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Smith concluded her speech with a performance of snapshots of George C. Wolf, Professor of Afro-American studies Cornel R. West '74 and others...

Author: By Elizabeth M. Darst, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Anna Deveare Smith Educates, Amuses Cambridge Crowd | 1/21/1998 | See Source »

...consequences of such carnage were soon felt. An ecosystem stripped of the wolf doesn't simply become more peaceable; rather, it becomes flabby and unbalanced. With the dominant predator gone, the next biggest hunter--typically the coyote--assumes the top spot. As the coyote population explodes, the populations of foxes, badgers and martens, which compete with coyotes for rodents and other small game, dwindle. At the same time, large prey like elk, which were once brought down by wolves, begin to multiply excessively, stripping vegetation from highlands. And with no elk carcasses lying around, scavengers like magpies, ravens and grizzly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big (Not So Bad) Wolves Of Yellowstone | 1/19/1998 | See Source »

...apparent. Around Yellowstone, elk kills are more common, a welcome development for park managers hoping to bring that animal's population back to manageable levels. The wolves often eat only 200 lbs. of the meat on a 500-lb. animal they fell, leaving plenty for other animals to scavenge. Wolf packs also appear to have killed as many as half the coyotes in at least two areas of the park, opening up ecological breathing room for foxes and other species. Even highland vegetation, no longer chewed up by hungry elk, is expected to start making a comeback. "We're seeing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big (Not So Bad) Wolves Of Yellowstone | 1/19/1998 | See Source »

This provision was always the wolf project's Achilles' heel, and almost immediately opponents exploited it--though not in the way conservationists expected. In 1995, separate suits were filed by a group of petitioners arguing that the wolf program is illegal. Since there is still a small population of indigenous wolves left in the U.S., and since it's impossible to determine whether a rogue spotted outside the park is part of the relocated population, a farmer who kills a wolf--as a few already have--just might be killing a native animal, something the Endangered Species Act forbids...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big (Not So Bad) Wolves Of Yellowstone | 1/19/1998 | See Source »

...Phillips Collection is the right place to start it, since Duncan Phillips was the only steady collector Dove had in his whole career and the relationship between the two men was one of the finer examples of mutual nurturing in the annals of American patronage. Phillips kept the wolf from Dove's door, but Dove opened Phillips to what was exclusively visual, not literary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: EMBEDDED IN NATURE | 12/22/1997 | See Source »

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