Posted inApril 1, 1996: Gambling: A tribe hits the jackpot

I made $52,000 in 1994 and never bought a pair of shoes that whole year

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Gambling: A tribe hits the jackpot.” “Tiffany” – she asked us not to use her real name – is a 48-year-old real estate agent from Phoenix. She gambled uncontrollably for two and half years and nearly ruined her marriage before controlling her compulsion. Now, […]

Posted inApril 1, 1996: Gambling: A tribe hits the jackpot

The nuts and bolts of Western gambling

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Gambling: A tribe hits the jackpot.” Americans spend more money on games of chance than movies, concerts and theaters combined. In 1994, Americans lost $40 billion of the $482 billion they wagered. Since state-sponsored lotteries and video gambling started the current gambling craze in […]

Posted inMarch 18, 1996: What does the West need to know?

The Native Home of Hope: Community, Ecology and the West

Missoula Mayor Daniel Kemmis, author Terry Tempest Williams and other Westerners will speak at the Wallace Stegner Center Symposium, called The Native Home of Hope: Community, Ecology and the West. The symposium, scheduled for April 12-13 at the University Park Hotel in Salt Lake City, will explore themes of cooperation and ecosystem management in the […]

Posted inMarch 18, 1996: What does the West need to know?

Environmental heroes

Not surprisingly, “environmental zeroes’ eclipsed “environmental heroes’ in the first session of the 104th Congress, according to the scorecard released last month by the League of Conservation Voters. The group’s 26th annual report rates lawmakers on key environmental votes, such as legislation to close national parks and to sell public lands. Contact the League of […]

Posted inMarch 18, 1996: What does the West need to know?

Arid art

Arid Art An Englishman from Cornwall in the west of England, Tony Foster is fascinated by the American West’s wilderness of eroded rocks and deserts, including Death Valley in California and the slickrock onion domes of Utah’s canyonlands. An exhibit of his latest work, Arid Lands, Watercolor Diaries of Journeys across Deserts, can be seen […]

Posted inMarch 18, 1996: What does the West need to know?

Brand new name, same old story

A new group has entered the fray over the Pacific Northwest’s salmon, but don’t be fooled by its name. The first, invitation-only meeting of Northwesterners for More Fish brought representatives from big electric companies, banks, timber companies, ports and aluminum plants to an exclusive club in Spokane last month, reports the Portland Oregonian. There, the […]

Gift this article