Showing posts with label ALS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ALS. Show all posts

June 19 - Juneteenth

 Posted on June 19, 2021

This is an update of my post published on June 19, 2010:


Juneteenth is sometimes called Freedom Day or Emancipation Day. This holiday honors African American heritage, and it commemorates the announcement of the abolition of slavery in Texas on June 19, 1865. 

When I first wrote about Juneteenth, in 2010, 36 states celebrated it as a state holiday. Now it is a federal holiday!



By the way, the term Juneteenth is an example of a portmanteau, which is a combination of two words, in this case June and nineteenth, to create a new word.

The words brunch and smog are two more examples of portmanteaus. Do you know what words they combine?


ANSWER: Brunch is a combination of the words breakfast and lunchSmog is a mash-up of smoke and fog.

For more on Juneteenth, check out last year's post.


ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Happy Birthday, Lou Gehrig

Born on this day in 1903, in New York City, Gehrig was an awkward athlete as a youth. However, he worked hard and constantly practiced baseball—and he became a star! From 1925 to 1939, Gehrig played in every single Yankee game, which was a record 2,130 games in a row.

Unfortunately, Gehrig came down with a rare disease that forced him to retire and that took his life just two years later. That disease is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called ALS—and sometimes called Lou Gehrig's disease. One of the best known recent folks with ALS is the famous physicist Stephen Hawking, who died at age 76 after living with ALS more than 50 years!!


Also on this date:

January 8 – Happy Birthday, Stephen Hawking

Posted on January 8, 2016

Stephen Hawking is the most famous living physicist today. Actually, some claim he is the most famous living scientist!

He has a brilliant mind, and he has contributed to our understanding of gravity, general relativity, black holes, and quantum mechanics.

He has famously battled amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), which has gradually paralyzed his body and required the use of a wheelchair and an electronic voice.

He has appeared on Star Trek, The Big Bang Theory, and Futurama, and he has granted the use of his recognizable (and copyrighted!) synthesized voice for a Pink Floyd song, an episode of The Simpsons, and a major motion picture about Hawking's life!

(By the way, Hawking's synthesized voice is American, despite the fact that Hawking is British.)

Hawking was free of his wheelchair--
and gravity!--briefly, on the "Vomit Comet."
Hawking has won tons of honors from the scientific community but also from such non-science sources as the British Royal Society of Arts, the Presidential Medal of Freedom from the United States, and the Prince of Asturias Award from Spain. His book A Brief History of Time was on the best-seller list for a record-breaking 237 weeks in Britain. (Compute that – it was on the best-seller list for more than FOUR and a HALF YEARS!)

Hawking has been married twice and has had three kids, now grown.



To celebrate Hawking's birthday (he was born on this date in 1942), check out some of the great moments of what I like to call Stephen Hawking TV:

Even better, read one of his books!








Also on this date:



























Bubble Bath Day








Argyle Day








Plan ahead:

Check out my Pinterest pages on:
And here are my Pinterest boards for:


June 19, 2010

Juneteenth—United States

Juneteenth is sometimes called Freedom Day or Emancipation Day. This holiday honors African American heritage, and it commemorates the announcement of the abolition of slavery in Texas on June 19, 1865. It is celebrated by more than just Texas—36 states call it a state holiday.

By the way, the term Juneteenth is an example of a portmanteau, which is a combination of two words, in this case June and nineteenth, to create a new word.

The words brunch and smog are two more examples of portmanteaus. Do you know what words they combine?

ANSWER: Brunch is a combination of the words breakfast and lunch. Smog is a mash-up of smoke and fog.


ALSO ON THIS DATE:

Happy Birthday, Lou Gehrig

Born on this day in 1903, in New York City, Gehrig was an awkward athlete as a youth. However, he worked hard and constantly practiced baseball—and he became a star! From 1925 to 1939, Gehrig played in every single Yankee game, which was a record 2,130 games in a row.

Unfortunately, Gehrig came down with a rare disease that forced him to retire and that took his life just two years later. That disease is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also called ALS—and sometimes called Lou Gehrig's disease. The best known living ALS patient is the famous physicist Stephen Hawking.

I am busy making every day special by taking a trip through California, Oregon, and Washington.

The daily posts will be minimal during my trip. Happy summer to everyone in the Northern Hemisphere!