of Bismarck January 28, 2015
Volume 2, Issue 5
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TIDBITS® HEADS TO
THE SUPER BOWL
Beverly Maitland
by Kathy Wolfe
In preparation for Super Bowl Sunday on February 1, Tidbits focuses on the history and interesting facts of this famous sporting event.
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• The Super Bowl has always been played on a Sunday, with the first on January 15, 1967 in the Los Angeles Coliseum. The game wasn’t called the Super Bowl that year, but rather the “World Championship of Professional Football.” The Green Bay Packers defeated the Kansas City Chiefs 35-10, with the Green Bay quarterback Bart Starr named the MVP. Green Bay was also the winner of the second Super Bowl.
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• Until 2002, the Super Bowl was always played in January, typically the last Sunday of the month. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, television schedules were delayed by one week, which pushed the Super Bowl back a week into February. The following year, the game was held in January but has been in February ever since. This year, Super Bowl XLIX will take place in The University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, home of the Arizona Cardinals, and will be the second Super Bowl played in that stadium. • The term Super Bowl did not appear on the game tickets until 1970, and wasn’t identified with Roman numerals until 1971. • In 2016, the Super Bowl will celebrate its 50th anniversary. However, it will not be known as Super Bowl L, using the Roman numeral for 50. It will revert back to Roman numerals in 2017, when it will use LI for the 51st game, which will be held in Houston.
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THE SUPER BOWL (continued):
• The name Super Bowl is attributed to the Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt, who came up with the idea after watching his young daughter playing with a Whamo Super Ball, a toy introduced in 1965 that could bounce six times higher than an ordinary rubber ball. That very ball can be seen exhibited at the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
• Only one team has won Super Bowls in four different decades, the New York Giants, and only one team has lost in four different decades, the New England Patriots. The Minnesota Vikings have played in four Super Bowls, but have never led at any point during any of those games. • Three men have been a winner in the Super Bowl both as a player and as a head coach – Tony Dungy, Mike Ditka, and Tom Flores. • The NFL has a policy that the game must be held in a stadium that has a climate of at least 50 degrees F (10 C), unless it is enclosed. The first indoor game was in 1978. Perhaps this was the result of the record coldest Super Bowl temperature of 39 degrees F (4 C) in New Orleans for the 1972 game. • A ticket to the first Super Bowl in 1967 cost between $6 and $12. In 2014, the cheapest ticket was around $1,800, while the most expensive seat was close to $450,000. The average price for last year’s game was $3,715, the highest average since the game’s inauguration. • It’s quite an honor to be chosen to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner” before the big game. In the inaugural game, it was performed by the University of Arizona and University of Michigan marching bands along with the UCLA choir. Over the years, the privilege has shifted to pop stars, including Barry Manilow, Neil Diamond, Whitney Houston, Cher, and Beyonce Knowles. Two singers have been invited twice – Billy Joel and Aaron Neville. The ranks of “American Idol” have been represented several times with singers Jordin Sparks, Carrie Underwood, Jennifer Hudson, and Kelly Clarkson, and judges Harry Connick, Jr. and Mariah Carey. The last time the game was opened with an instrumental performance of the national anthem was at Super Bowl XXII in 1988 when trumpeter Herb Alpert presented the “Banner.” On one occasion, the national anthem was not sung. That was back in 1977 when Vicky Carr sang “America the Beautiful” instead. See the next page for more!
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• The Pittsburgh Steelers have won more Super Bowls than any other team. They have played in eight games and emerged the victor in six of those appearances. The Dallas Cowboys and the San Francisco 49ers are close behind with five victories each. Out of seven appearances at the Super Bowl, the Denver Broncos have lost five, the record for the most losses. The team with the most consecutive appearances is the Buffalo Bills from 1990 to 1993. Unfortunately for the Bills, all four of those were losses. Four NFL teams have never made it to the Super Bowl – the Cleveland Browns, Detroit Lyons, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Houston Texans.
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1. LITERATURE: How many daughters does King Lear have in Shakespeare’s play? 2. MUSIC: When did MTV make its debut? 3. GEOGRAPHY: What is the tallest mountain in Western Europe? 4. ANATOMY: What is the biggest bone in the foot? 5. HISTORY: Who founded the abolitionist newspaper “The North Star”? 6. LANGUAGE: What does the Latin phrase “non compos mentis” mean? 7. GENERAL KNOWLEDGE: What was the site of Coca-Cola’s first bottling company? 8. COMICS: What is the name of Dennis’ younger buddy in the “Dennis the Menace” comic panel? 9. SCIENCE: How fast can a bolt of lightning travel? 10. TELEVISION: In what fictional city does the soap opera “All My Children” take place? (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
For Advertising Call: (701) 391-2076 THE SUPER BOWL (continued):
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• The half-time show has turned into quite an extravaganza over the years. For the first 10 years, the program featured marching bands. In 1976, the group Up With People broke that pattern. Gradually half-time has progressed to top entertainers, with Michael Jackson performing in 1993. Other notable half-timers include Gloria Estefan, Diana Ross, Smokey Robinson, Aerosmith, Britney Spears, Tina Turner, Stevie Wonder, Paul McCartney, and The Rolling Stones. In 2014, Bruno Mars sang to a record-breaking television audience of 115.3 million, and earned an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Short-Format Live-Action Entertainment Program.
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• A Super Bowl ring is valued at about $5,000, depending on the price of gold and diamonds at the time they are created by Josten, the primary supplier of high school and college graduation rings. The NFL springs for the price of 70 rings to the winning team, who can distribute them to whomever they please, even non-players. • Turn to page 6 for more Super Bowl facts!
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2. Who was the manager of the Houston Astros the first time the franchise won more than 90 games in a season? 3. Name the only Iowa football player to win the Heisman Trophy? 4. In 2014, the East and West squads in the NBA All-Star Game combined to score a record 318 points. What had been the previous mark? 5. The Calgary Flames tied an NHL record in the 2013-14 season for most games decided by one goal in a season (49). Who are the Flames tied with? 6. How many times has Canada’s women’s team won the Olympic gold medal in curling? 7. In 2014, Kevin Streelman set a record by recording birdies on the final seven holes to win a PGA Tour event. Who had the mark of six straight? (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
NEW YEAR * NEW YOU
• 1992 marked the first year the national anthem was performed in sign language, and since then, a signer has performed along with the vocalist every year. Christina Aguilera made history in 2011 when she forgot the words to the anthem, completely skipping the line about the flag’s broad stripes and bright stars.
• Lots of Super Bowl viewers watch the game just for the clever commercials. Back in 1967, a 30-second commercial for the first game could be had for around $42,000. Twenty years later the price was $58,000, ten years after that in 1997, it was $1.2 million for the same length of time. In 2007, it cost $2.6 million. In 2014, 43 advertisers paid a record $4.5 million for a commercial. That’s about double the price for the same time during the Oscars telecast. The average commercial costs about $1 million to produce.
1. Detroit pitcher Max Scherzer set a majorleague record for most starts to begin a career without a complete game. How many was it?
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Tidbits® of Bismarck NOTEWORTHY INVENTORS:
BINNEY & SMITH
The inventions of Edwin Binney and C. Harold Smith are used every single day around the world. Although their most famous creation is the crayon, they are responsible for other conveniences as well, as you’ll discover as you read along. • In 1884, Edwin Finney’s father Joseph founded the Peekskill Chemical Company in Peekskill, N.Y. The company’s specialty was creating colors of black and red, for example, lampblack, printing ink, charcoal, and a paint containing red iron oxide used to paint American barns red. The company earned a gold medal award in chemical and pharmaceutical arts at the 1900 Paris Exposition for their ingenuity in creating black chemical colorants. Peekskill went on to achieve notoriety for an idea presented to the B.F. Goodrich Company. By adding carbon black to the traditional white automobile tire, not only did the color of the tire change, but the process strengthened the rubber and improved tread life, making the tires five times more durable. • Edwin’s cousin C. Harold Smith joined the company around 1885, and they expanded their product line to include shoe polish. In 1900, the cousins purchased a stone mill in Easton, Pennsylvania, a region where a large supply of slate could be found. This paved the way for the production of slate pencils for schools.
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• Binney began experimenting with a mixture of slate waste, cement, and talc, and before long had created the first dustless white chalk. The company was awarded a gold medal for their An-Du-Septic Dustless Chalk at the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair. For the next 50 years, Crayola used the image of their gold medal on their crayon packages. Continued on the next page!
by Samantha Weaver • Those who traveled by air over the recent holiday season may sympathize with political satirist Mark Russell, who made the following sage observation: “The scientific theory I like best is that the rings of Saturn are composed entirely of lost airline luggage.” • If you’re planning a visit to rural Texas anytime soon, you might want to keep in mind that in that state, it’s against the law to milk a cow that belongs to someone else. • The elephant shrew is more closely related to the elephant than to the shrew. • You may have heard of bridezilla, but what about momzilla? In a survey by David’s Bridal, 22 percent of respondents claimed that it was the mother of the bride who caused the most conflict when planning the event, while another 22 percent said that it was the mother of the groom. You might want to take these results with a grain of salt, though, considering the fact that the survey respondents were actually brides themselves. • Even an honest person might have some sympathy for the deceit attempted by a man named Corey Taylor in 2007. He was so desperate to get out of his cell-phone contract without paying the high fee that he attempted to fake his own death. Unfortunately for him, it didn’t work. • You may be surprised to learn that condoms date back to at least the 1600s. • If you’re afraid that peanut butter will stick to the roof of your mouth, you suffer from arachibutyophobia. *** Thought for the Day: “My therapist told me the way to achieve true inner peace is to finish what I start. So far I’ve finished two bags of M&Ms and a chocolate cake. I feel better already.” -- Dave Barry (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
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BINNEY & SMITH (continued):
• On Jan. 27, 1785, the Georgia General Assembly incorporates the University of Georgia, the first state-funded institution of higher learning in the new republic. It wasn’t until 1918 that the university began admitting women. • On Feb. 1, 1885, John Taylor, the president of the Mormon Latter-day Saints Church, goes “underground” to avoid arrest and continue resisting federal demands for polygamy. Taylor had at least seven wives. Although the Mormons wanted freedom from outside interference, they also sought the benefits of being a part of the United States. Inevitably, these two goals conflicted. • On Jan. 30, 1920, Toyo Cork Kogyo, a Japanese cork business, is formed. A decade later, the company produced its first vehicle and changed its name to Mazda. The MazdaGo was a three-wheeled truck that resembled a motorcycle with a cargo-carrier at the back. • On Jan. 31, 1945, Pvt. Eddie Slovik becomes the first American soldier since the Civil War to be executed for desertion. Slovik was originally classified 4-F because of a prison record, but was reclassified 1-A when draft standards were lowered. In 1944, he was trained to be a rifleman, which was not to his liking, as he hated guns. • On Jan. 28, 1959, the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League sign Vince Lombardi to a five-year contract as the team’s coach and general manager. The Brooklynborn Lombardi played college football at Fordham University as a guard on the offensive line, dubbed the “Seven Blocks of Granite.” • On Jan. 29, 1964, Stanley Kubrick’s black comic masterpiece “Dr. Strangelove” opens in theaters to both critical and popular acclaim. The movie focused on the actions of a rogue U.S. military officer who believed that communists are threatening the “precious bodily fluids” of Americans. • On Jan. 26, 1980, at the request of President Jimmy Carter, the U.S. Olympic Committee votes to ask the International Olympic Committee to cancel or move the Moscow Olympics in response to the Soviet military invasion of Afghanistan. (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
• Binney & Smith had already developed the Sta-on-al industrial wax marking crayon for marking shipping crates and barrels in 1902. But the formula, which was full of carbon black, was considered too toxic for use by children, so they began experimenting with a safer recipe using paraffin wax and colored pigments. Binney’s wife Alice, a former schoolteacher, conceived the name for their new product by combing two French words – craie, meaning chalk, and ola, short for oleagineux, the French word for oily, because they were made of petroleum-based wax. In 1905, the company began selling a box of eight crayons for a nickel, and the product was an instant success. They quickly expanded to 18 different sizes of crayon boxes with five different sizes of crayons. • Next, Crayola expanded their line to include items for art students, such as Perma-Pressed sharpenable fine art crayons and Artista brand paints. • Although Smith died in 1928 and Binney in 1934, Crayola continued to grow, introducing a 48-pack of assorted color crayons in 1949, and 64 colors in 1958 in a box that had a built-in sharpener for the first time. Today there are more than 100 different types of Crayola crayons, including those that have glitter added, some that glow in the dark, others that smell like flowers, or change color, and still others that can be easily washed off walls. Crayola markers were introduced in 1978. • Crayons were inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame in 1998.
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1. After gaining stardom, Freddy Cannon was known by what name? 2. Who scored a big international hit with “Apache”? 3. Which singer-songwriter gave us the easylistening “If You Could Read My Mind”? 4. “461 Ocean Boulevard” was an album title for which artist? 5. Name the song that contains this lyric: “You packed in the morning and I stared out the window and I struggled for something to say, You left in the rain without closing the door, I didn’t stand in your way.” (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
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Tidbits® of Bismarck The mythology of the movie is a lot of fun, especially the colorful and exciting “Land of the Remembered.” The film was produced by Guillermo del Toro, and his fantastical and ghoulish sensibility is reflected here. Last year was a good year for animated flicks, and this one ranks among the best in its class.
EDITOR’S NOTE: DVDs reviewed in this column will be available in stores the week of January 26, 2015. PICKS OF THE WEEK Fury (R) -- Sgt. Collier (Brad Pitt) -- or Wardaddy, as he is called -- has led his tank crew through carnage of World War II, all the way from North Africa to Germany. “Fury” is the name of their Sherman tank, manned by Wardaddy, “Bible” (Shia Lebouf), “Gordo” (Michael Pena), and an uncouth hillbilly called “Coon-Ass” (Joe Bernethal). Near the end of the war, the hardened crew gets a fresh-faced typist (Logan Lerman) as a new assistant driver. His first task: find his seat and wipe up the remains of his predecessor. Director David Ayer (best known for gritty crime dramas like “Training Day” and “End of Watch”) shows battle in brutal intensity. It’s a grim affair, but the mood and tone match the severity of what’s going on. The movie shows heroism in war without chest-beating or draping itself in a flag. The Book of Life (PG) -- This animated feature mixes pop culture and Mexican folklore to make an adventure about life, death, love and goofiness. Manolo (voiced by Diego Luna) is a passionate young guitarist who’s competing with a narcissistic soldier (Channing Tatum) for the love of the fairest -- and toughest -- young lady in town. This love triangle has the attention of the gods of the afterlife, setting up Manolo for an adventure through the worlds of the dead.
The Judge (R) -- This family/courtroom superdrama reaches out for a hug while smothering your face with pages of old Grisham novels. Hank (Robert Downey Jr.) plays a big-city lawyer who journeys back to his unloved small-town roots for his mother’s funeral. Hank’s father (Robert Duvall) is a judge -- and windbag -- who has ruled his smalltown Indiana courtroom for decades. Just as the family tension thickens, Judge Father is arrested for a hit-and-run homicide. In his desperate hour, the high-and-mighty patriarch must rely on his son’s defense. Art and Craft -- For years, the most prolific art forger in U.S. history got hundreds of fakes into museums and collections. His forgeries looked masterful, and he mimicked the works of artists from a wide array of styles and eras. Most of his art supplies were things you could pick up at Wal-Mart. He lied and schemed to pass off his work as the originals, but he never really made any money doing it. He wasn’t trying to. This documentary sits down with the unassuming middle-aged man, and puts light on a surprising human story. TV RELEASES “Masterpiece: Downton Abbey Season 5” “Marie’s Mind for Murder: Set 1” “Mama’s Family: Mama’s Favorites -- Season 4” “Regular Show -- Mordecai Pack” “Maison Close: Season 1” (c) 2015 King Features Synd., Inc.
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MORE SUPER BOWL FACTS • More than 100 million people watch the Super Bowl every year. Only one other event has surpassed 100 million, 1983’s series finale of M*A*S*H*. • In terms of the amount of food eaten on any particular day, Super Bowl Sunday is second only to Thanksgiving. It should be no surprise that Super Bowl Sunday is the highest pizza sales day of the year. Domino’s Pizza alone sells more than 11 million pizza slices on the day, about 80% more than a normal Sunday. An estimated 1.25 billion chicken wings will be consumed during the game. Back in 2000, gamewatchers ate about 8 million lbs. (3,628,739 kg) of avocados during the Super Bowl, but with that industry’s increased advertising and emphasis on guacamole snacks, thet number has skyrocketed to 79 million lbs. (35,833,797 kg). If you’re counting, that’s about 158 million avocados. • The Vince Lombardi Trophy awarded to the winner of the Super Bowl takes four months to create. It’s manufactured in Parsippany, New Jersey, by Tiffany, who has made every single trophy since the first game in 1967. The trophy wasn’t called the Lombardi Trophy back then, when the legendary coach led his Green Bay Packers to the first two victories. The game was called the AFL-NFL World Championship and up until 1971, the trophy was inscribed with the words “World Professional Football Championship.” After Lombardi died of colon cancer in 1970, the trophy was renamed and the Baltimore Colts became the first team to receive it as the Vince Lombardi Trophy at Super Bowl V. The trophy is made entirely of sterling silver and stands 22 inches (56 cm) tall, weighing 7 lbs. (3.2 kg). The silver itself is valued around $3,500, but the completed trophy’s worth is given as $25,000. • Although Peyton Manning was 37 years and 10 months old when he played in 2014’s Super Bowl, he wasn’t the oldest quarterback to play in the championship game. That honor belongs to John Elway, who was 38 when he played in Super Bowl XXXIII in 1998. Elway was also that game’s MVP. The youngest starting Super Bowl quarterback was Ben Roethlisberger, who at 23, was the winning QB for the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XL in 2006. Continued on the next page!
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MORE SUPER BOWL FACTS (continued):
• Jerry Rice has scored the most Super Bowl touchdowns of any player. Rice achieved eight TD’s in four different games, in three games as a San Francisco 49er and in one as an Oakland Raider. Emmitt Smith is a distant second with five touchdowns in his three games as a Dallas Cowboy. • The last time the Super Bowl was a day game, ending before the local sunset, was in January of 1977. • In 2011, Cowboy Stadium in Dallas ran into some seating difficulties when they failed to properly install a section of temporary seats. This left 1,250 ticket holders without seats. Officials were able to place 850 people around the stadium in vacant seats, but 400 remained unseated. NFL promised a triple refund for the $800 tickets to all 1,250 people. • In 1981, the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans honored the 52 American hostages who had just been released from 444 days in captivity in Iran by displaying a gigantic yellow ribbon over the main entrance to the stadium.
Trivia Test Answers 1. Three 2. August 1, 1981 3. Mont Blanc 4. The heel bone, or calcaneus 5. Frederick Douglass 6. Not of sound mind 7. Chattanooga, Tenn., 1899 8. Joey 9. 3,700 miles per second 10. Pine Valley, Pennsylvania Sports Quiz Answers 1. It was 178 games. 2. Bill Virdon led the Astros to a 93-70 mark in 1980. 3. Quarterback Nile Kinnick, in 1939. 4. It was 303 points, in 1987. 5. The Florida Panthers, in the 2010-11 season. 6. Twice -- 1998 and 2014. 7. Mike Souchak, in the 1956 St. Paul Open. Flash Back Trivia Answers 1. Freddy “Boom Boom” Cannon, because of his powerful recordings. Astonishingly, he never had a No. 1 hit single. 2. Jorgen Ingmann, in 1961. 3. Gordon Lightfoot, in 1970. In a horrible music decision, the beautiful song was turned into a disco dance number by Viola Wills in 1980. 4. Eric Clapton, in 1974. 5. “Just When I Needed You Most,” by Randy VanWarmer, 1979. VanWarmer wrote the song after a breakup and knew it was good, but the recording company wasn’t especially impressed, wanting to make it the B-side to another single. Instead the song shot to the top of the adult contemporary charts, hit No. 4 on the Hot 100 and made a respectable showing on even the country chart.
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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