Page 206 - Use Your Memory
P. 206

USE  YOUR  MEMORY
 Suppose you wish to know the final day of the year. The process
 is similar. Knowing that the first Sunday of the last month falls on
 the  5th  day, you add the  three  sevens representing the  following
 Sundays to arrive at Sunday 26th. Reciting the next few dates and
 days we get: 27th Monday; 28th Tuesday; 29th Wednesday; 30th
 Thursday;  31st  (the  last  day of the year)  - a Friday.
 As you can see, this system can be applied to any year for which
 you may especially need to know days for dates. All you have to do
 is to make up a Memory Number for the first Sunday or,  for that
 matter, the first Monday, Tuesday, etc., of each month of the year;
 add  sevens  where  appropriate  to  bring  you  near  to  the  day  in
 question;  and recite to that day.
 An interesting tip in making use of the Memory Number of one
 year with relation to surrounding years is that with each year the
 first  date  for the  days  at the  beginning of the  month  goes  down
 one, with the exception of leap years, when the extra day produces
 a  jump  of two  for  the  following year.  In  the  years  1969,  1970,
 1971, for instance, the first Sunday for January fell respectively on
 the  5th,  4th and 3rd  days  of the month.
 The second of the two systems to be introduced in this chapter is
 for  calculating  the  day  for  any  date  from  1900  to  2000.  It  is
 necessary in this  system to  ascribe to each month  a number that
 will always remain the same. The numbers  for the months are as
 follows:
 January  1
 February  4
 March  4
 April  0
 May  2
 June  5
 July  0
 August  3
 September  6
 October  1
 November  4
 December  6
 Some  people  suggest  that  these  be  remembered  using  associa-
 tions  such  as  January  is  the  first  month,  the  fourth  letter  in
 February is r, which represents 4, and so on, but I think that it is
 better to use the  number:
 I2O
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