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^ WORD OF THE WEEKtropophilous |
Friday 16th May
- Day 136/365- Mary, Queen of Scots, fled to England, 1568. Educator Elizabeth Palmer Peabody born, 1804. Writer, courtesan and spy Grace Elliott died, 1823. The RAF carried out Operation Chastise, popularly known as the Dambusters Raid, 1943. Actor Pierce Brosnan born, 1953. Puppeteer Jim Henson died, 1990. Saturday 17th May
- Day 137/365- Artist Sandro Botticelli died, 1510. Physician and vaccine pioneer Edward Jenner born, 1749. Great Britain declared war on France, 1756. L. Frank Baum's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was first published in the US, 1900. Racing driver Dorothy Levitt died, 1922. Singer-songwriter Enya born, 1961. International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia and Biphobia. World Information Society Day. Sunday 18th May
- Day 138/365- Poet and polymath Omar Khayyám born, 1048. An arrest warrant was issued for playwright Christopher Marlowe, 1593. Historian, astrologer and politician Elias Ashmole died, 1692. Photographer Gertrude Käsabier born, 1852. Mount St Helens in Washington State erupted, 1980. Actress Elizabeth Montgomery died, 1995. International Museum Day. Monday 19th May
- Day 139/365- Catherine of Aragon, 13, and Arthur, Prince of Wales, 12, were married by proxy, 1499. Anne Boleyn, second wife of King Henry VIII of England, was executed, 1536. Philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte born, 1762. The daytime sky over New England and part of Canada darkened, 1780. Soprano Nellie Melba born, 1861. Poet John Betjeman died, 1984. Tuesday 20th May
- Day 140/365- Abraham Ortelius published Theatrum Orbis Terrarum, the first modern atlas, 1570. Poet John Clare died, 1864. Nobel laureate novelist Sigrid Undset born, 1882. The first prisoners arrived at the Auschwitz concentration camp, 1940. Journalist and broadcaster Louis Theroux born, 1970. Sculptor Barbara Hepworth died, 1975. World Bee Day. World Metrology Day. Wednesday 21st May
- Day 141/365- The coronation of sixteen-year-old Otto III as Holy Roman Emperor, 996. Artist and engraver Albrecht Dürer born, 1471. Explorer and conquistador Hernando de Soto died, 1542. Queen Victoria officially opened the Manchester Ship Canal, 1894. Actress Fairuza Balk born, 1974. Singer-songwriter Twinkle died, 2015. World Day for Cultural Diversity for Dialogue and Development (UN). International Tea Day (UN). Thursday 22th May
- Day 142/365- The Wars of the Roses began with the First Battle of St Albans, 1455. Writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle born, 1859. Martha Washington, first First Lady of the United States, died, 1802. Verdi's Requiem premiered in Milan, 1874. Television and radio presenter Clara Amfo born, 1984. Swimmer David Wilkie died, 2024. International Day for Biological Diversity (UN). World Goth Day.
This week, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in A Case of Identity:The husband was a teetotaller, there was no other woman, and the conduct complained of was that he had drifted into the habit of winding up every meal by taking out his false teeth and hurling them at his wife.
A selection of quotations from films containing the word 'dawn' in the title, either as a whole word or part of a word. Answers next issue or from the regular address.Last issue's 'child' quotations were from:
- - A hundred years ago I walked away from mankind; from a century of horrors... Men made a world where standing together is impossible.
- Men are still good. We fight, we kill, we betray one another, but we can rebuild. We can do better. We will. We have to.- Well fought, gentlemen. It's time to save the colours. Get to Rorke's Drift. You must warn them.
- You touch my brother with that stake, biker, and vampires won't have to suck your blood. They'll be able to lick it up off the floor.
- Attention all shoppers. If you have a sweet tooth, we have a special treat for you. If your purchases in the next half hour amount to five dollars or more, we'll give you a bag of hard candy free! For the kiddies, or enjoy yourself. So hurry and do your shopping!
- Oh, you're a boat in a magical land. Can't you row yourself?
- The devil's greatest achievement is that people don't believe he exists. Nowadays, the concept of evil is politically incorrect.
-- Bless the Child [2009]- We're friends 'til the end! Remember?
-- Child's Play [1988]- - This child is special. His destiny is to save the world.
- That's a good destiny.
-- The Golden Child [1986]- At this very moment, they could be making all those men out there turn their guns on one another!
-- Children of the Damned [1964]- Filet de Barbie!
-- A Nightmare on Elm Street: The Dream Child [1989]
Strange stories from around the world, some of which might be true...
- Scientists in China know that the population of Yangtze finless porpoises in the range of the Yangtse River from the Tibetan Plateau to the sea in eastern China has dramatically decreased over the last couple of decades, but they had no usable data from further back, so turned to poetry. They searched databases of Chinese poetry going back to the Tang dynasty (618-907 CE) and found 724 poems that mentioned the porpoise, about half also noting where they had been seen. The data suggests that the general range had decreased by 65% since the Tang dynasty, and hy 91% in the Yangtse's tributaries and lakes, with the sharpest decline over the last 100 years. ● Between 1990 and 2013 32 greater sage-grouse in Wyoming's Grand Teton National Park were killed in collisions with aircraft near Jackson Hole Airport. The National Park Service has teamed up with the Teton Raptor Center, artist Lori Solem and Jackson Hole Middle School art students to create a novel way of trying to reduce the number of fatalities. They have deployed papier-mâché decoy sage-grouse in a field south of the airport in the hope that they will deter the real birds. ● Two biologists on a trip to observe seabirds while on holiday in Cape Verde accidentally discovered a live Monte Gordo grasshopper. The last live specimen was collected in 1980, and the species was declared extinct in 1996. ● Sheriff's officers in Gilmer County, Georgia, were roped in to wrangle a herd of four "friendly" goats that appeared in a yard, having escaped from their home 14 miles (22.5km) away. ● Plans are being developed to reintroduce elk in Britain 3,000 years after the native population was hunted to extinction. Provided the idea meets public approval and suitable locations can be found the initial idea would be to introduce elk into enclosures alongside beavers - a successfully-reintroduced species - before being released into the wild. ● The Zhuyuwan Scenic Area Zoo in Yangzhou City, China, has asked the public to be on the alert for a capybara, the world's largest rodent, which escaped more than 40 days ago along with two others, which have been recaptured. They think the fugitive might have swum down the nearby canal. ● Two tourists in America's National Parks have learned the hard way that official advice to stay at least 25 yards (23m) from bison is no joke. One man, in an unidentifed park was filming himself approaching a bison behind him for a TikTok video when he realised it had started to charge. He managed to get away. Another man, in Yellowstone, was not so lucky and became the first person this year to be gored by one of the large animals, requiring emergency medical treatment and 80 stitches. Bison weigh up to 2,000lbs (907kg) and can run at up to 35mph (56km/h).
- A bright green and orange light seen over Australia, from Perth to the Goldfields, last Sunday was "one hell of a meteor" according to astronomer Matthew Woods of Perth Observatory. It was likely composed primarily of iron, and searches are underway to see if any of it survived to crash into the Outback. ● A rare sample of rock and dust from the Moon, collected by the Chinese Chang'e 5 mission and returned to Earth in December 2020 has arrived in the UK to be studied. It is hoped it will shed light on the Moon's origins, especially the theory that the Moon consists of rock ejected from the early Earth in a massive impact event with a Mars-sized body, named Theia. ● Calculations by three Dutch scientists suggest that the universe will die much sooner than previously thought. Current estimates are that it will take 101100 years (10 followed by 1,100 '0's) for the last white dwarf stars to evaporate away and the universe reach a final cold stasis or heat death, but the new research suggests a shorter timescale of a mere 1078 years.
- Archaeologists excavating at the site of planned student accomodation in Leuvan, Belgium, have discovered an extremely rare Roman wooden water pipe preserved in low-oxygen marshy soil. ● Excavations in Pompeii, Italy, have revealed the remains of four people, including a child, in a room barricaded with a bed to try to save themselves from the 79 CE eruption of Vesuvius. ● Renovation work in Rome's Piazza San Giovanni has uncovered the remains of a forgotten palace, likely home to the Popes between the 9th and 13th Centuries, before the establishment of the Vatican. ● Archaeologists excavating the site of two Roman-era fortresses at Tel Abu Seifi in North Sinai have discovered a third fortress. ● Archaeologists in Cyprus have rediscovered an ancient statue sanctuary containing over 100 statue bases, the size of which suggests that some of the statues would have been huge. The site was discovered in 1885 but later became covered over by sand and forgotten about. ● A group of British archaeologists studying the leap forward into using bronze for weapons, jewellery and tools in the eastern Mediterrean around 1,300 BCE are claiming to have made a surprising discovery about the materials used. Bronze is an alloy of copper and tin, copper being widely available in the area, but there is no significant regional source of tin. The group performed lead and tin isotope analysis of tin ingots recovered from bronze age shipwrecks off Israel and found that much of the tin was mined in England, specifically Devon and Cornwall, where tin continued to be mined until the late C19th. ● Archaeologists at the Saqqara site in Egypt have discovered an unknown pharaoh's tomb concealed behind a "massive" pink granite false door in another tomb. ● Metal detectorists in southwest Wiltshire have found a rare Anglo-Saxon gold and garnet raven head and a gold band, dating to around the 7th Century. ● The discovery of stone tools and circular structures on the Isle of Skye in Scotland's Inner Hebrides has been hailed as "hugely significant", pushing back the earliest-known occupation of the area.
- Three Chinese men have been arrested on the Japanese island of Amami after hotel staff alerted police to their luggage, which was making "rustling" noises. The suitcases contained "thousands" of hermit crabs, weighing a total of 353lbs (160kg). The crabs are a protected species on the island, and the men were charged with attempting to smuggle them out. ● US Border Patrol agents in Mission, Texas, have arrested two men after an inspection of their car revealed an spider monkey zipped inside a pink bag. The species is endangered. ● Four men have been convicted in Odisha, India, of attempting to smuggle over 400 rare turtles, worth about ₹1,000 (£9; $12) each. ● Gordon Pierce, described by police as a "low-level drug dealer" and addict, was arrested in Kansas last Thursday and charged with stealing a 1794 bronze cannon from its podium in a Wichita park. It is alleged that he owed his meth dealer $20,000 (£15,130) and had been threatened with himself and his family being shot if he did not repay the debt, which he planned to do by selling the metal from the cannon and stolen statues. Pierce had bribed a homeless man with drugs to help him hoist the cannon onto the back of his pickup only for it to fall off while being driven. He then fixed a chain to it and dragged it home using the truck. ● A slow-speed car chase by California Highway Patrol officers in Oakland and Berkeley turned serious after the suspect threw a bag at them out of his window. Another officer discovered that it contained a hand grenade with its pin partially removed. The suspect eventually abandoned his vehicle, was apprehended on foot and faces charges of possession of a stolen vehicle, fleeing police, resisting arrest and possession and transportation of a destructive device. ● Akron resident Victoria Vidal was arrested on Monday after police stopped her car and found her pet raccoon sitting on the passenger seat holding an empty meth pipe in its mouth. She was charged with possession of drugs, three counts of possession of drug paraphernalia and additionally cited for driving under suspension. The Springfield Township Police Department later issued a statement that "No raccoons were hurt or injured in this incident."
- Scientists at the Naturalis Biodiversity Centre in the Netherlands studying caddisfly larvae cases preserved since the 1970s have found 571 cases dating as far back as 1971 which contain microplastics, lead, titanium and zinc, showing that plastic pollution has been an issue for over 50 years. ● Radiation levels in much of the Zone of Obligatory Resettlement around the former Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine, site of the 1986 disaster, have fallen below Ukraine's national safety threshold, suggesting that crops could be grown again in fields there, with proper monitoring and adherence to food safety regulations. ● Seismologists studying the Uturuncu volcano in Bolivia, which last erupted 250,000 years ago, after frequent earthquakes hit the area, the land around it deformed and the cone began ejecting plumes of gas have concluded that it is not likely to erupt. They imaged the magma and gas moving around beneath the volcano - it sits on the largest-known magma body in the Earth's crust - and concluded that the movement is not upwards. ● The supervolcano under Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming has long been considered a potential threat, last erupting more than 70,000 years ago, but new analysis has revealed the presence of a "sharp reflective cap" of magma 2.4 miles (3.8km) below the surface, which acts like a lid trapping pressure and heat below it. The volcano is venting gas through the park's many hydrothermal springs and geysers, so it is, in effect, breathing peacefully. ● Renewable energy sources provided a record 32% of global energy last year, even as electricity demand grew by 4%, according to a report by the Ember think tank. ● Researchers in China have developed a low-cost and energy-efficient way to extract uranium from sea water; it is thought that around 4.5bn tonnes of uranium is in the oceans, more than 1,000 times the amount that is available for mining from the ground. ● Researchers from Los Alamos National Laboratory, the University of Texas at Austin and Type One Energy may have solved a 70-year-old problem with nuclear fusion, long seen as the future of nuclear power. For fusion reactors to work plasma, superheated electrically-charged gas, has to be contained using magnetic fields, but the fields have tiny "holes" which allow particles to escape, causing the reaction to fail. To find and eliminate the "holes" scientists have used perturbation theory, which is fast but critically flawed. The team has instead applied symmetry theory, which requires less computing power, is faster and more accurate. ● The effects of hurricanes in the atmosphere and at the surface of Earth are well-known, but new research has thrown light on their effect under the sea. They have been found to trigger underwater waves which move sediment and organic matter from the litoral zones at coasts to the ocean depths; Hurricane Florian, in 2003, for example, is estimated to have moved an entire year's worth of sediment in two weeks, according to the Oceanix Flux Program, which deployed sediment traps at various depths. As well as having a key role in suppporting marine life sediment movement also plays a significant part in carbon cycling.
IN BRIEF: A record 51,725 playing cards have been toppled like dominoes to set a new world record. The cards were bent slightly to stand on their sides, and put up by a team of domino toppling experts in a special facility designed by Foshan Sunhohi Smart Home Technology Company to prevent even the slightest breeze affecting them. ● A 47-year-old American tourist who climbed onto railings at the Colloseum in Rome to take a photograph slipped and fell, impaling himself for 20 minutes before paramedics and rescuers could reach him. ● A woman in Kentucky was shocked to discover 22 boxes containing 70,000 Dum-Dum lollipops on her doorstep. Her 8-year-old son had ordered them on Amazon while playing with her phone... After the story broke on local news stations she was able to return them and get a refund of the $4,000 (£3,000) cost. ● An NHS blood donation worker has been given a payout of almost £29,000 ($38,300) payout after a Myers-Briggs psychology quiz taken during a team-building exercise compared her to Darth Vader, leading her to resign a month later. ● A Vanderbilt student who fell ill during an overnight research trip in the Blue Springs Cave, Tennessee, had to be rescued from three miles into the cave system. ● When Jack McGowan married his wife Kathryn last week there was a debate about how many bridesmaids she would have, which might have got a little bit out of control. Brides in the UK usually have 3-5 bridesmaids. Kathryn had 95, making up 38% of the guest list... Jack had a mere 8 groomsmen. ● Common sense dictates that an egg dropped on its end is more likely to crack than one dropped on its side, but research by MIT associate professor Tal Cohen, who dropped 180 eggs from three different heights either horizontally- or vertically-orientated, found the reverse is true.
UPDATES: A second F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jet, worth around $67m (£50.7m) has been lost by the USS Harry S. Truman, this time due to a failure to slow the landing aircraft with arrestor wires. Both pilots ejected and were recovered safely by helicopter. It is the third fighter lost in the Red Sea since December, when the USS Gettysburg accidentally shot one down in a friendly fire incident. ● Researchers into the origins of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which caused the COVID pandemic, have found evidence that an ancestor of the virus originated in Western China or Northern Laos and left there several years before it appeared in humans in Wuhan, Central China, suggesting that it travelled up to 1,678 miles (2,700km) in too short a time for natural dispersal by its primary hosts, horseshoe bats, but was spread by the wildlife trade, probably in palm civets or raccoon dogs, not manufactured in a lab and accidentally released as some conspiracy theories supposed. ● The Russian Kosmos 482 Venus probe reentered the atmosphere at 06:24 GMT on Monday over the Indian Ocean west of Jakarta, Indonesia, and is assumed to have fallen into the water. ● Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers have been convicted of two counts of criminal damage, one by cutting down the iconic Sycamore Gap tree and the other for causing damage to Hadrian's Wall after the tree fell on it. They will be sentenced in July.
2025 BAFTA TV Awards
Drama Series: Blue Lights (BBC One); Limited Drama: Mr Bates Vs The Post Office (ITV1); Scripted Comedy: Alma's Not Normal (BBC Two); Soap: Eastenders (BBC One); Reality: The Jury: Murder Trial (Channel 4); Factual Entertainment: Rob and Rylan's Grand Tour (BBC Two); Daytime: Clive Myrie's Caribbean Adventure (BBC Two); Short Form: Quiet Life (BBC Three).
Leading Actress: Marisa Abela, Industry (BBC One); Leading Actor: Lennie James, Mr Loverman (BBC One); Supporting Actress: Jessica Gunning, Baby Reindeer (Netflix); Supporting Actor: Ariyon Bakare, Mr Loverman (BBC One).
Female Performance in a Comedy: Ruth Jones, Gavin & Stacey: The Finale (BBC One); Male Performance in a Comedy: Danny Dyer, Mr Bigstuff (Sky Comedy).
Entertainment Programme: Would I Lie To You? (BBC One); Entertainment Performance: Joe Lycett, Late Night Lycett (Channel 4).
International: Shōgun (Disney+); Live Event Coverage: Glastonbury 2024 (BBC Two); Current Affairs: State of Rage (Channel 4); Single Documentary: Ukraine: Enemy in the Woods (BBC Two); Factual Series: To Catch a Copper (Channel 4); Specialist Factual: Atomic People (BBC 2); News Coverage: BBC Breakfast: Post Office Special (BBC News/BBC One); Sports Coverage: Paris 2024 Olympics (BBC Sport/BBC One).
Children's Scripted: CBeebies' As You Like It at Shakespeare's Globe (CBeebies); Children's Non-Scripted: Disability and Me - FYI Investigates (Sky Kids).
Memorable Moment: Strictly Come Dancing - Chris McCausland and Dianne Buswell Waltz to "You'll Never Walk Alone" (BBC One).
BAFTA Fellowship: Kirsty Wark.
TV screenwriter Steve Pepoon (The Simpsons, co-creator of The Wild Thornberrys, ALF, 68), film & TV director James Foley (Fifty Shades of Grey: Fifty Shades Darker, Twin Peaks, The Chamber, 71), makeup artist Greg Cannom (Mrs Doubtfire, Bram Stoker's Dracula, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, 73), film director & screenwriter Robert Benton (Places in the Heart, Kramer vs Kramer, Bonnie and Clyde, 1985).
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DUMBLEDORE BEAR'S LOTTERY PREDICTOR!
Dumbledore Bear, our in-house psychic predicts that the following numbers will be lucky:18, 22, 35, 40, 51, 53[UK National Lottery, number range 1-59]
You can get your very own prediction at http://www.simonlamont.co.uk/tfir/dumbledore.htm.
Little Jennifer's somewhat haughty grandmother was staying with her family. One morning Little Jennifer came down to breakfast and her grandmother looked down her nose at her. "Little Jennifer," she said, "I hope you've made your bed."
Little Jennifer looked at her and smiled as only she could. "Oh, no, Granny, I think it was already made when Mummy and Daddy bought it!"