TIDBITS Issue 33 CDA Idaho 2020

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of Kootenai County, Idaho Issue #46 Nov. 13th 2017Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 of Kootenai County, Idaho

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TIDBITS® VISITS POMPEII

by Janet Spencer In the year 79 A.D. the volcano Mount Vesuvius erupted, wiping out the thriving town of Pompeii along with neighboring communities in what is now Italy. Come along with Tidbits as we explore the ruins! THE TOWN • Pompeii was founded around the 7th or 6th century B.C. and was under Roman rule at the time of the eruption. The town’s name either comes from the word “pompe,” which means five, perhaps because the community consisted of five distinct hamlets, or because it was settled by a family named Pompeia. • Pompeii was on the edge of the Mediterranean Sea, at the mouth of the Sarno River, about five miles from Mount Vesuvius. It was a thriving town. There were factories, shops, taverns, temples, cafes, brothels, theaters, bathhouses, an aqueduct system, and a sports arena that seated 20,000. The amphitheater is the oldest known stone amphitheater in Italy and the Roman world. Pompeii was a busy port town that exported products throughout the region. • The population included about 12,000 in Pompeii and another 12,000 in the surrounding areas. Because Vesuvius had erupted so many times throughout history, the soil in the area was rich with ash and very fertile. (cont)

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TIDBITS of Kootenai County, Idaho Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020

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Evelyn Bevacqua Howe 212. W. Ironwood Dr., Suite D,# 224, Coeur d'Alene, ID 83814 Cell: 208.755.9120 Email: Tidbitscda@gmail.com www.tidbitscda.com Facebook/tidbitscda

POMPEII (cont) • In the year 79 A.D., residents of Pompeii didn’t know Vesuvius was a volcano, and didn’t even know what a volcano was. It had not erupted in centuries. There was no word for volcano in their vocabulary. When earthquakes struck prior to the eruption, they had no way of knowing what that portended. THE ERUPTION • When Vesuvius erupted, it spewed a huge column into the sky. As the debris cooled, it began to fall, raining rocks, pumice, and ash. Normally the prevailing winds would have carried the ash away from Pompeii, but on this day winds carried the ash over the town. Ash fell at a rate of about 6 inches (15 cm) per hour. Roofs collapsed. Earthquakes rocked the area. Tsunamis battered the shore. • Later, a series of pyroclastic flows rushed down the valleys, engulfing entire areas with super-heated gasses. Rivers of lava flowed at a rate of about 70 mph (113 km/hr). • A man named Pliny the Younger watched the eruption from 13 miles (21 km) away, and wrote about it in a series of letters to a friend. These letters were uncovered in the 1500s and preserved. Meantime, his uncle, Pliny the Elder, a fleet commander in the Royal Navy, was sailing a ship in an effort to rescue some relatives. His ship was bombarded with debris. Soon after reaching shore, he was overcome by gasses and heat, and died. His crew abandoned the quest and fled to safety. • The eruption lasted for about 24 hours, but the city continued to be covered by molten rock and ash for two days after that. When all was said and done, the city was buried up to 23 feet (7 m) deep in some places. • The lava and ash covered a total area of over 200 square miles (500 sq/km). It’s estimated that 16,000 people died throughout the region, with about 2,000 of those within the city of Pompeii. (cont)

NOW HERE’S A TIP By JoAnn Derson • “Technology is going to be a significant part of our back to school strategy. So, this year, we made sure we have extra chargers and headphones, plus set up a charging station for all school items. We are doing everything we can to be prepared!” -- M.K. in Louisiana • Double crust pies should be cooked on the bottom rack. This will ensure the pie is cooked from the bottom and the top crust will not overbrown. • Cane-bottom chairs feeling a little bit loose? You can tighten the cane by taking them outdoors, thoroughly wetting the seat from the underside with hot water, then letting them dry in the full sun. The drying process can shrink the cane, causing it to tighten. • “I recently inherited a beautiful cedar chest from my grandmother, who is downsizing. To freshen the smell of cedar, we lightly sanded the interior and buffed out the dust with a rag that we put a little cedar oil on. It’s totally renewed and ready for all my heirloom quilts!” -- T.F. in South Carolina • Use a bit of shaving cream to spot clean a carpet. The “soap” is easily controlled and doesn’t spread unless you make it spread. Use a damp, clean sponge to rinse. • Things you can do with chunks of Styrofoam: Use them as filler in a large garden pot so that you don’t need as much potting soil; create a stamp for a fun art project; set a square of thick foam into a small box and poke holes to hold a set of colored pencils upright. Send your tips to Now Here’s a Tip, 628 Virginia Drive, Orlando, FL 32803.(c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc. •


TIDBITS of Kootenai County, Idaho Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 POMPEII’S EXCAVATION • Pompeii remained undiscovered for the next 1,500 years. The thick layer of ashes protected the buried city from vandalism and weather. No one even remembered that a town had ever been there. • In the year 1599, men were digging a canal to re-route the local river when they unearthed gold coins, pottery, and artwork. When word got out, other people started digging and uncovered rusty keys, carved stones, and alabaster statues. The local magistrate, Domenico Fontana, investigated but found murals that depicted lewd behavior. This offended his sensibilities so he ordered the ruins be re-buried, and Pompeii was forgotten for another 150 years. • In 1748, a man digging a well discovered a large trove of marble and alabaster buried in the volcanic dirt. Don Carlos, King of Naples, hired men to dig it all up because he needed it for an elegant new home he was building. During the excavation, workers uncovered three beautiful statues of women, which were much admired by the new queen of the area. She asked Don Carlos to search for more statues for her collection. Thus began the first major excavation. In 1763 an inscription (“Rei publicae Pompeianorum”) was found that identified the site as Pompeii. Over the next hundred years, various rulers ordered more excavation, and the booty uncovered ended up in various peoples’ pockets. Not till 1860 did an organized reconstruction attempt begin. • An archeologist named Giuseppe Fiorelli began a systematic unearthing of the buried town. He discovered that the ashfall had been so complete that it had perfectly preserved everything it covered in a totally airless environment. Loaves of petrified bread were found in a bakery oven. Wall murals retained their original vibrant colors. (continued next page)

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® of Idaho TIDBITS of Kootenai Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 TidbitsCounty, Dallas County POMPEII’S EXCAVATION (cont) • As workers were unearthing the city, they noticed that there were empty spaces in the ash layers, showing where there had once been human bodies. Fiorelli found that if he pumped plaster into the cavities left by the deteriorated bodies of the dead, he could perfectly reproduce them as they had appeared at the moment of their death. • Archaeologists also made plaster casts of root cavities in gardens to determine what was being grown there. • Graffiti could still be read on the walls, ranging from from private messages to election notices and public announcements. There are lists of market days, insults and accusations, the exchanges of lovers, quotes from Virgil, score keeping for games, and even the scratched alphabets of children. • In 1951, after the interruption caused by World War II, intensive excavation was resumed under Amedeo Maiuri, who was in charge of the excavations from 1924 to 1961. By the 1990s, about two-thirds of the city had been excavated. CURRENT DAY • Mount Vesuvius is the only active volcano on mainland Europe. It has erupted perhaps 100 times, including six times in the 18th century, eight times in the 19th century, and three times in the 20th century, most recently in 1944. Since 1944, hundreds of minor earthquakes have been reported in the region. • Although Pompeii is uninhabited, there are over 3 million people living within 20 miles of the volcano—the highest concentration of people living near an active volcano on earth. • In terms of the world’s deadliest volcanic eruptions, Mount Vesuvius doesn’t even rank in the top five.

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By Lucie Winborne • Sociologists have discovered an interesting correlation between economic health and women’s clothing: The worse the economy, the longer women’s skirts become, while the better the economy, the shorter they rise. • Coca-Cola owns all website URLs that can be read as ahh, up to 62 h’s. • The world’s shortest escalator is the one in the basement of the More’s Department Store in the city of Kawasaki, Japan. It’s 33 inches tall and has only five steps. • Realizing that surgical antiseptics were marketable to just a small group of professionals, the makers of Listerine began to market the product as a floor cleaner -- as well as a cure for gonorrhea. While we won’t necessarily vouch for the latter, in a pinch, just add a capful for every gallon of water and mop away. Other uses include dandruff elimination, deodorant, a numbing agent for toothache pain and tick removal. • The famous Battle of Hastings didn’t take place in Hastings, but a town seven miles away, today called Battle. • A 1938 issue of “Mademoiselle” magazine had a handy bit of advice for college gals seeking suitors: have your mom send you some flowers to trick all the boys into thinking they have competition. No word on whether it worked. • According to an American study, Californians are less likely to barbecue on a Tuesday than any other day of the week. • Ferdinand Demara, aka “The Great Impostor,” posed as a surgeon aboard a Navy destroyer in the Korean War, where he was forced to operate on 16 people. He proceeded to speed-read a textbook on general surgery and was able to successfully perform all the operations without losing a single patient.

Thought for the Day:

“Wisdom is the reward you get for a lifetime of listening when you would rather have talked.” -- Mark Twain (c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.


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TIDBITS ofTidbits Kootenai® County, Idaho Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 of Dallas County

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By Dr. Holly Carling

WHY AM I SICK?

If a tree in your yard or a flower in your garden suddenly died or was sick, would you just chop it down or pluck it out and throw it away? Or would you take it somewhere (such as the University of Idaho Extension Office Master Gardener Clinic) to find out WHY it is sick or dying and try to rescue it? If your car stopped running, or was making some horrible sound, would you just take it to a junk yard and dispose of it? Or would you take it to a mechanic for a diagnostic workup? Would you be happy if they just duct-taped it together and said, “you’re good to go!”? If not, why do that to your body? The number one question you should always be asking is “WHY?” Don’t be satisfied with a duct-tape approach, and don’t be satisfied with “you’re just aging”. Everything that goes awry in the body has a “WHY”. There is a reason – usually a multitude of reasons – WHY it is behaving the way it is. For example, if you have been diagnosed with heartburn or reflux, ask “why?” Don’t be satisfied with just taking a prescription for the rest of your life. Why do you have heartburn or reflux? If the doctor says it’s because you have too much acid in your stomach, ask “Why?” Your stomach doesn’t just produce too much acid (or too little acid - which is MORE commonly the cause of heartburn – but that takes a little longer to explain) for no reason. You have to dig deeper. What is your body trying to tell you?

Keep asking, keep digging. Know that for nearly everything that your body decides to do, which we call a “symptom”, there is also a remedy for it, once we know the WHY. What we are digging for are the roots – the root cause. For nearly every condition, there are several root causes that usually coalesce to become a disease. The art is in the discovery. Each symptom is a piece of the puzzle. As we fractionalize medicine, we lose this art of discovery. Each specialist tends to look at just their little piece of the body and forget that we are one being. Each piece of the puzzle, no matter how unrelated it may seem on the surface, gives a whole picture of the root cause of the disease. Like a tree that is dying, look to the soil. Look for what is stressing the tree out so much that it becomes sick and/or dies. Are we over-watering or under-watering? Is it growing in the best light? Does the soil need nutrients? Is the soil loose and absorptive or compact and hard, resisting nutrients? With our tree or our vehicle, we will not be happy until we get to the root cause and fix the real problem and not just prop it up and let it stay sick or broken. WHY are you doing that to yourself? Start asking “WHY?”

Dr. Holly Carling is a Doctor of Oriental Medicine, Licensed Acupuncturist, Doctor of Naturopathy, Clinical Nutritionist and Master Herbologist with over three decades of experience. Dr. Carling is currently accepting new patients and offers natural health care services and whole food nutritional supplements in her Coeur d’ Alene clinic. Visit Dr. Carling’s website at www.vitalhealthcda.com to learn more about Dr. Carling, view a list of upcoming health classes and read other informative articles. Dr. Carling can be reached at 208-765-1994 and would be happy to answer any questions regarding this topic.


TIDBITS of Kootenai County, Issue505-0674 #33 Aug. 10th 2020 For Advertising CallIdaho (334)

Stolen Medical Equipment

It’s hard to fathom how low some criminals will go. Right in the middle of the COVID crisis, a respiratory therapist working for the Department of Veterans Affairs was nabbed for theft. Hospitals were sweating out having enough space and equipment to take care of patients, and medical personnel were struggling to find enough protective gear for themselves. So what was this respiratory therapist doing? He was stealing ventilators and selling them on eBay. He stole not only ventilators but bronchoscopes and other respiratory support equipment -- just the medical stuff COVID patients need to keep breathing while their bodies heal. Among other things, he sold on eBay a whopping five ventilators in two months -- March and April -- right in the middle of the COVID chaos. Staff at the VA hospital knew the items were missing, of course, and had reported each instance. They probably did a daily count of materials, worried about how they would cope with an influx of patients. Then someone thought to check sales of those medical items on eBay, and there they were. The VA Office of Inspector General stepped in, as well as the U.S. attorney. The suspect initially denied involvement, of course. Criminals always do. He said someone else was using that seller name on eBay, that he hadn’t stolen anything, even though eBay listings and IP addresses traced back to his house. Search warrant in hand, the authorities collected all manner of stolen medical equipment from the guy’s house, including CPAP machines and masks, ventilation tubes and more. EBay sales records were found, complete with serial numbers of the missing items. The U.S. Attorney’s Office spoke with buyers of some of the equipment. But one piece of the evidence was damning. The final nail in the crook’s coffin was his own cellphone with photos of some of the items he stole. Theft of government property can net a 10-year prison sentence. Hopefully, that 10 years will apply to each individual piece of equipment this criminal stole. (c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

1. GEOGRAPHY: What is the capital of Hungary? 2. MOVIES: What is the name of the necklace given to Rose in the movie “Titanic”? 3. TELEVISION: Which TV comedy led to a spinoff series called “The Andy Griffith Show”? 4. HISTORY: The Motion Picture Association of America established modern movie ratings in which year? 5. ADVERTISING: What is the name of the rooster in the Kellogg’s Cornflakes advertisements? 6. MEASUREMENTS: How many gills are in a pint? 7. FOOD & DRINK: What is spumoni? 8. LITERATURE: Which 20th-century poet once wrote, “August rain: the best of the summer gone, and the new fall not yet born. The odd uneven time”? 9. BIBLE: How many times did Noah send a dove from the Ark to seek land? 10. ANATOMY: What is a common name for the clavicle? Answers 1. Budapest 2. The Heart of the Ocean 3. “The Danny Thomas Show” 4. 1968 5. Cornelius 6. Four 7. A layered Italian ice-cream dessert 8. Sylvia Plath 9. Three 10. Collar bone (c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.

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ForofAdvertising 505-0674 TIDBITS Kootenai County,Call Idaho(334) Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 COUCH THEATER VIDEO/DVD PREVIEWS

PHOTO: Meryl Streep in “Julie & Julia” Photo Credit: Columbia Pictures If cinema is a feast for the eyes, then cinema about food is ... a fourcourse meal? A buffet? Well, whatever it is, it’s delicious start to finish. If you’re feeling hungry for something to pass the time, give these five tasty treats a shot.

“The 100-Foot Journey” -- A cold war over hot food erupts when an Indian family sets up shop across the road -- the titular 100 feet -- from a prestigious French bistro. The French chef, Madame Mallory (Helen Mirren), offers sabotage at every turn, while her protege, sous chef Marguerite (Charlotte Le Bon), slowly falls in love with Hassan (Manish Dayal), the gifted chef of the new Maison Mumbai. Over time, Madame Mallory recognizes Hassan’s talent. As racial tensions between the two groups are addressed, a single savory omelette opens the door to harmony and happiness for all. “Ratatouille” -- In this adorable Pixar animated film, Remy (voiced by Patton Oswalt), a foodie rat with a precocious palate, joins forces with Alfredo Linguini, a sympathetic kid whose father just happened to be the late renowned chef Auguste Gusteau -- a believer that “Anyone can cook.” Linguini goes to work in Gusteau’s Parisian restaurant as a dishwasher, but when Remy figures out how to surreptitiously control Linguini’s movements, the pair’s creations as a cook create quite a stir, to the dismay of the interloping Chef Skinner, who has been abusing Gusteau’s name for marketing. With every dish, you’ll be rooting for the tiny chef under the hat. “Julie & Julia” -- Amy Adams plays Julie Powell, a New York writer who begins a blog about cooking all 524 recipes in Julia Childs’ “Mastering the Art of French Cooking.” Meryl Streep plays Julia Child, whose story is shown in flashbacks from her arrival in Paris with her diplomat husband, attending Le Cordon Bleu to learn about French cooking and ultimately putting together the cookbook and the publishing process. Along the way, we explore cooking as creativity, challenge and character-building. “No Reservations” -- A fast-paced and competitive bistro kitchen gets an emotional makeover when head chef Kate (Catherine Zeta-Jones), facing some life challenges, gets a new sous chef (Aaron Eckhard) with a mind, talent and style all his own. It’s a rom-com set in a kitchen, and while it’s hot and spicy, it’s pretty light and easily digestible. Also stars Abigail Breslin and Zoe Kravitz in a supporting role. “Soul Food” -- Sunday dinner and Momma are what keep a family together. Although this one is a family drama -- sisters and spouses, secrets and friendships, hopes and dreams -- it heavily features the act of coming together for food as a balm for what ails a heart. Mother Joe suffers a tragic stroke and perishes after languishing in a coma, her dying wish placed in the hands of 11-year-old Ahmad (Brandon Hammond). While the lives of sisters Teri, Maxine and Bird (Vanessa Williams, Vivica A. Fox and Nia Long) play out, Ahmad conspires to bring the family together for Sunday dinner again.

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® ofIdaho TIDBITS of Kootenai County, Issue County #33 Aug. 10th 2020 Tidbits Dallas

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• On Aug. 23, 1784, four counties in North Carolina declare their independence as the state of Franklin. The counties lay in what would become Tennessee. In defiance of Congress, Franklin survived as an independent nation for four years with its own constitution, Indian treaties and legislated system of barter. • On Aug. 21, 1911, theft of the Mona Lisa is discovered. After a two-year search for the painting, former employee Vincenzo Perugia was captured attempting to collect a ransom. • On Aug. 20, 1920, seven men, including legendary football star Jim Thorpe, meet to organize a professional football league. The meeting led to the creation of the American Professional Football Conference, the forerunner to the National Football League. • On Aug. 22, 1933, the notorious Barker gang robs a Federal Reserve mail truck in Chicago and kills Officer Miles Cunningham. Netting only a bunch of worthless checks, the Barkers soon returned to a crime with which they had more success -- kidnapping. Their first victim, William Hamm, had earned the gang $100,000 in ransom. • On Aug. 18, 1958, Vladimir Nabokov’s controversial novel “Lolita” is published in the U.S. The novel, about a man’s obsession with a 12-year-old girl, had been rejected by four publishers before G.P. Putnam’s Sons accepted it. • On Aug. 19, 1960, in the USSR, captured American U-2 spy plane pilot Francis Gary Powers is sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for his confessed espionage. Only 18 months into his sentence, the Soviets released him in exchange for Rudolf Abel, a senior KGB spy who was caught and convicted in the U.S. five years earlier. • On Aug. 17, 1978, the Double Eagle II, with three pilots, completes the first trans-Atlantic balloon flight when it lands near Paris after lifting off from Presque Isle, Maine. The helium-filled balloon had flown 3,233 miles in the nearly six-day odyssey.


TIDBITS Kootenai County, Idaho Issue #33 Aug. 10th 2020 ForofAdvertising Call (334) 505-0674

By Matilda Charles

It’s OK to Just Go Home

Staying safe nowadays comes in many forms. It’s not just keeping our distance from others or carrying tiny bottles of hand sanitizer. Now staying safe also can mean avoiding the new routines we’ve felt comfortable putting in place. Because things had started to calm down around here, at least somewhat, I’d started venturing to the grocery store late at night. Few people were in the store, allowing me to zip through the aisles, grab a few things and get out. Now, unfortunately, I’m going back to curbside delivery. The manager has told me about the multiple threats of weapons and violence that came about from people who were asked to wear a mask in the store. Basically, they threw an immature (and dangerous) fit. In one case, a gun was drawn at the front door. So, we need to be flexible. Things are changing on a daily basis. Back to the online ordering I go. Not ideal, certainly. It means I can’t pick out my own groceries. It means being in my designated pick-up spot in front of the store at a specific time, even in a deluge of rain. How are you to know if your area is safe from the idiots who want to throw a tantrum over being asked to wear a mask? Start with the store manager. They owe you the truth. Make a call to the police non-emergency line and ask them if there have been any instances of threats of violence in town. Authorities in a number of states are rolling back portions of the re-opening they just recently allowed, locking down certain businesses again and adjusting the rules. Theaters, hair salons and more are subject to sudden changes. People will be unhappy. If you do go out to local businesses, be aware of your surroundings. Don’t be afraid to just turn around and go home.

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Why do we do what we do!!? Simply put…because it makes a difference. But, here is the wonderful secret, it makes a difference in our residents’ lives, in their loved one’s lives, and, most especially, in our lives!! Conversations, calls, notes, cards, letters, like this one just received fill our cups of love to the brim! “Thank you for taking such good care of my husband... I am so glad he’s in such a nice safe place.” “According to the National Opinion Research Centre, 8 in 10 people reported their time caregiving as a positive experience. (National Opinion Research Center, “Long Term Care in America: Expectations and Reality,” ResearchHighlights (May 2014).) From gaining a greater sense of purpose to new life skills, it’s clear that the benefits of caregiving don’t just apply to the recipient, but also those who provide the care. Here are a few of the wonderful benefits caregivers often experience: Feeling Good – Caring for others provides benefits that most people often don’t experience… Feeling a Sense of Accomplishment - Taking care of someone else presents unique challenges and obstacles to overcome… Feeling loved and building strong Relationships – Caring for others helps to develop empathy and the ability to connect with people, even in difficult times… Feeling valued and experiencing personal growth – Caregivers gain a variety of skills from their experiences… While the task of caregiver presents many challenges, it’s clear that, with the right attitude, the benefits heavily outweigh any negatives. Caregiving presents a special opportunity to gain intangible benefits that last a lifetime… (HomeInstead Senior Care, www.caregiverStress.com ) Our note to our Lodge families…THANK YOU!! (If you know someone who would like to join our circle of caregivers in one of our homes, please contact Linda at 208-755- 3637 or linda@lodgeliving.net. We even have gorgeous onsite studio apartments which include meals and all utilities as a part of our employment package. We are delighted to schedule around school commitments for our employees who are reaching ever upward. Call us!!)

LindaDavis Director of building relationships. 208.457.3403 www.LodgeLiving.net


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® of Idaho TIDBITS of Kootenai County, IssueCounty #33 Aug. 10th 2020 Tidbits Dallas

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1. Which singer penned and released “Undercover Angel”? 2. Who released the hit “Smoke From a Distant Fire”? 3. Which singer-songwriter released “Fool (If You Think It’s Over)”? 4. Meat Loaf has been in upward of 50 TV shows and movies. What part did he play in the 1999 cult classic “Fight Club”? 5. Name the song that contains this lyric: “Too many long conversations, And no one is hearin’ a word, Just tryin’ to escape the frustrations, Till a song in the night can be heard.” Answers 1. Alan O’Day, in 1977. The song, only as a single, went to No. 1, even without an album to promote it. Look for copies with an extended version. 2. Sanford Townsend Band, in 1977. Unfortunately, this one is classified as a one-hit wonder ... the Alabama band was too good for that label. 3. Chris Rea, in 1978. Rea received a Grammy nom for Best New Artist in 1979, and Best British Male Artist in 1988, 1989 and 1990. 4. He played Robert “Bob” Paulson. 5. “Dancin’ Shoes,” by Nigel Olsson, in 1979. The song ended up on the Billboard’s Year-End Hot 100 Singles for that year. Olsson was a former drummer and backup singer for Elton John. (c) 2020 King Features Synd., Inc.


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