Designer Wins International Award for Foldable Cardboard Helmet

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Bike-sharing systems are everywhere these days, but most people don’t make a habit out of carrying a helmet. To keep cyclists safe, LiveScience reports that a designer, Isis Shiffer, has created a collapsible head protector made from cardboard that can be sold in vending machines and fit easily inside a bag. Shiffer was recently named the winner of this year’s James Dyson Award, an international student design award that’s given to undergraduates or recent graduates.

The EcoHelmet is made from 100 percent cardboard, and it’s coated in a material that makes it resistant to water. The secret to its protective powers lies in its honeycomb pattern, which can absorb the impact of a crash. It’s designed to cost less than $5, and it’s also biodegradable, so cyclists can purchase it—and dispose of it—without guilt.

Shiffer, an avid cyclist, was inspired to create the EcoHelmet after utilizing bike-sharing programs around the globe. “When I was exploring new cities I had no access to a helmet and I didn’t want to spend $30 buying one,” the designer told the BBC.

Shiffer was awarded £30,000 (about $37,000) to refine the helmet’s design. She hopes to pilot it in New York in spring 2017, and might initially provide it to bike-share users for free. Watch how it works in the video below, courtesy of Dezeen.

[h/t LiveScience]


November 18, 2016 – 11:30am

Dog Owners Say Their Canine Pals Make Them a Better Person

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Between the early morning walks, the chewed-up furniture, and the trips to the vet, dog parenting is hard work. But at the end of the day, the payoff is worth it: Canine owners report that their pets make them a better person in more ways than one, a new survey finds.

BarkBox, the monthly subscription box for dogs, recently conducted its first-ever BarkBox Dog Parent Study. They hired a research firm to ask more than 1000 adult, dog-owning Americans how their relationship with their furry friends affects their lives.

In total, 93 percent of respondents said their relationship with Fido inspires them to become a better person in at least one way. Seventy-one percent of people said their dogs make them happier, and nearly 80 percent said getting up in the morning is easier knowing that their canine companions are there to greet them. More than half of participants said their pups make them more patient and responsible (and just under half said their pets make them more affectionate).

According to BarkBox’s survey, your furry friend can also help with your physical fitness: 83 percent of dog owners said that their four-legged companions make them more physically active, with 72 percent reporting that their pet influenced their workout choices.

Most of these findings aren’t likely to shock dog owners—or scientists, for that matter. Studies have found that interacting with dogs can improve mood and reduce anxiety; that children who grow up with animal companions might be more empathetic than their pet-less peers; and that dog owners get more exercise than people without dogs.

That being said, BarkBox’s survey revealed a few surprising details about pet ownership that canine parents probably won’t confess to their dog-less friends. For one, nearly half of dog owners said their dog “always or frequently” sleeps in their bed—and 36 percent said they were willing to sleep in an uncomfortable position to keep their dog next to them. And privacy seems to be of little concern to pet parents: A third reported having  “gotten intimate” with someone while their pooch was present, and 43 percent said they typically let their dog wander into the bathroom while they are using it.

Most importantly, 85 percent of subjects said their dogs have helped them weather a tough time in their lives, and 97 percent said they’d do something to make their pups happy, too. And on average, they tell their pets “I love you” six times a day. (Awww.)


November 17, 2016 – 8:30pm

Sacramento Animal Lover Offers to Cover All Adoption Fees at Local Shelter

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It’s expensive to get a pet. Adoption fees, vaccinations, spaying/neutering costs, and microchips add up—so to encourage more people to adopt rescue cats and dogs, WPTV reports that a Sacramento woman has offered to foot the bill for every animal adoption at a local shelter through December 31.

Relator/animal lover Kim Pacini-Hauch adopted a terrier named Teddy from Sacramento’s Front Street Animal Shelter in 1984. Now, she wants others to follow her lead. According to the shelter, they are nearly at capacity, and an uptick in adoptions will help them make room to take in more pets. Pacini-Hauch hopes that paying the $85 adoption fee for dogs, and $65 for cats, will speed up the process.

So far, Pacini-Hauch’s generous scheme is working. According to The Sacramento Bee, the Front Street Animal Shelter posted Pacini-Hauch’s offer on Facebook on Tuesday night. When the shelter opened the next day, more than 250 people were waiting in line—and by mid-afternoon, all of its cats had been adopted, and 21 dogs had found new homes. Around 650 animals are still in foster care, and the shelter will take them in as the facilities become less crowded.

Live in the Sacramento area, and have an interest in adopting a furry companion of your own? Visit the Front Street Animal Shelter’s website or Facebook page for more information. (Keep in mind that adoption fees are waived, but you will still need to pay for your new pet to get fixed and vaccinated, among other costs.)

[h/t WPTV]


November 17, 2016 – 5:00pm

For Sale: The Dress Marilyn Monroe Wore While Singing ‘Happy Birthday’ to JFK

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When Marilyn Monroe sang “Happy Birthday” to President John F. Kennedy, her dress—not her voice—stole the show. The actress wore a glittering, skintight gown while performing at a Democratic fundraiser/presidential birthday celebration held at New York’s City’s Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1962. A bidder paid $1.27 million for the iconic dress in 1999, but CNN reports that the slinky garment will go back on the auction block today. This time around, it’s expected to fetch up to $3 million.

Julien’s Auctions

Julien’s Auctions, a Los Angeles-based celebrity auction house, is selling the dress, along with an assortment of Monroe’s other possessions, including her jewelry, movie costumes, and even personal items like cigarettes, prescription pill bottles, and a used tube of lipstick. All of these items are expected to fetch a pretty penny, but none compare to the bejeweled gown, which Darren Julien, president and CEO of Julien’s Auctions, described in a statement (quoted by CNN) as “truly the most important artifact of Marilyn’s career that could ever be sold.” Currently, it holds the record for the most expensive personal clothing item to ever be purchased at auction.

Some people might argue that the white dress Monroe donned in 1955’s The Seven Year Itch is more memorable than the one she wore while singing “Happy Birthday” to JFK. Someone purchased it for $4.6 million in 2011, making it the most expensive dress ever to be sold at auction. However, it didn’t truly belong to Marilyn in real life—plus, W points out, the doomed starlet wore the beige gown during one of her last major public appearances. Less than three months after JFK’s birthday, the 36-year-old Monroe was found dead on August 5, 1962.

Bidding for the dress starts at $1 million. To see the full list of items for sale, visit Julien’s Auctions.

[h/t CNN]


November 17, 2016 – 7:00am

Americans Wasted 375 Million Paid Vacation Days in the Past Year

filed under: travel, Work
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Americans are really bad at ditching their cubicles for a cabana. According to a new survey conducted by online travel firm Expedia, U.S. residents received an average of 15 annual vacation days in the past year, but they only took 12. Collectively, the nation threw away 375 million vacation days.

Expedia’s 2016 Vacation Deprivation Report examined vacation habits among 9424 employed adults in approximately 28 countries around the world. Not surprisingly, the number of paid days off—and how people use them—varied dramatically among workers in North America, South America, Europe, and Asia, with the U.S. lagging behind many nations.

People in Europe, Brazil, and the United Arab Emirates received the most vacation days—and for the most part, they used them. Workers in Finland, France, Spain, the UAE, and Brazil were all provided with 30 days of leave, and took full advantage of their time off. German and Italian residents also received 30 days vacation, and used 28 and 25 of them, respectively. Meanwhile, 25 vacation days were the norm in Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, the United Kingdom, and Austria (as was using them).

Workers in North America and Southeast Asia weren’t so lucky. Employees in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, South Korea, and Thailand only received 15 days of vacation.

Wondering which countries took the fewest vacation days? That would be South Korea, where people took only eight of their 15 (the least among all 28 countries) and Japan, where people were given 20 days but used half that amount.

Why aren’t Americans escaping the office for some much-needed R&R? Twenty-two percent of U.S. survey respondents said they felt like they should wait a year or more after accepting a new job before taking a day off; 14 percent felt guilty (6 percent felt so guilty, they skipped out on vacation altogether); and 9 percent said they were worried that their bosses would view them negatively if they utilized all their vacation days. It’s no surprise, then, that 29 percent of Americans said they typically went one year or longer between vacations, and 25 percent of Americans reported feeling “very vacation deprived.”

Many people view vacations as a luxury, but they’re actually a health necessity. Taking time away from work to de-stress can lower your risk for heart attack, make you feel happier and calmer, and help you live longer. Not only that, time off actually makes you better at your job: One survey conducted by accounting firm Ernst & Young found that workers who take more vacation time receive better performance reviews and are less likely to leave the firm. Instead fearing that a vacation will make you seem lazy, uncommitted, or replaceable, view it as a way to recharge and become a more energetic and productive employee.


November 16, 2016 – 1:30pm

Nebraska Senator Moonlights as an Uber Driver

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Cash-strapped millennials aren’t the only ones who understand the value of a side hustle. As CNN reports, Republican senator Ben Sasse, who represents Nebraska, spent last Saturday night working as an Uber driver.

Members of Congress are forbidden from earning any money that isn’t related to their public service, so Sasse wasn’t motivated by financial gains. The politician explained his actions on Twitter, saying he was moonlighting for the rideshare service to show solidarity with Nebraska workers. Sasse’s office described the Uber job as being part of a larger “work tour.” (The money earned will be donated to charity.)

“Senator Sasse does tons of Nebraska work events, from changing tires on semi trucks to feeding cattle at 5 a.m.,” said a spokesperson in a statement quoted by The Guardian. “This work tour was built around the changing and dis-intermediated economy, a subject he talks about frequently.”

As Uber drivers likely know, the Saturday night shift isn’t all fun and games. “Pro-tip: If you throw up in an uber, the surcharge can be substantial,” Sasse tweeted. Still, he was able to find a silver lining, saying “It’s a market incentive to get drivers to agree to Sat.pm work.”

Sasse isn’t the only notable figure to try a rideshare gig on for size. As CNN reports, Elwood Edwards (the man who recorded AOL’s “You’ve Got Mail” greeting) now works as an Uber driver, and basketball player Shaquille O’Neal recently went incognito and picked up passengers for Lyft, as part of the company’s “Undercover Lyft” series.

[h/t CNN]


November 16, 2016 – 1:15pm

11 Brilliant Gifts for the Cat in Your Life

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Cats love playing with tinsel and tissue paper, but discarded wrapping materials shouldn’t be their only holiday goodies. This season, treat your favorite feline to one of these 11 creative gift ideas.

1. DJ CAT SCRATCHING PAD; $35

This DJ Cat Scratching Pad lets your kitty channel its inner disc jockey while giving its claws a workout. It comes with a record-shaped corrugated cardboard pad, which sits atop a mock record player plastered with old-school-inspired band stickers. And if you’re up for a silent jam session with your pet, the cardboard “record” spins, and the record player’s tone arm is posable. (For easy assembly, the Scratching Pad arrives in a flatpack, and comes with instructions detailing how to fold it together sans glue.)

Find it: Uncommon Goods

2. GRASS PATCH HUNTING BOX CAT REST AND TOY PLAY BOX; $20

Inside every cat beats the heart of a hunter. If your kitty’s an indoor pet, you can arouse its natural instincts with the Grass Patch Hunting Box. It’s filled with tiny jingle balls, which felines can swat and chase by sticking their paws inside peek-a-boo openings on the box’s top and sides. To give your cat a taste of the great outdoors, the box’s top is covered in faux grass that’s suitable for either scratching or lounging.

Find it: Amazon

3. CATIT FLOWER FOUNTAIN; $30

This bubbling, flower-shaped water fountain keeps your cat’s water as fresh as a daisy. A water-softening filter is hidden inside the fountain, along with a re-circulating system that keeps clean liquid flowing. Since every cat drinks at a different speed, it comes with three water flow settings.

Find it: Amazon

4. CATNIP FORTUNE COOKIES; $24

Cats prefer tuna to Chinese food, but they may want to give these catnip-stuffed fleece fortune cookies a nibble. Each hand-sewn cookie is filled with organic, farm-fresh ‘nip and features a randomly chosen cat-themed fortune. (Example: “Your litter box will always be clean.”) The toys come in sets of four, and arrive inside a Chinese take-out carton.

Find it: Uncommon Goods

5. KITNIPBOX; $19-29 PER MONTH (15 PERCENT OFF WITH THE CODE “MENTALPAWS”)

KitNipBox is a monthly subscription box for cat owners looking to spoil their fuzzy friends on the regular. It sends customers a curated package of healthy cat treats, toys, accessories, and other goodies—and if you own two kitties, you can opt for a multi-cat box that includes even more feline swag. A portion of KitNipBox’s monthly fee is donated to animal welfare organizations, so your purchase also helps less-fortunate cats.

Find it: KitNipBox

6. PETCUBE PLAY; $199

If you’ve ever wondered what your cat does when you’re not around, the Petcube Camera will help solve the mystery. The Wi-Fi-enabled video camera connects with your smartphone via a website or app, letting you check in with your pet when you’re on the go. And if you’re really missing your kitty, a two-way audio feature and an interactive laser toy allow for long-distance bonding sessions.

Find it: Amazon

7. HEPPER CAT POD BED; $130

This lofted, pod-shaped cat bed is crafted from fabric-covered foam, and its reversible liner—sewn from microfiber and sherpa fleece—is machine-washable (perfect for removing cat fur). The bed’s top is also removable, allowing you to transform it into a hammock-shaped lounger. If your pet ends up preferring discarded boxes to beds, you can return the pod and receive a full refund.

Find It: Amazon

8. MUSIC FOR CATS; $15-25

Typically, felines don’t like music, as it often features pitches and tempos enjoyed only by humans. However, they might dig Music for Cats, an album created by composer David Teie and a team of animal scientists. According to Teie’s website, the 40-minute CD is “based on feline vocal communication and environmental sounds that pique the interest of cats.” You can purchase a single album for $20; a digital download for $15; or a four-CD version of the album for $25. (It features silence between the songs, so you can play it for your cats for extended periods of time while you’re away.)

Find it: Music for Cats

9. PETSAFE POUNCE TOY; $28

Hunting mice is all about the chase. Pounce features an electronic mouse that races around a circular track, providing your cat with a heart-pounding pursuit. Just like a real rodent, the mouse is unpredictable: It twitches, zooms, hides, and changes direction. Pounce is also suitable for all feline ages: The toy offers four speed settings, including high and medium for active cats, and low or variable for older, less-agile ones.

Find it: Amazon

10. VESPER CAT FURNITURE; $108

Feline furniture can be stylish, too. This sleek, modern cat tree features a cube cave, two platforms lined with memory foam cushions, and a dangling toy.

Find it: Amazon

11. FROSTED DONUTS WITH SPRINKLES GIFT SET ORGANIC CATNIP CAT TOY; $29

Your cats might like playing with these doughnut-shaped, catnip-stuffed toys almost as much as you enjoy eating the real thing. The eco-friendly felt toys are sold in sets of three—chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry—and come with fake “Nutrition Facts” that tell you how many “Meows of Fun” and “Total Purrs” are in every bite.

Find it: Etsy

Mental Floss has affiliate relationships with certain retailers and may receive a small percentage of any sale. But we only get commission on items you buy and don’t return, so we’re only happy if you’re happy. Thanks for helping us pay the bills!


November 16, 2016 – 6:00am

Interactive ‘Game of Thrones’ Events Will Let Fans Step Inside Westeros

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Winter is coming—and with it, the Blu-ray and DVD release of Game of Thrones: The Complete Sixth Season. The box sets were officially released yesterday, and to mark the occasion, HBO is hosting an upcoming series of interactive Game of Thrones-themed events in New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago.

Game of Thrones: Season 6—Behind the Scenes will swing by Astor Place in New York City on Friday, November 18, and Saturday, November 19. Next week, it will travel to Chicago’s Grant Park, and in December it will arrive at Hollywood & Highland in Los Angeles.

The promotional event will offer five different fan experiences, each pegged to a single bonus feature included on the new Blu-ray and DVD sets. Fans can hone their battle skills in a virtual reality “Battle Training” in Castle Black’s courtyard; step inside memorable scenes from the show, like “The Battle of the Bastards” and “Hold the Door”; stand inside a burning of the Temple of the Dosh Khaleen, courtesy of green screen technology; get a behind-the-scenes look at how the show’s visual effects are created; and view an assortment of Game of Thrones costumes and props (yes, you can even sit on the Iron Throne).

You can pre-register for Game of Thrones: Season 6 – Behind the Scenes by visiting GoTBehindtheScenes.com. If you purchased Season 6 on Blu-ray or DVD, you can bring the box set with you and gain early access.


November 16, 2016 – 3:00am

See Someone Suffering a Mental Health Crisis? This App Is an Alternative to 911

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Each year, two million people with mental health conditions are jailed, the majority of whom are non-violent and will not receive the treatment they need while behind bars. But as Fusion reports, a crisis response nonprofit in San Francisco wants to break this cycle of incarceration with an app that lets people report incidents of “individuals suffering from homelessness, mental illness, and substance abuse” to them instead of to the police.

The nonprofit and its app are called Concrn, and are currently available for use in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District. According to Concrn’s website, its goal is to connect those who are suffering—20 to 25 percent of the nation’s homeless population has a form of severe mental illness, and about a third of all people with mental illnesses have substance abuse problems [PDF]—”to the resources they need.”

Police are trained to address crime, but they’re rarely equipped to address mental health-related crises—and when they do, the encounters can escalate and turn deadly. To avoid these worst-case scenarios, Concrn’s app allows people to request a Compassionate Responder to the site, who’s trained in de-escalation and can connect the individual with shelters and services. (If you don’t have a smartphone, you can contact Concrn’s dispatch line at 415-801-3737.) When Concrn volunteers aren’t responding to calls, they make rounds around the neighborhood, touching base with locals to make sure everything’s OK.

Not everyone agrees with Concrn’s approach, or finds it to be effective. In a San Francisco Magazine article published earlier this year, Tenderloin Station Captain Teresa Ewins said that reporting these types of crises to Concrn rather than the police creates a “huge safety issue” for the community. (Concrn specifically states that their app should only be used for emotional and health crises, not actual violent crimes.) Plus, while Concrn’s volunteers are able to provide resources like shelter beds and TB tests, they have no way of ensuring people actually utilize them.

Others, however, think nonprofits like Concrn are a step in the right direction. “There’s no two ways about it,” Jim Zelaya-Wagner, the director of San Francisco’s Homeless Outreach Team, told KALW, San Francisco’s public radio station. “We’ve got 30 outreach workers, and we’re looking at a city of 6000 to 7000 homeless individuals, based on last year’s count. That’s a lot of homeless folks. So, hey, the more people that can help, the better.”

Concrn was launched in 2014, and its founders hope for the app to someday be available for all San Francisco residents. In the meantime, Concrn is seeking more volunteers to help the Tenderloin District’s residents, both to help respond to calls and for community outreach when the lines are less busy.

[h/t Fusion]


November 15, 2016 – 1:30pm

The Delicious History of the Nation’s Oldest Chinese-American Restaurant

filed under: Food, History
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Behind every Chinese-American restaurant is a tale of assimilation, innovation, and survival—but the Pekin Noodle Parlor in Butte, Montana has a particularly storied past. Founded by immigrants in 1911, it claims to be the oldest continuously operating eatery of its kind in the United States. Now, the Museum of Food and Drink (MOFAD) in Brooklyn is featuring the eatery in its new exhibit, “Chow: Making the Chinese American Restaurant,” which looks at how Chinese food in the U.S. evolved into the ubiquitous cuisine we know and love today.

The Pekin Noodle Parlor is tucked inside a brick building on Uptown Butte’s historic Main Street. Suspended over the restaurant’s storefront is a neon sign that reads “CHOP SUEY,” and inside, a steep set of stairs leads visitors to a narrow, second-floor room lined with cozy curtained dining booths divided by orange beadboard partitions.

Jerry Tam
Jerry Tam

On the restaurant’s ground floor—which in previous incarnations served as a gambling hall and an herbal medicine dispensary—you’ll find relics from the building’s past: old bottles of soy sauce, vintage Chinese gambling equipment, kitchen equipment, and tin containers and drawers filled with herbs and teas. As for food, patrons can order chop suey and Szechuan, Cantonese, and Burmese-style dishes off a menu that’s remained largely unchanged for more than a century.

The Pekin Noodle Parlor is a family affair. Danny Wong, an 82-year-old immigrant, has owned and operated the restaurant since the early 1950s, and his son, Jerry Tam, assists him in its day-to-day operations. Wong—whose Chinese name is Ding Tam—purchased the business from its founder, his great-uncle Hum Yow.

If it seems strange that the nation’s oldest functioning Chinese restaurant is in Montana, chalk it up to 19th century immigration patterns. Between 1850 and 1900, around 250,000 Chinese people came to the United States. Many of them were fleeing political strife, poverty, and famine; others were lured by the 1849 Gold Rush. Montana Territory was a mining mecca, and thousands of Chinese immigrants flocked there looking for work. By 1870, nearly 10 percent of Montana’s population was Chinese-American.

Eventually, gold reserves dwindled and animosity from white miners grew, so Chinese immigrants then found new jobs building America’s first transcontinental railroad. Once the railroad was completed in 1869, they gained new livelihoods as entrepreneurs, founding small businesses like laundries, groceries, farms, and—yes—Chinese-American restaurants.

According to historians at the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives, Wong can trace his family’s history in America back to the 1860s. A distant relative, whose name has been lost, delivered supplies to Chinese camps and communities across the American West. By the late 1890s, that family member’s son had arrived in Butte, an area home to Montana’s largest Chinese community at the time, where he helped run a laundry business.

More Tams arrived in Butte, and two men from the family—Wong’s great-uncle, Hum Yow, and his grandfather Tam Kwong Yee—went into business together. They opened a Chinese mercantile on the east edge of the city’s Chinatown. By 1911, its top floor had been transformed into the Pekin Noodle Parlor, and the first floor was home to a gambling club, and later, an herbal shop. These businesses eventually closed, but the Pekin Noodle Parlor remained.

In 1947, Tam Kwong Yee’s grandson, Danny Wong, emigrated from China to America and found a job at the Pekin Noodle Parlor. When Hum Yow retired from the restaurant business, Wong purchased it and ran the establishment for more than six decades with his wife, Sharon Chu. Chu passed away in late 2014, and today, Jerry Wong helps his father run the business.

Pekin Noodle Parlor isn’t the first documented Chinese-American restaurant in the United States. (That honor goes to Canton Restaurant, which opened in San Francisco in 1849.) However, it’s the oldest one still running today—and aside from a fresh coat of paint here or a minor remodel there, it contains all of its original furnishing, including the chairs, tables, and dishes.

Jerry Tam thinks the secret to the restaurant’s longevity is its classic Chinese-American menu, which includes dishes like chow mein, chop suey, and egg foo young. “People enjoy the food,” Wong told mental_floss. “It’s comfort food; it’s very familiar.” (For a long time, the Pekin Noodle Parlor also served American diner food.)

Emma Boast, MOFAD’s program director and curator of the “Chow” exhibit, has another theory for why the Pekin Noodle Parlor’s menu is so popular with patrons.

“In bigger cities on the East coast and the West coast, this kind of food really fell out of fashion after World War II,” Boast told mental_floss. “Particularly in the 1960s and 1970s—and certainly today—in places like New York, Chicago and San Francisco, [there are] new Chinese-Americans coming over and bringing their food from various regions within China with them, and starting their own businesses for their own communities. That’s not necessarily happening in Montana, so I think there’s maybe more of a market there for that kind of classic Chinese-American food.”

Wong’s local celebrity also plays a part. “He’s very well known, because the restaurant has been there for so long,” Boast says.

Plus, colorful rumors about the Pekin Noodle Parlor’s past add to the restaurant’s intrigue. The establishment is close to Butte’s old red light district, and it’s surrounded by miles of underground tunnels. Legend has it that these passages were once used to illegally transport drugs, while others say that the Pekin Noodle Parlor also operated as a brothel. However, Montana historians say there’s no truth to these tales. According to them, the tunnels were built to provide buildings with steam heat, and they occasionally served as a delivery conduit.

Today, few Chinese-Americans still live in Butte—or for that matter, Montana. During the early 20th century, immigrants left the state due to discriminatory laws, boycotts against Chinese-American businesses, and racism. They moved to Chinatowns in larger cities, or to other cities that offered safety and economic opportunity. Chinese-Americans in Butte fought back against prejudiced practices and policies, but their population also dwindled in number. Today, fewer than one percent of the city’s residents are Asian.

Miraculously, the Pekin Noodle Parlor survived, and in 2011, the business celebrated its 100th birthday (Jerry Tam cooked dinner for the whole town). To commemorate the occasion, the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives organized an exhibit, “One Family—One Hundred Years,” dedicated to the Tam family’s history and Butte’s Chinese-American legacy. On display was an assortment of antique relics—including a cash register, a chopping block, gambling equipment, shipping containers, and more—salvaged from the Pekin Noodle Parlor’s basement and ground-level storefront.

As for MOFAD’s exhibit, it showcases a replica of the Pekin Noodle Parlor’s famous neon sign, along with an original china place setting, a Cantonese-style wok, and an assortment of shipping materials once used to transport ingredients. Visitors can also view 150 years’ worth of Chinese-American restaurant menus, a working fortune cookie machine, and relics from restaurants across the U.S.

When asked about the Pekin Noodle Parlor’s future, Tam says he will continue to help his father run the restaurant “until he decides to do otherwise.” As for now, he’s trying to certify the restaurant’s claim to fame as America’s oldest Chinese-American restaurant, in hopes of receiving a Guinness World Record. “If you look at the underpinnings of our restaurant, it’s a fascinating story,” Tam says. “It’s a fascinating business.”


November 15, 2016 – 8:30am