Category — S. Jones
Friday Facts: Eggs, Monodirevr, Stripper Parkas
:: This Saturday is the 34th annual Last Year’s Easter Egg Hunt at Whittinger’s Park. The Greek Gardening Consortium insists that they hid more than 12 eggs and that if the rest aren’t found there will be no 35th annual Easter Egg Hunt at Whittinger’s Park.
:: Acts of violence committed against actors dressed as “Ronald McDonald” since 1980: 17
:: Acts of violence committed against actors dressed as “The Hamburglar” since 1980: 12
:: Acts of violence committed against actors dressed as “Birdy the Early Bird” since 1980: 30
:: Apples are the third most popular fruit currently sold at Haspiel’s Produce.
:: When asked, in a 2006 Evening Press poll, which insect they’d be most willing to eat “if worse came to worse,” the majority of the respondents preferred “crickets.”
:: Jumbo, P.T. Barnum’s famous elephant, visited the city seven times before he was killed in a locomotive accident in 1885, and once after.
:: Exotic dancers are required to wear jackets during the Winter season, according to a 2002 city ordinance, as part of a concerted effort to reduce instances of cold and flu.
:: A regionally-produced version of the popular board game Monopoly incorrectly spelled “Moondriver Blvd” as “Monodirevr Lvbd.”
:: The city’s original mounted police force was disbanded in 1970. It was reformed in its current incarnation in 1992.
:: The Dog Run at Mabel Tripp Gardens features a colored concrete map of Northern Europe as it existed during the Napoleonic era, as well as a timeline of the Little Emperor’s assorted battles and conquests. There is also an interactive water feature (visitors are politely requested to not squirt the dogs).
- D. Andrews, K. Church, S. Jones, J. Morris
March 30, 2007 No Comments
Oh, You Never Knew It! - Feb. 14
:: It was on this day in 1981 that the city attempted to hold its first and only World War II reenactment. The site was the field at St. Peter’s Armory, the country’s only National Guard facility named for a Catholic saint. The city mustered a majority of its male citizens for the exercise, but the reenactment of the 1943 Battle of the Kasserine Pass never happened. Early in the day of the reenactment, Councilman Stephen Townsend, playing the part of Gen. George S. Patton, was surveying his “troops” when he came upon local accountant Tim Considine, who was preparing to leave the battlefield because of a sudden migraine headache. Councilman Townsend, caught up in the moment, smacked Considine in front of a group of nurse’s assistants (there to play the part of field medics) from the local hospital who happened to be walking by. Witnesses said Councilman Townsend said something about refusing to countenance “cowards and deserters in my army.”
Word of the incident spread quickly around the battlefield, eventually making its way to Mayor Karl Montgomery, who was playing the part of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower. Mayor Montgomery strongly suggested that Townsend apologize to the shocked accountant, which he did. The mood among the crowd was so sour after the slapping incident that Mayor Montgomery, in consultation with his advisers, canceled the event. No one was more disappointed than local butcher Gerbert Maier, who was to play the part of German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel.
- C. Gaines
:: February 13 marked the 122nd anniversary of the Northwestern Spotted Chipmunk’s introduction into what is now known as Heinschoft Park by Health-E-Oats magnate Oscar Heinschoft. Legend has it that Heinschoft brought in that particularly aggressive breed of chipmunk to drive out the indigenous Yellow Pine Chipmunk. Heinschoft was said to collect acorns for use as bait, despite being told many times that fish do not eat acorns. The self-proclaimed “physioligan” felt that the fiercely territorial, vaguely carnivorous spotted chipmunk would be the perfect solution to his problem.
Well, Heinschoft was victorious in his quest to rid the wooded area of Yellow Pine Chipmunks and to celebrate he hosted a city-wide acorn hunt, during which he was attacked by a particularly aggressive Spotted Chipmunk which, unfortunately, turned out to be rabid. Despite a personal visit from Louis Pasteur, Heinschoft refused any vaccine (”Against our natural orders. Let nature do with me what she will!”) and treated the disease with large quantities of Health-E-Oats, having seen a promotional opportunity. He passed less than a week later from what was described as a rampant rabies infection and malnutrition. Northwestern Spotted Chipmunks still inhabit Heinschoft Park and Health-E-Oats remain on the market, in their current incarnation- Schofty Squirrel’s Pop-Twizzy Marshmalloats.
- S. Jones
February 14, 2007 No Comments












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