Monday Open Thread January 18, 2016
Today is Martin Luther King Day
18 is a multiple of 9, 3, and 6, leading to suspicions that it will generate unending fractions (more later)
18 is the sum of 3 of its divisors, 3, 6, and 9 |
18 is argon, a noble gas |
I8 is the group containing noble (inert) gases in the periodic table |
The Mahabarata has 18 books, (including the Bhagavad Gita which has 18 chapters) and concerns a war between 18 armies that lasted 18 days |
OK, deep breath, but first recall that 1/3 is .333 repeated forever, 1/6 is .666 repeated forever and 1/9 is .111 repeated forever. |
1/18 | = 0.055 repeat 5 forever |
2/18 | = 0.111 repeat 1 forever (1/9) |
3/18 | = 0.166 repeat 6 forever (1/6) |
4/18 | = 0.222 repeat the 2 (2/9) |
5/18 | = 0.277 repeat the 7 |
6/18 | = 0.333 repeat the 3 (1/3) |
7/18 | = 0.388 repeat the 8 |
8/18 | = 0.444 repeat the 4 (4/9) |
9/18 | = .5 (1/2) |
In most countries, 18 is the age of majority |
In most countries, 18 is the voting age |
18 is the age of sexual consent under the Mann Act |
18 is 6 pm |
There are 18 chapters in Ulysses by James Joyce |
18 BCE was Year of the Consulship of Lentulus and Lentulus (That would be Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus, and Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus) |
Caesar Augustus introduced two of the lex Julia, the Lex Iulia de Ambitu which punished bribery when acquiring political office and the Lex Iulia de Maritandis Ordinibus which restricted marriage between differing social classes |
Juba II was King of Mauretania and Lugaid Riab nDerg was High King of Ireland |
18 CE was the Year of the Consulship of Augustus and Caesar |
The Roman poet Ovid died |
On this day in: | |
1535 | - Spanish conquistador Francisco Pizarro founded Lima, now the capital of Peru. |
1670 | - Henry Morgan captured Panama |
1778 | - James Cook was the first known European to stumble across the Hawaiian Islands |
1788 | - The lead ships of the First Fleet arrived at Botany Bay carrying convicts to found a penal colony |
1919 | - The Paris Peace Conference opened in Versailles, France |
1943 | - The first uprising of Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto |
1944 | - The Metropolitan Opera House in New York City hosted its first a jazz concert, featuring Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman, Lionel Hampton, Artie Shaw, Roy Eldridge and Jack Teagarden (Paydirt, Y'all) |
1967 | - Albert DeSalvo, the "Boston Strangler" was convicted and sentenced to life |
1974 | - A Disengagement of Forces agreement was signed by Israeli and Egypt |
1976 | - Lebanese Christian militias overran Karantina, Beirut and killed at least 1,000 despite the lack of a declared Crusade |
1993 | - Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is officially observed for the first time in all 50 states. Suck it, Racists |
Born on this day in: | |
1689 - | Montesquieu, a French lawyer and philosopher |
1779 - | Peter Mark Roget, an English physician, lexicographer, and theologian Wrote a thesaurus |
1782 - | Daniel Webster, an American lawyer and politician, the 14th United States Secretary of State. The protagonist of "The Devil and Daniel Webster", a short story by Stephen Vincent Benét |
1882 - | A. A. Milne, an English author, poet, and playwright |
1892 - | Oliver Hardy, an American actor, singer, and director who claimed descent from Sir Thomas Hardy, Admiral Nelson's Flag-Captain at Trafalgar |
1905 - | Joseph Bonanno, an Italian-American mob boss. The Bonanno family eventually moved to San Jose, Ca. |
1911 - | Danny Kaye, American actor, singer, and dancer. |
1932 - | Robert Anton Wilson, American psychologist, author, poet, and playwright. Wiseass, too |
1933 - | David Bellamy, an English botanist, author and academic |
1933 - | Ray Dolby, an American engineer and businessman who founded Dolby Laboratories |
1941 - | Bobby Goldsboro, an American singer-songwriter, guitarist, and producer |
1941 - | David Ruffin, an American singer (The Temptations) |
Deaths this day in: | |
52 BCE - | Publius Clodius Pulcher, a Roman politician. Semolina's grandfather |
1425 - | Edmund Mortimer, the 5th Earl of March, English politician. Shakespeare wrote about him. |
1873 - | Edward Bulwer-Lytton, an English author, poet, playwright, and politician. Snoopy's inspiration |
1936 - | Rudyard Kipling, an English short-story writer, poet, and novelist, Nobel Prize laureate |
1954 - | Sydney Greenstreet, an English-American actor and singer |
2008 - | Georgia Frontiere, an American businesswoman and Boss Ram |
2011 - | Sargent Shriver, an American politician and diplomat |
St. Louis Blues
St. James Infirmary
La vie en rose
When The Saints Go Marching In
Basin Street Blues
St. Louis Blues
Benny Goodman Quartet - Avalon
Benny Goodman Trio (China Boy and Sheik of Araby)
Benny Goodman & Lionel Hampton Stealin Apples (with Danny Kaye as straight man)
Flying Home (1957)
Hamp's Boogie Woogie
GENE KRUPA & LIONEL HAMPTON "Sing,Sing,Sing" (1971)
Speaking of drums -- Lionel Hampton Tom Tom Solo
St. Louis Blues
Begin The Beguine
Frenesi
Stardust
All of Me
On the Sunny Side of the Street
Basin Street Blues
Body & Soul
St. James Infirmary
So, the floor is yours compadres, whassup?
Comments
Happy Martin Luther King Day, everybody.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
fractions
are Wrong.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5JXrP8yv8o]
A Botany Bay song. Written by Bobby Sands.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4eh6XvHAVY]
Thanks. Headphones are dead just now, so I'll have to listen
later. The assertion that "fractions are wrong" can keep the mind rolling along for hours, if not days. Thanks especially for that.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
I knew there was a reason
I did not like dealing with them. They look good as ruler notches on a inch until you start trying to divide and conquer them and then they show how tricky and wrong they are. I personally don't mess with them. 3/4 is alright but .75 is wrong. Converting these wrong fractions to being right is not worth the trouble. I just eyeball them. These days I have to deal pixels which are not only wrong but incomprehensible.
you
are exactly right. They look really good on a ruler. Especially a wooden one. But as soon as you try to employ them, they start melting your mind.
pizarro
was a stink-bomb. He famously demanded ransom for the Inca emperor Atahualpa; then, once it was delivered, Pizarro killed Atahualpa anyway. His brothers Juan, Gonzalo, and Hernando, they stunk real bad too. Hernando inspired Lope de Aguirre, an insane person, to rampage throughout what is now South America. In 1561, Aguirre became the first white invader to declare an independent state in the Americas.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQYKDrOs_j8]
He came up earlier in the series, perhaps when
he set sail or something, and I played something by elton john. All the conquistadores were serious assholes, perpetrators of much wrong as well as great wrongs. If I could accept such a thing in the real world, I would peg them as evil, but I am no manichean, mor otherwise capable of using that term. I think it was 16th century man off of the Road to Eldorado album.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
i like
this one.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjptgWBr2n8]
Yes, very good indeed.
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --