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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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071089
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07108900.034
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1990-09-17
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NATION, Page 29American NotesTEXAS"Please Don't Die, Tree"
Visibly ailing since Memorial Day, Austin's historic Treaty Oak
-- alleged site of a treaty signing by Native Americans and Father
of Texas Stephen F. Austin -- has been receiving the kind of
diligent attention usually given a gravely ill head of state. A
team of eleven has meticulously removed the contaminated soil from
around its huge root network, and last week billionaire H. Ross
Perot flew in 18 technical specialists from around the nation to
assist in a bedside diagnosis.
About 600 years old and 50 ft. high, the great tree, with its
52 1/2-in. girth and 127-ft. limb spread, has inspired an
outpouring of sympathy. Well-wishers stand vigil, send get-well
cards, flowers, candles, even cans of chicken soup with anguished
messages: "Please don't die!"
It seems that someone poured the potent herbicide Velpar in a
circle around the tree early this year, committing a "malicious
act against an innocent creature," said city forester John
Giedraitis. When the tree shed beads of sap, he said, "it's
weeping. This tree is under a tremendous amount of stress." Velpar
maker Du Pont has put up a $10,000 reward for the capture of the
tree's poisoner. Says a poster at the tree: HANG HIM FROM THE
HIGHEST LIMB.
Police late last week arrested Paul Stedman Cullen, 45, and
said he apparently poisoned the tree as part of a ritual. Hanging,
though, is not in prospect. Cullen could get only up to 20 years
for criminal mischief, a felony.