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Two Cents From Us, No Sense From the Vacation

For months, the Vatican has been filibustering against the United Nations’ International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) that convenes September 5 in Cairo. In March, Pope John Paul II castigated the conference leader, Dr. Nafis Sadik, during her audience at the Vatican. :Marriage is ignored, as if it were something of the past," he fumed in a press statement. In April, the Holy See and a handful of Catholic countried tied up the advance meetings in New York with numbing debates over phrases like "individuals and couples," "reproductive and sexual health," and even "safe motherhood," which the Vatican somehow interprets as condoning pre-marital sex, contraception or abortion. And in June, 114 cardinals from around the world gathered in Rome to denounce "cultural imperialism" and "ideologies" whereby "abortion on demand, sexual promiscuity and distorted notions of the family are proclaimed as human rights or proposed as ideals for the young." The Vatican wants everyone to restrict their sexual lives to the time of the month when a woman is naturally infertile, no matter what their religion, no matter what the state of the world.

The Voice of Our Elders

Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders doesn’t mince words when taking on the tobacco lobby and other obstacles to American health.

The Old College Try

College campuses have some environmental craming to do: The average student produces 640 pounds of solid waste each year, including 500 disposable cups and 320 pounds of paper. Only five percent of it gets recycled. But not all students are hedonistic, beer-swilling waste creators. More than 450 people from 125 universities attended the Campus Earth Summit at Yale University in February to hear speakers like Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Carol Browner and her predecessor, William Reilly. Paul Hawken, the author of "The Ecology of Commerce" and head of cataloger Smith and Hawken, told them: "There are a lot of things that come between you and your Calvins." Among the chemicals used in making clothes: camium, molybdenum and lead. "This jacket I like to wear," he said, thumbing his tweed at the lapels, "Chromium, zinc, tin…"

Plugging Burma’s Pipeline

Burma, the western flank of the Indochina peninsula that also includes Vietnam and Thailand, has long been a black hole in the global village. For decades the military dictator was a numerologist and xenophobe. Foreign corporations, foreign journalists, foreign anything were not welcomed. (The country still supplies half of the world’s heroin and opium.) In 1988, the military junta crushed a student pro-democracy movement, killing over 2,000 demonstrators, and renamed the country Myanmar. The junta, now called the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC), invited foreigners to tap its natural wealth for the first time in 30 years. Thai loggers rushed into the teak forests, adding the deforestation that plagues the country. One large rainforest remains, however, because it’s the home of ethnic villagers whoe have been fighting the government for 40 years. But SLORC may conquer the region with a natural gas pipeline for the benefit of international oil companies.

The Achilles’ Heel of Nuclear Power

In January 1993, Portland General Electric (PGE), Oregon’s largest electric utility, closed its nuclear power plant, Trojan, after cooling tubes has seriously corroded less than halfway through the plant’s anticipated 35-year lifespan. PGE had also found inexpensive replacement power from California. It would be cheaper to close Trojan, said the utility, than to fix it.

Hunter’s Free Speech

In the late fall of 1990, a woman named Claire Casey tried to stop a pair of hunters from shooting tame partridges on public land owned by the state Bureau of Land Management in Idaho. She waved her arms around to scare the partridges off, and lectrued the hunters on the errors of their ways. Casey didn’t just make the hunters mad–she sent them scurrying for their lawyers. Casey was convicted of "hunter harrassment" and fines $150.

Blight of the American Chestnut

Millions of lofty, straight American chestnut trees once forested the eastern United States with their dense canopy of saw-toothed leaves, making an umbrella for a host of native wildlife. During the late 1800s, a determined squirrel could have traveled from Atlanta, Georgia to Bar Harbor, Maine aboard the outstretched boughs of chestnut trees without ever touching the ground. Yet, according to Philip Rutter, president emeritus of the American Chestnut Foundation, it would have been a lean and mean rodent by journey’s end, for the chestnut’s spiny bur has been described as "the most effective anti-squirrel device nature has invented." Humans weren’t deterred, though, and many trees became fine Early American furniture. The wood, resistant to rot and weather, split with a straight grain and carved easily. Its bark–rich in tannic acid–was used to tan leather.

The Panther’s Last Stand

You may recognize the Florida panthers as the ferocius cat flashing its teeth on pro hockey T-shirts sold in sporting goods stores, or peering from one of the Sunshine State’s hottest selling specialty license plates. Its cash-register-ringing popularity belies and irony: The Florida panther is perhaps the world’s most endangered carnivore, with only about 70 surviving in the wild, including the young. Down from the days when a panther scalp brought a $5 bounty from cattlemen tired of the cats killing calves, almost everyone now wants the save the panther. But can they?

One Man’s Junk

Under the looming shadow of the 1990 Clean Air Act and the threat whooping federal fines if they don’t reduce pollution, states are taking a hard look at a symbol of the bad old days–smoke-belching 1960s and 70s cars. But getting the clunkers off the road is no simple matter.

Attack of the Feral Pigs

In December, 1992, the adventure-loving chairperson of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), Alex Pacheco, and staffer David Barnes helicoptered into the lush Pelekunu Valley on the Hawaii island of Molokai, a largely untamed sliver of paradise 40 miles long and nine miles wide. Pacheco and Barnes planned to camp out for several weeks on its remote Pelenuku Preserve. Their purpose, however, was not to bask in the midday sun or engage in leisurely bird watching.

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