Community Corner
Watch Summit Rise From Pile of LEGOs
Guests are invited to the Summit Historical Society fundraiser at 2p.m. today at the Washington School. Check out 5 things you may not know about LEGOS.

It’s an object from childhood whose ubiquity is probably only trumped by the Teddy bear or rubber ducky: the LEGO block. In the half-century since its invention, LEGO has had a resurgence in popular culture. Its benefits to childhood education has been studied and there’s even a dedicated to learning engineering through LEGOS.
In Summit, LEGOS are also a form of . Literally.
Get over to the today (Sunday) from 2 to 4pm to watch families build the Hill City using LEGOs. The event, is sponsored by and benefits the .
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You may think you know all there is about LEGOS. Here are 5 things more things:
- LEGO copyrighted its 1 ½ -inch-tall, trapezoid-shaped action figure in 1978. The Denmark-based company is suing a Japanese toy firm in a Connecticut court to protect that copyright.
- LEGO turned 54 this weekend. Take a look at a visual timeline created in 2008 for its 50th.
- In 1953, the company changed its name from Automatic Binding Bricks to LEGO (via). LEGO is derived from the Danish words "leg" and "godt". Put together, the words translate to "play well".
- Summit's LEGO-building workshop is led by a Livingston-based firm called Building Block's Workshops. The idea is to build an "architecturally sound" version of LEGO Summit.
- Ambassador lifetime pass to LEGOLAND Florida costs $2,500 (plus tax).
Find out what's happening in Summitfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
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