Semi-special Since several recent issues have been labeled “special” because of their long planning time and extra pages, we were loath to call this edition on the Endangered Species Act a special issue too. But as the publication date approached, pages filled with yet more dimensions of the story. So we compromised: no extra pages […]
Dear Friends
Dear friends
Stacked deck? When Alaska Republican Rep. Don Young decided to leave the Beltway to hear opinions on changing the Endangered Species Act, he set no House (Natural) Resource Committee hearings in what we think of as The West: Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Montana, Oregon, Arizona, New Mexico, or South Dakota. Young selected mainly small […]
Dear friends
Good-bye and welcome Congratulations to former HCN employee Amy Conley and spouse Robert Hayutin on the birth of their daughter Sabina. Amy was a person of all trades in the office, specializing in direct mail and circulation, until Sabina demanded her attention. We will miss Amy, who remained cheerful even when confronted with thousands of […]
Dear friends
A special issue Longtime readers will notice that this edition of the paper is fatter than usual by 12 pages and written primarily by one person, Jon Christensen, who covers the vast Great Basin as our regional editor. This special issue has been many months in the making, and Jon joined staff in Paonia for […]
Dear Friends
Spring visitors Two roving college classes each spent several hours at High Country News listening to talks about the West and asking questions about this nonprofit newspaper. They wanted to know how to cover a vast area with no staff, and in particular, more about Glen Canyon Dam, which both groups had just toured. By […]
Dear Friends
Odds and ends The Feb. 20, 1995, essay by Jon Margolis – -Waaaaaaaah! The West refuses to be weaned’ – set the telephone to ringing and filled P.O. Box 1090. Rancher Sid Goodloe of Capitan, N.M., argued that it “didn’t have enough class to make the wastebasket beside your desk, much less the back page […]
Dear Friends
Now playing at the Cheyenne Opera HCN poetry editor Chip Rawlins recently traveled from his home in the small town of Boulder, Wyo., to the Wyoming Capitol to take a peek at his tax dollars at work. To his amazement, Chip found himself watching an opera he thinks was called The Merchants of Menace. He […]
Dear friends
Jim Stiak, reporter High Country News was honored last year when The Millennium Whole Earth Catalog chose this newspaper for one of its capsule reviews, calling HCN “the model for eco-media reporting.” The example the catalog chose to represent the paper was Jim Stiak’s lead story on timber theft, a concise exposé of how the […]
Dear friends
A special issue Usually, 16 pages every other week is all it takes to report the news from our million-square-mile West, this being the sleepy region it is. But because we skipped an issue, and because writer Ray Ring has a lengthy report on Denver International Airport, and because of what we call the “wolf […]
Dear friends
We break for winter Our little joke is that twice a year, to enable you to catch up with your High Country News reading, we skip an issue. That’s true. But the additional truth is that staff also needs a break every six months or so. As a result of meeting our mutual needs, there […]
Dear friends
Moving on and up Just as we are about to send yet another batch of interns – Meg, Shara and Chip – out into a cruel and uncaring world, we hear that previous graduates of HCN’s program, despite their experience here, are doing well. Cathy Ciarlo went on to earn her law degree from Northwestern […]
Dear friends
Good news, bad news This column is usually free of the “issues” that permeate the rest of the paper. The “Dear friends” column is HCN’s version of a small-town cafe’s liars’ table. It is here that we gossip, remark on who got married or had a child, and welcome visitors. But this fortnight’s mix of […]
Dear friends
Another special issue It must be something about the fall that brings to culmination many months of research and interviews. On Sept. 4 we published a special, 24-page issue called Grappling with Growth, which has just gone to a third printing to accommodate requests for copies. With this issue we offer the first of several […]
Dear friends
Dead deer come to town Hunting season has begun with a bang, so to speak, in the mountains that surround Paonia. Staffers have had to compete for parking on Grand Avenue with vehicles festooned by dead deer, and out one office window which faces a very busy meat packing plant, we can see a procession […]
Dear friends
On the green beat When journalists who cover the environment get together as 450 did Oct. 6-9 in Provo and Sundance, Utah, they tend to talk like underdogs. They tell how frustrating it is to sell complex green-beat stories to editors who ask for 12 inches of copy, or how tough it is to compete […]
Dear friends
Rockin’ and rollin’ The rural inland West is going out of its way to make Californians feel welcome. First we had summer fires that blanketed the area in smog. After the fires came the mud flows, including one that blocked Interstate 70 west of Glenwood Springs, Colo. Then on Sept. 13, moments after midnight, western […]
Dear friends
‘Assault on the Male’ Paonia residents got a sneak preview in the town hall of “Assault on the Male,” a BBC documentary that showed on the Discovery Channel Sept. 4. The preview and talk were courtesy of Theo Colborn, a Paonia resident and former local pharmacist who spends most of her time in Washington, D.C., […]
Dear friends
Energy efficient The U.S. Department of Energy has decided that High Country News walks its talk. HCN is one of seven recipients of the agency’s National Energy Awards. The newspaper was selected because its retrofitted building – once a feed and auto parts store – demonstrated admirable energy efficiency. The building was designed by architect […]
Dear friends
Ray Ring and company High Country News now has an Editor Emeritus, an Editor, an Associate Editor and, as of July 6, a Senior Editor. This last is Ray Ring, who has spent the past 10 years or so writing novels and free-lance newspaper and magazine articles in Tucson, Arizona. Altogether, Ray has lived and […]
Dear friends
Fires on the hillside The town of Paonia, where High Country News has its office, decided not to set off fireworks July 4th – nature was already providing a spectacular display. Lightning without rain had turned tinder-dry juniper hillsides above the town into fast-moving blazes, some spouting flames up to 80 feet tall. Although firefighters […]
