If you ban candy tossing at parades, what next?
For many youngsters, the mad scramble for candy tossed from parade floats is as much of a holiday tradition as family cookouts and fireworks displays.

“The kids see the candy as a treasure and they'll run straight into the street for it,” said Fort Mitchell, Ohio, Police Chief Steve Hensley. “It's like they have tunnel vision when they enter the street. They don't pay any attention to the massive floats coming down Dixie Highway.”

In Fort Mitchell, which boasts one of the Tristate's largest Independence Day parades, a city council member recently suggested the city ban candy tossing, in favor of passing it out behind the curb.

In New Orleans, where thousands of Mardi Gras revelers scramble for beads thrown from floats, the city protects parade spectators through enhanced security, barricades, and public service announcements that remind spectators that it's illegal to run in front of, or behind floats to scoop up beads.

People, take a stand! They'll start with candy, but can a fruit toss ban be far behind! Stop the madness!


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The Silver Surfer (Norrin Radd) is a fictional character, a Marvel Comics superhero created by Jack Kirby. The character first appears in the comic book Fantastic Four #48 (March 1966), the first of a three-issue arc fans and historians call "The Galactus Trilogy".
Originally a young astronomer of the planet Zenn-La, in order to save his home-world from destruction by a fearsome cosmic entity known as Galactus, Norrin Radd made a bargain with the being, pledging himself to serve as his herald. Imbued in return with a tiny portion of Galactus' Power Cosmic, Radd acquired great powers and a silvery appearance. Galactus also created for Radd a surfboard-like craft — modeled after a childhood fantasy of his — on which he would travel at speeds beyond that of light. Known from then on as the Silver Surfer, Radd began to roam the cosmos searching for new planets for Galactus to consume. When his travels finally took him to Earth, the Surfer came face-to-face with the Fantastic Four, a team of powerful superheroes that helped him to rediscover his nobility of spirit. Betraying Galactus, the Surfer saved Earth but was punished in return with everlasting exile there.
Stan Lee enjoyed the character and decided to feature him in his own individual title in 1968. John Buscema was penciller for the first 17 issues of the series, with Kirby returning for the eighteenth and final issue. The first seven issues, which included anthological "Tales of the Watcher" backup stories, were 72-page (with advertising), 25-cent "giants", as opposed to typical 36-page, 12-cent comics of the time. Thematically, the stories dealt with the Surfer's exile on Earth and the inhumanity of man as observed by this noble yet fallen hero. The Silver Surfer comic book series became known as one of Lee's most thoughtful and introspective works. Englehart writes that Buscema and Lee were "pouring their souls into the series".
Waldo County, situated in mid-coast Maine along scenic Penobscot Bay, has genuine New England character evidenced by working port towns and quaint rural villages. Visitors are awed by the area's unspoiled beauty. From striking coastal views to sweeping mountain vistas, dramatic natural settings abound. In addition great care has been taken to preserve and refurbish numerous historic landmarks, homes and buildings. Consequently, the Maine of yesteryear is still found here.
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