Atlantic Beach, New York



Weather in:
Atlantic Beach

Current Conditions
Fair
Temperature: 40.7 °F

Humidity: 56 %
Wind Speed: 18 mph W
Pressure: 30.22 "

Dew Point: 26 °F
Gusts: 24 mph S
Rain Today: 0.00 "






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  • Atlantic Beach News
    Local news for Atlantic Beach, NY continually updated from thousands of sources on the web.

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    Local classifieds for Atlantic Beach, NY

    • ken's clean_ups, there's nothing that we can't or won't do.
      KEN'S CLEAN_UPS, SPECIALIZING IN FORECLOSURES, HOMES, OFFICES, BUSINESSES AND RENTAL CLEANOUTS. THERE'S NOTHING THAT WE CAN'T OR WON'T DO. OFTEN LESS EXPENSIVE THAN A DUMPSTER. DUMPSTERS AVAILABLE IF NECESSARY. FOR A FREE ESTIMATE AND PROMPT SERVICE CALL 631 244-7135 OR CELL/631 807-2707 WE DO IT AL...
    • Long Island Hair Salon - Long Island Beauty Salon
      Patricia’s Famous Hair Extensions Salon & Spa (http://www.NYCHairSalon.com) is the top hair salon and beauty salon spa in the NYC, New York are that is located in Astoria, Queens. We are a full service hair salon and offer a wide range hair services at our full Service Hair Salon and Spa. We offer:...
    • redline mobile repair
      REDLINE MOBILE Repair AUTO BOAT&TRUCK ALSO MOTORCYCLE SPECIALISTS REDLINE MOBILE Repair AUTO BOAT&TRUCK ALSO MOTORCYCLE SPECIALISTS "WE DO IT ALL" 120 E MERRICK RD FREEPORT NY 11520 REPAIRS/RESTORATIONS ... we will make you smile the way we repair your car for service. we also tow and roadside se...
    • Best Long Island Hair Salon - Beauty Salon
      Patricia’s Famous Hair Extensions Salon & Spa (http://www.NYCHairSalon.com) is the top hair salon and beauty salon spa in the NYC, New York are that is located in Astoria, Queens. We are a full service hair salon and offer a wide range hair services at our full Service Hair Salon and Spa. We off...
    • ken's clean_ups, there's nothing that we can't or won't do
      KEN'S CLEAN_UPS, SPECIALIZING IN FORECLOSURES, HOMES, OFFICES, BUSINESSES AND RENTAL CLEANOUTS. THERE'S NOTHING THAT WE CAN'T OR WON'T DO. OFTEN LESS EXPENSIVE THAN A DUMPSTER. DUMPSTERS AVAILABLE IF NECESSARY. FOR A FREE ESTIMATE AND PROMPT SERVICE CALL 631 244-7135 OR CELL/631 807-2707 WE DO IT AL...

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    Questions Possibly Related to Atlantic Beach, New York

    Provided By Y! Answers

    When in New York City, what's the closest place to an Atlantic Ocean beach,?

    Answer:
    Brooklyn: COney Island Beach/Brighton Beach Local Buses: B1, B36, B49, B68, B74, B82. Express Buses: X28, X29, X38. Subways: B, D, F, N, Q. Manhattan Beach: Buses: B1/B49 BM3: Last stop is at West End Rd/Emmons Av, and cross bridge to Manhattan Beach neighborhood. Bronx: Orchard Beach Bx5 and Bx12 provides shuttle service from Pelham Bay Park Station or from their regular route during summer only. BL45 is also nearby. Queens: Rockaways Beach/Riis Park/Neoposit Accessible via Buses: Q21/Q53 (Cross Bay Bridge area to Beach 116th St Q22 (Far Rockaway-Beach 169th St0 Q35 Westbound stop at Beach 169th St (Beach 169th St to Beach 116th St) Rockaway Park Shuttle to Beach 116th St or A to Far Rockaway) QM17 to Far Rockaway or QM16 to Neoposit/Beach 147th St only) Few trips during rush hour in peak direction. Staten Island: South Beach Wolf Pond Park & Beach http://www.nycgovparks.org/parks/wolfespondpark Trains: Prince Bay, however payment is avaialble at St. George. Access via Staten Island Ferry (free) Local buses: S55, S56, S59 (Part time), S78. Express Bus: X23 Atlantic Express Tottenville Beach http://www.si-web.com/Recreation/Tottenville.html Train: SIR to Tottenville, last stop. Buses: S78, S59. Express Buses: X22. Long Island: Long Beach N15/N33 Avoid Jones Beach by buses because these buses are always 2-hour late or S92 bus in Montauk area. Westchester County, NY Playland Beach Accessible via BL91 from Yonkers, BL92 from White Plains, BL75 from Rye and BL76 from Rye and Port Chester.

    Why was the Atlas Mountain and Atlantic Beach named after Atlas?
    Question:
    Does anybody know why the Atlas Mountains and the Atlantic Beach in New York were named after the mythological charecter Atlas?


    Answer:
    The story I heard was that the titan Atlas was tasked with holding up the sky for all eternity. The Atlas mountains were said to be the place where he stood, because Zeus told him to stand at the "Western Edge of the World," and the Atlas Mountains are about as far west as anything anyone in that era knew about. The Atlantic Ocean was also named after Atlas, mainly because of its proximity to the Atlas Mountains. Atlantic Beach was named after the Ocean, not the titan.

    Who else thinks there should be an Interstate freeway stretching from New York to Savannah?
    Question:
    One along the Atlantic Coast, parallel to 95, running through NYC, Atlantic City, Jersey Shore (they can use Garden State Pkwy in NJ), Ocean City, Virginia Beach/Norfolk, Wilmington, Myrtle Beach, Charleston and Savannah. As you can probably tell, I love coastal beaches and hate traffic on I-95. This would be a lot more logical than that proposed Mexico-to-Canada superhighway, I-69 (The Oral Express, as I call it).


    Answer:
    Why ruin the coast with an interstate? If you want to travel fast, take I95. If you want to sightsee, take the blue highways. Half the fun of that kind of travel is seeing the towns you go through, rather than around.

    Why do people make fun of New Jersey?
    Question:
    It has beaches. It is close to new york. It has Atlantic City which is the gambling capital outside vegas. ive also heard its got cheap gas prices too. btw, im from california so thats why im clueless about why people make fun of jersey.


    Answer:
    People mostly make fun of it for being "dirty," which actually encompasses a lot of issues the parts of Jersey have. There is one particular area that is very nice, and I know of several pro athletes that live there and send their kids to schools there...but it's super expensive, and that's part of the problem, too. Reason one: Two of the highest crime areas in the nation- Trenton and Newark. Newark is the car-theft capitol of the world. Reason two: Overcrowding. At over 10,000 people per sq. mile, its pop. density is 13x the national average. Reason three: The real estate market is impossible. You can't get a condo for under 100 grand, and you can't get a nice house in a non-deadly area for under a million. Reason four: Continuation of reason two; it just makes sense that traffic is awful. Reason five: It really is dirty. Second-largest producer of industrial chemicals. One area w/ way too many malls frequently exceeds the EPA limits on perfume particulates. (I didn't even know that was a potential issue!) There are more, but most of them are just extensions of the main ones- schools are overcrowded (#2), rents are out of control (#3), etc. Oh, one more: Some of the worst state taxes in the nation, and they keep going up and up and up...that extends to issues w/ businesses that want to get up and running, but can't... Is that enough?

    What is your most favorite Monopoly space or spaces to own?
    Question:
    Mine are: -Atlantic Ave(cuz of the name) -Boardwalk(Cuz of the value, plus I like to live on the beach) -New York Ave(if someone has to move back 3 spaces from chance, oops, there's a chance 3 spaces ahead of NY Ave) -Illinois Ave(Cuz there's a chance card that directs you there) -Any of the railroads(Railroads are great to own) Those spaces are must haves for me.


    Answer:
    The oranges, the hotels are worth more for the money, but aren't too expensive to start up.

    If you could plan a trip for less than five days where would you go? It would have to be in the fall.?
    Question:
    Chose out of these? Washington Dc Hawaii Atlantic City Biloxi, MS Orange Beach, AL Panama City Virgin Islands New York City Southern Cali Please tell me your answer with a response! What I am asking is if you could chose one out of these, where would you go? Any preferences?


    Answer:
    Hi,,,, hey i appreciate you including Biloxi,,, we are still in the rebuilding stage from Katrina,, some of the casinos are open though... If it were me,, i would say Hawaii......you can to to many of the others any time,, hawaii,,, is a little different.... lol good luck

    how to publish your first book, best writting work-shop in NJ?
    Question:
    Hudson county/metro area/New York/New Jersey and Long Island/Rockaway/Long Beach Does it help your writting more if you live in the middle of nowhere, let's say, in the woods with birds and ducks, the smell of pine and grass chasing you around with little distraction. Is the writer more effective if he is by the salty waters of the atlantic ocean with the sound of the big waves and sea eagles over your head. Does it help you to write if you are in a place where, there's just you and nature? Do you hear the voice in your head more clearly? Can someone please write on this topic, maybe you know of some authors who live in the metro area who take advante of this gift of nature and strech their mind and pen stuff out.. -Amateur Writer


    Answer:
    I penned my debut novel while I was in the middle of chemotherapy for breast cancer. The book was recently published and is being cited for "lush, beautiful imagery." (ForeWord Magazine May/June 06.) The voice in your head is what counts. And...more than anything, hard work. Believe me, constant nausea and sessions in the chemotherapy infusion room did nothing to inspire me. On the other hand, once I published the novel and was in recovery, I decided to h*** with it, chucked my previous career and moved to a pole house on the ocean on the north side of Kauai. These days I watch whales breach from the room in which I write. Just get on with it, amateur writer. No excuses. Aloha, Cheryl Swanson, author Death Game

    Yet another translation needed in Italian. No online translators please.?
    Question:
    I just need this translated into Italian. No online translations please. Thanks in advance! "I don't have the microphone for the computer yet, I asked my father to get it ,and I think he's looking into it. Until then , communication through Skype will be impossible. I think it will be very useful when I am in Italy, and wish to talk to my parents. As far as the sea, I haven't swam in it more than a few times in my entire life. We usually swim in the Atlantic, and in New York the Atlantic is usually too cold to enjoy. Hopefully the waters near you will be warmer. I do love the beach however, as I love getting tan ( I have German heritage.. and I don't tan easily). I think the ocean is beautiful, and it will be nice to visit it. I'm also glad I'll have time before school starts to spend time with you. It will be nice to adjust. Oh ! We have Dragon-ball here in American as well. Its popular among younger boys ( Carlo's age). I leave for Italy in 29 days ( I'm counting)!"


    Answer:
    "Non ho ancora il microfono per il computer; ho chiesto a mio padre di prendermene uno, credo se ne stia occupando. Fino ad allora, comunicare tramite Skype sarà impossibile. Penso mi sarà molto utile una volta in Italia, quando vorrò parlare con i miei genitori. Per quanto riguarda il mare, non ci ho nuotato che poche volte in tutta la mia vita! Noi di solito nuotiamo nell'Atlantico e a New York di solito è troppo freddo per potercelo godere [per potercelo godere = to enjoy it, the Atlantic; alternative: per poterci godere una nuotata = to enjoy a swim] Spero l'acqua da te siano più calda. Mi paice la spiaggia, comunque, e prendere la tintarella (sono di origini tedesche... non mi abbronzo facilmente). Penso l'oceano sia meraviglioso e sarebbe bello poterlo vedere [ = to see it; "to visit an ocean" is hard to properly translate :) perhaps you can go on a day-trip: "un'escursione sull'oceano"] Sono anche felice di avere del tempo da passare con te prima che inizi la scuola. Ne dovremmo parlare. ["we should talk about", which in Italian imply "so we can adjust"] Oh! E trasmettono [if you're talking about the anime; the manga is "pubblicato", instead :)] Dragonball anche qui in America. E' molto popolare fra i ragazzini (dell'età di Carlo). Partirò per l'Italia tra 29 giorni (li sto contando)!" [or "sto facendo il conto alla rovescia", a count-down]

    vacation I need some ideas?
    Question:
    ok here are the details-my husband and I have 5 children ages are 8,9,12,13,14. they are all girls except the 14yr old is a boy. we are trying to decide where to go on vacation. we have the money to go, we just are trying to think of somewhere everybody will enjoy. somewhere not to hectic. somewhere fun and relaxing is what we want. we went to galvenston bay in Texas last year. we live in kentucky so west coast is out of the question. we want somewhere we can drive to no more than 13 hours or so. they have been to disney world in orlando we only went to magic kingdom though. and that was years ago. i thought about new york or atlantic city but im afraid it would be way to busy. we went to pensacola beach in florida a couple years ago i just want some ideas for something different. we just wnt to tennessee for spring break. and i lived in kansas in 2001


    Answer:
    Niagara Falls in canada is fun. there are a lot of different thing you can do around the falls. you can also stay at a hotel that overlooks the falls and watch them illuminate at night. Have Fun!!!!!!!

    some more bizarre facts?
    Question:
    happy reading lol. *According to sales, 17,000 individual 'smarties' are eaten every minute in the UK *The life of an eyelash is about 5 months. *Iceland, Europe's second largest island following Great Britain, boasts of having the world's oldest 'active' parliamentary body, Althing, which first met in 930AD. *The Turkish football club, Galatasaray, has an A for every other letter. *The tongue of a mature Blue Whale has approximately the same mass as that of an entire adult elephant. *The study, which tested telephones, desks, water coolers, doorknobs, and toilet seats, compiled 7,000 samples from major centers across the country. What they found, was that while phones ranked highest in bacteria levels, the office desk was a close second. *In England during World War I, many German names and titles were changed and given more English-sounding names, including the royal family's from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to Windsor. Kaiser Wilhelm II countered this by jokingly saying that he was off to see a performance of 'The Merry Wives of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.' *Both turdoid and turdine mean "belonging to the family turdus," Turdus musicus is the song thrush & Turdus viscivorus is the mistletoe thrush *Nearly a quarter of all mammals can fly; with a huge 985 known species, bats make up 23.1% of all known mammals by species *January is National Soup Month in the United States, January is the seasonal equivalent to July in the Southern Hemisphere; & on Jan 14th, 90% of New Year resolutions will be broken! *You use an average of 43 muscles for a frown and you use an average of 17 muscles for a smile, and they say every two thousand frowns creates one wrinkle *Baby robins eat 14 feet of earthworms in the first 14 nestling days of their life and that is not even their main food on the menu (14 feet a day is wrong) But parent robins make around 100 food visits to the nest every day! *The first man to die during planning & construction of the Hoover Dam was the father of the last man to die during its construction. December 20, 1922 with J.G. Tierney a Bureau of Reclamation employee who was part of a geological survey and drowned when he fell from a barge. Exactly 13 years later, in 1935, his son Patrick W. Tierney, fell to his death from an intake tower. * You will have to walk 80 kilometers for your legs to equal the amount of exercise your eyes get daily *The Chinese used fingerprints as a method of identification back in 700 *Sound travels 15 times faster through steel than it does through the air *A greenfly born on a Tuesday can be a grandparent by Friday *There are more mobile phones in UK than there are people *Termites are affected by music; the termites will eat your house twice as fast if you play them loud music *Paraskavedekatriaphobia is the extreme fear of Friday the 13th *One gallon of used motor oil can ruin approximately one million gallons of fresh water! *Christopher Trace, the first presenter of Blue Peter, was the body double for Charlton Heston in the film Ben-Hur *Thomas Edison got patents for a method of making concrete furniture and a cigar which was supposed to burn forever *A cubic mile of ordinary fog contains less than a gallon of water *If you think of the Milky Way as being the size of the continent of Asia, our solar system would be the size of a penny. *The chicken is the closest living relative to the Tyrannosaurus Rex Myth or fact?? *The average driver will be locked out of their car nine times during their life time (yes, men are in the stats) *A Boeing 767 airliner contains 3,100,000 parts * Belief in the existence of vacuums used to be punishable under Church law * Your skin weighs twice as much as your brain *An owl can see a mouse moving from over 150ft away by a light no brighter than candlelight *The average person has walked 100,000 miles by the time they reach the age of 85. *Your hearing is less sharp after eating too much *In the course of a lifetime, the average person spends 2 years on the phone (I bet cell phones/mobiles were not taken into consideration when that fact was worked out!!) * Henry VIII was once served a loin of beef while visiting the house of a noble. He was so impressed with the beef that he asked for a sword and knighted it! Ever since, that particular cut of beef has been known as sirloin. ("Sir Loin").. This is a MYTH *In a lifetime, the average clean-shaven man will spend five months shaving and will remove 28ft of hair. *Beethoven was extremely particular about his coffee , he always counted 60 beans per cup. *In 1943, Navy officer Grace Hopper had to fix a computer glitch caused by a moth, hence the term 'computer bug'. *Jupiter is large enough to contain the other major 7 planets in our solar system. *The water pressure inside every onion cell would be sufficient to explode a steam engine. *Sunglasses were first worn by film stars, not to look mysterious, but to relieve there eyes from the dazzling glare of the early studio lights *If you take any number, double it, add 10, divide by 2, and subtract your original number, the answer will always be 5. *Over a 12 day period your body generates a whole new set of taste buds. (This process continues until you are in your 70's.) *Greyhounds can reach their top speed of 45 mph in just 3 strides *There is more sugar in 1kg of lemons than in 1kg of strawberries. *Paraskevidekatriaphobia, is a morbid, irrational fear of Friday the 13th. Therapist Dr. Donald Dossey, whose specialty is treating people with irrational fears, coined the term. He claims, when you can pronounce the word you are cured. Friggatriskaidekaphobia has the same meaning. *American Airlines saved $40,000 in 1987 by eliminating one olive from each salad served in first class *Titan arum is probably the world's smelliest flower. Originating in the tropical rain forests of Sumatra, this huge, extremely rare flower is a giant lily. It seldom blooms, but when it does the smell is described as something like the dead carcass of an animal *A Viking tribe once raided England because they had run out of beer *Walt Disney World generates about 120,000 pounds of garbage every day. *Turtles can breath through their bottoms. *Barbie's full name is Barbara Millicent Roberts. *The buzz generated by an electric razor in America is in the key of B flat. In the UK, it is in the key of G. *Some of the most popular lipstick shades in Renaissance England were named, Rat, Horseflesh, Turkey, Blood and Puke. *When Thomas Eddison died in 1941, Henry Ford captured his dying breath in a bottle. *Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" was the first Hollywood film that showed a toilet flushing - thereby generating many complaints. *The first flying-trapeze circus act was performed by Frenchman Jules Leotard at the Circus Napoleon on Nov 12th 1859. He invented the garment now known as the leotard. *In 1972 when Gordon Brown (British Chancellor of the Excheque) was 21, he won a Daily Express competition for "A Vision of Britain In The Year 2000." *It is said, grapefruit scent makes middle age women seem six years younger to men (but it does not work the other way round). *The average elephant produces 50lb of dung a day. *The dinosaur noises in Jurassic Park came from slowing down the sounds of elephants, geese and horses. *The French invented the pop of the Christmas Cracker in the 19th century (Tom Smith bought the idea back to UK after holidaying in France) *The chances of hitting 2 holes-in-one during the same round of golf is one in 8 million *Victorian ladies tried to enlarge their boobs by bathing in strawberries *Until the 18th century, India produced almost all the world's diamonds *The ancient Egyptians thought it was good luck to enter a house left foot first *During their marriage, Angelina Jolie and Billy Bob Thornton bought an electric chair for their dining room * The average single man is one inch shorter than the average married man *Lightning strikes about 6,000 times per minute on this planet of which 80% are in-cloud flashes and 20% are cloud-to-ground flashes. *When screen lover Rudolph Valentino married Jean Acker (on Bonfire Day), she locked him out of their bedroom, the marriage lasted only six hours *160 cars can drive side by side on the Monumental Axis in Brazil, the world's widest road. On paper they can, as the road (actually it's an avenue) is 865 feet wide, but in reality they can't. *When a female horse and a male donkey mate, the off-spring is called a mule; but when a male horse and a female donkey mate, the off spring is called a HINNY *On average women speak 7000 words per day, where as men speak just over 2000 *Intelligent people have more zinc and copper in their hair *While in Alcatraz, Al Capone was inmate No.85 *Disney World is bigger than the world's 5 smallest countries *A house fly hums in the middle octave key of F *Adolf Hitler's mother seriously considered having an abortion but was talked out of it by her doctor *In one gram of soil, about ten million bacteria live in it *A single ounce of gold can be beaten into a thin film covering 100 square feet *Before the 1800, there were no separately designed shoes for left and right feet *Paper was invented early in the second century by Chinese eunuch *The first person to receive a singing telegram was singer Rudy Vallee, in honour of his 32nd birthday, July 28th 1933. * The longest one-syllable word in the English language is screeched *In Shakespeare's time, mattresses were secured on bed frames by ropes when you pulled on the ropes the mattress tightened, making the bed firmer to sleep on. Hence the phrase, "Goodnight, sleep tight." *There are 336 dimples on a regulation golf ball *A 75-year-old male driver received ten traffic tickets, drove on the wrong side of the road four times, committed four hit-and-run offenses and caused six accidents, all within 20 minutes, in McKinney, TX on 15 Oct 1966 [Worst driver: G. B. of Records] *The term "the whole 9 yards" came from WWII fighter pilots in the South Pacific. When arming their airplanes on the ground, the .50 caliber machine gun ammo belts measured exactly 27 feet, before being loaded into the fuselage. If the pilots fired all their ammo at a target, it got "the whole 9 yards." *Wilma Flintstone's maiden name was Shaghoopal *The word "trivia" comes from the Latin "trivium" which is the place where three roads meet. People would gather and talk about all sorts of matters. Also in medieval universities, the trivium comprised the three subjects taught first, grammar, logic, and rhetoric, AND the Roman Goddess, Trivia, is the goddess of crossroads, witchcraft and the harvest moon. *In 1935, the police in Atlantic City, New Jersey, arrested 42 men on the beach. They were cracking down on topless bathing suits worn by men. *During lunch breaks in Carlsbad, New Mexico no couple should engage in a sexual act while parked in their vehicle, unless their car has curtains. *The distance between cities are actually the distances between city halls. When you see a sign "Sheffield - 40 miles" it means it is 40 miles to the city hall of that city sign *The name of Canada is believed to come from the Iroquois Indian word "Kanata", meaning "village" or "community". The word Canada was first used in a 1534 text written by Jacques Cartier describing the Indian village of Stadacona. *The longest non-medical word in the English language is floccipausinihilipilification (29 letters), which means "the act of estimating as worthless." *Dominica, Mexico, Zambia, Kiribati, Fiji and Egypt all have birds on their flags. *Bees visit over 2,000 flowers and fly over 55,000 miles to produce just 1lb. of honey *Four out of every ten people who come to a party in your home will look in your bathroom cabinet *The taboo against whistling backstage comes from the pre-electricity era when a whistle was the signal for the curtains and the scenery to drop. An unexpected whistle could cause an unexpected scene change! *The sound you hear when macho people crack their knuckles is actually the sound of nitrogen gas bubbles bursting. *Francis Bacon died of hypothermia while trying to freeze a chicken by stuffing it with snow *Captain Jean-Luc Picard's (Star Trek) fish was named Livingston *The WD in WD40 means "water displacement." The 40 in WD40 comes from the 40 attempts at creating this product. *Beethoven dipped his head in cold water before he composed. *Mice, whales, elephants, giraffes and man all have seven neck vertebra. * The name for Oz in the "Wizard of Oz" was thought up when the creator, Frank Baum, looked at his filing cabinet and saw A-N, and O-Z, hence "Oz." *American car horns beep in the tone of F. *The only food cockroaches won't eat are cucumbers. *China has more English speakers than the U.S. *Hong Kong has the world's largest double-decker tram fleet in the world *The words silent and listen have the same letters. Santa and Satan do too *You can tell the sex of a turtle by the sound it makes, A male grunts, A female hisses. *There are no public toilets in Peru. *Samuel Clemens [aka Mark Twain] was born in 1835 when Haley's Comet came into view. When he died in 1910, Haley's Comet came into view again *The pound sign is called a 'octothorp.' *In 1963, baseball pitcher Gaylord Perry remarked, "They'll put a man on the moon before I hit a home run." On July 20, 1969, a few hours after Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, Gaylord Perry hit his first, and only, home run *"Dreamt" is the only word in the English language to end in "mt." *The Queen termite can live up to 50 years and have 30,000 children every day *The term, "It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye" is from Ancient Rome. The only rule during wrestling matches was, "No eye gouging," eveything else was allowed. *A Dalmatian is the only dog that can get gout *The male gypsy moth can smell the virgin female up to 1.8 miles away *A male emperor moth can smell a female emperor moth up to 7 miles away *The human heart creates enough pressure to squirt blood 30 feet out of the body. *A puff of smoke, such as when someone is smoking a cigarette or a pipe is called " a lunt " *The name "Pinocchio" is from Tuscany, Italy and means "pine nut" or "kernel". *Gilligan of Gilligan's Island had a first name that was only used once, on the never-aired pilot show. His first name was Willy *It was the left shoe that Aschenputtel (Cinderella) lost at the stairway, when the prince tried to follow her. It was originally the right, but the translator messed up again. *Cinderella's slippers were originally made out of fur. The story was changed in the 1600's by a translator. *Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories an hour & if you yelled for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days, you would have produced enough sound energy to heat one cup of coffee *For 47 days in 1961, the painting "Matisse's Le Bateau (The Boat)" was hanging upside down in the Museum of Modern Art in New York. None of the over 116,000 visitors seem to have noticed. *Walt Disney named Mickey Mouse after Mickey Rooney, whose mother he dated. *Lorne Greene had one of his nipples bitten off by an alligator while he was host of "Lorne Greene's Animal Kingdom." *The magic word 'Abracadabra' was originally intended for the specific purpose of curing hay fever. *The phrase "rule of thumb" was popularized by an old English law which stated that you couldn't beat your wife with anything wider than your thumb top to first joint. (a thumb measurement is an inch) *More redheads are born in Scotland UK than in any other part of the world *The Sanskrit word for 'war' means - "desire for more cows". *The average bed is home to over 5 billion dust mites. *Only female wasps, bees, and mosquitoes sting. *Las Vegas means "The Meadows" in Spanish. *Born on November 2, 1718, British politician, John Montagu, the 4th Earl of Sandwich, is credited with naming the 'sandwich.' He developed a habit of eating beef between slice of toast so he could continue to play cards uninterrupted. *Ice hockey was first played in 1885 by British soldiers stationed in Canada *Armored knights raised their visors to identify themselves when they rode past their king. This custom has become the modern military salute. *Your fingernails grow 4 times faster than your toe nails *Pain travels faster than 3000 feet per second *A cow produces 200 times more gas a day than a person *About 10,000,000 people have the same birthday as you *The snail mates only once in it's entire life, also a snail has 4 noses *The Coca-Cola company is the biggest consumer of sugar in the world *The dot that appears over the letter "i" is called a tittle. *All major league baseball umpires must wear black underwear while on the job (in case their pants split) *Captain Kirk never said "Beam me up, Scotty," but he did say, "Beam me up, Mr. Scott" *The word gymnasium comes from the Greek word gymnazein which means to exercise naked *Everyone thought Albert Einstein suffered from dyslexia, because he couldn't speak properly until he was 9 years old. *Mel Blanc (the voice of Bugs Bunny) was allergic to carrots *The nation of Monaco on the French Riviera, is smaller than Central Park in New York. Monaco is 370 acres and Central Park is 840 acres *Gweneth Paltrow's nickname for Steven Speilberg is "Uncle Morty." Steven Speilberg calls Gweneth Paltrow "Gwynnie the pooh." *You can't kill yourself by holding your breath. *The sorcerer's name in Disney's Fantasia is Yensid, which happens to be Disney backwards. *Armadillos are the only animal besides humans that can get leprosy *The world's longest name is: Adolph Blaine Charles David Earl Frederick Gerald Hubert Irvin John Kenneth Lloyd Martin Nero Oliver Paul Quincy Randolph Shermasn Thomas Uncas Victor William Xerxes Yancy Zeus Wolfeschlegelsteinhausenbergerdorft Sr. *Shirly Temple received 135,000 presents on her 8th birthday. * When Christopher Columbus and crew landed in the New World they observed the natives using a nose pipe to smoke a strange new herb. The pipe was called a "tabaka" by the locals, hence our word tobacco. *Americans on the average eat 18 acres of pizza every day. *The sound of E.T. walking was made by someone squishing her hands in jelly. *Hitler and Napoleon both had only one testicle. *Every time you lick a stamp, you're consuming 1/10 of a calorie. *In ancient China, people committed suicide by eating a pound of salt. *Queen Victoria [UK 1837-1901] eased the discomfort of her monthly cramps by having her doctor supply her with marijuana. *The average human eats 8 spiders in their lifetime at night. [usually in our sleep] ~ this is a MYTH *If you fart consistently for 6 years and 9 months, enough energy is produced to create an atomic bomb *Sugar was first added to chewing gum in 1869 by a dentist (William Semple). One way to assure business!! *The Ramses brand condom is named after the great phaoroh Ramses II who fathered over 160 children. *The names of the three wise monkeys are: Mizaru: See no evil, Mikazaru: Hear no evil, and Mazaru: Speak no evil. *The Spanish word esposa means "wife." The plural, esposas, means "wives," but also "handcuffs." *23% of all photocopier faults worldwide are caused by people sitting on them and photocopying their butts. * There was one U.S. state that no longer exists? In 1784 the U.S. had a state called Franklin, named after Benjamin Franklin. But four years later, it was incorporated into Tennessee. *The clinical term for a hairy buttocks is "daysypgal." *A duck's quack doesn't echo, and ... no one knows why.~ MYTH everything echoes. University students have recorded a ducks echo. It is usually so quiet we cannot hear it. *"The sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's sick" is said to be the toughest tongue twister in the English language. ??? Maybe if said fast. *Clans many many years ago that wanted to get rid of their unwanted people without killing them, burnt their houses down - hence the expression " to get fired." !!


    Answer:
    A baby elephant weighs less than a blue whale's tongue sharks can sense the heartbeat of other fish donald duck was banned in finland because he doesn't wear pants the ant is proportionally the strongest animal cockroaches chew on your eyebrows and lashes

    Places to vacation around Thanksgiving time. Pretty places?
    Question:
    Well, this Thanksgiving break we're thinking of driving off somewhere just to get out for a bit. At 38 miles to the gallon, it would only cost 45 dollars to go about 450 miles, and that's about the furthest we hope to go. Anyways, pretty much anywhere in Maryland, Philidelphia, New York, Maine, and other surrounding states. Just you know, somewhere worth going in slight cold weather. We still may just drive up to see the Beach, so if anyone has a good suggestion for a good beach (In this case, any states bordering the Atlantic) just let me in on that too. Thanks a lot.


    Answer:
    The Pocanos in Penn. have beautiful leaves in the fall and it is rural and calm for relaxing. but I hear Maine is amazing! or maybe Niagra falls? ;)

    is this a good report?
    Question:
    i have a report on hurricane floyd that is due on wednsday there has got to be some teachers on this site: you can put it on microsoft word to see it better Hurricane Floyd ‘What is a hurricane?’ you might ask yourself. A hurricane is a violent storm of the Western North Atlantic and has wind speeds of up to 72 miles per hour. They form when the temperature is at least 26 degrees, as it slowly gets taller it releases latent heat which is a source of energy for a cyclone, there needs to be a lot of moisture in the air, there needs to be a low wind shear because if it had high wind shear the hurricane would break apart and it has to be 500 km away from the equator. The dangers a hurricane poses to human society is that causes a large amount of death, loss of housing, little to eat and billions of dollars in property damages. The people who issue warnings and watches are weathermen who tell us if the hurricane is mild or if its extremely bad you have to take shelter immediately. Have you ever wondered what categories they place hurricanes and what they call the scale that classifies the devastation of a hurricane? The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane scale classifies the most Western Hemisphere cyclones that range from either “tropical depression” to “tropical storms” wich eventually become hurricanes. Category 1 doesn’t really do much damage to houses and buildings but will do some damage to mobile homes and trees and some flooding. Category 2 would do some damages to houses, the flooding will damage some piers and the boats who aren’t well anchored be damaged. Category 3 there will be minor damage to some houses and buildings, any mobile homes will be completely destroyed, and the flooding would destroy smaller structure but will damage higher structures. Category 4 would destroy the roofs of houses, large erosion areas by the beach. Category 5 is the most devastating hurricane of them all. Houses would be destroyed, building structures would be either blown away or damaged, the flooding would cause extreme damage to all lower floors that are near the shoreline, and people would need to evacuate as soon as possible. Hurricane Floyd was a very strong category 4 and almost had a category 5 rating and was the largest Atlantic hurricane ever recorded. Hurricane Floyd was formed off the coast of Africa and lasted from September 7th to September 19th and became a category 4 hurricane and almost became a category 5. It struck the Bahamas and caused heavy damage. It went to the East Coast of the U.S which enormous evacuations. Floyd was responsible for 57 deaths and $4.5 billion in damages and this was in North Carolina. While Floyd was crossing the Bahamas it was almost becoming a category 5 for 12 hours and was weakened to a category 3 and was soon had enough strength to become a category 4. As it went through Florida it slowly started to weaken because of all the dry air. As Floyd accelerated to the north it weakened so much that Floyd became a category 2 on September 16. As of the 17th the storm continued to the northeast and later disappeared in Newfoundland After the devastation of hurricane Floyd came a lot of criticism saying that there was a very slow response. The runoff from the hurricane made problems for North Carolina’s rivers. One major concern was with all the freshwater in the ocean that people were afraid that fish and shrimp would die off killing the fishing and shrimp industries. Amazingly however, both industries were thriving because many marine animals moved to saltier waters so could become less vulnerable to Floyd’s effects. Pollution was also a scare because there were a ton of pesticides in river waters but unlike hurricane Fran the pesticides were lower because Floyd had more rain, which diluted the pesticides making them weaker. Child abuse was also a problem near the hardest hit areas in North Carolina which was probably caused by the aftermath of Floyd which caused parental stress because of all their losses and rebuilding. The East Coast, Florida and Massachusetts were under a hurricane warning at one point. Even with those specific areas that were mentioned only half actually were hit by hurricane like winds. Hurricane trackers were afraid that Florida was going to be the worse hit with a category 4 hurricane. Because of the warning one million Florida residents were told to evacuate. As the storm went north more people evacuated and caused the largest peacetime evacuations ever in the U.S with 2.6 million evacuating Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas alone. Hurricane Floyd was the deadliest U.S hurricane since hurricane Agnes. 57 people died and cost 4.5 billion dollars. In the Bahamas 1 person died, in North Carolina 35 people died, in Virginia 3 people died, in Delaware 2 people died, in Pennsylvania 6 people died, in New Jersey 6 people died. In New York 2 people died, in Connecticut I person died and in Vermont one person died as well. In the Bahamas the hurricane knocked out power and communication lines. Abaco Island, Cat Island, San Salvador Island, and Eleuthera Island was where the most damage had occurred where Floyd had uprooted trees and destroyed houses, restaurants, hotels and shops. Despite all the damage Bahamian citizens felt really lucky because only one person died and only a small number of injuries had occurred. North Carolina received most of the storms impact and had 35 deaths and caused billions in damage. Floyd also created some tornados but only caused minimal damage. 500,000 costumers were left without electricity due to the damage of the power lines. The rainfall and strong winds affected many homes across North Carolina destroying 7,000 houses, due to the storm 17,000 houses were in a state of disrepair and damaged 56,000 houses and made ten thousand people to live in shelters.


    Answer:
    The information is pretty good. Some of your sentences run on and should be split up. Also, read through it carefully, as you are missing words here and there, like: "The dangers a hurricane poses to human society is that causes a large amount of death, " Should be "The dangers a hurricane poses to human society is that it causes a large amount of death, " or even better "it may cause" since not all hurricanes do cause all of those things. Now, where are your citations? Where did all your information come from? Not right out of your head I'm sure, so you need to let your teacher know where you got that information from. With some minor corrections, I think it's a pretty good job. By the way, what grade level is this for?

    POLL about TRAVEL?
    Question:
    U.S. TRAVEL: TRY TO JUST PICK ONE BY PLACING AN X BY YOUR ANSWER. 1] DISNEYWORLD WORLDS OF FUN 2] DOLLYWOOD SILVER DOLLAR CITY 3] HOLLYWOOD BROADWAY 4] NEW YORK CITY LOS ANGELOS 5] NIAGRA FALLS GRAND CANYON 6] WASHINGTON D.C. SEATTLE WASHINGTON 7] OCEAN DESERT 8] BEACH MOUNTAINTOP 9] YELLOWSTONE YOSEMITE 10] ROCKY MOUNTAINS SMOKY MOUNTAINS 11] ATLANTIC PACIFIC GULF OF MEXICO 19] LOS VEGAS NEW ORLEANS 20] MT. RUSHMORE MT. ST. HELEN ’S 21] LAKE TAHOE GREAT LAKES 22] CARRIBEAN ISLANDS HAWAII 23] BUSCH GARDENS SEAWORLD 24] EUREKA SPRINGS, AR BRANSON, MO 25] DODGE CITY TOMBSTONE YOU ARE SUPPOSE TO CHOOSE OUT OF EACH NUMBER WHICH OF THE TWO OR THREE YOU WOULD RATHER GO.


    Answer:
    1] DISNEYWORLD X WORLDS OF FUN 2] DOLLYWOOD SILVER DOLLAR CITY X 3] HOLLYWOOD X BROADWAY 4] NEW YORK CITY LOS ANGELOS X 5] NIAGRA FALLS GRAND CANYON X 6] WASHINGTON D.C. SEATTLE WASHINGTON X 7] OCEAN DESERT X 8] BEACH X MOUNTAINTOP 9] YELLOWSTONE YOSEMITE X 10] ROCKY MOUNTAINS X SMOKY MOUNTAINS 11] ATLANTIC PACIFIC X GULF OF MEXICO 19] LOS VEGAS X NEW ORLEANS 20] MT. RUSHMORE MT. ST. HELEN ’S X 21] LAKE TAHOE X GREAT LAKES 22] CARRIBEAN ISLANDS HAWAII X 23] BUSCH GARDENS SEAWORLD X 24] EUREKA SPRINGS, AR X BRANSON, MO 25] DODGE CITY X TOMBSTONE

    Please take my survey!!! It's fun!?
    Question:
    Okay, I have my answers down, whoever has the closest answers to mine get the best answer!! 1. Led Zeppelin or The Beatles? 2. Barques or Mug Rootbeer? 3. Vitamin Water or Gaterade? 4. Orange or Purple? 5. Atlantic or Pacific? 6. Red Sox or Yankees? 7. France or Spain? 8. Hockey or Badmiton? 9. Taco Bell or Pizza Hut? 10. Ford or Nissan? 11. Forest or Beach? 12. Lunch or Dinner? 13. Math or History? 14. Wld Fowl or Tucan? 15. Tom Sawyer of Huckleberry Finn? 16. Larry Bird or Magic Johnson? 17. Drums or Guitar? 18. Spicy or Sweet? 19. Duct Tape or Masking Tape? 20. Apple or Orange? 21. Dell or Gateway? 22. Centerfielder of Pitcher? 23. Vermont or Virginia? 24. I Love New York or Flavor Of Love? 25. Rain or Hail? 26. German or French? 27. Ring or Necklace? 28. Pants or Shorts? 29. Coke or Pepsi? 30. Grasshopper or Cricket? I will tally the scores! Tell everyone about this! I guess I have to tell you mine! 1. Led Zeppelin 2. Mug 3. Gaterade 4. Purple 5. Atlantic 6. Red Sox 7. France 8. Badminton 9. Taco Bell 10. Nissan 11. Beach 12. Dinner 13. History 14. Tucan 15. Huckleberry Finn 16. Larry Bird 17. Guitar 18. Spicy 19. Masking Tape 20. Apple 21. Dell 22. Centerfield 23. Virginia 24. Flavor of Love 25. Hail 26. French 27. Ring 28. Shorts 29. Coke 30. Grasshopper


    Answer:
    Led Zeppelin Mug Vitamin Water Orange Atlantic Red Sox France Badmitton Taco Bell Nissan Beach Lunch History Tucan Huck Finn Larry Bird Guitar Duct Tape Apple Dell Center Fielder Vermont Flavor of Love Rain French Necklace Shorts Coke Cricket


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