste
planet
plank
poker
post
quick

repeat

sear
shiny
sleep
spice
splint
spray
twilight

visibility

wend
worry



SUDOKU .. hard



solution:





ICE BREAKER ...
thanks, Kris
You can use 'ice breaker questions' to build a rapport, enabling strangers to engage in back and forth conversion. With a little practice and possibly a beer or two, you’ll be breaking more ice than the Titanic. 

Say You’re Independently Wealthy And Don’t Have To Work, What Would You Do With Your Time?


QUOTE
thanks, Ella





CLEVER 

thanks, Julia
WEBSTER'S 1913 DICTIONARY 
Modern dictionaries have lazy definitions that focus too much on simplicity at the cost of precision use this 107 year old dictionary

Webster's 1913



EYE OPENER 




A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Laws are like cobwebs which may catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through. -Jonathan Swift, satirist (30 Nov 1667-1745)


Yener Torun


OPTICAL ILLUSION

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