Tidbits of Bismarck, Volume 1, Issue 11

Page 1

of Bismarck December 17, 2014

Vol. 1 Issue 11

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by Kathy Wolfe Better half, soulmate, significant other – no matter how you say it, it’s all about being a couple. Tidbits has the acts on some famous couples both real and imaginary. • In March of 1952, Joltin’ Joe DiMaggio determined that he would like to meet Marilyn Monroe and within days, they had their first date. Due to his spectacular achievements with the New York Yankees, DiMaggio was much more of a celebrity at the time than the beautiful movie star. The two were married in a San Francisco civil ceremony in January, 1954, and just nine months later, were in divorce court. Raised in a strict traditional home, DiMaggio strongly disliked Marilyn’s film career, believing she should be a housewife caring for his home, and asked her to give up her career. For 20 years after her death at age 36, Joe had roses delivered to her grave twice a week. • Virginia McMath and Frederick Austerlitz made ten films together during the 1930s, a dance duo better known as Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire. Prior to their first film, 1933’s Flyin’ Down to Rio, Rogers had never before danced with a partner. By 1936, the pair were top box office stars. From 1933 to 1949, the famous dancers made a total of 10 movies. Turn the page for more!

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FAMOUS COUPLES (continued):

• The love story of Cherilyn Sarkisian and Salvatore Bono began in 1962 in a Los Angeles coffee shop. She was 16 and he was 27. Bono, who worked for a record producer at Hollywood’s Gold Star Studios helped get Cher a gig as a backup singer on some of the studio’s classic recordings, including The Righteous Brothers’ hit “You’ve Lost That Loving Feeling.” By late 1964, the pair were married and performing together, calling themselves Caesar and Cleo, releasing a single “Do You Wanna Dance?” Early the following year, they switched their name to Sonny and Cher. Their signature hit “I Got You, Babe” was released in 1965. Their third album, in 1967, featured Sonny’s composition “The Beat Goes On,” another Sonny and Cher trademark. In 1971, they were offered a summer television series, The Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour. The show was such a hit, the couple was offered a regular prime time program later that year, and it quickly soared to the network’s Top Ten. The program continued for four seasons, garnering 15 Emmy Award nominations. Unfortunately, by the third season, the marriage was unraveling, and although they separated that year, the show went on. A nasty divorce was finalized in 1975. Yet nothing seemed to hold the couple back, as they reunited in 1976 for The Sonny and Cher Show. Poor ratings resulted in its cancellation the following year. Cher went on to a successful solo singing and acting career, while Sonny was elected mayor of Palm Springs, California, for a term, followed by his election to the U.S. House of Representatives. While serving in that position, he was killed in a Lake Tahoe skiing accident, when he struck a tree. It seems only fitting that his tombstone’s epitaph reads, “And the beat goes on.” • Biblical figure Samson was a judge over Israel when he fell for the seductive Delilah. Samson possessed supernatural strength endowed by God when he took a vow to be set apart for God’s service. Samson’s vow included never cutting his hair, and if he did, his strength would leave him. He had been exacting vengeance on the Philistines, and they were out for payback. The Philistine rulers approached Delilah, offering her a great sum of money if she could discover the secret of Samson’s strength. Delilah slyly wormed the information out of him, then “called for someone to come and shave off the seven braids of his hair…and his strength left him.” The Philistines gouged out his eyes and put him in prison performing hard labor. In his pain, Samson cried out to God, and as his hair grew, his strength was restored. During a Philistine celebration, they paraded Samson into the temple to entertain the heckling crowds. He braced himself between the support pillars of the temple and used his unearthly strength to bring down the edifice, destroying his enemies along with himself.

1. MEDICINE: What condition does a deficiency of iron cause? 2. FOOD AND DRINK: What is bergamot? 3. GEOGRAPHY: Lake Tahoe lies between which two U.S. states? 4. MOVIES: Which animated movie contains the line: “Squirrel!”? 5. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What is the traditional birthstone for September? 6. PUBLISHING: What magazine was headed by Helen Gurley Brown for 32 years? 7. ASTRONOMY: How many moons does the planet Mars have? 8. MYTHOLOGY: What is the Greek god of the sun called? 9. LANGUAGE: What is the only word in the English language that ends in the letters “mt”? 10. LITERATURE: What was the name of Dick and Jane’s dog in the famous early readers? (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

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FAMOUS COUPLES (continued):

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• Olive Oyl was around long before her boyfriend Popeye. Olive first appeared in 1919 as a main character in the comic strip Thimble Theatre, a tall, extremely thin girl with her hair pulled into a bun. Popeye wasn’t introduced to the strip until nearly 10 years later, but immediately became so popular, the comic was renamed Popeye. Olive Oyl’s brother was Castor Oyl, her father was Cole Oyl, and her sister-in-law, Cylinda Oyl. Olive appeared in nearly 25,000 comic strips. Popeye’s first animated cartoons appeared in 1933. In 1937, he was so popular that the community of Crystal City, Texas, the self-proclaimed Spinach Capital of the World, erected a statue of Popeye in front of City Hall to honor the character who had turned spinach into a very popular food. Popeye proved himself a good boyfriend over and over when he rescued Olive from the clutches of his archrival Bluto.

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• Twenty-five-year-old Elvis Presley was stationed in Germany in 1959, when he met the 14-year-old daughter of an Air Force officer at a party. Elvis and Priscilla Beaulieu had an eightyear courtship before finally marrying in 1967 in an eight-minute ceremony at Las Vegas’ Aladdin Hotel. He was 32, she was 21. Priscilla’s engagement ring was a 3.5-carat diamond surrounded by a row of smaller diamonds. The couple separated in 1972 and divorced in 1973. Ironically, their courtship lasted longer than the marriage.

1. Who holds the record for most Opening Day starts by a pitcher? 2. Which of the following players had the most seasons of 40 or more home runs for the Philadelphia Phillies: Chuck Klein, Mike Schmidt or Jim Thome? 3. When was the last time before the 2012 season that the Stanford football team won the Rose Bowl?

• You might not recognize the name “American Gothic,” but you’ve probably seen the image. It’s a 1930 oil painting of a farmer holding a pitchfork, standing alongside a woman in her apron in front of a farmhouse. Painter Grant Wood enlisted his sister Nan to model, while Wood’s dentist, Dr. Byron McKeeby posed next to her. Although some folks think they represent husband and wife, Wood intended the couple as a father and his spinster daughter. While driving through Eldon, Iowa, Wood happened to see a little wood farmhouse called the Dibble House, and had a vision of the couple standing in front of it. The couple he painted were, in Wood’s words, “the kind of people I fancied should live in that house.” The painting was exhibited for the first time in Chicago’s Art Institute, where Wood earned a $300 prize and immediate fame. Although he is best known for “American Gothic,” Wood painted 27 other works, along with various murals, lithographs, ceramics, and other art.

4. Who was the last Maryland player drafted by an NBA team in the top five picks before Alex Len was selected No. 5 by Phoenix in 2013? 5. In 2014, Jeff Carter and Drew Doughty became the seventh and eighth NHL players to win an Olympic gold medal and a Stanley Cup in the same year. Name three of the first six. 6. Ted Ligety, in 2014, became the second American with two Alpine skiing Olympic gold medals. Who was the first? 7. Who had held the record for best 36-hole score at the U.S. Open before Martin Kaymer shot a 130 in 2014? (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

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Tidbits® of Bismarck FAMOUS CANADIANS:

ELIZABETH ARDEN Where would the world of beauty be without Elizabeth Arden? Here’s the success story of this Ontario-born businesswoman who built a cosmetics empire in the early 20th century. • Elizabeth Arden was born Florence Nightingale Graham in 1884 to a poor farm family. Although her ambition was to become a nurse, she dropped out of a Toronto nursing school, but not before she had diligently studied the lotions used to treat burns. She made the move to Manhattan at age 23, where she worked as a bookkeeper for the Squibb Pharmaceuticals Company. Elizabeth spent all her free hours in their lab, absorbing all the information she could about skincare. • Elizabeth soon switched jobs to become a beautician’s assistant in 1908. Two years later, she and a partner each invested $1,000 to open their own salon, and when that partnership dissolved shortly afterward, she opened her own on Fifth Avenue. She dubbed her salon Elizabeth Arden, taking the first name from her former partner and the surname from the Tennyson poem “Enoch Arden.” • A trip to Paris enabled Elizabeth to learn new beauty techniques in that city’s salons. While in Paris, she developed a collection of rouge and powders, and upon her return to America, hired a team of chemists to develop her own personal line of face creams and lotions. • Within five years of opening that first salon, Elizabeth Arden was selling her products internationally. She opened several exclusive spas, offering the first makeovers, and pampering clients with expensive beauty treatments. Continued on the next page!

by Samantha Weaver • It was American author and illustrator Oliver Herford who defined a manuscript as “something submitted in haste and returned at leisure.” • A football in an NFL game lasts, on average, only 6 minutes. • If you’re planning to visit Chicago anytime soon, you might want to keep in mind that in that city, it’s against the law to dine in any establishment that is on fire. • One Washington state prison offers inmates cats to aid in their rehabilitation. • In 1856, a soldier of fortune (who was also a journalist, doctor and lawyer) by the name of William Walker and his hand-picked group of mercenaries took over Nicaragua. Walker appointed himself dictator, thus securing for himself the distinction of being the only native-born American citizen to become head of state of a foreign nation. • You might be surprised to learn that the Earth experiences a million earthquakes every year; however, most of them are so small that they aren’t even noticeable. • If you counted up all the McDonald’s, Dunkin’ Donuts, Pizza Hut, Burger King, Domino’s Pizza, KFC, Wendy’s and Taco Bell locations in the United States and added them together, you still wouldn’t reach the number of pharmacy locations across the country. • Barbra Streisand once had a shopping mall installed in the basement of her Malibu, California, home. • The next time you see a group of cats together, you can call them a “cloudier.” If the cats are young ones, though, the appropriate term for a group of kittens is a “kindle.” • Those who study such things say that cockroaches can run as fast as 3 mph. *** Thought for the Day: “A man can’t be too careful in the choice of his enemies.” -- Oscar Wilde (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

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ELIZABETH ARDEN (continued):

• On Dec. 18, 1620, the British ship Mayflower docked at modern-day Plymouth, Massachusetts, and its passengers prepared to begin their new settlement, Plymouth Colony. That winter of 1620-1621 was brutal, and the Pilgrims struggled to find food and ward off sickness. By spring, 50 of the original 102 Mayflower passengers were dead. • On Dec. 15, 1791, Virginia becomes the final state to ratify the Bill of Rights, making the first 10 amendments to the Constitution law. The Anti-Federalist critics of the Constitution believed that it gave too much power to the federal government. The Bill of Rights assuaged their concerns. • On Dec. 17, 1944, Public Proclamation No. 21 declared that Japanese-American “evacuees” from the West Coast could return to their homes. In 1942, more than 110,000 Japanese Americans were relocated to remote internment camps built by the U.S. military. • On Dec. 20, 1957, Elvis Presley receives his draft notice for the United States Army. After basic training, he served in 3rd Armor Corps in Friedberg, Germany, where he attained the rank of sergeant. • On Dec. 19, 1968, Warner Brothers releases the movie “Bullitt,” starring Steve McQueen, in Sweden, two months after its debut in U.S. theaters. Many critics consider “Bullitt” to be one of the greatest action movies ever made, because of the seven-minute car chase through the streets of San Francisco. • On Dec. 16, 1973, the Buffalo Bills running back “OJ” Simpson becomes the first player in the National Football League to rush for more than 2,000 yards in a single season. After leading the University of Southern California Trojans to a Rose Bowl victory and winning the Heisman Trophy, Simpson was drafted by Buffalo in 1969. • On Dec. 21, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 explodes in midair over Lockerbie, Scotland, killing all 243 passengers and 16 crew members aboard, as well as 11 Lockerbie residents on the ground. A bomb hidden inside an audio cassette player detonated in the cargo area when the plane was at an altitude of 31,000 feet. (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

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• Due to her efforts, the use of cosmetics began to be viewed as more appropriate and ladylike rather than something used by just the lower classes of women. Elizabeth was a woman ahead of her time, counseling women to stay hydrated, stay out of the sun, and practice yoga regularly. • A devoted suffragette, in 1912, Elizabeth marched the streets of New York in support of women’s rights with 15,000 other women. All of them wore red lipstick supplied by Arden as a symbol of their solidarity. • In 1922, Elizabeth opened a salon in Paris, which was followed by salons in South America and Australia. Even in the midst of the Great Depression, her company was grossing upwards of $4 million a year. In 1946, her picture graced the cover of TIME magazine, one of the first women to be honored in this way. • Elizabeth enjoyed spending her money on horses, purchasing a Kentucky horse farm, where she raised the winner of the 1947 Kentucky Derby, Jet Pilot. She also owned a Manhattan penthouse, a country cottage in upstate New York, and a 12th-century castle in Ireland. • When she died in 1966, Elizabeth Arden was 81 years old, a fact she had kept a secret from the public for years. She was one of the wealthiest women in the world, having founded one of the most successful and recognized brands in the world. There were 100 salons scattered across the globe, and a line of 300 cosmetic products. Five years after her death, the Eli Lilly pharmaceutical corporation purchased the company for $38 million. Today, its value approaches $1.5 billion.

1. Who sued whom in the 1992 Beach Boys lawsuits? 2. Who loved Puff, the magic dragon? 3. What equipment is used in the Limbo? 4. Who released “Bungle in the Jungle”?

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5. Name the song that contains this lyric: “Tuesday afternoon is never ending, Wednesday morning papers didn’t come, Thursday night your stockings needed mending, See how they run.” (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.


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Tidbits® of Bismarck There is a fun aspect to watching the characters strive against the contrived challenges of their world. With a steady trickle of tantalizing plot development, you might get hooked -- like TV’s “Lost” -- into watching how this dark fictional world unfolds.

EDITOR’S NOTE: DVDs reviewed in this column will be available in stores the week of Dec. 15, 2014. PICKS OF THE WEEK Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG-13) -With the city under the heel of the ruthless Foot Clan, our best hope lies in four grotesque heroes rising from the sewers of 1980s and ‘90s pop culture. The team of turtles -- that’s Leonardo, Donatello, Michaelangelo and Raphael -- spew groan-worthy one-liners while leaping from explosions and fighting various thugs. The series’ supervillain, Shredder, gets a sharp robosuit instead of the usual metal-plated outfit. While this reviewer will never forget the role The Turtles played in his younger years, this is sadly one of the most forgettable flicks of the summer. Even big-budget action flicks cashing in on highly marketable nostalgic action franchises need to have a little charm, a pinch of originality. While the action flashes continually on screen, the genuine thrills are brief and far between. Maze Runner (PG-13) -- In another adaptation of a young-adult novel, we find familiar issues handled in a slightly new way. Thomas (Dylan O’Brien) wakes up in an unfamiliar place, apparently dropped off with a colony of other stranded teenage boys inhabiting what they call The Glades. Thomas falls in with a group of boys who run through a nearby mechanized maze -- a huge complex that’s full of traps and nasty critters. Thomas and the others struggle to stay alive, reclaim their lost memories and to make sense what has happened to them.

This is Where I Leave You (R) -- With an awesome A-list cast, this family drama-comedy is a bit of a let down. Jason Bateman and Tina Fey (both Emmy-winners with great histories of down-to-earth comedy) headline as siblings in a fraught family that just lost their father. Dad’s last wish is to have the whole family -four adult siblings and Mom (Jane Fonda) -- sit shiva and mourn together for seven days. The twist is that, of course, these people can barely stand each other under the weight of so much baggage. With all of this emotion and cast to carry it, the film relies too much on slapstick and low-end gags. Skeleton Twins (R) -- In a different dramedy about adult siblings forced into a reluctant reunion, two different comedic actors make a much better effort. Former “SNL” campaigners Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig play a pair of fraternal twins who were close throughout childhood, but have separated to different sides of the country in adulthood. Pulled together by forces outside of their control, together the twins must face all the ways their lives have not gone to plan. Among many troubles, Milo (Hader) is not the A-list actor he’d dreamed of being, and Maggie (Wiig) is facing disillusionment in her marriage. TV RELEASES “Cowboy Bebop: The Complete Series” “Extant: Season 1” “Makers: Women Who Make America 2” “Finding Your Roots: Season 2” “Nova: Emperor’s Ghost Army” (c) 2014 King Features Synd., Inc.

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THIS WEEK’S EVENTS This week is full of notable events in a number of different categories. Increase your knowledge by reading along. • December 15 is Bill of Rights Day, commemorating the day this group of freedoms became law in the United States in 1791. The term Bill of Rights refers to the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, and details those freedoms not specifically designated in the main body of that document. These include freedom of religion and speech, the right to bear arms, freedom from unreasonable search and seizure and from a warrant issued without probable cause. The prohibition of double jeopardy is also part of the Bill of Rights, as is the guarantee of a speedy, public trial with an impartial jury. • December 17 is a big day in the history of aviation. On this day in 1903, the Wright Brothers made their historic flight of the first powered airplane on a beach at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. The first flight of their Wright Flyer lasted 12 seconds and covered 120 feet (36.5 m), 20 feet (6.1 m) above the ground. Three more flights followed that day. While Orville made the first flight, Wilbur piloted the record flight that lasted 59 seconds and covered a distance of 852 feet (260 m). On the same day 32 years later, the Douglas DC-3 airliner had its maiden flight, a plane that was to revolutionize air travel in the United States. With three refueling stops, the DC-3 was able to cross the U.S. in about 15 hours. On December 17, 1947, the Boeing B-47 Stratojet strategic bomber made its first flight. The country’s first multi-engine, jet-powered bomber was designed to fly at high altitudes and at supersonic speeds. In 1949, the jet broke the record for crossing the United States, accomplishing it in under four hours, with an average speed of 608 mph (978 km/hr). • On December 14, 1972, Eugene Cernan became the last man to set foot on the moon while on the Apollo 17 mission. Cernan was the 11th man to walk on the moon, and had been in space on two previous missions before the final mission to the moon. Continued on the next page!

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THIS WEEK’S EVENTS (continued):

• Can you name the longest-running American sitcom? It’s The Simpsons, which aired for the first time on December 17, 1989, and chronicles the adventures of a dysfunctional workingclass family living on Evergreen Terrace in the city of Springfield. The animation process of each episode takes from six to nine months to complete. TV Guide has ranked The Simpsons as #8 on their list of the “50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time” and Bart Simpson as #1 on their list of “TV’s 10 Biggest Brats.” • Every year sometime between December 20 and 23, the Northern Hemisphere experiences Winter Solstice, based on the tilt of the Earth’s axis. This occurs when the sun’s elevation with regard to the North Pole is at its most negative value, with the North Pole tilted 23.5 degrees away from the sun. For those of us in the Northern Hemisphere, December 21, 2014 will be the shortest day and the longest night of the year. All those living above a latitude of 66.5 degrees north, which is the Arctic Polar Circle, will experience 24 hours of darkness. Those in the Southern Hemisphere will experience their Summer Solstice on that day. The sun will be directly overhead on the Tropic of Capricorn. Those locations below 66.5 degrees south latitude will have 24 hours of daylight.

1.

2. 3.

4. 5.

Flash Back Trivia Answers In 1969, Murray Wilson, the father of band members Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson, had sold the rights to their music against their wishes. In 1992, Brian sued to get back the rights to many of his songs. He won. On the heels of that, cousin Mike Love sued Brian to get copyrights to songs he claimed were his. Little Jackie Paper. A wooden pole set on two upright posts. The dance is done bending backward and moving under the pole without knocking it down. Jethro Tull, 1974. “Lady Madonna,” by the Beatles in 1968. Paul McCartney was aiming for a boogiewoogie Fats Domino sound, and Fats covered it the same year. “Lady Madonna” gives a daily account of the problems of a working-class woman ... except Saturday was left out, something McCartney didn’t realize until years later.

Trivia Test Answers

1. Anemia 2. A type of citrus fruit 3. California and Nevada 4. “Up” 5. Sapphire 6. Cosmopolitan 7. Two, Phobos and Deimos 8. Helios 9. Dreamt 10. Spot

Sports Quiz Answers 1. Tom Seaver, with 16. 2. Mike Schmidt did it three times (1979, ‘80, ‘83); Klein (‘29, ‘30) and Thome (2003, ‘04) twice each. 3. It was the 1971 season. 4. Steve Francis was the No. 2 overall pick by Vancouver in 1999. 5. Ken Morrow, Brendan Shanahan, Steve Yzerman, Duncan Keith, Brent Seabrook and Jonathan Toews. 6. Andi Mead-Lawrence, in 1952. 7. Rory McIlroy shot a 131 for 36 holes in 2011.

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Enterprise Publications, LLC, owned and operated by James and Nikki Wiese of Bismarck, recently acquired the rights to publish Tidbits® in the

Bismarck/Mandan area. Tidbits® is a light and interesting paper dedicated to publishing things you didn’t know. A “tidbit” is defined as “a tasty morsel to be devoured before the meal,” and that’s exactly what Tidbits® is.....a morsel for the mind. Tidbits® is published weekly, so look out! Tidbits® has arrived! Distributed at area restaurants, Tidbits® is meant to be picked up when entering and read while dining. Tidbits® provides food for thought, so Bon Appetit! Tidbits® can also be found wherever people are waiting. Whether you are waiting for your vehicle to have its oil changed or get new tires, or waiting for your doctor, chiropractor, optomistrist, or dentist, rest assured that Tidbits® will be there to keep you entertained! Once you are done waiting, either take it home for further enjoyment or leave it for the next person! Don’t worry about running out, because we will publish more each week. If you actually have a week where you are not waiting for something, rest assured that Tidbits® will still be there. Find and read each week’s edition online at our website, www.bismarcktidbits.com. Tidbits® is here for you.


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