An animal-rights activist has wounded or killed hunts for black bears in California and Colorado, grizzly bears and buffalo in Montana, and elk in Arizona, and has his sights set on other hunts in the West.
The Magazine
December 16, 1991: Are the bison coming?
Frank and Deborah Popper see themselves as carrying a timely, well-meant warning to the Great Plains. But most Great Plains residents see the two New Jersey academics as alarmists, and their Buffalo Commons idea as malicious.
December 2, 1991: The public gets a chance to revamp dams built 50 years ago
Native Americans are in the best position to alter the way dams are operated as developers ask the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to renew licenses for 170 of the nation’s oldest hydropower projects.
November 18, 1991: A passive town in Utah awaits its fate
Overwhelmed by the current wave of tourism, federal administrators of the public land surrounding Moab say they are unprepared to handle the environmental impacts of off-trail biking, four-wheeling and unregulated camping.
November 4, 1991: Mining law is no longer a sacred cow
Congress could consider comprehensive reforms to the 1872 Mining Law for the first time since the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920.
October 21, 1991: Sting uncovers eagle-killers
Working undercover, agents bought an array of illegal poisons, learned how to lace carcasses with them, and visited ranches where deadly baits were left for predators.
October 7, 1991: Two say politics rules their agencies
John Mumma came alone to a packed subcommittee hearing Sept. 24 to denounce the agency that — for three decades — he put above family and friends …
September 23, 1991: How a Montana reporter wrote what he saw … and lost his job
Missoulian reporter Richard Manning told how the logging business in Montana had taken a brutal turn that would punish the land, the local economy, and the small-time loggers and mills.
September 9, 1991: High noon in Nevada
The Forest Service goes head-to-head with an angry rancher.
August 26, 1991: Government tames its wild, destructive dam
Early this month Interior Secretary Manuel Lujan issued a decree to alter the operation of a key faucet on the Colorado River — Glen Canyon Dam.
August 12, 1991: West’s grand old water doctrine dies
Colorado attorney declares “First in time, first in right” dead.
July 15, 1991: Special issue: The Central Arizona Project story
The Central Utah Project is yet another sign that the West’s and the nation’s attitude toward water is changing.
July 1, 1991: The Snake’s imperiled salmon: A personal call to act
I want to tell you about a fish, a place named for it, and a recent weekend there that I will not forget.
June 17, 1991: A wilderness war: Utah’s canyons cut to the bone
The wilderness debate is forcing rural Utahns to confront their deepest hopes and fears.
June 3, 1991: A fading Yellowstone ‘Vision’
In 1989 a coalition of park and forest chiefs in what is now called the Greater Yellowstone ecosystem embarked on a pioneering plan to coordinate their management. But something went awry.
May 20, 1991: Solar power becomes a reality
A California solar energy company that wants to generate thousands of megawatts of pollution-free electricity is finding surprising success in the sun-drenched American Southwest.
May 6, 1991: The bombing of the West
For many of the Navy and Air Force pilots who would fly deadly missions in Operation Desert Storm, their first experience with live bombs was in the Nevada desert.
April 22, 1991: Special issue: Northwest salmon at the crossroads
Twenty articles and four special maps on salmon, dams, and logging.
April 8, 1991: Overgrazing: Feds move to end it
The Forest Service claims parts of the Big Cimarron grazing allotment on the Uncompahgre National Forest are chronically overgrazed, and says the bulk of the area should be managed for recreation and the protection of its rivers and lakes.
March 26, 1991: The nuclear wasting of the West
The nation’s nuclear weapons industry has left a dangerous legacy of radioactive wastes strewn around the West.
