a plague and a partner rat tales - nie world chicken clucking in harmony! cathy and marcy direct...

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© 2009 Universal Press Syndicate release dates: May 30-June 5 22-1 (09) from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page ® . Have you ever been around a pet rat, perhaps in your classroom? Maybe you have seen rats in an alley or field near your home. Over the centuries, rats have caused a lot of trouble for people. But they have also helped us learn more about ourselves. The Mini Page looks at this sometimes creepy, sometimes helpful animal. Rodent family A rat is a rodent. Rodents include animals such as mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, squirrels, chipmunks and beavers. Rodents make up the largest group of mammals on Earth. There are about 2,300 species, or kinds, of rodents. Rodents all have long, sharp teeth called incisors. Many other animals, including humans, have incisors too. But in rodents, the incisors are especially long. They keep growing throughout most of a rodent’s life. Rodents also have powerful jaw muscles. Rodent jaws and incisors are specially designed to gnaw through hard material. For example, a beaver can chew through trees. Rats can chew through lead and aluminum. Rats also dig with their incisors. Rat body A Norway rat’s incisors grow about 4 to 5 inches a year. They need to keep chewing on things to wear down their teeth. If they didn’t, their teeth would grow through their skulls. Rats will gnaw on whatever they can sink their teeth into, including cement or brick. Norway and roof rats have long, skinny tails covered with scales. They have long snouts and a super strong sense of smell. They have furry bodies with sharp claws on their paws. Rat or mouse? Experts say the main difference between rats and mice is their size. The bodies of rats people commonly see are usually at least 5 inches long (not counting their tails). The common Norway rat’s body can grow up to 18 inches long. The common mouse is about 2 to 3 inches long (without its tail). Rats and mice are different species, though. Mouse parents won’t give birth to babies so big that they are called rats. Rats won’t give birth to little mice. A Plague and a Partner Rat Tales photo courtesy National Institute of Health The Norway rat is the most common rat in the United States. It is the kind you will most likely see in cities or as pets. There are about as many rats in the United States as there are humans. However, many species of rats live in the wild, away from humans. They live in fields, forests and marshes. Some rats live underground their entire lives. Mini Spy . . . from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Mini Spy and Basset Brown are watching his pet rat. See if you can find: • lips • ladder • letter F • kite • net • boomerang • pencil • orange slice • arrow • peanut • bandage • dice from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate TM Rat-like or human-like behavior? Some rats, such as Norway rats, share many behavior traits, or characteristics, with humans. Both: • are social animals; they like to hang out with others of their kind. • are adaptable. Rats and humans can figure out how to live in all sorts of conditions. This has helped both species thrive, or do well, all over the world. • can learn new things. • can teach what they have learned to their young. Rat world Rats have spread all over the world, often by hitching rides with humans. Rats spread from Europe and Asia to the Americas by stowing away on ships. There are hundreds of species of rats. The two species most familiar to people are the roof rat and the Norway rat. They can be found everywhere there are humans. Roof rat The roof rat is also known as the house rat, ship rat or black rat. It can be white, black or gray. Experts believe it may have originally come from India. It is a strong climber and can often be found in trees or on roofs. It mainly eats plant matter such as fruits, vegetables and grains. It destroys many food crops. Norway rat The Norway rat is also known as the brown rat, wharf rat, sewer rat or water rat. It can be white, brown or black. The Norway rat probably came from China. It got its name because people thought it came to Norway from Asia and then spread through Europe. Norway rats thrive in cities, living in garbage dumps, sewers and buildings. They are mostly nocturnal, which means they are most active at night. Norway rats are great swimmers. They eat almost any type of food. Rats Are Everywhere Scientists test the memory of rats taught to swim to an underwater platform in a pool. The white rats you see as pets or lab animals are probably Norway rats. They have white fur and pink eyes because they are albino (al-BYE-no). Albino animals don’t have the coloring normal to their species. Scientists breed certain strains of rats to work within laboratory settings. Words that remind us of rats are hidden in the block below. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally. See if you can find: TAIL, INCISORS, NORWAY, ROOF, PLAGUE, DISEASE, EAT, PET, RODENT, GNAW, JAW, CHEW, DIG, SNOUT, PAW, BEHAVIOR, ADAPTABLE, SHIP, LAB, ALBINO, FOOD, NOCTURNAL, MAZE, COLONY, BURROW. RATS TRY ’N FIND RATS CAN BE GOOD PETS! GS O N I B L A Y N O L O CN T N H CWO R RU B D I G P O A J A I HE P F OO R DM L C I K A WP E A A D O O F A A T L L MWK L WTWP E T Z GU L S R O S I C N I L A B E U R T N E D OR D I S E A S E E N E L B A T P A D A T UO N S A Y AW R ON R O I V A H E B L from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Basset Brown The News Hound’s TM photo by Keith Weller, courtesy USDA Rookie Cookie’s Recipe Strawberry Gelatin Treat from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Meet Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer have made several CDs of music for families. They have won two Grammy awards. They play many instruments, including banjo, electric guitar, mandolin, spoons, pennywhistle, steel drum and ukulele. They sing many styles of music, too, including yodeling and chicken clucking in harmony! Cathy and Marcy direct three ukulele orchestras, one for a Brownie troop, one for senior citizens and one for advanced players. The two women live in Maryland. Cathy grew up in Baltimore and learned to play the guitar when she was 12. She began playing music for kids at a school on a Navajo Indian reservation. Marcy grew up in Michigan. She loved playing the guitar while her grandmother played along on the piano. She went to a school for dramatic arts, as well as to the Ringling Brothers Clown School. You’ll need: • 1 (6-ounce) package sugar-free gelatin • 2 cups boiling water • 1 cup fat-free strawberry yogurt • 2 cups sliced strawberries • 1 small banana, sliced What to do: 1. Dissolve gelatin powder in 2 cups boiling water. (Do not add additional cold water.) 2. Stir in strawberry yogurt until well-mixed. 3. Add fruit to mixture. 4. Chill for several hours until set. *You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate TM TM Go dot to dot and color this adaptable mammal. Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer All the following jokes have something in common. Can you guess the common theme or category? Rocky: What sound is made when a rat shoots a machine gun? Rick: Rat-a-tat-tat! Renee: Can you spell a rat trap with three letters? Rachel: C-A-T! Roxanne: Why can’t you catch a rat when it runs out from under the stove? Randy: Because it’s out of range! from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Hurting humans Rats have caused people a lot of trouble. Sometimes rats attack, and even kill, humans. They carry more than 40 diseases harmful to humans. Some of these diseases include bubonic plague, typhus and rat-bite fever. Experts believe diseases from rats have killed more people in the last 1,000 years than all the wars combined. During the Middle Ages*, the bubonic plague, or Black Death, may have killed about half the people in the world. *“The Middle Ages” is a term referring to life in Europe from about 500 to 1500. Plague is not such a problem today, partly because people are controlling rat populations better, and partly because we can now cure plague. Destructive animals Rats destroy about 20 percent of all the agricultural products in the world every year. What they don’t eat, they may contaminate, or make unsafe, with their droppings. Experts believe many unexplained house fires have been caused by rats chewing on the wiring. Rats also tunnel under buildings, weakening the structure. Experts estimate that rats cause about $200 million in damage in the United States each year. Rats eat other animals, such as birds and baby sea turtles. They may play a big part in causing some animals to become endangered. Helping humans Scientists have learned a lot about humans by studying rats. Partly because rats adapt and learn so quickly, they are great subjects for experiments. They can learn to go through mazes or hit certain levers to get food. They can teach their young how to perform the same tasks. Also, rats are small and reproduce quickly. That makes them good animals to study as well. Rats can stay healthy even if they breed within their families, which is unusual. This allows scientists to easily breed strains that have certain characteristics. Rats Among Humans Athletic rat facts Rats: • have treaded water for three days. • have survived after being flushed down the toilet. • can climb walls, trees and telephone poles. They can walk across telephone lines. • can leap up 3 feet and across 4 feet. • can get through openings the size of a quarter. • can fall 50 feet without getting hurt. A rat’s life Rats live for a few months to a year in the wild. They are in danger from: • humans and animals such as dogs and eagles; • diseases; • lack of food. Rats often form colonies. When a pair sets up their nest, their young and grandbabies may stay in large groups. There can be hundreds of rats in a colony. Norway rats build nests with complicated burrow systems. They have special rooms for food storage, for living and for the “bathroom.” The Mini Page Staff Betty Debnam - Founding Editor and Editor at Large Lisa Tarry - Managing Editor Lucy Lien - Associate Editor Wendy Daley - Artist photo by Keith Weller, courtesy USDA Scientists study the movement ability of middle-aged rats as they walk on a machine. The Mini Page thanks Phil Myers, curator of mammals, University of Michigan, for help with this issue. Site to see: www.biokids.umich.edu Look through your newspaper for stories about animals and humans. Next week, The Mini Page is about Pompeii, a city in Italy preserved by a volcano. from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate Supersport: Nicklas Lidstrom Height: 6-1 Birthdate: 4-28-70 Weight: 189 Hometown: Vasteras, Sweden Don’t mention retirement to Nicklas Lidstrom. Not yet. The 39-year-old Detroit Red Wing is still skating with youthful energy and handling the hockey stick with a veteran’s savvy. While grinding into the playoffs, the skillful Swede was among the three contenders for the Norris Trophy, presented annually to the NHL’s top defenseman. Lidstrom has won the coveted award six times. He has appeared in 11 NHL All-Star games. A contributor to four of Detroit’s Stanley Cup titles, Lidstrom plays with iron-man grit. In 16-plus seasons of bumping and checking, he has competed in nearly 98 percent of his team’s games.While an outstanding defender, the Red Wings’ captain provides offense as well. In the first 78 games this season he produced 16 goals and 43 assists for 59 points. During his career, Lidstrom also took time out to help Sweden win an Olympic Gold medal in 2006. In the offseason, Nicklas, his wife and four sons return to Sweden. A soccer player as a boy, he now enjoys golf and boating for relaxation. But when he’s on the ice, Lidstrom competes with all-star intensity. TM

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Page 1: A Plague and a Partner Rat Tales - NIE WORLD chicken clucking in harmony! Cathy and Marcy direct three ukulele orchestras, one for a Brownie troop, one for senior citizens and one

© 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

release dates: May 30-June 5 22-1 (09)

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini Page®.

Have you ever been around a pet rat,perhaps in your classroom? Maybe youhave seen rats in an alley or field nearyour home.

Over the centuries, rats have caused alot of trouble for people. But they havealso helped us learn more aboutourselves. The Mini Page looks at thissometimes creepy, sometimes helpfulanimal.Rodent family

A rat is a rodent. Rodents includeanimals such as mice, guinea pigs,hamsters, squirrels, chipmunks andbeavers. Rodents make up the largestgroup of mammals on Earth. There areabout 2,300species, or kinds,of rodents.

Rodents all havelong, sharp teethcalled incisors.Many otheranimals, including humans, have incisorstoo. But in rodents, the incisors areespecially long. They keep growingthroughout most of a rodent’s life.

Rodents also have powerful jawmuscles. Rodent jaws and incisors arespecially designed to gnaw through hardmaterial. For example, a beaver can chewthrough trees. Rats can chew throughlead and aluminum. Rats also dig withtheir incisors.

Rat bodyA Norway rat’s incisors grow about 4 to

5 inches a year. They need to keepchewing on things to wear down theirteeth. If they didn’t, their teeth wouldgrowthroughtheir skulls.Rats willgnaw onwhateverthey cansink theirteeth into, including cement or brick.

Norway and roof rats have long, skinnytails covered with scales. They have longsnouts and a super strong sense of smell.They have furry bodies with sharp clawson their paws.

Rat or mouse?Experts say

the maindifferencebetween ratsand mice istheir size. Thebodies of rats

people commonly see are usually at least5 inches long (not counting their tails).The common Norway rat’s body can growup to 18 inches long.

The common mouse is about 2 to 3inches long (without its tail).

Rats and mice are different species,though. Mouse parents won’t give birth tobabies so big that they are called rats.Rats won’t give birth to little mice.

A Plague and a Partner

Rat Tales

photo courtesy National Institute of Health

The Norway rat is the mostcommon rat in the UnitedStates. It is the kind you willmost likely see in cities or aspets.There are about as many ratsin the United States as thereare humans. However, manyspecies of rats live in thewild, away from humans.They live in fields, forestsand marshes. Some rats liveunderground their entirelives.

Mini Spy . . .from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Mini Spy and Basset Brown are watching his pet rat.See if you can find:

• lips• ladder• letter F• kite • net• boomerang• pencil• orange slice• arrow• peanut• bandage• dice

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

TM

Rat-like or human-like behavior?Some rats, such as Norway rats,

share many behavior traits, orcharacteristics, with humans. Both:

• are social animals; they like tohang out with others of their kind.

• are adaptable. Rats and humanscan figure out how to live inall sorts of conditions. This hashelped both species thrive, or do well,all over the world.

• can learnnew things.

• can teachwhat they havelearned totheir young.

Rat worldRats have spread all over the world,

often by hitching rides with humans. Ratsspread from Europeand Asia to theAmericas by stowingaway on ships.

There are hundredsof species of rats. The two species mostfamiliar to people are the roof rat andthe Norway rat. They can be foundeverywhere there are humans.

Roof ratThe roof rat is also

known as the houserat, ship rat or blackrat. It can be white,black or gray.

Experts believe it may have originallycome from India. It is a strong climberand can often be found in trees or onroofs. It mainly eats plant matter suchas fruits, vegetables and grains. Itdestroys many food crops.Norway rat

The Norwayrat is also knownas the brown rat,wharf rat, sewerrat or water rat.It can be white, brown or black.

The Norway rat probably came fromChina. It got its name because peoplethought it came to Norway from Asiaand then spread through Europe.

Norway rats thrive in cities, living ingarbage dumps, sewers and buildings.They are mostly nocturnal, whichmeans they are most active at night.

Norway rats are great swimmers.They eat almost any type of food.

Rats Are Everywhere

Scientists test the memory of rats taught toswim to an underwater platform in a pool.The white rats you see as pets or labanimals are probably Norway rats. Theyhave white fur and pink eyes because theyare albino (al-BYE-no). Albino animals don’thave the coloring normal to their species.Scientists breed certain strains of rats towork within laboratory settings.

Words that remind us of rats are hidden in the block below. Some wordsare hidden backward or diagonally. See if you can find: TAIL, INCISORS,NORWAY, ROOF, PLAGUE, DISEASE, EAT, PET, RODENT, GNAW,JAW, CHEW, DIG, SNOUT, PAW, BEHAVIOR, ADAPTABLE, SHIP,LAB, ALBINO, FOOD, NOCTURNAL, MAZE, COLONY, BURROW.

RATS TRY ’NFIND

RATS CAN BEGOOD PETS!

G S O N I B L A Y N O L O C N

T N H C W O R R U B D I G P OA J A I H E P F O O R D M L CI K A W P E A A D O O F A A TL L M W K L W T W P E T Z G UL S R O S I C N I L A B E U RT N E D O R D I S E A S E E NE L B A T P A D A T U O N S AY A W R O N R O I V A H E B L

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Basset Brown

The News

Hound’s

TM

phot

o by

Kei

th W

elle

r, c

ourt

esy

US

DA

Rookie Cookie’s RecipeStrawberry Gelatin Treat

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Meet Cathy Fink and Marcy MarxerCathy Fink and Marcy Marxer have

made several CDs of music for families.They have won two Grammy awards.

They play many instruments,including banjo, electric guitar,mandolin, spoons, pennywhistle, steeldrum and ukulele. They sing manystyles of music, too, including yodelingand chicken clucking in harmony!

Cathy and Marcy direct three ukulele orchestras, one for a Brownietroop, one for senior citizens and one for advanced players. The two womenlive in Maryland.

Cathy grew up in Baltimore and learned to play the guitar when shewas 12. She began playing music for kids at a school on a Navajo Indianreservation.

Marcy grew up in Michigan. She loved playing the guitar while hergrandmother played along on the piano. She went to a school for dramaticarts, as well as to the Ringling Brothers Clown School.

You’ll need:• 1 (6-ounce) package sugar-free gelatin• 2 cups boiling water• 1 cup fat-free strawberry yogurt• 2 cups sliced strawberries• 1 small banana, slicedWhat to do:1. Dissolve gelatin powder in 2 cups boiling water. (Do not add

additional cold water.)2. Stir in strawberry yogurt until well-mixed.3. Add fruit to mixture.4. Chill for several hours until set.*You will need an adult’s help with this recipe.

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

TM

TM

Go dot to dot and color this adaptable mammal.

Cathy Fink and Marcy Marxer

All the following jokes have something in common.Can you guess the common theme or category?

Rocky: What sound is made when arat shoots a machine gun?

Rick: Rat-a-tat-tat!

Renee: Can you spell a rat trapwith three letters?

Rachel: C-A-T!

Roxanne: Why can’t you catch a rat when itruns out from under the stove?

Randy: Because it’s out of range!

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Hurting humansRats have caused people a lot of

trouble. Sometimes rats attack, andeven kill, humans.

They carry more than 40 diseasesharmful to humans. Some of thesediseases include bubonic plague, typhusand rat-bite fever.

Experts believediseases from ratshave killed morepeople in the last1,000 years thanall the warscombined. During

the Middle Ages*, the bubonic plague,or Black Death, may have killed abouthalf the people in the world.*“The Middle Ages” is a term referring to lifein Europe from about 500 to 1500.

Plague is not such a problem today,partly because people are controlling ratpopulations better, and partly becausewe can now cure plague.Destructive animals

Rats destroyabout 20percent of allthe agriculturalproducts in the worldevery year. What they don’t eat, theymay contaminate, or make unsafe,with their droppings.

Experts believe many unexplainedhouse fires have been caused by ratschewing on the wiring. Rats also tunnelunder buildings, weakening the structure.

Experts estimate that rats causeabout $200 million in damage in theUnited States each year.

Rats eat other animals, such as birdsand baby sea turtles. They may play abig part in causing some animals tobecome endangered.

Helping humansScientists have learned a lot about

humans by studying rats. Partlybecause rats adapt and learn so quickly,they are great subjects for experiments.They can learn to go through mazes orhit certain levers to get food. They canteach their young how to perform thesame tasks.

Also, rats are small and reproducequickly. That makes them good animalsto study as well.

Rats can stay healthy even if theybreed within their families, which isunusual. This allows scientists to easilybreed strains that have certaincharacteristics.

Rats Among HumansAthletic rat facts

Rats:• have treaded water

for three days.• have survived after

being flushed down thetoilet.

• can climb walls,trees and telephonepoles. They can walkacross telephone lines.

• can leap up 3 feetand across 4 feet.

• can get through openings the size ofa quarter.

• can fall 50 feet without gettinghurt.A rat’s life

Rats live for a few months to a yearin the wild. They are in danger from:

• humansand animalssuch as dogsand eagles;

• diseases;• lack of

food.Rats often form colonies. When a pair

sets up their nest, their young andgrandbabies may stay in large groups.There can be hundreds of rats in acolony.

Norway rats build nests withcomplicated burrow systems. They havespecial rooms for food storage, for livingand for the “bathroom.”

The Mini Page StaffBetty Debnam - Founding Editor and Editor at Large Lisa Tarry - Managing Editor Lucy Lien - Associate Editor Wendy Daley - Artist

phot

o by

Kei

th W

elle

r, c

ourt

esy

US

DA

Scientists study the movement ability ofmiddle-aged rats as they walk on a machine.

The Mini Page thanks Phil Myers, curator ofmammals, University of Michigan, for helpwith this issue.

Site to see: www.biokids.umich.edu

Look through your newspaper for storiesabout animals and humans.

Next week, The Mini Page is about Pompeii,a city in Italy preserved by a volcano.

from The Mini Page © 2009 Universal Press Syndicate

Supersport: Nicklas LidstromHeight: 6-1 Birthdate: 4-28-70Weight: 189 Hometown: Vasteras, Sweden

Don’t mention retirement to Nicklas Lidstrom. Not yet. The 39-year-oldDetroit Red Wing is still skating with youthful energy and handling thehockey stick with a veteran’s savvy.

While grinding into the playoffs, the skillful Swede was among the three contendersfor the Norris Trophy, presented annually to the NHL’s top defenseman. Lidstrom haswon the coveted award six times. He has appeared in 11 NHL All-Star games.

A contributor to four of Detroit’s Stanley Cup titles, Lidstrom plays with iron-mangrit. In 16-plus seasons of bumping and checking, he has competed in nearly 98percent of his team’s games. While an outstanding defender, the Red Wings’ captainprovides offense as well. In the first 78 games this season he produced 16 goals and43 assists for 59 points.

During his career, Lidstrom also took time out to help Sweden win an Olympic Goldmedal in 2006.

In the offseason, Nicklas, his wife and four sons return to Sweden. A soccer playeras a boy, he now enjoys golf and boating for relaxation. But when he’s on the ice,Lidstrom competes with all-star intensity.

TM