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Show WASATCH MOUNTAIN TIMES wasaree UN TAIN Volume 1, No. 10 October PED Ar oR ES The Sagebrush Rebellion: Grassroots or Big The public lands debate seems to be being pushed Mountain States. How is it that a relatively small group, tion of the economy have such a large political voice? porations are orchestrating this 1995 grassroots Bucks? Page 8 by ranchers in the Rocky who ma a a tiny porCould i that big cor- FRAME IT! movement? One Rancher’s View on Public Lands Grazing Page 12 Uinta Basin rancher Allen E Smith grazes cattle on both private and public land But he is dead set against Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt s Rangeland Reform He tells why in an essay. a Artist Don Weller Ain’t Your Average Cow Poke _ Page 10 Don Weller spent his adult life at a drawing table with a pen. So what world renown illustrator doing cutting cows in Oakley? scam is the Zi a WN ra 421 First, I Win the Championship, Then We Start a Family Page 7 Every year, Randy Hanskat takes a shot at the club golf championship. After he wins it, he promised his wife Jane, they can have kids. But Jane doesn’t remember any deal like that. Is Randy, and the rest of the country, sports crazed? + ASS Picture Framing re FRAMING Main Street ° Park City 649-2155 When the Cranes Wave Goodbye to Natural Nan Page 5 It’s that time of year again. The Sandhill Cranes have made their way back along the mountains to the pastures near where Natural Nan lives. That can mean only one thing. BODY LANGUAGE Jackson Hole entrepreneur Fran Huff built Wyoming Woolens from the ground up. Now the clothing manufacturer and retailer grosses $4.5 million annually in sales. But Huff is more than a business woman. This community activist fought Wal-Mart to a standstill. Page 4 Leeks? These strange cousins of the onion are really delicious if prepared the right way. Only Virginia Rainey can tell you. Page 15 PUN a) ed | Bats! They are creepy and they own the night. But Utah bats won’t suck your blood. In fact, they won’t hurt you at all, unless they’re rabid. Find out more about Utah’s bats. They’re really not that creepy. Page 6 Utah’s native fish are not rainbow trout. The real natives are cutthroats. But more and more they have been disappearing. They are being out competed by species, like rainbow, that have been artificially introduced and planted by the millions. mw P Intrepid news specialist I.B. Rappaport is on to new data linking a gene on human DNA with lying. Newly published research reveals the gene prevalent in politicians. What a surprise. Page 14 The Wasatch Mountain Times enviromental news capsule keeps you informed. Page 16 Fil ie Ae) \ 7 Prices! I f Page 13 We have Utah’s best selection of bulbs and wildflower seed. Oreat lants! Park City Nursery sé 649-1363 “We Know What Grows” HWY 224, across from the Blue Roof Market PAGE 3 |