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  • Jamie Lennox, Alliance for the Wild Rockies

    Jamie Lennox is membership coordinator for the Alliance for the Wild Rockies and a board member of the Wild Rockies Legislative Action Fund. He previously worked for the Missoula Independent, a weekly newspaper. He lives in Missoula, Mont. Monday, 2 Aug 1999 MISSOULA, Mont. Today, I am pondering wilderness. I write and rewrite about my […]

  • Bright Lights, Big Donations

    GOP presidential hopeful George W. Bush is winning over big business with help from a college chum, Thomas Kuhn, head of the Edison Electric Institute, an electric utility trade group. Trade associations have traditionally kept quiet during presidential nomination battles, but this year they are speaking out early and declaring their allegiance to Bush. Lobbyists […]

  • I've Seen Fire and I've Seen Rainforests

    A thick, hazy smog caused by the burning of rainforests in Indonesia is spreading across Southeast Asia this week, reminiscent of the 1997 smog that caused rampant health problems and that cost Indonesia, Singapore, and Malaysia some $4 billion. Satellite pictures show that most of the fires have been started by owners of Indonesian plantations, […]

  • A Hot New Trend

    The hot, dry weather that is now plaguing much of the U.S., and which has killed 182 people, appears to extend what federal scientists say is a trend toward more extreme summer temperatures since World War II. While most scientists are hesitant to attribute any individual heat wave to global warming, some note that the […]

  • Bay Watch

    The San Francisco Bay looks and smells a lot better these days than it did 30 years ago, in part because municipal sewage and industrial waste are no longer dumped directly into the water. But many fish and wildlife species in the Bay are still in steep decline. The problem now is numerous small sources […]

  • The E in E-Commerce Ain't Energy

    Emissions of carbon dioxide in the U.S. remained almost flat last year, rising only 0.4 percent, despite a booming U.S. economy that grew almost 4 percent and gasoline prices that hit record lows. These new findings are punching a hole in the theory that economic growth is linked to energy consumption, and are giving credibility […]

  • A Fine French Whine

    Pollution is the top worry for French citizens, with 85 percent of respondents in a recent poll saying they are concerned about the problem. The Paris area has had severe air pollution problems this week, and the World Health Organization estimated earlier this year that some 17,000 people die each year in France from illnesses […]

  • A Drought of Good Sense

    A House subcommittee this week took up Rep. Joe Knollenberg’s (R-Mich.) quest to repeal part of a 1992 law that gave the feds license to require that new toilets be low-flow. Though plumbing manufacturers and environmentalists say otherwise, Knollenberg and 82 other reps contend that the new toilets, which flush no more than 1.6 gallons […]

  • A Good Sense of Drought

    Parris N. Glendening (D) yesterday declared Maryland’s first statewide drought emergency in history and said mandatory water conservation measures probably will be imposed as soon as next week. In the meantime, the state has suggested that residents take shorter showers, not wash cars, and not bother to water the lawn or flower beds. Glendening, speaking […]