Vvyp What Comey s testimony means
Brian Farrell insect class examines some of the bugs they brought home. Farrell left works with student Chris Lamie ;04 to determine a particular insect affiliation. Staff photo by Rose Lincoln Brian D. Farrell is a man with many props. He bounds around his sunny corner office at the Museum of Comparative Zoology showing off his finds: a pile of 60-year-old lantern slides of Cuba, an ancient projector, the dog-eared 1938 field journal of P.J. Darlington Jr., a
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well-known zoogeographer and one of Farrell s predecessors at the museum.But Farrell s most beloved props are the dozens of boxes of mounted beetles that litter his tables. The insects range in size from the 4-inch-long palm beetle to the minuscule maiz
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e weevil, and come from a
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ll corners of the Earth 鈥?Africa, the Himalayas, Massachusetts, the Caribbean: They have muscular horns or wispy antennae; they are long and thin, short and round, oval and nearly octagonal; and, most spectacularly, they are striped Yswt University expands wages, benefits
Rural populations in the Comoros rely on rainwater collected from roofs and stored in water tanks, whic
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h are often unprotected. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs OCHA , following last week s eruption of Mount Karthala, at least 720 water tanks in 36 villages have been polluted with volcanic debris, affecting about 39,000 people on Grande Comore, the main island in t
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he Comoros chain.After a preliminary chemical analysis revealed that the water stored in these tanks was turbid and had high chemical concentrations, populations in Dimani, Domba and Oichili have been recommended not to drink the water.Late last week, the authorities launched an emergency plan to supply clean water to the affected populations with the support of humanitarian partners. As part of this plan, subterranean water is collected in Moroni and transported by truck to the af
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fected villages. A total of 12 trucks are involved in the operation, of which two have been made available