Goodbye Norma Jean

Wait, WHAT? Bobby Kennedy was THERE? Who knew?

On this day in history, August 5, 1962, movie actress Marilyn Monroe is found dead in her home in Los Angeles. She was discovered lying on her bed face down with a telephone in one hand. Empty bottles of pills, prescribed to treat her depression, were littered around the room. After a brief investigation Los Angeles police concluded that her death was “caused by a self-administered overdose of sedative drugs and that the mode of death is probable suicide.”

Marilyn Monroe was born Norma Jean Mortenson in Los Angeles on June 1, 1926. Her mother was emotionally unstable and frequently confined to an asylum, so Norma Jean was reared by a succession of foster parents and in an orphanage. At the age of 16, she married a fellow worker in an aircraft factory, but they divorced a few years later. She took up modeling in 1944 and in 1946 signed a short-term contract with 20th Century Fox, taking as her screen name Marilyn Monroe. She had a few bit parts and then returned to modeling, famously posing nude for a calendar in 1949.

She began to attract attention as an actress in 1950 after appearing in minor roles in the The Asphalt Jungle and All About Eve. Although she was onscreen only briefly playing a mistress in both films, audiences took note of the blonde bombshell, and she won a new contract from Fox. Her acting career took off in the early 1950s with performances in Love Nest (1951), Monkey Business (1952), and Niagara (1953). Celebrated for her voluptuousness and wide-eyed charm, she won international fame for her sex-symbol roles in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953), How to Marry a Millionaire (1953), and There’s No Business Like Show Business (1954). The Seven-Year Itch (1955) showcased her comedic talents and features the classic scene where she stands over a subway grating and has her white skirt billowed up by the wind from a passing train. In 1954, she married baseball great Joe DiMaggio, attracting further publicity, but they divorced eight months later.

In 1955, she studied with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio in New York City and subsequently gave a strong performance as a hapless entertainer in Bus Stop (1956). In 1956, she married playwright Arthur Miller. She made The Prince and the Showgirl – a critical and commercial failure – with Laurence Olivier in 1957 but in 1959 gave an acclaimed performance in the hit comedy Some Like It Hot. Her last role, in The Misfits (1961), was directed by John Huston and written by Miller whom she divorced just one week before the film’s opening.

By 1961, Monroe, beset by depression, was under the constant care of a psychiatrist. Increasingly erratic in the last months of her life, she lived as a virtual recluse in her Brentwood, Los Angeles, home. After midnight on August 5, 1962, her maid, Eunice Murray, noticed Monroe’s bedroom light on. When Murray found the door locked and Marilyn unresponsive to her calls, she called Monroe’s psychiatrist, Dr. Ralph Greenson, who gained access to the room by breaking a window. Entering, he found Marilyn dead, and the police were called sometime after. An autopsy found a fatal amount of sedatives in her system, and her death was ruled probable suicide.

In recent decades, there have been a number of conspiracy theories about her death, most of which contend that she was murdered by John and/or Robert Kennedy, with whom she allegedly had love affairs. These theories claim that the Kennedys killed her (or had her killed) because they feared she would make public their love affairs and other government secrets she was gathering. On August 4, 1962, Robert Kennedy, then attorney general in his older brother’s cabinet, was in fact in Los Angeles. Two decades after the fact, Monroe’s housekeeper, Eunice Murray, announced for the first time that the attorney general had visited Marilyn on the night of her death and quarreled with her, but the reliability of these and other statements made by Murray are questionable.

Four decades after her death, Marilyn Monroe remains a major cultural icon. The unknown details of her final performance only add to her mystique.

George Mikan

NOT George Mikan.

On this day in 1949, after a three-year battle to win both players and fans, the rival Basketball Association of America (BAA) and National Basketball League (NBL) merge to form the National Basketball Association (NBA).
The BAA incorporated in 1946, challenging the hegemony of the nine-year old NBL. The BAA established itself in bigger cities than the NBL, which existed only in small Midwestern cities like Fort Wayne, Sheboygan and Akron. While the NBL held its games in small gymnasiums, the upstart BAA played its games in large major-market arenas such as the Boston Garden and New York City’s Madison Square Garden. By the 1948-49 season, the BAA had begun to attract some of the country’s best players, and four NBL franchises  – Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Minneapolis and Rochester – moved to the BAA, bringing their star players with them. George Mikan, the biggest attraction in either league who by himself could virtually assure a team’s success, defected to the new league with the Minneapolis Lakers.
 

On August 3, 1949, representatives from the two leagues met at the BAA offices in New York’s Empire State Building to finalize the merger. Maurice Podoloff, head of the BAA since its inception, was elected head of the new league. The new NBA was made up of 17 teams that represented both small towns and large cities across the country. Through the 1950s, though, the number of teams dwindled, along with fan support, and by the 1954-55 season, only eight teams remained. That year, the league transformed the game with the creation of the 24-second clock, making play faster-paced and more fun to watch. Fans returned, and the league, now financially solvent, expanded throughout the 1960s and 70s. Today, the NBA has 30 franchises and attracts players and millions of fans from countries around the world.

Security

Talking about password security is a guaranteed crowd-snoozer, but hear me out. The hard reality is password security is extremely important.

Illustrated below are a few ways account passwords can be compromised:

  1. Someone you know is deliberately trying to cause you harm.
    There are many people who might want to take a peek into someone’s personal life. If these people know them well, they might be able to guess their email password and use password recovery options to access their other accounts.
  2. You become the victim of a brute-force attack.
    Whether a hacker attempts to access a group of user accounts or just one person, brute-force attacks are the go-to strategy for cracking passwords. These attacks work by systematically checking all possible passphrases until the correct one is found. If the hacker already has an idea of the guidelines used to create the password, this process becomes even easier to execute.
  3. There’s data breaches.
    Every few months, it seems another huge company reports a hacking resulting in the compromising of millions of accounts. Data breaches happen more often than reported on the news.

What can you do?

Although data breaches are out of your control, it’s still imperative to create passwords that can withstand brute-force attacks and relentless frenemies. Avoiding both types of attacks is dependent on the complexity of your password.

You think a password similar to yours is un-hackable?  This test will show how long will it take for a computer to crack a password similar to yours. This is a fun little exercise. Try it. VERY IMPORTANT: Please do not use your actual password, but rather, something similar.

https://howsecureismypassword.net/

Bigfoot Erotica

I assiduously avoid the political, but I have to admit, this one caught my eye. What’ll they think of next?

‘Bigfoot Erotica’ Becomes an Issue in Virginia Congressional Campaign

Monster-themed pornography does exist. But Denver Riggleman, a Republican, said his writing on Bigfoot has not been pornographic.

“The Mating Habits of Bigfoot and Why Women Want Him?”

He describes the book as “a sort of joke anthropological study on Bigfoot believers.”

“I have a sense of humor,” Mr. Riggleman said. “I’m not going to apologize for personality.”

“Oh, Jim.”

The Doors score their first #1 hit with “Light My Fire”

 

By the beginning of 1967, The Doors were well-established members of the Los Angeles music scene. As the house band at the Whiskey a Go Go on the Sunset Strip, they had built a large local following and strong industry buzz, and out on the road, they were fast becoming known as a band that might typically receive third billing, but could blow better-known groups like The Young Rascals and The Grateful Dead off the stage. It would have been poetic if their popular breakthrough had come via their now-classic debut single, “Break On Through,” but that record failed to make the national sales charts despite the efforts of Jim Morrison and his band mates to fuel the song’s popularity by repeatedly calling in requests for it to local L.A. radio stations. It was the follow-up release from their debut album, The Doors, which would become their first bona fide smash. “Light My Fire,” which earned the top spot in the Billboard Hot 100 on this day in 1967, transformed The Doors from cult favorites of the rock cognoscenti into international pop stars and avatars of the 60s counterculture.

As “Light My Fire” climbed the charts in June and early July, The Doors were out on the East Coast, still plugging away as an opening act (e.g., for Simon and Garfunkel in Forest Hills, Queens) and as sometime-headliners (e.g., in a Greenwich, Connecticut, high-school auditorium). When the group topped the charts in late July, Jim Morrison celebrated by buying his now-famous skintight black-leather suit and beginning to hobnob with the likes of the iconic model/muse Nico at drug-fueled parties held by Andy Warhol.

Attempting to keep Morrison grounded were not only his fellow Doors Robby Krieger, Ray Manzarek and John Densmore as well as the professional manager they had hired in part to “babysit” him, but also his longtime girlfriend Pamela Courson, who is quoted in Jerry Hopkins and Danny Sugerman’s Doors biography No One Here Gets Out Alive (1980) as greeting the sight of Jim Morrison preening in front of a mirror at home before a show in the summer of 1967 with, “Oh Jim, are you going to wear the same leather pants again? You never change your clothes. You’re beginning to smell, did you know that?”

In the end, of course, Morrison’s heavy drinking and drug use would lead to increasingly erratic behavior over the next four years and eventually take his life in July 1971. During that period, The Doors would follow up “Light My Fire” with a string of era-defining albums and songs, including “People Are Strange,” “Love Me Two Times” and “The End” in 1967; “Hello, I Love You” and “Touch Me” in 1968; and “L.A. Woman” and “Riders on the Storm” in 1971.

 

Caffeine is Life

This makes me happy. Long overdue.

https://www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/news/2018/06/26/new-tenant-lined-up-for-former-bean-barrel-spot-in.html

By Sonya Sorich
– Digital Editor, Sacramento Business Journal

Jun 26, 2018, 9:13pm PDT
Updated Jun 27, 2018, 10:23am

The locally owned Identity Coffees will fill a West Sacramento space previously occupied by Bean & Barrel.

Identity Coffees, which has a site in midtown Sacramento, confirmed plans for a second location in a social media post on Tuesday. It says, “The rumors are true, we are headed out west on an adventure with shop no. 2 in the works!”

Josh Schmidt, a CBRE vice president, confirmed to the Business Journal that Identity Coffees will replace Bean & Barrel at 289 Third St. Schmidt represented the landlord in the deal.

Identity Coffees opened in 2016 at 1430 28th St. in midtown Sacramento. Lucky Rodrigues, an owner of Identity, also co-founded the locally based Insight Coffee Roasters, which he left before starting his new venture. Rodrigues did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

“Lucky is a very strong operator and I believe he will be a big success and embraced by the community,” Schmidt said in an email. The business could open in the next 60 to 90 days, according to Schmidt.

The locally owned Bean & Barrel offered coffee, beer, wine and food. It opened last year in a mixed-use building in West Sacramento’s Washington neighborhood. In a 2016 interview, a partner in Bean & Barrel said the space was approximately 1,990 square feet. Located across the street from Burgers & Brew, it had been vacant for several years.

In February, paper covered the windows of Bean & Barrel. At the time, a sign outside the business attributed the closure “to new construction and transition of management team.”

 

Stoic Sentiment

Kudos to Jerry Coyne of WEIT for the following snippet.
Thanks to Ed Peeling for bringing it to my attention.
Meanwhile in Dobrzyn, Hili evinces some stoic sentiment, but Malgorzata says, “Hili is pretending.”
Cyrus: Am I pressing on your paw?
Hili: A bit but suffering ennobles.
In Polish:
Cyrus: Nie uciskam ci łapki?
Hili: Trochę, ale cierpienie uszlachetnia.

 

====================================

Oh, and also this from :

The main causes of death in Country & Western songs

Dinner party with some old EDS’ers tonight.

With any luck, the neighbors will complain.

That is all.

Peaches

(AP) GRAND JUNCTION • A silent killer steadily encroaching on the most beloved of Western Slope fruit has moved into the crosshairs of peach growers and researchers.

It’s a fungus so widespread that every orchard in the valley is infected, it’s estimated to cost the local peach industry about $6 million a year and there’s no silver bullet to eradicate it.

But the good news is that researchers with Colorado State University have found promising results and have discovered a potential way to manage this devastating fungus, called cytospora. Though it has become an epidemic in western Colorado orchards, managing it could be as simple as painting trees with a special mixture to protect them and avoid spreading the infection.

This hard-to-pronounce fungus causes a disease called cytospora canker, which leaves behind a distinct calling card in orchards. The fungus spreads through spores and enters trees through wounds or cracks in the bark. Once established, it girdles trees from the inside, causing telltale dead branches and eventually killing the entire tree.

Researchers realized something needed to be done after initial surveys of orchards in 2015 revealed that every orchard in the valley had some infection and estimated, on average, 75 percent of the trees in the surveyed orchards had been infected with cytospora. Many of the orchards were fully infected, especially if their trees were old enough to be in full production.

When Colorado State University pomology assistant professor Ioannis Minas first walked through Palisade area orchards, he noticed the oozing, the trees’ futile attempt to push the fungus out with amber-colored sap. No matter which orchard he visited, there it was, a sticky reminder of the persistent infection.

“It was this cytospora gum rain,” he said.

But the attitude he encountered at the time was one of resignation, in which peach growers had come to accept their trees wouldn’t last more than a decade after they were planted and the last few years of production would be a matter of lopping off dead limbs, milking the rest of the tree for as long as the peaches would grow . Other stone fruits are susceptible to cytospora infection, including cherries, apricots and plums, but it’s most evident in peach orchards.

“Cytospora has always been here; it’s become a much bigger issue in the last 20 years,” said Bruce Talbott, who manages the Talbott Farms’ orchards.

The worsening situation is one that Talbott attributes to several factors — the planting of newer varieties of peach trees that are less resistant to the fungus, increased use of sprinkler irrigation and extreme temperature swings in the wintertime that expand and contract the tree bark and leave cracks behind.

These tiny fissures are just the sort of environment cytospora spores like, and the opportunistic fungus takes hold.

Talbott said he has noticed increased cytospora infection after winters where temperatures drop to 10 or 15 below zero at night, and then the next day’s high temperatures reach the upper 30s.

These wide temperature swings are key to researchers’ hypothesis explaining why cytospora is a devastating issue in western Colorado but not other peach-growing regions like Georgia, Michigan and California.

Despite increased humidity in those areas, which would likely be a better climate for fungus to thrive, those regions don’t have the fatal results cytospora inflicts here. It’s seen as a pretty weak adversary to the industry elsewhere, but those places don’t have the unique climate that produces cool nights and hot days, with extreme temperatures like the Grand Valley.

“Most of the rest of the world doesn’t care about cytospora,” Talbott said. “We’ve tolerated it up until now, and now it’s like, OK, this is serious enough for the industry that we need to commit to finding a solution here.”

Surveys conducted by Colorado State University indicate the losses to the peach industry locally are as much as 20 percent of revenues every year, which amounts to about $6 million annually.

It’s a problem that has slowly become more and more expensive, more devastating and more prevalent across the Grand Valley’s orchards.

One of the most costly effects of cytospora infection is the shortened life of peach trees.

Orchard managers plan on trees lasting about 20 years when they’re planted — accounting for five years of growth, 10 years of full production and the last five years getting whatever’s left of the tree before they yank it out and start over. But cytospora has reduced that time frame.

While spring frosts are still the biggest threat to the industry, cytospora isn’t far behind.

Finding a reliable solution to keep the fungus under control hasn’t been easy.

Initial attempts to test 20 chemicals on cytospora-infected samples showed none of them provided 100 percent control, Minas said.

Further research indicated some chemicals are more effective than others, according to current trial results.

The best results for suppressing the fungus have come from mixing fungicide with white latex paint and applying it to young trees to prevent infection, as well as covering pruning wounds and existing cankers to prevent them from spreading spores.

Colorado State University plant pathologist Jane Stewart and graduate student Stephan Miller are part of the team working on a solution for peach growers.

“We’re trying to find an emergency solution,” Minas said. “Because this is a really big problem.”

===============

We had cytospora in our PA peach orchards decades ago, though we didn’t have a name for the disease that caused the oozing amber sap to flow. In any case it was not a show stopper for us, more of a nuisance than anything. Much more problematic in the intervening years was Plum Pox, which ended up literally wiping out the entire peach business in Adams county for a number of years before it was finally eradicated. For those interested in a much deeper dive into diseases of peaches and plant pathology:

https://news.psu.edu/story/141757/2005/01/20/research/invasive-procedure

Growers Plan To Replant Some Orchard Sites Lost To Plum Pox

Plum Pox Eradication in PA - A Blueprint for Future Plant Disease Outbreaks

Jim Lerew, Latimore Township, Adams County, PA.

Why Not?

Skating across the country - Why not?
This story about skating across the country…

 

Much better than hanging around to watch the Denver Post circling the drain!

 

https://theknow.denverpost.com/2018/07/20/mike-lempko-inline-skating-charity/190108/

 

Goes on the Bucket List

Just waiting for one of our kids to move here so we can come visit….

On July 24, 1911, American archeologist Hiram Bingham gets his first look at Machu Picchu, an ancient Inca settlement in Peru that is now one of the world’s top tourist destinations.
Tucked away in the rocky countryside northwest of Cuzco, Machu Picchu is believed to have been a summer retreat for Inca leaders, whose civilization was virtually wiped out by Spanish invaders in the 16th century. For hundreds of years afterwards, its existence was a secret known only to the peasants living in the region. That all changed in the summer of 1911, when Bingham arrived with a small team of explorers to search for the famous “lost” cities of the Incas.

Traveling on foot and by mule, Bingham and his team made their way from Cuzco into the Urubamba Valley, where a local farmer told them of some ruins located at the top of a nearby mountain. The farmer called the mountain Machu Picchu, which meant “Old Peak” in the native Quechua language. The next day–July 24–after a tough climb to the mountain’s ridge in cold and drizzly weather, Bingham met a small group of peasants who showed him the rest of the way. Led by an 11-year-old boy, Bingham got his first glimpse of the intricate network of stone terraces marking the entrance to Machu Picchu.

The excited Bingham spread the word about his discovery in a best-selling book, sending hordes of eager tourists flocking to Peru to follow in his footsteps up the Inca trail. The site itself stretches an impressive five miles, with over 3,000 stone steps linking its many different levels. Today, more than 300,000 people tramp through Machu Picchu every year, braving crowds and landslides to see the sun set over the towering stone monuments of the “Sacred City” and marvel at the mysterious splendor of one of the world’s most famous man-made wonders.