Greeley Tidbits Issue 846
-
Upload
tidbits-of-greeley-west-weld-county -
Category
Documents
-
view
256 -
download
0
description
Transcript of Greeley Tidbits Issue 846
The Neatest Little Paper Ever Read ®Week of Sept. 26, 2012
Perry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum Center& Sewing
4875 W. 10th Street - Greeley - 970.378.7807 - Open Mon - Sat
Bring in your old vacuum& trade it for a NEW
RICCARand receive an extra
$50 to $100$50 to $100Additional trade on
selected models!
Perry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum CenterPerry’s Vacuum Center
The Last Vacuum You’ll Ever Buy!!
Made in USA - Unbelievable Suction PowerTandem Air System - Sealed HEPA Filtration
Great for People with Allergies
by Kathy WolfeWhat was your favorite candy when you were
growing up? Take a nostalgic look back at the history behind some of the early varieties you may have enjoyed, many of them long gone but not forgotten.
• The first candy to combine milk chocolate, marshmallow, peanuts and caramel was the Goo Goo Cluster, introduced in 1913 and sold unwrapped from large glass candy jars in the drug store. When a regular customer mentioned that the candy was “So good, people will ask for it from birth,” the creator named his confection after the first sounds made by his newborn son, “Goo Goo!”
• The invention of America’s first candy machine, a lozenge cutter in 1847, got the NECCO wafers their start. The familiar pastel candies were sold
10 OFF$10 OFF$Emission TestEmission Test
With this ad
150 E. 18th St - GreeleyRocky Mountain Diesel Injection970.356.2672 800.356.2672
GotDieselPower.com GotSoot.com
970.356.2672 800.356.2672
Diesel Emission Testing
10 OFF10 OFF10 OFF10 OFFFOR LIGHT & HEAVY
DUTY DIESELS
WANT TO RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS?Publish a Paper in Your AreaPublish a Paper in Your Area
We provide the opportunity for success!
Call 1.800.523.3096 (US)1.866.631.1567 (Can)
www.TidbitsWeekly.com
Tidbits remembers...
Of Greeley, Evans, LaSalle, Eaton & More!
Old-Time Candy
������������Visit our showroom at
3060 W. 29th StreetGreeley - 80631
Visit our showroom at3060 W. 29th Street
Greeley - 80631
FrontRangeInteriors.comFrontRangeInteriors.com
HardwoodCarpet
TileVinyl
Window Treatments
HardwoodCarpet
TileVinyl
Window Treatments
Issue 846
�����������������������������������������������
������������������������������������
������������ ������������
��������������������������������������
Listen to...
Tidbits TalkWednesdays at 8:18am
For Prospective Students
2102 9th Street - Inside....
Large InventoryR/C Parts & Service 970.351.8603JackWagon R/C
R/CHQGreeley’s
���������������������������������������
������������������������������������
���������������������������������������������������������������������������
LOOK HERE!LOOK HERE!��������������������������
���������������������������
AdvantageAuto BrokersAdvantageAuto Brokers
Caught Reading Tidbits!
Tidbits fans Bob & Shirley Stockhouse were CAUGHT READING TIDBITS at the SUBWAY on 23rd in Evans!
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld CountyPage 2 To advertise call 970.475.4829
for over 50 years before they were given their name, an acronym for the New England Confec-tionery Company that produced them. The same company introduced conversation hearts in 1866, dubbing them “motto hearts” and printing such messages as “Be Good,” “Be True” and “Kiss Me.” The phrases have been updated in recent years, adding “Call Me,” “Fax Me” and “Email Me.” In 2011, NECCO added “Tweet Me” to the list of mottos.
• It’s likely that nearly every child in America has at some time received a ball-shaped lollipop from the bank teller. These little pops, known as Dum Dums, have been around since 1924 when they were introduced by the Akron Candy Com-pany. Sales manager I.C. Bahr named the pop, figuring Dum Dum was a word any child could say. Seven original flavors were introduced, with many added and deleted over the years, includ-ing the famous Mystery Flavor. The Mystery Flavor changes regularly since it is a blend of the tail end of one batch and the beginning of the next, whatever they may be.
• Chick-O-Sticks and Chicken Bones were pretty much the same thing. Introduced in 1938 as Chicken Bones, this was a honeycombed candy filled with peanut butter and rolled in toasted coconut. In 1955, it was discovered that another company already owned the name, and the change was made to Chick-O-Sticks.
• There’s nothing like pouring straight sugar down your throat, which is what we did with Pixy Stix, a powdered sugar packaged in a drinking straw. It started out as a drink mix in the late 1940s called Frutol, but since kids seemed to prefer the straight powder, Pixy Stix made their debut in 1952.
• The chocolate-covered, crunchy peanut butter bar 5th Avenue was the 1938 brainstorm of Wil-liam Luden, who is more famous as the creator of Luden’s cough drops.
• Back in the 1950s when James Dean and Marlon Brando looked cool with their cigarettes rolled up in their T-shirt sleeves, candy cigarettes were all the rage with kids. It seems that candy makers actually worked with the tobacco companies to help attract young smokers! Although the origi-nal candy cigs with their “lit” red tip are long gone, they are now reproduced but, we hope, with a different goal. Some folks who have quit smoking pass out packs to friends on the anni-versary of their last cigarette.
• Those little hollow tubes of black licorice coated with pastel-colored candy were known as Snaps. They appeared at candy counters for the first time around 1930 and can still be found at specialty candy shops. You’ll have a little more trouble finding wax lips, introduced in the early 1900s, which could be chewed into a waxy, cherry-flavored gum. If you didn’t like the lips, vampire fangs and moustaches were also avail-able.
• The Pittsburgh-based D.L. Clark Company had a hit in 1917 with a chocolate-covered honeycomb of ground, roasted peanuts, simply called Clark Bar. This confection became so popular with U.S. troops stationed overseas in World War I, it be-came a giant sensation back at home as well. The
A Store Unlike Any OtherA Store Unlike Any OtherLincolnParkEmorium.com
970.351.6222
822 8th StreetDowntown Greeley
Chalice says...“You’ll love
wandering aroundin a lovely store!”
same company produced the Zagnut candy bar beginning in 1930, a crunchy peanut butter bar covered in toasted coconut. The word “zigzag” became popular in the 1930s, and it’s believed that’s where the name originated.
• Many children spent their allowance on the cara-mel Slo Poke suckers, because according to the familiar jingle, “Get yourself a Slo Poke, it lasts all day!” If you were a chocolate fan, you could purchase the similar Black Cow.
• How about our preferred chewing gums? Three of our old favorites, Black Jack, Beemans and Clove were discontinued years ago, but the Cadbury Adams Company, which owns the formulas, cooks up a batch of each every couple of years. The licorice-flavored Black Jack gum was the first flavored gum in America. Back in the late 1800s, an Ohio physician Dr. Edward E. Beeman marketed a gum of pepsin powder and chicle, designed to aid digestion. Legendary test pilot Chuck Yeager made Beemans gum famous by chewing a stick before every flight for good luck. In fact, the antacid qualities of pepsin made the gum popular with pilots for reducing stomach agitation in flight. Clove gum was first manufactured in 1914 by Thomas Adams. Leg-end has it that Clove grew in popularity during Prohibition because its strong smell masked the odor of illegal alcohol on the breath. The Beech Nut Company launched Fruit Stripe gum in the 1960s with a zebra as its “spokesman,” packaging it in zebra-striped wrappers. It was the only gum with stripes, which were added on after the gum was made. The down side of Fruit Stripe was that it lost its flavor very quickly, and now that it has been re-introduced, the complaint is the same — It’s pretty much flavorless in just over five minutes.
• Chicago’s Williamson Candy Store produced and sold chocolate back around 1920. One of their young customers hung around the establishment so much, before long the employees were ask-ing him to do little odd jobs, “Oh, Henry, could you do this?” and “Oh, Henry, will you bring me that?” Soon after, their newest confection was named the Oh Henry bar.
970-352-8895970-352-8895 1525 8th Avenue - GreeleySe Habla Español
MUSIC - GUNS - STEREOS - LAPTOPS - GUITARSTOOLS - TVs - CELL PHONES - JEWELRY & MOREMUSIC - GUNS - STEREOS - LAPTOPS - GUITARSTOOLS - TVs - CELL PHONES - JEWELRY & MORE
���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
��������������������������������
Making WavesHair Salon
Call Nancy970.302.6096Call Nancy970.302.6096
Making Waves
Call NancyCall NancyCall NancyCall Nancy970.302.6096970.302.6096970.302.6096970.302.6096
• Hair Cuts & Styles• Color• Color Repair• Perms• Adults, Children• Senior Discounts• Ladies, Gentlemen• Walk-ins Welcome
Walk-ins WELCOME!4875 W. 10th StreetJust West of 47th Ave. on 10th Street in Greeley
Hair Styles for 2012Hair Styles for 2012Hair Styles for 2012
C.N.W.
970.352.SIDE (7433)
NO MONEY
DOWN!
Residential & Commercial
cnwsidingandwindows.com
1101 29th Street Road Greeley/Evans
~Licensed~Insured~Bonded
Siding & Window Company
NO MONEY
DOWN!
Residential & Commercial
1101 29th Street Road
Siding & Window CompanySiding & Window CompanyC.N.W.
Specialty Auto Auctions and Sales
(970)266-9561 fort collins(800)901-0022 toll free
Call Today!
Larimer County Fairgrounds - “The Ranch” in Loveland, CO
Interested in Buying?Visit our Website for More
Information on Buying/Selling!
There is StillTime ToConsign!!
Classic Cars - Street Rods - Muscle CarsCollector Cars - Sports Cars - Everyday Drivers
Gates Open @ 8am Memorabilia @ 9am Auction Starts @ 10amAUCTION - Sat, October 6th
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld County Page 3www.TrustTidbits.com
1621 1st Ave - Greeley
Domestic & Foreign4-Wheel Alignment - Autos - Pick ups - Trucks
Vans - Dual Wheels - Mini Vans - RVs
EXPERT REPAIR ONBrakes - Shocks - Struts
Complete Front End RepairGive Louie’s a call - 970.356.8088
����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
1713 61st Ave. Suite 102Greeley, CO 80634
WeldFamilyClinic.com
���������������������������������������������������������������������������������
����������������������������������������������������������
��������������������������
���������������������������������������������
�������������������������������������������������
�����������������������
FAMOUS LANDMARKS OF THE WORLD:CHRISTO REDENTOR
Watching over the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, with outstretched arms, stands the Christo Redentor or Christ the Redeemer statue. This week, Tidbits imparts some little-known facts about this wonder of the modern world.
• Although it may appear that this immense statue stands in the middle of the wilderness, it is actually located in the heart of the city in the urban forest of Tijuca National Park. Christ the Redeemer stands atop the 2,300-foot (701-m) peak of Cor-covado Mountain. The statue is visible from 20 miles (32.2 km) away.
• A Catholic priest named Pedro Maria Boss first proposed the idea for a religious monument overlooking Rio de Janeiro; however, his idea never reached fruition. It wasn’t until 1921 that it was put forward again, this time by the Catholic Circle of Rio. They launched a fund drive, solicit-ing donations from the public, and construction began in 1922.
• A local engineer created the design, but French sculptor Paul Landowski was commissioned to do the sculpting. The statue was made from re-inforced concrete with outer layers of soapstone. Stone was brought to the mountain from Sweden and construction continued for the next nine years. The statue was officially unveiled in 1932.
• From its foundation base to the top, Christ the Redeemer stands 130 feet tall, and has a span of 92 feet from fingertip to fingertip, the tallest reli-gious statue in the world. A 360-passenger train departs the nearby railway station every hour for the 20-minute trip to the site.
• Until 2002, visitors had to climb 220 steps to reach the statue’s base. Panoramic elevators and escalators have now been installed.
• A 2008 lightning strike created extensive damage to the statue’s fingers and head, requiring im-mediate repairs to the exterior as well as to the lightning rods concealed in the arms and head. In 2010, a $3.8 million restoration was complet-ed. One hundred workers labored to renovate both the internal structure and outer appear-ance. Layers of fungi were removed and small cracks were repaired. More than 60,000 pieces of soapstone were replaced with stone taken from the same Swedish quarry as the original. This restoration also corrected the shocking vandal-ism that occurred when individuals spray-paint-ed the statue, an act the mayor of Rio called a “crime against the nation.”
SEPTEMBER 21, 2012
�������������OCTOBER 20, 2012
��������������������NOVEMBER 9 & 10, 2012
���������������������������������������������������������������DECEMBER 1, 2012
���������������
GREELEY PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRAGlen Cortese, conductor
�������������������� ����All concerts at the Union Colony Civic Center
at 7:30 pm, unless otherwise noted.
Tickets: (970) 356-5000www.GreeleyPhilharmonic.com
SEASON SPONSOR
DECEMBER 14, 2012
�����������������FEBRUARY 16, 2013
����������������MARCH 9, 2013 2:30 PM & 7:30 PM
��������������MAY 4, 2013
���������������
Dealing From the of ColordoDealing From the of Colordo999 E. Eisenhower Blvd - Loveland CO 80537888.728.3807 LovelandFord.com
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld CountyPage 4 To advertise call 970.475.4829
Call the doctor...970.353.3440624 13th Street
Greeley CO 80631
AutoDoctorAuto
DoctorLLC
Doyle T. TobelGreeley’s Only “Auto Doctor”
Full service and repair oncars, vans, SUVs, pickups
FREE CheckEngine
Light Scan!
We Sell QualityUsed Cars!
Are you readyto get to work?
Stand out fromthe rest with anOil & Gas degreefrom Aims.
Aim higher.
www.aims.edu/academics/applied_tech/oil-gas/
Loveland Ford’s Prep Player of the Week!
Jake Weinmaster: RB for the Loveland Indians
BANKRUPTCYYour First Step to a Fresh Start!
Eric CarlsonA�orney at Law
970.352.6467
For a FREE One-HourConsulta�on call...
For a FREE One-HourConsulta�on call...
FREE The debtrelief youneed at aprice you
can afford!
Chapter 7Chapter 13
The debtrelief youneed at aprice you
can afford!
Chapter 7Chapter 13
Your Home & Belongings: SAVEDGarnishmets: BLOCKEDForclosures: STOPPEDBills: DELT WITHHarassing Calls: RESTRAINEDPeace of Mind: RESTORED
Your Home & Belongings: SAVEDGarnishmets: BLOCKEDForclosures: STOPPEDBills: DELT WITHHarassing Calls: RESTRAINEDPeace of Mind: RESTORED
1109 13th Street - Greeley CO 806311109 13th Street - Greeley CO 806311109 13th Street - Greeley CO 80631We are a debt relif agency. We help people
file for relief uner the bankruptcy code.
Calories that DON’T Count1. If no one sees you eat it, it has no calories. 2. If you drink a diet soda with candy, they cancel each other out. 3. When eating with someone else, calories don’t count if you both eat the same amount. 4. Foods used for medicinal purposes have no calories. This includes any chocolate used for energy, Sara Lee cheesecake (eaten whole), and Haagen-Dazs ice cream. 5. Movie-related foods are much lower in calories simply because they are a part of the entertainment experience and not part of one’s personal fuel. This includes (but is not limited to) Milk Duds, popcorn with butter, Junior Mints, Snickers, and Gummi Bears. 6. Cookie pieces contain no calories because the process of breakage causes calorie leakage. 7. If you eat the food off someone else’s plate, it doesn’t count. 8. If you eat standing up the calories all go to your feet and get walked off. 9. Food eaten at Christmas parties has 0 calories, courtesy of Santa. 10. STRESSED is just DESSERTS spelled back-ward.Disclaimer: The above humor HAS NOT been ap-proved by the FDA...and aren’t you glad!
DO YOU THINK THIS STORY IS TRUE?Outside England’s Bristol Zoo there is a parking lot for 150 cars and 8 buses. For 25 years, its parking fees were managed by a very pleasant attendant. The fees were-cars, $1.40 buses $7.Then, one day, after 25 solid years of never miss-ing a day of work, he just didn’t show up; so the Zoo Management called the City Council and asked it to send them another parking agent.The Council did some research and replied that the parking lot was the Zoo’s own responsibility. The Zoo advised the Council that the attendant was a City employee. The City Council responded that the lot attendant had never been on the City payroll.Meanwhile, sitting in his villa somewhere on the coast of Spain (or some such scenario), is a man who apparently had a ticket machine instaled completely on his own and then began to show up every day and collected and kept the parking fees, estimated at $560 per day -- for 25 years. At 7 days a week. This amounts to just over $7 million dol-lars...and no one even knows his name.Do you think this story is true? We wonder.
What is Celibacy?Celibacy can be a choice in life or a condition imposed by circumstances.While attending a Marriage Weekend Frank and his wife Ann listened to the instructor declare, “It is essential that husbands and wives know the things that are important to each other.”He then addressed the men. “Can you name and describe your wife’s favorite flower?”Frank leaned over, touched Ann’s arm gently, and whispered, “Gold Medal-All-Purpose, isn’t it?”
And thus began Frank’s life of celibacy.
After losing to Broomfield a week ago, Coach John Poovey rallied his troops and went into Dis-trict 6 Stadium to face a much improved Greeley Central Wildcat team for their first league game of the season. After an early exchange of touchdowns in the first quar-ter, the Indians turned up the tempo and never looked back.
Loveland went up 22-7 at half and kept the momentum early in the third quarter to extend their lead to 37-7. Central scored a couple of late touchdowns but the damage was done and the Loveland Indians won easily, 37-21.
The Indians had an ex-cellent game on the ground thanks in part to sophomore running back, Jake Weinmas-ter. Weinmaster scored the first touchdown of the night with a 7 yard run early in the first quarter. The running back grabbed one more touchdown early in the second and that
Call us for a quote! 970.301.4829
In Greeley - 5340 W. 9th St. DriveNext to Coyote’s on 10th Street
In Ft. Collins @ Timberline & Drake - 970.484.4465
Why pay more to print?
was the score that gained Loveland the lead that they would never surrender.
Congratulations to this week’s Loveland Ford player of the week, Jake Wein-master.
The Indians are now 2-2 on the season and 1-0 in 4A Northern play. They will face A Niwot team fresh off their first win of the season over Greeley West.
KFKA will broadcast a spe-cial double feature starting on Thursday, Sept. 27 with Fossil Ridge and Fort Collins. Then on Friday Sept. 28 KFKA will broadcast from District 6 Stadium another 4A North-ern battle, this time between Thompson Valley and Greeley West.
For more on the world of sports - preps, college and the
pros - join Troy Coverdale and Brady Hull for Agfinity’s Sports Day weekdays from 11a-1p on 1310 KFKA.
Photo courtesy of Tyler Walje, ideline reporter for KFKA
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld County Page 5www.TrustTidbits.com Page 5
My CardGreeley area businesses &
professionals ready to serve YOU!
Auto RebuildersYour Paint Professionals
CHAVEZCHAVEZ
970.356.7811970.356.7811
2127 4th Ave - Greeley
Stripes, Candies & PearlsFrame Specialists
PrestigeWindow Tinting
AutomotiveResidentialCommercial
Quality You Can See Through
FreeEstimates
PrestigeWindowTintingColorado.comPrestigeWindowTintingColorado.com815 16th Ave - Greeley
970.351.8414
Window TintingPrestige
970.351.8414
Norman’s MemorialsNorman’s Memorials�����������������������������������������������������������
��������������������������
������� ����������������������������������������
1912-20121912-2012
Advertise in “MY CARD”Reach 10,000 Tidbits Readers Every Week!
Only $24 per week
Call Ron Ross970.475.4829720.934.7677
Shawn’s Handyman Service
RepairRepaint
RedoRemodel
Call Shawn Eliott
970.302.2206
What do YOUneed done?
Dwight’sarpet areC C
Dwight CaresAbout YOUR
Carpet!
Call NOW!970.304.0400
�����������������������������������������������������������
Northern Colorado’s All New SportsTalk Show!!!��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
�������������������
���������������������������������
����������������������������������������������������������
Corporate Logo SpecialistsT-Shirts-Embroidery
SCREEN GRAPHICS
���������������������������������
����������������������������������������������
�������������
��������������������������������������
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld CountyPage 6 To advertise call 970.475.4829
Break Time!
HairNailsSkin
Waxing
Blisstik Studio3211 W. 20th St, Suite B
Greeley, CO 80634
BlisstikStudio.com
970.378.6880Call for an appointment
BlisstikStudio.com
Call for an appointment
• It was Canadian American educator Laurence J. Peter who made the following sage observa-tion: “You can always tell a real friend: When you’ve made a fool of yourself, he doesn’t feel you’ve done a permanent job.”
• In Murfreesboro, Tenn., it is illegal to keep indoor furniture outdoors.
• Mike Edwards, one of the founding members of the British band Electric Light Orchestra, met with an untimely death decades after he left the group. In 2010, as Edwards was driv-ing in the rural southwest of England, a farmer lost control of a 1,300-pound bale of hay. This wheel-shaped bale rolled down a hill and over a hedge, and just happened to smash into the van that Edwards was driving. • The humble honeybee is the official insect of 17 states.• Those who study such things say that there is a 1 million to 1 chance that, within the next century, an asteroid will crash into the Earth and destroy most life on the planet.
• In 2008 a company called Defense Devices, based in Jackson, Tenn., introduced a new item: a stun gun disguised as a tube of lipstick. The same company offers a ring that will shoot pepper spray.
• You might be surprised to learn that the giant bullfrogs of South Africa have sometimes been known to attack lions.
• Rhode Island may be the smallest state, but it has the longest name: It’s officially known as the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantation.
• The tuatara is a lizard that can be found in New Zealand. Its claim to fame? It has a third eye, on the top of its head.
***Thought for the Day: “The length of a film
should be directly related to the endurance of the human bladder.” -- Alfred Hitchcock
(c) 2012 King Features Synd., Inc.
By Samantha Weaver
Answers on back page!
Scuba dive with us!
www.GreeleyScuba.com
LessonsTrips
AdventuresNew Friends
Suduko Sponsored By...Suduko Sponsored By...
Nothing save the music of heaven can compare to the power, emotion and intricacy of symphonic music.
My wife and I were reminded of this on Friday Sept. 21st when we attended the Greeley Philhar-monic Orchestra’s opening concert of its 102nd season at the stunningly beautiful Monfort Con-cert Hall at the Union Colony Civic Center.
We were wowed by Debussy, dazzled by Ar-mando Silva who painted while the orchestra played Respighi, and staggered by the changing sounds and themes of Ravel’s arrangement of “Pic-tures at an Exhibition” by Mussorgsky.
It was all brought to life for us by the 60+ member Greeley Philharmonic Orchestra under the able leadership of conductor Glen Cortese. The house, nearly full, enjoyed superb musicians performing great music with excellence.
As the music washed over me I reflected on what makes sym-phonic music so wonderful.
Symphonic music is stunning in numbers. Every time I walk into a concert hall and see the dozens of instrumentalists on stage I am stunned. The Gree-ley Philharmonic Orchestra has approximately 60 performing any given time. That’s a lot of people to be man-aged through multipart musical scores by only one conductor.
Symphonic music is interesting in variety. It delights the ears of listeners with an array of sound, change of rhythm and broad range of or-chestration, all made possible because of a variety of instruments at work. There are violins, violas, cellos, flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons, trumpets, trombones, tubas and others, and of course that whole section of curious percussion instruments. Now that’s variety.
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld County Page 7www.TrustTidbits.com
“Kick in the Pants” is a series of columns that will appear over the next six months. A compilation of the series will be made available toward the end of the series. Dr. Ross is the publisher of Tidbits of Greeley. Dr. Ross is also the Voice of Tidbits Radio on 1310KFKA Every Saturday Noon - 1pm. To contact him email: [email protected]
Plumbing & HeatingPlumbing & Heating
Call Terry Jantz for all your plumbing needs!970.405.0458970.405.0458970.405.0458970.405.0458970.405.0458
Taps - Faucets - Sinks - Toilets - Water TanksHot Water Heater Expert InstallPumps - Backwater ValvesSaltless Water TreatmentBoilers
Symphonic music is overwhelming in complex-ity. Orchestra music is not something that can be played by a couple of guitar players with capos, a keyboardist and a drummer. It’s composed of an extravagant combination of sounds, rhythms and melodies played by instruments performing elabo-rate and complex musical variations that change with each movement. Through the complexity, stories are told, pictures are painted and listeners are taken on a journey.
Symphonic music is overpowering in perform-ance. There is nothing like the swelling sound and flurry of the finale of a great piece of music. When the violins play one melody and the cellos and vio-las compete with them for another and the wood-winds and brass make their gentle or booming contribution to the debate – the soul is touched, the spirit is lifted – and then enter the percussion with bangs, clashes and drum rolls placed pre-cisely for maximum impact. Oh my goodness, you
don’t know what it’s like until you experience it yourself. You are overpowered by the music - your chair vibrates while your soul is caressed.
But perhaps most important, symphonic music is civilizing to the human soul. Much of popu-lar music today favors ugliness, crassness and obscenity. You’ve seen them with their ugly ap-pearance, dirty clothes, visible
under ware, genital grabbing, face-distorting and obscene gesturing while they scream X-rated lyr-ics to indiscernible tunes. Ugliness, vulgarity and depravity destroy a culture.
That is why our world today needs the great music of the ages performed by great artists. We need to be lifted, encouraged and challenged to significance and great music helps. I’m glad to say that I was there on Friday when all who gathered were bathed in beauty and lifted in spirit as the power, precision and grandeur of great music was performed by the Greeley Philharmonic Orchestra.
Great Music
����������������������������������������������
���������������
���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������
��������������������������������������������������������������������������������
������������������������������������
�����������
���������������������������������������������������������
�����������������������������
Dr. Ron Ross
Read Tidbits Online TrustTidbits.com
Read Tidbits Online TrustTidbits.comTrustTidbits.comT
����� �����������������������������������������������������������������������
• On Sept. 24, 1789, The Judici-ary Act of 1789 is passed by Con-gress and signed by President
George Washington, establishing the Supreme Court of the United States as a tribunal made up of six justices. By 1869 the number of justices was increased to nine.
• On Sept. 30, 1868, the first volume of Louisa May Alcott’s beloved children’s book “Little Women” is published. Alcott dedicated most of her life and writing to supporting her family after her father’s failure at running Transcendentalist school. Her works include “Little Men” (1871) and “An Old-Fashioned Girl” (1870).
• On Sept. 28, 1901, Ed Sullivan, who would be-come the host of the long-running TV variety program “The Ed Sullivan Show,” is born in New
York City. During the peak of its popularity in the 1950s and 1960s, Sullivan’s program show-cased a wide range of entertainers, including The Beatles and Elvis Presley.
• On Sept. 29, 1913, Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the engine that bears his name, disappears from the steamship Dresden while traveling from Belgium to England. On Oct. 10, Diesel’s body was found in the water. Conspiracy theories began to fly almost immediately. Many people believed (and still believe) that Diesel was murdered.
• On Sept. 25, 1957, under escort from 1,000 para-troopers in the U.S. Army’s 101st Airborne Divi-sion, nine black students enter all-white Central High School in Little Rock, Ark. Three weeks earlier, Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus had sur-rounded the school with National Guard troops to prevent court-ordered racial integration.
• On Sept. 26, 1960, for the first time in U.S. his-
tory, a debate between major party presiden-tial candidates is shown on television. John F. Kennedy debated Richard M. Nixon in a Chi-cago studio. Nixon refused to wear makeup.
• On Sept. 27, 1989, Zsa Zsa Gabor, on trial for slapping a police officer, storms out of the courtroom in the middle of the district attorney’s closing argument. She had been pulled over for expired tags on her Rolls Royce, as well as hav-ing an open container of alcohol and an expired license.
(c) 2012 King Features Synd., Inc.
�������������������� ��� �� ���������� ����� � ��������� �� �����
�������������� �������� ��������������������������
����������� ��������������� ���� ����� ���� ������ ��� ������� ����� ����� �������� ������� ���� ����� �������������� ��� �������� �������� ������� ��� ������� ��� ���������� ��� �������� ��� �������� �� ������� ������ ����� ������� �������� �� ��� ��������� �� ��������� �� ���� �� ����� ���� ������ ������� ������ �������� ���������� �������� ���� �������� ����� �� �� ���� �� ����� ������������ �� ��������� ��� � ������� �� �� ����� ����������� �������� ����� ���� �������� ����� �� �� �������� ����� ������� ������� ����� �� ��������� ��� � ������� �� �� ����� �������� ���������� ��� ����� ���������� ��� ���� �� ������ ��� ����� �������� ������� ������ �������� ���� ������� ������ ���� ���� ����������� ��� ��� �� �������� ������ ��� ��� ������������ �������� ����� ����� �������� ��� �� ������ �� ������ ��� ����� ��� ������ ������� ���������� �� ���� ������� ���� �������� ��� ��������� �� ����� ������� ��������� ������������ ������ ��� ��� ������� ���� ��� ������ �������� ���� ������ ����� �� ���������� ��� ������ ��� ������������� ��� �������� ��������
�� ����� ������� � ���� ��� ����������� ����� �� ������������ �������� ���� ������ ��������
���������� ����
����������
�������� �������
���������� ����
����
�������� ��������
� �������
��
��
��
��������� ����� ������������ ����� ��� ����� ������ ����� ��� � ���������� �������� ������� ���� ���� ����� ��� ����� ������� ��������
���������� ����
�������
��������� ����� ������������ ����� ��� ����� ������ ����� ��� � ���������� �������� ������� ���� ���� ����� ��� ����� ������� ��������
��������� ����
�������
���� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������� �������� ������������������������������������������������������������ ������������ ����� ������� ������� ������ ����������������������������� ���������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������� ���� ���� ������������������������������������������������ ������
�� ������� �����������������������������������������������������
����� ���� ��� ����������� ����� �� ��� ��� �
���� ���� ��� ���������� �
���� ���� ������������
��� ����
��������� ����� ������������ ����� ��� ����� ������ ����� ��� � ���������� �������� ������� ���� ���� ����� ��� ����� ������� �������� ��
���� ������� ����������
���� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ �������������� ��������������������������������������������������������������������������� ���������� �������� ������������������������������������������������������������ ������������ �������� ����� ��������������������������������������������������� ���������� ����� ������� ������� ������ ����������������������������� ���������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������� ���� ������������������������������������������������������������� ������
�� ������� �����������������������������������������������������
�����������������
��������� ����� ������������ ����� ��� ����� ������ ����� ��� � ���������� �������� ������� ���� ���� ����� ��� ����� ������� ��������
�����������
����������
��������� ����
���� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ �������������� ������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������������ �������� ������������������������������������������������������������ ������������ ����� ������� ������� ������ ����������������������������� ���������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������� ���� ������������������������������������������������������������� ������
�� ������� �����������������������������������������������������
���� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ �������������� ����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� ������������ �������� ����������������������������������������������������������������������������� ��������� ������ ����� �������� ���� ������������������������������������������������������ ���������� ������ ����� �������� ���� �������������������������������������������������� ����������� ��� ������ ����� �������� ���� �������������������������������������������� ������������� ������ �������� ������������������������������������������������������������������ ���������� �������� ���������� ����� ���� ��������������������������������������������� ���������� ����� ������� ������� ������ �������������������������������������������� ����������� �������������������������������������������������������������������������� �������������� ���� ������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ������
�� ������� ������������������������������������������������������
�������������
���� ���� �������� ��� ��� ���
���� ���� ���������� ���� ��� ���
������
���� ���� ����� �����������
� ��
���� ���� ���� ��� ������� ���
����� ������� ���������� ��� ������������� ������ �����
��������
�������
���� ���� ������ ���
������������� � ��������� ������� � ������ ������ ������� ����
��������
���� ���� ������������ ������� ��� �����������
����� ����� �������������� ����
���������������
���� ������� �� ��
������ ������ � ���� ��������� ���� � �� �� ������ � �������� ��� ��� ��� ���� ������
��������
���� ���� ���� ��� ���� ���
��������������� ��������� �������� ��������� ������
��������
�����
���� ������� ������
�������� ����� � �������� �� ������������ ���� ������
��������
������ �� �� �� ��
���� ��� ������ ��
���� ���� ���� ������ ����������� �������� ������������ ��� �������� ����������� � ���� ��� ����� ����
��������
�������
���� ���� ����� ��� ��
����������� �� ��������� ����� ����������� ���
��������
���� ���� ����� ���� ����� ���
�� ��������� � ���������� � ���� ���� ������� ������ �������� �������
��������
�������
���� ������� ��������
������ ����� � ������� ������ � ����� � ���� ����� � ������� ������
��������
���� ���� �����
���� �� �� ������ ������ ����� ������
��������
���� �������� ��� ��
�������� �� ������� ���� �������� �����
��������
���� ������ ������
����������� ������� ��� ���� ������ ���� ������ ������ ��� ����
��������
���� ���� �������� ��
������ ������ ����������� ���� ���� ����� �����
��������
������
� �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ������ �� ���� ���� ����� �
� �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ����� � �� ���� ���� ������ �� ���� ���� ����� �
��
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
��������
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
����� �
���������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
��������
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
���
��������
�����
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld CountyPublished by Handshake Publishing
Ron & Amy RossAll inquiries: 970.475.4829 or 720.934.7677
1813 N. Del Norte Aveune - Loveland CO 80538www.TrustTidbits.com - [email protected]
Tidbits of Greeley & West Weld CountyPage 8 To advertise call 970.475.4829
Harry JohnstonNo...I’m not retired! I’m now the General Manager of Loveland Ford & Lin-coln! Stop in and I’ll show you a great line of made-in-America Fords and Lin-colns and some exception-ally well-priced used cars, vans and trucks.
New General Manager