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Last Updated:
Apr 22nd, 2008 - 17:12:02 



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West By Northwest



Best of the Web
Green Light on Washington: Blogs from FCNL
Ned Stowe and Friends
"The Phone Is Ringing Now. Who Will Answer It? The next crisis is already here. Only it is not another armed attack by violent extremists. It is a much bigger threat. It is a threat not just to the U.S., but to all of humanity, far bigger than al Qaeda, Iran, and North Korea combined. Dangerous climate change, if unchecked now, will make today's security challenges seem small compared the mounting crises that humanity will likely face by mid-century and beyond... Climate change is threatening human security today." Visit a great, new, interactive blog at Friends Committee on National Legislation. a link to Green Light
Apr 22, 2008


Voices of Spencer Creek
Joy of Living: Busy Birdie Day
Edie Self
From her armchair, nature observer and writer Edie Self reports on the bird activities on a typical, early spring day near the river here in the Willamette Valley.In honor of Earth Day we bring you a little bit of the joy of living: "I wonder whether the heavy frosts followed by sunny days have already turned those berries alcoholic so early in the year." With a link in the photo to The Seattle Audubon Society's Bird Web site. Enjoy! a feature at WxNW.org
Apr 22, 2008


Voices of Spencer Creek
Spencer Creek Storybook: A Rainbow Quilt, and Maple Syrup?
Lois Barton
The new name for this section will eventually be a new project of WxWN.org. Meanwhile, enjoy the true tales of Lois and her talented family: "In 2004 Margie replaced the thirty-year old Viking machine with a Baby Lock embroidery machine. The upstairs bedroom in that log house has been converted into an ergonomic studio with cutting, ironing, assembly facilities, including a large design wall. Margie is noted for artistic use of color, design and patterns the skill for which is undoubtedly inherited from her quilting grandmother." And..."a red breasted sapsucker was absorbed in drinking the sap from several holes he’d drilled through the bark." –a two for one feature at WxNW.org
Apr 18, 2008


Voices for the World
Tigerland
Caroline Alexender
A journey through the mangrove forest of Bengal:" 'If the Sundarbans goes under, the tiger episode on earth is over,' Kushal said, a belief shared by many authorities. The plight of tigers worldwide is critical, with the most optimistic estimates positing a population of between thirty-three hundred and forty-three hundred. Some four hundred tigers are cautiously estimated to inhabit the combined Sundarbans of India and Bangladesh... From time to time, we passed solitary women trudging through the water near the shoreline, pulling nets behind them as they trawled for prawn seed. This practice, introduced in the past twenty years or so, has disastrously reduced prawn and other fish populations, and the constant pacing along the fragile shore by the women and children who drag the nets has contributed to erosion. In their flowing saris, the women presented picturesque silhouettes that belied the danger of their work, up to ten hours a day waist high in the murky water. As many as ten fatal crocodile attacks are documented each year..."-with a thanks and a link to The New Yorker
Apr 18, 2008


Voices of Peace
Call to Pope to Truly Preach Gospel of Peacemaking
Bishop Gumbleton and Frank Cordaro and 1250 others
We waited until the reports came in of the Pope's speech to the United Nations. Not yet has he not spoken words that any good diplomat could utter:"Five years later, how much more reason you have to call for an immediate end to this war, and to refuse to meet with the President of the United States until that is accomplished." –thanks to Institute for Public Accuracy
Apr 18, 2008


Voices of Peace
Inventing a Word for Trauma: Adrien Niyongabo and the Trauma Healing and Reconcilliation Service
Lois Barton with Helen Park
As we mark the sad, 5th anniversary year of US occupation in Iraq, we think of all the people who have needlessly suffered. This story gives hope that after terrible and tragic events, healing from trauma is possible. This speaker from Burundi says: "Post-traumatic stress disorder is epidemic in those countries affected by the genocide, but the languages did not even have a word for trauma. People described such terrible symptoms and experiences that the word was coined for trauma that could be literally translated as 'to take out your heart and put it back upside down.' "– a feature at WxNW.org
Mar 20, 2008


Voices of the Northwest
The RG's Porter/Mickey Exchange Over BLM's Western Oregon Plan Revision
Sam Porter and Ross Mickey
"But the BLM is required to comply with the Endangered Species Act to 'provide the means whereby the ecosystems upon which an endangered species depends may be conserved.' And although this crucial and ecologically insightful NFMA regulation – 'to maintain all native vertebrate species in a viable state across their ranges'– is not legally binding on the BLM, that agency should"...and the reply from Ross Mickey, the Western Oregon Manager for American Forest Resource Council. And Porter's second letter in reply.– a feature at WxNW.org and a thanks to Sam Porter and the RG
Mar 20, 2008


Voices of the Northwest
The LNG/Pipeline Conversation
Sha Spady
Oregon Public Broadcasting has a new call-in show called Think Out Loud covering regional issues. This thoughtful writer replied:"Simply put the LNG/No LNG issue is a classic example of the meeting of conflicting paradigms: the pre-21st century 'Human Entitlement' paradigm vs. the 21st Century 'Sustainability' paradigm." –with a link to OPB's Think Out Loud
Mar 20, 2008


Environment in the News
LNG Terminal Carries Long-term Threats
Don B. Henning
"I cannot understand why 'the fix' appears to be in for proposals to site LNG facilities on the Columbia when similar proposals have been rejected for good reasons in California, Washington and Mexico... It appears large vested private money interests are behind these proposals to create an entirely new bulk energy importation stream for interstate markets and that these business interests will continue to push these plans forward without due regard to the welfare or safety of Oregon’s citizens, environment and economies." –with a link to the Hilsboro Argus/oldnorthcoastoregon.com
Mar 20, 2008


Environment in the News
West Coast Salmon Season Imperiled by Low Stocks
David B. Wood, The Christian Science Monitor
"Dave Bitts, a Eureka-based salmon trawler for more than 30 years, says he could lose half his yearly income, and coastal towns from Oregon to the Mexico border will lose a mainstay of their economy and culture. Savina Duran, manager of Sea Harvest restaurant in Moss Landing, Calif., says diners will have to forgo a hot-ticket menu choice – wild, fresh, local salmon – for cheaper, farm-grown varieties from elsewhere. Steve Scheiblauer, harbor master for Monterey, Calif., says the town could lose the quaintness of a coastal California fishing village as fleets of fishing boats disappear from the harbor. Their concerns come with the cutback – and possible shutdown – of ocean salmon fishing in California and Oregon. It could happen because US government assessments showed the spawning chinook at half the minimum number needed for current statewide industry demand. A total shutdown of salmon fishing – one of three options to be decided by April 6 – would be the biggest fishing closure in West Coast history, experts say..." – with a link to The Christian Science Monitor
Mar 20, 2008


Voices for the World
Nobel Laureates Condemn China on Tibet
Carley Petesch, Associated Press
Pray for the people of Tibet, and the world. Meanwhile: "Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel and 25 other Nobel laureates on Thursday condemned the Chinese government's violent crackdown on Tibetan protesters and called on Beijing to exercise restraint...But he said pressure for peace and dialogue is needed until we 'hear reports from the Tibetan themselves that all has been restored and the prisons are opened.' Tibetan exile groups have claimed that 80 people were killed during the protest and its aftermath, while Beijing maintains that 16 died and more than 300 were injured."–with a link to google.com news
Mar 20, 2008


Voices of the Nation
The War Election
Norman Solomon
"If the ultimate argument against the war is that it isn’t being won, the advocates for more war will have extra incentive to show that it can be won after all. If a steady argument against the war maintains that it was and is wrong -- that it is fundamentally immoral -- that’s a tougher sell to the savants of Capitol Hill and an array of corporate-paid journalists." –a feature at WxWN.org
Mar 7, 2008


Best of the Web
The I.F. Stone Project on Journalistic Independence
Steve Aftergood
"I.F. Stone (1907-1989), the celebrated journalist and iconoclast who was renowned for his independence, is being remembered in the service of the values he embodied... The Nieman Foundation at Harvard University today announced the establishment of an I.F. Stone Award for journalistic independence, integrity ...at http://www.nieman.harvard.edu/
Also a richly detailed new website devoted to I.F. Stone provides excerpts from his writings, biographical information, reminiscences and other information..." –with a thanks to Steve Aftergood and his great Secrecy News Blog, a link to www.ifstone.org

Mar 7, 2008


Arts & Letters
When the Beats Came Back
John Suiter
"In a plain gray archival box in the basement of Reed’s Hauser Library there lies a single reel of audiotape that captures a moment in the early life of one of the anthemic poems of the 20th century. The aging brown acetate clarifies an author’s voice, hints at a spirit, adds to the myth of two poets, and tells of a part Reed College played in the early days of the Beat Generation—before it was Beat, or yet a generation. The lid of the box is marked simply but evocatively with two names and a year:'Snyder Ginsberg 1956.' It has lain there, duly cataloged but unlistened-to, until this past spring, when I stumbled on it..." Also listen to the earliest-known recording of Ginsberg reading "Howl" at the Portland college. An extraordinary example of literary sleuthing at its best.– a grateful thanks and a link to Reed Magazine
Feb 27, 2008


eBooks
Breaking Free: A Novel of the Sixties
Sylvia Hart Wright
For the fourth anniversary online, we are celebrating when a new novel hit the cyberspace "press," the second part a fund-raiser for this zine. Now for the first time, West By Northwest.org is proud to present, free, both parts of the full-length, historically accurate novel by prize-winning author, Sylvia Hart Wright. Crafted into two parts, each part can stand alone; however if you are like most readers, you will want to follow Elise Heller's adventures from the stormy student, peace and women's movements of the Bay Area to the New York noir of the Black Panthers. With a gift for dialog and a great sense of how the personal truly is political, this novel introduced many memorable characters, especially Elise Heller, one of the strongest female protagonists in contemporary American fiction. –an e-book feature of WxNw.org
Feb 27, 2008


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