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POPSWW II "Name Trees" Inscribed By U.S. Soldiers Felled Local people are calling for the few “name trees” that still stand to be classified as historic monuments and saved from the same fate. “It should have been done a long time ago,” said Nicolas Navarro, the curator of a Second World War museum in the grounds of his family’s 13th-century Château du Taillis near by. “It’s sad and pathetic that it wasn’t.” The trees surrounded land in the heart of Saint Pierre de Varengeville-Duclair forest, near Rouen in Normandy, which was once home to a US army camp named after the Twenty Grand brand of cigarettes. “Basically, they spent their time carving their names into the trees with knives and bayonets,” Mr Navarro said. Mr Navarro said that more than 150 trees were felled last year, a destruction that went unnoticed beyond the district for months. He is determined now to preserve the ones that remain.
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POPSWhy do leaves change colors Scientists hope studying anthocyanins will clue them into the degree to which some trees are stressed, which could provide a better picture of environmental problems early on. Like Dr. Seuss's character the Lorax, which spoke for the trees, leaf color could one day tell us what trees are feeling. This is so amazing, but not unexpected. All living things have a way to express themselves; one has only to seek it.