Starting in 1988, various plantations in Jalisco began suffering blights, caused by fungus and parasites.
But Fannie and Freddie are just two blights on an otherwise dismal economic landscape.
Meanwhile, two other urban blights are also forcing their way into state fairs: advertising and politics.
Even the chronic insecurity that blights parts of Africa is no excuse for tight-fistedness.
The hope is it will raise awareness of a problem that blights the lives of huge numbers.
That the DRS is used in some matches and not in others is an insanity that blights the game.
The first was that working-class communities were most at risk from the kind of pervasive low-level criminality that blights lives.
Yes, open pit bitumen mining blights the landscape, the process releases too much carbon dioxide, and tailing ponds occasionally kill ducks.
David Quammen, an American science journalist, picks up the story of contemporary blights, exploring how the next pandemic will be detected.
Africa suffers from the resource curse, which blights countries nature made rich.
At least some of that region's blights, including starvation and a related lack of sufficient and safe water, are addressable without taxing richer countries.
He also credited them with "advancing similar innovative financing mechanisms" that "can help us reach the Millennium Development Goals" for reducing poverty, disease and other blights on humanity.
The number of such schools needs to grow rapidly in order to cut the long tail of underachievement which blights the education service in the disadvantaged areas of England.
It's just like old times as Blackburn score twice from set pieces to see off the fragile Baggies, while Nikola Kalinic blights an impressive display with an ugly challenge on Paul Scharner.
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