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Topic: OT - Weird History

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Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5138 on: June 24, 2025, 09:34:25 AM »
I still recall PSAT/SAT day.  It wasn't as big a deal back then, really, you just showed up hopefully after sleeping well and took the test.  I took two SATs and one PSAT.  I had zero prep.  I was aware that guessing was bad.  I think some books came out while I was in college allowing one to take practice tests.


Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5139 on: June 25, 2025, 06:37:10 AM »

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5140 on: June 25, 2025, 06:58:25 AM »
Died on this date (Jun. 20) in 1966, the Belgian cosmologist and priest Georges Lemaître who was the original proponent of what later became known as the Big Bang theory.
 
Trained as a civil engineer, Lemaître served as an artillery officer with the Belgian army during World War I, then, in 1923, he entered a seminary, where he was ordained a priest. From 1923 to 1924 he visited the University of Cambridge to study solar physics and there met Arthur Eddington; he then spent two years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he was influenced by the ideas of Edwin Hubble and Harlow Shapley regarding the likelihood of an expanding universe. In 1927 he returned to Belgium and was made professor of astrophysics at the University of Louvain.

In 1933 he published his Discussion on the Evolution of the Universe, in which he suggested that the universe stemmed from what he called a "primeval atom." This incredibly dense initial form, he argued, contained all the material for the universe in a sphere about 30 times larger than the Sun. Its explosion sent matter flying all directions and resulted ultimately in the expansion of the galaxies that we see today. The significance of his theory lay not so much in its affirmation of the expansion of the universe as in its presumption of an initial event to start the expansion. In 1946, Lemaître published his Hypothesis of the Primal Atom – the same year in which George Gamow and his colleagues began to develop the nuclear physics of the Big Bang.



Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5141 on: June 25, 2025, 07:01:30 AM »

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5142 on: June 25, 2025, 07:11:58 AM »
Born on this date (Jun. 24) in 1915, the maverick English astrophysicist and cosmologist Fred Hoyle, who did important work in nucleosynthesis and championed the steady-state theory of the universe. Educated in mathematics and theoretical physics at Cambridge University, he returned there after wartime work on radar development and remained from 1945 to 1973, with many long-term visits to the California Institute of Technology and the Mount Wilson and Palomar Observatories. He was appointed Plumian Professor of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy in 1958 and founded Cambridge's Institute of Theoretical Astronomy and served as its first director. His early work on stellar evolution led to his famous collaboration with Margaret and Geoffrey Burbidge and William Fowler on the synthesis of the elements beyond helium in stars. Hoyle successfully predicted the existence of a resonance in carbon-12 that was essential to helium burning in stars. In 1948 Hoyle, Hermann Bondi, and Thomas Gold developed the steady-state cosmological model. Hoyle provided a mathematical theory of the model consistent with the general theory of relativity and served as the leading spokesman for the new theory, coining the term “Big Bang” for the competing model during a radio lecture.
 
Hoyle was an early supporter of the modern view that extrasolar planets and life are ubiquitous. In his standard text Frontiers of Astronomy (1955) he wrote:
“[W]e may expect planetary systems to have developed around the majority of stars.... Living creatures must it seems be rather common.”

Hoyle allowed his fertile imagination full rein in his science fiction novels, such as The Black Cloud (1957), in which an intelligent interstellar cloud arrives in the solar system, and A for Andromeda and its sequel, in which he turned to some of the possible consequences of SETI.



FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5143 on: June 25, 2025, 07:56:25 AM »
THIS DAY IN HISTORY: 

Slovenia National Day (1991)
Following WWI, Slovenia formed a federation with Serbia and Croatia that in 1929 became Yugoslavia. In 1991, Slovenia declared its independence from Yugoslavia on the same day as Croatia—after elections in 1990 showed that 88 percent of the people wished to secede. Yugoslavia immediately took military action, but the resulting Ten-Day War had few casualties, and the Slovenian victory solidified the new nation's independence.
"Courage; Generosity; Fairness; Honor; In these are the true awards of manly sport."

medinabuckeye1

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5144 on: June 25, 2025, 03:57:49 PM »

medinabuckeye1

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5145 on: June 25, 2025, 04:15:12 PM »
https://vintageaviationnews.com/warbird-articles/today-in-aviation-history-first-flight-of-the-ryan-fr-1-fireball.html

If you've never read about this plane, it is a fascinating story. Jets are great at top end but they, especially the early ones, had MUCH slower throttle response than piston planes. This was a major problem for the Navy due to the inherently short take-off run offered by an Aircraft Carrier. Unlike the land-based Army Air Corps (forerunner of the Air Force), the Navy couldn't simply pave a few hundred more feet of runway: When you got to the bow you had to be going fast enough to fly or else you were taking a swim.  

The Ryan Fireball was a hybrid piston/jet with the radial piston engine at the front providing enough quick power to get airborne and the jet at the back providing enough thrust to attain very high speeds at high altitude. 

The Fireball could obtain 404 MPH compared to 391 for the Hellcat and 446 MPH for the Corsair but that doesn't tell the whole story. The Fireball had a higher ceiling and it's speed dropped less as it climbed so it was much faster at high altitudes than the Hellcat and Corsair.

medinabuckeye1

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5146 on: June 25, 2025, 04:41:39 PM »
[img width=500 height=272.997]https://i.imgur.com/5knNiOq.png[/img]
To me, this chart demonstrates why timing the market is a bad idea.  If you've bought every month for the ~35 years covered by this chart then:
  • You've made ~10%/yr on the stuff you bought from 1989-the mid '90s.  
  • You've made a bit less on the stuff you bought from the mid '90s to 2001.  
  • You've made ~10%/yr on the stuff you bought from 2002-2008.  
  • You've made a bit more on the stuff you bought from 2009-2020.  
  • You've made ~10%/yr on the stuff you bought recently.  
On average, about 10%/yr.  

If you tried to time the market, you *MIGHT* have sold in March, 2000 and switched to bonds that paid less but still a positive amount then bought back in in March, 2009 and that would make your overall return much better.  Alternatively you*MIGHT* have sold in March, 2009 in which case you'd have missed the recovery and your overall return would be much worse.  

MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5147 on: June 25, 2025, 07:38:00 PM »
ON THIS DATE IN HISTORY
1867 First barbed wire patented by Lucien B. Smith of Ohio

1868 Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina readmitted to US, after the Civil War

1868 US President Andrew Johnson signs a law establishing an eight-hour workday for government workers

1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn: US 7th Cavalry under Brevet Major General George Armstrong Custer is wiped out by Sioux and Cheyenne warriors led by Chiefs Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull in what becomes famously known as "Custer's Last Stand"

1903 Boston Beaneater Wiley Piatt is only 20th-century pitcher to lose 2 complete games in one day, falling to Pittsburgh 1-0 & 5-3

1941 Finland declares war on Soviet Union

1942 Major General Dwight Eisenhower appointed commander of US forces in Europe

1950 North Korea invades South Korea, beginning the Korean War

1968 Bobby Bonds hits a grand slam in his 1st major league game (San Francisco Giants)

1976 Texas Ranger Toby Harrah is only shortstop not to handle a fielding chance in doubleheader

1977 Roy C. Sullivan of Virginia is struck by lightning for 7th time!

1988 104°F highest temperature ever recorded in Cleveland in June

1988 MLB player Cal Ripken Jr. plays in his 1,000th consecutive game

1990 120°F in Phoenix, Arizona

"Once in Africa I lost the corkscrew and we were forced to live off food and water for weeks." - Ernest Hemingway

Cincydawg

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5148 on: June 26, 2025, 07:29:20 AM »

1868 Florida, Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina readmitted to US, after the Civil War

This always kind of interested me.  I thought if secession was illegal, they never seceded legally, so there would be not need legally to readmit them.

They remained under martial law effectively, if not legally, maybe both, until after the 1876 election where a "compromise" was reached as to who won in return for removing Federal troops from the South.

FearlessF

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5149 on: June 26, 2025, 08:09:13 AM »
TODAY'S BIRTHDAY: 

Abner Doubleday (1819)
Doubleday was a US Army officer who distinguished himself in the American Civil War. He fired the first shot in defense of Fort Sumter and saw action at Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Gettysburg. He also served in the Mexican and Seminole Wars. He retired from the army in 1873 and wrote many articles, including two accounts of his war experiences, drawing on his 67 volumes of diaries. For years, accounts persisted that he invented the game of baseball in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839.
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MrNubbz

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5150 on: June 26, 2025, 09:51:24 AM »
1916 Cleveland Indians experiment with numbers on jerseys in a game against Chicago WS; first time MLB players identified by numbers corresponding to those on scorecard

1917 First US troops arrive in France during World War I

1934 US President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs Federal Credit Union Act into law, establishing Credit Unions

1963 US President John F. Kennedy gives his famous "Ich bin ein Berliner" (intended to mean "I am a Berliner", but may actually mean "I am a doughnut") speech in West Berlin

1968 Iwo Jima & Bonin Islands returned to Japan by US

1970 Frank Robinson hits 2 grand slams as Baltimore Orioles beat Washington Senators 12-2
"Once in Africa I lost the corkscrew and we were forced to live off food and water for weeks." - Ernest Hemingway

Riffraft

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Re: OT - Weird History
« Reply #5151 on: June 26, 2025, 12:32:28 PM »

1970 Frank Robinson hits 2 grand slams as Baltimore Orioles beat Washington Senators 12-2
Worst trade the Reds ever made. traded for Milt Pappas and a couple of other players. Reds GM said Robinson was an old 30.

 

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