Monday, October 31, 2016

Forget Spooky Specters

For Halloween fun today, let's forget the spooky specters of elections (and other possibly scary happenings ... like too many calories) and their agitating aftermath.
For one day, okay?  Just a fast thought.

Google defines specter: "something widely feared as a possible unpleasant or dangerous occurrence.  Synonyms: threat, menace, shadow, cloud"
Not just for Halloween, vocabulary.com offers this spooky definition: "A specter means a ghostly apparition, a ghost itself, or simply an idea that people find frightening."





To put things in perspective, Sister Wallace and her companion got creative and carved The Plan ...:


Our daughter emailed us from her mission in Atlanta eleven years ago:
"What are you doing for Halloween?  ...  Are you going to watch scary movies and eat candy?  I have very good memories from my childhood for this time of year.  It just reminds me of how fortunate I have been in my life. Thank you ...  My companion and I are doing pretty good about the sweets ... and I'm running almost every morning.  It feels good."
  
Here's wishing you Happy Holidays, and a little healthy fast food!

Thursday, October 20, 2016

Quotes on Sixth Anniversary

While eating my jam sandwich at the nursery, I realized today is this blog's sixth anniversary!
I quote from "Words:"

"Wednesday, October 20, 2010
...
Sensing that many other readers are pressed for time, or may not be intensely interested in my shared journal, I decided to blog with "language fast food."  Words can get in the way of human progress, as well as inspire great achievement.
...
Thank you for your interest.
Wishing you success and happiness,
and a little healthy fast food."

Printing office in Nauvoo, Illinois 7/20/2016

Here's a quote related to the above photo I took on our family trip:

"In Nauvoo, [George Q.] Cannon's father sent him to live with his uncle and aunt, John and Leonora Taylor. Cannon worked in the printing office of Times and Seasons and the Nauvoo Neighbor for Taylor, who was an editor of both periodicals. In June 1844, Taylor accompanied Joseph Smith, Hyrum Smith, and Willard Richards and others to Carthage Jail. There, Joseph and Hyrum were killed, and Taylor sustained serious bullet wounds. Cannon tended the printing affairs while Taylor recovered. This training would serve him well in later life."
– en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Q._Cannon

Now on a timely T from Kay's HS English Department:


Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Pursuing Trivia

This is not about Trivial Pursuit, “the original trivia game that started it all.  …  Players roll a die and move along the track in any direction they like. When a player stops on a color[,] they get a question …” (boardgamegeek.com)
Our family used to play it as one of many board games we’ve owned.

By the way, here’s a current version I was not aware of:
Star Trek 50th Anniversary Trivial Pursuit board game.  This collector's edition game features 1200 questions about all 5 Star Trek television series and the first 10 Star Trek movies spanning over 50 years with a collectible Galileo 01 Enterprise Shuttlecraft to store the cards, plus custom die.”  (30 bucks at shop.startrek.com)
Reminds me of my first year at the University of Utah, where I observed students watching "Star Trek" on TVs in the "study" hall.  I sometimes wondered how they could do that while focusing on their books.

Of course it’s about language, so I searched “language trivia” and instantly found this:
http://edl.ecml.at/LanguageFun/LanguageQuiz
["European Day of Languages" is 26 September; (sorry I missed it.)]
"To celebrate the European Day of Languages, we suggest a quiz to give you the chance to test your knowledge about the languages of our continent.
...
Miscellaneous - Question #1
Question: Who was the founder of Esperanto?
Ferdinand de Saussure
J. R. R. Tolkien
Naom Chomsky
Ludwig Lazarus Zamenhof           

[Clicked:] Language Trivia
[For years, my younger sister taught Russian in high school, so I clicked Russian.]
Did you know this about Russian?
01 Russian is one of the six official languages of the United Nations, and is the native language of 142 million citizens of the Russian Federation, the world's largest country. It is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia and the most widely spoken Slavic language.
02 Besides Russian, there are 160 ethnic groups speaking about 100 different languages in Russia.
03 The Russian alphabet, known as Cyrillic, goes back to the ninth century. Its most ancient version was devised by two Greek missionaries – brothers Cyril and Methodius, both outstanding scholars and linguists. The alphabet assumed its modern shape in the 17th century under Peter the Great, while the written Russian of today was introduced by the Soviet government in 1918. The reform didn’t just simplify the writing but symbolised a break with the Tsarist past.  [In USA we spell it symbolized.]
04 Russia’s Cyrillic alphabet contains 33 letters, 2 of which have no sound on their own, but they carry grammatical meaning and are still considered letters.  ...
05 Over a quarter of the world's scientific literature is published in Russian. Russian is also applied as a means of coding and storage of universal knowledge—60–70% of all world information is published in the English and Russian languages.
06 Unearthed in 2000, the Novgorod Codex is considered to be the most ancient Russian book which dates back to the beginning of the 11th century. The wooden book with four wax pages was used for a few decades to record psalms and other religious texts.
...
08 "Bistro" a small restaurant or cafĂ© could have originated from the Russian "bystro", meaning "quick" or "rapidly". The word may have been loaned when the Russian Cossacks occupied Paris in 1814, at the end of the Napoleon war. Russian Cossacks, who wanted to be served quickly, would shout "bystro". The French, supposedly, picked it up and adopted it as a name for their small restaurants with robust earthy dishes that later on conquered the world.  ...
09 Russian names generally consist of three parts: the first or given name, the patronymic, and the last or family name.  ...
10 The Russian Language Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (since 1944) was established as a research center for Russian language and Russian literature ..."
(edl.ecml.at/LanguageFun/LanguageQuiz)

As many of us know, it’s easy to play and engage in an endless pursuit of trivia, but we don’t do that.  Too much work to do … amid so many fascinating facts to learn.







Sunday, October 2, 2016

Experience I will not forget!

Today Kay and I enjoyed hearing on the radio all the speakers in final sessions of General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  One of my favorite talks was by Elder Ronald A. Rasband of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles: “Lest Thou Forget.”  He said the topic was prompted by “a meeting with a dear friend who was experiencing a ‘crisis of faith’ … ‘I would like to share with you the counsel I would offer to my friend and hope that each of you may find your faith strengthened and your resolve renewed to be a committed disciple of Jesus Christ.  … do not forget Heavenly Father knows and loves each of you and He is always ready to help.’  Elder Rasband counseled members to never forget, question, or ignore personal spiritual experiences.”
– deseretnews.com/article/865663844/... by Rachel Sterzer, LDS Church News.

Several such experiences come to mind, including one from about 1979, when our family camped with Kay’s siblings and their families at Little Sahara Sand Dunes, Utah.  Her older brother rented a dune buggy for all to use, and we had my dad’s “original AAA Springbar Tent” for our three little boys and us.  It was a rough night with the youngest crying (Kay being such a patient mom,) followed by a fun day on the dunes.

“Little Sahara is approximately 115 miles [southwest] from Salt Lake City via Nephi.  ...  nearly 60,000 acres of dunes, trail and sagebrush flats ...  [by Jericho.]
Sand Mountain: A wall of sand climbing nearly 700 feet high provides the ultimate challenge to rider and machine.”  – utah.com/little-sahara-sand-dunes

I will not forget this “mountaintop experience” as I call it.  Being an early riser by habit, I was up before sunrise while the family slept.  I hiked up the highest dune nearby and followed the ridge away from the campground.  Customary for such hikes, I had in my shirt pocket a few pages of scripture to read at the top.  As the sun rose, I sat and read the first four chapters of Mosiah from the Book of Mormon: Another Testament of Jesus Christ.  In that cool, quiet spot, feeling joy and love for my Savior, I felt the Spirit warmly witness that those words are true, and that I should always remember what I undeniably experienced.

(Mosiah 3:13) "And the Lord God hath sent his holy prophets among all the children of men, to declare these things to every kindred, nation, and tongue, that thereby whosoever should believe that Christ should come, the same might receive remission of their sins, and rejoice with exceedingly great joy, even as though he had already come among them."

Hiking and jumping down the dune hill, I forgot the tough night experience for the rest of the day.  Breakfast helped, of course, and our activities with the children.  Family fun in the sun!

Little Sahara Sand Dunes image courtesy Utah.com

Little Sahara Sand Dunes image courtesy Google Maps