Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Yellowstone bison guts pile up

On the day after Christmas, bison migrating downhill from Yellowstone National Park’s northern range once again met gunfire in Montana. Caught in a power struggle between the National Park Service, whose policy of “natural regulation” has allowed their numbers to grow to an estimated 4,300, and the livestock industry, which is worried about disease, more […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Feds targeted by louder thunder from below

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah – Met Johnson worried that no one would show up for the two-day Western Summit of conservative state legislators, county commissioners and public-land users he organized here in January. Johnson, the leader of the so-called “Cowboy Caucus” in the Utah House of Representatives, feared the “steam might have gone out of […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

So far, wolf reintroduction survives legal challenge

Wolves arrived in central Idaho and Yellowstone last week after evading enemies in courtrooms and legislatures around the region. The frenzy of last-minute legal maneuvering preceding their return has fragmented opinion on both sides of the issue and bewildered onlookers. Five months ago, to block the wolves’ return, the American Farm Bureau and the Mountain […]

Posted inJanuary 23, 1995: What a long strange trip it's been

Imported wolves lope off into Idaho wilderness

Editor’s note: After being trapped, caged, tested for disease and analyzed by genotype by having blood and tissue taken, inoculated, ear-tagged, radio-collared and tranquilized, they were loaded up for a plane ride south. This was a trip more than a decade in the making – restoring wolves to the West. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, on […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Easy does it: A sport to make your blood run slow

Even a pudgy mammal like myself knows better than to hibernate all winter, but choosing a winter sport is tricky. Downhill skiing is out; standing at the top of a steep hill with slippery little boards strapped to my feet gives me the fantods. This spell-checker doesn’t know that word, but I do. Cross-country skiing […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Especially expensive agents

For the fourth time in five years, the BLM’s law enforcement division has been blasted for shenanigans that were at best imprudent. An audit prepared by the Department of the Interior found that during 1991-92 the division’s 69 special agents misrepresented their case loads and misused their $27 million two-year budget. According to the report: […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

The education of a scientist

Edmund Wilson tells us he wrote his autobiography, Naturalist, to learn more fully “why I now think the way I do … and perhaps, to persuade.” The Harvard University professor, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, can’t really convey what made him a consummate biologist who taught the world the significance of biodiversity. But he can […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

For forest activists

Forest activists will gather in Ashland, Ore., Jan. 13-16 to discuss ways to attract more people to their cause and promote public awareness of forest issues. The fourth annual West Coast Ancient Forest Activists Conference, sponsored by the nonprofit group Headwaters, also features workshops exploring President Clinton’s Forest Plan to protect watersheds. Conference organizers hope […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Peace gets no chance

Elected officials in Los Alamos, N.M., where government scientists built the first atomic bomb, recently squelched a plan hatched by Albuquerque children to commemorate peace. County council members said the proposed park might become a gathering place for peaceniks, and that a plaque on a statue there might express anti-war sentiments. The council’s rejection stunned […]

Posted inDecember 26, 1994: Albuquerque learns it really is a desert town

Don’t dump on tourists

Those who blame tourism for dissolving ties in small towns and increasing living costs are on the wrong track, say some planning experts. It’s “the real estate community that is corrupting towns,” said Myles Rademan, public affairs director for Park City, Utah, at a Telluride, Colo., summer travel symposium. Other panelists also targeted escalating real […]

Gift this article