wednesday, april 25, 2012 boredom, discontent set in among...

1
supporter of the nonprofit, and his daughter, Susie Buffett, serves on Girls Inc.’s board. War- ren Buffett sat with his wife and daughter at a front-row table on Tuesday. Obama later appeared at a pri- vate fundraiser in the Des Moines area and headlined a rally for campaign volunteers and sup- porters in a community center at a suburban park. She ticked through President Barack Obama’s signature ac- complishments, including the 2009 federal stimulus package and 2010 health care legislation. She credited the Democratic in- cumbent’s administration with easing the economic downturn that met him when he took office. Yet, she warned supporters that the general election would be close. Iowa, which Obama car- ried in 2008, is among about a dozen states expected to be among the most closely con- tested in November. The presi- dent plans to campaign in Iowa City on Wednesday. “Understand with every door you knock on, with every call you make, with every conversation you have, this could be the one that makes the difference,” she told about 400 people during her 20-minute talk. “Treat it that way.” Obama encouraged Girls Inc. supporters in the audience to keep believing in girls and giving them the confidence they need to be themselves. “You’re not just giving them something to do. You’re giving them something to be,” Obama said. Before Obama’s speech, sev- eral members of Girls Inc. talked about what the programs have meant to them. A video the girls produced also showed some of the tutoring and social activities with an emphasis on activity be- cause Obama promotes fitness and healthy eating. The lunch event’s master of ceremonies, Rhaniece Choice, 20, said she was impressed by Obama’s personable manner. “She was just so down-to- earth,” said Choice, who is now a sophomore at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “She just wanted to get to know us back- stage on a personal level.” Chanecia Martin, 15, who in- troduced Obama, said she was impressed by how cool the first lady seemed. “It was a once-in-a-lifetime ex- perience,” Martin said. Obama told all the young girls in the audience that she tells her two daughters that they have to practice who they want to be every single day. But she said it helps to have some strong sup- porters in your corner when you go after dreams. “Focus on the people in your life who give you positive rein- forcement,” she said. “Gravitate toward the positive. Stay away from the ‘haters.”’ Must be 18 years or older to play. Please play responsibly. See more winners online at lottery.sd.gov Don Molstad Sioux Falls $10,000 Hot Lotto Sabrina Johnson Sioux Falls $5,000 Cash Stash Maribel Lovejoy Sioux Falls $3,000 Ruby Red Slingo Robert Reichert Parkston $1,200 Double Match Michelle Fischer Lesterville $1,000 Rooster Racin’ Sue Younce Sioux Falls $1,000 Wheel of Fortune Dominic Jensen Dell Rapids Daryl Sudbeck Hartington, NE $700 Fireball 7’s Krista Palmer Sioux Falls $700 Fireball 7’s Justine Turbak Sioux Falls $608 Mega Millions Megaplier Lenny Schrank Fedora $600 Mega Millions Megaplier Gary Coy Oklahoma City, OK $503 Wild Card 2 Lori Dykstra Sioux Falls $5,000 Double Wild Jacks Sherri Christensen Sioux Falls $502 Wild Card 2 Earl Arnold Ramona $501 Wild Card 2 John Havelock Sioux Falls $501 Wild Card 2 Brad Dragseth Sioux Falls $501 Wild Card 2 Stephine Cross Sioux Falls $500 Deluxe Bank Loot 2806 Fox Run Parkway Yankton, SD 665-3929 Body Shop It’s not just a body shop, its... J J J ustra’s ustra’s ustra’s Bring your car to us for expert collision repair and service! BEEN BUMPED? BEEN BUMPED? Complete Collision Services Frame straightening • Pre-accident restoration • Dents, dings & rust removed Auto Painting Specialists Color match • Premium Finishes • Thousands of colors Insurance Specialists Free Written Estimates • All Work Guaranteed Congratulations PRESS&DAKOTAN YANKTON DAILY Jen’s Event Planning & Cleric Ribbon Cutting The Yankton Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassador Committee hosted a ribbon cutting for Jen’s Event Planning & Cleric located at 2901 Broadway Ave. Jennifer Heath, owner will plan corporate or private events, weddings, birthdays and everything in between. She is also an ordained minister so she is able to perform the wedding itself. No event to big or small, we handle them all. To contact Jennifer call (712)730-1758 or email [email protected] or www.jenseventsplanning.com Community Bank WE ARE PROUD TO BE YOUR April Is Community Banking Month Support Your Community Bank S S S Su up pp port t t Y our C C mmuni t y B Bank k k k S S S S o Y Y o o or rt r rt t t Y Y Y Y o Y o our Co ur C C Co Co om mm m k k k k k k k k GO LOCAL IN APRIL! mu muni nity ty Banking Month Ap Ap Ap ri ril l Is Is C Com omm m www.cortrustbank.com Member FDIC | ID 405612 2405 Broadway | 668-0800 110 Cedar | 665-6423 Yankton, We Are Your PAGE 12 PRESS & DAKOTAN n WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2012 BY RODNEY MUHUMUZA The Associated Press DJEMA, Central African Republic The hunt for alleged war criminal Joseph Kony is heating up on international radars, but Ugandan foot soldiers who have spent years searching for the man are starting to ask a question their top commanders prefer to ignore: Is it possi- ble he is dead? Ugandan army officials say the Lord’s Resistance Army leader is alive and hid- ing somewhere within the Central African Republic. Rank-and-file soldiers, however, say intelligence on Kony is so limited that if he dies, or is already dead, his foes might never know and could wind up chasing a ghost through this vast Central Africa jungle. In interviews last week with an Associ- ated Press reporter who trekked with them in the jungle, soldiers in one of many Kony-hunting squads said their task in the Central African Republic could no longer be described as a manhunt. The soldiers, who requested anonymity for fear of punishment, said for years there has been no LRA presence in the areas they patrol. The soldiers are growing increasingly disillusioned, complaining of boredom and having to carry around heavy guns they never expect to use. “Our commanders don’t want you to know the truth,” one of them said on the banks of the Vovodo river, his colleagues nodding in approval. “They want to keep us here, but up to now our squad has never come across any rebels.” Another soldier said: “We are bored. We have nothing to do. We are mobile every day but we never see the enemy.” Kony, an enigmatic rebel leader who has lived in the bush for the last 26 years, last month became the subject of intense international focus after U.S. advocacy group Invisible Children made a popular online video purporting to make him fa- mous. He has been silent since 2008, when the Ugandan army raided his forested base in northeastern Congo. Ugandan officials say Kony, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity, fled to the Central African Re- public hours before the aerial attack, but LRA attacks have been frequently re- ported in Congo recently. Ugandan troops left the Congo last year after Congolese authorities asked them to go. Soldiers told the AP they should be in Congo for the hunt. Ugandan officials say the LRA, which has no more than 200 men scattered in small groups all over Central Africa, is hard to eliminate completely because the jungle is where the rebels are most com- fortable. Last year U.S. President Barack Obama sent 100 troops to help regional governments fight the LRA. The Ameri- cans play an advisory role in Uganda, the Congo, South Sudan and the Central African Republic, countries that have been affected by the LRA over the years. Even in extremely dry spells, accord- ing to the accounts of Ugandan soldiers who have fought Kony since the 1990s, the rebels can survive on filtered clay, which they mix with honey and then roll into something that resembles a sausage. One piece is enough to satiate a man for several days. Ugandan soldiers call this concoction Kony’s dry ration. Col. Joseph Balikuddembe, the top Ugandan commander of the anti-Kony mission, said the war on the LRA cannot be rushed. To eliminate the rebels and their top leaders, he said, Ugandan troops must live like the rebels, on scant provisions, to catch them in the jungles. But this method is a source of discon- tent among soldiers who are poorly paid — most earn about $100 per month — and who feel that they are being used to justify an expensive war against a de- graded rebel force that offers no resist- ance. Some openly wonder if Kony is still alive. Their amusement comes from using their cell phones to watch pornography and charging the phones’ batteries with solar panels during long treks. Otherwise, they are forced to walk miles every day through unforgiving terrain, facing jungle threats including crocodiles, elephants and poachers. The makeshift clinic at a military base in Nzara, South Sudan, is packed with anti-malaria medication that will be spent when the rains fall and mosquitoes be- come rampant. The jungle experience also demands personal sacrifice from the soldiers because they can’t communicate with their families for months and then years, and sometimes go hungry. In February, when supplies were slow in arriving, some members of a 60-mem- ber Kony-hunting squad tried and failed to eat a wild yam that is a favorite of the LRA’s. It is called abato, and a mature one is about the size of a baby’s folded hand. “We tasted the yams and they were sour,” said Ugandan Pvt. Godfrey Asi- imwe. “I don’t know what the LRA do to those yams to make them edible and deli- cious. We hear they enjoy them.” And some soldiers, in an impossible test of endurance, are forced to walk on broken limbs. Last Thursday, halfway through a 14- kilometer walk through the jungle, a sol- dier stumbled and fell badly. He tried to stay the course but eventually broke down and asked to be carried around. His colleagues resisted and he limped on. The next day he was bundled onto a mili- tary helicopter that also carried the stink- ing remains of a soldier killed in a crocodile attack on Wednesday. Obama From Page 1 GOT NEWS? Call The P&D At 665-7811 Boredom, Discontent Set In Among Kony Hunters BY DONNA BLANKINSHIP AND SETH BORENSTEIN Associated Press SEATTLE — Using space-faring robots to mine precious metals from asteroids almost sounds easy when former astronaut Tom Jones describes it — practically like clearing a snow-covered driveway. Jones, an adviser to a bold venture that aims to extract gold, platinum and rocket fuel from the barren space rocks, said many near-Earth asteroids have a loose rocky surface held together only weakly by gravity. “It shouldn’t be too hard to in- vent a machine like a snow blower to pick up material,” explained Jones, a veteran of four space shuttle missions. But it will be risky and mon- strously expensive, which is why some of the biggest and richest names in high-technology — in- cluding the barons of Google and filmmaker James Cameron — are behind the project. If the plan gets off the ground as planned, robots could be ex- tracting cosmic riches within 10 years. Outside experts are skeptical because the program would prob- ably require untold millions or perhaps billions of dollars, plus huge advances in technology. Yet the same entrepreneurs behind this idea also pioneered the sell- ing of space rides to tourists — a notion that seemed fanciful not long ago. “Since my early teenage years, I’ve wanted to be an asteroid miner. I always viewed it as a glamorous vision of where we could go,” Peter Diamandis, one of the founders of Planetary Re- sources Inc., told a news confer- ence Tuesday at the Museum of Flight in Seattle. The company’s vision “is to make the resources of space available to humanity.” The inaugural step, to be achieved in the next 18 to 24 months, would be launching the first in a series of private tele- scopes that would search for the right type of asteroids. The proposal is to use com- mercially built robotic ships to squeeze rocket fuel and valuable minerals out of the rocks that rou- tinely whiz by Earth. Several scientists not involved in the project said they were si- multaneously thrilled and wary, calling the plan daring, difficult — and pricey. They don’t see how it could be cost-effective, even with platinum and gold worth nearly $1,600 an ounce. An upcoming NASA mission to return just 2 ounces (60 grams) of an asteroid to Earth will cost about $1 billion. The entrepreneurs of Plane- tary Resources have a track record of profiting from space ventures. Diamandis and co- founder Eric Anderson led the way in selling space rides to tourists, and Diamandis has a sep- arate company that offers “weightless” airplane flights. Investors and advisers to the new company include Google CEO Larry Page, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and Cameron, the man behind the Hol- lywood blockbusters “Titanic” and “Avatar.” Extracting water is key to deep space exploration, as well as for driving costs down, Anderson said. The water can be converted into fuel by separating the hydro- gen and oxygen. On a manned flight, it could also be used for drinking and growing food. The plan is to take water from an asteroid to a spot in space where it can be broken down into fuel. From there, it can easily and cheaply be shipped to Earth orbit for refueling commercial satellites or spaceships from NASA and other countries. Anderson acknowledged the many potential pitfalls. “There will be times when we fail,” he said. “There will be times when we have to pick up the pieces and try again.” The mining, fuel processing and later refueling would all be done without humans, Anderson said. The target-hunting telescopes would be tubes only a couple of feet long, weighing only a few dozen pounds and small enough to be held in your hand. They should cost less than $10 million, company officials said. Asteroids Could Yield Precious Metals, Cosmic Riches

Upload: others

Post on 24-Apr-2020

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2012 Boredom, Discontent Set In Among ...tearsheets.yankton.net/april12/042512/ypd_042512_SecA_012.pdf · Barack Obama’s signature ac-complishments, including

supporter of the nonprofit, andhis daughter, Susie Buffett,serves on Girls Inc.’s board. War-ren Buffett sat with his wife anddaughter at a front-row table onTuesday.

Obama later appeared at a pri-vate fundraiser in the Des Moinesarea and headlined a rally forcampaign volunteers and sup-porters in a community center ata suburban park.

She ticked through PresidentBarack Obama’s signature ac-complishments, including the2009 federal stimulus packageand 2010 health care legislation.She credited the Democratic in-cumbent’s administration witheasing the economic downturnthat met him when he took office.

Yet, she warned supportersthat the general election wouldbe close. Iowa, which Obama car-ried in 2008, is among about adozen states expected to beamong the most closely con-tested in November. The presi-dent plans to campaign in IowaCity on Wednesday.

“Understand with every dooryou knock on, with every call youmake, with every conversationyou have, this could be the onethat makes the difference,” shetold about 400 people during her20-minute talk. “Treat it thatway.”

Obama encouraged Girls Inc.supporters in the audience tokeep believing in girls and givingthem the confidence they needto be themselves.

“You’re not just giving themsomething to do. You’re givingthem something to be,” Obamasaid.

Before Obama’s speech, sev-eral members of Girls Inc. talked

about what the programs havemeant to them. A video the girlsproduced also showed some ofthe tutoring and social activitieswith an emphasis on activity be-cause Obama promotes fitnessand healthy eating.

The lunch event’s master ofceremonies, Rhaniece Choice, 20,said she was impressed byObama’s personable manner.

“She was just so down-to-earth,” said Choice, who is now asophomore at the University ofNebraska-Lincoln. “She justwanted to get to know us back-stage on a personal level.”

Chanecia Martin, 15, who in-troduced Obama, said she was

impressed by how cool the firstlady seemed.

“It was a once-in-a-lifetime ex-perience,” Martin said.

Obama told all the young girlsin the audience that she tells hertwo daughters that they have topractice who they want to beevery single day. But she said ithelps to have some strong sup-porters in your corner when yougo after dreams.

“Focus on the people in yourlife who give you positive rein-forcement,” she said. “Gravitatetoward the positive. Stay awayfrom the ‘haters.”’

Must be 18 years or older to play. Please play responsibly.

See more winners online at

lottery.sd.gov

Don MolstadSioux Falls

$10,000 Hot Lotto

Sabrina JohnsonSioux Falls

$5,000 Cash Stash

Maribel LovejoySioux Falls

$3,000 Ruby Red Slingo

Robert ReichertParkston

$1,200 Double Match

Michelle FischerLesterville

$1,000 Rooster Racin’

Sue YounceSioux Falls

$1,000 Wheel of Fortune

Dominic JensenDell Rapids

Daryl SudbeckHartington, NE

$700 Fireball 7’s

Krista PalmerSioux Falls

$700 Fireball 7’s

Justine TurbakSioux Falls

$608 Mega Millions Megaplier

Lenny SchrankFedora

$600 Mega Millions Megaplier

Gary CoyOklahoma City, OK$503 Wild Card 2

Lori DykstraSioux Falls

$5,000 Double Wild Jacks

Sherri ChristensenSioux Falls

$502 Wild Card 2

Earl ArnoldRamona

$501 Wild Card 2

John HavelockSioux Falls

$501 Wild Card 2

Brad DragsethSioux Falls

$501 Wild Card 2

Stephine CrossSioux Falls

$500 Deluxe Bank Loot

2806 Fox Run Parkway

Yankton, SD 665-3929 Body Shop

It’s not just a body shop, its...

J J J ustra’s ustra’s ustra’s

Bring your car to us for expert collision repair and service!

BEEN BUMPED? BEEN BUMPED? Complete Collision Services

Frame straightening • Pre-accident restoration • Dents, dings & rust removed

Auto Painting Specialists Color match • Premium Finishes • Thousands of colors

Insurance Specialists Free Written Estimates • All Work Guaranteed

Congratulations

P RESS & D AKOTAN Y ANKTON D AILY

Jen’s Event Planning & Cleric Ribbon Cutting

The Yankton Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassador Committee hosted a ribbon cutting for Jen’s Event Planning & Cleric located at 2901 Broadway Ave. Jennifer Heath, owner will plan corporate or private events, weddings, birthdays and everything in between. She is also an ordained minister so she is able to perform the wedding itself. No event to big or small, we handle them all. To contact Jennifer call (712)730-1758 or email [email protected] or www.jenseventsplanning.com

Heath Driscoll

Community BankWE ARE PROUD TO BE YOUR

April Is Community Banking Month

Support Your Community BankSSSSuupppporttt Your CC mmunitty BBankkkkSSSS o YYooorrtrrttt YYYYoYYoour Cour CCCoCoommmm kkkkkkkkGO LOCAL IN APRIL!

mumuninitytyy Bankingg MonthApApAppririll IsIs C Comommm

www.cortrustbank.comMember FDIC | ID 405612

2405 Broadway | 668-0800110 Cedar | 665-6423

Yankton, We Are Your

PAGE 12 PRESS & DAKOTAN n WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2012

BY RODNEY MUHUMUZAThe Associated Press

DJEMA, Central African Republic —The hunt for alleged war criminal JosephKony is heating up on internationalradars, but Ugandan foot soldiers whohave spent years searching for the manare starting to ask a question their topcommanders prefer to ignore: Is it possi-ble he is dead?

Ugandan army officials say the Lord’sResistance Army leader is alive and hid-ing somewhere within the Central AfricanRepublic. Rank-and-file soldiers, however,say intelligence on Kony is so limited thatif he dies, or is already dead, his foesmight never know and could wind upchasing a ghost through this vast CentralAfrica jungle.

In interviews last week with an Associ-ated Press reporter who trekked withthem in the jungle, soldiers in one ofmany Kony-hunting squads said theirtask in the Central African Republic couldno longer be described as a manhunt.The soldiers, who requested anonymityfor fear of punishment, said for years

there has been no LRA presence in theareas they patrol.

The soldiers are growing increasinglydisillusioned, complaining of boredomand having to carry around heavy gunsthey never expect to use.

“Our commanders don’t want you toknow the truth,” one of them said on thebanks of the Vovodo river, his colleaguesnodding in approval. “They want to keepus here, but up to now our squad hasnever come across any rebels.”

Another soldier said: “We are bored.We have nothing to do. We are mobileevery day but we never see the enemy.”

Kony, an enigmatic rebel leader whohas lived in the bush for the last 26 years,last month became the subject of intenseinternational focus after U.S. advocacygroup Invisible Children made a popularonline video purporting to make him fa-mous. He has been silent since 2008,when the Ugandan army raided hisforested base in northeastern Congo.

Ugandan officials say Kony, who iswanted by the International CriminalCourt for war crimes and crimes againsthumanity, fled to the Central African Re-

public hours before the aerial attack, butLRA attacks have been frequently re-ported in Congo recently. Ugandan troopsleft the Congo last year after Congoleseauthorities asked them to go.

Soldiers told the AP they should be inCongo for the hunt.

Ugandan officials say the LRA, whichhas no more than 200 men scattered insmall groups all over Central Africa, ishard to eliminate completely because thejungle is where the rebels are most com-fortable. Last year U.S. President BarackObama sent 100 troops to help regionalgovernments fight the LRA. The Ameri-cans play an advisory role in Uganda, theCongo, South Sudan and the CentralAfrican Republic, countries that havebeen affected by the LRA over the years.

Even in extremely dry spells, accord-ing to the accounts of Ugandan soldierswho have fought Kony since the 1990s,the rebels can survive on filtered clay,which they mix with honey and then rollinto something that resembles a sausage.One piece is enough to satiate a man forseveral days. Ugandan soldiers call thisconcoction Kony’s dry ration.

Col. Joseph Balikuddembe, the topUgandan commander of the anti-Konymission, said the war on the LRA cannotbe rushed. To eliminate the rebels andtheir top leaders, he said, Ugandantroops must live like the rebels, on scantprovisions, to catch them in the jungles.

But this method is a source of discon-tent among soldiers who are poorly paid— most earn about $100 per month —and who feel that they are being used tojustify an expensive war against a de-graded rebel force that offers no resist-ance. Some openly wonder if Kony is stillalive.

Their amusement comes from usingtheir cell phones to watch pornographyand charging the phones’ batteries withsolar panels during long treks. Otherwise,they are forced to walk miles every daythrough unforgiving terrain, facing junglethreats including crocodiles, elephantsand poachers.

The makeshift clinic at a military basein Nzara, South Sudan, is packed withanti-malaria medication that will be spentwhen the rains fall and mosquitoes be-come rampant. The jungle experience

also demands personal sacrifice from thesoldiers because they can’t communicatewith their families for months and thenyears, and sometimes go hungry.

In February, when supplies were slowin arriving, some members of a 60-mem-ber Kony-hunting squad tried and failedto eat a wild yam that is a favorite of theLRA’s. It is called abato, and a mature oneis about the size of a baby’s folded hand.

“We tasted the yams and they weresour,” said Ugandan Pvt. Godfrey Asi-imwe. “I don’t know what the LRA do tothose yams to make them edible and deli-cious. We hear they enjoy them.”

And some soldiers, in an impossibletest of endurance, are forced to walk onbroken limbs.

Last Thursday, halfway through a 14-kilometer walk through the jungle, a sol-dier stumbled and fell badly. He tried tostay the course but eventually brokedown and asked to be carried around. Hiscolleagues resisted and he limped on.The next day he was bundled onto a mili-tary helicopter that also carried the stink-ing remains of a soldier killed in acrocodile attack on Wednesday.

ObamaFrom Page 1

GOTNEWS?Call The P&D

At 665-7811

Boredom, Discontent Set In Among Kony Hunters

BY DONNA BLANKINSHIPAND SETH BORENSTEINAssociated Press

SEATTLE — Using space-faringrobots to mine precious metalsfrom asteroids almost soundseasy when former astronaut TomJones describes it — practicallylike clearing a snow-covereddriveway.

Jones, an adviser to a boldventure that aims to extract gold,platinum and rocket fuel from thebarren space rocks, said manynear-Earth asteroids have a looserocky surface held together onlyweakly by gravity.

“It shouldn’t be too hard to in-vent a machine like a snow blowerto pick up material,” explained

Jones, a veteran of four spaceshuttle missions.

But it will be risky and mon-strously expensive, which is whysome of the biggest and richestnames in high-technology — in-cluding the barons of Google andfilmmaker James Cameron — arebehind the project.

If the plan gets off the groundas planned, robots could be ex-tracting cosmic riches within 10years.

Outside experts are skepticalbecause the program would prob-ably require untold millions orperhaps billions of dollars, plushuge advances in technology. Yetthe same entrepreneurs behindthis idea also pioneered the sell-ing of space rides to tourists — a

notion that seemed fanciful notlong ago.

“Since my early teenage years,I’ve wanted to be an asteroidminer. I always viewed it as aglamorous vision of where wecould go,” Peter Diamandis, oneof the founders of Planetary Re-sources Inc., told a news confer-ence Tuesday at the Museum ofFlight in Seattle. The company’svision “is to make the resourcesof space available to humanity.”

The inaugural step, to beachieved in the next 18 to 24months, would be launching thefirst in a series of private tele-scopes that would search for theright type of asteroids.

The proposal is to use com-mercially built robotic ships to

squeeze rocket fuel and valuableminerals out of the rocks that rou-tinely whiz by Earth.

Several scientists not involvedin the project said they were si-multaneously thrilled and wary,calling the plan daring, difficult —and pricey. They don’t see how itcould be cost-effective, even withplatinum and gold worth nearly$1,600 an ounce. An upcomingNASA mission to return just 2ounces (60 grams) of an asteroidto Earth will cost about $1 billion.

The entrepreneurs of Plane-tary Resources have a trackrecord of profiting from spaceventures. Diamandis and co-founder Eric Anderson led theway in selling space rides totourists, and Diamandis has a sep-

arate company that offers“weightless” airplane flights.

Investors and advisers to thenew company include Google CEOLarry Page, Google ExecutiveChairman Eric Schmidt andCameron, the man behind the Hol-lywood blockbusters “Titanic”and “Avatar.”

Extracting water is key to deepspace exploration, as well as fordriving costs down, Andersonsaid. The water can be convertedinto fuel by separating the hydro-gen and oxygen. On a mannedflight, it could also be used fordrinking and growing food.

The plan is to take water froman asteroid to a spot in spacewhere it can be broken down intofuel. From there, it can easily and

cheaply be shipped to Earth orbitfor refueling commercial satellitesor spaceships from NASA andother countries.

Anderson acknowledged themany potential pitfalls.

“There will be times when wefail,” he said. “There will be timeswhen we have to pick up thepieces and try again.”

The mining, fuel processingand later refueling would all bedone without humans, Andersonsaid.

The target-hunting telescopeswould be tubes only a couple offeet long, weighing only a fewdozen pounds and small enoughto be held in your hand. Theyshould cost less than $10 million,company officials said.

Asteroids Could Yield Precious Metals, Cosmic Riches