Zztv Health Care Fight Produces Top 2009 Quotes
Lisa Wofford had just moved out of her apartment and was planning to move her family into a house when a winter storm knocked a power pole onto the new digs, preventing her from closing on it.By Friday, the newly homeless Wofford was on her fifth day at an American Red Cross shelter, and an approaching snowstorm cast even more uncertainty on her future. I m praying for no snow. I don t want to be here any longer, Wofford said before starting in on her lunch of pasta and green beans. I ve slept, like, seven hours since Monday. I m running on faith. The second wintry blast could complicate efforts to restore power to the m
stanley quencher ore than 280,000 homes and businesses in Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri still blacked out after the first storm put a million customers in the dark at its height this week.That storm, which coated much o
stanley cup f the Plains in ice before moving dumping snow on the Northeast, has killed at least 38 people, mostly in traffic accidents. It has been blamed for 23 deaths in Oklahoma alone. The next storm was predicted to bring 2 to 6 inches of snow to parts of Kansas and Oklahoma, said Ken Harding, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service.The service iss
stanley cups ued winter weather watches for the northwest two-thirds of Oklahoma from Friday afternoon through Saturday morning. By late Friday afternoon, snow was already falling on the outskirts of Oklahoma City.An Xcel Energy serviceman working to restore power in an Oklahoma City neighborhood peppered by toppled tre Yirz Air Marshals in Trouble Overseas, Too
Journalist Julia Whit
stanley tumbler ty had an incredible story in the May/June 2012 issue of Mother Jones, and we ;ve just rediscovered it. It tells the tale of Enriqueta Velarde, a woman who has worked tirelessly, and often alone, to save not just one, but two species of Mexico seabirds: the Heermann gull and the elegant tern. The st
stanley botella ory is compelling, and the writing is absolutely beautiful: Can One Incredibly Stubborn Person Save a Species In 1979 another in a grow
stanley cup becher ing line of alien species hitched a ride on a fishing skiff from a remote village on Mexico Baja California peninsula to land on Rasa Island, a tiny sun-blasted wafer of rock in the Gulf of California. The invader was Enriqueta Velarde, a petite 25-year-old Mexican graduate biology student who looked 18, with a comely smile and an adventuring heart. It was the launch of her Ph.D. research into one of the island resident species, the Heermann gull, a petite, pretty bird about which almost nothing was known. In fact, little was known of the island beyond its desolate oddities: thousands of mysterious stone cairns and pathways thought to have been made by guano miners in the 19th century, three wooden crosses marking unremembered graves, a stone hut crumbling with the region frequent temblors. Velarde arrived at the beginning of the three-month cacophony known as the breeding season, when Rasa 148 desert acres become a fecund madhouse of hundreds of th