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Show Page 22-T- HERALD, Provo, Utah. Monday, November 19, 1979 HE CAPTAIN EASY 5 WHERE PAPPYS RiIBH FUNNY BUSINESS 1416 LITTLE BABY IS OCR LATEST ECQMOMy MODEL, ... APRRRtATHLV NAMED "PE CAMEL. J 'v'--Wv ANW VEKY l NOW-Y- FTUTU 7 OH EA&Y1 WHY AM 5UPPEWLY 50 OU ANP YOUR PAPA WILL BE REUNITE? WZ EACH OTHAlREl I Yt I jOTIRISHTENP Ws Occur In Pairs : I OUT'. OH THE HZENfM Sunspots by Roger Bollen V;v HJP1WS By Crooks & Lawrence I By A, LEOKUM Dark, roundish spots often can be seen on the sun's surface. Sometimes they are large enough to be seen without a telescope. The spots may be from 500 to 50,000 miles wide. These spots are called sunspots. A sunspot seems to have a very dark center with a less dark border around it. But sunspots are not really dark. They look dark only because of the brighter surface of the sun surrounding them. If you could view a sunspot by itself, it would look extremely bright. Astronomers think sunspots are holes in the sun's surface gases. Hot gases from inside the sun break through the surface and spiral out. The gases whirl around in a widening circle. As they whirl and spread out, they grow cooler. The cooler gases shine less brightly than the rest of the surface of the sun. That is why sunspots look dark. The gases in sunspots are electrified. Sunspots also are mapetic. When occur in pairs, the two spots have an opposite magnetism. Astronomers are not sure why sunspots are electrified and magnetic. According to one theory, explosions inside the sun causes pulses of electrified gas to rise to the surface. When the gas breaks through the surface of the sun, a sun-spis formed. The number of sunspots seen on the sun is different from year to year. The number of spots increases for a few years. Then it decreases for a few years. About every 11 years a large number of spots can be seen. This pattern is called the cycle of ' WINTHROP aLlONL)5EA By Frank Hill IN OUR LAST ERSOCe CAPTAIN PLUS HAS BEEN I BOUNCE BACK ' EASILY PROM CKUaHEL? PLAT RV EVIL PROFESSORS CRUSHING ITWB EXPERIENCES., FU-ON-- r Rrr toucan ORYOJCANI PAPER IV PUTGAR&AGtE INTO... RUT ITOVBfcM HEAP... CAKE AND BAT IT, TOO Lq f emu FRANK AND ERNEST By Bob Thaves op? sun-spo- ts SHORT RI3S By Dick Covalli MVJT "kVE me aen First VtSiTORS gg NGfT HERfc ot trv my sonic super A STAINLESS STEEL. DBUMSTICK IS HARO ar nc disest, honorable - OH, BOY A CAKE v Y YES, IT'S 1 1 ) MY BABY NOW I'LL GET A MATCH AND J SISTER'S ' LIGHT THE CANDLE , FIRST Inc ,T u fag US fiu"-- d llf-'ki- ! OH By Alfred Andriola MSMSM questions answered. Illustrated. Pat brisk 6he,W1 bust- - neeseelhw drugs to anyone it tT1f $rJ jkW whitey will be death if r Jjfl CHILLED r ! FUN TIME The Chuckle Box Pupil: I can't find where I left off in this book. Teacher: Look for the clean pages. Ernie BushmiCler By 0 it t N6. KERRY DRAKE sun-spot- s. Send your questions, name, age, address to "TELL ME WHY" In care of this newspaper. Include zip code. In case of duplicate questions the author will decide the winner. Today's winner Is: Mary Paradise, 13, Sutton, Mass.) EACY wPrv :flL mi vi; aa (Win four "Tell Me Why" books, 1,300 l Ai Will: What three words do pupils use most often? Sue: I don't know. Will: That's right! (BIRTHDAY j PRICILLA'S POP I HEARP MR. IS GIVING rWOW A BIR7 FOR THANKSGIVING .'' hit- - , ' HOW MANY I By Al Vermeer JUST WONPERING WHATS BECOME OF THE PIGEONS.' IT y jSCjKTJl WAS c av .fm 0n mwsrj RPUE nvl i How many girls names can you make from these letters? Use them in any order, but only once in each name. See tomorrow's paper for the answer. (Win KSS K3Y Dy , fis!:ni:l & ,SL Me Why" book. Hundreds of questions answered. Illustrated. Send your riddles, jokes to "RIDDLES, JOKES, TELL ME WHY," Include i!p code.) ' c tm ui a "Tell Stoftei By Gordon Bess This Day In History ANP NOW LADIES, AND GENTLEMEN By United Press International Today is. Monday, Nov. 19, the 323rd day of 1979 with 42 to follow. The moon is new. The morning stars are Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury and Venus. Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. ' James Abram Garfield, 20th president of the United States was born Nov. 19,1752. On this date in history: In 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address on the Civf -- War . battlefield in THE MAGNIFICENT AIW$5 &1DS HIS PeSFCRMMCE BUGS WfTMIHEOLPRASai WC3TIT MARY rpM SJJSJSffir VtAI' ' 1 fa1 S.-SS- : By Scunders & Ernst 1 f ! WE AWAReYx ARE FAME IN ONAL i V v? BASKETt3ALLf J - if NEVER 1 f- - AND WILL BREAK MY HEART TO 6EE KARL SITTING OUT THE . 6EA50N ON THE BENCH MISS A TORO HOME ' Penn-sylvani- . r ALLEY In 1874, the National Women's Christian Temperance Union was organized in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat began a historic visit to li Jerusalem, a mission of peace which won him international praise as 1977 "Man of the Year." In 1978, the Guyana government reported finding 300 to 400 bodies, the result of mass suicide, in the Jonestown commune of the Peoples AO f.nEr:::.! AD STEVE ROPER Arab-Israe- 00? By Dove Grcue iilLW i THISAFFM J ABOUT ANY OF IT, f p' . mpmcHBlmpmHKsXjAiovTOFWITH AIL jjffflg Temple. f 1. The fastest running animal is ... rm J V BY SApFRV' IT SURE WAS THOUGHT-- ) FUL OF THRSC BOYS T BRING SOME PASTRIES in; r. . r- I ... I WONDER HOW THEY POUND OUT WE WERE go HUNGRY r "Between their loved homes and the war's desolation" is a line from what famous song? (a) "Battle Hymn of the Republic" (b) "The Star Spangled Banner" (c) "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" person to have held the rank of general of the armies was (a) Dwight D. Eisenhower (b) John J. Pershing (c) Douglas MacArthur 3. The only ANSWERS q z udm oi 'qeiaaip om - BAMAJtsl t man i? goih' over! sou rmgthe Lomiy XjjiJ ti:i dc::j loser ITStXJWAJJT i eeii hss ia&9 mmyM. 9(A:-2. By Sounders & Overgard By Art Scnsom V. LOOKUP. 630UP5TAIR4 V O |