ON THIS DAY: July 10, 2018

July 10th is

Clerihew Day! *

Nicola Tesla Day *

Teddy Bear Picnic Day

National Piña Colada Day

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MORE!  Eva Ekeblad, Nicola Tesla and Edith Quimby, click

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ON THIS DAY: July 9, 2018

July 9th is:

Intern Appreciation Day

National Sugar Cookie Day

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MORE! Ann Radcliffe, Respighi and June Jordan, click

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TCS: Inferno

Good Morning

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Welcome to The Coffee Shop, just for you early risers on Monday mornings.
This is an Open Thread forum, so if you have an off-topic opinion burning
a hole in your brainpan, feel free to add a comment.

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I am the way into the city of woe,
I am the way into eternal pain,
I am the way to go among the lost.

― Dante Alighieri, Inferno

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ON THIS DAY: July 8, 2018

July 8th is

Carver Day *

Chocolate with Almonds Day

National Blueberry Day *

Video Game Day

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MORE! Arthur Evans, Ruby Sales and Jonathan Daniels, click

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ON THIS DAY: July 7, 2018

July 7th is:

World Chocolate Day *

Strawberry Sundae Day

Tell the Truth Day

Father-Daughter Take a Walk Day

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MORE! Gustav Mahler, Nettie Stevens and Satchel Paige, click

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Nuclear Power, Japan, and Korea

By Terry Welshans

By the mid-1930s most nations with an interest in such things, were trying to understand how nuclear energy worked. Physicists in Germany, Denmark, Hungary, Japan, England, and the United States were writing and reading scientific papers on the subject, learning from one another.

Atomic bomb at Nagasaki, Japan (Wikipedia)

As you can imagine, this is a very complex subject. Some were doing better than others, and some were just starting to understand the basics. No one had considered using this new source of power as a weapon. That was about to change.

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APOLOGY

Apology for Her

by Emily Dickinson

Apology for Her
Be rendered by the Bee—
Herself, without a Parliament
Apology for Me. 

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Apologies Dear Readers for the missing Word Cloud post.

Word Cloud will return at the usual time next week.

 

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ON THIS DAY: July 6, 2018

July 6th is

National Dollar Day *

National Fried Chicken Day

International Kissing Day

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MORE! Jan Hus, Molly Yard and the Dalai Lama, click

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ON THIS DAY: July 5, 2018

July 5th is

Apple Turnover Day

Bikini Day *

Graham Cracker Day

Workaholics Day

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MORE! Isaac Newton, Clara Zetkin and Ray Charles, click

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A Poem for the 4th of July

Immigrants in Our Own Land

by Jimmy Santiago Baca

We are born with dreams in our hearts,
looking for better days ahead.
At the gates we are given new papers,
our old clothes are taken
and we are given overalls like mechanics wear.
We are given shots and doctors ask questions.
Then we gather in another room
where counselors orient us to the new land
we will now live in. We take tests.
Some of us were craftsmen in the old world,
good with our hands and proud of our work.
Others were good with their heads.
They used common sense like scholars
use glasses and books to reach the world.
But most of us didn’t finish high school.

The old men who have lived here stare at us,
from deep disturbed eyes, sulking, retreated.
We pass them as they stand around idle,
leaning on shovels and rakes or against walls.
Our expectations are high: in the old world,
they talked about rehabilitation,
about being able to finish school,
and learning an extra good trade.
But right away we are sent to work as dishwashers,
to work in fields for three cents an hour.
The administration says this is temporary
So we go about our business, blacks with blacks,
poor whites with poor whites,
chicanos and indians by themselves.
The administration says this is right,
no mixing of cultures, let them stay apart,
like in the old neighborhoods we came from.

We came here to get away from false promises,
from dictators in our neighborhoods,
who wore blue suits and broke our doors down
when they wanted, arrested us when they felt like,
swinging clubs and shooting guns as they pleased.
But it’s no different here. It’s all concentrated.
The doctors don’t care, our bodies decay,
our minds deteriorate, we learn nothing of value.
Our lives don’t get better, we go down quick.

My cell is crisscrossed with laundry lines,
my T-shirts, boxer shorts, socks and pants are drying.
Just like it used to be in my neighborhood:
from all the tenements laundry hung window to window.
Across the way Joey is sticking his hands
through the bars to hand Felipé a cigarette,
men are hollering back and forth cell to cell,
saying their sinks don’t work,
or somebody downstairs hollers angrily
about a toilet overflowing,
or that the heaters don’t work.

I ask Coyote next door to shoot me over
a little more soap to finish my laundry.
I look down and see new immigrants coming in,
mattresses rolled up and on their shoulders,
new haircuts and brogan boots,
looking around, each with a dream in their heart,
thinking they’ll get a chance to change their lives.

But in the end, some will just sit around
talking about how good the old world was.
Some of the younger ones will become gangsters.
Some will die and others will go on living
without a soul, a future, or a reason to live.
Some will make it out of here with hate in their eyes,
but so very few make it out of here as human
as they came in, they leave wondering what good they are now
as they look at their hands so long away from their tools,
as they look at themselves, so long gone from their families,
so long gone from life itself, so many things have changed.


“Immigrants in Our Own Land” from Immigrants in Our Own Land, © 1977, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1990 by Jimmy Santiago Baca – New Directions Publishing

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