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in other words, if I wanted to know if September 3, 1950 was a Monday and also Labor Day that year, where would I go to look to find the answer without having to pay to get into some web site. Thanks for anyone's help

2007-08-31 08:21:01 · 6 answers · asked by mauicat 2 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

6 answers

if you double-click the clock at the bottom right of your pc screen, a box will pop up with a calendar. go to the date you need to find and viola...there it is :o) just make sure u hit cancel and not save when your done with the calendar!

oh shoot nevermind! im sorry...that calendar only goes back to 1980 :o( did you try typing that date into google and just searching for it?

2007-08-31 08:26:19 · answer #1 · answered by §eeker 5 · 0 0

www.vpcalendar.net/3_Columns/Calendar_0.html is a site for virtual perpetual calendars.
A perpetual calendar refers to one of 14 Gregorian calendars (the type we use today)--one for each of the 7 days of the week in leap years, and another 7 for the days of the week in NON-leap years (which 1950 was). They are numbered 0-6 for each category. Calendar 0 was used in 1950, and it shows that SEPT. 3 was a Sunday, and Labor Day was on the 4th. This site shows the calendar listings up to the year 2100.

2007-08-31 16:19:07 · answer #2 · answered by jan51601 7 · 0 0

If you have a BASIC compiler, here is an algorithm good back to 1750.

* Calculation in BASIC, where D, M and Y mean the obvious and INT is
* a function that gives INTegers only (truncates decimals), is:
*
* 1) IF M < 3, M = M+12, Y = Y-1
* 2) X = D + 2*M + INT(.6*(M + 1)) + Y + INT(Y/4) - INT(Y/100) + INT(Y/400) + 2
* 3) N = (INT (((X/7 - INT(X/7)) * 7 +.5))
*
* N will be 0 - 6, where 0 = Saturday, 1 = Sunday, . . . 6 = Friday.

2007-08-31 11:30:59 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not sure why my double-click calendar lower right is wired wrong or what, but it only goes back just so far...not to 1950, anyway. Try Googling "Perpetual Calendar", which should bring up some sites where you can pull up a calendar for that year...or any other!

2007-08-31 08:30:38 · answer #4 · answered by constantreader 6 · 0 0

www.timeanddate.com/calendar/ is a prepetual calendar. You put in the year and it show you the calendar.

2007-08-31 08:28:40 · answer #5 · answered by Wanda K 4 · 1 0

Great website:

www.dayofbirth.co.uk

2007-08-31 08:29:13 · answer #6 · answered by andre.3001 3 · 0 0

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