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Vol. 29 No. 43
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2019
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Jameela Jamil’s new game show celebrates life’s worst moments By TAYLOR NEUMANN
you take anything from the set? No. I asked if I could have Ted Danson, but they said no, that’s illegal. So I’m TBS’ new game show The Misery Index (premieres Tuesday, Oct. 22) is far hoping they’re going to send me a sign — I just want a sign of our neighborhood from your typical game show — instead of contestants guessing at mundane number. trivia questions, they must rank real-life unfortunate experiences on a What projects are you working on now? scale from 1-100. Possible scenarios include getting attacked by a I’m turning my Instagram account, I Weigh, into a full combear, being breastfed until age 9, or even getting your privates stuck pany. So I guess I’m a businesswoman. I’ve hired a staff of in a shower chair. Yikes. But misery goes down best with laughwomen, and we’re all going to smash the patriarchy together. ter, and you’ll be doing a lot of that with host Jameela Jamil … We’re going to create an activism platform for young (Tahani from The Good Place) and the Tenderloins (the compeople to teach them about how to be better allies, and creedy team behind truTV’s Impractical Jokers), who help ate a space that’s radically inclusive, where they can “coach” the contestants through each situation. We talked feel like every marginalized person can find someone to Jamil about why she decided to host a game show now who looks like themselves on our pages. … I’m and what it’s like working with those crazy guys, and also writing a book! And hopefully there will be more even got her to reveal one of her own embarrassing moMisery Index fun ahead. ments.
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Box office top 10
Domestic revenues Oct. 11 - Oct. 13 Rank • Film • Weekend gross (millions)
Gross to date • Weeks in release • Screens
1. Joker $193.6
Had you met the guys before or worked with them previously? I hadn’t. I was just a fan from afar, and they’re really big fans of The Good Place. So we were just really excited to meet each other. … I’d heard wonderful things about them, what they’re like to work with, and I can now confirm they are 100% the most extraordinary crew of guys to work with. … They’ve been a tight crew over 20 years, and they welcomed me like I was the fifth Tenderloin. I refer to myself as the “Tandoori Tenderloin” because of it. … I would do this show for 100 years. I love this show so much. It’s so stupid and so fun, and I’d work with them forever. … I’ve inherited four big brothers. Share a bit on the stress level of the game’s format. It’s a fairly high-stress situation filming a show that people are relying on you for life-changing money, and they want to do life-changing things with that money. The pressure’s so on. We care so much. Sal cries in the fourth round every single time he’s in it. Every time Sal gets picked for the fourth round, he cries. Which is my favorite thing about him. He just cares so much. Let’s talk The Good Place. You’re finished filming the final season — did
Let’s play our own version of The Misery Index. What have been some of your most traumatizing experiences? Worst job ever: When I was 19, I volunteered to be tested on. It triggered me into eczema forever, so I really hope that product never made it to market. But that was genuinely my job for a year, just testing, drinking anything, trying anything, putting any kind of cream on, trying out makeup in these medical trials, and I’ve never recovered. Movie that scarred you for life: Scream. @#$% that movie. @#$% that movie to hell. I can’t be alone at night in a house because of Scream. It’s affected all of my living decisions forever. It’s affected my rental decisions. I’m haunted forever by that stupid scene where the light comes on. … That film ruined my life. Worst food: Oh yeah. Why do people eat kimchi? I know it’s good for you, but it smells like anus when it comes out. Not here for it. Most embarrassing moment: I had to interview Daniel Craig once, and I’d mistaken how well I could fit in my dress, and my whole dress exploded open at the back all the way up to the neck. [So] I had my bum out during an interview with Daniel Craig and two Bond girls. … Everyone heard the dress split open. I had to still sit down and finish the interview, wearing my dress which was now just an apron. I had to moonwalk out of the hotel. Worst date: I once went on a date with a man who took lots of drugs before we got to the cinema, and he’d taken a hallucinogenic just before our date — which was at 6pm — so that’s the sign that he was a drug addict. But I didn’t know. It was our first ever date. And we went to watch 2001: A Space Odyssey, which is already a very trippy movie. And if you’re on acid and you watch that film at the same time, you scream for two hours straight. And you and your date get kicked out of the cinema in front of everyone.
The Creature (still) walks among us By Jeff Pfeiffer, ReMIND Magazine
Universal Pictures’ Gill-man quietly lurked beneath the surface — watching unsuspecting visitors to his prehistoric domain deep in the murky jungle backwaters of South America in the 1954 monster movie classic Creature From the Black Lagoon. The iconic creation has also continued to stalk pop culture over the years in ways that may not have been obvious to even the most dedicated fan of the fright flick. The Creature’s Features Creature From the Black Lagoon was released well over a decade after Universal’s original run of horror classics. But it quickly enshrined its Creature as the last among the main pantheon of other iconic monsters from the famed studio, mentioned in the same breath as Dracula, the Mummy, Frankenstein’s monster and the Wolf Man. While those other monstrous creations led to their portrayers — Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff and Lon Chaney Jr. — becoming household names, the name of the actor portraying the Gillman is not necessarily as well known. Actually, there were two different men underneath the iconic costume in the initial film — one portrayed him on land, the other in the water. In the original movie, during the land-based scenes in which the Gillman was either pursuing Kay (Julia Adams, playing the lone female member of the crew aboard the tramp steamer Rita, often while wearing that famous white bathing suit) or attacking the male scientists and explorers, Ben Chapman wore the suit and played the monster. More famously, Ricou Browning
Universal’s Gill-Man has had a monstrous influence on pop culture for over 60 years.
Photo Credit: Creature From the Black Lagoon: Credit: Universal International/Telescope donned the costume for those challenging underwater scenes. Browning was a stuntman, producer and underwater cinematographer. He also cowrote and produced the 1963 film Flipper and wrote for its spinoff TV series of the same name. In addition, he directed the acclaimed underwater scenes in the 1965 James Bond film Thunderball, and even did some underwater camera work for the 1980 comedy Caddyshack. Browning swam in the suit in not only the initial feature, but also in its two (frankly inferior) sequels: Revenge of the Creature (1955, probably best remembered as Clint Eastwood’s first movie) and The Creature Walks Among Us (1956). He was the only
actor to play the Gill-man in all the films, as the creature on land was played by other actors in the followups. Even wearing the bulky Creature suit, Browning made the Gill-man’s swimming scenes look effortless and, honestly, graceful. Viewers could actually believe this was an amphibious “missing link” from ages past. The scenes are enhanced by the film’s thrilling, almost overused score. It’s estimated that the tune — created by a team of composers including Henry Mancini, Herman Stein and Hans J. Salter — is heard well over 100 times in a film that runs only about 80 minutes. According to film scholar David
Schecter, the musicians had an edict from studio execs that “We want to hear the creature theme every time.” And boy, they weren’t kidding. The memorably blaring brass as the Gillman rises from the water, or shambles toward Kay or a scientist, certainly telegraphs when the creature is around. Creature From the Black Lagoon originally hit theaters in a 3D, as well as a 2D, format near the end of Hollywood’s initial (but certainly not last) wave of interest in that technology in the early ‘50s. Over the decades, audiences could occasionally find a classic movie house (and occasionally a TV network) that showed the film in 3D, too. Rip-Offs A new type of monster was introduced to the movies with the amphibious Gill-man. Those filmmakers put care in designing and bringing that creation to life through a realistic costume that looked impressive on land and in the water. The same cannot always be said of future films that swam into theaters and drive-ins following the success of Black Lagoon. Gill-man-inspired sea monsters popped up in generally awful flicks like The Phantom From 10,000 Leagues (1955), The Monster of Piedras Blancas (1959) and The Horror of Party Beach (1964), with creature costumes sometimes being laughably bad, at least once with back zipper in full view. A later Black Lagoon-inspired film, Roger Corman’s production Humanoids From the Deep (1980), was unpleasant viewing in a different way, upping the original film to an R-rated level and making explicit the violent and sexual subtexts.
Brought to you by the publishers of ReMIND magazine, a monthly magazine filled with over 95 puzzles, retro features, trivia and comics. Get ReMIND magazine at 70% off the cover price, call 1-855-322-8784 or visit remindmagazine.com. ©2018 ReMIND magazine
Visit us online at www.MinotDailyNews.com
• 2 • 4,374
2. The Addams Family $30.3
• 1 • 4,007
3. Gemini Man $20.6 $47.9
$6.1
• 3 • 3,496
$3.9
• 5 • 2,357
7. Judy $14.9
$3.2
• 3 • 1,627
8. IT Chapter Two $207.0
• 6 • 2,303
9. Jexi $3.1
$4.9
• 4 • 3,019
6. Hustlers $98.1
$30.3 $20.6
5. Downton Abbey $82.7
$55.9
• 1 • 3,642
4. Abominable
• 1 • 2,332
10. Ad Astra
$3.1 $3.1 $1.9
BESTSELLERS $47.0
Why did you decide to join the show? Jameela Jamil: They just said “the Tenderloins” and I said yes. That was basically it. That was the pitch. “Do you want to host a game show with the Tenderloins?” “Yes, please. Please, and when?” Basically, those were my two questions. Before I even knew what the show was about, knowing that they were involved and how much I loved them made me really excited. And I thought the premise of the game was really funny and unique and just a really great way of talking about the way that humans survive by laughing their way through misery. And the show really embodies that.
FREE
•4
• 1,678
SOURCE: Studio System News
HARDCOVER FICTION
1. "The 19th Christmas" by James Patterson and Mixine Paetro (Little, Brown) 2. "The Institute" by Stephen King (Scribner) 3. "Ninth House" by Leigh Bardugo (Flatiron Books) 4. "What Happens in Paradise" by Elin Hilderbrand (Little, Brown) 5. "The Dutch House" by Ann Patchett (Harper) 6. "The Water Dancer" by Ta-Nehisi Coates (One World) 7. "The Testaments" by Margaret Atwood (Nan A. Talese) 8. "Child's Play" by Danielle Steel (Dell) 9. "The Giver of Stars" by Jojo Moyes (Pamela Dorman Books) 10. "Bloody Genius" by John Sandford (G.P. Putnam's Sons)
HARDCOVER NONFICTION
1. "Blowout" by Rachel Maddow (Crown Publishing) 2. "Movies" by Shea Serrano (Twelve) 3. "Talking to Strangers" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown) 4. "Tough Love" by Susan Rice (Simon & Schuster) 5. "Witch Hunt" by Gregg Jarrett (Broadside Books) 6. "The United States of Trump" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt and Co.) 7. "Debt-Free Degree" by Anthony Oneal (Ramsey) 8. "The Book of Gutsy Women" by Hillary Rodham Clinton and Chelsea Clinton (Simon & Schuster) 9. "Year of the Monkey" by Patti Smith (Knopf) 10. "Inside Out" by Demi Moore (Harper)
NIELSENS
1. NFL Football: N.Y. Giants at New England, Fox, 16.26 million. 2. NFL Football: Pittsburgh at L.A. Chargers, NBC, 14.89 million. 3. "60 Minutes," CBS, 12.41 million. 4. NFL Football: Cleveland at San Francisco, ESPN, 11.56 million. 5. "Sunday Night Pre-Kick," NBC, 11.54 million. 6. "NCIS," CBS, 11.21 million. 7. "Football Night in America, Part 3," NBC, 9.73 million. 8. "Thursday Night PreKick," Fox, 9.34 million. 9. "FBI," CBS, 8.7 million. 10. "The Voice" (Tuesday), NBC, 8.55 million. 11. "The Voice" (Monday), NBC, 8.54 million. 12. "Chicago Fire," NBC, 7.71 million. 13. "Young Sheldon," CBS, 7.64 million. 14. "Blue Bloods," CBS, 7.63 million. 15. "Chicago Med," NBC, 7.47 million.
2 Minot (N.D.) Daily News, TRADING POST, October 22, 2019
News
People With Issues
Recurring Themes
There’s so much to unpack about Sexy Vegan, a 37-yearold from West Hollywood, California, that we scarcely know where to begin. His real name is Hansel DeBartolo III. After changing his name in 2016, he had the new handle tattooed on his forehead and chest. He’s an “Instagram sensation” and a 2020 presidential candidate, according to his IMDb profile. But most recently, Vegan’s been a resident of the Twin Towers Correctional Facility, reported the Los Angeles Times, following his arrest Sept. 26 on charges of sexual abuse of his dog, which authorities say he captured on video and posted on social media. “I do get judged a lot for being different,” Vegan told Dr. Phil in 2017.
— Sunday morning shoppers in central Auckland, New Zealand, got more than an eyeful on Sept. 29 when for several hours, pornography was broadcast on a large outdoor video screen at the Asics sportswear store. The “totally inappropriate and offensive” scenes apparently continued for about nine hours — until staff arrived at the store around 10 a.m. and turned the screen off, the New Zealand Herald reported. “Some people were shocked, but others just stopped and watched,” said security guard Dwayne Hinango. The store manager, who gave only “John” as his name, said the incident stemmed from a cybersecurity breach, and Asics apologized on its website and through email to its customers. — And in Auburn Hills, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, motorists along an interstate got a free show late on Sept. 28 after two people broke into a small building connected to an electronic billboard and uploaded pornography to the sign. Auburn Hills police told WDIV that two hooded young men were captured on surveillance video entering the structure at 10:49 p.m. and staying about 15 minutes. Police started getting reports of the images around 11 p.m. “I was just looking up at it and I was like, ‘Huh, oh, wow. That’s porn,’” said driver Chuck McMahon. Police are still looking for the hackers.
The Continuing Crisis
— At New Lynn’s Peaches and Cream, a sex toy shop in suburban Auckland, New Zealand, staffer Kat Maher immediately noticed a strange customer on Sept. 23. “He was very energetic and erratic, going around the shop, talking a lot,” she told Stuff. Strangely, he also closely resembled Elvis Presley, with slicked-back black hair and sunglasses, although he was wearing a highvisibility orange vest. “He brought a sex toy called ‘Like a Virgin’ up to the counter, but his card declined,” Maher said. When the purchase didn’t go through, the man grabbed the “fake vagina” toy, worth about $60, and ran out of the store. Maher reported the theft to police, but fake Elvis has not been apprehended. She also noted that the shop gets robbed about once a week: “It’s really frustrating when this sort of thing happens. So rude and it ruins your day.”
OF THE
Sept. 20, the day before the global event, he instructed crews to transport more than a ton of trash that had already been collected from coastlines and deposit it on a pristine beach in Jindo, according to Agence-France Press. “We brought in waste Styrofoam and other coastal trash gathered from nearby areas so the 600 participants could carry out clean-up activities,” Lee said. He apologized for deceiving the volunteers and assured residents that there was no “secondary pollution.”
News that Sounds Like a Joke
The Hudson Regional Health Commission in New Jersey is investigating a mystery odor, according to WABC. People in Jersey City and Bayonne complained about the smell on Sept. 24, and officials, following the wind, searched in Newark but couldn’t identify the source of the odor, which some described as similar to rotting fish. “Being a peninsula, we have water on three sides and sometimes at low tide you can smell the bay,” explained Edoardo Ferrante, coordinator at the Office of Emergency Management. “It was really nothing like that. It was a very nasty, almost like a foul meat type of smell.” The HRHC is continuing to investigate the odor.
Weird
just got “tired of looking after” their toddler boys, Andrey, 3, and Maksim, 2. So in mid-August, they dropped the boys off at a homeless encampment in Zaporizhia, Ukraine — and didn’t come back. The naked toddlers were watched over by men at the camp for a week as they drank from a river and foraged through trash for food, until passerby Olena Tashevska spotted them on Aug. 26 and called police, reported the Daily Mail. A pediatrician who examined them at the hospital said they suffered from viral infections and malnutrition. “They are weak now and barely can walk,” Dr. Taisa Klimenko told local media. Police are pursuing criminal charges against the parents, and the boys are living in an orphanage in the meantime.
Buh-bye!
Michael and Georgina Parsons’ 54 neighbors in Little Bay Islands, Newfoundland, are resettling on the mainland this fall as part of a program to centralize populations in growth areas. But not the Parsons. In spite of the fact that the government will cease all services to the island on Dec. 31 — electricity, mail delivery, ferry and snowplow — the Parsonses have decided to stay. “We’re not nervous,” Michael told CTV. “I don’t know if that’s because we’re Family Values just plain crazy or whatnot.” Bozhena Synychka, 20, They are busy preparing for and Volodymyr Zaitsev, 25,
Unclear on the Concept
Lee Dong-jin, the mayor of Jindo county in South Korea, wanted to make International Coastal Cleanup Day special for his community. So on
life off the grid, purchasing a snowmobile and wood stove, and installing a solar panel system. “We’re also learning to do without some fresh fruits and vegetables and go to more dry goods, bottled goods, powdered milk — that sort of stuff,” Georgina said.
Overreaction
Police were called to an IHOP restaurant in Asheville, North Carolina, on Sept. 26, after a group of patrons lost their composure when told their orange juice refills weren’t free. Authorities told WLOS the customers damaged the restaurant and assaulted its manager and another employee. Police are examining surveillance video in an effort to identify the suspects. “We never want to see anyone injured, especially over a bill at a restaurant,” said Asheville police spokesperson Christina Hallingse. https://wlos.com/news/local/m anager-of-tunnel-road-ihopassaulted-over-lack-of-freerefills
Creme de la Weird
was made of keratin, the substance found in fingernails and hair, and neurosurgeons were able to remove it with a razor. “However, the underlying condition will still need to be treated,” explained Dr. Vishal Gajbhiye. A biopsy of the horn showed that it was benign, and a skin graft covers the spot where it grew.
Spoiler Alert: Man Bites Dog
In Rio Rancho, New Mexico, officers were called to the Rio West mobile home park Sept. 26 following reports of a violent altercation, the Albuquerque Journal reported. Chris Galvadon, authorities told the paper, had used an ax to assault a woman, causing “significant injury” to her hand. But as officers assisted the woman, Galvadon barricaded himself inside the home, and the SWAT team and New Mexico State Police were called in to help. Negotiations continued unsuccessfully for hours until K-9 officer Diesel was sent in. Diesel ended the standoff by biting and apprehending Galvadon, but not before Galvadon bit him back. Rio Rancho Police Capt. Andrew Rodriguez said the bite didn’t break the skin, but Diesel will “be on antibiotics for a bit.”
Indian farmer Shyam Lal Yadav, 74, bumped the top of his head about five years ago, and shortly afterward, the bump started growing, becoming what doctors call a sebaceous horn. On Sept. 18, Metro News reported that Send your weird news Yadav underwent surgery to items with subject line WEIRD remove the “devil horn” at NEWS to WeirdNewBhagyoday Tirth Hospital in sTips@amuniversal.com. Sagar, India. The 4-inch horn
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Worship W orship
Services S ervices
Bring B ring yyour our friends & family and experience the jjoy oy and comfo comfort rt of worshipping togethe together. r. The deadline for ads in this di directory, rectory, including any w weekly eekly changes, is Tuesday • Contact classads@minotdailynews.com classads@minotdailynews.com 9 a.m. Tuesday
Lutheran
First Lutheran Church ELCA
Saturday Worship
Please join us... us...You’re You’re Y ou’re always welcome at Zion!
5:00 pm
120 5th A Ave. ve. NW 852-4853
8:30 am & 11:00 am
502 17th Street NW
Sunday Education 9:45 am
Wednesday
www.firstlutheran.tv www.firstlutheran.tv www (Live Stream & Recorded)
Supper 5:00 pm Worship & Education 5:45 pm
Radio Broadcast KRRZ 1390AM Sunday 8:30 am
Pastor Brandy Gerjets Pastor Ellery Dykeman
Worship: Saturday ...........................................................5:00 pm Sunday .............................................................9:30 am Wednesday Church School............. School....................................................6:00 .......................................6:00 pm Confirmation......................................................6:00 Confirmation ......................................................6:00 pm
Holy Communion is celebrated at every worship service.
Pastor Desiree Uhrich Pastor Derek Harkins
Lutheran Brethren
Our Redeemer’s Church
215 3rd Ave. Ave. SE • 838-5196
700 16th A Ave. ve. SE
A Church of the Lutheran Brethren
701.838.0750
Sunday
Worship: W orship: 8:30 & 10:30 Fellowship: 9:30am
www.ourredeemers.org ww w.ourredeemers.org
bethanylutheranminot.org
Service: 6:45pm Church School: 5:45pm
www.bethanylutheran.tv Streaming: ww w.bethanylutheran.tv
Lutheran Church Missouri Syno Synod d
(1⁄2 mile West West of Super Walmart) Walmar t)
Sunday W Worship: orship: 8:15, 9:30 & 11:00 am Sunday School & Adult Bible Study: 9:30 am
Pastor Rich Davis, Interim Minister
WEDNESDAYS Church School 4:30pm Food Faith Family Supper 5:15pm Confirmation (Grades 6-8) 6:15pm Worship 6:15pm Adult Faith Formation 7:00pm Church School 7:00pm
Pastor John Streccius Pastor Natasha Kolles
Bethel Free “Building Followers
Lutheran Church - AFLC
of Jesus Christ”
530 22nd Ave. NW, Minot 701-852-6492
Sunday: Fellowship 9:00 AM: Sunday School 10:30 AM: Worship Service
Minot Baptist Church
Sunday Worship Service
www.bflcminot.com Pastor Shane McLoughlin
LCMS
8:30am & 11:00am (Sept.-May)
2209 4th Ave. Ave. NW 839-4663
Adult Bible Study & Sunday School/Youth 9:45 am
www.stmarksminot.com www ww w.stmarksminot.com
Sunday Worship......10:30 am Sunday Evening Worship...5:30 pm Wednesday Worship ......7:00 pm
“Sending The Glorious Light of Jesus Christ to a Dark & Needy World” World”
Sunday School School..........9:45 ..........9:45 am Morning Morning Worship....11:00 Worship. . . .11:00 am Evening Worship.......6:00 Worship.......6:00 pm Wed. W ed. Evening Worship...7:00 Worship. . .7:00 pm 500 46th A Ave. ve. NE Pastor David Miller
839-1351
Reverend Philip Beyersdorf
Southern Southe rn Baptist
(Independent Fundamental KJV)
Teaching the Word, One Verse At a Time! KJB
916 5th Ave. SE Minot, ND 58701
(701) 852-5399 Email Address: dbchurch@srt.com Pastor: Jeremy Jacob
Baptist
Cross R Cross Roads oads Baptist B aptist
200 3rd St. SW • 852-4533
415 28th A Ave. ve. SE (Behind Menards) Rev.v. Kent Hinkel, Senior Pastor Re
SBC
Sunday School 9:45 am Sunday W Worship orship 11:00 am & 6:30 pm www.minotcrbc.org www.minotcrbc.org Wednesday W ednesday 6:30 pm More Information Prayer Meeting & Call 838-1873 Children & Y Youth outh Missions
Mennonite Brethren
Rev. Barry Seifert, Associate Pastor Pastor Josh Huseby, Worship Arts Pastor Sam Kautzmann, Student Ministries
www.fbcminot.org Classic Worship Worship Service.................8:30am Ser vice.................8:30am Contemporary Contempora r y Worship Worship Service Ser vice ..... 9:50am Sunday School (All Ages)............11:00 am Children’s Church........................ 9:50 am Contemporary Contempora r y Worship Worship Service Ser vice .. 11:05am WANA (Sept.-May)............. AWANA ed. A Wed. W 6:30pm .............6:30pm
Church of God
Assembly of God Sunday W Worship: orship: Traditional Traditional Worship..8:30 orship..8:30 - Traditional 8:30 am - am 1805 2nd St. SE, Minot Sunday W 11:00 am - Contempora Contemporary Contemporar ry ry 838-1111 fasog@srt.com fasog@srt.com
Sunday School............10:00 am
Interpreter Dan Dangerfield for the Deaf Lead Pastor 11:00 AM “Christ Centered - W Wednesday ednesday Family Night..6:30 Service People Oriented” Available For All Ages) (Programs Available
pm
Presbyterian
Immanuel Baptist Church 1615 2nd St. SE • 839-3694 Sundays
Sunday School School.............9:15 .............9:15 am W orship..................10:30 am Worship..................10:30
Wednesdays: W ednesdays:
Brian T. T. Skar, Skar, Pastor www.ibcminot.org
Elaine Carlson, Children’s Ministry Director
First Assembly of God
Soup Kitchen.....11:30am-12:30pm Family Supper…….....….. Supper…….....….... 5:30 pm Classes for all ages.............6:30pm Adult Choir (as scheduled)...7:30pm
Gospel TTabernacle abernacle Gospel TTabernacle abernacle Community Church
West W est M Minot inot Church Chu rch of G God od
Family amily W Worship orship C Center enter
Sunday W Worship............10:30 orship............10:30 am Wednesday W ednesday Family Training Training Hour Classes for all Ages.........6:30 pm westminot.com YYoung oung Adults....................8:00 pm Youth...........7:00 pm Jeff Je ff Hebe Heber, r, Pastor Friday Night Youth...........7:00
1105 16th St. NW | 701-839-1407
9999 27th St. NE • Minot
838-4492 Sunday W Worship.............11:00 orship.............11:00 am Sunday Night Worship......7:30 Worship. . . . . .7:30 pm KHRT KHRT 1320 AM - 9:00 am
Pastor James & Anna Henderson
Pastor James & Anna Henderson • 838-5759
Methodist
Cornerstone Co rnerstone Presbyterian Church
1000 NE 3rd Street W Weekly eekly Worship Worship Schedule Sunday 852-0315 For our discipleship times, Sunday School schedule, and all other church activities, please see our website @ ww www.ecominot.org w.ecominot.org
6:30 HS Youth Group 6 :30 pm
852-1872 1800 Hiawatha St.
Independent Fundamental Baptist
Our Savior ww St. Mark’s www.oslcnow.com www w.oslcno .oslcnow w.com Lutheran Church Lutheran Church
(LCMS) 3705 11th St. SW • 852-6404
Thursday W Worship orship 6:30 pm Worship Sunday W orship 8:30 & 10:45 am
Radio Broadcast KHRT KHRT 1320 AM Interpreter services for the deaf at 10:45 am Sunday 11:00 am
Wednesday W ednesday
SATURDAYS
ELCA Worship 5:00 pm Church School 9:45 am Worship 11 11:00 am
ELCA • 701-838-0746
Bethany Lutheran Church ELCA Hernes Pastor Janet He rnes Mathistad Pastor Gerald Roise Pastor Intern David Myers
SUNDAYS 8:30 Worship 8 :30 am
Sunday Worship
Service Contemporary Contempora r y Se ry Service.............9:00 r vice.............9:00 am Sunday School........... School....................... 0:00 am ............110:00 TTraditional raditional Se Service...............11:00 r vice...............11:00 am Wednesday W ednesday Contemporary Contempora r y Se Service...............6:30 r vice...............6:30 pm
Seventh Day Sabbath Services
All Webcasts & Services
held at The Sleep Inn & Suites Sat. Oct. 5th - 3:30 Services Minot, South Entrance Wed. Oct. 9th - 1:30 Day of Atonement Webcast Executive Board Room Sat. Oct. 12th & 26th 1:30 Webcast Pastor Herb Teitgen hteitgen@hotmail.com 218-287-8692
www.ucg.org/congregations/minot-nd www.ucg.org/beyond-today
Vincent United United M Methodist ethodist Chu Church Churrch
Faith F aith United Methodist Church 838-4425
Sunday SSchool Sunday chool 9:45 am
1024 2nd SSt.t. SE P Pastor astor Mary McDonald Johnson Pastor Jennifer
Saturday Worship Worship 5:00 pm Sunday School 9:00 am Sunday Worship Worship Se Service r vice 10:00 am Coffee Co Cofffee Fellowship 11:00 am
Open hearts... Open minds... Open doors!
Sund Sunday ay Coffee FFellowship ellowship 10:30 am 5900 Hwy 83 North Minot, ND 58703 www.faithumcminot.com ww w.faithumcminot.com
Sund Sunday ay W Worship orship 11:00 am Pastor P astor K Kenneth enneth Mu Mund nd 701-838-1540
Minot (N.D.) Daily News, TRADING POST, October 22, 2019 3
BY TERRY AND KIM KOVEL A table has four legs and a flat top — except when it is designed by a clever cabinetmaker. Freeman’s Auction in Philadelphia sold an unusual rosewood table with two partial shelves built below the 20-inch square tabletop. It is decorated with carved dragons on the brackets and a spider and fly inlay of mixed metal and mother-of-pearl. The AngloJapanese inlaid rosewood table was made by A. and H. Lejambre of Philadelphia around 1880; the company produced work from 1865 to 1907. Similar tables are in several museums. The table sold at auction for $13,000. Q. All the images and descriptions online for Hummel’s “Girl Resting on Fence 1938” state that it’s marked “W. Germany.” I have that figurine but it’s marked “Germany.” It’s also marked with a big bee over the letter “V” and “C by W. Goebel.” The year “1938” is embossed on the bottom, too. I can barely make out figurine number “112/3/0.” Why are the marks on my figurine different? A. This figurine was designed for Hummel by Reinhold Unger in 1938. It was originally called “Just SittinGirl” and is now called “Just Resting,” though it’s listed online under other names. It’s been made for several years in different sizes. The marks tell how old the figurine is. The bee over “V” mark was used from 1950 to 1959, with a bigger bee from 1955 to 1959. Figurines made from 1960 to 1990 were
marked “W. Germany.” Your year Fostoria was founded in figurine was made before that, Fostoria, Ohio. The Fostoria so it is just marked “Germany.” factory moved to Moundsville, West Virginia, in 1891. Pieces Q. What is the resale price were made in clear, amber, for a Fiesta 60th Anniversary blue, ruby, green and olive. pitcher with four matching Some Fostoria Coin glassware was made for Avon from 1961 cups in new condition? A. Fiesta has been made by to 1983. It was sold to Lancaster the Homer Laughlin China Co. Colony Corporation in 1983, since 1936 and has been made which continued to make some in many colors since then. To Coin glass. Fostoria was closed mark the 60th anniversary in in 1986. Fostoria Coin pieces 1996, Fiesta was made with the sell online for $15 to $45. You words “Still Proudly Made by should try to sell it locally. The Homer Laughlin China Co., Genuine Fiesta, 60th AnCURRENT PRICES niversary, 1936-1996” and the Current prices are recorded logo of a dancing lady. The An- from antiques shows, flea marniversary line includes a kets, sales and auctions pitcher, mugs (cups), tumblers, throughout the United States. a cake plate, a clock face plate Prices vary in different locaand other items. The price de- tions because of local economic pends on color and condition. conditions. Pitchers sell online for $25-$48, Bride basket, cranberry mugs for $3-$10. A set with Coin glass bowl, yellow and four mugs could sell for $37 to pink enamel flowers, silver $88. Higher prices are asked plated frame, 15 x 9 inches, but don’t sell. $160. Royal Worcester vase, blue Q. We have several pieces of flowers, yellow leaves, reticuour grandparents’ collection of lated neck and handles, 14 1/2 Fostoria Coin Glassware. We inches, $220. have pieces in blue, red and Northwood carnival glass amber. Are there any collectors bowl, three fruits pattern, cherlooking to add to their collec- ries, orange, green, iridescent, tion? How do you recommend ribbed, ruffled, 9 inches, $290. we sell it? Bamboo brush pot, carved, A. Coin glass was first made scholars playing “Go,” bamboo in the 1890s by two makers: trees, clouds, 6 inches, $480. Hobbs and Central Glass ComDurand vase, dark to light pany. The glass included im- blue iridescence, high shoulpressions of actual U.S. coins ders taper down to base, signed, until the government declared 8 inches, $580. it illegal. In 1958, Fostoria Glass Rocking horse, horsehair Company began making Coin mane and tail, leather saddle, glass impressed with “coins” wood grain, Relko, New with patriotic symbols. They Zealand, 38 x 61 inches, $640. included the Liberty Bell, Majolica planter, Poseidon Torch, Eagle and Colonial Man, head, mermaid busts, seaweed, along with the date 1887, the turquoise, yellow trim, Lonitz,
c. 1870, 8 3/4 x 15 3/4 inches, $830. Lacquer box, two family crests, flowers, vines, embossed corners, copper/ brass fittings, black, 3 1/4 x 5 3/4 inches, $750. Half-tester bed, mahogany, rococo, round column posts, acanthus trim, drapery, signed W.T. Davis, c. 1860, 63 x 71 inches, $6,000. Steinway grand piano, mahogany, square legs, 1917, 38 x 69 inches, $9,600. Terry Kovel and Kim Kovel answer questions sent to the column. By sending a letter with a question and a picture, you give full permission for use in the column or any other Kovel forum. Names, addresses or email addresses will not be published. We cannot guarantee the return of photographs, but if a stamped enve-
Submitted Photo
This unusual table is an example of Anglo-Japanese style. It has a look that was not favored by many cabinetmakers. The table with wooden tiers and carved dragons sold at auction for $13,000. lope is included, we will try. The amount of mail makes personal answers or appraisals impossible. Write to Kovels,
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4 Minot (N.D.) Daily News, TRADING POST, October 22, 2019
LASTWEEKINMINOT
Jill Schramm/MDN
Mailboxes line the roadway near a residence that is among several residences east of Des Lacs where zip codes are mixed, creating confusion for Ward County’s 911 system.
Blended community: County 911 system moves to untangle Burlington, Des Lacs
Some residents living east of Des Lacs may be surveyed about changing their addresses to ensure they get proper emergency services when they need them. Larry Haug, Ward County 911 coordinator, told the Ward County Commission Tuesday that 13 residences would be impacted by address changes if the plan moves forward. “What we have is a mixture of what we refer to as postal communities. In other words, some of these residences have Des Lacs addresses. Some of them have Burlington, and there is no clear delineation where one ends and the other one begins. This is a problem now for the 911 system,” Haug said. The area of alternating city addresses is just under a mile along 19th Avenue Northwest (Ward County Road 10), between the city of Des Lacs and 156th Street, as well as two homes on Fourth Avenue Northwest. The mixing of zip codes has not created problems for mail delivery because mail for the rural route in that area is sorted in Burlington and served with a single carrier, according to the Postal Service. The 911 system provides the street and house numbers but the Postal Service designates the town and zip code. “We have no authority or ability to assign the same zip code. That is done by the Postal Service,” Haug said. “The Postal Service will not change them automatically, just because I asked. They say that once an address has been in existence for over a year, they’re not going to change it.” However, if the cities of Des Lacs and Burlingon and Ward County give approval, the Postal Service will survey residents in the targeted area. If at least 50% of surveys are returned and at least 50% respondents are in favor of a change, the Postal Service will make the change, he said. Haug noted the survey is set up for failure because of cautions included in the survey letter about initial inconveniences and potential mail delays associated with a change. “It’s not real encouraging to go along with this,” he said. The form includes no information about the impact on emergency services if no changes are made. Haug said if a survey is to go out, he would first send a letter to residents explaining the reason behind the change and setting up a time and place to meet with anyone who wants more information. Haug said he has received written support from the cities of Burlington and Des Lacs to proceed in requesting a survey. The Ward County Commission gave its support Tuesday.
Kim Fundingsland/MDN
Recent snowfall fell on top of saturated ground throughout North Dakota, raising concerns for spring runoff next year.
Entire state soggy: Wettest fall on record
It’s wet out there. The wettest in more than a century. Virtually from border to border North Dakota is extremely soggy, causing problems for farmers and ranchers and even raising the risks of spring flooding. The recent wintry mix dealt a cruel blow to two areas of the state where there is understandably growing concern about spring runoff. Both the Souris River that flows through Minot and the Red River that cuts through Fargo and Grand Forks on the state’s eastern border have a long history of escaping their banks. The Red River on the state’s border with Minnesota is flirting with flood stage levels now, something that is expected in the spring but never this late in the fall. Not to be overlooked is the James River that flows through the Pipestem and Jamestown Dams. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has called a public meeting for tonight in Jamestown to address citizen concerns about current high water levels. “It’s a slow moving river. Right now they are strug- Only Seats Ozark Mountain Christmas gling to get back down to 4 Left! in Branson where they want to be,” said From November 2-8, 2019 7-Day Motor Coach to America’s $1,039 per Allen Schlag, National person Live Entertainment Capital! Weather Service hydrologist 10 Shows Included: Premium Seating! in Bismarck. “It’s quite un-
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usual to see this kind of runoff generation at this time of year in North Dakota.” Schlag said that while the James may touch “minor flood stage,” doing so would have very low impact. He noted that the river is not “out of control.” However, high water in any river or reservoir in North Dakota at this time of year is unusual. It is not surprising though, especially following a very wet September and an early October snowstorm that dumped up to 30 inches of snow in some parts of the state. “North Dakota had the wettest September ever, with 125 years of data,” said Schlag. “So far October is above for moisture too. It’s been remarkably wet. Pretty much the whole state is wet.” The Souris River Basin escaped the bulk of the recent snowfall and has seen only a minimal increase in flows. Still, like elsewhere in the state, soil conditions are extremely wet throughout the basin. “What really gets me here is impacts to the soil, really hard to imagine it is mid-October,” said Schlag. “We have roughly 30 to 40 days, if the weather turns around, to lose some of this soil moisture. My optimism is waning by the minute.” Notable too is that potholes are currently filled to springtime levels with little or no room to capture any spring runoff. It’s a condition that could aggravate the spring runoff. “How much has never been defined mathematically, but we do know it has an effect,” said Schlag. “When wetlands are full we tend to see more runoff.” On the heels of record September precipitation in the Minot area, and other reporting points, October is setting records of its own. According to Joe Effertz, who measures snowfall at the North Central Research and Extension Center south of Minot, three inches of snow fell Oct. 9 and 10 and another inch on Oct. 11. The latter two totals tied daily records set in 1959 and 1973. The seven inches of snow easily surpassed the monthly average of 2.1 inches and there is half the month remaining. Normal precipitation for October, rain plus moisture contained in snowfall, is 1.16 inches. As of Tuesday morning Effertz had already recorded 2.1 inches of precipitation for the month, 12th most since record-keeping began in 1905. The wettest October on record was 1994 with 5.54 inches of precipitation. While all indications are that soil conditions will remain very wet heading into freeze-up, increasing the odds of increased runoff, it is far too early to surmise what conditions will actually be encountered during next spring’s runoff season. “It doesn’t mean you’ll have flooding issues but, even with normal snowpack, we’ll be above normal runoff,” cautioned Schlag. “We know this increases the risk of above normal runoff but it is not by itself a slam dunk.” One of the major factors affecting spring runoff, said Schlag, is temperatures that contribute to the speed of the melt. “It we drag out the spring melt season, say for weeks instead of days, it makes a world of difference. Especially if you can do it without significant rainfall,” explained Schlag. While wet ground can mean trouble come spring, there
Don’t miss out on any important news in Minot, Ward County or the region. Subscribe today to stay informed with the Minot Daily News. Call 857-1900. are many areas of the state already coping with similar conditions. The Harvey region, with 30 inches of snow, was at the center of the recent snowstorm that plastered much of the state east of Minot. Because wet conditions made it almost impossible to harvest and the snowstorm struck at one of the earliest dates in memory, many crops remained in the field when the snow began falling. “The standing soybeans were completely full of snow to the top of the plants,” said Joel Schimke, Harvey Farmers Elevator manager. “On the north and west sides of the corn fields the snow was as high as the tassels on the corn.” Schimke was optimistic that most of the crops in the fields would still be harvested, some with as little as five-percent loss. The expense of doing so however, has increased. “It’s terribly muddy,” said Schimke. “If nature gives us a chance at it guys are going to try and get their crops off. A lot of guys are putting tracks on their combines. The ground is going to have to freeze for a wheeled combine.” According to Schimke, several farmers purchased used tracks for their combines while others purchased new at a cost of $75,000 a pair. “They are gearing up to get it done. That’s just the way it works,” said Schimke. “With tracks on a combine they can drive through the water.” In addition to farming troubles due to wet conditions, of interest to residents all along the Souris River Valley is the moisture situation in southern Saskatchewan where three reservoirs capture and regulate water that eventually enters the Souris. “They are wet but not to the same degree as North Dakota,” said Schlag. “They are damp but not to the same extent, nowhere near what we’ve had here.” The Canadian reservoirs on the Souris are all at or within inches of their prescribed winter operating levels. Lake Darling, the final reservoir on the Souris above Minot, was at 1,596.92 feet Tuesday afternoon and is scheduled to be lowered to 1,596 feet by Feb. 1.