Posted inSeptember 24, 2001: River of dreams

Dear Friends

Award-winning intern Congratulations to former Daily Astorian reporters Karen Mockler and Mike Stark. The pair will share the 4th annual Dolly Connelly Excellence in Environmental Journalism Award for their three-part series on the Columbia River Estuary, titled “Life on the Brink.” The $1,000 annual award was created by Seattle Post-Intelligencer columnist Joel Connelly to honor […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

Coverage appreciated

Dear HCN, We are so delighted when HCN arrives in our mailbox. It provides well-written and excellent information – though often disturbing – about our changing world and Western landscapes. Some of these changes are very positive, however, like the most recent article about the Salish and Kootenai tribes whose stewardship principles should be carried […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

Carla and Greg Woodall not the whole story

Dear HCN, The July 30 front-page piece titled, “Not in our backyard” was well-written and informative, except for one important detail: It gave the reader the impression that Greg Woodall and his sister, Carla, invented the campaign to preserve Scottsdale’s McDowell Mountains and are practically doing it by themselves. That isn’t the case. Greg and […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

The facts about fish control

Dear HCN, In a May article titled “Debate rages over fish poisoning” (HCN, 5/7/01: Debate rates over fish poisoning), very subjective views of the impacts of fish-control chemicals antimycin and rotenone on the environment were presented. It’s ironic that despite the article’s recognition of the growing fears of the uninformed public toward fish-control chemicals, it […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

Boulder utilizes burns

Last May, when a prescribed burn in New Mexico’s Bandelier National Monument blew out of control and destroyed 200 structures in nearby Los Alamos, burn programs around the nation faced intense scrutiny. But in Boulder, Colo., support for prescribed burning in local open space remains strong. The Boulder Fire Department’s prescribed fire management specialist Rod […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

Voice of the Butterfly

Change can be as miraculous as a butterfly emerging from a chrysalis … or as surreal as a wild landscape sprouting highways and leapfrog subdivisions. John Nichols’ newest work of fiction, The Voice of the Butterfly, is a hyperactive meditation on transformation in our post-modern, uber-consumption world. Full of gritty slapstick zen, Nichols’ morality play […]

Posted inSeptember 10, 2001: The rise and fall of a desert stream

Keeping an eye on The Planet

Last year, instead of heading home after a full day of classes, senior Tiffany Campbell went to the Bellingham offices of The Planet, Western Washington University’s nationally recognized environmental magazine. As The Planet’s editor, Campbell rounded out 15-hour days editing copy, meeting with writers and laying out nearly 40 pages of stories. For Campbell, who […]

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