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 Message 1 of 5 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameRayne19894  (Original Message)Sent: 4/7/2008 6:23 AM
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    Welcome to all the new members that have joined us  in April. We are so happy that you have chosen to  be a part of the group. If you have any questions please ask, either management or one of the great members here will be happy to assist you. Please remember to  post once a month.

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    Reply
     Message 2 of 5 in Discussion 
    From: MSN NicknamecindyeditorSent: 4/8/2008 10:10 PM

    May Holidays & Observance
     
    The month of May is:
    Asian Pacific American Heritage Month
    Asian Pacific American Heritage Council: www.apaha.org
    On May 7, 1990, President George Bush signed a proclamation declaring May to be Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, recognizing the first Japanese immigrants arriving in the United States on May 7, 1843.
    Better Hearing and Speech Month
    Better Sleep Month
    Egg Month (National)
    Source: American Egg Board www.aeb.org
    Historic Preservation Month (National, US)
    Source: www.nationaltrust.org
    Huntington's Disease Awareness Month
    Mental Health Awareness Month
    Military Appreciation Month (National)
    Source: www.nmam.org
    Neurofibromatosis Awareness Month (World)
    www.ctf.org
    Older Americans Month
    Source: AOA - Administration on Aging Web site: www.aoa.gov/press/oam/oam.asp
    Physical Fitness & Sports Month (National, US)
    www.fitness.gov/may_month_observances.html
    Teacher Appreciation Month
    National Teacher Day is always the Tuesday of the first full week of May. Source:  National Education Association Web site: www.nea.org/teacherday
    Tennis Month (US National)
    United States Tennis Association: www.usta.com
    Trauma Awareness Month (National)
     
    Top - Page Directory
    Weekly Observances - May
     
    First Week of May - Observances:
     
    Astronomy Week - May 5 - 11, 2008
    "Astronomy Day occurs sometime between mid April and mid May on a Saturday near or before the 1st quarter Moon. Astronomy Week starts the Monday preceding Astronomy Day and ends the following Sunday. Astronomy Week was created to give sponsoring organizations a longer period of time to host special events." Source: www.astroleague.org/al/astroday/astroday.html
    Health Care Administrator's Week
    Be Kind to Animals Week
    www.americanhumane.org.
    Safe Kids Week (National)
    National Safe Drinking Water Week
    "National Drinking Water Week is a good time to focus attention on safe drinking water and state and federal efforts to conserve and protect water resources."  Source:  The Water Quality Association: www.wqa.org/sitelogic.cfm?ID=1136
    EPA - Safe Water: www.epa.gov/safewater/
    Public Service Recognition Week, celebrated the first Monday through Sunday in May since 1985 and honors the men and women who serve America as federal, state and local government employees.
    Source: www.excelgov.org and www.opm.gov/psrw
    Suicide Awareness Week (National) - Has been moved from May to September in 2004
    Source: www.suicidology.org
    Teacher Appreciation Week (National, US)
    A time for honoring teachers and recognizing the lasting contributions they make to our lives. National Teacher Day is always the Tuesday of the first full week of May, so the actual date varies from year to year. That whole week is designated Teacher Appreciation Week by the National PTA.  It's a time to strengthen support and respect for teachers and the teaching profession. The history of Teacher Day goes back to 1944."  Source:  National Education Association Web site: www.nea.org/teachday
    Volunteer Week (US National) April 27 - May 3, 2008
     Source: http://volunteer.gov/gov/INDEX.CFM; also www.pointsoflight.org/programs/seasons/nvw/.
     
    Second Week of May - Observances:
    Alcohol and Other Drug-Related Birth Defects Awareness Week
    Sponsored By: National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (NCADD)
    NCADD Web Site: www.ncadd.org
    Gamblers Week
    You can send a postcard to your favorite gambler! www2.postcards.org/postcards/cards/0251/
    Nurses Week (National, US)
    National Nurses Week is always observed May 6th thru May 12th (Florence Nightingale's birthday.)  The dates are the same every year.  Source:  www.nursingworld.org/pressrel/nnw/nnwhist.htm
    Nursing Home Week (National, US)
    The first annual National Nursing Home Week was in 1967. It always begins on Mother’s Day.  Source: www.ahca.org
    North American Occupational Safety & Health Week
    Coordinated through the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE), which consists of 30,000 members world-wide dedicated to protecting people, property, and the environment. Information can be found at www.asse.org
    Police Week (National)
    "May 15 has been National Peace Officers Memorial Day, and the week containing May 15 has been National Police Week, since President John F. Kennedy signed Public Law 87-726 on October 1, 1962."  Source: www.nationalcops.org/npw.htm and www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/05/20020510-9.html
    Stuttering Awareness Week (National)
    "In May 1988, the U.S. Congress passed a Joint Resolution designating the second week of May as National Stuttering Awareness Week."  Source:  Stuttering Foundation of America Web site:  www.stutteringhelp.org
     
    Third Week of May - Observances:
     
    American Craft Beer Week - Third week in May
    Source: www.americanbeermonth.com
    Emergency Medical Services Week (National, US)
    Hospital Week (National)
    www.medinfosource.com/resource/healthobserve.html
    Safe Boating Week (National, US)
    www.safeboatingcampaign.com
     
    Fourth Week of May - Observances:
     
    Pickle Week (International)
    First celebrated in 1948, International Pickle Week spans two full weekends and includes the traditional start of the summer season, Memorial Day weekend.  Source:  www.mtolivepickles.com/News/Event05.html
     
    Other May Observances: (Dates To Be Verified):
     
    Etiquette Week (National, US)
    Historic Preservation Week (National, US)
    Pet Week (National, US)
    Wildflower Week (National, US)
     
     

     

    Reply
     Message 3 of 5 in Discussion 
    From: MSN NicknamecindyeditorSent: 4/8/2008 10:26 PM

    Mothers Day

    A Salute To Mothers

    "Mothering Sunday" in the UK and Ireland on the fourth Sunday of Lent. It was originally a time when Catholics were supposed to travel to attend Mass in their "Mother Church" (the regional cathedral) rather than in their local parish. By the Reformation, it had changed into an occasion for children to visit parents. An 1854 source mentions a couplet: "On 'Mothering Sunday,' above all other/Every child should dine with its mother."[1]
    "Mother's Day Work Clubs" organized by Anna Jarvis's mother, Ann Maria Reeves Jarvis (1864-1948), to improve sanitation and health in the area. These clubs also assisted both Union and Confederate encampments in controlling a typhoid outbreak, and conducted a "Mothers' Friendship Day" to reconcile families divided by the Civil War.[2]
    The "Mother's Day" anti-war observances founded by Julia Ward Howe in 1872[3]

    [edit] Howe's "Mother's Day"
    Julia Ward Howe is sometimes claimed as the "founder of Mother's Day," implying that Julia Ward Howe's June 2nd occasion and Anna Jarvis' second-Sunday-in-May event are the same thing. It is even suggested that an anti-war and feminist holiday was co-opted by the forces of sentimentality, tradition, and Hallmark Cards.[4] But although Mother's Day was celebrated in eighteen cities in 1873, it did not take root. It continued in Boston for about ten years under Howe's personal financial sponsorship, then died out.[5]
    Julia Ward Howe's Mother's Day, celebrated on June 2nd, was first proclaimed around 1870 by Julia Ward Howe's Mother's Day Proclamation, and Howe called for it to be observed each year nationally in 1872. As originally envisioned, Howe's "Mother's Day" was a call for pacifism and disarmament by women. The original Mother's Day Proclamation was as follows [1]:
    Arise then...women of this day!
    Arise, all women who have hearts!
    Whether your baptism be of water or of tears!
    Say firmly:
    "We will not have questions answered by irrelevant agencies,
    Our husbands will not come to us, reeking with carnage,
    For caresses and applause.
    Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn
    All that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.
    We, the women of one country,
    Will be too tender of those of another country
    To allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs."
    From the voice of a devastated Earth a voice goes up with
    Our own. It says: "Disarm! Disarm!
    The sword of murder is not the balance of justice."
    Blood does not wipe our dishonor,
    Nor violence indicate possession.
    As men have often forsaken the plough and the anvil
    At the summons of war,
    Let women now leave all that may be left of home
    For a great and earnest day of counsel.
    Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead.
    Let them solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means
    Whereby the great human family can live in peace...
    Each bearing after his own time the sacred impress, not of Caesar,
    But of God -
    In the name of womanhood and humanity, I earnestly ask
    That a general congress of women without limit of nationality,
    May be appointed and held at someplace deemed most convenient
    And the earliest period consistent with its objects,
    To promote the alliance of the different nationalities,
    The amicable settlement of international questions,
    The great and general interests of peace.
    Early "Mother's Day" was mostly marked by women's peace groups. A common early activity was the meeting of groups of mothers whose sons had fought or died on opposite sides of the American Civil War.
    The first known observance of Mother's Day in the U.S. occurred in Albion, Michigan, on May 13, 1877 [2], the second Sunday of the month. According to local legend, Albion pioneer, Juliet Calhoun Blakeley, stepped up to complete the sermon of the Rev. Myron Daughterty, who was distraught because an anti-temperance group had forced his son and two other temperance advocates to spend the night in a saloon and become publicly drunk. In the pulpit, Blakeley called on other mothers to join her. Blakeley's two sons, both travelling salesmen, were so moved that they vowed to return each year to pay tribute to her and embarked on a campaign to urge their business contacts to do likewise. At their urging, in the early 1880s, the Methodist Episcopal Church in Albion set aside the second Sunday in May to recognize the special contributions of mothers.
    On February 4, 1904, South Bend, Indiana resident Frank E. Hering made the first Public Plea and started his own campaign for a national observance of "Mother's Day" in Indianapolis, Indiana.

    [edit] Jarvis's "Mother's Day"
    In 1907, Mother's Day was first celebrated in a small, private way by Anna Jarvis in Grafton, West Virginia, to commemorate the anniversary of her mother's death two years earlier on May 9, 1905. Jarvis's mother, named Ann Jarvis, had been active in Mother's Day campaigns for peace and worker's safety and health since end of American Civil War. The younger Jarvis launched a quest to get wider recognition of Mother's Day. The celebration organized by Jarvis on May 10, 1908 involved 407 children with their mothers at the Andrew's Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton (this church is now the International Mother's Day Shrine). Grafton is, thus, the place recognized as the birthplace of Mother's Day.
    The subsequent campaign to recognize Mother's Day was financed by Philadelphia clothing merchant John Wanamaker. As the custom of Mother's Day spread, the emphasis shifted from the pacifism and reform movements to a general appreciation of mothers. The first official recognition of the holiday was by West Virginia in 1910. A proclamation designating the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day was signed by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson on May 14, 1914.
     


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    Reply
     Message 4 of 5 in Discussion 
    From: MSN NicknamecindyeditorSent: 4/9/2008 12:25 AM
     

    The Funnies

     CONCERNS FOR BABY BOOMERS...
    Then & Now
    Submitted by SLgraber

    Then: Long hair.
    Now: Longing for hair.
    Then: Keg
    Now: EKG.
    Then: Acid rock
    Now: Acid reflux.
    Then: Moving to California because it's cool.
    Now: Moving to California because it's warm.
    Then: You're growing pot.
    Now: You're growing a pot.
    Then: Watching John Glenn's historic flight with your parents.
    Now: Watching John Glenn's historic flight with your kids.
    Then: Trying to look like Marlon Brando or Elizabeth Taylor.
    Now: Trying not to look like Marlon Brando or Elizabeth Taylor.
    Then: Seeds and stems.
    Now: Roughage.
    Then: Popping pills, smoking joints.
    Now: Popping joints.
    Then: Our president's struggle with Fidel.
    Now: Our president's struggle with fidelity.
    Then: Paar.
    Now: AARP.
    Then: Being caught with Hustler magazine.
    Now: Being caught by Hustler magazine.
    Then: Killer weed.
    Now: Weed killer.
    Then: Hoping for a BMW.
    Now: Hoping for a BM.
    Then: The Grateful Dead.
    Now: Dr. Kevorkian.
    Then: Getting out to a new, hip joint.
    Now: Getting a new hip joint.
    ~~~~~


     

     


    Reply
     Message 5 of 5 in Discussion 
    From: MSN NicknamecindyeditorSent: 4/9/2008 12:41 AM
    ~~~~~
    I refuse to think of them as chin hairs. I think of them as stray eyebrows. -- Janette Barber
    ~~~~~
    "Inside every older person is a younger person...
    wondering what the hell happened."
     
     
      

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