issue 630 sh-nw

12
There’s No Limt to Hanging Your Holiday Cheer In 1882, the rst Christmas tree was lit by the use of electricity. Edward Johnson lit up a Christmas tree in New York City with eighty small electric light bulbs. It should be noted that Edward Johnson created the rst string of electric Christmas lights that were then mass produced around 1890. By 1900, department stores started using the new Christmas lights for their Christmas displays. After that, literally, the sky was the limit. Such it is with a house in Pittsburg where over 210,000 lights are computer animated and synched to music. It took 3 months to hang the lights and over 6 months to do the computer programming. See and Hear it http//www.youtube.com/watch?v=5W7xj5f-eCs NOW THAT YOUR IN THE MOOD, HERES A LIST OF GREAT HOLIDAY LIGHTING EVENTS IN THE TWN CITIES AND ELSEWHERE Downtown Minneapolis’ Holidazzle Parade Minneapolis’ Christmas lights are on Nicollet Avenue - the stationary ones in the stores that line the pedestrianized mall, and the Holidazzle parade of lights and music that marches down Nicollet on weekend nights between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Downtown Minneapolis Macy’s Santaland Holiday Show The Macy’s store on Nicollet Avenue traditionally has a lovely holiday window display and inside the store is the annual free Macy’s Santaland Holiday Show, a huge animatronic holiday display that’s enchanted children for generations - the Macy’s holiday show has been with us almost 50 years. Grand Avenue’s Grand Meander and Holiday Lights St. Paul’s shopping district, is lined with restaurants, stores and boutiques, many of who have decorated store fronts, as well as the lights on Grand Avenue itself. A fun day to go is during the annual Grand Avenue holiday event, Grand Meander held on December 5th. During the Grand Meander, there’s entertainment, music and the Grand Avenue tree lighting ceremony at locations all along Grand Avenue. Taylor Falls Lighting Festival and Christmas Lights The cute-as-a-button town of Taylor’s Falls, about an hour north of the Twin Cities, holds a three day annual Lighting Festival November 26th, with parades, reindeer, music, food and entertainment. Historic houses in the town get dressed up for the season and welcome visitors to experience the atmosphere of a Victorian Christmas. goto: www.fallschamber.org Gerten’s & Linders’ Garden Center Holiday Lights and display Linders garden center in St. Paul has an annual holiday display with 80 Christmas trees & 200,000 computer controlled holiday lights. Gerten’s in Inver Grove Heights has Christmas entertainment during December. Visit with Santa and his reindeer on December weekends. www.linders.com / www.gertens.com Lake Phalen Christmas Lights in the Park The drive around Lake Phalen gets illuminated with over a million animatronic Christmas lights every year from Thanksgiving until New Year’s Eve. There is a charge per car to see the lights, but all of the proceeds from the entrance price goes to local charities. www.lightsinthepark.org Summit Avenue Christmas Lights This is where some of the grandest Victorian homes in the Twin Cities were built. Homeowners along the avenue often decorate with classic Christmas lights... and some go all-out tacky. The Governor’s official home and Christmas tree is at 1006 Summit Avenue, with a competing, equally large, Christmas tree directly opposite. The Governor’s Residence is open for free public tours on the first three Tuesdays of December (1st, 8th and 15th) between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. with live music and a tour of the holiday decorations inside the mansion. Inver Grove Heights Holiday Lights The citizens of Inver Grove Heights seem to love the holidays a little more than average, and the suburb is a popular destination for driving about and looking out for lights. Drive your own car around, or take a Holiday Light Trolley during the Holiday on Main Street event on December 19. The free trolley rides start at 6.30 p.m. after a day of festive entertainment in Inver Grove Heights. South Saint Paul Holidaze On Friday December 4, the city of South St. Paul holds the annual Holidaze Celebration with music, Santa, carriage rides, a mitten and hat drive, and the city’s tree lighting ceremony at 7 p.m. www.southstpaul.org Plymouth Lights The owners of 16700 33rd Ave North, in the suburb of Plymouth, love Christmas, Christmas lights, and Christmas music so much that they’ve created one of the must legendary holiday light displays in the Twin Cities. Bentleyville Tour of Lights Duluth. Not exactly in the Twin Cities, but if you are heading north this Holiday season, stop by Bentleyville in Duluth. This free attraction recently moved from Nathan Bentley’s home in Cloquet to the Bayfront Festival Park in Duluth. There are hundreds of thousands of lights, fire pits for roasting marshmallows, live music on the weekends, and Santa, and it’s all free. Even the marshmallows. Bentleyville is open from November 27 - January 2 from 5 p.m until 10 p.m. www.bentleyvilleusa.org Falcon Prince Inc . 1633 County Hwy. 10 Spring Lake Park, MN 55432 Phone: 763-792-1125 Fax: 763-792-4795 Email: [email protected] www.TidbitsTwinCities.com Published under licensing agreement with Tidbits Media, Inc., Montgomery, AL www.tidbitsmedia.com I like to believe that people in the long run are going to do more to promote peace than our governments. Indeed, I think that people want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out of the way and let them have it. Dwight D. 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Only $35 A Holiday Gift Tradition GOOD AT 160+ GOLF COURSES ® Fingerprint jewelry We invite you to see the collection at: “You, with me - alwaysWear your loved one’s touch in silver or gold BLAINE NATIONAL VILLAGE HWY 65 & 105TH -- A Minnesota Minute A Minnesota Minute A Minnesota Minute A Minnesota Minute A Well Known & Trusted Licensed Home Daycare for 20 years On 62nd Ave N Between Boone & Winnetka Ave Caring for Families in New Hope, Crystal, Maple Grove & West Brookyn Park M Mary Mary M a M M M M M M M M M M M M a a a a a M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M a a a a a a a a a a a a y y y y y y y y r r r r r ry r r r y y y y y y y ’s s Jo’s o J o o o o J J J o o J J o o o o o s s ’s s s s ’s ’s D aycare y e e e e e e e e Daycare Daycare e y y y y y y D D D D D D D D D D D D a a a a a a a a a a a a a a c c c c c c D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D D a a a a a a a a a a y y y y c c c c c c a a a a a a a a a a r r r r r r e e e r r r r r r r e e e e e e e e e Openings Available for Before and after School Full or Part Time Infants thru School age Mon - Fri 6:30 AM- 5:30 PM Licensed Food Program Large Outdoor Play Area Crafts & Activities Many References CALL 763-537-1159

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630 NW HENN-SHERB CO

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Page 1: ISSUE 630 SH-NW

There’s No Limt to Hanging Your Holiday Cheer

In 1882, the first Christmas tree was lit by the use of electricity. Edward Johnson lit up a Christmas tree in New York City with eighty small electric light bulbs. It should be noted that Edward Johnson created the first string of electric Christmas lights that were then mass produced around 1890. By 1900, department stores started using the new Christmas lights for their Christmas displays. After that, literally, the sky was the limit. Such it is with a house in Pittsburg where over 210,000 lights are computer animated and synched to music. It took 3 months to hang the lights and over 6 months to do the computer programming.

See and Hear it http//www.youtube.com/watch?v=5W7xj5f-eCs

NOW THAT YOUR IN THE MOOD, HERE’S A LIST OF GREAT HOLIDAY LIGHTING EVENTS IN THE TWN CITIES AND ELSEWHERE

Downtown Minneapolis’ Holidazzle ParadeMinneapolis’ Christmas lights are on Nicollet Avenue - the stationary ones in the stores that line the pedestrianized mall, and the Holidazzle parade of lights and music that marches down Nicollet on weekend nights between Thanksgiving and Christmas. Downtown Minneapolis Macy’s Santaland Holiday ShowThe Macy’s store on Nicollet Avenue traditionally has a lovely holiday window display and inside the store is the annual free Macy’s Santaland Holiday Show, a huge animatronic holiday display that’s enchanted children for generations - the Macy’s holiday show has been with us almost 50 years. Grand Avenue’s Grand Meander and Holiday LightsSt. Paul’s shopping district, is lined with restaurants, stores and boutiques, many of who have decorated store fronts, as well as the lights on Grand Avenue itself. A fun day to go is during the annual Grand Avenue holiday event, Grand Meander held on December 5th. During the Grand Meander, there’s entertainment, music and the Grand Avenue tree lighting ceremony at locations all along Grand Avenue.Taylor Falls Lighting Festival and Christmas LightsThe cute-as-a-button town of Taylor’s Falls, about an hour north of the Twin Cities, holds a three day annual Lighting Festival November 26th, with parades, reindeer, music, food and entertainment. Historic houses in the town get dressed up for the season and welcome visitors to experience the atmosphere of a Victorian Christmas. goto: www.fallschamber.org Gerten’s & Linders’ Garden Center Holiday Lights and displayLinders garden center in St. Paul has an annual holiday display with 80 Christmas trees & 200,000 computer controlled holiday lights. Gerten’s in Inver Grove Heights has Christmas entertainment during December. Visit with Santa and his reindeer on December weekends. www.linders.com / www.gertens.comLake Phalen Christmas Lights in the ParkThe drive around Lake Phalen gets illuminated with over a million animatronic Christmas lights every year from Thanksgiving until New Year’s Eve. There is a charge per car to see the lights, but all of the proceeds from the entrance price goes to local charities. www.lightsinthepark.orgSummit Avenue Christmas LightsThis is where some of the grandest Victorian homes in the Twin Cities were built. Homeowners along the avenue often decorate with classic Christmas lights... and some go all-out tacky. The Governor’s official home and Christmas tree is at 1006 Summit Avenue, with a competing, equally large, Christmas tree directly opposite. The Governor’s Residence is open for free public tours on the first three Tuesdays of December (1st, 8th and 15th) between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. with live music and a tour of the holiday decorations inside the mansion.Inver Grove Heights Holiday LightsThe citizens of Inver Grove Heights seem to love the holidays a little more than average, and the suburb is a popular destination for driving about and looking out for lights. Drive your own car around, or take a Holiday Light Trolley during the Holiday on Main Street event on December 19. The free trolley rides start at 6.30 p.m. after a day of festive entertainment in Inver Grove Heights. South Saint Paul HolidazeOn Friday December 4, the city of South St. Paul holds the annual Holidaze Celebration with music, Santa, carriage rides, a mitten and hat drive, and the city’s tree lighting ceremony at 7 p.m. www.southstpaul.orgPlymouth Lights The owners of 16700 33rd Ave North, in the suburb of Plymouth, love Christmas, Christmas lights, and Christmas music so much that they’ve created one of the must legendary holiday light displays in the Twin Cities. Bentleyville Tour of Lights Duluth. Not exactly in the Twin Cities, but if you are heading north this Holiday season, stop by Bentleyville in Duluth. This free attraction recently moved from Nathan Bentley’s home in Cloquet to the Bayfront Festival Park in Duluth. There are hundreds of thousands of lights, fire pits for roasting marshmallows, live music on the weekends, and Santa, and it’s all free. Even the marshmallows. Bentleyville is open from November 27 - January 2 from 5 p.m until 10 p.m. www.bentleyvilleusa.org

Falcon Prince Inc . ● 1633 County Hwy. 10 ● Spring Lake Park, MN 55432 ● Phone: 763-792-1125 Fax: 763-792-4795 ● Email: [email protected] ● www.TidbitsTwinCities.com ● Published under licensing agreement with Tidbits Media, Inc., Montgomery, AL www.tidbitsmedia.com

I like to believe that people in the long run are going to do more to promote peace than our governments. Indeed, I think that people want peace so much that one of these days governments had better get out of the way and let them have it.

Dwight D. Eisenhower

Sponsored in part by:

Four (4) Buy One Get One Free Rounds of Golf At Each CourseMany Golf Courses Offering Driving Range & Power Cart Discounts

Call: 763-753-6988www.birdiemarketing.com

MINNESOTAGOLF CARD2011

A $20,000 VALUE! Only $35

A Holiday Gift Tradition GOOD AT 160+ GOLF COURSES

® Fingerprint jewelry

We invite you to see the collection at:

“You, with me - always”

Wear your loved one’s touch in silver or gold

BLAINE NATIONAL VILLAGE HWY 65 & 105TH

--

A Minnesota

Minute

A Minnesota

Minute

A Minnesota

Minute

A Minnesota

Minute

A Well Known & Trusted Licensed Home Daycare

for 20 yearsOn 62nd Ave N Between

Boone & Winnetka Ave

Caring for Families in New Hope, Crystal, Maple Grove & West Brookyn Park

MMaryMary MaMMMMMMMMMMMMMMaaaaaaMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMaaaaaaaaaaaa yyyyyyyyrrrrrryrrryyyyyyy’ssJo’soJooooJJJooJJooooo ss’’’’’’’s’s’s’sss’s’s

DDaycareDD y eeeeeeeeeeDaycareDaycareeeeyyyyyyDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD aaaaaaaaaaaaaa ccccccDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyccccccaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrreeerrrrrrreeeeeeeeeeeeee

Openings Available for Before and after School

Full or Part Time Infants thru School age

Mon - Fri 6:30 AM- 5:30 PM

● Licensed Food Program● Large Outdoor Play Area● Crafts & Activities● Many References

CALL763-537-1159

Page 2: ISSUE 630 SH-NW

The Paper People Reach For! Page 2

GIFTS AND SERVICES THAT WILL MOVE YOU

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“Kottke Care” We service your car with the same reliable skills and safety standards used on our school buses that carry your most precious cargo. You’ll also Love our Customer lounge

“Serving Our Community Since 1948”

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Give a memory that will

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Mt Mckinley

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Cerro AconcaguaCerro Aconcagua

Page 3: ISSUE 630 SH-NW

763-792-1125 - WWW.TIDBITSTWINCITIES.COM Page 3

Mountains (Continued)

• The Appalachian Mountains are the oldest mountain chain in North America which extend from Newfoundland to Alabama. • They are made up of various mountains, ridges, and valleys. The Great Smoky Mountains running from Tennessee to North Carolina. The Blue Ridge Mountains which are the backbone of the system extending from Georgia to Pennsylvania. • Then there is Mt. Mitchell, the highest mountain in the Appalachians and the eastern coast. It is about 6,684 feet high.Let’s Get a Little Bigger• The beautiful Rocky Mountains extend some 3,000 miles from the Mexican frontier to the Arctic Ocean, through the western United States and sections of Canada. • The Continental Divide is located in these Mountains and is the spot that separates waters fl owing into the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico from those fl owing into the Pacifi c Ocean. • The Rockies include at least 100 separate ranges, with four broad groupings: the Canadian Rockies / Northern Rockies of Montana and northeastern Idaho; the Middle Rockies of Wyoming, Utah and southeastern Idaho; the Southern Rockies, mainly in Colorado and New Mexico; and the Colorado Plateau in the four corners region.• The highest peak in the lower U.S. Rockies is Mt. Elbert in Colorado at 14,433 feet. In the Canadian Rockies it is Mt. Robson in British Columbia, at 12,972 feet. Alaska is where it really comes together with 16 of the highest peaks in the United States. At the foot of one of these, Mt. Saint Elias (19,551 ft), sits the Malaspina Glacier, which is larger than the state of Rhode Island.

You’ve Got to Go Down to Go Up

• The Andes Mountain range is an uninterrupted chain of highland that is situated along the western coast of South America. At 5500 miles in length, it is comprised of many peaks and active volcanoes over 20,000 feet making it the longest and one of the highest mountain ranges in the world. It’s comprised of two great ranges: Cordillera Oriental and Cordillera Occidental, which stand divided by a deep intermediate depression. It also contains the Patagonian Ice Field comprised of over two hundred glaciers and considered to be the largest ice fi eld outside of Antarctica. The tallest mountain in the Andes? Cerro Aconcagua at 22,831 feet tall.

All the Way to the Top

• The world’s highest peak on land is Mt. Everest in the Himalayas. It is 29,036 feet. Prior to being named Mount Everest, the mountain was commonly referred to as Peak XV. It was formally

named Mount Everest after Col. George Everest who was the Surveyor General of India in the early 1860s. It also has some local names such as Sagarmatha (Nepali) and Chomolungma (Tibetan). • The Himalayas stretch across six countries: Afghanistan, Bhutan, the People’s Republic of China, India, Nepal and Pakistan. Some of the world’s major rivers, the Indus, the Ganges, the Brahmaputra and the Yangtze, rise in the Himalayas, and their combined drainage basin is home to some 1.3 billion people, including the people of Bangladesh. • When measured from sea-level, Mount Everest is without a doubt the biggest mountain peak on this planet. However, if one were to consider the height of a mountain from its base to its peak, there are a few other mountains that are taller than Everest in totality.• The world’s highest mountain, from its base on the ocean fl oor, is Mauna Kea, on Hawaii. It is 33,474 feet high, but only 13,796 feet are above sea level. The summit of Mauna Kea has been a celestial observatory since ancient times and is considered to be one of the best astronomical sites in the world. The summit is above approximately 40 percent of Earth’s atmosphere which allows amazing images of the night sky on an average of 300 clear nights per year.

Final Bits, Chunks and Pieces

• Standing at 4,406 feet (1,343 meters), Ben Nevis is the highest mountain in the British Isles, and as such, is the major challenge for any United Kingdom climber or walker. In Gaelic, the mountain’s name, Beinn Nibheis, has been linked with Irish and Gaelic words meaning poisonous or terrible.• Who could forget the Matterhorn the most recognized mountain on the European continent. It’s roughly 14,700 ft of chiseled rock pyramid is a defi ning geographical landmark. It is considered the birthplace of climbing.

Ending With Some Rock Solid Quotes

• “Nobody trips over mountains. It is the small pebble that causes you to stumble. Pass all the pebbles in your path and you will fi nd you have crossed the mountain.”—Author Unknown• “Only when you’ve been in the deepest valley can you know how magnifi cent it is to be atop the highest mountain.”—President Richard M. Nixon 1913-1994• “People travel to wonder at the height of the mountains, at the huge waves of the seas, at the long course of the rivers, at the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars, and yet they pass by each other without wondering.”—Saint Augustine

M i n n e s o t a ClinicalStudy Center

WHERE: The Minnesota Clinical Study Center 7205 University Avenue N.E. Fridley

Steven Kempers, M.D.For more information, please call

763-502-2941

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Volunteers, ages 18 or older, are wanted for a research study for rosacea that will test an investigational topical gel for 4 weeks. The study will involve 8 visits over the course of 8-10 weeks.

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All participants are seen by a board certified Dermatologist No cost study related evaluationsQualified participants will be reimbursed for time and travel

M i n n e s o t a ClinicalStudy Center

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Steven Kempers, M.D.For more information, please call

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ARE YOU A WOMAN WHO HAS HAIR LOSS?IF YOU ARE A WOMAN, 18 YEARS OR OLDER AND HAVE EXPERIENCED HAIR LOSS (NOT RELATED TO PREGNANCY, A CURRENT MEDICATION, A THYROID DISORDER, OR UNCONTROLLED DIABETES), YOU MAY BE ELIGIBLE FOR A RESEARCH STUDY.

THE MINNESOTA CLINICAL STUDY CENTER IS LOOKING FOR VOLUNTEERS TO PARTICIPATE IN A 24 WEEK, 7 VISIT RESEARCH STUDY THAT WILL USE AN INVESTIGATIONAL TOPICAL PRODUCT VERSUS AN INACTIVE PLACEBO FOR FEMALE PATTERN HAIR LOSSIF YOU WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION ABOUT HOW YOU CAN PARTICIPATE IN THIS RESEARCH PROJECT, PLEASE CALL 763-502-2941.

Page 4: ISSUE 630 SH-NW

The Paper People Reach For! Page 4

Turkey Picking 101I don’t need a calendar to tell me that Thanksgiving is near. The dozens of questions in my email box on how to buy a turkey are a sure sign. So, back by popular demand (with a few new tips as well), here is everything you need to know to select the best turkey at the best price!

GO FOR CHEAP. John Smith, professional butcher and author of Confessions of a Butcher: Eat Steak on a Hamburger Budget, advises, “Always go with the cheapest turkey and you’ll never go wrong. He says one turkey processor will slap many different labels on his crop of birds. The turkeys are all the same, only the labels are different.”

NO ENHANCEMENTS. Roger Kutz, a butcher in Minnesota, suggests we skip the turkeys that come “enhanced.” They are just loaded up with salty water and fl avorings. Never forget that a turkey with an 8 percent solution added is only 92 percent turkey.

BUY FROZEN. Both of our butchers agree that these days a frozen bird is best. By law, turkeys can be labeled “fresh” even though the moisture in the bird is frozen. If you press very fi rmly on the bird the meat is not frozen. The turkey processors have it down to a science. They bring the temperature of the birds down to the very legal limit before sending them off to the store two weeks before Thanksgiving. Frozen turkeys, on the other hand, are quick-frozen immediately after butchering. So the freshest turkey is really a frozen turkey. The freezing process has no noticeable effect on the quality or the taste of the bird.

BIGGER IS BETTER. To get the best meat to bone ratio, opt for the biggest bird with the roundest chest. A bird of less than 16 pounds is going to have much less meat to bone, and one that is 12 pounds or less will be mostly bones. The designations of hen and tom, young or mature apply only to size, not to age or gender.

SAFE PREP. You must have aneffective antibacterial solution in your kitchen when preparing poultry. But don’t spend $6 for a 12-ounce bottle of cleaner. Make it yourself: One quart of 70 F (cool) water plus one teaspoon of liquid bleach. Any warmer and

the bleach evaporates; more bleachwill harm some surfaces and fabrics.Regularly sanitize all surfaces with thisbleach water, particularly those that mayhave come in contact with raw poultryincluding the inside of the refrigerator.

DO NOT STUFF IT! Liz Tarditi,professional personal chef warns us that as the bird cooks, raw juices drip intothe soft, absorbent stuffi ng. Turkey must reach an internal temperature of 165 F,and so must the contaminated stuffi ng.It’s nearly impossible to cook a stuffed turkey to perfection and also guaranteeuncontaminated stuffi ng. Prepare your stuffi ng as you always have, but bakeit in a separate foil-covered pan whilethe turkey is roasting. Remember, anunstuffed bird will roast faster and moreevenly, too.

FILL THE FREEZER. Frozen turkeyswill be at rock bottom prices during thenext few weeks and through Christmas.This is a good time to fi ll your freezer. Aslong as the plastic packaging is intact, afrozen turkey is safe and delicious for at least a year, if not longer. Stretch your food dollars by roasting cheap turkeysthroughout the year.

NOW HERE’S A TIPBy JoAnn Derson

▲ “Spray plastic wrap with non-fl avored cooking spray before using it to cover cakes or cupcakes. The frosting won’t stick to the wrap.” -- R.M. in Florida

▲ “Baking cookies to mail? Save potato-chip cans (the tall ones in which chips come stacked). They protect cookies from breaking.” -- G.D. in Wisconsin

▲ “Get a professional look when recaulking a sink by running over the bead of caulk with the back of a soapy teaspoon. It will smooth the caulk and give it a uniform appearance.” -- I.O. in West Virginia

▲ If you suspect you have a slow leak from your toilet tank, put a few drops of food coloring into the large tank. If the fl apper is not closing all the way, in a short time the dye will have made its way to the toilet bowl. If it does, you know that you need to replace the ball and fl apper.

Send your tips to Now Here’s a Tip, c/o King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475 or e-mail JoAnn at [email protected].(c) 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.

TIP BITSHELPFUL HOME

Reprinted in its entirety with permission by Creators Syndicate and Mary Hunt

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A Tidbits® Feature ArticleGet Backup!

In life when we are knocked down or fall off our bike we are told, “get back up!” When it comes to computers this advice is often met with chagrin. “I don’t have abackup”, is the anguished cry I hear over and over. According to Gartner Research,a PC built in 2003 has a 28% chance of a hard drive failure in 2006. Hard drivefailures are one of the most common repair items according to PC manufacturers. After all hard drives are mechanical devices with platters spinning at up to 7,200RPM and read/write heads fl oating mere nanometers above the platter surface. Heatis your drive’s worst enemy, drives get extremely hot during heavy use and I oftenfi nd PC cases packed full of dust from years of accumulation. This dust layer actslike a blanket holding heat in while it slows down fans that are supposed to exhaustwaste heat! The result is that one day the drive just quits, your PC won’t boot, and you really need that paper, or fi nancial information right now!Now some of you are thinking, “I don’t need to read the rest of this article becauseI have a backup.” Ask your self these questions. If my PC won’t boot can I still get my backup? Where is my backup stored? A backup on a broken drive is no good at all. Just what am I backing up? Just fi les, what about programs, the Registry, e-mails, contacts, etc. Most backup systems right out of the box only copy data fi les like those found in the My Documents folder. They rely on your PC working fi neand assume that you have just accidentally erased an important fi le. A true backup is a copy of every single byte on the hard drive, including all the information on howthe hard drive is formatted and confi gured. This backup should be on a separatehard drive that is kept in a safe place. Good backup software should also have abootable CD that has software that will run even if your hard drive is completelyfried. This software will allow you to buy a new hard drive and then recover everything and I mean everything!Quick Tip-Bit: I recommend backup software called Acronis True Image. Check it out at www.acronis.com. Purchase a good External hard drive (it should havea fan to keep the drive cool) and regularly create a full disk backup of your Internalhard drives (C:, D: etc.) to the External drive. Then when the worst happens you areready to Get Backup!If you have any questions please call. Dean Hancy

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Music Legend:Jimi Hendrix

James Marshall “Jimi” Hendrix was bornJohnny Allen Hendrix on November 27,1942 and died on September 18, 1970.This American guitarist, singer and songwriter is often considered to be thegreatest electric guitarist in the historyof rock music and one of the most important and infl uential musicians of his era across a range of genres.• The fi rst formal band Hendrixplayed in was The Velvetones, whoperformed regularly at the Yesler TerraceNeighborhood House in Seattle. Heplayed without pay. His fl ashy style and left-handed playing of a right-handed guitar made him a standout. • Early in his career, Hendrixjoined the very popular Isley Brothersband and went on tour, where hewas eventually hired as part of LittleRichard’s backup band.• The Rolling Stones’ manager Andrew Loog Oldham and later,producer Seymour Stein, both passed on managing Hendrix. They didn’t likehis music. • Hendrix then met ChasChandler, who was ending his tenureas bassist in The Animals rock band and was looking for talent to manage.Chandler was enamored with the song“Hey Joe” and was convinced he could create a hit single with the right artist.He liked how Hendrix played the song.• Producer-manager Chandler helped Hendrix move to London, wherehe joined with English bass player Noel

Redding and drummer Mitch Mitchell toform his new group, The Jimi HendrixExperience.• In London, he gained a reputation as a great player. He jammed with Eric Clapton during an appearancewith his new band, Cream. Hendrix’sfans included The Beatles, The Who and The Rolling Stones.• Jimi recorded “Hey Joe” as his fi rst single with the Jimi HendrixExperience, followed by “Stone Free,”“Purple Haze” and “The Wind CriesMary.” (The last three are all Hendrixcompositions.)• In March 1967, Hendrix set his guitar on fi re on stage at the end of his act as part of a tour by The Walker Brothers.• In May 1967, the group released their fi rst album, “Are YouExperienced,” which reached No. 2in England behind The Beatles’ “Sgt.Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.”• Although very popular internationally at this time, theExperience had yet to crack America.Their fi rst single there failed to sell.Hendrix’s big chance came when PaulMcCartney recommended the groupto the organizers of the MontereyInternational Pop Festival.• Hendrix’s Monterey Pop Festival performance was fi lmed by D.A. Pennebaker and later shown in somemovie theaters around the country inearly 1969. The movie immortalized Hendrix’s burning and smashing of hisguitar at the fi nale of his performance.• The last Experience concert took place on June 29, 1969, at BarryFey’s Denver Pop Festival, a three-day event held at Denver’s Mile HighStadium that was marked by policefi ring tear gas into the audience as theyplayed “Voodoo Child (Slight Return).”The band escaped from the venue in theback of a rental truck that was partlycrushed by fans trying to escape the tear gas. The next day, Noel Redding quit theExperience.• Hendrix died in London under somewhat mysterious circumstances onSeptember 18, 1970.

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■ On Nov. 23, 1966, Elvis Presley’s 22nd fi lm, a rock ‘n’ roll musical called “Spinout” in which Elvis played a singing race car

driver, opens in theaters across the country. “Spinout” was fi lmed on location at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and the Ascot Motor Car Racing Ground, a well-known dirt track nearby.

■ On Nov. 25, 1980, Sugar Ray Leonard regains boxing’s welterweight title when his opponent, reigning champ Roberto Duran, waves his arms and walks away from the fi ght in the eighth round, telling the referee “No mas, no mas” (“No more”). Duran maintained that he had stomach cramps and could barely stand up.

■ On Nov. 27, 1703, an unusual storm system fi nally dissipates over England after wreaking havoc on the country for nearly two weeks. Featuring hurricane strength winds, the storm killed somewhere between 10,000 and 30,000 people and sank hundreds of Royal Navy ships.

■ On Nov. 26, 1931, the fi rst cloverleaf interchange to be built in the United States, at the junction of US 1/9 and NJ Route 35 in Woodbridge, N.J., is featured on the cover of the Engineering News-Record. A piece on the under-construction Hoover Dam was relegated to the journal’s back pages.

■ On Nov. 30, 1886, the Folies Berg re in Paris introduces an elaborate revue featuring women in sensational costumes. The theater spared no expense, staging revues that featured as many as 40 sets. Among other long traditions, the show’s title always contains 13 letters and includes the word “Folie.”

■ On Dec. 5, 1933, the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is ratifi ed, repealing the 18th Amendment and bringing an end to the national prohibition of alcohol. Mississippi, the last dry state in the Union, ended Prohibition in 1966.

■ On Dec. 4, 1945, in an overwhelming vote of 65 to 7, the U.S. Senate approves full U.S. participation in the United Nations. Some senators proposed a resolution designed to force the president to receive congressional consent before approving U.S. troops for any U.N. peacekeeping forces. The resolution was defeated.

■ On Dec. 3, 1967, 53-year-old Lewis Washkansky receives the fi rst human heart transplant in Cape Town, South Africa. After surgery, he was given drugs to suppress his immune system and keep his body from rejecting the heart. He died 18 days later from double pneumonia.

■ On Dec. 2, 1972, the Temptations earn the last of their four chart-topping hits when “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone” reaches No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Earlier hits by producer-songwriter Smokey Robinson were “The Way You Do the Things You Do” (1964) and “My Girl” (1965).

■ On Nov. 29, 1981, actress Natalie Wood, who starred in such movies as “Rebel Without a Cause” and “West Side Story,” drowns in a boating accident near California’s Catalina Island. It was believed she somehow slipped overboard while untying a dinghy attached to the boat.

(c) 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.

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Here’s Why You Need a Flu Shot

by Matilda Charles

Oh, we’re an obstinate bunch. It seems that the older we get, the less likely we are to listen to others who have our welfare in mind. A recent study indicates a whole lot of seniors don’t want to get an annual fl u shot. Some of us come up with interesting excuses not to get the shot, mostly having to do with how bad we think the fl u is going to be, our general state of health and whether we’re likely to get the fl u, and how well we think the shot would work if we did get one. I can tell you one very compelling reason to get the fl u shot: delay of fi rst heart attack. This information comes from another study reported in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. It says that getting a fl u shot early in the season brings a 19 percent reduction in the occurrence of acute myocardial infarction. Shots received after the middle of November had a smaller reduction, but a reduction just the same. The pneumonia shot didn’t do a thing. Consumer Reports’ health magazine also is getting into the act with a poll about why people don’t want a fl u shot. One big reason cited is that last year’s fl u

season was a big nothing, especially because it hit younger people harder. What we need to remember, however, is that in a normal fl u year, 90 percent of the deaths from fl u are in the 65-and-older age group. Consider this, too: According Consumer Reports, if you have to go to the emergency room with a twisted ankle, there’s a 50 percent chance that your nurses won’t have had a fl u shot.

Vibration Therapy for Bone Loss Vibration therapy is said to address a number of ills: prevent varicose veins, break up cellulite, rev up the lymph system and reduce knee and leg pain. The big benefi t, however, is that it’s possible for vibration therapy to address the problem of bone loss. Here’s how vibration therapy is thought to work: The machine platform that one sits or stands on vibrates at 30-90 cycles per second, the same rate as muscles in the human body. The vibrations in essence mimic the body and do what the body isn’t doing anymore -- creating bone, in this case. The studies are numerous and come from all over the globe. In China, a 24-week study in postmenopausal women show an increase in the bone and mineral density of the hip.

In Belgium, researchers compared vibration therapy with regular resistance training, and the vibration therapy showed that strength increased. In Florida, a study concluded that whole-body vibrations “improve quality of life, walk, balance and motor capacity in elderly patients.” Even NASA has gotten into the act with LIV, or Low Intensity Vibration. With astronauts spending long periods of time in space with no real way to exercise, bone loss has been a serious concern. Via various contraptions, NASA has been able to let astronauts work out, but the results haven’t been satisfactory when it comes to bone loss. Enter vibration therapy, and a way for astronauts to maintain bone strength while in space. I found some of these alleged machines for sale online. This is one item that needs a doctor’s advice, though, as a vibration level that’s too high can be very dangerous.

Matilda Charles regrets that she cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into her column whenever possible. Write to her in care of King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or send e-mail to [email protected].

(c) 2010 King Features Synd., Inc.

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EXPLORES LONG & SHORT RIDES, ROADS & MORE

by Patricia L. Cook

Some of us seem to be born with the unending desire to see places and experience things that are both near and far away. Join Tidbits as we explore some interesting journeys.• If you’re itching to take a long road trip, the 4,800-mile-long (7,700-km) Trans-Canada Highway is the road to be on. It is the world’s longest national highway from Victoria, British Columbia, to St. John’s Newfoundland, and Labrador. Dedicated in 1962, it was completed in 1970. Today, several routes are considered a part of the Trans-Canada Highway, but the main road, Highway 1, passes through Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Banff, the Canadian Rockies, Kamloops and Vancouver Island. • If, instead of a road trip, you

are thinking of a short fl ight, British Airways has the shortest scheduled fl ight in the world. Off the northern coast of Scotland, there are twice-daily fl ights between the islands of Westray and Papa Westray. The time to reach the destination? A mere two minutes!• The longest passenger fl ight is between Singapore and Newark, New Jersey. The fl ight covers 10,335 miles (16,633 km), which is almost halfway around the globe and about 18 hours on the plane! The earth’s circumference is 24,881 miles (40,042 km). turn the page for more!• Driving the long haul to a specifi c destination requires choosing a route. It’s easy now, but, following World War II, the U.S. government was faced with a problem: many Americans buying cars and not enough roads on which to drive them. The solution was the Federal Highway System. The major routes are denoted by one or two numbers, and spurs off of them are three-numbered routes. North-south routes bear odd numbers, and east-west routes bear even numbers. Route numbers become larger as one moves from east to west or north to south. (Continued Pg. 10)

Have you ever wanted to have a psychic reading, but didn’t quite know what to ask or what to expect? It’s really a simple process. Initially, you may wonder how you know when it’s time to see a psychic. When you begin to notice things that are mentioned regarding psychics. When you fi nd yourself thinking about having a reading. When the topic comes up while talking with your friends. These are all signs that it’s time for you to have a reading. Once you make the decision to have a reading, it’s time to search out a psychic. The best way to pick one is word of mouth. Talk to people who have had readings and see who they recommend. Ask about their experiences and if they were happy with them. After you’ve decided on a psychic, set up an appointment. It’s a good idea you give yourself at least a week between the time you make the appointment and the actual reading. This will give you the opportunity to mentally prepare for your reading. If your psychic is also a medium, it’s a possibility that you will connect with loved ones on the other side and this could be an emotional experience. Take some time before your reading to make a list of things you’d like to know. The more questions you have, the more answers you will get. If you ask

a vague question such as, “What do you see around me?” your answer could be long in coming. The psychic will have to reach out and feel and listen to get an idea of what it is you want you to know. This takes time and you are probably paying by the minute. If it’s your fi rst reading and you aren’t sure what to ask, you can keep your questions relatively simple. Will I get a raise this year? When will I get a new car? Is this love interest a good choice? Each answer will lead to more questions. Once you are comfortable, you can ask more detailed questions with confi dence. And most important, enjoy yourself. You should leave a reading feeling good and looking forward to your next one. Thank you for your interest and attention. Till next time, stay in touch with yourself, with your life, and with those loved ones who have moved on.

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RIDES, ROADS & MORE (Continued From Pg. 9)

• As more and more cars started to overwhelm the Federal Highway System, a need grew for a bigger route system. The government embarked on the Interstate Highway System in the 1950s. A second factor bearing on the design for this system was national defense. If the country was threatened by an invasion, a way was needed to quickly transport resources to the region under threat. The Interstate System provided for multi-lane highways with limited access and no traffi c lights. The numbering system for these roads is the opposite of the Federal Highway System routes; the route numbers increase for the odd-numbered, north-south routes going from west to east. (For example, I-5 runs from California to Washington, and I-95 runs from Maine to Florida.) They increase for the even-numbered, east-west routes going from south to north. (For example, I-10 runs from California to Florida, and I-90 runs from Washington to Massachusetts.)• With the roads in place, now it is possible to travel fast on the interstates or take the scenic slower routes to see more of the country. • A Federal Highway Administration program that was started in 1991 designates some roads as “America’s Byways.” There are 150 designated Byways in 46 states that are worth a drive. For some near you, visit www.byways.org. Within the “Byways” designation there are “National Scenic Byways” and “All-American Roads” based on cultural, archaeological, historic, scenic, natural and recreational qualities. • One “All-American Road” is the Blue Ridge Parkway, which this year has been celebrating its 75th anniversary of being part of the National Park Service. It covers 469 miles (754.8 km) through the Blue Ridge Mountains in Virginia and North Carolina. • It can’t be driven in the winter, but the Beartooth Highway (U.S. 212) is the highest elevation highway in the Northern Rockies and is designated as a “National Scenic Byway.” The road provides access to the northeast entrance of Yellowstone National Park in northern Wyoming and southern Montana in a rugged area with

20 peaks reaching 12,000 feet (3657 m) in elevation. Because of its high elevation and also because the northeast Yellowstone entrance closes to auto traffi c in the winter, this road is only opened about four and one-half months each year. Beartooth Pass (the highest point) is 10,947 feet (3337 m) in elevation and offers stunning views. • Just so you know: “The Long and Winding Road” was the last No. 1 song by the Beatles in the United States, beginning a 10-week run at the top of the Billboard chart on May 23, 1970. It was the last single released by the band before their breakup. Paul McCartney wrote the song from his home in Scotland. Possible inspiration for the song was B842, a 31-mile (50-km) winding road.• The Natchez Trace Parkway became a part of the National Park Service in 1938 and is also an “All-American Road.” The 444-mile drive is an old route used by American Indians, settlers and many others who played signifi cant roles in American history. The scenic drive is between Natchez, Mississippi, and Nashville, Tennessee. There are many markers along the route pointing out historical events or places. One is a monument at Grinder’s Stand in Tennessee where Meriwether Lewis, of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, died mysteriously on the Trace in 1809. Also, the Natchez Trace Parkway was named one of the country’s top ten road biking destinations by ESPN (Entertainment Sports Programming Network).• Bicycling is becoming more popular in the United States, whether mountain biking or road biking. One organization, the Adventure Cycling Association (ACA), is dedicated to: “Inspiring people of all ages to travel by bicycle.” ACA publishes maps for a route system over 40,000 miles long, keeping cyclists in mind by noting available services along the way and often steering riders toward low-traffi c or scenic roads. Bicycle travel is good for the environment because it is pollution-free, healthy because of the exercise, and makes the journey (not just the destination) something to remember. Check Adventure Cycling’s website for great cycling information: www.adventurecycling.org

• So, whether you’re going by bike, car, truck, motorcycle or recreational vehicle, or you’re buying a ticket and taking a trip by bus, train or airplane, long roads, short fl ights, mountains and fl at lands are ready to be explored. Enjoy!

A N S W E R S

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Pub

lishe

d by

: Fal

con

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ce P

ublis

hing

F

or A

dver

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all:

763-

792-

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By

Sam

anth

a W

eave

r

● I

t w

as j

ourn

alis

t, en

trepr

eneu

r an

d ph

ilant

hrop

ist

Esth

er D

yson

who

mad

e th

e fo

llow

ing

sage

obs

erva

tion:

“T

he In

tern

et is

like

alc

ohol

in so

me

sens

e. It

acc

entu

ates

w

hat y

ou w

ould

do

anyw

ay. I

f yo

u w

ant t

o be

a lo

ner,

you

can

be m

ore

alon

e. If

you

wan

t to

conn

ect,

it m

akes

it

easi

er to

con

nect

.”

● H

ere’

s a

star

tling

sta

tistic

: If

your

fam

ily is

ave

rage

, yo

u th

row

out

abo

ut $

600

in u

nspo

iled

food

eve

ry y

ear.

● If

you

’re

plan

ning

a v

acat

ion

som

etim

e in

the

near

fu

ture

, you

mig

ht w

ant t

o ke

ep in

min

d Tr

avel

& L

eisu

re

mag

azin

e’s

mos

t rec

ent c

ity r

anki

ngs.

Thes

e ra

nkin

gs

didn

’t in

volv

e fo

od o

r cul

ture

, tho

ugh.

For

this

parti

cula

r lis

t, re

ader

s vo

ted

on t

he c

ities

with

the

mos

t- an

d le

ast-a

ttrac

tive

peop

le. I

f yo

u en

joy

peop

le-w

atch

ing,

he

ad to

Cha

rlest

on, S

.C.,

whi

ch r

epor

tedl

y bo

asts

the

mos

t attr

activ

e po

pula

ce, f

ollo

wed

by

San

Die

go a

nd

Sava

nnah

, Ga.

, in

seco

nd a

nd t

hird

pla

ces.

The

U.S

. ci

ties w

ith th

e le

ast a

ttrac

tive

resid

ents?

Acc

ordi

ng to

the

surv

ey, t

hey’

re M

emph

is, B

altim

ore

and

Phila

delp

hia.

● In

Tur

key,

a tra

ditio

nal M

uslim

wed

ding

lasts

anyw

here

fr

om f

our

to s

even

day

s. D

urin

g th

at ti

me

the

brid

e’s

fam

ily a

nd th

e gr

oom

’s f

amily

par

ticip

ate

in s

epar

ate

cele

brat

ions

, and

the

brid

e an

d gr

oom

are

not

allo

wed

to

see

each

oth

er u

ntil

the

cere

mon

y at

the

end.

● Pr

egna

nt w

omen

mig

ht b

e pa

rticu

larly

inte

rest

ed in

th

e fo

llow

ing:

The

ani

mal

that

is p

regn

ant t

he lo

nges

t is

the A

frica

n el

epha

nt, w

ith a

n av

erag

e ge

stat

ion

perio

d of

66

0 da

ys (

thou

gh s

ome

preg

nanc

ies

can

last

up

to 1

00

days

long

er).

The

reco

rd fo

r sho

rtest

ges

tatio

n pe

riod

is

held

join

tly b

y th

ree

mar

supi

als,

incl

udin

g th

e Am

eric

an

opos

sum

, w

hich

rem

ain

preg

nant

for

onl

y 12

to

13

days

.

● D

urin

g th

is s

easo

n of

exc

ess,

it m

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be

wor

thw

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to

rem

embe

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at t

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al h

olid

ay m

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cont

ains

m

ore

than

3,0

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so m

ight

be

wor

thw

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to

rem

embe

r tha

t the

sugg

este

d da

ily in

take

of c

alor

ies f

or

men

is 2

,500

; for

wom

en it

’s 2

,000

.

● If

you

’re

an a

rach

noph

obe,

you

mig

ht n

ot w

ant t

o re

ad th

e fo

llow

ing

tidbi

t of

info

rmat

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Sci

entis

ts in

M

adag

asca

r re

cent

ly d

isco

vere

d a

new

spe

cies

of

bark

sp

ider

that

spi

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over

riv

ers

and

othe

r bo

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of

wat

er. W

hat m

akes

thes

e w

ebs

note

wor

thy

is th

at th

ey

are

the

larg

est e

ver

reco

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, mea

surin

g up

to 8

2 fe

et

acro

ss.

***

***

***

***

***

***

***

Tho

ught

for

the

Day

: “P

erpe

tual

dev

otio

n to

wha

t a

man

cal

ls h

is b

usin

ess,

is

only

to

be s

usta

ined

by

perp

etua

l neg

lect

of m

any

othe

r thi

ngs.”

-- R

ober

t Lou

is

Stev

enso

n

(c) 2

010

Kin

g Fe

atur

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ynd.

, Inc

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Mou

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ain

Hig

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rst t

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s

• In

the

Oxf

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Engl

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Dic

tiona

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m

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ain

is d

efi n

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s “a

nat

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ele

vatio

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th

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isin

g m

ore

or le

ss a

brup

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from

the

sur

roun

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lev

el a

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ttain

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an a

ltitu

de w

hich

, re

lativ

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the

adj

acen

t el

evat

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is im

pres

sive

or n

otab

le.”

• A

s im

pres

sed

as w

e ar

e w

ith t

he

maj

esty

and

siz

e of

mou

ntai

ns, b

ear

in m

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they

are

onl

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mps

in th

e ea

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cru

st. G

o ou

t a fe

w h

undr

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iles

and

ever

ythi

ng lo

oks

pret

ty fl

at o

n th

is w

onde

rful

blu

e ba

ll w

e liv

e on

.•

Ok,

the

re a

re fi

ve

basi

c ki

nds

of

mou

ntai

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fold

ed

mou

ntai

ns

and

bloc

k m

ount

ains

w

hich

ar

e fo

rmed

by

th

e un

fath

omab

le p

ress

ures

of

tect

onic

pla

tes

rubb

ing

agai

nst

each

ot

her.

Dom

ed

and

volc

anic

mou

ntai

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orm

ed b

y ris

ing

hot

mag

ma

push

ing

up t

he e

arth

’s c

rust

unt

il it

pops

(so

met

imes

cat

acly

smic

ally

; he

nce

a vo

lcan

o). T

hen

ther

e ar

e pl

atea

u m

ount

ains

w

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bas

ical

ly a

re ju

st sh

owin

g na

ture

’s w

ear

and

tear

.•

Scie

ntis

ts b

elie

ve o

ne fi

fth

of t

he

earth

’s s

urfa

ce is

mou

ntai

nous

. Le

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