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Thanks to readers for Research Fund gifts and the many
responses to HCN’s survey;
visitors
by Greg Hanscom and Jodi Peterson,
Nov 14, 2005
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Photographer Stephen Trimble offers suggestions for how
citizens and communities can reinvent their relationship with the
Western landscape.
by Stephen Trimble,
Jun 23, 2008
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The Grand Old Party will either find a new life – or court self-destruction – in the West today, where moderates and hard-liners are battling over conservation issues.
by Ray Ring,
Jul 21, 2008
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The Forest Service has overhauled its cumbersome
forest-planning process, but many experts say the agency may have
gone too far.
by Jodi Peterson,
Feb 19, 2007
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The brothers Stewart and Mo Udall are two of the
West’s conservation heroes, and their sons, Rep. Tom Udall of
New Mexico and Rep. Mark Udall of Colorado, have very large shoes
to fill in their own work for the Western landscape
by Paul Larmer,
Oct 11, 2004
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In his book Vicious: Wolves and Men in America, Jon T.
Coleman explores the history of how the wolf was slowly transformed
from vermin to be cruelly slaughtered into a noble calendar
pinup
by Michelle Nijhuis,
Oct 11, 2004
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In the presidential election this fall, sportsmen are
likely to be split between those who vote for wildlife, and those
who vote for the gun
by Tom Reed,
Oct 11, 2004
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The West needs to take charge of its own destiny, and
become more than just a political game piece in the presidential
election
by Greg Hanscom,
Oct 25, 2004
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Paul Rogat Loeb’s inspirational anthology
The Impossible Will Take a Little While, lives
up to its subtitle; it’s truly "a citizen’s guide to
hope in a time of fear"
by Laura Paskus,
Oct 25, 2004
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It would be a grave mistake for President Bush to assume
that his recent victory gives license for a winner-take-all power
grab in the West
by Paul Larmer,
Nov 22, 2004