by Dennis Myers
Doug Smith 1932-2019 Nevada environmental leader Douglas G. Smith died in Reno on March 25. Born in Montana, he saw combat in Korea, then earned undergrad and grad degrees at Montana State University. He eventually became state secretary of agriculture. In 1975, he moved to Nevada and became part of the state workers injury insurance program. Smith was the founder of Citizens for a Scenic Reno, which in 2000 used an initiative petition to curb billboards in the city. He often worked shoulder to shoulder with his friend Marilyn Melton. In the early days of Nevada auto roads, road signs were not permitted, and the state was in a constant battle trying to control them. Eventually, lobbyists won the right to install them, and they spread across the states, limited over the years only on federal highways by beautification legislation in the 1960s. CSR delivered its petition on June 25, 2000, with more than the needed number of signatures to qualify for the city ballot. One day later, billboard companies filed a competing initiative petition, which never obtained the necessary signatures and was withdrawn on July 29. On Aug. 29, the companies filed a SLAPP suit (strategic lawsuit against public participation) against CSR and the city, seeking to have the measure removed from the ballot. The suit was unsuccessful, and the measure was approved by Reno voters on a 57-43 percent majority. CSR became known as Scenic Nevada and evolved to undertake broader environmental concerns, becoming an influential player in the valley. Following Smith’s death, local planning activist Pam Galloway wrote, “Today, developers are heard reassuring elected officials that ‘we have met with Scenic Nevada’ as they develop plans. That is a huge testament to Doug’s vision.” Since Smith’s retirement six years ago, Scenic Nevada has retained its clout while led by Lori and Mark Wray.
trump wantS probe Donald Trump last week called for an investigation of those who wanted him investigated for his Russia links. “We’ve had very bad things happen, and those people are certainly to be looked at,” he said. “I’ve been looking at it for a long time, and I’m saying, ‘Why haven’t they been looked at?’” The probe could start with those who called for the investigation of Trump, such as Sens. Dean Heller, Lindsey Graham, John McCain, Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski; and U.S. Reps. Darrell Issa, Tom McClintock, Steve Knight, Justin Amash, Mike Coffman, Barbara Comstock, Carlos Curbelo, Walter Jones, Adam Kinsinger and Erik Paulsen. Trump has yet to apologize to Robert Mueller for accusing him of running a ‘hoax,” “scam” and “rigged witch hunt.” In fact, Trump doubled down after the Mueller report, calling the probe an “attempted takeover of our government, of our country, an illegal takeover.”
—Dennis Myers
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One choice fits all at the UNR student union bookstore. PHOTO/DENNIS MYERS
UNR vs. Reno What does the campus have against the city? reno real estate agent Dave newman has a grievance. It’s against the University of Nevada, Reno, which insists on using the shorthand nickname of Nevada instead of University of Nevada, Reno, or UNR, thus depriving the city of publicity. “When people hear Nevada, they think that’s Las Vegas,” he said. It’s a grievance he used to discuss on his long-running Reno real estate show on KOLO. “I think it’s a mistake mainly because we’re a tourist town and here’s Michigan State, and other places, that don’t use their towns,” Newman said. “Well, I don’t know where Michigan State is located. ... It’s a crazy thing for a tourist town. It’s our primary industry. We want to draw people to this town and here we take our name out of our university.” And he says he’s not the only one. There are a lot of people in the business community who feel that way.
“Everyone I talk with agrees with me,” he said. He called the original decision to use the state name and avoid the city name “thoughtless.” The late Clark Santini, descendant of campus president Walter Clark (1918-1938), once had business cards as the president of the UNR Alumni Association. The cards gave the name of the campus this way: “The University of Nevada.” The implication—that UNR is the real Nevada—grates not just in Clark County but statewide. The hipper-than-thou attitude, needless to say, does not play well among nonWashoe legislators at budget time. The state’s new governor, Steve Sisolak, as a Nevada regent said in 2004, “They [UNLV and UNR] are equal. One is not a child of the other one, or an offshoot of the other one.” But he has offered no sign of taking a hand in the matter as governor,
suggesting he will leave the matter to the regents. That the usage is a campus policy is indicated by a 2004 Las Vegas Sun report: “UNR’s School of Medicine and the Cooperative Exchange [actually Extension] are allowed to drop the Reno because they are statewide, [then-UNR President John] Lilley said, but those are supposed to be the only exceptions to the rule.” Paradoxically, the medical school has apparently dropped its statewide identification and gone to being Renoonly. The website now recommends, “How we refer to ourselves/ Preferred[:] University of Nevada, Reno School of Medicine/ When an abbreviation is necessary[:] UNR Med.” It is not surprising that the dispute happens in a state where the favorite euphemism is gaming—which references everything from hopscotch to blackjack—as a substitute for gambling, which is more specific. Nevada can refer to anything from a Clark County university to a Carson City community college. Most news stories have painted the matter as a north/south dispute. But while virtually everyone in the south calls that campus UNLV, the north is hardly unanimous in calling the Reno campus by the term Nevada. It is rarely heard. Referring to UNR as UNR is nearly universal in Reno. And if, as Newman suggests, the business community is unhappy with the Nevada term, critics of the older name may be pushing against an unlocked door. The notion of favoring Nevada over UNR is often attributed to (1) native Nevadans and (2) sports fans. But only about a fifth of Nevadans are natives and many of them are known to use the acronym instead of Nevada. The same is true of sports fans. A good example is the late Rollan Melton, raised in Fallon and a graduate of what was then called the University of Nevada. In 1992, the first Las Vegas Bowl—carried by ESPN and containing a dramatic UNR rally and near upset of Bowling Green—prompted Melton to point out in print that the term Reno was mentioned only twice during the broadcast, once in a commercial paid for by UNR and once at the end of the game by an announcer.