Wednesday, October 2, 2024

mee (personal pronounObsolete spelling of mequotations ▼

obsolete emphatic of me quotations ▼

Noun  mee (countable and uncountableplural mees-style wheat noodlescoordinate terms ▲quotations 

https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mee#English    

Are you are old enough to remember hearing the words, “Meet me at the Eagle”?  It was quite common for people who were shopping at the John Wanamaker Department Store in Philadelphia to arrange to do so with their family or friends.  Moreover, if one were to become lost or even separated from their loved one while shopping, then this phrase took on real significance and became very sound advice!  The Eagle was the centerpiece of the Grand Court in the John Wanamaker Main Store located in Philadelphia.  This prominent symbol would become the meeting place for thousands of Philadelphians since Mr. Wanamaker brought it to the store from the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition held in St. Louis.  Separately made parts form the heavy plates of the inner structure and the outer features and other surface parts.  The Eagle contains some 6,600 bronze feathers and each individual feather was made and painstakingly placed by hand.  Created by the noted German sculptor August Gaul, the dimensions of his creation measured 6’6” in height, 3’3” wide and 9’10” in length.  In 2001, the Philadelphia Historical Commission designated the Eagle an historic object.  The original Eagle is currently located at what is now Macy’s Department Store at 13th and Market Streets in Philadelphia.  See pictures at https://rivertonhistory.com/2019/06/meet-me-at-the-eagle/    

The Philadelphia Eagles are a professional American football team based in Philadelphia.  The Eagles compete in the National Football League (NFL) as a member club of the league's National Football Conference (NFC) East division.  The team plays its home games at Lincoln Financial Field in the South Philadelphia Sports Complex.  The franchise was established in 1933 as a replacement for the bankrupt Frankford Yellow Jackets when a group led by Bert Bell secured the rights to an NFL franchise in Philadelphia.  After more than a year of searching for a suitable replacement for the Yellow Jackets in the lucrative Philadelphia market, the National Football League granted an expansion franchise to an ownership group headed by Bert Bell and Lud Wray, who were also awarded the liquidated assets of the defunct Yellow Jackets organization.  Drawing inspiration from the Blue Eagle logo of the National Recovery Administration, a centerpiece of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal policies, Bert Bell and Lud Wray named their new franchise the Philadelphia Eagles.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia_Eagles   

Samuel Maverick (c.1602—c. 1670) was one of the first colonists to settle in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.  Arriving ahead of the Winthrop Fleet, Maverick became one of the earliest settlers, one of the largest landowners and one of the first slave-owners in Massachusetts.  He signed his name as "Mavericke".  He is the ancestor of rancher Samuel Maverick, from whom the term maverick for "independently minded" and an unbranded animal derives.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Maverick_(colonist)#  For the Texas politician and landowner (1803–1870), see Samuel Maverick.  For the Texas soldier and businessman (1837–1936), see Samuel Maverick Jr.    

Debating in various forms has a long history that can be traced back to the philosophical and political debates of Ancient Greece, such as Athenian Democracy or the Shastrartha in Ancient India.  In Imperial China's Han Dynasty, debate amongst scholars was most famously portrayed in a series of debates known as the Discourses on Salt and Iron, held in 81 BCE.  Named by Emperor Zhao for its two most famous debates, those debates focused on the reformation of the economic policies implemented by Zhao's predecessor, Emperor Wu.  Modern forms of debating and the establishment of debating societies in the Western world occurred during the Age of Enlightenment in the 18th century.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debate   

http://librariansmuse.blogspot.com  Issue 2860  October 2, 2024

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