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Jesse James, ranger.


Planting trees to repair the land became a "mission" for Jesse James III James III, king of Scotland
James III, 1452–88, king of Scotland (1460–88), son and successor of James II. During his minority he was under the care of his mother, Mary of Guelders, and her adviser, James Kennedy, bishop of St. Andrews.
, district ranger Ranger

Any of a series of unmanned probes launched from 1961 to 1965 by NASA. The project was NASA's earliest attempt to explore the Moon's surface. Ranger 4 (1962) became the first U.S. spacecraft to hit the Moon, crash-landing on its surface as planned.
 for St. Francis National Forest near Marianna, Arizona, nearly 20 years ago. He considers it to be one of his most important missions, but it isn't his only one--he has many, and all benefit either the environment or individuals in his community. Whether overseeing projects to plant the trees or planting them himself, James has played a role in getting literally millions of tree--mostly oaks and pines--into the ground.

For his dedicated work on St. Francis and involvement in many groups and organizations, James was recently named 1993 Lee County Citizen of the Year. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Reverend Robert Taylor Robert Taylor or Bob Taylor may refer to:

Arts
  • Robert Taylor (actor) (1911–1969), American actor
  • Robert Taylor (Australian actor), Australian actor, best known as Agent Jones in The Matrix
 who presented James with the award last fall at a banquet, the recipient is "well-rounded and versatile, dependable, willing to tackle any worthy project and see it through, and . . . he says TREES when it's time It's Time was a successful political campaign run by the Australian Labor Party (ALP) under Gough Whitlam at the 1972 election in Australia. Campaigning on the perceived need for change after 23 years of conservative (Liberal Party of Australia) government, Labor put forward a  to take a picture."

James, 43, answers the inevitable questions about his famous name by saying simply, "it belonged to my father and grandfather before me," but admits he broke the tradition with his own son Reginald.

As a youngster in his native Fayette, Mississippi Fayette is a city in Jefferson County, Mississippi, United States. The population was 2,242 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Jefferson CountyGR6. Geography
Fayette is located at  (31.
, James helped supplement the family income by cutting trees, and as a high school student he cut trees for pulpwood pulp·wood  
n.
Soft wood, such as spruce, aspen, or pine, used in making paper.


pulpwood
Noun

pine, spruce, or any other soft wood used to make paper

Noun 1.
 to earn money for college. With a degree in agriculture education, James taught one semester se·mes·ter  
n.
One of two divisions of 15 to 18 weeks each of an academic year.



[German, from Latin (cursus) s
, but decided the Forest Service was where he belonged.

"I felt like I'd been cutting trees all my life--now I needed to learn how to plant them," he says. "I interviewed with the Forest Service and was given a 180-day 'appointment' planting trees with Grenada (MS) State and Private Forestry."

James eventually returned to college to get a bachelor's degree in forestry. "My professors couldn't understand why I wasn't studying social science--I was the only member of my ethnic group to be in the forestry program," he says. "But my dream was to become a professional forester."

He served in various posts before transferring in 1987 to the 22,000-acre St. Francis National Forest in eastern Arkansas. Here, he took over the job of district ranger--"it's sort of like being the district's gofer (language) Gofer - A lazy functional language designed by Mark Jones <mpj@cs.nott.ac.uk> at the Programming Research Group, Oxford, UK in 1991. It is very similar to Haskell 1.2. ," he says, with characteristic understatement. "Whatever needs to be done that others don't have time for, I do it." As district ranger James directs programs that involve forest soil and water uses, wildlife, recreation, and its use as rangeland for area ranchers; he deals with oil and gas leases, monitors the extraction of minerals and quarry Quarry


Cerynean stag

captured by Hercules as third Labor. [Gk. and Rom. Myth.: Hall, 149]

Cretan bull

savage bull caught by Hercules as seventh Labor. [Gk.
 rock, and attends to "special uses" which, for instance, permit a Methodist church camp and 52 privately owned summer homes to occupy Forest Service land.

"Now some folks might call it 'work,' but my work is play," says James, grinning widely. "If I thought of it as work I might get tired." (Rev. Taylor adds that when James' wife suggests that he rest, James replies, "There is no rest for the wicked Wicked may refer to:
  • Wickedness
Fiction and the arts
  • Wicked (novel), a novel by Gregory Maguire based on L. Frank Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; full title: Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
, and the righteous right·eous  
adj.
1. Morally upright; without guilt or sin: a righteous parishioner.

2. In accordance with virtue or morality: a righteous judgment.

3.
 can't afford to get tired!")

Since he came to St. Francis, the soft-spoken James has both initiated programs and expanded existing ones that involve the community in work on the forest.

The Senior Community Service Employment Program (SCSEP SCSEP Senior Community Service Employment Program (American Association of Retired Persons) ) has grown under his direction from six to 10 local seniors who spend about three days each week in St. Francis putting up signs, cleaning up recreation areas, cutting grass, and fertilizing wildlife openings, among other chores.

James recruits his SCSEP workers from clinics and several agencies for aging, then trains them himself. One of the women--an assembly line worker for some 40 years--had never completed high school, he says. "Partly on Forest Service time, partly on my own time" he helped her obtain a G.E.D. by teaching her fractions and typing.

Another Forest Service program--the Youth Conservation Corps, which employs students ages 16 through 18 for eight weeks in the summer--is optional to each national forest, but had never been tried on the St. Francis before James arrived.

"It's a great opportunity for kids," says James who started the program in 1987, and recruits his youthful workers at the local high school. "Now I can only let each of them work one year--you wouldn't believe how many kids want to be out here."

James was also instrumental in involving the Forest Service in a Youth Enterprises in Agriculture, which allows him to offer jobs to two college-bound seniors each year, and in a Youth Apprenticeship apprenticeship, system of learning a craft or trade from one who is engaged in it and of paying for the instruction by a given number of years of work. The practice was known in ancient Babylon, Egypt, Greece, and Rome, as well as in modern Europe and to some extent  Program. The program offers two students after-school and summer jobs to perform such tasks as taking water samples from forest lakes and wells.

James also "supplements existing trees by "planting trees that are natural and genetically suited to the land." One way he insures this is by collecting acorns from the forest's numerous oaks--northern, red, white, nutall, and cherry bark--and turning them over to local nurseries. Later, when the acorns have become seedlings, they're planted in the forest by youth groups or senior volunteers from area churches. Since 1989, James has overseen the planting of more than 18,000 oak trees.

James has also been responsible for starting the "Take a Kid Fishing Week" at St. Francis in 1988, an event that draws some 450 annually; visiting area churches to speak to youth groups on "awareness of the forest and environment, and the role young people play on planet Earth;" and for getting the 22-mile St. Francis Scenic Byway designated in 1989 (then-Governor Bill Clinton was the keynote speaker at the dedication ceremony). For these accomplishments James insists that he "not be given all the credit, for they involved many people working together."

He added, "It's left up to us |at the Forest (Naut.) at the fore royal masthead; - said of a flag, so raised as a signal for sailing, etc.

See also: Fore
 Service to decide~ if we want to interact with the community, and I believe it's important to make people aware of what's available out here. Our job, though, is to take care of the forest."
COPYRIGHT 1994 American Forests
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Earthkeepers; professional forester Jesse James III
Author:Selbert, Pamela
Publication:American Forests
Date:Mar 1, 1994
Words:978
Previous Article:By Means of Trees.
Next Article:It's time to reform ESA. (Endangered Species Act) (Editorial)
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