Posted inDecember 24, 2007: Last chance for the Lobo

Not Rupert Murdoch, that’s for sure

Matt Jenkins’ update on L.A.’s Metropolitan Water District is a wonderful and necessary piece, taking up slack since the Chicago Tribune gutted the once-proud L.A. Times, which no longer appears capable (HCN, 11/12/07). It gives me little pleasure to note that where mainstream media regularly fails to look out for the public interest, your independent […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2007: Last chance for the Lobo

Personal freedom, personal responsibility

Our communities have successfully developed smart solutions to avoid foreseeable nightmares from sprawl, traffic and other infrastructure limitations (HCN, 11/26/07). Across the West, new affronts to a legacy of urban planning are now emerging in response to these successes. Arizona’s “wildcat” subdivisions are one remarkable example, and last year’s so-called “takings” initiatives another. Thanks in […]

Posted inDecember 24, 2007: Last chance for the Lobo

The troubled times of the Mexican wolf

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Last chance for the Lobo.” PRE-1970 Mexican wolves extirpated from the Southwestern U.S. by private, state and government control campaigns. 1970s 1976 Mexican wolf listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act. 1977-1980 Five wolves captured in Mexico to establish a captive breeding program. […]

Posted inWotr

How to feel abundant at Christmas

In recent weeks I repeatedly found myself shopping for gifts and stocking stuffers. More than once I roamed the aisles of discount stores that specialize in out-of-fashion, out-of-date, not-quite top-shelf merchandise. You know, not the Salvation Army, but definitely not Target. I was not alone. The stores were crammed with shoppers looking for bedroom slippers, […]

Posted inWotr

You, too, can overcome cynicism at Christmas

Trolling the Web recently, I found Rick Banyan’s site for “kinder, gentler” cynics. I hoped he’d help me get through this season of jingles and fears that we’re not buying enough stuff to make Christmas profitable for retailers. Banyan says sarcastically that we “emerge from the holidays 10 pounds heavier and several hundred dollars lighter.” […]

Posted inArticles

Going Native

Raising teepees isn’t the type of engineering one usually expects from the Army Corps of Engineers. But thanks to a novel training program, more than 150 federal employees have learned firsthand how to build the traditional native dwellings. Participants in the Corps’ tribal training course, which is designed to increase cultural and environmental awareness, spend […]

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