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  • Butterworth pans redistricting plan
  • Social services agency probed
  • Florida still ranks poorly in delayed education study
  • Bush stresses early reading start
  • Navy wins okay to bomb forest for next 20 years
  • Computer glitch is fixed in time to launch 'Atlantis'
  • FSU medical school again falls short

  • From the state wire

  • Hurricane Jeanne appears on track to hit Florida's east coast
  • Rumor mill working overtime after Florida hurricanes
  • Developments associated with Hurricanes Ivan and Jeanne
  • Four killed in Panhandle plane crash were on Ivan charity mission
  • Hurricane Frances caused estimated $4.4 billion in insured damage
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  • Man's death at Universal Studios ruled accidental
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  • Mistrial declared in case where teen was target of racial "joke"
  • Panhandle utility wants sewer plant moved to higher ground
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  • Homestead house fire kills four children, one adult
  • Pierson leader tries to cut off relief to local fern cutters
  • Florida's high court rules Terri's law unconstitutional
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  • Man who killed wife, niece, self also killed mother in 1971
  • Producer sues city over lead ball fired by Miami police
  • Tourism suffers across Florida after pummeling by hurricanes
  • Key dates in the life of Terri Schiavo
  • An excerpt from the unanimous ruling in the Schiavo case
  • Four confirmed dead after small plane crash in Panhandle
  • Correction: Disney-Cruise Line story
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    Navy wins okay to bomb forest for next 20 years

    By Times staff writer
    © St. Petersburg Times
    published April 9, 2002

    U.S. Forest Service officials announced Monday that they will allow the U.S. Navy to continue to use the Pinecastle Range in the Ocala National Forest for practicing aerial bombing and strafing for the next 20 years.

    The range has been used for bombing practice since 1943. Navy and other military pilots make about 10,000 practice runs a year at Pinecastle. When the planes drop live and unarmed bombs weighing 500 to 2,000 pounds, windows shake for miles around.

    In 1983, a Navy jet missed its target by a half-mile with a 500-pound bomb that struck a nearby road. A Wildwood man, Johnny Teate, was driving his dump truck when he crashed into the 3-foot crater. Teate's injuries were slight and the bomb did not detonate.

    Although the Florida Coalition for Peace & Justice protested that a national forest is not an appropriate location for preparing for war, forest supervisor Marsha Kearney disagreed, pointing out the long use of the site by the military and the nation's wartime status.

    "Recent world events demonstrate the need for sustained operational readiness by the nation's military forces," she wrote in the April 5 decision. "The world remains a dangerous place and the nation needs forces at a high state of readiness."

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