Musings
and History
Quote
of the day:
“Bitterness
will shorten your life. It will inhibit your ability to love and be
loved. It will be the casket in which you are buried.”
Reverend
T. D. Jakes
Trivia
question of the day:
What
professional football player had the nickname of “Tooz”. Answer
at the end of the blog.
Here
is an example of a good leader:
While
an air traffic controller I was working in Pensacola, Florida. At
that time the Vietnam War was underway and US Navy training was going
full bore including carrier based training involving the aircraft
carriers
Lexington
and Kitty
Hawk.
The sky was full of airplanes, we had the same traffic count as
Miami.
The
assistant chief was the person we controllers went to when we had a
problem that required a change in procedures. He had a standing
order...”Do not come to me with a problem without three possible
solutions then I will select one of the three, after all you
controller are the experts.” This man understood his limitations.
The end result was that we solved our own problems and if it did not
work, it wasn't his fault. He loved to go downtown to the strip
joints where he was known to the dancers as “Radar”. He has
since gone to that great control tower in the sky.
This
Date in History April 18
1775 On this date
one of the most important events in world history occurred. During
the occupation of the American colonies the English parliament handed
down more and more oppressive laws and taxes upon the colonists. The
colonists formed a shadow government and genuine rebellious groups to
prepare to combat the English army and kick them out of the Colonies.
This was not easy trick, because the British army was one of the
most formidable on the planet. Earlier the Patriots had intercepted
information that a regiment of British soldiers were going to
Concord, Massachusetts to capture a cache of arms that the Patriots
had hidden there and to capture the Patriot leaders John Hancock and
John Adams thought to be in Lexington. The Patriots would need to
know from which direction the British would be coming meaning were
they going to cross over to Charlestown and the head toward Concord
or were they going to take the more circuitous route by the Boston
peninsula. The Patriots assigned that task to Paul Revere and
Richard Dawes. An observer in the Old North Church steeple, the
tallest structure in the town, and would signal with one lantern if
he observed the British troops were going by the Boston peninsula and
two lantern if they were going to cross over. Revere would go by the
peninsula and Dawes would cross over and both would ride to Lexington
and alert the “Minutemen” and John Adams and John Hancock that
the British were coming. The “Minutemen” were essentially
National Guard for the colonies. It was two lanterns and Revere and
Dawes began riding toward Lexington and Concord yelling their
warning. There were about 700 British troops and the Minutemen
gathered 77 men. Eventually the Patriots and the British confronted
each other near Lexington. The British commander ordered the
Patriots to disperse and the Minutemen hesitated slightly and then
somehow a shot was fired and then everyone open fire. After the
smoke had cleared there were 8 dead Patriots and 30 wounded. This
was the shot heard around the world. There was only one British
soldier wounded but the struggle for independence for the colonies
began in earnest, the Revolutionary War had begun. By the way, the
British never captured Adams and Hancock.
1942 Earlier after
the Japanese had raided Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt
told the American military to plan some kind of strike against Japan
for no other reason than to restore American morale and confidence.
The military decided that bombing Tokyo would get the job done. The
tricky part was how. The nearest friendly airport was in 400 miles
west in China and if the bombers departed from those bases and made
their bomb run they could not get back. So the answer was to have
the bombers depart from an aircraft carrier in the Pacific, make
their bomb run and land in China. The only bomber had that could
even come close to taking off from an aircraft carrier was the
Mitchell B-25 medium bomber. So the United States Army Air Force
tasked Colonel James “Jimmy” Doolittle get make this happen.
Doolittle picked 16 of the best B-25 crews and sent them to Eglin
AFB, Florida for training. Doolittle marked off the length of an
aircraft carrier deck onto a runway and then trained the crews to get
off the ground before the end. He never told them the purpose of the
training until all of the crews were fully trained. The bombers were
flown to the west coast and ferried to the docked aircraft carrier
USS
Hornet
and hoisted aboard. It was determined early on that the bomber could
not get off the carrier deck with a full bomb load so the were loaded
with a half load. It was determined that the aircraft had to get
within 500 miles of Tokyo to have a chance of making it to China.
The Hornet left the west coast headed west toward Japan. On this date
the Hornet spotted a Japanese vessel when they were 630 miles from
Japan. The Japanese vessel was destroyed but the Commander of the
Hornet ordered Doolittle and company to depart right away in case the
spotted vessel got a message off. All the bombers got off the
carrier and made it to Japan although not all made it to Tokyo.
Tokyo was bombed and a few of the bombers made it to China, some
crashed into the Yellow Sea and some crashed in Japan. But they got
the job done. Only four months after the raid on Pearl Harbor the
capitol of Japan was bombed by American aircraft. America was
jubilant.
1521 The Catholic
monk Martin Luther is on trial in Worms, Germany. He was accused of
defying the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V with his writings and was
threatened with torture if he did not recant. Luther asked for a day
to consider. On this date Luther returned to the representative of
Charles V and refused to recant stating that he would continue to
preach and write what he read in the bible and not what he was told
to preach and write. Needless to say, Charles V representatives were
stunned knowing that if they forced Luther to preach and write what
they wanted, they would be denying the bible. Luther was released.
His friends knew there would be a price on Luther’s head and
hustled him off to a secret castle where he interpreted the bible
written in Latin into common German so the average man could read it.
This was the first act of Protestantism and went a long way toward
allowing the common man to think for himself about what was written
in the bible, not what was interpreted for them by the church.
Born
today:
1947 US actor James
Wood. He said “I would not walk across the street and pull one of
those movie executive out of the snow if they were bleeding to death.
Not unless I was paid for it.”
1963 US comic Conan
O’Brien. He said “I read where archaeologists uncovered the
graves of fifty of Ramesses II children...fifty children, y'all! I
want to know who decided to name a condom after this guy.”
Died today:
1955 German
physicist Albert Einstein. He said “The significant problems we
face cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created
them.” Think on that, y'all.
Answer to the trivia
question:
Oakland Raider
defensive lineman John Matuszak was known as “Tooz”. John died
at the age of 38...overdose of Darvocet (pain killer).
Thanks
for listening I can hardly wait until tomorrow
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