How to Put Tar in the Planet and Keep Feathers on the Eagles: The Best and Worst of the Monthly Planet and Weekly Letters to an Alaskan Editor

Undergraduate Problem Series: Huxley College of Environmental Studies, Western Washington State College. John Muir helped a Presbyterian minister choose a site near the north end of the world's longest fjord for a mission in the year 1879. The Reverend S. Hall Young declared that "Haines M...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Blix, Brian
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Western CEDAR 1981
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cedar.wwu.edu/envs_stuschol/1
https://cedar.wwu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=envs_stuschol
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Summary:Undergraduate Problem Series: Huxley College of Environmental Studies, Western Washington State College. John Muir helped a Presbyterian minister choose a site near the north end of the world's longest fjord for a mission in the year 1879. The Reverend S. Hall Young declared that "Haines Mission" would be founded for the benefit of the fierce Tlingit inhabitants. I do not know what "benefit" the Tlingits have received, but my guess is Haines, Alaska 99827. David Clarke and a group of other fervent environmental professors chose a site near the south end of Western Washington University's campus for a cluster college, in the year 1968. David Clarke declared that "Huxley College" would be founded for the benefit of dedicated environmentalists in Washington and beyond. I am not sure what "benefit" the environmentalists have received, but now they've got The Monthly Planet.