Wednesday,  Sept. 25, 2013 • Vol. 15--No. 72 • 31 of 44

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• "In these highly complex systems, you can't suspend Murphy's Law -- that something will go wrong," Cook told the hearing.
• The South Dakota State Medical Association has passed a resolution opposing the project.
• "The (association's) support of the petition and its opposition to uranium mining in the Black Hills is based on concerns about the mining's potential harmful impact on the health of the public, particularly water supply contamination," association President Daniel Heinemann said in a statement.
• Hollenbeck said the mine would boost the economy.
• "We're looking at about $20 million worth of tax revenue for the state of South Dakota, Custer and Fall River counties," he said. "And then we're also looking at about 100 jobs for that area, and 100 good paying jobs in that area is extremely significant."
• At least a dozen Edgemont residents on Monday urged the state board to approve a mining permit.
• "The technology is very definitely safe," said Clarence Anderson, who worked in Edgemont's uranium industry when it was active years ago.
• The Dewey-Burdock mine, named for two abandoned towns nearby, would cover about 16.5 square miles and produce about 1 million pounds of uranium oxide annually for the next two decades. It also needs a permit for the state Water Management Board. That hearing is scheduled next month.

10 Things to Know for Today
The Associated Press

• Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:
• 1. TROOPS BLAMED FOR HOSTAGE DEATHS
• The terror group behind the Kenya attack says troops trying to end the siege used chemical weapons and carried out "a demolition" that buried 137 hostages in the rubble. The government denies the claims.
• 2. HOW IRAN'S PRESIDENT IS UNLIKE HIS PREDECESSOR
• In a speech to the U.N., Rouhani acknowledges that the Holocaust happened -- something Ahmadinejad could never bring himself to do.
• 3. GOP SENATOR FILIBUSTERS OBAMACARE
• Texas' Ted Cruz vows to speak against the president's health care law until he's "no longer able to stand."

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