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High winds and low humidity are creating a danger for the upcoming fire season, the state forester said Thursday, especially for southeast Arizona.
NEW YORK — Bodies tensed and noses twitching, the dogs sniff the hunting ground before them: a lower Manhattan alley, grimy, dim and perfect for rats. With a terse command — "Now!" — the chase is on.
State Forester Scott Hunt discusses preparations Thursday for the upcoming fire seasons. Hunt, appearing with Gov. Jan Brewer, said he expects high winds, though not as bad as in 2011 when the Wallow Fire burned 538,000 acres in eastern Arizona.
The prom is making a big comeback.
A number of rats are displayed in a lower Manhattan alley, caught and killed by small hunting dogs as a group of dog owners gather to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A rat lay dead in a lower Manhattan alley, caught and killed by a small hunting dog as a group of dog owners gather to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A rat is caught by a dog in a lower Manhattan alley as a group of dog owners gather with their small hunting breeds to hunt the rodents in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A dog named Paco, owned by Bill Reyna of Wayne, N.J., center, and a Wire Haired Dachshund named Vina, owned by Trudy Kawami of New York, corner a rat as they and other dig owners gather to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
Susan Friedenberg of New York takes a rat from Tanner, her Border Terrier, that caught the rodent as a group of dog owners gathered in lower Manhattan to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
Richard Reynolds, center, and other dog owners explain their activity to a passerby who was walking through a alley where the dog owners gathered to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. Reynolds and others gather occasionally to hunt and kill rats usually found in garbage piles on side streets and alleys. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A rat is circled and killed by dogs of various hunting breeds that a group of dog owners brings together in a lower Manhattan alley to occasionally hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A group of dog owners stand in one of the lower Manhattan alleys where they gather to let their various breeds hunt rats in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A rat is caught by a dog in a lower Manhattan alley as a group of dog owners gather with their small hunting breeds to hunt the rodents in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. The rodent-hunters have been scouring downtown byways for more than a decade, meeting weekly when weather allows. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A dog named Paco, owned by Bill Reyna of Wayne, N.J., looks over a dead rat in a lower Manhattan alley in New York Friday, April 26, 2013, where a group of dog owners gather occasionally to let their various breeds hunt rats (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A group of dog owners gather in a lower Manhattan park before a hunt for rats that takes their various breeds into alleys in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
A Wire Haired Dachshund named Vina, owned by Trudy Kawami of New York, carries a rat after catching it in a lower Manhattan alley in New York Friday, April 26, 2013. The capture is part of a rat hunt a group of dog owners take part in occasionally. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)
"Mud" has the feel of a classic, although it's perhaps not enthralling enough to be one. The third and most elaborate feature to date from writer-director Jeff Nichols seems to have been adapted from a novel that doesn't exist -- something by James Lee Burke, perhaps, or Cormac McCarthy, or some other specialist in frequently violent tales about the challenges to masculinity and the forging of new identities that face rural people who belong to a sprawling modern world -- who might be hanging out in a supermarket parking lot one moment and falling into a creek full of deadly cottonmouths the next.
This letter is in response to Kimberly Miller’s letter published April 12.
He has given standout performances in the likes of “The Big Lebowski,” “Crazy Heart” and “True Grit,” but Oscar-winner Jeff Bridges’ enormous talent doesn’t stop there. His illustrious resume runs the gamut from musician to author to humanitarian, which begs the question: Is there anything he can’t do?
What are the ethical standards of hunting? For hunters to be so actively ignorant is understandable; they have been able to bamboozle the public for generations. Morons, bullies, and brutes are trapping and baiting millions of innocent animals for sports, trophies, heritage. None of their lamebrain excuses should ever be taken seriously by anyone.
“With a labor participation rate of 63.3 percent, have the Democrats turned America into a third world country or a leftist utopia? Pardon the redundancy.”
I’ve heard quite a bit lately about how “our grandpa and grandma’s guns don’t cut it anymore.”
Everytime a baby with Down syndrome is born in Arizona, Virginia “Gina” Johnson knows about it.
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson
Guest Commentary by Shawn Thiele
By Mark Heller, Tribune
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