Tidbits April 18 Issue
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April 18, 2013 Issue # 815The 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® SPARKLES WITH
DIAMONDSby Kathy Wolfe
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“Diamonds are a girl’s best friend.” “Diamonds are forever.” “Diamonds in the rough.” What-ever you say about these precious gems, you can’t deny they are desirable! Tidbits has all the dirt on diamonds this week – read along and see!• The word “diamond” has its origins in the
Greek language from the word Adamas, which translates “unconquerable and inde-structible.” The Greeks believed them to be splinters of stars that had fallen to Earth and believed diamonds promoted strength, invin-cibility, and courage to those who wore them.
• Ranked as the hardest natural substance on Earth, diamonds are composed entirely of carbon, the only gemstones composed of just one element. They are formed at high temper-atures under intense pressure 87 to 120 miles (140 to 190 km) within the Earth’s mantle over billions of years. A volcanic eruption can often bring diamonds to the Earth’s surface. Although there are synthetic “diamonds,” there is no man-made way to reproduce the tremendous heat and pressure found deep within the Earth that creates diamonds. Mil-lionaire publisher Malcolm Forbes had this to say about diamonds – “Diamonds are nothing more than chunks of coal that stuck to their jobs.” turn the page for more!
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• Although diamonds are 58 times harder than the next hardest mineral on Earth, they are quite brittle and can be shattered by the single blow of a hammer. And if a diamond is placed in an oven at a temperature of 1405° F (763° C), it will disappear without leaving so much as an ash behind.
• About 250 tons of earth must be mined to produce a single one-carat diamond. Over 130,000,000 carats weighing 57,000 lbs. (26,000 kg) of diamonds are mined every year – a value of about $9 billion.
• Of all the diamonds to be found on Earth, only 20% of them are suitable for jewelry. The ma-jority of diamonds are used for industrial drill-ing, grinding, cutting, and polishing tools. Dia-monds are embedded into drill bits for drilling oil and gas wells through thousands of feet of rock.
•Diamondswerefirst discovered in India, butmost diamond deposits are found in Africa and Russia.Therearesignificantdeposits inBra-zil, Australia, and Canada, and in a few U.S. states, Arkansas, Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana. There’s only one mine in the world where you can be a miner, located at Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas, a 37.5-acre ancient volcanic crater. For $7, you can mine alldayandkeepanythingyoufind. In1990,one lucky park visitor found a diamond weigh-ing 3.03 carats in the rough. After cutting, the gem was a perfect 1.09 carat. Don’t get your hopes up, however – gemologists estimate this was a one in a billion occurrence.
• Although less than 1% of diamonds are mined in the U.S., America buys more than half of the world’s total production of quality gems.
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DIAMONDS (continued):
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For which month is the diamond the birthstone?What decade was the advertising phrase “A diamond is forever” introduced?Bywhatcompany?Whowas“Time”magazine’sfirstMan of the Year in 1927?What was the name of the Dukes’ car on the TV show “The Dukes of Hazzard”?
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Inwhichclassicnoveldoesthecharacter Pip appear? What is TV chef Emeril’s last name?What famous song starts out with theline“It’snineo’clockonaSaturday....”Who was the female star in the 1983film“RiskyBusiness”?Who wrote and released the pop-ular 80s song “The Safety Dance”?
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Quiz Bits
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Who was the last Florida State running back to rush for 1,000 yards in a season?WhowasthelastNBAplayerto be on a title-winning team after leading the league in minutes played during the regular season—Norm Nixon,Wilt Chamberlain, Michael JordanorBillRussell?WhoholdstheNBArecordformost career free throws made?
Who was the last NHL player before Anaheim’s Teemu Selanne in 2013 to have a four-point game at age 42?(hint: think donuts)Earlier this year, Serena Williams became the oldest player (31) to hold the No. 1 ranking in women’s tennis. Who had been the oldest?Name the last pitcher before Boston’sJoshBeckettin2007 to win an All-Star Game and a World Series game in the same season. (hint: NL)
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DIAMONDS (continued):
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• A diamond’s value is based on the “Four C’s” – carat weight, clarity, color, and cut. A diamond’s carat is not the same as that of gold. Pure gold is considered 24 carats, while one diamond carat is 0.007055 oz. (200 mg). Not all diamonds are clear. The presence of impurities causes the gems to vary in color, as can heat or irradiation. Nitrogen in a stone produces a yellow color, while irradiation might produce green. Blue,red,brown,pink,orange,andevenblackmightresult from the presence of both irradiation and heat. Clear diamonds are the highest grade and value.
• Diamonds lose about 50% of their original weight during the cutting and polishing process, changing a rough stone into a faceted gem. One diamond weigh-ing two carats is worth double that of two one-carat diamonds. About 75% of all diamonds sold world-wide are round cut. Other popular cuts include the football-shaped marquise, the pear cut (which are rounded on one end with a tapering point on the other), and the emerald cut, a rectangular shape with cropped corners.
• Although blue, green, and pink diamonds are ex-tremely rare, they are not the rarest gems. That honor
belongs to the pure red ruby. Diamonds them-selves aren’t actually rare at all, with thousands mined every year.
• The world’s largest diamond was found in South Africa in 1905. Dubbed the Cullinan, it weighed 3106.75 carats uncut, three times the size of the next largest diamond, the Excelsior, also found in South Africa. The Cullinan was cut into the 530-carat Great Star of Africa and the 317-carat Lesser Star of Africa, along with 104 other dia-mondsofflawless color andclarity.Today theyareallpartoftheBritishcrownjewels.
DiffiCULtY tHiS WeeK:
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• The legendary Hope Diamond is a 45.52-carat deep blue stone famous for a supposed curse uponitsowners.Itsbluecolorisattributedtotrace amounts of boron and nitrogen within its composition. When exposed to ultravio-let light, it produces a red phosphorescence, a “glow-in-the-dark” effect. The curse alleges that the gem brings tragedy to all who own it or wear it, but it’s likely that the stories were fabricated to heighten the diamond’s mystery and consequently, its value. However, legend has it that two owners committed suicide, an-other was killed by Russian revolutionists, one murdered by her sweetheart, and another thrown from a precipice. At one point, the gem was in the possession of Marie Antoinette and herhusbandKingLouisXVI,whowereguil-lotined. It’s believed that theHopeDiamondcamefromamineinIndia,andwasbroughttoParis by aFrenchgemmerchant. It currentlyresides in the Smithsonian Institute, donatedby diamond merchant Harry Winston in 1958. The irreplaceable gem is reportedly insured for $250million. It’s displayed behind a 3-inch-thick (76 mm) bulletproof glass in its own dis-play room.
• It’sbecometraditionaltopresentone’sintend-ed with a diamond when proposing marriage. This dates back to 1477 when Archduke Maxi-millian of Austria gifted Mary of Burgundywith a diamond upon their engagement. It’salso customary to wear engagement and wed-dingringsonthethirdfingerofthelefthand.This is because the ancient Egyptians believed thatparticularfinger’sveinranstraight to theheart.
DIAMONDS (continued):
:A group of porcupines is called a prickle.A rock python can live for a year without a meal.
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1Q09 - WEEK 03JAN 11 - JAN 17
According to , the Beatles’ hit song “Yesterday” has been(recorded in a new version in the studio) by more singers more than any other popular song in history.The melody for this legendary song came to Paul McCartney in a dream he experienced late one night.
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We know her as a leading authority on love, marriage, and child rearing. Read along and learnofDr.JoyceBrothers’journeytofame.• JoyceDianeBauerdidn’tsetouttobecomeacelebrity.Borntoattorneyparentswhohadalaw practice together, Joyce attended school inQueens,NewYork. Itwason toCornellUniversity for her undergraduate work fol-lowed by a Ph.D in psychology from Colum-bia University, writing her dissertation on anxiety avoidance and escape behavior.
• JoycemarriedmedicalstudentMiltonBroth-ers in 1949, and when she discovered she was pregnant, the couple made the choice for Joyce to give up her teaching position and re-main at home with their child. Living under financial strain onMilton’s $50 permonthmedical resident salary, Joyce decided to au-dition for the popular quiz show The $64,000 Question.Becauseherhusbandwasafanofboxing, she had studied numerous reference books on the subject, and when the sponsors suggested it as her topic for questions, she readily agreed. Her sharp memory enabled her to answer the most difficult questionsaccurately. In1955,shebecamethesecondpersonandfirstwoman towin the$64,000top prize. The follow-up program in 1956, The $64,000 Challenge pitted her against ex-pertsinthefieldofboxing,andafteranswer-ing every question correctly, she nabbed the $70,000 prize money. Her total quiz show earnings of $134,000 made her one of the biggest winners in the history of TV game shows.
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DR. JOYCE BROTHERS (continued):• Following her much-publicized success on the
quiz shows, Joyce became a popular guest on many TV shows, including a stint as a commen-tator for aCBS boxingmatch between SugarRayRobinsonandCarmenBasilia.Joycewasso well-liked by the viewing public that she was offered her own afternoon talk show, one that gave her the chance to use her psychology skills.Shefieldedquestionsfromtheaudience,offering advice on relationships, raising chil-dren, and other life issues. The program was an immediate success and before long Joyce was receiving 1000+ letters a week. Not only was the show syndicated nationally, within a few months, a late-night show dealing with more “adult” issues was added to her schedule, fol-lowed by another live call-in radio program.
• A syndicated newspaper column in 350 news-papers followed, and in 1963, Good Housekeep-ing magazine began running a monthly column, a feature that continued for over four decades.
• Best-selling books were next on her list ofachievements with How to Get Whatever You Want Out of Life, What Every Woman Should Know About Men, and What Every Woman Ought to Know About Love and Marriage.
• In1989,Joycewasfacedwithanissueofherown she had to deal with. Her husband of 40 years died of cancer and she was overcome with grief, even to the point of suicidal thoughts. The good that came out of her experience was the 1992 book Widowed, the story of the journey through her despair, and a guide for others cop-ing with the same feelings of loss.
• Now 85 years old, Joyce still occasionally ap-pears as a guest star, guest speaker, and product spokeswoman.
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• You may not realize it, but you’ve probably seen pic-tures of the French village of Mont-St.-Michel. It’s apicturesque place, a tiny islet in the English Chan-nel with an 8th-century abbey at the top of a high hill, surrounded by stone houses and cobbled streets. It wasn’t always an islet,though; the hill on which the abbey sits was once surrounded by an oak for-est, and the shore was miles away. That all changed in the year 725, though, when an earthquake struck the re-gion. A tidal wave washed over the forest, leaving a vast tidal plain in its wake. Ever since, twice a day, 40-foot tides completely sur-round Mont-St.-Michel. * * *Thought for the Day: “The fundamental cause of trou-ble in this world is that the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.” --BertrandRussell
• It was pioneering science-fiction author H.G. Wellswho made the following sage observation: “Moral indigna-tion is jealousy with a halo.”• In a match between a200-pound mountain lion and a 20-pound porcupine, the lion is likely to be the loser -- and will probably die if it tried to take a bite of the desired prey.•Inanoddcoincidence,Pres-ident Abraham Lincoln had a secretary named Kennedy, and President John F. Ken-nedy had a secretary named Lincoln. Kennedy the secre-tary told Lincoln the president that he shouldn’t go to Ford’s Theatre the night he was shot; Lincoln the secretary tried to convince Kennedy the presi-dent not to go on a trip to Dallas, where he was shot. • Those who study such things say that Americans watch more television dur-ing the months of January and February than at any other time during the year.• Strawberries have more vitamin C than oranges.
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LIBRARIESHappy National Library Week! Since 1958, we’ve observed this tribute established by the American Library Association. Here are some “book bits” for readers to chew on during this commemorative week. • The word “library” has its origins in the Latin,
the word liber meaning “book.” Humans have long recognized the need for an organized ar-chive of history. The earliest libraries dating backto2600BCincludedpapyrusscrollsandclay tablets written in cuneiform script. There wasevenalibraryclassificationsystemasear-lyas700BC.
• As French settlers made their way to North America in the 1500s, they brought their per-sonal book collections with them. The firstnon-personal library was established in Quebec City in 1635 at the Jesuit College. Three years later, clergyman John Harvard bequeathed his 400-volume library and half of his estate to the College at New Towne. The college was renamed Harvard College in his honor, and the library’s meager beginnings have grown into the largest academic library and third largest library overall in the United States, with close to 17 million volumes.
• Inthe17thand18thcenturies,asthequantityof books increased with the advent of printing, there was a considerable increase in the inter-estoflibraries.In1731,BenjaminFranklinin-troduced the idea of a “subscription library,” one that shared books among members of a lit-erary society. People could join by purchasing “stock” in the organization, and books were lent only to members.
• TheBodleianLibrary,themainresearchcenterfor the University of Oxford, was established in1602.By1914,thetotalnumberofbooksinits collections had already passed the one mil-lion mark.
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League Baseball career. Twenty years later, Aaron became base-ball’s new home-run king when he broke Babe Ruth’s long-standing record of 714 career homers.
• On April 27, 1963, Margaret Annemarie Battavio’s very first single, “I Will Follow Him,” reaches No. 1 on the U.S. pop charts. At age 15, the singer better known as Little Peggy March became the youngest female performer ever to top the Billboard Hot 100.
• On April 22, 1970, Earth Day, an event to increase public awareness of the world’s environmental prob-lems, is celebrated in the United States for the first time. Millions of Americans participated in rallies, marches and educational programs.
• On April 25, 1983, the Soviet Union releases a letter that Rus-sian leader Yuri Andropov wrote to Samantha Smith, an American fifth-grader from Manchester, Maine, inviting her to visit his country. An-dropov’s letter came in response to a note Smith had sent him in De-cember 1982, asking if the Soviets were planning to start a nuclear war.
• On April 28, 1789, three weeks into a journey from Tahiti to the West Indies, the HMS Bounty is seized in a mutiny led by Fletcher Christian, the master’s mate. Captain William Bligh and 18 of his loyal support-ers were set adrift in a small, open boat. Bligh and his men reached Timor in the East Indies in June, af-ter a voyage of about 3,600 miles.
• On April 24, 1800, President John Adams approves legislation to ap-propriate $5,000 to establish the Library of Congress. The first library catalog, dated 1802, listed 964 vol-umes and nine maps. Twelve years later, the British army invaded the city of Washington and burned the Capitol, including the then 3,000-volume Library of Congress.
• On April 26, 1937, during the Span-ish Civil War, the German military tests its powerful new air force -- the Luftwaffe -- on the Basque town of Guernica in northern Spain. One-third of Guernica’s 5,000 inhabitants were killed or wounded, and fires en-gulfed the city and burned for days.
• On April 23, 1954, Hank Aaron hits the first home run of his Major
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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. Lamp is missing. 2. Hat is smaller. 3. Briefcase word is different. 4. Mailbox is missing. 5. Mat is missing. 6. Bill slip is missing.
Find at least 6 differences in details between panels
•America’s first actual public librarywas theBostonPublicLibrarywhichopeneditsdoorsin 1854. Today it’s the second largest library in the U.S., second only to the U.S. Library of Congress. Established in 1800, the Library of Congress is the nation’s largest library. Originally housed in the Capitol building, its 30,000 volumes were completely destroyed inAugust, 1814whenBritish troops set fireto the Capitol during the War of 1812. For-mer president Thomas Jefferson immediately offered his personal library of 6,487 books (which he had spent 50 years collecting) for sale as a replacement, and Congress appropri-ated $23,950 for the purchase.
• Educator and Columbia University librarian Melvil Dewey copyrighted his decimal clas-sificationsystemforbooksin1876,asystemstill used by most libraries. Each category, for example “Philosophy and Psychology,” is as-signed a number, which is then divided into subcategories in increments of 10.
• Steel magnate Andrew Carnegie gave millions of dollars to fund more than 2,500 libraries in 47. U.S. states, 7 Canadian provinces, the U.K.,Ireland,Australia,NewZealand,andtheWest Indies.Carnegie required that the localcommunities provide the land and a budget for operation. At the time of his death, Carnegie had already donated $351 million of his for-tune – that’s $4.8 billion in today’s money.
• There are close to 122,000 public and academ-ic libraries in America, with about 8% of that number public libraries. Nearly 170 million Americans are registered borrowers, and they make about 1.6 billion trips to the library each year.
LIBRARIES (continued):
April1940s, by DeBeersCharles LindberghThe General Lee“Great Expectations”
Lagasse “Piano Man” byBillyJoelRebecca De MornayMen Without Hats (1983)
Quiz Answers1.2.
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6.7.
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Warrick Dunn1,180 yds, 1996Norm Nixon1979-80, LakersKarl Malone with 9,787
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Tim Hortonin 1972Chris Evert(30 in 1985)Jon Smoltz(1996,Braves)
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sports Answers
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