SEC. B
page 1

Etc., etc., etc. …...

Coming in future issues…..

Progress Report on Fontenelle Trees

Nebraska Byways:
Stories about
Nebraskans

Statement by Larry Schweiger
President of the National Wildlife Federation


"Today we celebrate the remarkable recovery of the bald eagle. The return of our national symbol is a victory for wildlife, a victory for conservation, and a victory for the Endangered Species Act.

"The bald eagle is one of our nation's greatest symbols. Chosen for its strength, independence and majesty, this icon of the wild exemplifies what it means to be American. As we celebrate the recovery of the bald eagle, we also celebrate the power of the American people to achieve great victories against any odds.

"We cannot commemorate this remarkable comeback without also acknowledging the law that helped us to achieve it. At the very hour that some in Congress are poised to weaken the Endangered Species Act, we are reminded that its safeguards were vital in charting the path of recovery for the bald eagle and other imperiled wildlife. Thanks to this landmark law, our nation's symbol will fly high for generations to come.

"Once again we have proof that the nation's safety net for imperiled wildlife works. Only with a strong Endangered Species Act will we continue to see bald eagles in our skies, wild salmon in our rivers, and grizzly bears in our American West.

"Forty years ago we almost lost the bald eagle because of our recklessness. But as the bird teetered on the edge, Americans took a bold step and declared that we would not allow our national symbol to go extinct. By passing the Endangered Species Act, we resolved to save the bald eagle and all of America's wildlife for future generations.

"When Americans first realized our national symbol was in danger of being lost forever, there were only 417 nesting pairs left in the lower 48 states. Today, eagle numbers are strong with over 7,000 breeding pairs spread across the lower 48.
"The success of the bald eagle is a success for all Americans. The Endangered Species Act provided the framework for the bald eagle's recovery, but it was the will and actions of individuals that brought this bird back from the brink of extinction.
"Thanks to the work of landowners, conservationists, business owners, scientists, federal, state and local agencies, and our champions in Congress, bald eagles are once again thriving throughout the nation. The comeback of the bald eagle is testament to what can be achieved through cooperative conservation.



More WPA stories about Nebraska by Nebraskans

Former senator John Edwards, 2004 surprise second place finisher in the Iowa caucuses, currently leads the pack among Iowa Democrats with 30% of the vote. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) polls second with 26% while 2004 nominee Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) polls a distant third. Edwards probably owes his current front runner status in Iowa to his superb ground organization from 2004...Mike Brown, former FEMA director, has released an email from an undisclosed White House source indicating that Bush responded in a cabinet meeting he was glad Brown was taking the heat rather than himself…..Recent primary winner Jim Webb (D-VA) has moved within 5 points of Sen. Allen, threatening to derail Allen's presidential ambitions in 2008….Saying It With A Straight Face Award is a tie in Nebraska with Ben Nelson's TV ads touting his saving us from the "death tax" and his opponent Pete Rickett's ads warning Nelson's election will mean Hillary Clinton and Ted Kennedy running the congress….Three more staffers of Rep. Bob Ney (R-OH) have left the scandal laden House member now embroiled in Jack Abramoff situation amid rumors of an indictment aiming at the Ohio congressman…..The GOP may rue the day when the Supreme Court ruled state legislatures may redistrict anytime they want to, not just when the census comes out every 10 years. Look for states like Illinois, New Mexico and New Jersey to start taking back some gerrymandered districts for Democratic congress critters….New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg is still considering running as a new type of Ross Perot, creating an entirely new party with himself as nominee. The billionaire mayor estimates he could easily fork over a half billion dollars towards the race, dwarfing even the enormous numbers of fundraising dollars Bush raised….MA Gov. Mitt Romney has spent more time and effort in the first four candidate selection states

than all other GOP '08 presidential hopefuls combined, earning a lot of slaps on the back as well as political chits along the campaign trail…. Lobbyist scandals and indictments continue to haunt the GOP as the public refuses to forget the black marks. By wide margins the public continues to give Bush low marks on leadership, economy, the war in Iraq and the list goes on. Generic congressional choice questions give Democrats wider margins over the Republicans than the GOP had over the Democrats in 1994 when they took back congress in a landslide mid term election surprise….Senate Republican leader Bill Frist is noted in Hotline on Call as making far fewer mistakes now than in previous months and as a result his long-shot presidential plans are back on track. Frist, after flipping on the issue of stem cell research, is planning to bring the issue to the floor of the Senate for a vote in early July. Frist once opposed stem cell research but now embraces it….Nebraska millionaire GOP Senate candidate Pete Ricketts dumped another $750K in his campaign coffers….

U.S. Sen. Ben Nelson: Phone: (202) 224-6551  Fax: (202) 228-001240, Suite 5 Dirksen Basement (Temp)
Washington, DC 20510
senator@bennelson.senate.gov

U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel: Phone: (202) 224-4224  Fax: (202) 224-5213
346 Russell Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510
chuck_hagel@hagel.senate.gov
Rep. Jeff Fortenberry: Phone: (202) 225-4806, Fax (202) 225-5686   1517 Longworth House Office Bldg. Washington,DC 20515
Rep. Lee Terry:Phone: (202) 225-4155  Fax: (202) 226-5452  1513 Longworth House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
talk2lee@mail.house.gov

Rep. Tom Osborne:Phone: (202) 225-6435  Fax: (202) 236-1385
507 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515

SEC. B, p2
Senate Moments

SEC. B, p3
HISTORY
SCRAMBLE