Posted on Leave a comment

336/365/01

P801

Posted on Leave a comment

The Math Does Get Old!

Media_httpcdnsvcsc2uc_qjefe

Posted on Leave a comment

On This Day: March 12

Updated March 11, 2012, 2:28 pm

NYT Front Page

On March 12, 1947, President Truman established what became known as the Truman Doctrine to help Greece and Turkey resist Communism.
Go to article »

On March 12, 1858, Adolph Simon Ochs, the American publisher who built The New York Times into one of the world’s top newspapers, was born. Following his death on April 8, 1935, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1862 Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to the rank of general-in-chief of the Union armies in the Civil War by President Abraham Lincoln.
1912 The Girl Guides, the forerunner of the Girl Scouts of America, was founded.
1930 Indian political and spiritual leader Mohandas K. Gandhi began a 200-mile march to protest a British tax on salt.
1938 The “Anschluss” took place as German troops entered Austria. Adolf Hitler annexed his homeland the following day.
1939 Pope Pius XII was crowned at the Vatican.
1951 The cartoon “Dennis the Menace” by Hank Ketcham made its syndicated debut in 16 newspapers.
1969 Rock musician Paul McCartney of the Beatles married Linda Eastman in London.
1980 A Chicago jury found John Wayne Gacy Jr. guilty of the murders of 33 men and boys.
1987 The musical “Les Miserables” opened on Broadway.
1993 Janet Reno was sworn in as the nation’s first female attorney general.
1994 The Church of England ordained its first female priests.
1999 The Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland joined NATO.
2002 Homeland security chief Tom Ridge unveiled a color-coded system for terror warnings.
2002 The U.N. Security Council approved a U.S.-sponsored resolution endorsing a Palestinian state for the first time.
2008 New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer resigned two days after reports had surfaced that he was a client of a prostitution ring.
2009 Disgraced financier Bernard Madoff pleaded guilty in New York to pulling off perhaps the biggest swindle in Wall Street history.
2011 The Arab League asked the U.N. Security Council to impose a no-fly zone to protect Libyan rebels.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Mitt Romney, Republican presidential candidate

Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney turns 65 years old today.

AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

Aaron Eckhart, Actor

Actor Aaron Eckhart turns 44 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

1928 Edward Albee, Playwright (“Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf”), turns 84
1932 Andrew Young, Civil rights leader, politician, turns 80
1933 Barbara Feldon, Actress (“Get Smart”), turns 79
1940 Al Jarreau, R&B, jazz singer, turns 72
1946 Liza Minnelli, Singer, actress, turns 66
1948 Kent Conrad, U.S. senator, D-N.D., turns 64
1948 James Taylor, Singer, songwriter, turns 64
1957 Marlon Jackson, Singer (The Jackson Five), turns 55
1960 Courtney B. Vance, Actor, turns 52
1962 Darryl Strawberry, Baseball player, turns 50

 

Historic Birthdays

Adolph Simon Ochs 3/12/1858 – 4/8/1935 American newspaper publisher; owned The New York TimesGo to obituary »
87 Andre Le Notre 3/12/1613 – 9/15/1700
French landscape architect; designed the Versailles gardens
67 George Berkeley 3/12/1685 – 1/14/1753
Anglo-Irish Anglican bishop, philosopher and scientist
72 Sir John Abbott 3/12/1821 – 10/30/1893
Canadian lawyer, statesman and prime minister (1891-92)
70 Clement Studebaker 3/12/1831 – 11/27/1901
American manufacturer; leader in the auto industry
74 Gabriele D’Annunzio 3/12/1863 – 3/1/1938
Italian novelist, dramatist, journalist and political leader
69 Wilhelm Frick 3/12/1877 – 10/16/1946
German statesman; Hitler’s minister of the interior
60 Vaslav Nijinsky 3/12/1889 – 4/8/1950
Russian ballet dancer
68 Elaine de Kooning 3/12/1920 – 2/1/1989
American painter, teacher and art critic
47 Jack Kerouac 3/12/1922 – 10/21/1969
American poet, novelist and spokesman for the Beat movement

 

 

Posted on Leave a comment

March 12

MORNING

“Why sit we here until we die?”
2 Kings 7:3

Dear reader, this little book was mainly intended for the edification of believers, but if you are yet unsaved, our heart yearns over you: and we would fain say a word which may be blessed to you. Open your Bible, and read the story of the lepers, and mark their position, which was much the same as yours. If you remain where you are you must perish; if you go to Jesus you can but die. “Nothing venture, nothing win,” is the old proverb, and in your case the venture is no great one. If you sit still in sullen despair, no one can pity you when your ruin comes; but if you die with mercy sought, if such a thing were possible, you would be the object of universal sympathy. None escape who refuse to look to Jesus; but you know that, at any rate, some are saved who believe in him, for certain of your own acquaintances have received mercy: then why not you? The Ninevites said, “Who can tell?” Act upon the same hope, and try the Lord’s mercy. To perish is so awful, that if there were but a straw to catch at, the instinct of self-preservation should lead you to stretch out your hand. We have thus been talking to you on your own unbelieving ground, we would now assure you, as from the Lord, that if you seek him he will be found of you. Jesus casts out none who come unto him. You shall not perish if you trust him; on the contrary, you shall find treasure far richer than the poor lepers gathered in Syria’s deserted camp. May the Holy Spirit embolden you to go at once, and you shall not believe in vain. When you are saved yourself, publish the good news to others. Hold not your peace; tell the King’s household first, and unite with them in fellowship; let the porter of the city, the minister, be informed of your discovery, and then proclaim the good news in every place. The Lord save thee ere the sun goes down this day.

EVENING

“Then he put forth his hand, and took her, and pulled her in unto him into the ark.”
Genesis 8:9

Wearied out with her wanderings, the dove returns at length to the ark as her only resting place. How heavily she flies–she will drop–she will never reach the ark! But she struggles on. Noah has been looking out for his dove all day long, and is ready to receive her. She has just strength to reach the edge of the ark, she can hardly alight upon it, and is ready to drop, when Noah puts forth his hand and pulls her in unto him. Mark that: “pulled her in unto him.” She did not fly right in herself, but was too fearful, or too weary to do so. She flew as far as she could, and then he put forth his hand and pulled her in unto him. This act of mercy was shown to the wandering dove, and she was not chidden for her wanderings. Just as she was she was pulled into the ark. So you, seeking sinner, with all your sin, will be received. “Only return”–those are God’s two gracious words–“only return.” What! nothing else? No, “only return.” She had no olive branch in her mouth this time, nothing at all but just herself and her wanderings; but it is “only return,” and she does return, and Noah pulls her in. Fly, thou wanderer; fly thou fainting one, dove as thou art, though thou thinkest thyself to be black as the raven with the mire of sin, back, back to the Saviour. Every moment thou waitest does but increase thy misery; thine attempts to plume thyself and make thyself fit for Jesus are all vanity. Come thou to him just as thou art. “Return, thou backsliding Israel.” He does not say, “Return, thou repenting Israel” (there is such an invitation doubtless), but “thou backsliding one,” as a backslider with all thy backslidings about thee, Return, return, return! Jesus is waiting for thee! He will stretch forth his hand and “pull thee in”–in to himself, thy heart’s true home.

 

Posted on Leave a comment

"It Yet Remains to See…"

My Life Closed Twice Before Its Close by Emily Dickinson

My life closed twice before its close;
It yet remains to see
If Immortality unveil
A third event to me,

So huge, so hopeless to conceive,
As these that twice befell.
Parting is all we know of heaven,
And all we need of hell.

Siesta1