Posted inDecember 6, 1999: Peggy Godfrey's long, strange trip

Check your facts on ORVs

Dear HCN, I think Todd Wilkinson should check his facts a bit more thoroughly next time he writes an article such as “Forest Service sets off into uncharted territory” (HCN, 11/8/99). He states that the BlueRibbon Coalition “receives significant funding from OHV manufacturers and timber companies.” I suppose this depends on your definition of “significant.” […]

Posted inDecember 6, 1999: Peggy Godfrey's long, strange trip

‘Appropriate balance’ not pertinent at Petroglyph

Dear HCN, I was glad to see your coverage of the crisis at Petroglyph National Monument in Albuquerque (HCN, 10/25/99). While in New Mexico three years ago, I spent a day exploring that monument. With its eloquent, ageless images, it impressed me as a treasure of transcendent value, affording civilization a new and better way […]

Posted inDecember 6, 1999: Peggy Godfrey's long, strange trip

We need a new vision for the wild

Dear HCN, In his interesting piece on disputes about creating new wilderness areas, Jon Margolis dubs the William Cronon critique of the wilderness ethic post-modernist, meaning that it’s mostly about an impressionistic appraisal of wildlands (HCN, 9/27/99). Margolis misses the point here; Cronon’s analysis is more substantive than that. The modern wilderness movement believes that […]

Posted inDecember 6, 1999: Peggy Godfrey's long, strange trip

Rivers among us

Even in the arid West, water wars aren’t inevitable, according to a new study by Reason Public Policy Institute in Los Angeles. Collaborative local planning efforts are an effective method of balancing water needs while protecting the environment, according to the 35-page study Rivers Among Us: Local Watershed Preservation and Resource Management in the Western […]

Posted inDecember 6, 1999: Peggy Godfrey's long, strange trip

‘Spiritual hucksterism’ attacked in Boulder

A former Naropa University student sued the Boulder, Colo., liberal arts college this fall, claiming “cultural genocide” and “spiritual hucksterism,” amid threats of a campus occupation by American Indian activists. Lydia White Calf and her Oglala Lakota husband, Royce, accused the co-founder of Naropa’s Native American Studies program of illegally practicing sacred ceremonies in the […]

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