July 31, 2008
Raphael O'Suna
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There are times when the souls of even those born under the lucky star of Jupiter, feel as if they were “Deep in the shady sadness of a vale.”
Sadness comes to us at all ages, because we value and understand different things at different times. And because we are sharing this planet with others who both affect us and experience their own trials and tribulations.
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July 31, 2008
> MAUI TODAY
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Nat’l Hitchihiking Month
Day 213 of 2008
153 days left in this year
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —
Hookalakupua: Magic
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY
— Sanguma: Magic
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
— “Silent is the mouth of the inhospitable.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY
— “Death is only a launching into the region of the strange Untried.” (Herman Melville)
EVENTS ON THIS DAY — July 31st
1498: Christopher Columbus, on his third voyage to the Western Hemisphere, discovers the island of Trinidad
1809: The first practical U.S. railroad track is used (wooden, for horse-drawn cars – Philadelphia)
1811: Mexican revolutionary Miguel Hidalgo, a priest, is executed by the Spanish
1922: 18-year-old Ralph Samuelson rides the world’s first water skis (Minnesota)
1953: The U.S. Department of Health, Education & Welfare is created
1966: The U.S. begins bombing the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) between the North and South Vietnam
1976: In just four hours, 12 inches of rain falls on Big Thompson Canyon in Colorado, creating a flood killing 144 people and causing $30 million in damages
1991: U.S. President Bush I and USSR President Gorbachev sign the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START)
1994: The United Nations authorizes armed intervention, under U.S. command, to restore democracy in Haiti
1995: The Walt Disney Company agrees to acquire Capital Cities-ABC Inc. in a $19 billion deal
2007: The U.N. Security Council unanimously approves a 26,000-strong peacekeeping force for Sudan’s Darfur region
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BORN ON THIS DAY — July 31st
1919: Primo Levi, chemist/writer
1921: Whitney M Young Jr, civil rights leader
1940: Stanley Jaffe, film producer
1944: Geraldine Chaplin, actress
1946: Bob Welch, rocker (Fleetwood Mac)
1956: Deval Patric, Governor of Massachusetts
1962: Wesley Snipes, actor
1965: J.K. Rowling, British author
1979: B.J. Novak, actor/writer (“The Office”)
July 30, 2008
Maui Curmudgeon, U.S. Presidents
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By the Maui Curmudgeon (18th in a 43-part series)
How do the U.S. Presidents stack up? I thought I’d find out by reading biographies of all 43 presidents, in the order of their administrations. Here are briefly the pros and cons of my discoveries, the interesting bits, and how I’d rank him. For comparison, I give you the 1982 Murrary-Blessing ranking, a survey of hundreds of leading historians who ranked each president by number. This survey is the gold standard of presidential rankings and is most cited when this kind of thing needs bringing up in media.
ULYSSES S. GRANT: 1869-1877 ~ 18th U.S. President
First, I admit to reading ahead a bit before I write these synopses. So I can say that up to Theodore Roosevelt, the presidency of U.S. Grant is easily the most surprising. The general consensus, particularly in high school history, is that Grant’s administration was a failure, riddled by scandal. The truth is far more interesting. Further, it is impossible to separate the man from his generalship, nor his generalship from his presidency.
He was born Hiram Ulysses (always pronounced U-liss-is) Grant. At 17, he showed up at West Point, and the congressman who recommended him couldn’t remember his name, and so wrote ‘Ulysses S. Grant’ on the form, and thus he became known.
He was in the army from 1839 until his election as president nearly 30 years later. During this time, he fought in dozens of battles from the Mexican War to the Civil War. General Robert E. Lee of the Army of Virginia is justifiably lauded as a great general who did much with little. It is often said that Lee graduated first in his class at West Point, while Grant was 22nd of 34. The story (true) has it that Lincoln offered command of the Union army to Lee when Civil War broke out. Lee turned it down. All this is by way of saying that Lee was the great general while Grant merely won the Civil war because he had greater numbers. This is a mixture of historical misunderstanding and southern lies.
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July 30, 2008
> MAUI TODAY, > Maui Yesterdays
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Nat’l Cheesecake Day
Day 212 of 2008
154 days left in this year
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —
Nupepa: Newspaper
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY
— Niuspepa: Newspaper
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
— “To be continued, according to the newspaper.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY
— “A newspaper inevitably reflects the character of its community.” (Tom Wicker)
July 30th, 1836: The first English-speaking newspaper is published in Hawaii - the Sandwich Island Gazette and Journal of Commerce. This version of the Gazette was irregularly published and lasted only three years. The first regular English language paper was established in 1856 - the weekly
Pacific Commercial Advertiser. The
Advertiser has published continuously since then, printed daily in 1882 and changing names in 1921 to
The Honolulu Advertiser.
Today’s top story: Hawaii visitor arrivals drop 14.2% in ’scary’ situation for tourism.
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EVENTS ON THIS DAY — July 30th
1619: The House of Burgesses in Virginia is formed (the first elective governing body in a British colony)
1729: The City of Baltimore is founded
1733: The Society of Freemasons opens its first American lodge in Boston
1956: The motto of the U.S., “In God We Trust,” is authorized by Congress
1965: President Lyndon Baines Johnson signs the Medicare bill into law (goes into effect following year)
1967: After 7 days of rioting in Detroit Michigan, 40 people are dead, 2,000 injured and 5,000 homeless
1974: The House of Representatives recommends Three articles of impeachment of President Nixon
1975: Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa disappears in suburban Detroit (never found)
1999: Linda Tripp is charged in Maryland with illegal wiretapping for secretly recording phone conversations with Monica Lewinsky that led to the impeachment proceedings of President Clinton (the charges against Tripp were subsequently dropped)
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BORN ON THIS DAY — July 30th
1818: Emily Bronte, England, novelist
1857: Thorstein Veblen, economist
1863: Henry Ford, auto maker
1880: Robert Rutherford McCormick, editor/publisher
1898: Henry Moore, sculptor
1947: Arnold Schwarzenegger, California governor/actor
1954: Ken Olin, actor
1956: Delta Burke, actress
1961: Laurence Fishburne, actor
1963: Lisa Kudrow, actress
1971: Tom Green, actor/comedian
1974: Hilary Swank
1992: Yvonne Strahovski, actress
July 29, 2008
Maui Curmudgeon, U.S. Presidents
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By the Maui Curmudgeon (17th in a 43-part series)
How do the U.S. Presidents stack up? I thought I’d find out by reading biographies of all 43 presidents, in the order of their administrations. Here are briefly the pros and cons of my discoveries, the interesting bits, and how I’d rank him. For comparison, I give you the 1982 Murrary-Blessing ranking, a survey of hundreds of leading historians who ranked each president by number. This survey is the gold standard of presidential rankings and is most cited when this kind of thing needs bringing up in media.
ANDREW JOHNSON: 1865-1869 ~ 17th U.S. President
From Lincoln to Johnson, from the sublime to the ridiculous.
No one could have followed the presidency of Abraham Lincoln and been declared great. The contrast was insurmountable. But that the nation ended up with such an incompetent racist as Lincoln ’s successor is a wonder. Historian Eric Foner writes, “Johnson’s personal stubbornness, racism, belief in state’s rights, and inability to gauge public opinion…destroyed his presidency.”
How did even get on the ticket?
Believe it or not, the answer to that question is somewhat obscure. However, it is generally believed that during the campaign of 1864, Lincoln wanted his very ineffectual vice-president Hannibal Hamlin replaced. At the time, Johnson stood out as a good choice.
Read the rest…
July 29, 2008
> MAUI TODAY, > Maui Yesterdays
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Cheese Purchase Day
Day 211 of 2008
155 days left in this year
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —
Kopa‘a: Sugar
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY
— Liklik: Little
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
— “Do not believe all that is told you.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY
— “Those who prize freedom only for the material benefits it offers have never kept it for long.” (Alexis de Tocqueville)
July 29th, 1835: The first sugar plantation in Hawaii begins production. Sugar takes on everincreasing economic importance, requiring a large plantation labor population that cannot be provided by the native population, seriously depleted by introduced diseases.
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EVENTS ON THIS DAY — July 29th
1588: The attacking Spanish Armada is defeated & scattered by English defenders in the Battle of Gravelines
1914: The first transcontinental phone link is made between NYC and San Francisco
1952: The first nonstop jet trans-Pacific flight is made
1957: The International Atomic Energy Agency is established
1966: Singer/songwriter Bob Dylan is injured in a motorcycle crash near Woodstock NY
1974: The 2nd impeachment vote of President Nixon is conducted by the House Judiciary Committee
1974: Singer “Mama” Cass Elliot, of The Mamas and the Papas, dies in London at 30 (reported as choking on food but later determined to be a heart attack)
1987: Ben & Jerry’s ice cream & Jerry Garcia agree on a new flavor: Cherry Garcia
1988: The South African government bans the anti-apartheid film, “Cry Freedom”
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BORN ON THIS DAY — July 29th
1805: Alexis de Tocqueville, statesman/writer
1869: Booth Tarkington, novelist
1871: Rasputin, the mad Russian monk
1883: Benito Mussolini, fascist Italian dictator
1892: William Powell, actor
1905: Clara Bow, silent screen actress
1905: Dag Hammarskjold, former U.N. secretary-general
1914: “Professor Irwin Corey, comedian
1953: Ken Burns, documentary filmmaker
1972: Wil Wheaton, actor
1974: Josh Radnor, actor
July 28, 2008
> MAUI TODAY, > Maui Yesterdays
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Milk Chocolate Day
Day 210 of 2008
156 days left in this year
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —
Kenekoa: Senator
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY
— Kirapim: Begin
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
— “The goodness of the taro is judged by the young plant it produces.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY
— “The superior man is modest in his speech but excels in his actions.” (Confucius)
July 28th, 1959: Hawaii’s first U.S. election sends the first Asian-Americans to Congress in Washington, DC. Hiram L. Fong is elected to the Senate, and Daniel K. Inouye is elected to the House of Representatives. Inouye was later elected to the U.S. Senate in 1962, and remains a U.S. Senator to this day.
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EVENTS ON THIS DAY — July 28th
1540: King Henry VIII’s chief minister, Thomas Cromwell, is executed (on the same day, Henry marries his fifth wife, Catherine Howard)
1586: Sir Thomas Harriot introduces potatoes to Europe
1821: Peru declares independence from Spain (National Day)
1868: The 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing due process of law, is declared in effect
1943: Italian Facist dictator Benito Mussolini resigns
1976: 242,000 people die in Tientsin-Tangshan (China) in an 8.2 earthquake
1977: The first oil flows through the Alaska pipeline
1978: The price of gold tops $200 per ounce for first time
2005: The Irish Republican Army renounces the use of violence against British rule in Northern Ireland and said it would disarm.
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BORN ON THIS DAY — July 28th
1844: Gerard Manley Hopkins, poet
1866: Beatrix Potter, English children’s author
1901: Rudy Vallee, singer
1907: Vivian Vance, actress
1909: Malcolm Lowry, novelist
1922: Jacques Piccard, undersea explorer
1941: Michael Mukasey, Attorney General
1943: Bill Bradley, BBall player/ US Sen (D-NJ)
1943: Mike Bloomfield, blues musician
1945: Jim Davis, Garfield cartoonist
1945: Richard Wright, rocker
1946: Linda Kelsey, actress
1947: Sally Struthers, actress
1954: Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela
1972: Elizabeth Berkley, actress
1973: Scott Bloom, actor
July 27, 2008
> MAUI TODAY
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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY —
Makua: Parent
PIDGIN WORD OF THE DAY
— Papamama: Parents
HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY
— “Warm is the home in which a parent lives.”
HAOLE SAYING OF THE DAY
— “You are the bows from which your children as living arrows are sent forth.” (Kahil Gibran)
July 27th, 1940: Cartoon character Bugs Bunny is born in Brooklyn, NY. The proud parents were Tex Avery and Mel Blanc.
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EVENTS ON THIS DAY — July 27th
1586: Sir Walter Raleigh brings the first tobacco to England from Virginia
1866: Cyrus W. Field succeeds in laying the first Atlantic telegraph cable (1,686 miles long)
1909: Orville Wright test flies the first U.S. Army airplane for 1 hour and 12 minutes
1940: Billboard magazine starts publishing bestseller charts
1944: The U.S. regains possession of Guam from Japanese
1974: The House Judiciary Committee votes 27-11 recommending Nixon impeachment on a charge that he had personally engaged in a “course of conduct” designed to obstruct justice in the Watergate case
2005: NASA says a sizable chunk of foam insulation came flying off the shuttle Discovery’s fuel bank during liftoff, prompting the space agency to ground future shuttle flights until the problem could be fixed.
2005: Ahmed Ressam, an Algerian who’d plotted to bomb the Los Angeles airport on the eve of the millennium, was sentenced to 22 years in prison by a judge in Seattle.
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BORN ON THIS DAY — July 27th
1824: Alexandre Dumas, playwright/novelist
1944: Bobbie Gentry, singer
1947: Betty Thomas, actress
1948: Peggy Fleming, figure skater
1949: Maureen McGovern, singer
1957: Bill Engvall, comedian
1968: Julian McMahon, actor
1972: Maya Rudolph, comedian
1964: Pete Yorn, rock singer/songwriter
1977: Jonathan Rhys Meyers, actor