Shavuot begins at sundown on this day. Called the Feast of the Weeks in the Jewish calendar, Shavuot is a two-day holiday that was originally a harvest festival. It’s also a thanksgiving day to commemorate the Giving of the Law, the Torah, recalling when Moses and the Israelites received the Ten Commandments from God at Mount Sinai. Shavuot, which means weeks, always begins exactly seven weeks after Passover. Shavuot is known also as Yom Habikkurim, or βThe Day of the First Fruits,β because Israel’s farmers would bring a bundle from their first harvest to the temple in Jerusalem as a token of thanksgiving to God. Spring harvests in Israel began with the barley crop at Passover. Each farmer would set aside the first of each type of fruit to ripen, tie it in ribbon, and all would be brought to the city, accompanied by a joyful, musical celebration.
Question of the Day
Why do people say βGeronimo!β when they jump out of airplanes?
Geronimo, an Apache leader who lived from 1829 to 1909, was known for the raids he led throughout the Southwest in resistance to his people being forced onto reservations. In a tribute to his reputation as a fearless warrior, American military parachute troops adopted his name as their battle cry as they jumped from airplanes.
Advice of the Day
Footprints on the sands of time are not made by sitting down.
Home Hint of the Day
Whenever possible, pick flowers in the late afternoon. They have a greater sugar content then and will last longer than ones picked earlier in the day.
Word of the Day
Cryophobia
Fear of extreme cold, frost, or ice
Puzzle of the Day
The numerical state(s). (Abbreviations of U.S. states)
MI (1,001 in Roman numerals), Tenn (10), and MD (1,500 in Roman numerals).
Born
Joseph Warren(U.S. patriot)β
Richard Strauss(German composer)β
Jacques-Yves Cousteau(marine explorer)β
Vince Lombardi(football coach)β
Peter Bergman(actor)β
Joe Montana(football player)β
Hugh Laurie(actor)β
Peter Dinklage(actor)β
Joshua Jackson(actor)β
Ashley Lawrence(soccer player)β
Died
John Wayne(actor)β
Karen Quinlan,(Coma patient. In a pioneering Right to Die case her parents fought to remove her from a respirator after she lapsed into a persistent vegetative state from ingesting tranquilizers and alcohol, after the respirator was removed she lived for many more years before passing away)β
DeForest Kelley(actor)β
David Brinkley(reporter and commentator whose NBC broadcasts from 1956-70 helped define and popularize television news in America. Brinkley hosted one of the earliest television news magazines, David Brinkley’s Journal, in the early 1960s)β
Events
King Henry VIII of England and Katherine of Aragon were marriedβ
Benjamin Franklin invented the Franklin stoveβ
Broad Street Riot, Boston, Massachusettsβ
Sir Barton won triple crownβ
Johnny Vander Meer of the Cincinnati Reds pitched his first no-hit, no-run professional baseball gameβ
Weather
A storm washed away 300 feet of Meigg’s Wharf in San Franciscoβ
Los Angeles climaxed a four-day heat wave with a temperature of 112 degrees Fβ
Phoenix, Arizona, had 1.64 inches of rain, a June recordβ
Hailstones as big as baseballs fell from Colorado Springs to Estes Park, Colorado, injuring 60 and causing $625 million in damage.β
Tornado killed 4 Boy Scouts at Little Sioux Scout Ranch camp in western Iowa, which occupies 1,800 acres. Three boys were 13 and one 14 years old. Scouts were there for a leadership training course. 48 scouts and staff were injured. Tornado struck about 6:30 p.m. 27 more tornadoes touched down in Kansas, Minnesota and Nebraska. Those tornadoes killed at least two people in northern Kansas, and destroyed much of the small town of Chapman. At Kansas State University campus in Manhattan, a tornado destroyed a wind erosion lab, damaged several engineering and science buildings, and tore the roof off a fraternity house.β