Opinion

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  • Hard Green Is Hard to Swallow

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Five years ago, a senior executive of a major trade association in Washington D.C.
  • Genetically Modified Medicine

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Though controversy surrounds the use of genetically modified seeds for growing such food staples as corn and soybeans, GM techniques are standard practice in medicine--and have been for decades.
  • 03/2000 School Choice Roundup

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Georgia * Illinois * Michigan * New York North Carolina * Ohio * Pennsylvania * Texas * Wisconsin GEORGIA GOP Senators Announce Voucher Plan Although the education reform bill Georgia Governor Roy Barnes introduced on January 13 included
  • Anti-logging activists gear up

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    The U.S. Forest Service is required to provide a comment period for citizens to respond to its Notice of Intent to prevent use of 40 million acres of roadless areas in National Forests.
  • Boom Continues in New Charter Schools

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A record number of new charter schools--more than 550--opened across the nation at the start of the 1999-2000 school year, bringing the total to 1,682, all created since 1991.
  • Burning Boise

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Radical anti-civilization environmentalists at the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) have claimed credit for setting a fire that destroyed the regional headquarters of Boise Cascade timber company in Monmouth, Oregon on Christmas morning, 1999.
  • CDC report warns of sludge danger

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Scientists and medical researchers are raising concerns that municipal sludge spread on farm fields across the U.S. may be responsible for illnesses and even deaths.
  • Does the GOP still stand for freedom?

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Are those who forget history doomed to repeat it? In the case of Texas Governor George W. Bush, the answer would appear to be yes.
  • Engineering for a better tree

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    According to Science News, wood harvested from trees that have been genetically engineered could make paper less costly and more environmentally friendly to produce. Vincent L.
  • Engineering the new millennium

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    From today’s cheese to tomorrow’s cures, biotechnology is supplying new answers to old problems.
  • Federal Coverup of $2.4 Billion Bungle

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    If Members of Congress want to know what to expect from approving the Clinton-Gore plan to increase federal oversight of public education, they need look no further than the federal government’s record on educating American Indians for the past 100
  • Hundreds of scientists sign biotechnology declaration

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A declaration supporting agricultural biotechnology and signed by over 600 scientists from around the world was released January 22 at a press briefing in Montreal. The briefing, sponsored by International Consumers for Civil Society, featured Dr. C.S.
  • Polar winds of change

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Are changes in wind flow around the poles a symptom of human-induced climate change? University of Washington researcher John M.
  • Teacher Text Demonizes Phonics

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A Whole Language textbook currently in use in a state university in New York warns budding educators that teaching children to read by sounding out the syllables of the English language is a "conspiracy" of the "Far Right" to "promote a religious
  • Test Cheats

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A dozen teachers in Los Angeles County's Banning High School face disciplinary action after school officials in January determined they helped students cheat on the Stanford-9 exam last spring.
  • The Controversial Top 10

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    The 10 mathematics programs endorsed by the Department of Education are described at http://www.enc.org/ed/exemplary/. A list of Expert Panel members is found at http://www.ed.gov/offices/OERI/ORAD/KAD/expert_panel/mathmemb.
  • Uncle Sam: Sell that land!

    Published March 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Teddy Roosevelt, who became the nation’s 26th president following the assassination of William McKinley, has long been lionized as the man who led his troops up San Juan Hill.
  • Analytical Results and Findings: Little Galloo Island

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Soil/Guano By far the most interesting and alarming discoveries of the Chopra-Lee Inc. investigation involve the soil and soil/guano samples obtained from Little Galloo and Galloo Islands.
  • Top EPA official in New England resigns

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    The sudden resignation of EPA Region I Administrator John P. DeVillars has sparked speculation within the agency and in the media that his departure could be related to widespread reports of enforcement problems in EPA's Boston office.
  • Cormorants culprits of contamination

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    A private consulting firm hired by a group of concerned citizens has found potentially harmful levels of PCBs, DDE, and mercury on state-owned property, Little Galloo Island, in eastern Lake Ontario.
  • Anti-biotech activists sow fear

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Modern biotechnology has sparked both optimism and controversy. Debate about the impact of the research tools and products of biotechnology encompasses human health, farm economics, global biodiversity, and environmental quality.
  • The melon millennium

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Melons offer something for everyone. Fragrant yet humble muskmelon is the highlight of an elegant breakfast; red, juicy watermelon the family picnic favorite; and pale green honeydew a salad bar staple.
  • Link between deaths and climate weakening over time

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Proponents of catastrophic global climate change theory predict increased deaths as temperatures warm—by now a familiar litany: On a warmer planet, intense heat waves alone are by 2050 likely to result in increases in death by cardiac arrest and
  • Europeans’ fear puts Midwest farmers in limbo

    Published February 1, 2000
    Opinion -
    Midwest farmers face tough, possibly costly, decisions as debate rages in Europe over whether to treat genetically modified (GM) crops differently from others in the European food marketplace.

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