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NARRATOR
John Henry Faulk
Region: Hill Country
Topics: Ground Water, Surface Water, Aquifer, Dam, Channel, Media, Government
Well known as a folklorist, as a radio and TV
personality of great wit, and as a courageous fighter against the
blackmailing and blackballing of the Red Scare, John Henry Faulk also
had a strong interest in environmental protection. In his hometown of
Austin, he spoke out against the construction and channelizing in and
along Barton Creek, and other sensitive areas. He also was a noted
opponent of the efforts in the 1960s and 1970s to overpump the
Ogallala Aquifer of the Panhandle, to move water from east Texas to
west Texas in a system of canals and pipelines, and particularly, to
dredge the Trinity River as a barge canal to Dallas. He cited
similarities to the Red Scare, in the hyperbole and name-calling that
was thrown against environmentalists who questioned these projects.
Interviewed
by
J.B. Smallwood, Jr.
June 18, 1981
Madisonville, Texas
Copy provided courtesy of
North Texas State University
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