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A Mask from Belize: As Colorful as My Traveling Friend

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Life Explained for You “Visual” Types…

Life explained for you “visualhttp://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQVEY-1dFYIAjjm95FVXTUR59ht79lfSwHZBD9_8qMHrXAmyUNxvjtXRA” types…

         

   
    

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On This Day: March 20

Updated March 20, 2012, 2:28 pm

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On March 20, 1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed, more than 5,500 others sickened when packages containing the poisonous gas sarin leaked on five separate subway trains.
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On March 20, 1856, Frederick W. Taylor, an American inventor who helped industries worldwide become more efficient, was born. Following his death on March 21, 1915, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1413 England’s King Henry IV died.
1727 Sir Isaac Newton – physicist, mathematician and astronomer – died in London.
1815 Napoleon Bonaparte entered Paris, beginning his Hundred Days rule.
1816 The Supreme Court affirmed its right to review state court decisions.
1828 Playwright Henrik Ibsen was born in Skien, Norway.
1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel about slavery, “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” was published.
1969 Rock musician John Lennon of the Beatles married Yoko Ono in Gibraltar.
1987 The Food and Drug Administration approved the sale of AZT, a drug shown to prolong the lives of some AIDS patients.
1995 A doomsday cult released sarin nerve gas in five Tokyo subway stations, killing 12 people and injuring more than 5,500.
1996 A jury in Los Angeles convicted Erik and Lyle Menendez of first-degree murder in the shotgun slayings of their millionaire parents. (They are serving life without parole.)
1997 Liggett Group settled 22 state lawsuits by admitting the industry markets cigarettes to teenagers and agreeing to warn on every pack that smoking is addictive.
2004 The U.S. military charged six soldiers with abusing inmates at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Carl Reiner, Actor, writer, director

Actor-writer-director Carl Reiner turns 90 years old today.

AP Photo/Dan Steinberg

Spike Lee, Director

Director Spike Lee turns 55 years old today.

AP Photo/Peter Kramer

1931 Hal Linden, Actor (“Barney Miller”), turns 81
1939 Brian Mulroney, Former Canadian prime minister, turns 73
1948 Bobby Orr, Hockey Hall of Famer, turns 64
1950 William Hurt, Actor, turns 62
1950 Carl Palmer, Rock musician (Emerson, Lake and Palmer), turns 62
1958 Holly Hunter, Actress, turns 54
1963 Kathy Ireland, Model, turns 49
1968 Liza Snyder, Actress (“Yes, Dear”), turns 44
1970 Michael Rapaport, Actor, turns 42

 

Historic Birthdays

Frederick W. Taylor 3/20/1856 – 3/21/1915 American efficiency expertGo to obituary »
60 Ovid 3/20/43BC – //AD 17
Roman poet known for his “Metamorphoses”
49 Torbern Olof Bergman 3/20/1735 – 7/8/1784
Swedish chemist and naturalist
87 Jean-Antoine Houdon 3/20/1741 – 7/15/1828
French sculptor in the 18th century Rococo style
68 George Caleb Bingham 3/20/1811 – 7/7/1879
American frontier politician and painter
63 E.Z.C. Judson 3/20/1823 – 7/16/1886
American adventurer and writer of 19th century “dime novels”
78 Henrik Ibsen 3/20/1828 – 5/23/1906
Norwegian playwright
92 Charles William Eliot 3/20/1834 – 8/22/1926
American educator
86 B. F. Skinner 3/20/1904 – 8/18/1990
American psychologist and exponent of behaviorism
77 Sir Michael Redgrave 3/20/1908 – 3/21/1985
English stage and screen actor
80 Alfonso Garcia Robles 3/20/1911 – 9/2/1991
Mexican Nobel Peace Prize-winning diplomat and advocate of nuclear disarmament
73 John Ehrlichman 3/20/1925 – 2/14/1999
American presidential assistant during Nixon administration

 

 

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March 20

MORNING

“Ye shall be scattered, every man to his own, and shall leave me alone.”
John 16:32

Few had fellowship with the sorrows of Gethsemane. The majority of the disciples were not sufficiently advanced in grace to be admitted to behold the mysteries of “the agony.” Occupied with the passover feast at their own houses, they represent the many who live upon the letter, but are mere babes as to the spirit of the gospel. To twelve, nay, to eleven only was the privilege given to enter Gethsemane and see “this great sight.” Out of the eleven, eight were left at a distance; they had fellowship, but not of that intimate sort to which men greatly beloved are admitted. Only three highly favoured ones could approach the veil of our Lord’s mysterious sorrow: within that veil even these must not intrude; a stone’s-cast distance must be left between. He must tread the wine-press alone, and of the people there must be none with him. Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, represent the few eminent, experienced saints, who may be written down as “Fathers;” these having done business on great waters, can in some degree measure the huge Atlantic waves of their Redeemer’s passion. To some selected spirits it is given, for the good of others, and to strengthen them for future, special, and tremendous conflict, to enter the inner circle and hear the pleadings of the suffering High Priest; they have fellowship with him in his sufferings, and are made conformable unto his death. Yet even these cannot penetrate the secret places of the Saviour’s woe. “Thine unknown sufferings” is the remarkable expression of the Greek liturgy: there was an inner chamber in our Master’s grief, shut out from human knowledge and fellowship. There Jesus is “left alone.” Here Jesus was more than ever an “Unspeakable gift!” Is not Watts right when he sings–

“And all the unknown joys he gives,

Were bought with agonies unknown.”

EVENING

“Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?”
Job 38:31

If inclined to boast of our abilities, the grandeur of nature may soon show us how puny we are. We cannot move the least of all the twinkling stars, or quench so much as one of the beams of the morning. We speak of power, but the heavens laugh us to scorn. When the Pleiades shine forth in spring with vernal joy we cannot restrain their influences, and when Orion reigns aloft, and the year is bound in winter’s fetters, we cannot relax the icy bands. The seasons revolve according to the divine appointment, neither can the whole race of men effect a change therein. Lord, what is man?

In the spiritual, as in the natural world, man’s power is limited on all hands. When the Holy Spirit sheds abroad his delights in the soul, none can disturb; all the cunning and malice of men are ineffectual to stay the genial quickening power of the Comforter. When he deigns to visit a church and revive it, the most inveterate enemies cannot resist the good work; they may ridicule it, but they can no more restrain it than they can push back the spring when the Pleiades rule the hour. God wills it, and so it must be. On the other hand, if the Lord in sovereignty, or in justice, bind up a man so that he is in soul bondage, who can give him liberty? He alone can remove the winter of spiritual death from an individual or a people. He looses the bands of Orion, and none but he. What a blessing it is that he can do it. O that he would perform the wonder tonight. Lord, end my winter, and let my spring begin. I cannot with all my longings raise my soul out of her death and dulness, but all things are possible with thee. I need celestial influences, the clear shinings of thy love, the beams of thy grace, the light of thy countenance; these are the Pleiades to me. I suffer much from sin and temptation; these are my wintry signs, my terrible Orion. Lord, work wonders in me, and for me. Amen.

 

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