Posted on Leave a comment

A Baby Monarch In the Making: Not So Great a Camouflage

P1682

Posted on Leave a comment

Second Cup on the Patio: Before the Day Picks Up

P1677

Posted on Leave a comment

On This Day: April 29

Updated April 28, 2012, 2:29 pm

NYT Front Page

On April 29, 1992, deadly rioting that claimed 54 lives and caused $1 billion in damage erupted in Los Angeles after a jury in Simi Valley acquitted four Los Angeles police officers of almost all state charges in the videotaped beating of Rodney King.
Go to article »

On April 29, 1901, Hirohito, ruler of Japan during World War II and Japan’s longest-reigning monarch, was born. Following his death on Jan. 7, 1989, his obituary appeared in The Times.

Go to obituary » | Other birthdays »

 

On This Date

By The Associated Press

1429 Joan of Arc entered the besieged city of Orleans to lead a victory over the English.
1861 Maryland’s House of Delegates voted against seceding from the Union.
1862 New Orleans fell to Union forces during the Civil War.
1899 Jazz musician and bandleader Duke Ellington was born Edward Kennedy Ellington in Washington, D.C.
1916 The Easter uprising in Dublin collapsed as Irish nationalists surrendered to British authorities.
1945 Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler married his longtime mistress Eva Braun in a Berlin bunker. (The couple killed themselves the next day.)
1945 American soldiers liberated the Dachau concentration camp in Germany.
1981 Truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admitted in a London court to being the “Yorkshire Ripper,” the killer of 13 women in northern England over five years.
1992 Rioting erupted in Los Angeles after a jury acquitted four Los Angeles police officers of almost all charges in the videotaped beating of Rodney King. Fifty-four people were killed.
1996 The musical “Rent” opened on Broadway.
1997 A worldwide treaty to ban chemical weapons went into effect.

Current Birthdays

By The Associated Press

Uma Thurman, Actress

Actress Uma Thurman turns 42 years old today.

AP Photo/Evan Agostini

Jerry Seinfeld, Actor, comedian (“Seinfeld”)

Actor-comedian Jerry Seinfeld (“Seinfeld”) turns 58 years old today.

AP Photo/Charles Sykes

1917 Celeste Holm, Actress, turns 95
1933 Rod McKuen, Poet, turns 79
1934 Luis Aparicio, Baseball Hall of Famer, turns 78
1934 Otis Rush, Blues musician, turns 78
1936 Zubin Mehta, Conductor, turns 76
1943 Duane Allen, Country singer (The Oak Ridge Boys), turns 69
1947 Tommy James, Singer (The Shondells), turns 65
1950 Debbie Stabenow, U.S. senator, D-Mich., turns 62
1955 Kate Mulgrew, Actress (“Star Trek: Voyager”), turns 57
1957 Daniel Day-Lewis, Actor, turns 55
1958 Michelle Pfeiffer, Actress, turns 54
1958 Eve Plumb, Actress (“The Brady Bunch”), turns 54
1968 Carnie Wilson, Singer (Wilson Phillips), turns 44
1970 Andre Agassi, Tennis player, turns 42
1983 Tommie Harris, Football player, turns 29

 

Historic Birthdays

Hirohito 4/29/1901 – 1/7/1989 Japanese emperor (1926-89).Go to obituary »
62 Oliver Ellsworth 4/29/1745 – 11/26/1807
American senator, jurist and chief author of the Judiciary Act of 1789
63 Alexander II 4/29/1818 – 3/13/1881
Russian emperor (1855-81); emancipated the serfs in 1861
58 Henri Poincare 4/29/1854 – 7/17/1912
French mathematician, theoretical astronomer and scientific philosopher
88 William Randolph Hearst 4/29/1863 – 8/14/1951
American newspaper publisher
82 Sir Thomas Beecham 4/29/1879 – 3/8/1961
English conductor and impresario
88 Harold Urey 4/29/1893 – 1/5/1981
American Nobel-Prize winning chemist (1934); helped develop the atom bomb
72 Sir Malcolm Sargent 4/29/1895 – 10/3/1967
English orchestra conductor
75 Duke Ellington 4/29/1899 – 5/24/1974
American composer, bandleader and pianist; a founder of big-band jazz
90 Fred Zinnemann 4/29/1907 – 3/14/1997
Austrian-born American motion-picture director
72 George Allen 4/29/1918 – 12/31/1990
American professional football coach

 

 

Posted on Leave a comment

April 29

MORNING

“And all the children of Israel murmured.”
Numbers 14:2

There are murmurers amongst Christians now, as there were in the camp of Israel of old. There are those who, when the rod falls, cry out against the afflictive dispensation. They ask, “Why am I thus afflicted? What have I done to be chastened in this manner?” A word with thee, O murmurer! Why shouldst thou murmur against the dispensations of thy heavenly Father? Can he treat thee more hardly than thou deservest? Consider what a rebel thou wast once, but he has pardoned thee! Surely, if he in his wisdom sees fit now to chasten thee, thou shouldst not complain. After all, art thou smitten as hardly as thy sins deserve? Consider the corruption which is in thy breast, and then wilt thou wonder that there needs so much of the rod to fetch it out? Weigh thyself, and discern how much dross is mingled with thy gold; and dost thou think the fire too hot to purge away so much dross as thou hast? Does not that proud rebellious spirit of thine prove that thy heart is not thoroughly sanctified? Are not those murmuring words contrary to the holy submissive nature of God’s children? Is not the correction needed? But if thou wilt murmur against the chastening, take heed, for it will go hard with murmurers. God always chastises his children twice, if they do not bear the first stroke patiently. But know one thing–“He doth not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men.” All his corrections are sent in love, to purify thee, and to draw thee nearer to himself. Surely it must help thee to bear the chastening with resignation if thou art able to recognize thy Father’s hand. For “whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons.” “Murmur not as some of them also murmured and were destroyed of the destroyer.”

EVENING

“How precious also are thy thoughts unto me, O God.”
Psalm 139:17

Divine omniscience affords no comfort to the ungodly mind, but to the child of God it overflows with consolation. God is always thinking upon us, never turns aside his mind from us, has us always before his eyes; and this is precisely as we would have it, for it would be dreadful to exist for a moment beyond the observation of our heavenly Father. His thoughts are always tender, loving, wise, prudent, far-reaching, and they bring to us countless benefits: hence it is a choice delight to remember them. The Lord always did think upon his people: hence their election and the covenant of grace by which their salvation is secured; he always will think upon them: hence their final perseverance by which they shall be brought safely to their final rest. In all our wanderings the watchful glance of the Eternal Watcher is evermore fixed upon us–we never roam beyond the Shepherd’s eye. In our sorrows he observes us incessantly, and not a pang escapes him; in our toils he marks all our weariness, and writes in his book all the struggles of his faithful ones. These thoughts of the Lord encompass us in all our paths, and penetrate the innermost region of our being. Not a nerve or tissue, valve or vessel, of our bodily organization is uncared for; all the littles of our little world are thought upon by the great God.

Dear reader, is this precious to you? then hold to it. Never be led astray by those philosophic fools who preach up an impersonal God, and talk of self-existent, self-governing matter. The Lord liveth and thinketh upon us, this is a truth far too precious for us to be lightly robbed of it. The notice of a nobleman is valued so highly that he who has it counts his fortune made; but what is it to be thought of by the King of kings! If the Lord thinketh upon us, all is well, and we may rejoice evermore.