Monday, December 22, 2014

Fwd: Monday December 22, 2014: Reference.com On This Day


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Reference.com On This Day <thisday@reference.com>
Date: Mon, Dec 22, 2014 at 3:00 AM
Subject: Monday December 22, 2014: Reference.com On This Day
To: "Hector William G." <hectorpinillos@gmail.com>


Reference.com On This DayReference.com On This Day
Reference.com On This Day
powered byad choices

On This Day:
Monday December 22, 2014

This is the 356th day of the year, with 9 days remaining in 2014.

Fact of the Day: flames

Flames come in all colors. A wood fire in a fireplace is yellow, orange, red, white, and blue. The colors in a flame depend on two things: the temperature of the fire and what material is being burned. After reaching orange-red, a hotter fire would become yellow, then white, then blue -- the hottest of all. Fire needs oxygen and undergoes oxidation. When a candle is burning, the middle of the flame, near the bottom, isn't getting much oxygen so it looks darker. The outside the top of flame are getting lots of air and the flame burns brightly there. The tiny pieces of carbon that fly up from the burning wax are hotter -- more than 2500 degrees Fahrenheit. So instead of glowing red, they glow yellow. Near the burning wick, the flame is blue -- because it's even hotter there. A wood fire burns at a lower temperature than a candle, so it is usually more orange than yellow. Other colors in a fire come from the different chemical elements in the burning wood.

Holidays

Feast day of St. Flavian of Tuscany, St. Zeno, St. Chaeremon and Others, and St. Ischyrion.
Japan: Toji or Winter Solstice.

Events

1775 - The Continental Navy was organized in the American colonies under the command of Ezek Hopkins.
1807 - Congress passed the Embargo Act, designed to force peace between Britain and France and keep the United States out of their war by cutting off all trade with Europe.
1894 - French army officer Alfred Dreyfus was convicted of treason in a court-martial that triggered worldwide charges of anti-Semitism. He was sent to Devil's Island but was later vindicated.
1894 - The United States Golf Association (USGA) was founded.
1895 - German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen made the first X-ray.
1938 - The first coelacanth to be identified was caught in the Bay of Chalumna off South Africa. The fish, thought extinct for 50 million years, was later named Latimeria-Chalumnae.
1944 - During the Battle of the Bulge, General Anthony McAuliffe responded to a German surrender request with a one word answer: "Nuts!"
1956 - The first gorilla was born in captivity, "Colo" in Columbus Ohio.
1961 - James Davis became the first U.S. soldier to die in Vietnam.
1989 - Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausçescu was overthrown in a revolutionary coup.
2001 - Richard C. Reid, a passenger on a flight from Paris to Miami, tried to ignite explosives in his shoes, but was subdued by flight attendants and fellow passengers.

Births

1858 - Giacomo Puccini, Italian musician, opera composer.
1862 - Connie Mack (McGillicuddy), American baseball star.
1945 - Diane Sawyer, American television journalist.
1949 - Maurice Gibb, English musician and a member of the Bee Gees.

Deaths

1880 - George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans), English Victorian novelist.
1943 - Beatrix Potter, English author and artist who created the character Peter Rabbit.
1989 - Samuel Beckett, Irish author and playwright, recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1969.
2002 - Joe Strummer, lead singer of the British punk band The Clash.

Reference.com On This Day
powered byad choices

Reference.com On This Day
http://www.reference.com/thisday/
You are currently subscribed to
Reference.com On This Day
as: hectorpinillos@gmail.com
UnsubscribeTo subscribe to the list by email,
send a blank message to:
join-thisday@lists.lexico.com
©2014 by Dictionary.com, LLC.
555 12th Street
Suite 500
Oakland CA 94607
Subscriptions to On This Day
can be turned on and off via the Web at
http://www.reference.com/thisday/list/
  Tell a friend about On This Day!



--

No comments:

Post a Comment