JACKSON'S FREE NEWS AND ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

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JACKSONS FREE NEWS AND ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Comprehensive Arts & Events Calendar Restaurants
Gallery Listings Freewill Astrology Classifieds
JACKSONS FREE NEWS AND ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
PlanetJH.com
FREE
MEDIA WATCH Page 10
BEST OF THE BLOG Page 5
GRANDMA Page 46
Volume 4, No. 27
TOWN COUNCIL
PERFECTS COLD
FUSION
Page 15
WINE AUCTION
EXPANDS SCOPE
Page 23
MARATHONERS
STEP IT UP FOR
JACKSON HALF
Page 24
cover illustration by Mike Weber / jackfabulous@gmail.com
pages 12-14
June 21-27, 2006 2
planet jackson hole
l june 21, 2006
planet
contents
Tickets go on sale June 30 for
the Doobie Brothers.
page 33
Step into the ring with Nacho
Libre
page 35
last week, briefly
opinions & editorial
wyoming news
out there
media watch
cover:
cellular biology
council chronicles
1% for the tetons
big picture
them on us
busted teens
en español
90-day wonderings
galaxy:
wine auction
upcoming, teen calendar
restaurants
food news
music
cd review
film:
nacho libre
arts observatory
living well
sports briefs
advice
crossword
horoscopes, spacetime, poet
classifieds
grandma, flipside
3
4-5
6-7
8-9
10
12-14
15
16
17
18-19
20
21
22
23-27
28
29-30
32
33
34
35
36
38-39
40
41
42
43
44-45
46
Box 3249, Jackson Hole, Wyoming 83001. Email
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James Stafford/Owner tree-doctor@hotmail.com 690.5352 or 732.2010
T I P O F T H E W E E K : M o u n t a i n P i n e B e e t l e s
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The largest infestation of Mountain Pine Beetles has hit more than one million acres of
forest in Northern Idaho and Wyoming. Years of drought and fires have left forests in the west
vulnerable. Surveys by the U.S. Forest Service found that 1.1 million acres of forest came
under attack by Mountain Pine Beetles in 2005, an increase from the 675,000 acres the year
before. The only sure natural way to stop the spread of beetles is deep and extended cold.
Because the bark of a tree insulates the beetles from the cold, temperatures need to be more
than -25 below for an extended time, studies have shown. Spraying the trees with Astro (1
gal. per 100 gal. of water) drenching the bark will protect the trees against attack. A deep
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S a v i n g T r e e s i n J a c k s o n H o l e
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Co-editor
Richard Anderson
editor@planetjh.com
Co-editor
Brian Siegfried
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Art Director
Jeana Haarman
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Designers Crystal Jolliff,
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Contributors: Danny Bobbe, Ed
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Publisher: Planet Jackson Hole, Inc.
Mary Grossman
publisher@planetjh.com june 21, 2006 |
planet jackson hole
3
last week,
briefly
Age: 27
Years in Jackson: 1 year 3 months
Hometown: Fort Worth, Texas
Occupation: Graphic Designer
Hobbies: I would love to say underwater
basket weaving, but I don't know how
yet - guess I should take a class.
Pro-Jackson: The sheer volume of fleece
Anti-Jackson: The sheer volume of fleece
Favorite Music: Anything, as long
as it's loud
Favorite Movies: Garden State, Fight Club
Favorite Book: The Da Vinci Code
Quote/Advice or Motto: Take a chance,
spread your wings, strike the air and fly.
Looking for in a guy: Intelligence,
humor, a gentleman that owns a
pair of leather shoes that are not hik-
ing boots, long walks on the beach
and likes to get caught in the rain.
Heather Turning
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If you want to be CATCH OF THE WEEK
or want to e-mail this weeks catch,
email CATCHME@planetjh.com
Ainsi je vis le rêve de cycliste le plus désireux de rêve
environ, montant dans les Alpes français.
La montée des géants puissants des Alpes français
centraux offre à un les vues les plus stupéfiantes que ce
monde doit offrir. Elle est une cour de jeu des cyclistes, si
en fait votre dans la souffrance comme le chien. Col du
Galiber, Alpe du Huez et Croix de Fer apportent des
images à mon avis de grand heros dans un moment après
faire tout hors de la guerre sur une autre. Coppi, Merckx,
la Gaulle et Lemond étaient les hommes forts de leur
temps la luttant hors de tous dans les Alpes français. À
moi sélever est lessence du sport du cycle, lendroit
étaient esprit vrai est matière finie.
Creuser dans son art de lauto-portrait et sentir la
puissance de la pesanteur mabaisser. me refuser le som-
met est à moi quelle vie est environ. Ainsi je dis apporte
sur les montagnes des dieux et me fais le sentir comme
un mortel vrai.
S I N G L E
T R A C K
WRITTEN BY
CRAIG PRATHER
TETON CYCLE WORKS
Park produces news aplenty
Three days, three more pieces of bad news from
Yellowstone National Park. On Saturday a mother from
Michigan died after falling off a cliff, on Sunday it was
announced that a troublesome black bear had to be eutha-
nized and on Monday Buffalo Field Campaign reported
that the number of Yellowstone buffalo killed in 2005-06
has topped 1,000.
A 52-year old women lost her footing on a small rock
retaining wall, slid down an embankment and then off a
500-foot cliff to her death, according to a press release by
Yellowstone National Park. The death occurred north of
the Tower Fall area at about 10 a.m. on Saturday. The
deceased, Deborah Chamberlin, was from Rockford, Mich.,
and was with her husband and two children at the time of
the accident. She was planning to take a photograph
before she fell.
The black bear, deemed aggressive by park rangers,
was trapped, removed from the Canyon Campground area
where it had charged multiple visitors and eventually euth-
anized.
The male bear had broken into a vehicle and was suc-
cessful in getting large quantities of human food, read a
Yellowstone National Park press release. The bear did not
fear people. It had been sprayed several times with pepper
spray but returned to the campsites where, after being
baited with an elk hindquarter, it was captured.
The bears behavior threatened the safety of employees
and park visitors, according to the press release.
With a USDA APHIS approved shipment of 48 bison to
the slaughterhouse on Monday, the total number of buffa-
lo killed by park service management and hunters in 2005-
06 reached 1,011, the highest level since the 1996-1997
winter/spring season when 1,084 buffalo were killed.
Fear that buffalo may pass on brucellosis to farm cattle
is the reason for the aggressive management of wild buf-
falo by state and federal agencies, read the Buffalo Fi