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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (20413)6/13/2003 4:15:22 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Horseman.....#3
Sorry IF this Bugs ya Jimminy....

Mormon Crickets Invading Western States
Fri Jun 13,11:43 AM ET Add U.S. National - !


By SANDRA CHEREB, Associated Press Writer

PALOMINO VALLEY, Nev. - Swarms of Mormon crickets are marching across the West, destroying rangeland and crops, slickening highways with their carcasses and leaving disgusted residents in their wake.




"It's yucky," said Amy Nisbet of Elko in northeast Nevada, where this year crickets made their first appearance in recent memory. "You drive down the street and they pop like bubble wrap."

Mild winters and three years of drought have provided ideal conditions for the insects, which hatch in the spring and feed through the summer. Experts say this year's infestation in Nevada, Utah and Idaho could be the worst in decades.

Five million acres are infested in Nevada with the 2 1/2-inch long creeping insects, said Jeff Knight, entomologist with the Nevada Department of Agriculture.

"I've seen them eat weeds in a field but leave the alfalfa," Knight said. "Other times, they'll just strip the crop bare."

Their voracious appetites take in anything — sagebrush, alfalfa, wheat, barley, clover, seeds, grasses, vegetables. At a density of just one cricket per square yard, they can consume 38 pounds of forage per acre as they pass through an area. They don't fly, but can hop and crawl a mile in a day and up to 50 miles in a season. And before they die in the fall, they lay the eggs that will become next year's swarm.

The Mormon cricket actually is a katydid, similar to a grasshopper. It got its name in 1848 when swarms invaded the fields of Mormon settlers in Utah. According to lore, the settlers prayed for divine assistance that arrived in the form of gulls, which ate the insects and saved the crops.

Though Knight couldn't provide an economic damage estimate, he said this year's infestation is twice as widespread as last year. The bugs are showing up in places they haven't been seen before, such as Elko's city limits and Palomino Valley north of Reno.

Last week, Elko County commissioners declared a state of emergency because of the worsening two-week infestation. Officials in southwestern Idaho say the infestation there is the worst since World War II.

"They've been building up there on the Boise front for several years, but last year was the first year everything seems to have coalesced and really erupted," said Mike Cooper of the Idaho Department of Agriculture.

"They're cyclic and they build up over a number of years, kind of peak, and then usually some kind of natural disease comes in and starts taking them down," Cooper said.

In Utah, agriculture officials estimate 6 million acres — more than double last year's plague — will be infested before the crickets die off.

Dick Wilson of the Utah Department of Agriculture said the dismal predictions were "all true. (My staff) are all out in the field, working seven days a week" fighting the bugs.

Earlier this spring, Nevada treated about 66,000 acres with an insecticide that kills the insects before they mature. But as the treatment cuts down their numbers in one area, they pop up somewhere else.

The chief weapon is carbaryl, an insecticide commonly known as Sevin. It is mixed with bran and spread before the crickets as they advance. Crickets lured to the bait quickly die. The poisoned carcasses are consumed by cannibalistic fellow crickets, which also die.

State officials said their priority is to protect public lands, crops — and motorists. In Idaho the state has posted warning signs on State Route 55. Crickets smashed by cars create a mush slicker than ice.

"We're doing our best to keep them off the highway," said Martin Larraneta, a state entomologist coordinating cricket controls in Elko. "It can be like a grease slick."



So far there are no reports of accidents caused by the crickets.

While serious, this year's outbreak isn't the most severe in Nevada history, experts said.

A 1939 state publication noted an infestation in Eureka County in 1882, when trains were unable to travel the main line of the Central Pacific Railroad "due to the rails being so thoroughly greased with crushed crickets," state archivist Guy Rocha said.

In the 1930s, a band of crickets 12 miles long and at times several feet deep was reported in Elko County, Rocha said.

The crickets have existed for millions of years and were once a food source for American Indians. But the swarms covering fields and roads and houses horrify modern residents.

"When it comes to something that's six-legged, people have a big problem with that," Knight said.

___



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (20413)6/13/2003 4:18:52 PM
From: TigerPaw  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
When a war involves no real threat it becomes purely political.

depressed urban professionals.
money.cnn.com

The downwardly mobile do not work enthusiasticly at their underperforming jobs, but they do tend to crowd out those who would accept the job as an advancement from an even more humble starting point. This is the same psychology that gripped the rust belt in the 1970s and contributed to the malaise of the times.

<font color=purple>One of the most difficult adjustments? Learning to lose an intellectually challenging job for one that is, well, less than rigorous on the brain cells.

"I used to work with people who programmed artificial intelligence who are brilliant and fun and interesting. Then, all of a sudden, I'm working with someone who talks about the way someone's butt looks in a pair of pants," says Miranda.
</font>
TP



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (20413)6/13/2003 4:20:43 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
The Rumster needs a mouthpiece.........

Iraqi shepherd sues Rumsfeld, Franks over loss of relatives and flock
Fri Jun 13,12:38 PM ET !


RAMADI, Iraq, June 13 (AFP) - An Iraqi shepherd is seeking 200 million dollars in damages from the US military for the deaths of 17 members of his family as well as 200 sheep in a missile strike, in the first such suit filed through the courts of the US-led occupation administration.









The first hearing will take place on July 20 at the tribunal of Ramadi, 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of Baghdad.

"The trial will be Iraq (news - web sites)'s first against US troops because we believe they used excessive force against the Iraqi people who cooperated with the United States to topple Saddam Hussein (news - web sites)'s regime," Abud Sarhan's lawyer told AFP.

Lawyer Rabah al-Alwani was approached by Sarhan, 71, to file a suit against US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and General Tommy Franks, commander of US forces in Iraq, after the shepherd claimed a US missile landed on his tent on April 4.

Days before, Sarhan had left his home village of Al-Altash, near an Iraqi military base that was heavily bombed by coalition warplanes.

He had set up a tent in the nearby desert to host 20 of his family members and relatives in three distinct sections, one for women, one for men and the other for children, said his half-brother Hamad Sarhan, 25, who was wounded in the attack.

"We thought we would be safe there. There were no military positions, only shepherds and their flocks.

"Before the night prayer, a missile landed next to us, shortly afterwards another one fell right into the women's section.

"It was horrible. We could not make out whose limbs were scattered on the ground," he said.

All his family members died, except for him and his half-brother as the two had stepped outside the tent to perform their ablutions in preparation for the evening prayer.

He said 200 of their 700 sheep also died in what he said was a coalition raid.

Missile debris, children's clothes and sheep carcasses were still littering the ground two months later, an AFP correspondent at the scene reported.

The shepherd could not be interrogated as he had taken his 300 cows to graze up north, in the lush fields of Makhmur.

"We went to Ramadi's tribunal to file a suit and it was deemed receivable because we produced all the requested documents," said Alwani.

The tribunal then informed the coalition through Iraq's justice ministry where one of the coalition advisers is providing technical assistance, he added.

His colleague Aref al-Dulaimi said the shepherd could reasonably argue for 200 million dollars in compensation.

"We hope the two US leaders will appear in front of the tribunal or that they will be represented," he also said.



He said Ramadi's tribunal had sent a letter to the Iraqi justice ministry which must now contact the foreign affairs ministry. The latter will send a letter to Iraq's embassy in Qatar to inform the US military's Central Command there of the trial date in Ramadi.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (20413)6/13/2003 5:39:33 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 89467
 
Newmont to Record Write-Down of Non-Core Investment in Australian Magnesium Corporation
6/13/2003 4:01:00 PM
DENVER, Jun 13, 2003 /PRNewswire-FirstCall via COMTEX/ -- Australian Magnesium Corporation (AMC) (ASX: ANM) today announced that it had reached agreement with the major stakeholders in the Stanwell Magnesium Project to restructure the activities of AMC.

As a result, while Newmont Mining Corporation (NYSE: NEM; ASX; Toronto: NMC) will retain its 27.8% ownership interest in AMC, the Company will record a non-cash write-down in the second quarter in relation to its investment in AMC. At the end of the first quarter, the book value of the Company's investment in AMC was $95.8 million.

In addition, Newmont was required to assume certain guarantees and commitments at the time it acquired Normandy Mining Limited in February 2002. As a result of AMC's restructuring, the existing A$75 million contingent facility provided by Newmont will be cancelled, in return for a new A$10 million (approximately $6.5 million) contingent credit facility to be provided by Newmont. Newmont will also be reviewing the need to take additional charges in connection with a guarantee relating to a magnesium sale agreement and a guarantee pertaining to an AMC subsidiary.

Commenting on the AMC situation, President Pierre Lassonde noted: "We are pleased that we were able to assist with the restructuring of AMC. While we met our inherited obligation to financially support AMC earlier this year, we had to make a key strategic decision when the Stanwell Project cost overrun was announced. We decided that a further investment in the magnesium business was not in the best interests of Newmont's shareholders."

Newmont, based in Denver, is the world's premier gold mining company and the largest gold producer with significant assets on five continents.

SOURCE Newmont Mining Corporation