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Last modified
1/26/2010 2:16:33 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 12:47:30 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8021
Description
Section D General Studies - Western States Water Council
State
CO
Basin
Statewide
Date
9/1/1990
Author
Land Institute
Title
The Land Report - The Land Report - Fall 1990
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Publication
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<br />'1; :', .,' <br /> <br />OOn~l}9 <br /> <br />Scientists' Cleverness?; More Wind Energy Experiences;' Wars of the <br />20th Century; Third World Desperation - A Threat to World Security. <br /> <br />'23 Spring 1985 <br />Mission Impossible? (The Land Institute); 1985 Research Season Be- <br />gins: Soil Surveyed in Experimental Plots: The Making of Mollisols; <br />Farm Debt; Alternatives in Energy; The Pipe Creek Shirt Company; <br />Agriculture in Nicaragua; Going Fission. <br /> <br />'25 Fall 1985 <br />DUnois Bundleflower . A P~tnmnia1 Food or Feed Crop?-; SUccessful <br />Farming - OrganicaIIr: Agriculture Pulls the Plug on the Central <br />Flyway; Making Connections (feminism and sustainable agriculture); <br />The Role of Women in Changing Agriculture: Agricultural Develop- <br />ment. or Intrusion?; Roots of African Famine; Pesticides are Poison for <br />Workers in Mexico. <br /> <br />'26 Spring 1986 <br />SustaInable Agriculture: A Concept Catching On: 1986 Research Sea. <br />son -qnderway; Allelopathy: Nature,l PhenQ~on or Unproven Con. <br />, cept?: The Environmental Problems of Irrigation Agriculture: Scien, <br />tific Assumptions and the Problem of Agriculture; On Herons, Human <br />Senses, and Healing: The Wild Thread; Celebrations of Nature; Speak <br />Often and Carry aBigCheck: A Guid.eto Political Effectiveness; On the <br />Road AgaIn (in Nepal). <br /> <br />'27 Summer 1986 <br />Land Institute to Celebrate 10th Anniversary; Prairie Festival 1986: <br />Soil and Seeds, the Sources of Culture: Soil, Seeds, and Settle1'8: <br />Midsummer ResearchReport; Land Folk VisitSmallFarms Resources <br />Project; Soil and Nuclear Power Plants; Reflections on the Organic <br />Garden at The Land; Were the First Farmers Gardeners?; Trees on the <br />Plains: They're for the Birds; Raptors on the Rebound; Tallgrass <br />Prairie preserve on the Horizon; CountyPoor FarmS. Good Riddance?; <br />Student Directory 1976-1986. <br /> <br />'28 Fall 1986 ,'~ <br />New Property Purchased; Wauhob Prairie Dedicated: Speech of Dedi, <br />cation; Leymus: A Plant with a History of ~uman Use; Sorghum: A <br />Perennial Future: A Reading List: Prairie MeOitation; Evil and <br />Change; Women m Agriculture; Lasso. Winner or Loser?; The Fertili. <br />zstion of Industrial Agriculture: Farme1'8 and the Folly of the Free <br />Market. <br /> <br />'29, Spring 1987 , <br />Spring Report; Design Process for the Greenhouse :Nearly Complete; <br />1987 Research Season Begins; The Re-Search of Thoreau; America's <br />Rarest Gamebird; The, Grain Exchange; Rediscovering Traditional <br />Agriculture: The Failure of Successful Agriculture inMexico; Our Role <br />in tp.e Evolution of a Land Ethic; Farm Policy for the Long Term; The <br />Land Needs People: Will the Cornbelt be Relocated? <br /> <br />'30 Summer 1987 <br />Talk about the Weather: The 1987 PreirieFestival: Citizenship and the <br />Land Ethic; Americans and the Land: Why Does Kansas Need a State <br />Soil?; U.S. Winter Vegetables and Pesticide Poisoning; The Future of <br />Pesticide Reform; Mid.summer Research Report; Diversity: Corn, <br />Convolvulus. and Coons; Concepts of Time; The Role ofWom.en has <br />Changed, and my Husband Doesn't Want Pie. <br /> <br />'32 Spring 1986 <br />New Greenhouse is Dedicated; The Farmer. Speaking of Greenhouses; <br />Kansans Talk toAnnie (the play "Planting in the Dust"); 1986 Researeh <br />Season Underway; Prairie Images; Grain Exchange Board of Advisors <br />Meets: Kansas Organic Producers Meet; Sustainability and Strong <br />DemoCracy; Society as a Matuting Ecosystem; Resourceful Farming: A <br />Primer for Family Farme1'8: Reshaping the Bottom Line. <br /> <br />'33 Summer 1988 <br />lOth Annual Prairie Featival:Health, Beauty, and Permanence: Land <br />and People.. An, Ecological Perspective; Seeking Permanence (Conn <br />Nugent and David Orr~ A Flint Hilla Visit: Listening to Silence; Music <br /> <br />to Evoke the Prairie: Prairie Patterns and their Relevance to Sustain. <br />able Agriculture; In the Greenhouse; The Land's Harvest: Grain <br />Patches in the Garden; An Introduction to Biodynamic Agriculture; <br />Energy Choices. <br /> <br />.34 Fall 1986 <br />Prairie Music with a Human Voice; Prairieland Food Cooperative. <br />Thriving; At The Land; Paula Bramel,Cox - Sorghum Breeder; Plant!, <br />Sou Interactions Studied; A Nitrogen Cycle Primer; Marketing the <br />Land's Harvest; Albert Howard. His EcolDgical View of Agriculture; <br />Rumania's Socialist Utopia; Conservation and Society. <br /> <br />.85 Summer 1989 <br />Prairie Festival 1989: The Global Environment, a Prairie Perspective; <br />Chansea: (at The Land Institute); The 1989 Experiments; <br />Drought' and the Prairie: Biological Controls Provide Help off the <br />Pesticide Treadmill: Large.ecale Organic Farmer Expresses Optimism <br />(Fred Kirschenmann); The Platte River and the Prairies ofNebraaka- <br />Saving What's Left; Loam,' Loam on the Plains; Rishi Kheti - The <br />Agriculture of the Sages: Questioning the SustaInability ofWestemi. <br />zation: What on Earth Can We Do? . <br /> <br />'37 Spring 1980 <br />Using Nature as a Model; LISA,funded Legume Research; Foliar <br />Diseases on Eastern Gamagrass; The Asilomar Declaration for SUs- <br />tainable Agriculture; The Land a8 Therapy; The Mad Farmer's Letter <br />to Some Relatives :i,n Town; What Did You Do for Recreation?; The <br />Greening of Religion; Creating a New Picture of the Earth; Green <br />Thumbs Gather; Solarize Soil to Control Wilt: Squash Bug wOes; <br />Reading aboutGardeDing; The Greeningof Agricultural Policy - Can it <br />Happen in Kansas? <br /> <br />Results of the 1989 experiments are available in <br />The Land Institute Research Report, Number 6. <br />. Copies are $3.00 postpaid. <br /> <br />r-~-----------------, <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> <br />Order Form for Back Issues of <br />The Land Report <br /> <br />Issue Numbers Desired <br /> <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I Name <br />I Address <br />I <br />I <br />L___________________~ <br /> <br />total number of copies ordered <br /> <br />poatpald prlee per copy: Single copy, $2.00: <br />2-4, $1.50 5-8, $1.25: ' 9+, $1.00 <br /> <br />total $ enclosed <br /> <br />35 <br />
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