JULY 2002 WORLD NEWS

July 28, 2002

F-16s Pursue Unknown Craft Over Region


Jets Scrambled Over Washington In UFO Chase

July 24, 2002

Space rock 'on collision course'

July 21, 2002

GIANT HAILSTONES KILL 15 IN CENTRAL CHINA

July 20, 2002

Drought, abnormally dry weather hits 49 states

OFFICIALS ALARMED BY WEST NILE VIRUS


July 18, 2002

Poll: 53% of Israelis want third temple  

 

   Grasshopper Infestation Plagues West

        Story from AP / AMY LORENTZEN, Associated Press Writer

        Wednesday, 17-Jul-2002 8:40PM

 

VERDIGRE, Neb. (AP) -- Their numbers swelled by the drought, grasshoppers and Mormon crickets are ravaging crops and pastures across the West in what could be the biggest such infestation since World War II.

"They're even eating the paint off some of the houses," said Nebraska farmer Robert Larsen, who raises alfalfa, corn, soybeans and cattle on 1,600 acres where thousands upon thousands grasshoppers jump out of the way as he walks by in what looks like the parting of the sea.

The infestation threatens the livelihood of farmers and ranchers already suffering because of the dry spell.

Agriculture officials are reluctant to put a dollar figure on the damage so far this year. But last year, grasshoppers and Mormon crickets -- a black, wingless cousin of the grasshopper -- caused $25 million in crop damage in Utah alone.

A mild winter and hot, dry weather since the spring have sped up the maturation of some grasshopper species and allowed more of the insects and their eggs to survive the cold. The drought has also cut into the population of birds and rodents that prey on grasshoppers, and reduced the fungal diseases that normally keep the insects' numbers down.

The result: Larsen and other farmers in parts of Nebraska have counted 50 to 100 grasshoppers per square yard in their fields, compared with three or four during a typical year. Even worse, near Steamboat Springs, Colo., about 200 grasshoppers per square yard invaded rangeland in June, reaching about 1 million grasshoppers per acre.

"We probably have farmers that have never experienced it before. The ones that have are probably in their 60s or 70s," said Michael Cooper, chairman of the National Grasshopper Management Board and acting administrator for the Idaho Department of Agriculture.

Nebraska, New Mexico, Idaho, Oregon and South Dakota are among the states hit hardest. But outbreaks have been reported in parts of most states west of the Mississippi River.

A grasshopper can devour more than half its body weight in vegetation per day, which can leave crops looking like Swiss cheese and rob pastures of feed for cattle.

"You walk across the edge of some fields and it looks like it is moving," said Ron Seymour, a University of Nebraska extension educator based in Hastings.

Farmers are left with two options: They can hold out for a change in the weather -- rain would encourage the spread of predators and diseases that can kill off grasshoppers -- or they can spray pesticides. But spraying can be costly.

Hiring an aerial sprayer can cost $6 to more than $11 per acre depending on the type of land and the chemicals used, said Dahl Jungren, owner of Flying J Aviation in Broken Bow. Cropland is more expensive than rangeland.

A total of $3.6 million is available to farmers this year through the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service for surveys and technical assistance in dealing with the grasshopper infestation. But that does not pay for spraying or the damage done by the pests.

Some ranchers will have to decide whether to try to save their grass or give up and buy hay to feed their cattle.

And the problem could get a lot worse. Many of the grasshoppers are still young and will become more voracious after they have become winged adults this month.

Also, grasshopper infestations can contribute to high numbers of other pests such as blister beetles, which feed on grasshopper eggs. The beetles, also known as potato bugs, blister the throats and stomachs of animals that eat them while feeding on alfalfa.

Dawson and Custer counties in the center of Nebraska are seeing some of the worst grasshopper infestations. About 40,000 acres -- 62.5 square miles -- were sprayed in May alone in Custer County.

"This is probably the most widespread infestation I've seen," Jungren said, "and I've been in the business for 30 years."
 

July 9, 2002

APPLIED DIGITAL DEVICE LINKS PASSENGER, LUGGAGE

July 4, 2002

Divine mystery of leaking water at Wailing Wall

Click for Source Article
Sages across the Holy Land were yesterday trying to fathom the significance of a mysterious damp patch that has appeared on Jerusalem's Wailing Wall.
Worshippers noticed water trickling from between the huge blocks of stone on Saturday. But before technicians could diagnose the problem, the area's host of mystics and holy men were already at work trying to divine the water's inner message. Was the Wailing Wall now weeping? And if so, what did it mean?
Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovitch, who presides over the wall, told the Jerusalem Post that the dripping was "highly unusual" and suggested that "maybe the wall is indeed crying because of the current situation in the country".
Rabbi Menachem Fromann went further.

"There is a prophecy that everybody knows, that states that when water comes through the stones of the wall it presages the advent of the Messiah," he said.
"Perhaps God is opening up a path for peace and people will feel this and move towards it."
The towering slabs of stone known to Jews as the Western Wall are revered as the last remains of the temple built by Herod the Great in 20BC and destroyed by the Romans in AD70.
A visit by Ariel Sharon in September 2000 to the enclosure above the wall - known as the Temple Mount to Jews and to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary - marked the start of the current round of Israeli-Palestinian violence.
Despite speculation as to the leak's deeper meaning, the truth seems more prosaic. "Instead of looking for a spiritual explanation it would be better to ask the Israeli water authority," said Rabbi Levi Lau, of the Hartman Institute in Jerusalem.        

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