By Rand Paul
Obama acts as though we no longer have a Constitution
The pecan tree, more than 300 years old, stands out from the others in a forested area of Dallas, a 25-foot segment of its trunk slightly bowed and running almost parallel to the ground before jutting high up into the sky.
The pecan tree, more than 300 years old, stands out from the others in a forested area of Dallas, a 25-foot segment of its trunk slightly bowed and running almost parallel to the ground before jutting high up into the sky.
The pecan tree, more than 300 years old, stands out from the others in a forested area of Dallas, a 25-foot segment of its trunk slightly bowed and running almost parallel to the ground before jutting high up into the sky.
"A lot of people don't recognize what they are and they're a really important part of the history of this country," said Otchingwanigan, a professor emeritus at Bemidji State University in Minnesota.
Earl Otchingwanigan, a member of the Ojibwe tribe, said he'd heard about the trees while growing up on a reservation on Lake Superior.