Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Agency wants to shoot down gun club

TUCSON, Ariz. – Forest Service officials have long dreamed of shutting down the Tucson Rod and Gun Club’s shooting range, but when they tried to silence the gunfire in March, they found themselves in the club’s crosshairs. The shooting range, which the gun club has leased from the Forest Service since the early 1950s, skirts […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

Youth Conservation Workshop

Today’s students are tomorrow’s land stewards, and for those interested in land management and conservation, the Colorado branch of the Society for Range Management is taking applications for four scholarships to its annual Youth Conservation Workshop, July 6-12. This national organization of ranchers, farmers, academics and employees of federal and state agencies sponsors the summer […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

The Colorado Trail Foundation

You can learn more about Colorado’s alpine environment by experiencing it this summer. The Colorado Trail Foundation offers three classes: “Alpine Wildflowers,” July 20-26, taught by botanist John Sowell; “Watercolor and Ornithology,” July 27-Aug. 2, taught by painter Marge Barge, and “Geology of the San Juans,” Aug. 3-9, taught by geologist Jack Campbell. Classes take […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

A negligent bureau?

What is the Bureau of Land Management doing in the woods? Not much good, says Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, a national organization of resource management employees. The watchdog group’s latest project, a Comprehensive Study of the Public Domain Forestry Program of the Bureau of Land Management, details what it calls rampant negligence within the […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

A Republican wins it

For the first time, a Republican will represent ethnically diverse northern New Mexico in Congress. Bill Redmond won the May 13 special election to replace Rep. Bill Richardson, who left office to become this country’s ambassador to the United Nations. Democrat Richardson had represented this district since its inception in 1982. Redmond, a minister, credits […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

Watch for fish-friendly foods

Salmon-friendly agricultural products are leaping right onto grocery store shelves this month. In the first attempt to market produce made with the Pacific Northwest’s dwindling salmon population in mind, the nonprofit Pacific Rivers Council has introduced a “Salmon-Safe” program. Twenty-four producers, ranging from wineries and vegetable growers to apple orchards and rice farms, have been […]

Posted inMay 26, 1997: The sacred and profane collide in the West

Just don’t do it

Just don’t do it Oregon’s logging codes might aim to protect fish, wildlife and water quality, but they can’t always protect people. A Coos Bay company recently defied a request from the state Forestry Department that loggers voluntarily stop clear-cutting slide-prone slopes above highways and homes. The state’s request came in response to last winter’s […]

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