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Environment: The Next Frontier (T. Rubin, Ed.). 



U.S. Information Agency, Hearst Special Pubs. 

 Lovejoy, T.E. 1992. Amazonia: the scientific basis for 



conservation. Pp. 21-25 ' n Conservation de la Selva Amazonica, 



Fundacion para el desarrollo de la ciencias fisicas, 



matematicas y naturales (FUDECI), Caracas, Venezuela. 

 Lovejoy, T.E. 1992. Foreword to Ecology and Conservation of 



Neotropical Migrant Landbirds (J.M. Hagen and D. W. 



Johnston, Eds.) Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, 



DC 609 pp. 

 Lovejoy, T.E. 1992. Foreword to South Carolina's Wetlands 



Wilderness: The ACE Basin by T. Blagden, Jr. Westcliffe 



Pubs., Inc., Englewood, CO. 

 Lovejoy, T.E. 1992. Earth's Living Library: Check It Out, 



Op-ed, The Washington Post, 19 March. 

 Moran, Katy 1991. Actions of the U.S. Congress Toward 



Environmentally Sustainable Foreign Assistance. New 



Directions in U.S. Foreign Assistance and New Roles for 



Anthropologists. J. P. Mason and M.H. Clark, Editors. Dept. 



of Anthropology, College of William and Mary: 



Williamsburg, VA. 

 Moran, Katy 1992. Introducing Statistical Testing to Standard 



Ethnography: An Example from Elephant Management in 



Sri Lanka. Computer Applications for Anthropologists. Margaret 



S. Boone and John J. Wood, Editors. Wadsworth: Belmont, 



CA. 

 Moran, Katy 1992. Ethnobiology and U.S. Policy. Sustainable 



Harvest and Marketing of Rainforest Products. Mark Plotkin 



and Lisa Famolare, Editors. Island Press: Washington, DC. 

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20). Pp. 353-369 in The Earth as Transformed by Human 



Action (B.L. Turner II, W.C. Clark, R.W. Kates, J.F. 



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CT. 386 pp. 

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Office of Telecommunications 



Radio Productions 



"Spirits of the Present: The Legacy from Native America" - 13 

 half-hour programs produced by the Native American 

 Public Broadcasting Consortium and Radio Smithsonian, 

 broadcast on 410 stations in North America. This 

 documentary series about Native American history and 

 culture looks at the life of today's Indians. 



"Messages from the Grandparents" The centuries-old 

 unbroken chain of oral traditions which are passed on to 

 each new generation. 



"Through Carib Eyes: The Columbus Encounter in the 

 Caribbean" The perceptions of Carib and Taino Indians 

 whose ancestors encountered Columbus. 



"Battle Lines: Pressures of the Land" Modern-day struggles 

 over issues of sovereignty. 



"Shared Visions: Art, Music, and Literature" Reflections on 

 cultural continuity by Native American artists, writers, 

 dancers, and musicians. 



"Sustaining Our Communities: Natural Resource 

 Management" An examination of traditional Indian 

 farming techniques and natural resource management 

 practices within various tribal communities. 



"Religious Freedom" A look at the legal challenges to 

 American Indians' religious freedom. 



"America's Heritage: Preserving Our History" The role of 

 cultural centers and the new National Museum of the 

 American Indian in preserving tribal history. 



"Traditional Caring: Non-traditional Health Issues" 



Confronting contemporary health issues such as diabetes, 

 alcoholism, and AIDS with traditional healing practices. 



"Rebuilding Our Nations" Creative solutions to the problems 

 of economic development in several Native Nations. 



"Education: Becoming a Whole Person" From curriculum 

 design to preservation of language, Native Americans are 

 taking control of their own educational systems. 



"Cultural Identity" The cultural and social bases for 



contemporary Indian identity among the Houma, Lumbee, 

 and Yaqui. 



"Responding to the Quincentennial" A mosaic of Indian views 

 on the Columbus Quincentenary. 



"The Indian in the Global Mind" The global fascination with 

 Indians, including the use of Indian mascots for non-Indian 

 sports teams. 



"Folk Masters, from the Barns of Wolf Trap," thirteen one- 

 hour stereo programs, produced by the Wolf Trap Founda- 

 tion for the Petforming Arts, WETA-FM, and Radio 

 Smithsonian. 



"Carolina House Party: Parlor Picking, Frolic Fiddling, and 

 Juke Joint Blues" Piedmont blues and parlor tunes sung by 

 Etta Baker, Pappy Sherrill and his old-time country 

 stringband, and country blues and electric boogie with 

 Drink Small. 



"There's Twelve Gates to the City: Black Gospel Styles" The 

 Kings of Harmony brass band from Washington, DC, St. 

 Louis pianist and vocalist Fontella Bass, and the a cappella 

 harmonies of the Birmingham Sunlights from Alabama. 



"Masters of the Folk Violin" The late master of Cajun fiddling 

 Dewey Balfa with Steve Riley, New Mexican-style violin 

 virtuosity from the Martinez Family, Anglo-Midwestern 

 fiddling contest champion Kenny Sidle, and the African 

 American Kansas City jazz sounds of 84 year-old Claude 

 Williams. 



"American Indian Music, Dance and Song from the Desert 

 and the Tundra" Athabascan fiddler Bill Stevens and the 

 Nunamta Yupik Eskimo Dancers from Alaska; the 



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