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Wednesday, November 1, 2006


11/1/06
Ok, last night as I always do, I listen to 700 WLW And Scott Sloan had a psychic on the show. Now, they were contacting fonder Powell Crosley (former owner of the Reds). Now, when the pyshic was talking with Mr. Crosley, there were some weird radio broadcast signals coming in. Now, if you know a lot about radio broadcasts. You would know that other smaller signals get into the radio. But, the same broadcast doesn't interfere with Alabama and Ohio. It was a WWII news broadcast, or at least it sounded like it. This was reported almost the entire time the psychic was on. Now this didn't happen during the commercials and current news events. Tell me this isn't strange. Just skip ahead about 1/3 of the broadcast you way hear it.

DID YOU KNOW...
...that the 1960 mystery film Scent of Mystery was the first and only feature-length film to be shown in Smell-O-Vision?

TODAY IN HISTORY
1512: Michelangelo finished repainting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in fresco.
1520: Ferdinand Magellan led the first European expedition to navigate the Strait of Magellan, the passage immediately south of mainland South America, connecting the Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans.
1755: A massive earthquake and subsequent tsunami destroyed Lisbon, and killed over 100,000 people in Portugal and Morocco.
1954: The "Front de Libération Nationale" began the Algerian War of Independence against French rule, with guerrilla attacks in various parts of Algeria.
1963: The Arecibo Observatory, with the world's largest radio telescope, officially opened in Arecibo, Puerto Rico.

PICTURE OF THE DAY

View of Lake Lugano and the city of Lugano, Switzerland, from the foot of Monte San Salvatore in 1909. Lying on the border of Italy, Lugano is located in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino.

This image was taken before the advent of color film. It is composed of three monochrome pictures shot through different colored filters and could only be viewed at the time via projection. It was only with digital image processing that the images could be satisfactorily combined into one.

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