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  • Mayonnaise on Rye, Hold the Tuna

    Citing mercury levels found in canned tuna, a coalition of environmental and health care groups is urging that pregnant women avoid eating canned tuna and that preschool kids eat no more than one tuna sandwich a week. The Environmental Working Group and Health Care Without Harm bought 27 samples of tuna in grocery stores and […]

  • Protestors Blubber Over Hunt

    The Makah Indians had an unsuccessful day of whale hunting off the coast of Washington yesterday, the tribe’s first hunt in more than 70 years. The Makah expect to harpoon a whale during coming weeks and placed part of the blame for their failure to do so yesterday on protestors whose boats followed them to […]

  • Seine Thoughts on Nukes

    Cracks are beginning to show in France’s strong base of support for nuclear energy. For the first time, politicians, including Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, are talking about cutting back on nuclear power. Jospin has said that France should reduce its dependence on nuclear from 80 percent to 60 percent of the nation’s energy supply, and […]

  • Watt's Up with Clinton?

    The Clinton administration is likely to nominate as a federal judge a Utah conservative whom environmentalists have compared to James Watt. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah), who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, is pushing the nomination of Ted Stewart, current chief of staff to Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt (R), and some administration officials believe Hatch will […]

  • Borderline Psychosis

    The U.S. and Mexico will need better land-use planning along their border over the next 20 years to avoid a host of serious environmental ills, according to a new report by a group of U.S. and Mexican universities. The area’s population could nearly double by 2020, straining already dwindling water supplies and worsening cross-border air […]

  • Caspar, the Friendly Town

    The 300-some residents of Caspar, an unincorporated village in northern California, have drawn up detailed plans for a model sustainable community that would run largely on solar power and include an electric-vehicle charging station, lots of open space, and affordable housing. They have proposed strict land-use regulations prohibiting new buildings that would negatively affect native […]

  • Top Secret: You Could Die

    The Clinton administration proposed a bill Friday that would let Americans living near dangerous chemicals know the casualty estimates for a worst-case accident in their region, while attempting to keep the information out of the hands of terrorists who might use it to plan an attack. The EPA last fall considered posting detailed worst-case chemical […]

  • Going, Going … Gabon

    Even as gorillas and chimpanzees in Central Africa are being wiped out by hunters, scientists are sounding the alarm that the animals need to be saved because they may be the key to finding a cure for AIDS. In January, scientists announced that H.I.V.-1, the most common AIDS virus, came from a subspecies of chimpanzee […]

  • David Dobbs, New England environmental author

    David Dobbs writes about the environment, community, and science from his home in Vermont. A contributor to Audubon, Sierra, Vermont Life, Popular Science, and other magazines, he is co-author of The Northern Forest and is now writing a book on the New England fishery, to be published next year. Sunday, 9 May 1999 MONTPELIER, Vt. […]

  • Eco-Visionaries or Survivalist Kooks? You Decide

    Solar power companies around the U.S. are getting a boost in sales from people who fear the impact of the Y2K problem. Some speculate that the millennium bug will cause massive failures in the nation’s power grid, though electric companies claim they have the situation under control. In another Y2K-related development, the French Institute of […]