Vol. 9 No. 2, March 2003
Index
- Major change and renewed commitment.
- A green offensive for New England.
- Coastal waters not a dump.
- Fish farms: no more sorry sites.
- A big win for the witch city.
- New life for an old tradition.
- A big day for an old friend.
- Quotes of note: "heard around New England".
- The new 40B: a law with a heart.
- Saving the soul of Southern NH.
- "Frivolous" suits, or bad projects?
- A bold vision for a Great Bay.
- A strong no to water pollution.
- New Hampshire Executive Councilors Peter S. Spaulding, Ruth G. Griffin, and Ray W. Wieczorak.
- The Bush Administration.
- U.S. Senators Patrick J. Leahy, D-Vermont, and James M. Jeffords, I-Vermont.
- What is in a name?
- A sympathy for growing pains.
- Big climate plan for a small state.
- Not "everyplace" and glad of it.
- A preference for wind power.
- The ultimate bad weather forecast.
- Reaping the wind in a brand new age: to some New Englanders, wind turbines are graceful and intriguing additions to the landscape that produce much-needed energy with no cost to the beleaguered natural environment. To others, they're a visual blight, one that threatens wildlife, fisheries, air and boat traffic, and the very sanctity of our public lands and waters.
- A clean air coup for CLF: a nearly 15-year effort has led to a dramatic reduction in toxic emissions from city of Boston buses.
- A mother Grizzly from Marblehead: the ursine image is an apt one. Clean air and water advocate Lori Ehrlich has no fangs and snarl, but she's fiercely effective in defending the health of her offspring--and the grateful citizens of Boston's North Shore.
- A Campaign to save New England: CLF is New England's most effective environmental advocacy group. The Campaign for CLF will provide critical resources, so we can continue defending the law of the land-for generations to come.
- A timely look at a timeless place: New England is memories, history, places that call to us, an endlessly varied landscape, but is the winter over yet?