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Welcome to the ReaderRant RoundTable July is Over and August Has Begun
It's HOT!
Wild Bill Davison co, Ray Diehl tb, Sidney Bechet ss, Art Hodes p, Walter Page b, Slick Jones dr, March 23 1949
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Historical Notes for This Week
July 31, 30 BC – Battle of Alexandria: Mark Antony achieves a minor victory over Octavian's forces, but most of his army subsequently deserts, leading to his suicide.
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August 1, 1920
Mohandas Gandhi began the movement of "non-violent non-cooperation" with the British Raj (ruling colonial authority) in India. The strategy was to bring the British administrative machine to a halt by the total withdrawal of Indian popular support, both Hindu and Muslim. British-made goods were boycotted, as were schools, courts of law, and elective offices.
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August 2, 1931 Albert Einstein urged all scientists to refuse military work.
"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones." - Albert Einstein
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August 3, 1981 Nearly 13,000 of the nation’s 17,500 air traffic controllers, members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), went on strike. The union had endorsed Ronald Reagan for president in 1980 (one of very few to do so), but Pres. Reagan said they were violating U.S. law banning strikes by federal workers, and would all be terminated unless they returned to work within 48 hours. A Reagan Letter to Robert Poli, PATCO (Oct. 20, 1980) Dear Mr. Poli: I have been briefed by members of my staff as to the deplorable state of our nation's air traffic control system. They have told me that too few people working unreasonable hours with obsolete equipment has placed the nation's air travellers in unwarranted danger. In an area so clearly related to public safety the Carter administration has failed to act responsibly. You can rest assured that if I am elected President, I will take whatever steps are necessary to provide our air traffic controllers with the most modern equipment available and to adjust staff levels and work days so that they are commensurate with achieving a maximum degree of public safety.... I pledge to you that my administration will work very closely with you to bring about a spirit of cooperation between the President and the air traffic controllers. Sincerely, Ronald Reagan
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August 4, 1964 The Pentagon reported a second attack on U.S. Navy ships in Vietnam’s Gulf of Tonkin But there was no such activity reported at the time by the task force commander in the Gulf, Captain John J. Herrick. One of the Navy pilots flying overhead that night was squadron commander James Stockdale, who was later captured and held as a POW by the North Vietnamese for more than seven years, and became Ross Perot's vice-presidential candidate in 1992: "I had the best seat in the house to watch that event and our destroyers were just shooting at phantom targets — there were no PT boats there . . . There was nothing there but black water and American firepower."
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August 5, 1963 The U.S., U.S.S.R. and U.K. signed the Limited Test Ban Treaty in Moscow, banning nuclear testing in the atmosphere, in space or underwater. Underground testing, however, was not prohibited. It has since been signed by more than 100 countries.
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August 6th, 1945 Anniversary of Hiroshima The United States dropped the first atomic bomb used in warfare on Hiroshima, Japan.
Hiroshima ruins
An estimated 140,000 died from the immediate effects of this bomb and tens of thousands more died in subsequent years from burns and other injuries, and radiation-related illnesses. Pres. Harry Truman ordered the use of the weapon in hopes of avoiding an invasion of Japan to end the war, and the presumed casualties likely to be suffered by invading American troops. The weapon, “Little Boy,” was delivered by a B-29 Superfortress nicknamed the Enola Gay, based on the island of Tinian, and piloted by Col. Paul W. Tibbets
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It's SUMMERTIME 1939! Sydney Bechet on soprano sax in Summertime, clarinet in Egyptian Fantasy
We have microclimates! Hellloooooooooo!!! We're not the ones living in a hot, humid, desert!
Our weather can differ 30 degrees F on any given day within ten miles.
Can you SoCal'ers say that? Uh...no.
Uh...yes !
Lake Arrowhead versus the lowlands down to the south, just for one !
I probably dislike Southern California more than you do, Rick, but I demand accuracy ! · · ·
Yes, accuracy is highly prized. Take for example my example of 'microclimates' being different within a mere 10 miles away.
Take your example of 'microclimate' of Lake Arrowhead and the flatlands being, say, realistically, 50 miles away.
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microclimate (mkr-klmt) The climate of a small, specific place within a larger area. An area as small as a yard or park can have several different microclimates depending on how much sunlight, shade, or exposure to the wind there is at a particular spot.
Rick during summer especially, it can be 65 at the beach and 95 in Pasadena. We too have micro climates. Then again, it can be 120 just 100 miles away in Palm Springs.
Life is a banquet -- and most poor suckers are starving to death -- Auntie Mame You are born naked and everything else is drag - RuPaul
There are lots of kinds of deserts. But the one thing they all have in common is a noted lack of humidity. Aridity, in fact, is one of the defining features of a "desert".
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Temperatures exhibit daily extremes because the atmosphere contains little humidity to block the Sun's rays. Desert surfaces receive a little more than twice the solar radiation received by humid regions and lose almost twice as much heat at night. Many mean annual temperatures range from 20-25° C. The extreme maximum ranges from 43.5-49° C. Minimum temperatures sometimes drop to -18° C.
Rainfall is usually very low and/or concentrated in short bursts between long rainless periods. Evaporation rates regularly exceed rainfall rates. Sometimes rain starts falling and evaporates before reaching the ground. Rainfall is lowest on the Atacama Desert of Chile, where it averages less than 1.5 cm. Some years are even rainless. Inland Sahara also receives less than 1.5 cm a year. Rainfall in American deserts is higher — almost 28 cm a year.
...and the effects of importing massive quantities water into said desert, not to mention holding vast amounts of water (reservoirs, swimming pools, artificial "lakes"), are?
...and the effects of importing massive quantities water into said desert, not to mention holding vast amounts of water (reservoirs, swimming pools, artificial "lakes"), are?
The effects are evaporating water into the dry air. Does this make the desert "humid"? Nope. It's still a desert it still has little to no humidity.
Now, you want some humidity come on down here to Florid-ugh. Where you can drown just by breathing the air or suffocate if you stand in one place too long.
Not really sure what the point here is, but I am a bit of a geek on physical phenomena.
Relative humidity forecast tomorrow noon:
Phoenix- 37% Las Vegas- 43% San Francisco- 80%
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the old model obsolete. R. Buckminster Fuller
' My hygrometer says that the humidity is 65% in Victoria, but the temperature is a very pleasant 26° C (which I think is about 80° F in the obsolete system still used in certain backward regions of the world).
' My hygrometer says that the humidity is 65% in Victoria, but the temperature is a very pleasant 26° C (which I think is about 80° F in the obsolete system still used in certain backward regions of the world).
The humid feel of the atmosphere is relative to the temperature, hence the term "relative humidity". The capacity of air to hold moisture goes up with the temperature and down with the temperature. To compare relative humidity levels between localalities, it is best to do so either at the same temperature, or at the warmest part of the day.
When the relative humidity is low, water evaporates more quickly. When water evaporates, or changes from a liquid state to a vapor, it absorbs a great deal of energy. To raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius requires the addition of one calorie of energy. To change water to vapor, without raising its temperature, requires 540 calories. This is why evaporating water cools things off.
The human body cools itself by sweating, which requires that the sweat evaporates and removes heat from the body at the 540 calories per gram rate. If the relative humidity is high, the rate of evaporation is lessened, and one feels uncomfortably warm, being unable to transfer heat quickly and efficiently to the atmosphere. This is also why swamp coolers don't work well when the relative humidity is high.
Bored yet?
You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the old model obsolete. R. Buckminster Fuller