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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 43

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Star Tribunei
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Minneapolis, Minnesota
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43
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7E. Fixit Crossword puzzle Star TribuneMondayNovember 301992 Eisenhower changed Shangri-La to Camp David PUZZLED? For answers to dues from to-" day's, yesterday's or last Sunday's crossword puzzle, caH 1-900-896-2123 and follow the instructions. You'll be billed 95 cents per minute, and you can use a touch-tone or rotary dial phone. As for fat-soluble vitamins, Armbruster said, they are not much affected by cooking anyway. Vegetables are normally blanched, or heated in water, to inactivate their enzymes before freezing.

Armbruster said that microwave heating is also efficient in inactivating the enzymes, which would otherwise oxidize the vitamins, and that microwaved and frozen vegetables actually offer better quality and nutrition value. New York Times News Service Send your questions to Fixit In care of the Star Tribune, 425 Portland Av. Minneapolis 55488. Sorry, Fixit cannot supply Individual replies. Fixit appears every day except Friday.

ff was tne presidential retreat Zi in Maryland always called Camp David? Alt was called Shangri-La until President Dwight D. Eisenhower changed the name to Camp David after his grandson, David. From "The Book of Answers," by Barbara Berliner I have 12 maple trees in pots, Zl and I don't want to plant them until next spring. Will they survive the winter as is? A No. trees in pots will not survive a Minnesota winter without some protection.

There are a couple of ways to afford them protection. Potted trees with little or no Does microwave cooking de-' stroy nutrients in vegetables? No, in fact it preserves some i vitamins better than other methods of cooking, said Gertrude Armbruster, associate professor in the division of nutritional sciences at Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. She and her colleagues studied vitamin the vitamin most subject to deterioration when heated. They found that because the microwave cooking time is shorter and because there is no need to use extra water to prevent burning, the final level of the nutrient is higher with microwave cooking than with methods using more water and longer heating. The same thing holds true for other water-soluble vitamins, like the vitamins.

48 Water of the Great Rift valley 50 Shakespeare's river 51 Biblical spy 54 Chariots of ancient Gaul 58 Makes haste 621861-65 War 63 Mold 64 "There is nothing 66 Spud 67 Sponsorship 68Fulda feeder 69 Surveying nails 70 Seines 71 Recline DOWN 1 Junkets 2Saree wearer 3 Beneath 4 Issue 5 Franklin ACROSS 1 Not false 5 Support 9 Close of acting 1 4 Author Ayn 15 Lamb of literature 16 Street show 17 Insult 19 Isaac's son and others 20 Calvin of golf 21 Fellow players 23 Continued story 25-and crossbones 26 Kind of test 28 Covered with gold 32 Surmount 37 Insolvent 38 Bad actor 39 Direction in 41 Engineering deg. 42 Willow 45 Extras 6 Landed 7 Points out 8 Inuit craft 9 WWII pilots bane 10 The Bunkers' auto UPartofQEO 12 New, in Berlin 13 Monsters loch 18 Toothed wheels 22 Overact 24 Fall short 27 Entertainer Home 29 Show, for short 30 Genesis garden 31 Colors 32 God of thunder 33 Demolish, In Devon 34 In the thick of 35 Rorem or Beatty 36 Baby's branching can be laid on their sides in a shady area, preferably branching can be laid on their sides in a shady area, preferably on the north side of a house or other structure. The pots should be grouped together, but not stacked. A 10-to-1 2-inch mulch of leaves or straw can be used to cover the trees and pots. Branched trees can be protected by burying the pots upright in the ground or by grouping the pots together on top of the ground, then mulching them with 18 to 24 inches of leaves or straw or with 1 2 inches of wood chips.

Pay close attention when applying mulch so that the sides and tops of the pots are evenly mulched to avoid areas of exposure. Jan Duncum, horticulture technician, Dial Insect and Plant Information, Minnesota Extension Service, St Paul til vf Turkeys have been a way of life for the Dahlgrens i 1 2 TT "5 6 TT Ti 12" 13 7T ii "ii 17 TaT" "ii 20 21 22" 23 2T" 25 26 27" 28 29 1 30 1 31 1 32 1 33 1 34 35" 36 37 38 39 40" 41 7 42 43 1 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 1 53 54 55 58 1 57 58 1 59 1 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 'mm" 68 69 70 71 By Ann BurckhardtStaff Writer Rick Dahlgren of rural Bird Island, has been around turkeys all his life. His mother, the late Dolores Blume Dahlgren, began raising turkeys at age 14. The birds paid her way to farm school (a high school then operating on the University of Minnesota's St. Paul campus) when her father decided a farm girl didn't need to go on to a regular high school.

"My folks met at a turkey growers' meeting. Dad always made sure he threw the dead turkeys out of the truck before he drove over to pick Mother up for a date. Dad started this farm in 1937. There wasn't much money in turkeys. There wasn't much money in anything in those days." Dahlgren, 46, was the only one of their seven children who wanted to raise turkeys, and he didn't want to do anything else.

"Turkeys are fantastic converters of feed. They grow so fast," marveled Dahlgren. He, his wife, Margaret, and four full-time men produce 225,000 torn turkeys annually on their Park Hill Turkey Farm, raising them in 18-week sequences. "The faster they grow, the bigger the amount of breast meat, and it's the breast that's worth money," Dahlgren said. They get the birds at one day old, Staff Photo by Jerry Holt Turkeys, turkeys, everywhere: Margaret and Rick Dahlgren raise about 225,000 turkeys a year on their farm at Bird Island, Minn.

Joyce JlsonHoroscope Monday, November 30, 1992 Call Joyce Jillson for a personal horoscope 1-900-903-4848 99 cents per minute (Touch-tone OR rotary-dial phones) WCCO-TV edges out (CARE to top news sweeps feeding them in eight long barns and shipping them to Mr. Turkey, a processor in Storm Lake, Iowa, 18 weeks later. Besides tending their feathered livestock, the Dahlgrens grow corn and soybeans. Why raise toms? The grown torn turkey weighs 30 pounds, while a hen weighs 13 to 14 pounds twice as many birds for the same amount of meat Like most turkeys in this country, the Park Hill birds are raised in TJ Saturday's Answers word 40Louganis' forte 43 Fled 44 Finishing tools 46 Puccini opera 47 One in the know 49 Priestly garment 52 Actress Barkin 53 Neutral; shade 55 Outwit 58 FDR coins 57 Warn 58 Jets .1) 59 Fellow 60 Pro i 61 Comedy Vv fc sketch 65 Before tee Ll Scorpio (Oct 24 Nov. 21): Your sophistication may work against you.

Being vulnerable and going back to family values is best now. New love comes when you do errands. Teens give you a reason to trust them. Sagittarius (Nov. 22 -Dec 21): Plan a vacation, or some get away.

Curiosity is the key to work success. A family mem-' j-ber is disappointed, but don't let the blame fall on your 1 shoulders. Seminars or lee-Hires prove stimulating. Capricorn (Dec. 22 -Jan.

19): Put a past incident behind you; otherwise, you cloud y. your future. Luck spirals into your life via a new partner- ship. Accept it At work, re-member, a project cant be done without you. Aquarius (Jan 20 Feb.

1B You are far more attached to a current love than you real-, ize. Hobbies or work need more attention. Dont sue- 1 cumb to flattery from some-; one who hasnt lived up to a promise. Ask for more mon-' ey Instead. Call a Capricorn.

-1 Pisces (Feb. 19 March 20): You need more peace and quiet This promotes study, work and happiness. Let family members know. reconciliations with elders could ease tensions. A pur- i chase should be returned.

Hunches are on the mark. and Frank Stewart five missing trumps break 3-2. Still', South draws only two rounds-of trumps and then, leaving one trump out, leads clubs to drive out the ace. West takes the queen of spades and continues hearts, forcing South" to use up his last trump. But South easily takes the rest with good '1 clubs and diamonds, making his contract.

South goes down if he leads a third." round of trumps at Trick Five. wins and leads a third heart to drive out South's last trump. When West gets in with the ace of clubs, he- leads a fourth heart, defeating the" contract Daily question You hold: Q102VKQJ675434A8 Partner opens with 2NT (22 to 24 points), and the next player What do you say? Answer Bid three clubs, the Stayman Con-vention, asking partner to bid a ma- jor suit of four or more cards. If he bids three hearts, you plan to jump -to six hearts. If he bids three dla- -i monds, denying a biddable major suit, you'll jump to 6NT.

Alfred Sheinwold and Frank Stew- art are columnists for the Los An-geles Times Syndicate. i fe' ILASUO I ON- JROIJU Mi dWe1sJtIIILJa vis a TMlTjoT Enilj a lily 1 1 Imfi 1 53 I i ttaoi ffillJU oiPil sir TjojlifFp a Hjvmrt-. nTIiw giaW 0 MXm i oftmsiMtnN i eco it ills i iinK TtftirBLJDl eI cll YiJlreiiTn-. Your birthday today: You're juggling heavyweight skills. Omnipotence.

Intellectual success. Style. These three things will lead you up the mountain of renewal and new achievements, but you must surrender and not fight this trend. By January, a new pal infuses you with even more ambitions. Family pleasures are heightened in February, when a partner gets money and becomes kinder.

By March, new jobs and educational and advancement routes open. Money flows In again in March and August Raises materialize in September, but you are gearing up for a new job or lifestyle in October. Aries (March 21 -April 19): Money comes from several sources. Be more selective about whom you see and what you tell others. Your goals in life are shifting; this change is good.

Taurus (April 20 -May 20): Consider what you want, rather than living up to a friend idea of what you should do. What were your dreams long ago? Lovers are demanding; hold your own space. A message brings great news about a child. Gemini (May 21 -June 21): All challenges bring out the best in you. Face-to-face meetings favor you; avoid phone negotiations.

Rivalries in love also prove helpful. Money comes from relatives. Cancer (June 22 July 22): A day of popularity. Push for leadership positions. Let neighbors know of your outside activities; they may want to join.

Platonic love turns romantic; be alert. Leo (July 23 -Aug. 22): Your talents must be expressed. Business contacts made over a year ago prove useful this week. Give up a responsibility: You'll feel better and act younger.

Virgo (Aug. 23 -Sept 22): Make plans early for the week. A so-called friend chimes in on your romance; say something fasti Be willing to try a different exercise or health regime. Use common sense in love. Libra (Sept 23 Oct 23): Your political instincts are superb; use them at once, or they diminish.

Music soothes your broken (romantic) heart. A trying family problem ends, thanks to a financial windfall. birds. "If you want to raise birds, you raise them year-round. They want to run their plants year-round." Minr.asota is the nation's second largest producer of turkeys, raising an estimated 44 million birds 836 million pounds of meat in 1992.

Dahlgren was president of the state's turkey growers in 1988. "Overproduction is killing us," he said. This year's estimated 44 million birds is a drop from 46 million birds in 1991, with a corresponding drop in on-farm income from $300 million to $250 million. As a low-fat meat, turkey is in demand by health-conscious consumers. It's also used to lighten meats, such as Jimmy Dean's "light" breakfast sausage.

Margaret Dahlgren, 45, serves her family a son and a daughter in college and another son in high school a lot of turkey. And she helped compile the 300 recipes in "Turkey Year-Round Cookbook," published in 1 990. The book is among the promotion activities of the turkey growers' auxiliary group formerly called Gal-Gobblers a name she called "beyond cute." As president of the group in 1988, she led the movement to rename the group Minnesota Women for Turkey. shows, Bill Cosby's "You Bet Your Life" and the tabloid magazine "Hard Copy," bombed. They didn't even beat the cartoons on KMSP.

The time-slot winner was WCCO's "Oprah Winfrey Show" (13.8 rating35 share). KSTP took second with "Regis Kathie Lee" (7.8 rating20 share). Dan Rather's "CBS Evening News" continued to be the most-watched national newscast, finishing the month with a 16.8 rating30 share. ABC's "World News Tonight" was second (10.9 rating20 share); "NBC Nightly News" was third (9.8 rating18 share). Nightowl theater KARE's 10:30 p.m.

"Cheers" reruns continued their phenomenal dominance (1 6.6 rating35 share). "Inside Edition" on WCCO was second (12.0 rating25 share), and KSTP's "Married with Children" reruns came in third (7.6 rating 17 share). Jay Leno's "Tonight Show" (8.2 rating29 share) trounced the 11 p.m. competition, including "Ar-senio Hall" (2.6 rating9 share). "Late Night with David Letterman" cleaned up at midnight (4.8 rating30 share).

"Rush Limbaugh" on KSTP had a 1.6 rating12 share. slate-gray spots usually above the sacrum over the spine, but may occur over the back of the thighs, legs, back and shoulders. There may be just one spot or several. They are caused by a cluster of melanin cells that are normally in the deeper skin and provide pigment to the skin. They are seen in 80 percent of black, Oriental and East Indian infants.

They also occur in 10 percent of white infants. So they do not indicate a mixed-race birth. They have no medical significance and usually disappear in infancy or early childhood. They are not the same thing as moles or hemangioma-type birthmarks and require no treatment Occasionally, multiple spots or spots in unusual locations will persist Questions should be sent to Dr. Lawrence Lamb, P.O.

Box 5537, Riverton, 8077. A. confinement facilities. And, like three-fourths of all turkeys, they're processed: The turkeys are more likely to wind up as luncheon meat Dahlgren calls it "pegboard stuff" than to grace a holiday table. Dahlgren remembers the old days when they got the baby birds in February or March, fed them all summer and sold out in November.

But the past 10 years or so, the turkey processors have gained power, demanding a steady flow of ''3 it- -v i1 share. KARE almost tied for second at 6 p.m., posting a 12.0 rating20 share to KSTP's 1 2.2 rating20 share. KARE had its best 3 p.m. Nielsens in memory thanks to the syndicated "Geraldo," which had a 6.5 rating22 share. It edged out KSTP's "Good Company" and WCCO's tandem of "Jeopardy" and "Family Feud," which had 6.5 ratings21 shares.

Unfortunately for KARE in terms of building an audience for its early news, its 4 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. to be running 10 miles a day. But two major arteries to his heart were already completely blocked. It is remarkable that he was able to do that much running despite his rather advanced heart disease.

That proves that even being able to do a lot of exercise does not mean your coronary arteries are open. Yes, young individuals may have myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart, or cardiomyopathy, which is different from coronary artery disease and can be fatal. It is not the exercise, but the disease that kills. Dear Dr. Lamb: Would you please explain Mongolian birthmarks? They are supposed to be small dark marks above the tailbone of children of mixed race.

Do they look like moles? Why do they appear? How many generations later do they occur, one-fourth or one-eighth mixed race? Dr. Lfmb says: They are blue or By Noel HolstonStaff Writer The November ratings sweeps came to a close the night before Thanksgiving with WCCO, Channel 4, eking out the narrowest of victories over KARE, Channel 11, in the highly competitive Monday-through-Friday 1 0 p.m. newscast competition. WCCO averaged a 19.2 rating and a 31 percent audience share; KARE also had a 31 percent share, though its rating was a slightly lower 18.9. On a seven-day basis, with the Saturday and Sunday newscasts factored in, KARE had a slight edge, with a 19.3 rating32 share to WCCO's 19.1 rating31 share.

(One rating point is 1 percent of all the TV households in the TV market; a share point is the percentage of just those households in which the set is in use at a given hour.) KSTP, Channel 5, was third in both the Monday-Friday and Monday-Sunday measurements, averaging 24 percent of the 10 p.m. audience. "Night Court" reruns on KMSP came in fourth at 10 p.m., with a 2.9 rating and 5 percent share. "Studs" on KITN, Channel 29, was in fifth place, with a 2.2 rating and 4 percent share. Geraldo Rivera's talk show, "Geraldo," helped KARE-TV beat the competition at the 3 p.m.

spot Dridgs Alfred Sheinwold South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4)763 T8542 AK9 QJ10 It isn't the exercise, it's heart disease that kills WEST EAST Q102 4J9 VKQJ6 VA1093 7543 J862 4A8 765 SOUTH AK854 Q10 K9432 South West North East 14 Pass 1V Pass 10 Pass 1 NT Pass 2 Pass 3 4 Pass 44 All pass On KMSP, Channel 9, "Prime Time News," which competes against 9 p.m. entertainment shows, averaged a 5.6 rating8 percent. Afternoon tidbits As usual, WCCO's 5 p.m. news was the ratings leader, with a 16.4 rating32 share. KSTP's 10.1 rating20 share was good for second place.

KARE was third with an 8.5 rating17 share. WCCO's news also won the 6 p.m. time period with a 17.2 rating29 AskDr.Lsmb while exercising unless he or she already had underlying heart disease. There are a few cases of angina pain or even heart attacks in young men who have exercised all their lives and maintained a good preventive program. Although there are individual exceptions, as a group, a good level of physical fitness through a sensible exercise program will significantly decrease the risk of a heart attack.

And when done properly, it can decrease the risk of a second heart attack if you have already had one. Before he became a runner, Jim Fixx was a significantly overweight, heavy smoker who never exercised. He had already developed serious heart disease. His father had a heart attack at age 35 and died at age 43. Fixx lost 60 pounds, stopped smoking and was reported Vs" Dear Dr.

Lamb: I am hopelessly confused about exercise and heart attacks. I am old enough to remember that doctors used to tell patients who had heart disease not to exercise. Then the fitness craze began and everyone started running. I know some people have dropped dead from running. Why should people exercise if it increases their i risj of dropping dead? I remember that Jim Fixx, who wrote "The 1 Complete Book of Running," and was a running enthusiast, dropped dead while running.

I also know that some outstanding athletes, such as basketball players, have i had heart attacks while playing and died. Yet, doctors tell some pa- tients to exercise after they have had a heart attack and tell others nol to. What is the truth? Dr." Lamb says: The truth is that doctors treat individuals, not statistics, or at least they should. There are almost no cases on record of -anyos dying from a heaft attack Opening lead TK The average player draws all of the missing trumps as soon as he can, a custom that leaves much to be desired. Your best plan in many hands is to draw just two rounds of trumps.

Drawing the last missing trump may let the defenders run you out of trumps, as we see in an example from a bridge classic, "How to Play a Bridge Hand," by William S. Root South ruffs the second heart and sees that hajfil go down unless the.

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