I dont think so.
Yes - the Bears played at Wrigley Field from 1921 - 1970, Wrigley Field wasn't officially the name of the park until 1926, before that it was Cubs Park & before THAT it was Weeghman Field. Wrigley Field has the distinction of having the second most pro football games played there, the current leader is Giant's Stadium having surpassed the Wrigley Field record in 2003 thanks to its hosting both the Giants and the Jets.
Try the ball parks: Wrigley Field (Cubs), or U.S. Cellular Field (Sox).
it started at the beginning of the 2007 year
adult polar bears are 7 feet long and cubs are 3 feet long
No not all polar bear cubs survive the harsh long winter.
On the Chicago Cubs website, the security page that lists items that can and cannot be taken into Wrigley Field does not list umbrellas on either list. It's probably safe to assume that umbrellas can be taken in, but it should be verified with a call to Wrigley Field. The Chicago Cubs website is linked in the Related Links.
They haven't won in over 100 years. It's a futile franchise. They had been trying to sell it for a long time. They sold it for around $870 mill.
The 1932 Final score was: Chicago Bears-9 < 0-Portsmouth Spartans It was played on an 80-yard long field of dirt that a circus had just left from 5 days before that, because of a blizzard over Wrigley Field, so they had to bring it indoors.
Polar bears are pregnant for nine months after which they usually have 1 or sometimes 2 cubs.
Female polar bears usually breed once every two years. It takes that long for her cubs to mature enough to be on their own.
The cubs are weaned between 7 and 10 months.
The Curse of the Billy Goat, or Billy Goat Curse is the name of an urban myth, superstition, used to explain the World Series drought that Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs have had to endure since their last appearance in the 1945 World Series, and their last World Series championship in 1908. The curse is a classic example of a scapegoat. As the story goes, Vasili "Billy Goat" Sianis, a Greek immigrant who owned a nearby tavern (the now-famous Billy Goat Tavern), had two 7.20 USD box seat tickets to Game 4 of the 1945 World Series between the Chicago Cubs and the Detroit Tigers, and decided to bring his pet goat, Murphy (or Sinovia according to some references), with him. Sianis and the goat were allowed into Wrigley Field and even paraded about on the playing field before the game before ushers intervened. They were led off the field. After a heated argument, both Sianis and the goat were permitted to stay in the stadium occupying the box seat for which he had tickets. However, before the game was over, Sianis and the goat were ejected from the stadium at the command of Cubs owner Philip Knight Wrigley due to the animal's objectionable odor. Sianis was outraged at the ejection and allegedly placed a curse upon the Cubs that they would never win another pennant or play in a World Series at Wrigley Field again and left the States to vacation in his home in Greece. The Cubs lost Game 4 and eventually the 1945 World Series, prompting Sianis to write to Wrigley from Greece, saying, "Who stinks now?" Following a third-place finish in the National League in 1946, the Cubs would finish in the league's second division for the next 20 consecutive years. This streak finally ending in 1967, the year after Leo Durocher became the club's manager. Since that time, the cursed Cubs have not won a National League pennant or played in a World Series --the longest pennantless drought in Major League history. Sianis died in 1970. The Billy Goat Curse In 1945, William "Billy Goat" Sianis tried to bring his pet goat, Murphy, with him into Wrigley Field for Game 4 of the World Series. Ushers at the game said the goat was too smelly and told Sianis he had to leave. To retaliate, Sianis cast a "goat curse" on the Cubs by saying, "Cubs, they not gonna win anymore". The Cubs lost the 1945 World Series to the Detroit Tigers and haven't made it to a World Series since.
A 6-year-long study recently found that polar bears can swim for great distances. GPS collars were attached to 20 female bears, some with cubs. The swims documented lasted from 17 hours to nearly 10 days and covered between 33 and 427 miles (54 and 687 kilometers) in the southern Beaufort Sea. There are no earlier studies on polar bear swims, but there was not enough open water in recent years for bears to swim such distances. Polar bears rely on sea-ice in the Arctic to hunt their prey, seals, but this ice is melting earlier every year. Scientists fear that cubs especially will not survive long swims. Twelve of the 20 bears had cubs when the collars were fitted, but when 10 of the 12 were recaptured a year later, only 6 had cubs. U.S. Geological Survey (link below).