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[b][url=http://www.cartierglassesonsale.com]cheap cartier sunglasses[/url][/b]8221; burning the landmark statue to the ground. The good news: He’ll be back. (via Dayton Daily News)In life, it was a sight to behold: the soaring “King of Kings” statue in Monroe, Ohio (see the best photos here). But the inferno on June 14 that leveled the statue was every bit as astonishing to witness (watch the blaze here).Now officials at Solid Rock Church, where the statue was located, say they plan to have the icon rebuilt and restored.Talking to the Dayton Daily News, Monroe police chief Mark Neu said that some $700,000 in damage was caused by the fire that lasted only a few minutes. He said that all indications are that lightning sparked the statue’s right hand C a belief confirmed by eyewitness accounts that said the hand caught fire first.As photos surfaced on June 15 of the smoking rubble, there was no indication as to how quickly the statue might be rebuilt or restored.LifestyleHallmark’s Prepaid Greeting Cards: Enough to Stop the E-Card TakeoverBy Michelle Castillo | February 18, 2011 | +TweetGetty
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[/b]In the 1840s, attempts to grow soft winter wheat on the Wisconsin Prairie failed repeatedly, and wheat culture succeeded only after farmers switched to a new hard spring wheat cultivar (13).While the spread of railroads and mechanized equipment helped farmers get more per acreproducing a unit of wheat took half the labor in 1913 as it did in 1840adaptation was only successful thanks to the laborious work of breeding hardier seeds, with both private and public funding. German Mennoniteswho immigrated from (cold and dry) southern Russia to Kansas in the late 19th centuryintroduced Turkey wheat in 1873, which thrived in the tougher climates the new farmers had been accustomed to back home. By 1919 Turkey seeds provided more than 80% of the wheat acerage in Nebraska and Kansas, and nearly 70% of the average in Colorado and Nebraska. The authors quote a government plant breeder who said that without the Turkey strain:The wheat crop of Kansas today would be no more than half what it is, and the farmers of Nebraska, Montana and Iowa would have
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