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Pro-Palestinian protesters take over Columbia University building; renewables now power more than half of Minnesota's electricity; Report finds long-term Investment in rural areas improves resources; UNC makes it easier to transfer military expertise into college credits.

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Big Pharma uses red meat rhetoric in a fight over drug costs. A school shooting mother opposes guns for teachers. Campus protests against the Gaza war continue, and activists decry the killing of reporters there.

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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

Founder Says Earth Day Marks 39 Years of Progress

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009   

Washington D.C. – Today is the 39th Earth Day - and for North Dakota, there's been a world of change in the environment since this "green" tradition began, according to a man who's been involved from the beginning.

Doug Scott, policy director for the Campaign for America's Wilderness, was in the middle of the conservation movement in the late 1960s, and helped to organize the first Earth Day in 1970. North Dakotans were leaders in incorporating environmental integrity into their everyday lives, Scott recalls. Just months after the first Earth Day, hearings were held in Watford City and Madora about setting aside land for a special wilderness area.

"That ultimately led to legislation championed by the North Dakota congressional delegation that, in just a few years, designated the wilderness in Theodore Roosevelt National Park."

Today, few North Dakotans can recall the time when there were no water treatment plants; raw sewage was dumped directly into the state's waterways. Coal-fired furnaces were commonplace, leaving soot on everything in North Dakota cities. In the years after the first Earth Day, the federal Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and Endangered Species Act all were passed.

What's next? Scott sees climate change as the next big issue of concern.

"How to use more renewables; how to reduce our dependence on foreign oil; and how, in all of those choices, to pour less carbon dioxide into the atmosphere."

Since the first Earth Day, he says, everyday Americans also have helped to designate 100 million acres as protected wilderness, including two million acres added to the National Wilderness Preservation System just a few weeks ago.



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