Friday, January 31, 2025

Anthony Hopkins

Credits: Ankor Inclán

Sir Philip Anthony Hopkins (born 31 December 1937) is a Welsh actor. One of Britain's most recognisable and prolific actors, he is known for his performances on the screen and stage. Hopkins has received numerous accolades, including two Academy Awards, four BAFTA Awards, two Primetime Emmy Awards, and a Laurence Olivier Award. He has also received the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 2005 and the BAFTA Fellowship for lifetime achievement in 2008. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his services to drama in 1993.

Source: Wikipedia

---------------- 

Anthony Hopkins is among the many Los Angeles area residents who lost their homes to the fires raging across the city on Wednesday. [January 8, 2025]

The Pacific Palisades home of the Welsh actor, who turned 87 on Dec. 31, has burned to the ground, as seen in photos obtained by PEOPLE. The scene shows just a few concrete pillars, scorched wood and a stone pathway at the property, where smoke still rose from the rubble.

On Friday, Jan. 10, the actor posted a message to instagram about the tragedy, writing "As we struggle to heal from the devastation of these fires, it’s important we remember that the only thing we take with us is the love we give." He included a heart, broken heart and praying emoji to the text post.

Source: People Magazine, by Jack Smart, January 10, 2025




Photo by Livingston

  Anthony Hopkins once said: “I am fully aware of my mortality, but at 87 years old, I still wake up every morning with the desire to misbehave. Age is not a barrier when you find passion in what you do. The real secret lies in keeping your curiosity alive, continuing to learn, and not letting the fear of time stop you from enjoying life. Every day is a new opportunity to create, to laugh, and to show that it is never too late to move forward with enthusiasm and joy."


Thursday, January 30, 2025

FDR three term president of the USA

The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little. -Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Birth anniversary today of Franklin Delano Roosevelt (January 30, 1882 – April 12, 1945), also known as FDR...the 32nd president of the United States, serving from 1933 until his death in 1945. He is the longest-serving U.S. president, and the only one to have served more than two terms. His initial two terms were centered on combating the Great Depression, while his third and fourth saw him shift his focus to America's involvement in World War II.



 And it is birthday of the 32nd president of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, born in Hyde Park, New York (1882). His mother, Sara, was in labor with him for more than 24 hours, and the doctor was beginning to fear the worst. He gave Mrs. Roosevelt some chloroform to calm her, and 45 minutes later, young Franklin made his entrance into the world: blue, unmoving, and weighing nearly 10 pounds. The doctor blew into the baby's lungs and revived him. Due to the traumatic and dangerous birth, the Roosevelts decided Franklin would be an only child. The family was comfortably wealthy, having made a reasonable fortune in real estate and trade, and the boy grew up surrounded by love, indulgence, and attention; the universe revolved around him, at least as far as his mother was concerned. He grew up in relative isolation, and was schooled by private tutors until he left to attend the prestigious Groton School in Massachusetts at the age of 14. In order to be popular at Groton, a student needed to be a star athlete or a rebel, and Roosevelt was neither. He just wanted to please his teachers, who instilled in their wealthy pupils a sense of obligation to help the less fortunate. Roosevelt went on to Harvard, where he had a much more active social life and participated in many extracurricular activities — at the cost of his grades. Marriage and law school followed Harvard, and he first entered the political arena in 1910, after some fellow New York Democrats asked him to run for office. Politics seemed a perfect fit for the outgoing Roosevelt, who loved to meet new people and longed to be a leader.

Roosevelt possessed a zest for life, an easy confidence, and an optimistic outlook, traits that stayed with him even in his darkest days. He was diagnosed with polio in 1921, and Eleanor Roosevelt later recalled: "I know that he had real fear when he was first taken ill, but he learned to surmount it. After that I never heard him say he was afraid of anything." He never gave up hope of a complete recovery, and managed to conceal the extent of his paralysis from the public for the rest of his life.

Even while steering the country through the Great Depression and World War II, Roosevelt still had time for his favorite hobbies. He enjoyed collecting stamps, playing cards, bird-watching, and swimming in a pool he had built at the White House. He had a special fondness for Mickey Mouse cartoons. He held a nightly cocktail hour for his close associates. Above all, FDR enjoyed entertaining. He was gregarious and loved to be surrounded by people. There were the usual formal state dinners one might expect, but the Roosevelts also hosted teas, children's parties, dances, cocktail parties, and game nights. Sometimes, Roosevelt would lead his guests in an impromptu sing-along, and his birthday parties usually featured friends and family members acting in comedy skits. White House staff had to cope with guest lists that were twice what had been planned for, or last-minute overnight guests when all the rooms were already full. The Washington Post reported that the Roosevelts had 28,000 visitors in 1936 alone: a mix of policy makers, school children, the press corps, visiting dignitaries, royalty, and celebrities. Once the war started, they didn't host as many events, but the scale of the events remained large. Two thousand people attended FDR's 1945 inaugural luncheon, and consumed chicken salad made from 200 chickens, plus 170 dozen rolls, almost 100 gallons of coffee, and 165 cakes (which were unfrosted because sugar and butter were rationed).

Through it all, his beloved Scottish terrier, Fala, was never far away. Fala — whose full name was "Murray, the Outlaw of Falahill," accompanied the president on his travels and slept in a special chair at the foot of FDR's bed. He was brought a bone every morning, and Roosevelt fed him his dinner every night. The dog was so popular with the American people that he needed his own secretary to deal with the overwhelming volume of mail that he received. When Roosevelt died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1945, the little dog was inconsolable. Eleanor reported that Fala grew to tolerate her, but spent the rest of his life waiting for the master to return.

-----------Writer's Almanac 2014


The one who does -

 An Inscription written in 1529 in the Italian town of Ascoli Piceno;

-The one who can doesn't want to,
-The one who wants can't,
-The one who knows doesn't do it,
-The one who does doesn't KNOW
And the World is Getting Worse Like This..


Source: FB Archaeology and Civilizations

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Tom Selleck, actor

 Legendary Actor Tom Selleck Is 80 Today

Golden Oldies is wishing American actor Thomas William Selleck a happy birthday today (January 29, 1945). His breakout role was playing private investigator Thomas Magnum in the television series Magnum, P.I. (1980–1988), for which he received five Emmy Award nominations for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, winning in 1985. Since 2010, Selleck has co-starred as New York City Police Commissioner Frank Reagan in the series Blue Bloods. Beginning in 2005, he has portrayed troubled small-town police chief Jesse Stone in nine television films based on the Robert B. Parker novels.






Tuesday, January 28, 2025

Lego bricks patented

 On this day in 1958, January 28, the Lego brick patent was filed.


I was the happy recipient of a set of the original white Legos, with some red strips for window sills or roofs, and a green base for building my creations on. What a great Christmas gift it was! Who knew that tubs of the various colorful ones, including little people, would be enjoyed by my grandchildren!


Hildegard of Bingen

 

Don’t Waste Your Greening Life-Force: Hildegard’s Prophetic Enchanted Ecology

The year is 1174.

Gravity, oxygen, and electricity have not been discovered.

Clocks, calculus, and the printing press have not been invented.

Earth is the center of the universe, encircled by heavenly bodies whose motions are ministered by angels.

Most people never live past their thirties.

Medicine abides by the Greek theory of the humors and treats all ailments with a combination of bloodletting, herbal tinctures, amputation, and the King’s Touch.

No university will educate a woman. In fact, no university exists.


At seventy-six, Hildegard of Bingen — poet, painter, healer, composer, philosopher, mystic, medical writer — has just finished writing and illustrating her third and farthest-seeing book: The Book of Divine Works, chronicling seven years of prophetic visions. God had first begun speaking to her in “the voice of the Living Light” when she was three, but she never suffered the hubris of a self-appointed prophet — rather, she considered herself “a totally uneducated human being,” a “wretched and fragile creature,” who is merely a channel for divine wisdom. She may be the Western world’s first great crusader against dualism — in the sermons she delivered to priests, bishops, abbots, and ordinary people all over present-day Germany and Switzerland, she preached that “God is Reason,” that “Reason is the root” from which “the resounding Word blooms,” but also that “from the heart comes healing,” that we apprehend the world and its wisdom most clearly through the intuitions of the “inner eye” and “inner ear.”

Hildegard was fifty-six when she began receiving the vision that would become her Book of Divine Works. On its pages, between writings about birds and trees and stones and stars, between reckonings with the nature of eternity and the fundaments of love, she conceptualizes something the word for which would not be coined for another seven centuries: ecology.

Long before Alexander von Humboldt invented modern nature with his recognition that “in this great chain of causes and effects, no single fact can be considered in isolation,” before John Muir insisted that “when we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the universe,” Hildegard places at the center of her cosmology the notion of viriditas, from the Latin for “green” — a greening life-force pervading the world, mirrored in the virtues that enlush the soul.

Human beings, she writes, are “co-creators with God” in the operations of nature. We must cooperate with one another in the task of protecting and nourishing this interconnected creation, and we must do so by integrating the rational and the intuitive in us. Hildegard’s human being is “the fragile vessel where soul and reason are active,” filled with “the fullness of time.”



In one of her visions, collected in the wonderful translation Hildegard of Bingen’s Book of Divine Works: With Letters and Songs (public library), she paints a menacing picture of a world in which we have grown disconnected from the greening life-force of our own souls. Seven centuries before Eunice Newton Foote discovered greenhouse gasses, and an epoch before we had any sense of climate change or our own hand in it, Hildegard prophecies:

Then the greening power of the virtues faded away, and all justice entered upon a period of decline. As a result, the greening power of life on Earth was reduced in every seed because the upper region of the air was altered in a way contrary to its first destiny. Summer now became subject to a contradictory chill while winter often experienced a paradoxical warmth. There occurred on Earth times of drought and dampness… As a result, many people asserted that the Last Day was near at hand.

She was unambiguous about what stands between us and such fate:

If… we give up the green vitality of [our] virtues and surrender to the drought of our indolence, so that we do not have the sap of life and the greening power of good deeds, then the power of our very soul will begin to fade and dry up.

And yet Hildegard believed in “the green vitality of human volition,” believed that “the soul knows what is good and what is harmful.” By integrating our rational faculty with our heart-honed intuition, by refusing to dishonor our own souls, we have within us the power to revivify this Earth. It what may be the clearest, most succinct manifesto for climate action, she writes:

Our thinking affects our greening power… The soul is the green life-force of the flesh… When we humans work in accord with the strivings of our soul, all our deeds turn out well.

This, indeed, is the beating heart of Hildegard’s viriditas: the insistence that the stewardship of Earth’s life-force is not merely our moral obligation to the universe but our spiritual duty to our own souls. And this can only be so — the words holy and whole share a Latin root; if an ecological conscience is a way of seeing the world whole, it is a way of seeing its holiness, of seeing our own holiness — not above it, but nested within it. Rachel Carson knew this when, picking up Hildegard’s torch eight centuries later to catalyze the modern environmental movement, she observed that “there is in us a deeply seated response to the natural universe, which is part of our humanity,” that the task now before humanity is “to prove its maturity and its mastery — not of nature, but of itself.” It was Hildegard who gave us the original model of poetic ecology

-------------

Source: Maria Popova's The Marginalian newsletter 

Sunday Jan 26, 2025  https://www.themarginalian.org/newsletter/

Monday, January 27, 2025

The Worldwide Women's March 2017



As posted by "A Mighty Girl" Facebook page on Jan 17, 2017

 The official numbers for the historic Women's Marches held in 914 cities in over 60 countries around the world are in! And, the political scientists who have been tallying march attendance data all week have reached an incredible conclusion -- that there is "no doubt that this was the largest single-day event in US history." Two political scientists, Erica Chenoweth, a professor at the University of Denver, and Jeremy Pressman, a professor at the University of Connecticut, have developed a massive database tracking Women's March attendance around the world based on analyzing news and attendee reports. Since crowd counting is an inexact science, the researchers developed a low-end and high-end estimate for every march. Yesterday, they announced their final Women's March tally -- on the low end, 3.5 million people participated globally, while on the high end, 5.6 million people marched. While many marches took place around the world, the vast majority of global turnout was not surprisingly at US-based marches. Even using the conservative low-end estimate for U.S. Women's March attendance, the researches made a remarkable discovery: on Saturday, at least one out of every 100 Americans participated in a Women's March, an unprecedented mass mobilization that was the largest ever in US history.

Chenoweth, who studies emerging political movements, says that act of counting is an important one. “It’s a really empowering thing to be noticed and to be tallied,” she observed. “That actually came to be much more evident to me when people started emailing us and tweeting at us, reporting that they had two, five, seven, 12 people in their tiny outpost.” For the US alone, the researches collected data on 653 individual Women's Marches in cities ranging from Abilene, Texas to Zebulon, Georgia. Now, they plan to continue analyzing the data and develop a final "best guess" estimate and rationale, which they say "will involve various adjustments for under/over-reporting and source validation.” They believe that this number will "land us somewhere between the current high and low estimates.”
Thank you once again to everyone who turned out for this immense show of solidarity and support for the belief that women's rights are human rights. And, thank you to Erica Chenoweth and Jeremy Pressman for undertaking the significant challenge of capturing the true and immerse scale of this historic day of action -- a day which marked just the beginning of a fight to protect the rights of women and all those who are threatened in days ahead.
If you marched in a Women's March last Saturday, what was the Women's March like in your city? Please share your march photos and stories below.
For books about Mighty Girls who stand together for justice and acceptance of all people, check out our blog post "Standing Together: 50 Mighty Girl Books Celebrating Diversity and Acceptance” at http://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=13481
For books for young children about courageous girls and women marching for their rights throughout history, we recommend "Marching with Aunt Susan" for ages 4 to 8 (http://www.amightygirl.com/marching-with-aunt-susan), "The Youngest Marcher" for ages 5 to 9 (http://www.amightygirl.com/the-youngest-marcher), "Child of the Civil Rights Movement" for ages 4 to 8 (http://www.amightygirl.com/child-of-the-civil-rights...), "Elizabeth Started All The Trouble" for ages 6 to 9 (http://www.amightygirl.com/elizabeth-started-all-the-trouble), and "A Sweet Smell of Roses" for ages 5 to 8 (http://www.amightygirl.com/a-sweet-smell-of-roses)
For older children and teens, we recommend "Rightfully Ours: How Women Won The Vote" for ages 9 and up (http://www.amightygirl.com/rightfully-ours), "Turning 15 on the Road to Freedom" for ages 12 and up (http://www.amightygirl.com/turning-15), and "She Takes A Stand: 16 Fearless Activists Who Have Changed The World" for ages 12 and up (http://www.amightygirl.com/she-takes-a-stand)
For books for children and teens about social movements that brought lasting change, you can find many books about the Women's Suffrage Movement (http://amgrl.co/1I0xibL) and the Civil Rights Movement (http://amgrl.co/2j2O7H0)
And, to check out our collection of over 150 photos of Mighty Girls at Women's Marches around the world, check out our blog post, "Mighty Girls Rise Up At Women's Marches Worldwide" at http://www.amightygirl.com/blog?p=14131 #WomensMarch

-----------------------
Note: I know some marches have already happened, but it doesn't feel like that is the best use of our energies this time around. The only comment I had when I posted this in 2017 was that the count didn't include those who also gave virtual support.