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March 14, 2013 Issue # 810The Little Paper Ever Read®NeatestPublished by: Wick Publications • P.O. Box 12861, Grand Forks, ND 58208 • For Advertising Call: 701-772-8239 • wickpub@yahoo.com
TIDBITS® BRINGS YOU SOME
IRISH INFOby Kathy Wolfe
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This week, Tidbits has lots of information about the Irish, everything from St. Patrick to Notre Dame. Celebrate St. Paddy’s Day by learning some interesting facts about the Emerald Isle. • The man has a day named after him, but who
exactly was St. Patrick? Strangely enough, his name wasn’t Patrick, and he wasn’t born in Ire-land, but rather in Scotland! Maewyn Succat was born in the late fourth century to a wealthy family, but at the age of 16, he was kidnapped from the family estate by a group of Irish raid-ers and sold into slavery. During his six years of captivity, he was a shepherd, and experienced a conversion to Christianity. According to folk-lore, a voice came to him urging him to escape, which he did, aboard a pirate ship. Yet the voice further counseled him to return to Ireland as a missionary to convert the Irish to Christianity.
• After 15 years of study for the priesthood, dur-ing which time Succat took on the name Patri-cius, he began his 29-year-long mission in Ire-land. Ancient legend tells of Patrick standing on a hilltop holding up his wooden staff, banish-ing all the snakes from Ireland. Because there were no snakes in Ireland, it’s believed this was merely symbolic of Patrick driving out the evil and pagan philosophies. turn the page for more!
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• Patrick wasn’t made a saint until the early 17th century, hundreds of years after his death in the year 461. March 17 is the anniversary of his death and is his religious feast day.
• Although we think of the color green when St. Patrick is mentioned, blue was the first color to represent the hero. In 1783, The Order of St. Patrick was founded, the senior order of chivalry and fellowship of knights. The Order of the Thistle already used green for their uni-forms and the Order of the Garter used dark blue, so the Order of St. Patrick used a shade of sky blue. Military uniforms were of “St. Pat-rick’s Blue” and during the time of King Henry VIII, and the flag of Ireland was a gold harp on a blue background. The harp remains as the country’s national emblem today.
• Between 1846 and 1900, about 2,873,000 peo-ple emigrated from Ireland to America, making it the second largest nationality group of im-migrants, second only to Germany. The most predominant occupation of those newcomers was that of skilled weaver.
• In 2010, about 34.7 million U.S. residents claimed ancestors from Ireland. What were the most common Irish surnames of these folks? The last names of Murphy, Kelly, and O’Sullivan are considered the top three “most Irish.” Other common Irish surnames include Walsh, O’Brien, Byrne, Ryan, O’Connor, O’Neill, and O’Reilly.
• Ireland has had its influence on geographical locations in the U.S. Seven communities are named Shamrock, including locations in Tex-as, Oklahoma, and West Virginia. Sixteen oth-er towns are named Dublin, sharing the name with Ireland’s capital. North Carolina is home to the community of Emerald Isle, population 3,655.
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IRISH INFO (continued):
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What popular liqueur was introduced in 1974?Guinness is a world renowned beer that originated in Ireland. The name comes from the man who created it, but what was his first name?Name the four ingredients in Irish coffee?What does “Erin Go Bragh” mean?
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What breakfast food did the Irish bring to America?What does the name of Hawaii’s capital, Honolulu, mean?Which one of Shakespeare’s plays contains the line, “The course of true love never did run smooth”?How many times does the word “grandmother” occur in the Bible (KJV)— 0, 1, 3, or 21?What is the capital of California?
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Who was the last Texas Rangers pitcher before Yu Darvish in 2012 to have five straight starts of at least seven strikeouts—Nolan Ryan, Bobby Witt, Kenny Rogers or Charlie Hough?In 2012, Carlos Beltran became the eighth member of the career 300 steals/300 homers club. Name four of the first seven to do it.
In 2012, Gabby Douglas became the third consecu-tive U.S. athlete to win the women’s Olympic all-around gymnastics title. Who were the previous two? Coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady have made five Super Bowl appearances together. Name three coach/QB pairs to have made four trips together.Who holds the major-league record for most Gold Gloves awarded to a catcher?
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• St. Patrick’s Day often brings beer and taverns to mind, but that tradition didn’t start in Ireland. The Irish Parliament declared the day a reli-gious holiday in 1903, meaning that all the pubs were closed. In 1970, that bill was overturned and the day became a national holiday rather than a religious observance.
• The tradition of a St. Patrick’s Day parade be-gan in America, not Ireland. New York City was home to the first parade, held on March 17, 1762. Irish soldiers serving in the British army organized the celebration to honor the Catholic feast day of Ireland’s patron saint. Today, New York’s parade is the largest in the world with more than 200,000 marchers along the Fifth Avenue route. Close to three million spectators observe the parade, which does not allow auto-mobiles or floats.
• Canada’s longest-running parade is in the city of Montreal, where it first took place in 1824.
• The three-color Irish flag – orange, green, and white – was created in 1848, and is symbolic of the country’s politics. The orange stands for the Irish Protestants, green for the Catholics, and white represents the hope that peace be reached between the two.
• Have you ever heard of the trifolium dubium? That’s the name given to the shamrock by bota-nists. The early Celts referred to the shamrock as the seamroy, and considered this three-leafed clover a sacred plant with mystical properties. Legend has it that St. Patrick used the sham-rock to explain the Holy Trinity to first-century Irish pagans. During the 17th century when the English began seizing Irish land and prohibiting the use of their native language and Catholic re-ligion, many Irish started wearing the shamrock as a symbol of pride in their heritage.
IRISH INFO (continued):
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• The Irish word lobaircin means “small-bod-ied fellow,” and has been modified a bit to the English word “leprechaun.” These little imps date back to the early Celtic beliefs in fairies, those tiny men and women with magical pow-ers, who used those powers for either good or evil. Leprechauns were seen as grumpy little men, whose duties were to mend the shoes of the other fairies. We’ve all heard of the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Folklore claims that the little men have great treasures stored in crocks, and use trickery to protect it from oth-ers. If a leprechaun is captured by a human, he has the magical power to grant three wishes in exchange for his release. In 1959, Walt Disney Studios released the film Darby O’Gill and the Little People, which gave us the image of cheerful and friendly leprechauns, but in Irish folklore, they are cantankerous and mischie-vous.
• Indiana’s University of Notre Dame is home to the Fighting Irish, a team that played its in-augural game in November of 1887. In 1918, Knute Rockne took over as head coach and his record of the highest winning percentage (.881) in football history, either college or professional, still stands. Notre Dame has pro-duced the second largest number of players drafted into the NFL, the greatest number of Heisman Trophy winners, and ten former Irish have been inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Every home game has been sold out since 1966, with the exception of one Thanks-giving Day contest against the Air Force in 1973, when the students had gone home for the holiday.
IRISH INFO (continued):
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The most popular child star of all time, Shirley Temple, brought a ray of sunshine to the troubled folks of the Great Depression era. How much do you know about this bright and talented individu-al who was a success not only on the screen but in public service as well? Follow along as see! • Born in 1928, Shirley was the daughter of a bank
employee father and a homemaker mother, who enrolled her in dance school at age three. When a talent search was conducted at the school, Shirley was signed by Educational Pictures and appeared in a number of movie shorts, as well as modeling for cereal ads. The 1932 movie Red-Haired Alibi brought Shirley her first feature film role.
• The first feature film created specifically for Shirley was 1934’s Bright Eyes, which featured her famous number “On the Good Ship Lolli-pop.” Over 500,000 copies of the sheet music were sold following the movie’s release. At the age of six, she received a miniature Juvenile Os-car for her 1934 accomplishments, and her feet and hand prints were added to the concrete fore-court of Grauman’s Chinese Theater.
• By the time she was six, Shirley had already starred in 20 movies. The Shirley Temple doll was introduced, wearing a polka-dot dress mod-eled after the one she wore in 1934’s Stand Up and Cheer!. By 1941, sales on the doll had topped $45 million. The sizable list of her other products included a line of clothing, soap, dish-es, and books. Shirley also endorsed Quaker Puffed Wheat, General Electric, and Packard, among others. At age seven, her merchandise royalties were double the income from her mov-ies.
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SHIRLEY TEMPLE (continued):• Shirley was the top box-office draw for a four-
year period, 1935 through 1938, saved 20th Century-Fox from bankruptcy, and had her own personal bodyguard.
• Following the huge success of Heidi, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, and The Little Princess, Shirley performed in her last film as a child ac-tress in 1940 at age 12. The film was The Blue Bird and was her 44th movie. Her popularity declined as she entered adolescence, and she made just a few films as a teen and young adult. When she was 15, Shirley met an Army Air Corps sergeant named John Agar, and at age 17, she married him. Their daughter was born when Shirley was 19, but the marriage was over after four years.
• December, 1950 was the time of two momen-tous occasions in Shirley’s life – she announced her retirement from the film industry at age 22, and she married wealthy California business-man Charles Black. This union would endure 54 years until his death. She entered the politi-cal arena in 1969, when Richard Nixon appoint-ed her as the U.S. Representative to the United Nations. Under Gerald Ford, Shirley served as Ambassador to Ghana and White House Chief of Protocol. Her assignment under Ronald Rea-gan was that of a foreign affairs officer with the State Department. During the George H.W. Bush administration, she was the Ambassador to Czechoslovakia. She became a best-selling author in 1988 with the release of her autobiog-raphy Child Star.
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• Those who study such things say that the rate of divorce increases dur-ing the winter months.• The Baltimore Orioles had a pretty bad season in 1988. After the team lost its first 10 games, Bob Rivers, a dee-jay at Baltimore radio station WIYY, announced that he would stay on the air until the home team won a game. He kept his word, sleeping only between songs, for 10 days. When the Orioles finally de-feated the Chicago White Sox, Rivers played “I’m Free” by The Who, and finally left.• Queen termites can live for up to 100 years.• When respondents to a sur-vey are guaranteed that the re-sults will be anonymous, fully 40 percent of the people ad-mit to cheating on their taxes.* * *Thought for the Day: “When two men in business always agree, one of them is unneces-sary.” -- William Wrigley, Jr.
• President Harry Truman was once told there were ghosts in the White House. His response? “I’m sure they’re here, and I’m not half so alarmed at meeting up with any of them as I am at having to meet the live nuts I have to see every day.”• Pet food is the third most profitable item for supermarkets, following meat and fresh produce.• The warmest parts of your body are your eyes and nose, while the cold-est parts (unsurprisingly) are your fingers and toes.• In the African country of Zaire, more than 200 differ-ent languages are spoken.• It was more than 30 years ago, in 1982, that a man in suburban Los Angeles tied 24 weather balloons to his lawn chair in an attempt to fly. A pretty success-ful attempt, too -- he made it to 16,000 feet, alarm-ing air traffic controllers and pilots in the process.
If you discover an H&R Block error on your return that entitles you to a smaller tax liability, we’llrefund the tax prep fee for that return. Refund claims must be made during the calendar year in
which the return was prepared. OBTP# B13696 ©2012 HRB Tax Group, Inc.
NEW LOCATION: 210 Gateway Dr NE, East Grand Forks , MN 56721 n 218-793-0035107 E 2ND St, Crookston , MN 56716 n 218-281-3658
GETTING THE MOST BACKSTARTS WITH GETTINGTHE MOST EXPERTISE.
If you discover an H&R Block error on your return that entitles you to a smaller tax liability, we’llrefund the tax prep fee for that return. Refund claims must be made during the calendar year in
which the return was prepared. OBTP# B13696 ©2012 HRB Tax Group, Inc.
NEW LOCATION: 210 Gateway Dr NE, East Grand Forks , MN 56721 n 218-793-0035107 E 2ND St, Crookston , MN 56716 n 218-281-3658
GETTING THE MOST BACKSTARTS WITH GETTINGTHE MOST EXPERTISE.
NeW LoCAtioN:210 Gateway Dr. NE
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2600 DeMers Ave.Grand Forks, ND
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SHORT STUFFThis week there’s no shortage of short things! Take a look at a number of items containing the word “short.” • Randy Newman’s 1977 Billboard top hit “Short
People” described his subject, “They got little baby legs that stand so low, you got to pick ‘em up just to say hello.” Who is classified as a short person? The term “short stature” refers to any person substantially under the average height for a person of the same age and gender. Pediatricians use a measurement called stan-dard deviation that compares the height of dif-ferent children. A child’s height must be more than two SD’s below average height in order to have short stature, and 95% percent of compa-rable children are taller.
• Do you know the difference between IRS forms 1040A and 1040EZ? Form 1040A is the “short form” while 1040EZ is the “easy” form, the simplest way to file taxes. Both are limited to taxpayers with less than $100,000 in tax-able income who take the standard deduction. However, the easy form is only for those with no dependents.
• A short sale on the stock exchange means that the seller does not actually own the shares he/she is selling and has to borrow them before be-ing able to deliver. When the share price falls, the short seller buys them and returns them to the lender, resulting in a gain on the deal.
• If someone calls you short, he/she might be re-ferring to your height, but could be telling you that your demeanor is abrupt, discourteous, or unfriendly. A short presentation doesn’t always refer to its duration. It might mean it was suc-cinct and concise.
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MOMENtS iN tiME the History Channel
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son’s orders to capture Mexican rev-olutionary Pancho Villa dead or alive.
• On March 18, 1937, nearly 300 students in Texas are killed by an explosion of natural gas at their school. Eleven oil and natural-gas derricks stood in the schoolyard as a means of saving the school mon-ey. The blast killed most victims in-stantly and was felt 40 miles away.
• On March 20, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson sends a tele-gram to Gov. George Wallace of Alabama in which he agrees to send federal troops to supervise a planned civil-rights march in Wal-lace’s home state. Earlier that month, civil-rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. had led two at-tempts to march to Montgomery.
• On March 21, 1980, President Jimmy Carter informs a group of U.S. athletes that, in response to the December 1979 Soviet incur-sion into Afghanistan, the United States would boycott the 1980 Olympics in Moscow. It marked the first and only time that the United States has boycotted the Olympics.
• On March 24, 1603, after 44 years of rule, Queen Elizabeth I of England dies, and King James VI of Scotland ascends to the throne, uniting England and Scotland un-der a single British monarch. Queen Elizabeth I passed into history as one of England’s greatest monarchs.
• On March 23, 1839, the initials “O.K.” are first published in The Bos-ton Morning Post. Meant as an ab-breviation for “oll correct,” a popular slang misspelling of “all correct” at the time, OK steadily made its way into the everyday speech of Americans.
• On March 22, 1908, Louis L’Amour, the author of scores of bestselling Western novels, is born in James-town, N.D. After returning from World War II, L’Amour began writing short stories and novels. His big break came when a novel he wrote at the age of 46 became the basis for the popular John Wayne movie “Hondo.”
• On March 19, 1916, the First Aero Squadron flies a support mission for the 7,000 U.S. troops who had invad-ed Mexico on President Woodrow Wil-
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DEERE. JOHN DEERE. (continued): • It was while living in Illinois that John no-
ticed the problems that farmers faced when attempting to till soil. Because the area had formerly been woodland, the soil was rich with hummus, which clumped and clung to the blades of the plows farmers were accus-tomed to using. While repairing a broken cir-cular saw, Deere stumbled upon an idea. He employed his smith skills to fashion the steel blade into the shape of a plow. He affixed two wooden spokes, then hitched the device to a horse. It plowed the heavy Illinois soil like a charm. In fact, a farmer who happened to be observing the test run immediately put in an order for his own John Deere plow.
• In short order, Deere gave up his blacksmith shop and focused on making plows. The company grew steadily and added many em-ployees. In the late 1840s, John relocated the entire operation to Moline, Illinois. Ashamed of his own lack of education, John sent his children to the state’s finest schools. One of his proudest days occurred when son Charles earned the equivalent of an MBA from Bell’s Commercial College in Chicago.
• With his son Charles managing the company, John found time to pursue philanthropic in-terests. He co-founded both the First Nation-al Bank and the First Congregational Church. He was elected the mayor of Moline in 1873, where one of his first actions – the replace-ment of the city’s open drains with a sewer pipe system – saved countless lives by reduc-ing the spread of disease.
• The original John Deere logo, registered in 1876, depicted a deer that was native to Afri-ca. Thirty-six years later, in 1912, it was re-placed with the image of a North American white-tailed deer. In the decades that fol-lowed, the now-familiar “outline” logo took over as the symbol of the John Deere brand.
III?
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DIFFERENCES: 1. Neckline is different. 2. Plant is missing. 3. License is different. 4. Windshield is missing. 5. Hair is different. 6. Poster is missing.
Find at least 6 differences in details between panels
• Look at all the idioms in the English language that contain the word “short.” You can make short work of something by finishing it quick-ly. You might run short (not have enough), fall short (fail to measure up to a certain standard), or cut short (interrupt someone). If you’ve sub-mitted your resume for a job, you might be on the short list, one that contains those narrowed down from the full pool of applicants. Hope-fully, on that resume, you didn’t sell yourself short, that is, didn’t give yourself full credit where it was deserved. You certainly wouldn’t want to get the short end of the stick, which might mean unfair treatment or not getting what you are worthy of.
• If you want to retain information in your short-term memory, it will be necessary for you to repeat it out loud or mentally rehash it from time to time. By doing so, the data re-enters the memory’s storage, enabling it to be pre-served for a longer period.
• What in the world is hydrogenated vegetable oil? Just a fancy name for shortening! Hydro-genation involves adding extra hydrogen at-oms to vegetable fats, which turns them into solids. Shortening is 100% fat, compared to the 80% fat content of butter and margarine. Procter & Gamble introduced Crisco, an ab-breviation of “crystallized cottonseed oil” in June of 1911.
• It’s as easy as 1-2-3! Making shortbread, that is. The traditional recipe calls for one part sugar, two parts butter, and three parts flour. This little treat originated in Scotland during medieval times, when the word “short” was used to describe all things crisp and crumbly. Shortcake is not the same as shortbread. It uses vegetable fat rather than butter and adds some leavening agent such as baking powder, resulting in a different texture.
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Bailey’s Irish CreamArthurIrish whiskey, coffee, cream, brown sugarIreland forever
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