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Sulphur woman accused of fatally shooting boyfriend during argument

Sulphur woman accused of fatally shooting boyfriend during argument Calcasieu Parish Sheriff s Office and last updated 2021-01-22 13:30:50-05 A 32-year-old woman was arrested Thursday after deputies say she fatally shot her boyfriend during an argument at a home in Sulphur. The Calcasieu Parish Sheriff s Office says that at around 3:00 p.m., deputies were dispatched to a residence on Walker Road. When deputies arrived, they located the victim, identified as 43-year-old William S. Clark of Sulphur, dead from an apparent gunshot wound. During further investigation, deputies say it was learned the complainant, identified as 32-year-old Kerri S. Monic, was allegedly responsible for the shooting. Monic, according to deputies, was also Clark’s girlfriend.

Remembering the Roosevelt Massacre of 1915

Remembering the Roosevelt Massacre of 1915 It was on Jan. 19, 1915, that one of the worst labor disputes in New Jersey resulted in the death of two striking workers. The conflict took place at the Williams & Clark fertilizer plant in what was then known as Roosevelt (now named Carteret). According to accounts of the day, the laborers had had their wages cut from $2 a day to $1.60 a day and when the rate wasn’t restored as had been promised, the workers went out on strike, not only from the Williams & Clark plant, but also from the Liebig Fertilizer Works about a mile away.

Almost 90% of the world s animal species will lose some habitat to agriculture by 2050

Scientists know that biodiversity is declining across much of the world although less universally and dramatically than we feared. We also know that things are likely to get worse in the future, with a combination of habitat loss, climate change and overexploitation set to drive species and habitats ever closer to extinction. What we don’t know, is what to do about this. Partly this is because conservation is woefully underfunded. But it’s also because the underlying causes of biodiversity declines are getting stronger and stronger every year. Climate change rightly gets a huge amount of coverage, but for biodiversity, the biggest threat actually comes from the destruction of natural habitats to make way for agriculture. And as global populations grow, and people become wealthier and consume more, that need for new agricultural land is just going to increase, resulting in at least 2 million sq km of new farmland by 2050, and maybe as much as 10 million.

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