National Chocolate-Covered Insects Day
In a month of tasty pumpkin baked goods, aromatic hot beverages and candy galore we have a food holiday to make you cringe: Chocolate-Covered Insects Day. Is it fair that we consider some arthropods more edible than others? Unless you're allergic, you probably salivate at the mere mention of shrimp, lobsters and crab. They're arthropods, as are spiders, scorpions and ants.
Celebrate National Chocolate-Covered Insects Day with chocolate covered ants. Don't worry, if you aren't consciously eating chocolate-covered insects, you might eat some by accident if you eat chocolate. The FDA allows for up to an "average of 60 or more insect fragments per 100 grams" in chocolate and chocolate liquor.
Dwight D. Eisenhower Birth Anniversary
"History does not long entrust the care of freedom to the weak or the timid," said the 34th president of the U.S. The two-term president went from five-star general in 1952 to president from Jan. 20, 1953, to Jan. 20, 1961. Born on Oct. 14, 1890, "Ike" died on March 28, 1969.
* More than 100 Schools, buildings, scholarships, organizations and statues have been named after Eisenhower.
* Commemorate his birthday by enjoying some of his favorite foods, including beef stew, chicken noodle soup, sugar cookies or rice pudding.
Be Bald and Be Free Day
Take pride in your shiny, bald head, it's Be Bald and Be Free Day. Forget expensive transplants, stinky hair growing chemicals and fake toupees. Embrace the bald instead.
* Good bald: Keanu Reeves in "The Matrix," Demin Moore in "G.I. Jane" and Natalie Portman in "V for Vendetta" all went temporarily bald for their craft.
* Not so good: Mayhem and controversy surrounded temporarily bald singers Sinead O'Connor and Britney Spears.
* Always hot in bald: Vin Diesel, Bruce Willis, Shaquille O'Neal, Michael Stipe, Seal and Patrick Stewart.
Sound Barrier Broken: Anniversary
He was assigned to the rocket-powered X-1 fighter plane, days after he cracked his ribs while horseback riding. "At the time, no one knew if a fixed-wing aircraft could fly faster than sound, or if a human pilot could survive the experience" according to the American Academy of Achievement.
Air Force test pilot and instructor Chuck Yeager broke the sound barrier on Oct. 14, 1947. He set a new air speed record of 1,650 mph, more than twice the speed of sound in 1952. What will you accomplish on Oct. 14?




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