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The Odd Truth is a collection of strange but factual news stories from around the world compiled by CBSNews s Brian Bernbaum. stanley cup A new collection of stories is published each weekday. On weekends, you can rea stanley uk d a week s worth of The Odd Truth.Strapping Young LadSCOTTSBLUFF, Nebraska - For a guy who just turned 25, Jacob Foos doesn t look a day over 100. He was born on Leap Day 1904. So, yesterday the 100-year-old Foos celebrated his birthday for only the 25th time. Foos is a retired farmer, who now lives in a Scottsbluff, Nebraska, nursing home. He says he never expected to make it to 100. He credits his longevity to clean living. Foos says he never smoked or drank much. It also could be due to a lot of hard work. Foos says in his younger days he used to shovel 50 tons of beets a day on the farm. Passion Of The Antichrist ROME, Ga. - Tickets at one movie theater screening Mel Gibson s The Passion of the Christ are being deemed decidedly unholy.The number 666, which many Christians recognize stanley cup as the mark of the beast, is appearing on movie tickets for Gibson s film at a Georgia theater, drawing complaints from some moviegoers. The machine that prints tickets assigned the number 666 as a prefix on all the tickets for the film, said Gary Smith, owner of the Movies at Berry Square in northwest Georgia. The 666 begins a series of numbers that are listed below the name of the movie, the date, time and price. It s from our computer and it s absolutely a coincidence, Smith sa Orly Counterfeit goods from China a continuing problem that costs billions a year
When the Board of Commissioners of Central Park decided it was time to build Central Park in 1857, they announced a design contest with a prize to the tune of $2,000 stanley mugs around $50,000 today . Obviously, it was Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux design won. But there were 33 other failed entries, only five of which still exist. One of those is from engineer John Rink. It currently on display at the New-York Historical Society, though it was believed to be lost until 2008, when it as discovered in an attic. The design features a series of highly planned park areas that look like biological illustrations of sea creatures, a la Ernst Haeckel. From above, it looks stanley quencher like one giant garden maze, intricately dotted with tons of topiaries, drawing heavily on Victorian garden design. Another failed plan on display comes cups stanley from George E. Waring, Jr., who proposed sticking to the natural topography of the park, unlike Rink. It was less of a park, and more of an uninterrupted landscape鈥攂ut it did include a cricket field. But ultimately, it was the egalitarian, open design of Rink and Olmsted that became the Central Park we know and love today. [NYHistory via Slate] Architecturenew yorkNew York City |