Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: HiTech RedNeck
I'd think it'd be dependent on the ordnance and manpower available and the energy required to take out the piece of infrastructure in question. I imagine that it'd be for LARGE bridges similar to the Golden Gate or Brooklyn Bridge in size, or caverns and caves like Iwo Jima. You'd have to talk to a military engineer to get specifics. I'm just going speculating based on things I've read here and there.
97 posted on 10/29/2001 8:44:36 PM PST by Tree of Liberty
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 90 | View Replies ]


Here is a hard copy of the Hillsboro, MO possible Anthrax case.

It will probably end up being just a spider bite, probably from a fiddle back spider.


Anthrax scare shuts Hillsboro courthouse




About 200 employees and 100 visitors were evacuated from the Jefferson County Courthouse in Hillsboro on Monday as a precaution because a mailroom employee was found to have a lesion on her abdomen.

County Commissioner Ed Kemp, who also is the county's acting director of emergency services, said there was no reason to believe that she or anyone there has anthrax. Health officials said they did not believe that she was infected.

Kemp said the courthouse would reopen today.

In another anthrax-related scare, a yellowish powder found inside a letter Sunday morning at the main post office in downtown St. Louis tested negative for anthrax, spokeswoman JoAnne Hartmann said Monday.

The substance was in an unsealed envelope with no return address that had been mailed from a European country, a source close to the case said. It was addressed to CNN on North Grand Boulevard. There is no CNN office there or anywhere in St. Louis.

In Jefferson County, the courthouse was closed about 1 p.m., and a hazardous materials team was put on standby after the woman's personal doctor told her that he could not immediately determine whethr she had a spider bite or cutaneous (skin) anthrax.

Another physician, Dr. Thomas Hartmann of the emergency room at St. Anthony's Medical Center in south St. Louis County, said it appeared to be an insect bite. But Hartmann said both the woman and a co-worker in the mailroom had been tested for anthrax and would be treated with antibiotics as a precaution.

"I think the odds of anything turning up positive is extremely remote," Hartmann said. "We feel that the courthouse can safely reopen."


100 posted on 10/29/2001 9:11:55 PM PST by stlnative
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 97 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson