Posted inNovember 28, 1994: Beauty eludes the beast

Environmental records of ranking Republican members ofcommittees addressing natural resource issues

Note: this is a sidebar to the news story titled “Election ’94 postmortem“ Environmental records of ranking Republican members of committees addressing natural resource issues. Compiled by League of Conservation Voters, based on bill sponsorship and recorded votes in the 103rd Congress. Sen. John Chafee, Committee on Environment and Public Works – 79 percent Sen. […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Blow, whistleblowers, blow

Continuing to emphasize openness at the Department of Energy, Secretary Hazel O’Leary proposed reforms Oct. 17 to protect whistleblowers. Employees who raise concerns about fraud or safety, for example, would be protected against retaliation and litigation costs related to lawsuits brought against them by contractors, and the agency would form a special department for employee […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Wild in Montana

Two former high-ranking Forest Service officials known for their blunt criticism of the agency headline the Montana Wilderness Association’s 36th annual convention in Great Falls, Dec. 2-3. Tom Kovalecky, retired supervisor of the Nez Perce National Forest, and John Mumma, former regional forester for the northern region of the Forest Service, will speak about changes […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Say what?

The NPS wants help ASAP in de-jargonizing its PR under NEPA. Translated, that means for the first time in 12 years the National Park Service is considering changes in procedure under the National Environmental Policy Act, the mother of all environmental protection. Passed in 1969, the act describes which environmental impacts the federal government must […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Wilderness becomes a career path

The Forest Service is about to give designated wilderness the bureaucratic attention it deserves, according to Jim Lyons, the nation’s front-line politician overseeing the agency. The Forest Service is creating a new Washington, D.C.-based job, national director of wilderness, which “will be on a par with other program managers, such as timber, range and minerals,” […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

A small town in Oregon gets ugly

After tarred-and-feathered effigies of two environmental activists were strung up in the center of Joseph, Ore., Sept. 30, the local newspaper headlined its story: “Enviros can learn a lot from a couple of dummies.” Some residents then organized an economic boycott aimed at driving the two environmentalists out of town. Were these tactics reminiscent of […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Off campus: A sociologist tries to help Idaho’s small towns

Note: this feature article is one of several in a special issue about land grant universities in the West. When sociologist Aaron Harp interviewed for a job at the University of Idaho, he was asked if the university had an obligation to save the state’s rural communities. “That’s a loaded question,” says Harp. “And having […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

On campus: A department head tries to change the academic culture

Note: this feature article is one of several in a special issue about land grant universities in the West. If the West’s land-grant universities are to evolve, faculty like Glen Whipple are keys to that evolution. Whipple is head of the Agricultural Economics Department at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. Just as important, he […]

Posted inNovember 14, 1994: Land grant universities

Apple growers become patrons of science

Note: This article is a sidebar to one of this issue’s feature stories, Sexy weapon thwarts bugs. Washington’s asparagus growers will pay WSU scientists $12,000 this year to figure out how to prevent asparagus spears from softening during canning. Pea and lentil growers will spend about $50,000 on researching soil conservation. And the tiny cranberry industry […]

Gift this article