(NB: ESD News changed its name to Sense of Place)
This article was published in Donella Meadows's syndicated column, "Global Citizen" 7-July 1990
A Vanguard of Environmental Journalism
Donella Meadows
Once every two weeks the computer in my office gives me a beep to say the ESD
News has arrived. When I click back, the masthead of a 15-page magazine
comes up on my screen. I can scroll through it, read what I’m interested
in, skip over or even wipe out what I’m not. If there’s a piece I want
to keep, I can save it on the computer’s memory. When I’m done, I toss
the whole issue into a metaphorical computer trash can, which never has to be
emptied into a recycling bin or a landfill, because it contains nothing but
erasable electronic blips.
No muss, no fuss, no trees cut, no dioxins from paper
mills, and interesting reading, too.
Jonathan Kohl, the publisher of ESD News,
claims that it’s the only electronic magazine in the world. There
are other computer transmissions, he says, which are unformatted text only.
This is a real magazine, professionally laid out, with fancy fonts and
plenty of illustrations (heavy on pine trees and Whole Earths).
Jonathan Kohl is a sophomore at Dartmouth
College, a computer wiz, and a coming media genius. The magazine
was born last fall, when Kohl volunteered to put out the newsletter of
the Environmental Studies Division (ESD) of the Dartmouth Outing Club.
The ESD is a remnant of the first Earth Day
20 years ago. Since then it has been the gathering place on campus
for the environmental activists, the recyclers, and the energy-savers.
Until Kohl came along, the newsletter was typically a hand-written, one-page
set of meeting minutes, duplicated onto that old-fashioned material called
paper, and distributed to about 20 hard-core ESD members.
Kohl’s newsletter started out on paper, too,
but by his second issue environmental enthusiasm on campus was welling
the number of subscribers, Kohl’s journalistic enthusiasm was swelling
the newsletter’s length, and his ecological conscience was worried about
wasting paper. He started a campaign to get ESD members to read their
publication via Blitzmail.
Dartmouth’s dense computer network, connected
by a message service called Blitzmail, made kohl’s innovation possible.
There are about 8,000 computers on campus – virtually every student, professor
and office has one. And the community has a new verb, “to blitz.”
A student sends me a Blitzmail message asking to meet with me and ends
“Thursday at 3. If that’s not OK, blitz me.” The Environmental
Studies Program blitzes the staff to announce a new seminar schedule.
And once every two weeks the ESD News crew, now consisting of eight
managers and editors and dozens of writers and artists, blitzes an issue
out to a subscription list totaling 400 and rising fast.
The medium of the ESD News is unique,
the format is lively, and the content is best. A recent issue described
the unsustainable old-growth logging activities of the Plum Creek Timber
Company, pointing out that the company’s chairman is a former Dartmouth
trustee. There has been a sizzling exchange of letters on Dartmouth’s
own environmental record, examining everything from where the dining service
buys its beef to how often the college sprays its tress to what goes out
of the smokestack at the power plant. The ESD News has challenged
Dartmouth to establish a dean of the environment. It also runs ads
for the popular “Go Big Green, Keep It Clean” re-usable mugs, which cuts
down on disposable plastic cups.
This is the generation that The New York Times has recently
labeled uninformed, passive and uncaring!
Every issue has a rundown of environmental
issues in the world news, a book review or a summary of an environmental
speech on campus, a feature article (coming next: the state of the
Connecticut River) and inspiring quotations. And yes, the minutes
of ESD meetings are still in there.
If I want a hard copy of any of these gems,
I can hit the print button, but the ESD News pleads with me not
to do that – I might (heaven forbid) print on only one side of the paper.
I am urged instead to blitz the staff, who will send me a copy of any issue
printed on both sides and on recycled paper.
The world has not yet seen either the peak
of ESD News or the end of Jon Kohl’s ideas. He envisions ESD
News as “a Grand Central Station of environmental information, bringing
alumni and other schools together with Dartmouth. Its reputation
and ability to cover stories and influence decision making will continue
to rise.”