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September 2015 Ingham County Edition
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Volume 9, Issue 1, September 2015
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It’s A Great Day At Kids’ World News! Isn’t it great to be back at school? After a busy summer, it’s great to settle in and learn more, see friends, read books and get back into a routine. Education is a privilage we all share in this country. Let’s take advantage of it! One way to take advantage is to be better organized. Here’s a few ideas: • If you have homework, do it when you get home from school. If you have a test on Friday, study for it each night so you don’t have to cram at the last minute. If you have a report due in a couple of weeks, do a part of it every day. That way, you’re never overwhelmed. • If you’re having trouble with a subject, ask for help. • Get plenty of sleep at night. Allow yourself plenty of time to get ready in the morning. • Eat a good breakfast. • Pack your lunch the night before and refrigerate. You won’t be so rushed in the morning by doing this. • Lay out your clothes the night before. School days are great days! Once again, Kids’ World News will be published every month for your enjoyment. Please thank our wonderful sponsors you see in this paper for supporting Kids’ World News. Watch next month for the 9th Annual Kids’ World News Coloring Contest entry! Get ready to join the fun!
The Staff of Kids’ World News if you would like to see Kids’ World News at your school or if you would like to be one of our proud sponsors, please call 517-202-2365 (e-mail: rich@kidsworldnews.net). If you would like to submit an article from your school (limit 150 words), e-mail: debi@kidsworldnews.net Kids’ World News is designed to give exposure to all area schools, recognition of students and staff members. We welcome imput from all our area schools. We do however, reserve the right to edit.
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Alexander Graham Bell Alexander Graham Bell was an influential scientist, engineer and inventor. The following are some interesting facts about this man. • He was born on March 3, 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was educated at the universities of Edinburgh and London. Bell immigrated to Canada in 1870 and to the United States in 1871. He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1882. • He is widely credited with the invention of the first practical telephone. • He didn’t have the middle name “Graham” until he turned 11. His father gave him his middle name as a birthday present as he wanted a middle name like his two brothers. • Bell was an excellent piano player at a young age. • His mother and wife were both deaf and this had a major influence on his work. He studied the human voice and worked with various schools for the deaf. In 1872, he founded a school to train teachers of the deaf in Boston, Massachusetts and became part of Boston University • Bell experimented with sound, working with devices such as a ‘harmonic telegraph’ (used to send multiple messages over a single wire) and a ‘phonautograph’ (used to record sound). • He worked on acoustic telegraphy with his assistant, electrical designer Thomas Watson. • On February 14, 1876, Bell and an American electrical engineer named Elisha Gray both filed patents with the U.S. Patent Office covering the transmission of sounds telegraphically. There is debate about who got there first but the patent was awarded to Bell. A few days later he succeeded in getting his telephone to work using elements similar to those of Gray’s water transmitter. Bells first words with the working telephone were spoken to Thomas Watson. They were along the lines of “Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you.” At the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadel-
phia, Pennsylvania, telephone was introduced to the world. In 1877, the Bell Telephone Company was established. • He had a strong interest in other scientific fields, conducting medical research, searching for alternative fuel sources, experimenting with metal detectors, developing hydrofoil watercraft and more. Other inventions include audiometer, the induction balance, and the first wax recording cylinder. • Bell was one of the cofounders of the National Geographic Society. • Bell’s summer home is located at Baddeck on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada. Most of his inventions on aeronautics were first tested near his summer home in Canada. • His study of flight began with the construction of large kites, and in 1907 he devised a kite capable of carrying a person. • Bell, with the American inventor and aviator Glenn Hammond Curtiss, developed the aileron and the tricycle landing gear. • His group also started working on hydrofoil boats, which travel above the water at high speeds. Bell’s final full-sized “hydrodrome,” developed in 1917, reached speeds in excess of 113 km/h for many years were the world’s fastest boat.
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The Amazing Apple! Where do apples come from? How do they grow? Let’s take a trip to an apple orchard and find out. On the farm, apples come from apple trees, where their buds were formed a full year before they are picked. During the winter, these fruit buds are dormant (resting) and waiting for spring. As the weather warms in the spring, the leaves and flowers begin to slowly open until the apple trees are covered in white and pink blossoms. The apple blossoms smell so sweet that bees visit them looking to gather nectar to make honey. As they fly from tree to tree and flower to flower, their feet get covered in a dusty substance from the apple blossoms called pollen. When they fly and land, the pollen falls on new flowers and this process allows the blossoms to be pollinated and grow into apples. Once the flower has been pollinated, the petals then fall off. After the bees are done with their job, the leaves on the apple trees take over to help the apple grow. The leaves create food or carbohydrates to help the apples grow by using air, water and sunlight in a process called photosynthesis. Each apple needs about 20 to 50 leaves to help it grow. Farmers prune the apple trees in the winter and early spring to help the leaves get more sunlight. Pruning is like giving the tree a haircut. Branches that block sunlight from other branches are cut out. During the summer, apples grow bigger and bigger. In the fall, most apples change color from green to red. The apples are then ripe and ready for picking. Some apples are ready in early fall and others are not ready until close to Halloween. The best way
to tell when an apple is ready to pick is by asking the farmer. An apple farmer will inspect the orchard and taste the apples. Now the fun part! The best way to choose an apple is to look closely at it. Make sure it is an apple you want to eat. Hold the apple in your hand and twist, twist and twist the apple around the stem. Then pull the apple gently off the tree. Make sure not to rip off any branches because those are next year’s apple buds forming. Shine up your apple and enjoy the first bite! Going to an apple orchard is a fun family outing. Go to the orchard and find your favorite apple varieties. Have a taste test with your family and find out the most popular apple in your home. Make some applesauce or homemade apple pie out of the apples you pick out! Enjoy the sweet taste of fall. Apple Crisp Kids’ Love! 4 apples, peeled and thinly sliced 1/2 cup brown sugar 1/2 cup flour 1/2 cup oats 3/4 teaspoon cinnamon 3/4 teaspoon nutmeg 6 tablespoons butter Heat oven to 375 degrees. Grease bottom and sides of square 8x8 pan. Arrange apples in pan. Mix remaining ingredients in a bowl. Sprinkle over the apples. Bake about 40 minutes or until topping is golden brown and apples are tender.
Apple Fun Facts for Kids • A bushel of apples weighs in at around 42 pounds! • George Washington grew and pruned his own apple trees in his spare time! • According to the Guinness Book of Records, the largest apple ever plucked from a tree weighed three pounds, two ounces! It was picked in Caro, Michigan. • Archeologists have found evidence that humans have been enjoying apples since 6500 BC. Information donated by Steve Tennes, Country Mill Orchard
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Math Puzzle Fun! These puzzles are fun to do! Going across the puzzle, you will either add or subtract 1 in sequence. Going down you add or subtract 10 in sequence. We give you one number to start and you take it from there!
Example:
6 16
46
26
90
95
36 46 54 55 56 57 58
49
66
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September 2015, Page 7
Ping Pong or Table Tennis Is Great Fun! Is playing ping pong or table tennis an exercise? You bet it is! No matter what kind of exercise you do, it forces your body to use energy and burn calories that are put into your body. You can have fun and burn calories at the same time! As you get better playing, the rallies get longer, your skills sharpen and you work harder! When you play ping pong, you are giving your body an aerobic workout which will strengthen your heart and lungs as you move back and forth across the table. Plus, you will be working at having better flexibility each time you play with your footwork. As your game improves, so does your coordination! Ping pong or table tennis began in England in the late 1800s. It is believed to have been invented by army officers who used rounded corks for balls and old cigar boxes for paddles. It became a competitive sport in 1927. In the 1950s, the plastic ball was invented and it became quite popular. Ping pong became an official
Olympic sport in 1988. Ping pong doesn’t require a lot of equipment! A table, a net, a ball and racket - that’s it! You can be any age to play it. The game is played with two or four players on a table with a net going across the middle. The player serving the ball throws it up in the air and hits it. The ball must bounce once on the server’s side and once on the other side. The player receiving the ball must hit it back with one bounce on their side and once bounce on the other side. If the player misses the ball after it bounces once on their side, the other player receives the point. A player can lose a point if they hit the ball out of bounds, off of the table or into the net. The player who first scores 21 points with a 2 point margin wins the COLOR game.
ME!
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Cookin’ Fun Peanut Butter Cheese Ball
Apple Scones 2 cups all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 3/4 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butter 1/4 cup granulated sugar 1 cup minced apples 1 egg, beaten 2/3 cup milk 2 tablespoons butter (for topping) 2 tablespoons granulated sugar (for topping)
1 8 ounce package of room temperature cream cheese 1 cup powdered sugar 3/4 cup creamy or chunky peanut butter 3 tablespoons packed dark brown sugar 1 1/2 cups milk chocolate & peanut butter morsels Graham cracker sticks and or apple slices Beat the cream cheese, powdered sugar, peanut butter and brown sugar in a large mixer bowl until blended. Spoon onto a large piece of plastic wrap. Bring all four corners up and twist tightly (should form a ball shape). Freeze for 1 hour and 30 minutes or until firm enough to keep its shape. Place morsels in a flat dish. Remove plastic wrap from the ball and roll ball into morsels to completely cover (you may have to press the morsels into the ball). Place the ball on a serving dish, cover and freeze for 2 hours or until almost firm. Serve with graham cracker sticks and apple slices. (Can be made ahead of time. If frozen overnight, thaw a room temperature for 20 to 30 minutes before serving.)
Breakfast Tacos 6 flour tortillas 8 eggs 2 tablespoons milk 6 bacon slices, cooked and crumbled 1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
Pre-heat the oven to 450 degrees. Grease an 8 x 12 inch baking pan. Sift together flour, salt and baking powder. Cut in the butter. Add the sugar and apples. Mix in the egg and milk to make a soft dough. Knead until ingredients are well-mixed. Spread in prepared pan, and bake for 25 minutes. When done, cut into 2 inch squares. Split each square diagonally. Butter. Dust the tops thickly with granulated sugar. Serve warm.
Orange Frost Breakfast Drink 2 cups mlk 1 cup water 1 cup ice cubes 3 tablespoons sugar 6 ounce can of frozen orange juice concentrate Combine all the ingredients in a blender, process until frothy and the ice cubes are chopped. Delicious!
Rules For The Kitchen!
First, cook and drain the bacon. Then crumble and set aside. In a medium sized microwave safe bowl, mix together the eggs and milk well. Cover the bowl with a paper towel. Microwave on HIGH for 3 to 4 minutes, stirring once after 2 minutes, or until this mixture is cooked and fluffy. Heat the tortillas as directed on their package. Spoon warm eggs onto each tortilla. Top with crumbled bacon and shredded cheese. Fold the tortilla and enjoy.
1. Always ask an adult if you can use the kitchen. 2. Have all the ingredients before you start. 3. Wash your hands before you touch food. 4. Wear an apron or towel to keep your clothes clean. 5. Always clean up when you are finished.
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New Covenant Christian Elementary News The teachers at New Covenant Christian School are busy getting ready for the new school year ahead! We have received an exciting gift to kick off our year. At our back to school meeting, we were blessed with a presentation of new Chromebooks for each teacher and a set of ipad minis. We are thrilled with the ways these tools will expand our toolbox as teachers and learners. These tools have the potential to change the way we work together as educators by creating online professional learning networks. They will allow us to c r e a t e hands-on, individualized activities for our learners. This is a step in anticipation of 1:1 learning in our future! We are thrilled with the opportunities for student engagement and learning this year!
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It’s Fun To Play The Bells! Bells are a percussion instrument. They can be made from various materials including clay, glass, or metal. They range in shape and size. They may be played by lightly shaking it as in hand bells or by striking it using a metal or wooden striker or mallet. Chimes are small bells which are arranged in a musical sequence. Carillons are a group of tuned bells no less than 23 pieces. Bells can be seen and heard on clock towers such as the famous Rajabai Tower in Mumbai. It was near Babylon when the oldest bells was believed to have been found. They have been widely used throughout history in different parts of the world like Egypt, England, Japan, China and India. They have been used for various purposes such as calling people to pray or announcing the start of a battle. The largest bell can be found in Moscow and it’s called Tsar Kolokol III. It weighs
400,000 pounds but was never rang and was damaged in a fire. A notable musician who used bells in some of his compositions was Wolfgang A m a d e u s Mozart. Famous Bells: • The Liberty Bell is a 2,080 pounds American bell of great historic significance, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It previously hung in Independence Hall and was rung on July 4, 1776 to mark American independence. • Big Ben is the fourth largest bell in the British Isles, after The Olympic Bell (used at the opening of the 2012 Olympic Games), Great Paul (St Paul's Cathedral, City of London) and Great George (Anglican Cathedral, Liverpool). It is the hour bell of the Great Clock in the Clock Tower at the Palace of Westminster, the home of the Houses of Parliament in the United Kingdom. • The World Peace Bell was the largest functioning swinging bell until 2006. It is located in Newport, Kentucky, United States, and was cast by the Paccard Foundry of France. The bell itself weighs 66,000 pounds, with clapper and supports the total weight which swings when the bell is tolled is 89,390 pounds.
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Let’s Talk... All kids get teased by a brother, sister, or friend at some time and it’s not harmful when done in a playful, friendly, mutual way. But when teasing becomes hurtful, unkind and constant, it can cross the line into bullying. Bullying is intentional, persistant aggressin and can take on many forms. Types Of Bullying ►Verbal: Name calling, teasing ►Social: Spreading rumors, leaving people out on purpose, breaking up friendships. ►Physical: Hitting, punching, shoving, kicking. ►Cyberbullying: Using the internet, cell phones or other digital technology to harm others. It is important to take bullying seriously and not just brush it off. It’s a BIG problem to many children. Bullies can make kids feel frightened, sick, embarrassed, hurt, lonely, not wanting to play outside, or go to school. Bullying bothers everyone, not just the kids who are getting picked on. There are many reasons that kids bully others. Some bullies torment others because that is the way they have been treated. They come from families or settings where people regularly get angry, shout and call names. Some TV shows promote meanness. Some bullies need a victim to feel more important or popular or in control. How To Combat Bullying ►First of all - tell an adult. Find someone you trust and tell them what is happening. Teachers, principals, parents can all try to help you. This is not tattling, bullying is wrong. Here are some ideas. ►Avoid the bully and use the buddy system. Take another way home instead of walking the same way if you can. Buddy up with a friend on the bus, in the hallways or at recess, wherever the bully is. Always offer to do the same for a friend in need. ►It is normal to get upset by the bully. Practice not reacting by crying, getting angry or showing how upset you are. That is what the bullies thrive on. Tell the bully "No! Stop it!" in a loud voice. Keep your “poker face” on until you are clear of danger. Be brave, take a deep breath, walk away (or run if you have to) to a safe place.
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►Remove the incentives. If they are demanding your lunch money carry your lunch and tell a supervising adult. ►Stay with friends who will help you build your confidence. Get involved with clubs or sports programs. Find activities that can help you learn and feel confident and strong. Maybe it’s a selfdefense class teaching martial arts. ►If you see another child getting bullied at your school, tell an adult! Kids can protect and stand up for each other by telling a bully to stop teasing or scaring someone else, and then walk away together. ►Don’t bully back. Don’t hit, kick or push back to deal with someone bullying you or your friends. That just satisfies the bully and it’s dangerous as someone can really get hurt. Get help from an adult. Bullies usually end up in trouble. If they keep acting out they will have fewer friends sooner or later. Every kid has a choice of how to behave and act. Bullies can learn to change their behavior. Some kids who bully eventually realize that they don’t get the respect or friends they want by threatening others. Teachers, counselors and parents can help them too. Bullies can change if they learn to use their power in positive ways. Some bullies turn into great kids and some never learn how to do that. No one needs to put up with a bully’s behavior. If you’re having trouble, talk to someone you can trust. Everyone has the right to feel safe.
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The Cool Caterpillar: What a Kid!
Step 1 - Starting with a half sheet of paper (approximate size 4 1/4” x 11”), fold in half the long way creating a piece of paper with a folded edge and a cut edge. Step 2 - Fold once again the long way. Step 3 - Open the paper completely and lay flat. You should have a center crease line and a crease line on each side of the center crease line. Step 4 - At one end of the rectangle, fold the short way a fold about 1” wide. Leave folded under. The folded end has created the head. Step 5 - On the head section, draw an eye on each side of the center crease line as shown. Add a smile too. Step 6 - It is time to decorate. Using markers, crayons, or colored pencils, make colorful and interesting patterns, shapes and stripes.
Step 7 - When the caterpillar is decorated, re-fold in half at the center fold line. Step 8 - Begin cutting through the fold up to the crease line. Be careful not to go past or Step 9 - Unfold. Re-crease the side crease lines short of crease line. Leave the head uncut. to fold inward. Glue open flaps one over the other. You will create a triangle shape.
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Has anyone ever asked you, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” You might have to think about it for a while, or maybe you already have an idea. If you were to ask that question to a caterpillar they would answer, “A butterfly! “ Did you know that a caterpillar is not a baby or an adult? It is a kid like you, still growing and learning each day. The caterpillar is a really interesting, cool kid! They are called "eating machines" because they eat as many leaves and plants as they can each day. They eat so much in fact, that they shed their skin four or five times before creating a chrysalis. Aren’t you glad you just have to buy new clothes when you grow out of your old ones? Caterpillars don’t have noses like we do. They breathe through small pores on their sides. Caterpillars have a head, eyes, and 13 sections to their bodies. Some caterpillars have furry hair while some have no hair with just a few thick bristles. A caterpillar has three pairs of walking legs and five pairs of legs with hooks for grabbing. A caterpillar also has 4,000 muscles while we only have around 650. Wow, now that is a really strong kid! The next time you see a caterpillar, watch it carefully. Notice what it eats, how fast it walks, and what it looks like. If you are lucky, you may find a chrysalis to watch this summer. Being able to see a caterpillar kid emerge as a grown up butterfly is really incredible. Without a doubt, the caterpillar is a pretty special kid, just like you!
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Republic of Singapore • Singapore is a very young country, but it expanded rapidly over 50 years of being independent. • The capital and largest city is Singapore City. • The country of Singapore consists of Singapore Island and over 60 smaller islands located in Southeast Asia at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula between the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean. • The population is about 5 million people! • The currency is the Singapore dollar. • Singapore is one of the top 20 smallest nations in the world, only covering 682.7 sq km. • The most popular sport is football (soccer). • The name Singapore is from the word “Singapura” or “Lion City”. Legend has it that a Sumatran prince sighted a beast that looked like a lion when he first set his foot on the island in the 14th century. • The official languages are English, Chinese, Malay, and Tamil. • The government is a parlimentary republic. Singapore was controlled by the British from 1819 as a trade colony, but joined the Malaysian Federation in 1963. Two years later the nation became independent. • The colors of Singapore’s flag represent red for brotherhood and equality, as well as white for purity and virtue. The crescent moon represents a young nation on the rise. The five stars stand for Singapore’s ideals of democracy, peace, progress, justice, and equality. • Singapore’s climate is tropical, which means it is hot, humid, and rainy. They have two distinct monsoon seasons - Northeastern Monsoon (December to March) and Southwestern Monsoon
(June to September). • Singapore is mainly flat with low hills, the highest hill being Bukit Timah at 545 feet. • Singapore is proud to host “The Night Safari”, which is the first night zoo in the whole world. Singapore also has the world’s largest walk-in aviary called Jurong Bird Park, and has over 1,500 free flying birds native to Africa. • Over 3,000 multinational companies have offices in Singapore. • The national holiday for Singapore is on August 9th.
Jurong Bird Park The lakeside pagodas at the Singapore Chinese Gardens. The Singapore Chinese Gardens is a imperial China theme garden in the west of the island republic, built in the 70s.
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Thomas Woodrow Wilson 26th President of the United States 1913-1921 Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born December 28, 1856 in Staunton, Virginia. He was the third of four children born to Rev. Dr. Joseph and Jessie Wilson. Tommy, as he was called during his youth, lived in the South during most of his childhood, experiencing the Civil War first hand. His father worked as a chaplain in the Confederate Army and his mother helped set up a hospital at their church. President Wilson did not learn to read until he was ten years old, and may have suffered from dyslexia or a form of it. Through his self-discipline and determination, he was able to achieve academically. He briefly attended Davidson College, then transferred to princeton, graduating in 1879. He then attended the University of Virginia Law School and in 1883, Wilson earned his PhD in Political Science and History from John Hopkins University. He was considered to be one of our best educated presidents. Wilson married Ellen Louise Axson in 1885 and they had three daughters - Margaret, Jessie and Eleanor. In 1914, his wife died and he married Edith Galt in 1915. She was a direct descendent of Pocahontas, who was a famous Native American. • Woodrow Wilson was the President of Princeton University from 1902 until 1910. • He was the Governor of New Jersey from 1911 to 1913. • He was elected as a Democrat to the Presidency in 1912. One of his achievements as President, was the passage of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913, creating a system that still provides the framework for regulating the nation’s banks, credit and money supply today. Wilson sponsored legislation that supported unions to ensure fair treatment of working Americans and the development of the Child Labor Act. Wilson also was instrumental with the passage of the 19th Amendment during his second term, guaranteeing all women the right to vote. His second term was centered on the first World War. He asked Congress to declare war in April 1917. He started the first draft since the Civil War. He was able to raise funds through Liberty Bonds. Wilson also set up the War Industries Board. He used the Lever Act to supervise food production and agriculture. He promoted the growth of labor unions, took control of the railroads and enacted federal drug prohibition. He also suppressed anti-war movements. Near the end
of the war, Wilson began to take control of the negotiations occurring with Germany, which included the armistice. During this time, Wilson issued the Fourteen Points, which demonstrated in his mond how a postwar world could avoid a conflict such as this one. He visited Paris in 1919 in order to create the League of Nations and for the Treaty of Versailles. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, primarily for his efforts to form the League of Nations. Wilson had a stroke in 1919. It left him with permanent paralysis of the left portion of his body. After leaving office in 1921, Wilson moved into a private residence in Northwest Washington D.C. He died there at the age of 67 on February 3, 1924 and is buried in the Washington National Cathedral.
President Wilson Trivia:
• President Wilson was 6’ 1/2” tall. • He was the only President with a PhD. • During his time in office, sheep grazed on the White House lawn to help the Red Cross raise wool for the war effort. • He was the first President to cross the Atlantic Ocean while in office. • He was the first President to deliver what is known today as the State of the Union Address. He was also the first to hold regular news conferences.
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Amelia Earhart Amelia Mary Earhart was born on July 24, 1897 in Atchison, Kansas. She was the oldest of the two sisters in her family, and often loved to play with her younger sister Grace Murial or “Pidge”. Amelia loved to read, and grew up to write several books of her own including “20 hrs. 40 min.”, “The Fun of It”, and “The Last Flight”. She is known as the first female aviator to fly across the Atlantic Ocean, and she left behind a great mystery when she disappeared. She set many records, stood for the equal rights amendment, and inspired many girls as a rolemodel. In December of 1920, Amelia and her father visited Frank Hawks, who was an air racing pilot. After taking a short flight, she knew flying was perfect for her and she was determined to learn how. She worked many different jobs and saved up enough to go to a flight school in 1921. Her first airplane was a secondhand yellow Kinner Airster biplane, which she fondly called “the Canary”. Amelia set her first record in that plane in 1922, as the first woman to reach an altitude of 14,000 feet. The next year she became the 16th woman to be issued a pilot’s license. Eventually she sold “the Canary” and another yellow Kinner, settling for a two passenger automobile called a Kissel “Speedster” so she could take her mother on a transcontinental trip with stops in Boston and throughout the West. She stayed in Boston tem-
porarily to continue at Columbia University for a few months and then found work as a teacher and then as a social worker in 1925. She became a local celebrity in Medford, Massachusetts after writing about aviation in the local newspaper. Amelia Earhart first flew across the Atlantic as a passenger to Wilmer Stultz, and in the project she met her eventual second husband George Putnam. After she returned to the U.S., she went on lecture tours and was dubbed the name of “Lady Lindy” as she looked like the solo flyer Charles Lindburgh. Her fame grew as she earned the Distinguished Flying Cross from Congress when she became the first woman to fly across the Atlantic, along with solo flights from Hawaii to California and an attempt at circumnavigating the globe. This last voyage was her final flight en route from Lae, New Guinea to Howland Island, her plane mysteriously disappeared in the Pacific Ocean. The United States government spent $4 million looking for Earhart, which made it the most costly and intensive air and sea search in history at that time.
Did You Know? • Earhart refused to don typical flying gear—she wore a suit or dress instead of the "high-bread aviation togs," a close-fitting hat instead of a helmet, didn't put on her goggles until she taxied to the end of the field, and removed them immediately upon landing. • She developed a friendship with Eleanor Roosevelt, who wanted to learn how to fly. Earhart had planned to teach her, for which the First Lady even got her student permit. • Earhart met Orville Wright at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia in 1937, the same year she disappeared. COUPON
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Michigan’s Isle Royale Isle Royale is an island in the Great Lakes that is located in the northwest of Lake Superior. It is 56 miles from the Michigan shore. The island and the 450 surrounding smaller islands and waters make up the Isle Royale National Park. The island is 45 miles long and 9 miles wide. Ferries from Michigan and Minnesota land at Rock Harbor on the eastern end of the island. Ferries from Minnesota also run to Windigo on the western end. There is also seasonal sea plane service. There are no roads on the island and in fact, no wheeled vehicles or devices other than wheel chairs permitted by the public. Siskiwit Lake is the largest lake on the island. It has cold, clear water and contains several islands, including Ryan Island, the largest. Ryan Island contains Moose Boulder. The island was a common hunting ground for native peoples from nearby Minnesota and Ontario. In prehistoric times, large quantities of copper were mined on Isle Royale and the nearby Keweenaw Peninsula. The region is scarred by ancient mine pits and trenches up to 20 feet deep. In the mid-1840s, a report by Douglass Houghton, Michigan's first state geologist, set off a copper boom in the state, and the first modern copper mines were opened on the island. Evidence of the earlier mining efforts was
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everywhere, in the form of many stone hammers, some copper artifacts, and places where copper had been partially worked out of the rock but left in place. The ancient pits and trenches led to the discovery of many of the copper deposits that were mined in the 19th century. Isle Royale was given to the United States by the 1783 treaty with Great Britain. The British remained in control until after the War of 1812. The Ojibwa peoples considered the island to be their territory. The Ojibwas ceded the island to the U.S. in the 1842 Treaty of La Pointe. Once the island became a National Park in 1940, logging and other exploitive activities ended and the forest area began to regenerate. The western tip of the island is home to several shipwrecks that are very popular with scuba divers, including the SS America. Recreational activities also include approximately 170 miles of hiking trails, fishing, boating, kayaking and observing nature. The most popular trail, best marked and longest single route is the 40mile Greenstone Ridge Trail that extends down the island's backbone. The trail leads to the peak of Mount Desor, at 1,394 feet, which is the highest point on the island and also passes though northwoods wilderness, and by inland glacial lakes, swamps, bogs and scenic shorelines. There are also numerous campgrounds many of which are only accessible by water.
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Domestic Cats Many people have a pet cat or know someone who does! This special pet comes in all sorts of breeds and colors. Some are longhaired and some are short-haired, and some have no hair at all! Their fur can be different colors or just one, but it usually depends on the breed. The most common breed in America is the American Shorthair. Cats normally weigh between 7-15 pounds, and the heaviest cat ever recorded was named Himmy and weighed 46 pounds! Overweight cats often have a variety of health proplems, so it is very important to feed cats a proper diet. Indoor cats typically eat cat food, which is a blend of nutrients that cats need. Outdoor and ferral cats hunt small animals like birds, mice, rats, and even small rabbits! Cats love to play! Playing with small toys and string resembles hunting, and they love to practice and improve on their hunting skills. They also will play by fighting with both humans and other cats. Kittens are especially known to love playfighting with each other and with 4-7 kittens born in a litter, they have plenty of playmates! Domestic cats have been around for a long time. While it was comm o n l y known that
cats were domesticated by Egyptians, recent discoveries actually point to cats domesticated for more than 10,000 years! Cats have some amazing senses! Their hearing is much better than a humans, and they can even rotate their ears 180 degrees! They also can see in much darker places. This “night vision” allows them to see at light levels six times lower than what a human needs in order to see.
Did You Know? • Abraham Lincoln had four cats in the White House while he was president! • On average, housecats live between 12 and 15 years. • Average cats can sleep 16-18 hours a day! • To greet each other, cats touch noses.
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