Posted inAugust 19, 1996: Western voices

A green Republican makes a run

Physician Robin Silver of Phoenix is known as an uncompromising environmentalist. Most recently, he forced the federal government to list the Mexican spotted owl as “threatened,” thereby stopping logging in the Southwest (HCN, 9/4/95). He has also fought against construction of a series of telescopes on Arizona’s Mount Graham (HCN, 7/24/95). So some Republicans may […]

Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

Feds set “terrible precedent’ with Kolob Canyon settlement

The survivors of an outing that left two Explorer Scout leaders dead in Utah’s Kolob Canyon will get more than $2 million from an out-of-court settlement with public agencies. David Fleischer and LeRoy Kim Ellis drowned in July 1993 while descending a narrow slot canyon near Zion National Park. A surviving Scout leader, four of […]

Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

Drought has Navajos discussing a taboo subject – range reform

DILKON, Ariz. – “Do you know anywhere where livestock sells for more?” asks Navajo rancher Jane Yazzie. As her friend translates my negative response, Yazzie fidgets with a check on the table. It’s clear the amount pains her. For one 450-pound heifer, an Arizona auction house paid $186.10. Two years ago, she probably would have […]

Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

‘Takings’: Lobbyists love it, the public doesn’t

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Remember Mr. Smith proclaiming that lost causes were the only ones worth fighting for? Even without Jimmy Stewart’s comforting drawl, that sentiment strikes a chord. Who can resist the charm of the loser who does not quit, the true believer who persists despite the disapproval of the multitudes? In that light, consider […]

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