Sunday, February 5, 2017

The Daily Drift

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Carolina Naturally
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Today in HIstory

1556
Henry II of France and Philip of Spain sign the truce of Vaucelles.
1631
A ship from Bristol, the Lyon, arrives with provisions for the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
1762
Martinique, a major French base in the Lesser Antilles of the West Indies, surrenders to the British.
1783
Sweden recognizes U.S. independence.
1846
The first Pacific Coast newspaper, Oregon Spectator, is published.
1864
Federal forces occupy Jackson, Miss.
1865
The three-day Battle of Hatcher’s Run, Va., begins.
1900
The United States and Great Britain sign the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, giving the United States the right to build a canal in Nicaragua but not to fortify it.
1917
U.S. Congress nullifies President Woordrow Wilson‘s veto of the Immigration Act; literacy tests are required.
1918
The Soviets proclaim separation of cult and state.
1918
SS Tuscania, a luxury liner of the Cunard Line subsidiary Anchor Line, is torpedoed by the German U-boat UB-77 off the coast of Ireland, sending 210 people to their deaths; it is the first ship carrying American troops to Europe to be torpedoed and sunk during World War I.
1922
The Reader’s Digest begins publication in New York.
1922
William Larned’s steel-framed tennis racquet gets its first test.
1945
American and French troops destroy German forces in the Colmar Pocket in France.
1947
The Soviet Union and Great Britain reject terms for an American trusteeship over Japanese Pacific Isles.
1952
New York adopts three-colored traffic lights.
1961
The Soviets launch Sputnik V, the heaviest satellite to date at 7.1 tons.
1968
U.S. troops divide Viet Cong at Hue while the Saigon government claims they will arm loyal citizens.
1971
Two Apollo 14 astronauts walk on the moon.
1972
It is reported that the United States has agreed to sell 42 F-4 Phantom jets to Israel.
1985
U.S. halts a loan to Chile in protest over human rights abuses.

Did you know ...

"After a police chase in 1956, in which he crashed his motorcycle, [Robert Craig] Knievel was taken to jail on a charge of reckless driving.  When the night jailer came around to check roll call, he noted Robert Knievel in one cell and William Knofel in another.  Knofel was well known as “Awful Knofel”... so Knievel began to be referred to as Evel Knievel..."

Department Store Chain Drops Ivanka Trump Like A Bad Habit

Department Store Chain Drops Ivanka Trump Like A Bad Habit As Daddy Fucks Over Our Country
The Dumbass Trump name continues to crumble as the Dumbass fucks up our country.
See, fucking your daddy has consequences.

Vegas Overrun with Bunnies

In Las Vegas, it's illegal to abandon a pet. But people do it anyway, just not at a shelter. People who have abandoned pet rabbits by just setting them free have sparked a takeover that might remind one of the movie Night of the Lepus.
The yards, parks and lots of Vegas are home to thousands of feral rabbits. Known as “bunny dump sites” to the legions of volunteers that care for their residents, they’re strange places, more tragic than adorable, where the human heart clashes with the limited resources of the state. Released by overwhelmed pet-owners and left to breed, the rabbits now overwhelm any attempt at government control, digging up public property, chewing on pipes, and ending up dead in the sewers. To survive, they depend entirely on the kindness of self-identified “bunny-lovers”—volunteers faced with an impossible task.
People feed the abandoned bunnies, but that leads to more bunnies. Local shelters are trying to "trap, neuter, and release" the rabbits, but have limited funds, and that's technically illegal anyway because of the abandonment regulation. Read about the bunny infestation in Las Vegas at Atlas Obscura.

The Freaky Swivel Neck of the Barbeled Dragonfish

Most vertebrates go to any length necessary to protect their vital spinal cord. The barbled dragonfish is not that concerned, and has dispensed with continuous neck bones as a tradeoff for eating bigger prey. A study by Nalani Schnell and David Johnson described the small but scary-looking fish's anatomy as having a gap between the neck and head where no bone restricts its head movement.
Now, to add to the freak show, it appears some barbeled dragonfish have a rather freestyle connection between their head and their body—one that allows them to achieve a 120 degree wide, banshee-like mouth gape.
“We certainly know of no other fishes with this feature,” Johnson told Gizmodo. Most vertebrates have bone-to-bone joints between the head and the neck, including us, he added.
The discovery came about through Schnell’s dissertation work, which focused on the peculiar anatomy of the barbeled dragonfish’s upper vertebra. Her early research showed that these creatures have a “flexible gap” between the occipital bones at the base of the skull, and the first ossified vertebra of the neck. Within this flex region, notochord tissue—a cartilage-like material that runs through the spines of all vertebrates—lacks the typical bony outer casing.
The fish is apparently unaware of how easy a spinal cord can snap. But since it lives in the deep and can withstand pressures we cannot, it's a safe bet to say that the marbled dragonfish is pretty tough. Read more about the research at Gizmodo.