Posted inMay 14, 2007: Two Views of the Verde

Tipping the scales towards native species

When biologist Phil Pister used buckets to rescue the last Owens pupfish from an evaporating pool, he knew that if he “tripped over a piece of barbed wire,” the species was history. Thirty-eight years later, the pupfish survives only because scientists move the fish pool-to-pool and constantly trap predators. In Unnatural Landscapes, Ceiridwen Terrill, a […]

Posted inMay 14, 2007: Two Views of the Verde

The challenge of climate-change denial

Reading the newspapers lately, you might get the impression that the once-strident climate-change deniers, doubters and skeptics are slowly becoming extinct. The New York Times recently called Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., the most strident of Al Gore’s critics, “a dinosaur,” and few in the House or Senate even tried to counter Gore’s recent testimony on […]

Posted inMay 14, 2007: Two Views of the Verde

Dropping the ball on the Snowbowl

Many loyal readers in Flagstaff were deeply disappointed by HCN’s minimal (125 words) blurb about the recent 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decision regarding the Arizona Snowbowl (HCN, 4/2/07). This was an amazing and significant decision with major consequences for land management throughout the West — and elsewhere. Snowbowl principal owner Eric Borowsky is already […]

Posted inMay 14, 2007: Two Views of the Verde

Saving the Sierra, tale by tale

NAMES: jesikah maria ross, Catherine Stifter PROJECT: Saving the Sierra: Voices of Conservation in Action RÉSUMÉ EXCERPTS: Stifter: Two Peabody awards for independent radio productions; firefighter, EMT, and water truck driver for North San Juan volunteer fire department; lives off the grid in solar-powered cabin. ross: UNICEF youth radio project in Ethiopia; community media projects […]

Posted inArticles

Oregon internees to get honorary degrees

These days, Portland’s Expo Center hosts everything from roller derby to dog shows. But few of the Oregonians who attend can recall when the Expo was used for a much grimmer purpose. At the onset of World War II, Japanese Americans were corralled on the grounds for months, awaiting the construction of internment camps. Sixty-five […]

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