Friday, April 1, 2005

Scripps Fellows Updates

Lisa Busch in March received the environment award in the Volvo for Life competition for her work to mend rifts between environmentalists and former pulp mill workers in Sitka, Alaska. She credits her reporting skills for her success in starting Sitka Trail Works, an organization that gives former mill workers new jobs on trail building crews. She’s now president of the organization, which has built over $2 million worth of trails. Details of her work are published online at:
http://www.volvoforlifeawards.com/cgi-bin/iowa/english/heros/hero2004/5380.html.

Carie Call, who lives on Pine Island off Florida’s central west coast, has taken a position as an environmental planner with the Lee County Department of Environmental Sciences. After 20 years in journalism, she says, “I wanted to do more to help instead of just writing about other people helping, and telling other people what they should be doing.” She and her husband, Barry, are still wrangling with banks and insurance companies to get funds to repair the extensive damage to their home sustained during Florida’s brutal 2004 hurricane season. The island was battered by four separate storms. They’ve made progress with helping to restore some of the island’s lush flora, however, taking advantage of fine spring weather to plant lavender, geraniums, passion flowers, and mango, avocado, bottle brush and live oak trees. Contact Carie at cobenchain@comcast.net.

John Flesher just had an article published in a Michigan regional magazine on the theme of environment and religion, a subject he pursued during his fellowship year. Last fall he also wrote a series of articles for the Associated Press on water use in the Great Lakes region, including whether Great Lakes water could ever be diverted to the West.

Dan Grossman won the Media Award of the American Institute of Biological Sciences and first prize in the in-depth radio reporting category in the Society of Environmental Journalist’s Annual Awards for Reporting on the Environment competition. Both awards were for “The Penguin Barometer,” a Radio Netherlands documentary on the impact of climate change on ecosystems. Also check out his most recent endeavor, a multi-media website on people and nature in Madagascar, at www.wbur.org/special/madagascar.

Todd Hartman and Rocky Mountain News colleague Jerd Smith published a 5-part series called "The Last Drop," which detailed the damage Colorado's thirsty Front Range is causing to mountain streams on the Western Slope. The project won a first place award from the American Planning Association and was co-winner of the Wirth Chair in Environmental and Community Development Policy award in the print media category.

John Kotlowski has turned his camera towards the National Parks, seeking to document Americans' relationship with their parks. He writes: “I am looking for the people in these photographs, or signs of them—the parking lots, the cars, the trash, the cameras, the crowds, the umbrellas, and so on." In recent months, his project has taken him to Arches National Park, Yosemite, the Grand Canyon, and the Great Smoky Mountains. John is also working on a project in Poland, where he is using photography, film and video to document traditional farming villages and the residents' way of life, which persists against the backdrop of corporate farming.

Alumni Updates

Chelsey Baker-Hauck ('00) is still working as director of the periodicals department at the University of Denver and managing editor of the University of Denver Magazine. Although she mostly writed about science and research for the magainze, she's also been able to dabble in other topics, from snowboarding to classical music. Right now she's working on a feature article about the role of atmospheric aerosols in climate change.

Josh Blumenfeld ('03) took a giant leap north from Wichita Falls, Texas, to start a new job as meteorologist for WKBT, the CBS affiliate in La Crosse, Wisc. "I'm definitely glad to be moving on in my career!" he says.

Meet the 2005-06 Ted Scripps Fellows

Five journalists have been selected as 2005-06 Ted Scripps Fellows in Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

The fellowships are hosted by the Center for Environmental Journalism and funded through a grant from the Scripps Howard Foundation. The nine-month program offers mid-career journalists an opportunity to deepen their understanding of environmental issues and policy through coursework, seminars and field trips in the region.

The new fellows include:

  • Bebe Crouse, environment editor for National Public Radio in Washington, D.C. She oversees NPR's environmental and general news coverage in 12 western states and edits staff and freelance environment stories from other regions. Crouse's career includes five years at CBS News where she wrote daily news analysis and commentary for Dan Rather and produced other feature and live segments for the network. She also spent three years as a Mexico City-based independent producer and reporter. Among her journalism honors are the 2003 National Headliner Award for Investigative Reporting for a team-produced look at malfeasance within the U.S. Border Patrol and the 2001 Peabody Award for NPR's team coverage of 9/11. Crouse earned a bachelor's degree in environmental studies and natural science from the University of California, Santa Cruz and a master's certificate in international journalism from the University of Southern California/El Colegio de Mexico in Mexico City. Her fellowship project involves developing a feasibility plan and outline for a new public radio program focused on environmental issues.


  • Don Hopey is an environment reporter at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. His writing displays a mix of local, state and national investigative stories and issue-oriented outdoor features. He has produced articles about pollution caused by the nation's hazardous waste incinerators, shortcomings in Pennsylvania's regulation of longwall coal mining, and an 80-mile canoe trip through the Wild and Scenic sections of the Allegheny River. Hopey has traveled to Central Europe to research and report about a range of environmental problems. His work has been recognized by a number of local and regional awards. He holds a bachelor's degree in political science from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and studied law at Duquesne University and journalism at Pennsylvania State University. Hopey's independent project will focus on the health and environmental effects of coal-burning power plants.


  • Jeff Johnson is senior editor for Chemical and Engineering News in Washington, D.C. He covers energy, the environment, science policy, chemical accidents and economics. Topics he has written about include air emissions and the Clean Air Act, mercury pollution, renewable energy from the ocean, cleanups at former Department of Energy nuclear weapons plants and "clean coal." Previously, Johnson worked for Environmental Science & Technology, a monthly environmental science magazine, and the Daily Environment Reporter, a Bureau of National Affairs publication where he covered the environmental activities of Congress. He earned a BS in industrial engineering at California State Polytechnic University and a master's in journalism at the University of Oregon. He intends to write a series of articles on energy and the environment for his fellowship project.


  • Greg Stahl is the senior reporter at the Idaho Mountain Express in Ketchum, Idaho. Working in rural Idaho, Stahl has covered public land issues such as user conflicts between backcountry skiers and snowmobilers, resource issues such as forest health, and endangered species issues including gray wolf reintroduction. His co-authored series examining a wilderness area designation for the state's Boulder and White Cloud mountains won the 2004 National Newspaper Association's Better Newspaper Contest in the investigative reporting category. In addition to reporting, Stahl coordinates teams of reporters and photographers working on in-depth articles for the twice-weekly newspaper. Previously, his freelance articles ran in publications such as High Country News and Sun Valley Art magazine. He earned a bachelor's degree in English at Western State College in Gunnison, Colo. His professional project will examine water shortage issues and legislative action involving the Snake River and Snake Plain Aquifer.


  • Andrea Welsh is a correspondent for Dow Jones Newswires in Sao Paulo, Brazil. She writes about trends in Brazil's beverage, auto, mining, and steel sectors. Welsh led the way in writing about Brazil's appeal as a global steel-making center and in covering the country's beer sector during the takeover of a local brewer by Belgium's Interbrew. She previously worked as Latin America reporter for Petroleum Argus, a Houston-based trade publication and covered the oil workers' strikes in Venezuela and the coup against President Hugo Chavez. Prior to that she served as correspondent for Dow Jones Newswires in Santiago, Chile and wrote about everything from capital market reforms to trade talks with the United States. Welsh holds a bachelor's degree in communications from Temple University in Philadelphia and a master's in Latin American studies and communications from the University of Texas at Austin. Her professional project will focus on small-scale sustainable economic projects in the Amazon.

Since 1997, the Scripps Howard Foundation has provided annual grants for its fellowships at CU-Boulder, named for Ted Scripps, grandson of the founder of the E.W. Scripps Co. Ted Scripps distinguished himself as a journalist who cared about First Amendment rights and the environment.

U.S. Environmental Journalism in Critical Condition, Say World Affairs Panelists

By Wendy Worrall Redal

Environmental journalism may be an endangered species, according a panel of media observers at the 57th annual Conference on World Affairs held at the University of Colorado's Boulder campus.

"This Just In: The Environment is Out" was the title of the April 7, 2005, session that featured CNN's Peter Dykstra, executive producer for science, technology, space, environment and weather; Christopher Flavin, president of the Worldwatch Institute, an international research organization whose focus is an environmentally sustainable future; Marley Shebala, senior reporter for the Navajo Times; and Harvey Wasserman, an environmental activist and senior editor of Free Press Online.

Panelists agreed the session's provocative title was largely not apt in much of the world, but in the U.S., coverage of the environment is threatened as news becomes increasingly commercialized, often nudging environmental stories to the margins or eliminating them altogether.

A case in point, Dykstra said, is CNN's decision to cancel its science, technology and environment show as of May 1, accompanied by a raft of layoffs. Dykstra's own litany of titles is further evidence: they are the result of four other executive producers being laid off. "I said to my bosses, 'You guys want me to be in charge of everything you don't care about?'" he quipped.

What's really needed to jump-start environmental coverage, according to Dykstra, is a major environmental disaster with a visible human and economic toll. Unlike the late 1960s, when Ohio's Cuyahoga River caught fire as its chemical-laced waters ignited, when the stacks of coal-fired power plants poured inky pollutants into the sky, when Pittsburgh businessmen took an extra white shirt to work, there have been "no dramatic disasters – by TV standards – in the last 15 years," said Dykstra, not since the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Alaska's Prince William Sound, spreading an oil slick across the pristine wilderness.

And without striking visuals, it's hard to get the public to pay attention, Dykstra observed.

Perceptible environmental problems galvanized public opinion several decades ago, leading to grassroots activism, the nation's first Earth Day, and Richard Nixon's signing of "some of the most inclusive and progressive environmental legislation," Dykstra recounted, citing the passage in the late 1960s and early 1970s of the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act and the National Environmental Policy Act.

The movement became complacent with success but was re-engaged in the 1980s with the appointment of James Watt as Ronald Reagan's Interior Secretary, as well as events like the disasters at Bhopal and Chernobyl, the ozone hole and acid rain, all of which "were key by the end of the 1980s," Dykstra said.

The 1990 Earth Day was a major television event, he recalled, and membership in environmental organizations had grown dramatically in the prior decade. "Bush I at least had to pay lip service" to the environment as a result.

But today's environmental crises are different, and that's a problem when it comes to news coverage.

"There are less telegenic but potentially more lethal events taking place" now, such as climate change, Dykstra explained. But since you can't see it, "TV pays no mind…The view from the top in my business is that everything's fine." Alongside a Congress that is "less concerned with environmental values," there is little incentive for news organizations to pursue environmental stories.

And while "TV is lashed to the spectacular visual," Dykstra said, TV stories are getting ever shorter, making it next to impossible to give environmental topics the coverage they deserve. Since the average CNN story is just 55 seconds, he said, the network is unlikely to do a story on the real costs of energy, for example.

He also said "consolidation of media is a real problem." U.S. policy has helped create enormous corporations whose leadership is "generally conservative," Dykstra said, citing News Corporation head Rupert Murdoch, Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone and Time Warner CEO Richard Parsons as "heavy Republican contributors."

That political persuasion at the helm "shows itself in our failure to cover the environment responsibly," Dykstra said. "Gatekeepers at the top are personally unfamiliar with environmental issues" and thus vulnerable to influence from industry and conservative think tanks. They're more likely to believe that climate change is a hoax, he said.

The media also "increasingly focus on the cult of personality." And there is no charismatic figure in the environmental movement to focus on, like Martin Luther King, Jr. was for the Civil Rights movement, he said.

What's gotten lost is the public-service ethos, according to Dykstra, at the expense of making more money. "TV is responding to the standard of entertainment, not the standard of journalism."

"On a global basis," however, "the environment is definitely not out," according to Worldwatch president Chris Flavin. "Environmentalism is growing worldwide," especially in Europe, he said, and most nations' news organizations are striving to cover it. Unlike the current U.S. administration, European ministers "all understand the centrality of environmental issues."

While the U.S. "led the wave of modern environmentalism in the 1970s," it is now one of very few countries without a full cabinet-level department of the environment, Flavin said.

Even China is surpassing the U.S. in environmental awareness, he said. "Seven or eight years ago it was illegal to have an environmental organization in China. Now there are more than 2,000 environmentally related NGOs in China." And most General Motors cars can't be sold in China today because they would be illegal, he added, explaining that China now has tougher fuel-economy standards than the U.S.

Environmentalism is "one of the fastest-growing areas of civil society in the world," said Flavin. "The U.S. is out of step with the rest of the world."

Yet if you ask individuals in the U.S. whether they care about the environment, they say they do, according to Flavin. Citing a recent poll, he said more than half of Americans call themselves environmentalists, and "a majority believes that global climate change is a significant threat."

Yet "clearly in terms of the political fight, environmentalists are not doing all that well in the U.S. today," said Flavin.

Why? His assessment mirrored some of Dykstra's observations. "The problems that got the environmental movement going were really in your face. Rivers were burning, the air was dark, garbage was piling up." Yet many problems today remain out of sight, he said, "mainly affecting minority and poor communities with little political power."

Other problems are big in scale and happening as part of a process, not exactly a draw for the news media's bias toward concrete detail. Flavin cited the loss of biological diversity, the condition of the oceans and global climate change which are "long-term problems unfolding gradually over a period of time and are not that visible to the public."

Such complex problems "feel abstract but clearly have major consequences," Flavin said.

"We're like a frog in water that's being slowly heated up. It will jump out of boiling water, but dies when it's gradually warmed," he warned. "If climate change suddenly erupted the way it was depicted in the film The Day After Tomorrow, people would act."

Compounding the dilemma, and in stark contrast to Nixon, Flavin said, is the "anti-environment Republican president we have today."

Conservative economic and ideological forces have become much more organized against the environment, according to Flavin. He cited examples such as Exxon getting government scientists fired when their findings shed negative light on the company, or the ability of industry to get its people appointed to government oversight positions.

Flavin also pointed a finger at the power of right-wing think tanks to influence media coverage of the environment.

"They've become very successful in providing what they call facts and information…They feed ammunition to Rush Limbaugh and his compatriots, they write speeches for Representatives on Capitol Hill…[It's] a much more organized, well-prepared opposition we have today.

"They're not winning the battle for hearts and minds, but they are winning the political war," Flavin claimed.

Harvey Wasserman concurred. "The sky, if not falling, is certainly heating up…We're in territory now where there's no turning back. We must err on the side of caution," he urged, especially with regard to climate change.

For Marley Shebala's people, the Dine, or Navajo, of Arizona and New Mexico, that's not news. "The people have always understood that you take care of Mother Earth, she takes care of you." But tribal elders have been convening recently to discuss unusual environmental events, such as the season's heaviest snow two weeks earlier, an anomaly that interfered with the tribe's centuries-old ceremonial schedule. They are concerned about the changes taking place, and she, as a reporter, has a duty to explain what is happening.

"As journalists, we are looked at by our people as storytellers," Shebala said.

If environmental stories are not being told, or are being told inaccurately or ineffectively, the public is not being served – on this the panelists agreed.

Far from conceding defeat, however, Flavin offered a set of guidelines to improve media coverage of the environment and garner more attention for environmental issues:

  • "Don't marginalize issues as 'green.' Talk about the health of the public, the future of the economy. Keep stories mainstream. Don't let the opposition define 'environmentalist' as marginal."
  • "Carry a positive message," Flavin said. Don't frame environmental stories so they're perceived as "all gloom and doom." "Fear and scaremongering do not work in the long run;" instead, focus on a "bright future," such as environmentally cleaner new jobs. "That's ultimately what motivates people," he said. "It's not that people don't care about the issues, it's that they feel it's become hopeless."
  • "Talk directly about values. We can't leave values to the right wing and the fundamentalists." Flavin suggested focusing on respect for nature, the value of human health, the welfare of human societies and the world community as a whole, emphasizing a concern for future generations.
  • "Welcome the religious community," Flavin encouraged, challenging stereotypes that Christians, even of a conservative stripe, are not concerned about the environment. "It's uplifting to see a significant portion of the evangelical community embracing stewardship of the planet," he said.

Wasserman advised linking the environment to the economy as the most effective way to galvanize the public's interest.

What might have happened, he asked, had the U.S. followed Denmark's lead in developing wind power in the 1990s, a decision that made the Danes a wealthy country now that wind energy is a multi-billion dollar industry? Or if U.S. automakers had developed the hybrid vehicle before the Japanese? "Ford did not produce the Prius," and that's as much an economic story as an environmental one, said Wasserman.

Journalists could also cover the hidden health care costs of oil- and gas-based energy production, noting that solar and wind energy are "way ahead in true cost accounting" when you factor in effects of air pollution such as asthma, Wasserman said.

The challenge to improve the public's understanding of complex environmental issues doesn't rest solely on the news media, though. Citizens, too, have a role to play, the panelists contended.

If people want better environmental news, they need to "look for reporting that shows as many voices as possible," Shebala said. In the Native world, that includes "even the voice of the animals."

The tendency of audiences, though, is to gravitate toward coverage that reflects what they already believe, Dykstra noted. It's a growing problem with the rise of blogs and ever more niche-oriented media where even news is now likely to be colored by a self-conscious ideological stripe, as on the Fox network.

Citizens should consult more independent news sources, said Shebala, where journalistic values prevail over a purely business approach. Independent media are able to cover issues that other papers, stifled by corporate pressure, won't.

But corporate media aren't impervious to change, Dykstra suggested. "The media business is incredibly sensitive to criticism." If you don't like what's on offer, you have to "push back from the other direction," he said, citing groups like Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (www.fair.org) as an organized example of such an effort.

Journey into the Earth: Scripps Fellows Tour World's Largest Molybdenum Mine

By Wendy Worrall Redal

More than a half-mile below the surface of Red Mountain in the Colorado Rockies, it's a typical workday for Justin Whetton. He spends most of his 12-hour shift operating a gigantic loader inside a dark tunnel, scooping over 300 buckets of rock a day, hauling it from one shaft and dumping it down another where it falls into huge trucks that take it to a powerful underground crusher.

Whetton makes around $20 an hour for his labor, but each scoop of ore, weighing 10 or 11 tons, is worth $1,000. The value comes from a metal inside the rock, called molybdenum. About 44 lbs. of "moly," as it's known in the industry, is contained in each bucket Whetton moves at the Henderson Mine.

The mine, located below Berthoud Pass near Empire, Colo., is the largest primary molybdenum source in the world. Its owner, Climax Molybdenum, is a subsidiary of Phelps Dodge Corporation, the world's second-largest producer of molybdenum and copper after Codelco, Chile's state-owned mining company. Last year Phelps Dodge produced about 9 percent of the world's moly supply, some 28 million pounds, most of it coming out of Henderson's vast lode.

The Ted Scripps Fellows got a close-up look at a major underground mining operation when they visited Henderson on April 22. Donning hard hats, headlamps, safety goggles and a self-rescuing device designed to provide breathable air in the event of a mine emergency, the fellows and CEJ staff descended some 3,000 feet in a shaft elevator into the bowels of Red Mountain.

Ted Scripps Fellows deep inside Henderson Mine (Photo/Andrew Silva)

Here, as if inside a giant subterranean maze, they boarded tractors that negotiated a warren of tunnels to give them an overview of some of the world's most sophisticated hard-rock mining operations. In the process, they learned a lot about a metal called moly.

While many people have never heard of molybdenum, let alone tried to pronounce it, they have almost certainly benefited from its use. Chemical-grade moly, the pure form mined and milled at Henderson, is used for many industrial purposes. It makes pipelines more corrosion-resistant, acts as a smoke retardant for plastics, and is used in CO2 detectors, fluorescent light bulb tubes, computer heat sinks, and in the orange paint pigment bought by the U.S. Navy.

However high-grade moly is best known as a lubricant. It's used in the manufacture of lower-friction piston rings in the automotive industry, as a spray for bicycle chains, and is added to greases and oils. In Europe, where automobile oil has a higher moly content, you only need to change your car's oil every 15,000 miles, Mine Manager Kurt Keskimaki said, adding that such oil is expected before long in the U.S.

Fellow Nadia White talks to Mine Manager Kurt Keskimaki (Photo/Andrew Silva)

Moly is also used as a catalyst for getting rid of sulfur in petroleum refining, an important function in meeting clean-air standards. In fact, about half of the moly mined at Henderson goes to Houston where it's processed by Criterion, a division of Shell, which is a major buyer.

Production at Henderson began in 1976, following the ore body discovery in 1964. Initially found by Uranium Research and Development, or URAD, who thought it was uranium ore, it turned out to be molybdenum, an enormous deposit. Geologically, it was the perfect set of circumstances, 13 different mineralizing events that kept enriching the deposit with more layers of the purest moly in the world.

It's hard to get a handle on just how much of the mineral makes up the core of Red Mountain, but Keskimaki has the figures: "We sit on 166 million tons of moly ore, 600 million pounds of recoverable moly."

Shaft sinking commenced in 1968. Initial removal began at the 8,100-foot level, but current extraction is now at 7,210 feet. A quarter-million feet of long hole are drilled each year, using more than a million pounds of explosives. Once the ore is crushed at the bottom level of the mine, it's sent on a conveyor belt one mile up to the surface, then 14 miles further on the belt to the mill site across the mountains in the Williams Fork Valley.

Fellows and CEJ staffers marveled at the complex operation as they stood above the gyrating crusher on the mine floor, watching as 80-ton haul trucks, the biggest underground trucks in the world, dumped their load of rock into the crusher's bowl. Like a giant mortar and pestle, the device crunched the ore chunks into pieces of rock 4-8 inches in diameter, small enough to load onto the conveyor belt that whisks the ore over to the mill at about 50 mph. The process was noisy enough that the visitors were glad to have the earplugs provided, and at times the face masks necessary to cut the dust and exhaust that are inescapable amid such operations, despite mitigation efforts.

Mine ventilation is just one aspect of the Climax company's commitment to worker safety. "We move more tons of air in a day than tons of rock," said Keskimaki. That's a lot of air, since 21,300 tons of material are milled daily at Henderson.

Such complex ventilation systems are part of the reason why Henderson is Colorado's second biggest power user after Pueblo's steel mill. The mine and mill, which operate around the clock, use 47 megawatts a day for an average monthly energy bill of $1.5 million – less than half the steel mill's cost. Fellow Sam Eaton said he was "amazed at the amount of energy they use. It's mind-boggling."

Fellows "journey to the center of the Earth" (Photo/Andrew Silva)

The conveyor belts are also power-hungry components of the Henderson enterprise, using 11,000 hp engines to transport the ore uphill to the mill. There, it is processed by separating the moly from its granite casing. First, the host rock is ground down into particles as fine as beach sand. During the milling, water and reagents are added, the latter causing molybdenum particles to float when the slurry is mixed with air. The moly adheres to the bubbles, allowing the metal to be separated from its host. More grinding and flotation further refines the moly concentrate, which at this point resembles ultra-fine, powdery graphite, very shiny and dark gray. In its final form as it leaves the mill, the moly is concentrated to nearly 250 times what it was when it entered as incoming ore. The process doesn't end here, though: the concentrate is filtered, dried and packaged for shipment by truck to further processing plants in Iowa, England and the Netherlands.

What's left over are the slurry remains and ore tailings. These are transported to the 1,000-acre tailing area where the moly-free granite settles and the water goes through an extensive reclamation process to be reused in a closed system at the mill.

Fifteen miles away, the mine sits near the head of the Clear Creek watershed, a region of alpine meadows and crystalline streams. Dealing with industrial wastewater is thus Henderson's biggest environmental stewardship issue. Fellows got a close-up look at the company's state-of-the-art treatment plant built in 1997, which handles up to 1600 gallons per minute from the mine. A million gallons a day are pumped into the plant from underground.

Ridding the water supply of toxic levels of manganese and zinc is the primary goal of the treatment facility. Tony Lucero, Henderson's environmental coordinator, called this "the most prominent operation we deal with from an environmental standpoint."

Calcium oxide is used to raise the pH-level of the water to precipitate out the minerals, which are removed and trucked to the BFI landfill between Golden and Boulder. Sulfuric acid is then added to lower the pH before the water is discharged into Woods Creek.

The company has been so successful that a trout fishery thrives in the stream below the discharge site, and the city of Golden buys Henderson's reclaimed water for its drinking water supply.

Fellow Nadia White appreciated the chance to see Henderson's operations and environmental mitigation up close. "I always find it valuable to go to the site of large industrial activity to get a sense of the scope and the potential economic impact, and the economic contribution to a community."

Even moving millions of pounds of rock a day, Keskimaki estimates there are enough reserves still inside the Red Mountain lode – about 1.5 billion pounds -- to keep Henderson operating for 20 more years.

A building boom and demand for petroleum products in China is keeping current moly demand high, he said, as well as speculation that a parallel Alaska pipeline might be built if additional oil drilling is approved in the Arctic. But eventually the mine's rich reserves will be exhausted. When that happens, a major reclamation effort will be required on Henderson's 12,800-acre site.

Lucero said the most significant reclamation work will take place at the mill, where tailings will be removed and wetlands and dry islands created. The company is working already to thin scruffy forests near the mill where weak trees have succumbed to a pine bark beetle outbreak, leaving vast mountainsides of dead and dying trees.

As for the fate of the mine, it may have a sci-fi future. Keskimaki said Henderson is in the running to be a deep underground laboratory for nuclear physicists to study subatomic particles called neutrinos. Since cosmic rays above the Earth's surface can interfere with neutrino behavior, scientists need to observe them by blasting them at high speeds thousands of feet below ground, shielded by a deep rock overburden. Just thinking about it makes the moly mining process seem downright simplistic.

Keskimaki thinks the odds are good that Henderson could be selected, given its proximity to a major airport and the Denver metropolitan area. In the meantime, mining moly by the thousands of tons continues, out of view of the backcountry skiers and hikers and fishermen who frequent the high country above the mine's expansive underworld.

Check out these Web sites for more on the Henderson Mine, NSF plans to build a deep underground neutrino lab, and what neutrinos are and why scientists want to study them.

Parks Project Unveils Mongolia's Natural Treasures

By Wendy Worrall Redal

Even the most well-traveled vagabonds have likely never heard of Altai Tavaan Bogd National Park. Tucked away on the far western fringe of Mongolia, near the juncture of Kazakhstan, China and Siberia, lies a one and half million-acre reserve where glaciated peaks rise more than 14,000 feet above some of the most pristine lakes in the world.

Altai Tavaan Bogd National Park (Photo/Ted Wood)

The park's forests and tundra are home to many species, some endangered or rare, including snow leopards, wolves, argali mountain sheep, ibex and elk. Golden eagles soar above the mountain valleys, where nomadic herders train and use them in hunting, as ethnic Kazahks have done for centuries.

Several outfitters in Mongolia offer visitors the chance to explore this remote backcountry on horseback, stopping to hike through flower-filled meadows and along rivers tumbling with glacial till from ice-bound slopes above. Travelers may be invited to share a cup of mare's milk tea, Mongolia's most common form of hospitality, inside a local family's yurt, the traditional round, felt-covered dwelling most herder families call home.

Traditional Kazakh eagle hunter (Photo/Ted Wood)

Few tourists, even among "adventure travelers," have been privileged to see the Tavaan Bogd peaks, or Mongolia's other magnificent national parks, including Lake Khovsgol, perhaps the clearest lake on the planet. Only a few hundred thousand visitors come to Mongolia each year. That's changing, however, as word is getting out about the country's dramatic natural gifts.

That growing awareness, translated into more tourism that focuses on Mongolia's unique landscapes, may be the key to protecting Mongolia's threatened natural ecosystems. It's the intent at the heart of a novel project launched by two journalists, both alumni of CEJ programs, who are working to provide maps, postcards and interpretive guides for Mongolia's national parks. The goal is to enhance visitors' experiences through education and information while returning profits through the sale of such materials to conservation efforts in the parks.

Writer Jeremy Schmidt and photojournalist Ted Wood, longtime friends and professional colleagues, founded Conservation Ink in 2003, a not-for-profit organization based in Jackson Hole, Wyo., as an avenue to "give back" to the world's threatened natural places they've built most of their careers covering, Wood said.

Their mission is to help developing countries protect their parks through funds made available from publications produced by Conservation Ink, not unlike the support for U.S. national parks that's provided by non-profit associations that return profits from visitor center book and gift shops back to the parks.

Wood was a Ted Scripps Fellow in 2001-02, and both Wood and Schmidt attended the 2001 Scripps Howard Institute on the Environment. It was during the Institute, in fact, that the first germ of their idea began to flower. Mongolia's then-environment minister, and D. Galbadrakh, director of the Mongolian Society for Environmental Education, were also attending the Institute. Wood and Schmidt struck up conversations with them, and learned of Mongolia's needs. Their imaginations began to take flight, and two years later, Conservation Ink was born.

Mongolia is Conservation Ink's pilot project. Like many developing countries, Mongolia's natural beauty and environmental health are threatened by a lack of financial resources. Struggling economically after the demise of the Soviet Union, the Mongolian government is looking to industrialization and resource development as paths to a vital market economy and brighter economic future. Often, however, exploiting natural resources comes at the cost of destroying natural landscapes and fragile ecosystems.

Lake Khovsgol, in northern Mongolia, is one of the clearest, cleanest lakes in the world (Photo/Ted Wood)

Wood acknowledged that while Mongolia's government has made an impressive effort so far in setting aside land for protection, about 13 percent of its total area, the economic pull to go in the other direction is strong. Parks have to be able to pay for themselves if they are to survive.

That's where Conservation Ink comes in. If the group's effort can help prove that a sustainable tourism economy is possible, much of the battle will be won. To make that happen, though, people have to know about places like Altai Tavaan Bogd and Lake Khovsgol National Parks.

Those are the first two Mongolian destinations that Conservation Ink has produced materials for. With a seed grant from National Geographic, Wood and Schmidt took several field research trips to Mongolia, horsetrekking with local guides to experience, study and photograph the parks. They also spent time in the capital, making connections that would lead to the opening of an Ulaanbaatar-based sourcing and distribution office for Conservation Ink.

They brought the first sets of map-guides and postcards back to Mongolia to distribute in the fall of 2004, where they are being sold to park visitors and in shops in Ulaanbaatar. CI is also connecting with tour operators, so they can make the materials available to their clients. The publications will help build regional tourism economies, where infrastructure is also a problem, as well as spreading the word (and images) of Mongolia worldwide through sales over the Internet.

Schmidt and Wood are actively pursuing the additional financial support CI needs to continue its Mongolia work and expand into other countries. Other donors, including USAID, have come on board as word of the non-profit's mission meets a receptive audience.

The initial maps and postcards produced by Wood and Schmidt are gorgeous. The text is enlightening and the photography stunning. Take a first-hand look at them on Conservation Ink's web site, www.conservationink.org, where you can also read in greater detail about the organization and its activities.

Look for an update in the fall edition of CEJ News/Views on Conservation Ink's continuing work in Mongolia during the summer of 2005.

Now 100, Forest Service Takes a Long Look Back

By Emily Cooper

"…where conflicting interests must be reconciled, the question will always be decided from the standpoint of the greatest good of the greatest number in the long run."

Forest Service chief Gifford Pinchot's oft-quoted exhortation to the agency he created is the bedrock on which the agency's "multiple use" mission was founded. One hundred years after its founding, the service reflects on the past century in a new documentary entitled "The Greatest Good."

Two Forest Service administrators and one of the filmmakers were on hand April 13 for a screening of the film on the University of Colorado's Boulder campus. Not merely a celebration of the agency's accomplishments, the film is illuminated by the bitter conflicts of the past century over forest fires, the impacts of recreation and—perhaps most contentious of all—logging in the national forests. Without offering any neat answers, the film asks its audience, What really is the greatest good? And for whom?

"We didn't want to make a film that just said, 'Oh boy, Forest Service, aren't you great,'" filmmaker Dave Steinke said during the panel discussion following the film. "Because we wouldn't want to watch that, and I'd assume you [would] not either."

"Multiple use" means that public lands should satisfy a variety of needs of the American people, from conserving open space to generating income. To that end, the 1960 Multiple-Use Sustained-Yield Act directed the Forest Service to manage the lands for recreation, grazing, timber, water and fish and wildlife—a tall order, and one that has probably never been met to anyone's satisfaction. But even if the act codified the concept of multiple use, the roots of the ideal go back to the agency's founding document, a letter ostensibly written by Agriculture Secretary James Wilson to Gifford Pinchot, but which was most likely authored by Pinchot himself. It was in that letter, written in February 1905 at the founding of the modern Forest Service, that Pinchot's famous "greatest good" quote was recorded.

It was not an idea that came out of nowhere for the man the film called "America's first homegrown forester."

Pinchot came from money, with a family that sent him to study forestry in Europe and later bankrolled the first forestry school in the United States at Yale University. He also had connections, one of his best-known friends being Theodore Roosevelt. Both Pinchot and Roosevelt chafed at the actions of the "robber barons" who were, in their eyes, raping the land of its natural resources for their own financial gain. At the same time, the Interior Department's General Land Office couldn't give federally owned land away fast enough. In response to the two pressures of privatization and exploitation of the public lands, Roosevelt and Pinchot began setting aside forest reserves.

While two previous presidents—Benjamin Harrison and Grover Cleveland—had created some forest reserves, Teddy Roosevelt outdid them many times over. In his second term alone, he set aside upwards of 80 million acres. In 1907 Congress responded to his zeal with the Fulton Amendment, an appropriations rider that took away the presidential power to reserve forest lands. Roosevelt signed the bill, but not before adding another 16 million acres to the national forest system—lands that were designated by Pinchot and his assistant, who circled them on a map the night before Roosevelt signed the bill. These last-minute reserves are called Roosevelt's "midnight forests."

Once the forests reserves had been created, the debates began over how to use them. Americans would never have accepted the idea of forest reserves if the intent was to set land aside for its own sake, historian Alfred Runte said in the film. Instead, Pinchot promised that the land would be used for the people. The 1905 manual, The Use of the National Forest Reserves: Regulations and Instructions, written by Pinchot and his staff, states:

"Forest reserves are for the purpose of preserving a perpetual supply of timber for home industries, preventing destruction of forest cover which regulates the flow of streams, and protecting local residents from unfair competition in the use of forest and range. They are patrolled and protected, at Government expense, for the benefit of the community and the home builder."

But societal values shift, and in the last century the Forest Service has found itself in the middle of a sometimes bitter conflict over how best to use the national forests.

In 1935 a small group of men that included Aldo Leopold and Bob Marshall—both of whom had cut their teeth in the Forest Service—founded the Wilderness Society. Concerned with the impacts that roads and facilities were making on the public lands, the men argued for the preservation of some of that land in its "natural" condition.

As early as 1924 the Forest Service, at Leopold's behest, had set aside the 500,000 acre Gila Wilderness as an administrative wilderness area. But in later years, the Forest Service fought against passage of the 1964 Wilderness Act, which defined wilderness as "an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain." Preserving land as wilderness, the agency reasoned, was a single use of the land and didn't fit within the agency's multiple-use mandate.

But there was another reason, too, why the service chafed at the popular legislation. The Forest Service was "used to thinking of itself heroically," environmental historian William Cronon said in the film. And it was also famous for its stubborn can-do attitude that one audience member at the screening characterized as "sometimes wrong but never in doubt." That attitude likely exacerbated the fight that was soon to erupt over logging in the national forests.

In the middle of the twentieth century, more and more people turned to the woods for recreation and solitude. At the same time, the Forest Service was facing immense pressure to "get the cut out," or produce as much timber as possible for the burgeoning post-World War II population and the homes that would shelter them. As hikers and picnickers came face to face with ugly clearcuts in their national forests, a conflict was inevitable.

Before World War II, the average annual timber cut in the national forests was ?? billion board feet [gotta look that number up]. In the 1980s, it skyrocketed to nearly 12 billion board feet per year, which caused a major backlash from many environmentalists and recreationists. That battle mirrored a similar one inside the service itself. Jeff DeBonis, a timber sale planner in Oregon's Willamette National Forest, became fed up with the high timber cut and founded Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics, with the goal of pushing the Forest Service to manage its lands in a more ecologically and economically sustainable manner.

Clearcutting in the 1960s, especially in the Pacific Northwest (above), inspired radical environmentalists such as those in Earth First! (below) to campaign against the Forest Service.


Looking back, even some high-level Forest Service employees acknowledge in the film that they went too far during the 1980s. Orville Daniels, former Forest Supervisor for the Lolo and Bitterroot National Forests in Montana, said that during those years the agency "went to the dark side" in its attempt to get the cut out. Dale Robertson, Forest Service Chief from 1987 to 1993, said the agency during the timber-hungry 1980s really stretched the multiple-use concept by taking timber at a rate that was not sustainable.

But in the post-film panel discussion, Rick Cables, forester for the Rocky Mountain region, challenged the film's criticism of the agency as a whole, saying the timber frenzy was isolated in one area of the country.

"The Northwest, northern California, Idaho, Montana is where the whole agency got painted with one broad brush—that we all went to the dark side," he said. "And I don’t accept it, personally. Because that never happened to me."

Still, he and other panel members acknowledged that the public is more skeptical of the Forest Service now because of the perception that the service went too far with logging.

"Trust was lost, and that still plagues us," said James Bedwell, forest surpervisor for Colorado's Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests and Pawnee National Grassland.

That distrust was illustrated by one audience member, who said President Bush's Healthy Forests Restoration Act could be called the "leave no tree behind act." Cables responded that such a characterization is "patently absurd." Still, he acknowledged the public's distrust as an obstacle the agency still has to face.

"The only way that you rebuild trust that I know is you make promises and you keep them," he said.

The Greatest Good is primarily a chronological overview, a history of great men—and a small handful of women—who created the Forest Service of today. For people who care about the public lands, it's a fascinating and enlightening journey. But most intriguing, perhaps, are the questions and the conflicts that it leaves unanswered.

In looking toward the future, filmmaker Steinke said he hopes the next documentary would tell a story about a Forest Service that survived budget cuts, avoided being absorbed into a "Department of Natural Resources," and maybe even managed to expand its land base.

"And it would be really neat to see another Pinchot, and another Leopold, and another [early forester Elers] Koch…" he said. "And I think another Earth First!, and another—maybe not Earth First!—maybe a better Sierra Club, to have that passion, I think, that makes for great story telling."

For more information about "The Greatest Good," including background material, interviews with the producers and upcoming screening dates, see the Web site at www.fs.fed.us/greatestgood.

Leaving Their Mark:
A Look at Some CU Environmental Journalism Students Who Are Making a Difference

CU GRAD STUDENTS "SEND" GRASSROOTS CLIMBING MAG
—Emily Cooper

Sometimes, taking advantage of an opportunity is just a matter of being in the right place at the right time. For Annie Burnett and Kasey Cordell, both climbers and students in CU's journalism program, Boulder was the right place, and last fall the right time, to become editors of a magazine that appealed to both of their interests.

Last fall the second-year master's students became editors of a two-year-old women-centered climbing magazine called She Sends. The women added their editing duties to their already crazy schedules as students, teaching assistants, and interns for other publications. But Burnett, who mountaineers, and Cordell, a sport climber and boulderer, are used to taking on huge challenges, and this is one they're happy to embrace.

"She Sends is always the fun work," Burnett said. "It's what I look forward to."

For non-climbers, the magazine's title might require a little explanation. Burnett said the word "send" is climbing lingo that means success.

"[T]o send something is to finish a problem, like, 'You sent that,' or 'She totally sent that,' like she just fired right up that, she finished it. She got through it," she said.

It's also an apt name for a magazine that's been fighting since its beginning to turn a spotlight on a growing segment of the climbing population. Lizzy Scully, a climber and journalist, said she started She Sends two years ago because she was tired of having her story ideas rejected by other magazines such as Rock and Ice and Climbing.

"They almost always said, 'No thanks,' when I suggested articles about women," she said.

From the very beginning She Sends was a grassroots effort. The first issue was a photocopied newsletter with a run of about 400. Volunteers have always been integral to keeping it going—Scully estimates she's had help from about 100 people over the past two years—but it was hard to keep people involved for no pay, and she found herself doing the bulk of the work. By last fall, she was burned out and thinking about letting the magazine go. That's when Cordell, Burnett and the rest of the staff stepped in.

Scully knew Cordell through the climbing community, and Cordell was friends and roomates with Burnett, whom she had met through the journalism school. Both were already interested in writing for She Sends, so when Scully started talking about moving on to other things, it seemed only natural that they would take over for her.

The women became editors of the magazine, working with Scully to put out the seventh issue in winter 2005, then taking off with it on their own. Scully is still involved in the publication, but mostly as mentor and visionary. The new staff, meanwhile, found themselves in charge of a quarterly magazine whose circulation had grown in two years from 400 to 10,000 and had changed from a free publication to one that sells for $3.95. Today it has a staff of eight, plus one intern, with writing and photographs provided by an enthusiastic group of freelancers.

"The only thing we don't have is offices," Burnett said. "[O]ur editorial meetings happen at the climbing gym in a conference room, or at our house."

Scully said she had no qualms about turning over control of her magazine to a new group, because she feels they share the same vision for the magazine that she does. Cordell agreed, but said that doesn't mean the magazine won't continue to evolve.

"My goal is to take the magazine in a new direction but to remain true to the original vision," Cordell said. That vision includes celebrating women climbers and helping build community.

Burnett said what makes the magazine different is that the articles focus not just on climbing trips, but what it's like for climbers to have real lives at the same time. And although it aims to celebrate women climbers, it's not just about women.

"It's got a ton of information about male climbers, female climbers, the hot climbers of the moment, and people that balance climbing with other things in their life like children and families and travel and jobs and things like that," she said.

The approach has hit a chord with the climbing community. Although right now its distribution is limited—it's sold predominently in climbing stores, and mostly in the Boulder area—many other stores, including R.E.I., have shown interest in carrying it. Cordell said she's even gotten requests for the magazine from as far away as Ireland and Canada. And it seems to turn up in the strangest places, Burnett added.

"It's kind of like that little magazine that somebody has in Joshua Tree, or someone's got a hold of it in Indian Creek, or Red Rocks, or someone has it in Yosemite," she said, naming some popular climbing locations. "[You] know about She Sends, if you're in the climbing community. It's just so cool."

But no one, perhaps, is as committed to the magazine as its staff, who often put in long hours for no pay. The editors plan to apply for non-profit status this summer, which would make them eligible for more grant money and maybe even make it possible to pay themselves a little bit for their time.

But Cordell said that for her, it's not really about money. She likes working on She Sends because it gives her the opportunity to do something she believes in, and to collaborate with a committed and talented staff.

"And I like laughing and giggling with them at our editorial meetings," she said.


INTERNATIONAL JOURNALISM CLUB TAKES FLIGHT
—Emily Cooper

Although Christine Dell'Amore was born and raised in Maryland, the second-year master's student has a French father, an aunt in Paris and dual citizenship with the United States and France.

"That always interested me in international issues, and it's always been in the back of my mind that it's something that I wanted to do," she said.

It was only natural that when she decided to go into journalism, she would keep her international focus. So she was disappointed when she arrived at the CU campus and found the journalism school's international opportunities lacking.

Rather than postpone her dreams, Dell'Amore decided to do something about them. In January 2004, inspired by an upcoming conference on international journalism that would take place that spring in Paris, she and fellow student Amarely Quintinilla started the International Journalism Club. Founding the club and registering it with the university allowed them to raise some funds to help them get to the conference.

But the club has proven to be much longer-lived than that. In the year and a half since its birth, the club has twice hosted visiting reporters from Germany, co-sponsored talks by a regional AP reporter in South Africa and an Africa correspondent for the BBC, and, with the help of donations from the Tattered Cover bookstore and the Boulder Public Library, set up a small book collection in the student resource center for people interested in working or interning abroad.

The club has also found allies among the journalism school faculty. Associate Dean Meg Moritz and new Global Media Studies chair Bella Mody help keep club members informed about international opportunities and campus events. Moritz is also organizing the school's first-ever international reporting seminar, scheduled to take place this summer in Hungary. Dell'Amore said the club has helped raise awareness that good internship and work opportunities are available worldwide.

"I think now that [internship coordinators] Alan and Beth are very much more open to it than they were a year ago," she said.

Dell'Amore's international aspirations also extended into her schoolwork at CU. The "professional project" is a semester-long research and reporting project that all master's students must complete to graduate. For her project, Dell'Amore traveled to Jamaica to write a story about the country's experiences with ecotourism. She said Tom Yulsman, her project chair, was supportive but also cautious about her topic choice, warning her that it might be difficult to follow up on her reporting after she returned to Colorado.

"It turns out that of all the interviews that I did—which is over 20—all the people had phones, most of them had e-mail, [so] there was no problem clarifying things or checking with them" on facts or quotes, Dell'Amore said. Instead, the biggest challenge turned out to be cultural—"breaking through the formality that a lot of Jamaicans have in talking about their tourism company" and finding out how they really feel about tourism's impact on their country. She also said she wishes she'd been less intimidated by cultural differences and spoken more to people on the street.

Still, Dell'Amore said she's glad she decided to take on the challenge.

"It gave me valuable experience as an international reporter," she said.

By pushing herself to look beyond Colorado for a story, she learned how to approach reporting abroad, contacting people, figuring out how to get around once there, and all the other details that go into organizing a story from afar.

"I also think it will help saying that I took the initiative and did what most people in my program didn't do," she said, "and despite most people's doubts about my success, it still was successful."


GRAD STUDENT TAKES CLASS ASSIGNMENTS TO THE NEXT LEVEL
—Emily Cooper

For many students, journalism class assignments are a good way to practice the craft of journalism. For master's student Jennie Lay, however, they're also a way to see her name in print.

During her two years in CU's journalism program, Lay published every story she wrote for any of her journalism classes. Through a combination of solid reporting and writing on one end, and persistence in contacting editors on the other, she's seen her stories appear in a wide variety of publications including The Steamboat Pilot, the Grand Junction Daily Sentinel, Steamboat Magazine, the Boulder Daily Camera, Ski and High Country News. Another story was recently accepted for publication by Westword.

Lay's first published story was an in-depth piece on Referendum A, a controversial initiative that would have authorized the sale of billions of dollars in bonds for water projects in Colorado. She wrote the story as her final assignment for Newsgathering I, one of the school's core course requirements. Sandra Fish, the class professor and an editor at the Boulder Daily Camera, encouraged Lay to submit it to the Camera, and a few days before the election, the story ran. Lay, a resident of Steamboat Springs on Colorado's Western Slope, said she thinks the Camera liked her story because it had a fresh angle—the effects of Referendum A on the Western Slope—and included a lot of sources from her side of the state.

Lay said her coup d'etat was her March 2005 cover story for High Country News. "Drilling Could Wake a Sleeping Giant" detailed the history of Project Rulison, a federal government experiment in using nuclear explosions to free up natural gas, and the effects it could have today on gas drilling in the area. But it wasn't the topic, or its front page placement, that made the story her favorite published piece.

"They were just cool to work with," Lay said of the High Country News editors.

Although they made her do a lot of extra research, much of which never went into the final story, she said it was a very collaborative editing process and it gave her confidence not just in her piece, but in the publication as a whole.

"Their stories have a lot of integrity behind them," she said.

Once Lay had had some stories published, it also became a lot easier for her to sell story ideas before she wrote them. She now freelances frequently for Steamboat Magazine and Ski, where she also worked as an intern.

"It's nice to mix it up between fun stuff and serious stuff," she said.

Lay credits her professors in the journalism program for encouraging her and her fellow students to publish what they'd written for class. She said it hadn't even occurred to her at first that all the work she put into her courses could end up in print. But she's also learned that to be a successful freelancer, you need persistence and a thick skin.

"You have to be not afraid to go back to someone after they've told you 'no' a whole bunch of times," she said.


CU SCIENCE WRITER CRACKS THE BIG TIME
—Wendy Worrall Redal

Most master’s students in environmental journalism might dream of one day writing for The New York Times science section or the esteemed British journal Nature, two publications that would mark the pinnacle of most freelance careers.

Amanda Haag already has clips from both.

Haag, a second-year master’s candidate who is one of two CU journalism students in the university’s Carbon, Climate and Society Initiative [Click here for the story], is still incredulous at her early success.

“It’s almost laughable,” she said, attributing her good fortune to a naïve sense of chutzpah when she opted to pitch freelance story ideas to editors at both publications. Only months before, she screamed at the thrill of seeing her first byline in the Boulder Daily Camera, a story on mining and water contamination in Colorado. But Haag quickly managed to parlay her science knowledge, writing ability and personal overtures into a synergy that has landed her two published features so far, with another story for Nature in the works.

Haag, 29, has a B.S. in biology and five years of lab experience. That background helped her land a four-week mini-internship at Nature’s London office in July 2004, which was the springboard to her freelance assignments for the journal. Typically Nature offers only six-month internships, but a fortuitous meeting between Haag and two Nature reporters at the 2004 AAAS conference provided her the abbreviated opportunity.

Haag traces her success at the Times to another face-to-face meeting. During a quick trip to New York, Haag introduced herself in person to Science Times editor David Corcoran. She’d written ahead, sent clips and asked for a meeting. Corcoran obliged. He told Haag not to get her hopes up, that he rarely used unsolicited freelance work, but said she could pitch unabashedly and faxed her the standard contract. She took that as a positive sign. Her third query was a success.

Haag had learned about the work of Morgan Keay, a 23-year-old biology graduate of the University of Colorado who founded a nonprofit foundation to aid the Tsaatan, Mongolia’s traditional reindeer herders, whose herds are suffering from inbreeding and are in need of genetic diversification through artificial insemination. Haag thought Keay’s project might interest the Times, and she was right. Her story, with reindeer as its focus, ran Dec. 21, 2004, strategically just before Christmas [“Future of Ancient Cultures Rides on Herd’s Little Hoofbeats”].

Haag thinks her story was picked up because it was unusual. “Obscurity and novelty are what work for them,” she said. When Science Times uses freelance stories, they tend to be more narrowly focused, “that you’d have a niche for, that maybe nobody else would find out about.” Haag said the big stories go to staff writers, while freelancers are drawn upon to “tell a smaller, manageable story,” perhaps focusing on the work of only one or two scientists.

Her story that appeared in the February 2005 issue of Nature, “Whale Fall,” featured an even more obscure animal twist and the scientists who study such phenomena. A whale fall is not unlike a fallen tree that becomes a nurse log in a rainforest ecosystem. Bone-devouring worms, bacteria and other scavengers live on whale carcasses at the bottom of the ocean, tunneling into the decaying body to suck fat, lipids and nutrients from the remains, in turn bringing a host of nutrients to the sea floor. Some species scientists have discovered appear to be uniquely adapted to live off whale falls. Haag’s story says scientists now estimate that a whale-fall community may survive for as long as a century.

While a subject like “Whale Fall” may sound pretty esoteric, Haag’s goal is to help readers understand the significance of scientific findings. That desire lies at the heart of her decision to leave the laboratory behind in favor of journalism.

She said she remembers “very clearly when I made the turning point” while a lab technician at McMurdo Station in Antarctica. She was working “ridiculous hours,” isolated with her samples and her equipment, wondering whether this was all there would be to her life as a scientist.

In the lab, Haag said, there is the “one-dimensional ‘doing the work,’” the task of scientific inquiry. “And then there’s translating it: Why would you want to know this? Why does this matter? Why should we care? What does this mean to society?” Those are the questions that animate Haag.

“Scientists think about these things, but it’s not the bulk of their work. As a scientist, your work keeps getting narrower and narrower, and my mind keeps getting broader and broader.”

As a journalist, Haag can indulge the bigger questions. And for someone not yet finished with her degree, she’s already doing it in a big way.

Alex Markels Joins Morning Edition at NPR

By Wendy Worrall Redal

When my alarm blasts me out of sleepy reverie at 6:30 a.m., I need precisely two things to start my day: coffee and National Public Radio’s Morning Edition.

The news show’s staff, however, has been up far longer than most listeners have, preparing the broadcast from the network’s studios in Washington, D.C. In fact, Alex Markels’ alarm goes off at 4:00 each weekday morning, just enough time for him to grab a coffee, orange juice and Odwalla energy bar before driving or roller-blading to his new job at Morning Edition by 5:00 – he can’t take public transportation because it doesn’t run that early.

Markels, who was a Ted Scripps Fellow in 2004-05, joined NPR in April, moving from his Boulder home and an active freelance career in print to his first major radio stint, in the hubbub of the nation’s capital.

Alex Markels

When he arrives, he checks on breaking stories to include or update for the day’s broadcast. By 7 a.m., he’s working with the producer on the morning’s second feed, keeping track of the wire services and newspapers to make sure nothing is missed. Once noon rolls around, he’s ready to start working on future shows.

Markels, who has plenty of experience in daily newspaper journalism, finds the pace intense but gratifying.

“It’s been a huge transition, more from a process standpoint that a content standpoint. I’m supervising staff, working and negotiating with news desks, and turning stories around in as little as a few minutes. Even in daily news reporting, the news cycle wasn’t nearly so short.”

There’s a special satisfaction for Markels in “hearing a story on the air that we put together five minutes before.”

It hadn’t occurred to him to pursue openings he’d seen advertised at NPR previously, since he had little radio experience. But through contact with an editor Markels had worked with at U.S. News and World Report, NPR came looking for him.

“The fact that I founded a community radio station a while back seemed to be enough to demonstrate my interest in the medium,” he said. Markels launched Radio Free Minturn, a public FM station, from a small town in the Colorado Rockies in 1997.

So far, every story he has been involved with at Morning Edition has been an excursion into exciting new territory. As he arrived in Washington, Pope John Paul II had just died.

“I spent the next two weeks learning everything I could about papal succession,” he said.

His Ted Scripps Fellowship experience has already served Markels in his new role as an editor, giving him helpful perspective from which to evaluate the merit of particular stories.

“If a story breaks, such as the recent Bush administration decision on the ‘roadless rule’ [in national forests], I at least have some context to decide whether it’s worth covering,” he observed.

Markels is enjoying D.C.’s ethnic diversity, free museums and spring flowers.

The downside? Traffic. Oh, and he’s still trying to get some sleep. He’s had plenty of preparation for his taxing schedule, though, as the father of 16-month-old Moses. While Moses may now be sleeping through the night, however, it doesn’t appear that his dad will be doing so any time soon.

Moses Markels contemplates new mischief as mom Holly looks on (Photo/Alex Markels)