The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 112, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 2010 Page: 7 of 20
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I. with Glass I
DAR honors SFA student
fruit crops
drought,'
Drought taking
toll on E. Texas
thirsty dirt on his fruit
orchard.
Like many agricultural
sites I"
Texas. RozeH’s land just
Kami Hancock, a fourth grade student in .
Michelle James’ class at Stephen F. Austin
Elementary, won a recent essay contest
presented by the Daughters of the
Republic of Texas. Her essay, entitled,
“Texas State Cemetery - It’s Beginning",
won first place at both the district and
state levels. At the DRT convention in
Houston on May 14, Hancock was awarded
$300, a flag that flew on March 2 over the
Alamo, a set of books for the SFA school
library, and $150 from the Former Texas
Ranger Association. She was later hon-
ored at a luncheon held by the Solomon
Barrow DRT Chapter in Baytown and was
awarded $100 and received a beautiful
Texas plaque. Pictured, from left, are Kami
Hancock, fourth grade teacher Michelle
James, and Priscilla Garcia.
Contributed photo
“moderate drought.” g
according to the U.S. nation.'
Drought Monitor, an index
Drought Mitigation Center, typically rely
The most s—*';■ •-
affected counties in the
state
growers and then hay
growers, you’re talking
hundreds of people, espe-
cially in our area in
The blame for the crop could be an 80 or 90 per- I
loss is obvious: a lack of cent loss." he said. “That’s |
major rainfall from March a hard number. It's hard to f
to May that, consequently, say, but if we’re getting I
ranked this spring as the these 100-dcgree days. I
sixth driest in recorded his- that’s what it could be.” |
tory in East Texas, said Pinto beans, traditionally I
Bob Peters, a local weather one of Jones' most sue- I
observer. cessful crops, is in greatest |
Since mid-Mareh. some danger. The plants can sur- I
sections of the greater vjvc temperatures in the I
Tyler area have received as low 90s, but as late spring I
littld as three-tenths of an days have warmed into the L
inch of rain, a radical mid .mil upper 90s, it's f
departure from the area's unlikely they'll survive. I
normal springtime precipi-
tation of about 8 inches.
days have warmed into the L
upper 90s, it’s ]
* - ' . . • I
Melons on his 10-acre I
farm are undersized and I
And unfortunately for probably won’t grow to T
amateur gardeners and pro- normal weight, either. r
fessional growers alike. But it’s not just produce I
there appears to be no end that will suffer from a I
in sight. drought that is expected to I
“The hotter and drier last further into June, f
you are .. the less likely Cattle ranchers also may I
you are to have rain," find themselves struggling E
Peters said. “Right now. I through the heat. I
don’t really see a major "You’re already starting r
change in that pattern com- to see beef cattle people I
ing in the next 30 days." sell cows just because they I
As of last week. 17 don’t have any grass It's I
counties in East Texas all burnt up." Low said. "If b
were considered to be in a we continue like this, it’s f
going to be a really bad sit- I
nation.” F
Without grass on their I
maintained by the National pastures, cattle producers I
,a. ... ,l. ™ly on (hejr hay b
severely reserves to feed their r
herds. But thanks to last I
include Cherokee year’s drought in Central I
County, where the agrieul- and South Texas, the over- T
lure industry, from cattle to whelming majority of East I
crops, is hurting due to the Texas' hay surplus was I
drought. sold to desperate cattle L
“I would say across the ranchers in other parts of L
board as far as vegetable the state. I
TYLER (AP) — Plumes
of dust billowed out from
under the wheels of Darren
RozeH’s tractor as it rum-
bled across a stretch of Jacksonville/Rusk. Alto*
New Summerfield and
Troup,” said Aaron Low,
Cherokee County agrilife
throughout East extension agent.
t "Just about everybody in
northwest of Tyler has pro- the rural areas is in some
gressively dried out during way affected, whether they
the past two months, and have horses or cows, or are
as much as 60 percent of just growing a vegetable
his fruit crop — which garden. We’re talking
includes peaches, black- about this thing wiping out
berries and plums — could entire crops." he said.
be lost this season due to a Jay Jones is among the
lack of moisture. Cherokee County growers
Already, a significant already facing a major crop
portion of the Rozcll Peach loss barring significant
Farm berry crop has been rainfall in coming weeks,
rendered unworthy for Jones has fanned in Alto
sale. The. peaches, mean- since 1991. and this year is
while, arc smaller than the hardest hit he’s taken in
normal, which likely will terms of rain shortages in
keep them out of grocery more than a decade.
stores from Dallas to “Of my vegetables and
Shreveport. what I have planted now, it
The blame for the crop could be an 80 or 90 per-
loss is obvious- a lack of epnt Iack ” “Thot’c
! 111 —1
Weekend, June 5-6,2010
Oe ftptoton Aon
7A
McDonald’s recalls
McDonald's raises ques-
havc been sitting in
Americans' kitchen cabi-
nets for years.
Only glasses produced
for the latest "Shrek"
12M Shrek glasses
MILLVILLE. NJ. (AP) said the glasses fall short
A recall of 12 million of standards for the toxic
cadmium-tainted "Shrek" metal that the agency is in
drinking glasses sold by the process of developing.
McDonald's raises ques- The CPSC wanted con-
tions about the safety of sumers to immediately
millions of similar cheap stop using the glasses
promotional products that McDonald s sold as part of I
a promotional campaign
for the movie “Shrek
f orever After," The fast-
food giant said it issued the
for the latest "Shrek" recall “in an abundance of
movie are included in the caution ami in light of
voluntary recall announced CPSC's evolving asscss-
Friday by the U.S. ment of standards for con-
Consumer Product. Safetv sutner products.
Commission, but they "We believe the Shrek
were made by a company glassware is sate for con-
that McDonald's has sumer use." McDonald s
worked with for 15 years. USA spokesman Bill
Anil many other compa- Whitman said. However,
nies make similar glass- again to ensure that our
ware with cartoon charac- customers receive safe
ters or other designs baked products f rom us. we made
jn the decision to stop selling
“It could have been any them and voluntarily recall
glass company." said Ron
Biagi. an executive with
Arc International, which
made the glasses "We all
do the same thing using
materials from the same
suppliers"
McDonald's said the
U.S.-made glasses met fed-
eral guidelines tor cadmi-
um under testing conduct-
ed by a < I’M approved vious promotional gim-
lab I PSI spokesman micks and Happy Meal
Scott Wolfson, however, toys are not involved
these products effective
immediately."
On its website.
McDonald's said cus-
tomers can learn how to
return the glasses and
request a refund by visiting
www mcdonalds.com glas
scs or calling McDonald's
toll-free number. I-KOO-
244-6227, It also said pre-
3
a
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Halter, Janie. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 90, No. 112, Ed. 1 Saturday, June 5, 2010, newspaper, June 5, 2010; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1192476/m1/7/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.