Rain Magazine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


RAIN is an appropriate technology, environmental, and community-organizing journal that began in Portland, Oregon in 1974.[1][2][3][4][5]

EditorSteve Johnson, Lane deMoll, Tom Bender, Greg Bryant, F. Lansing Scott, Marcia Johnson, Lee Johnson, Phil Conti, Del Greenfield, Tad Mutersbaugh, Mark Roseland, Debra Whitelaw, Karen Struening, Carlotta Collette, Steve Rudman, Scott Androes, Mimi Maduro, Steven Ames, Linda Sawaya, John Ferrell, Rob Baird, Tanya Kucak, Katherine Sadler, Jeff Strang, Nancy Cosper, Laura Stuchinsky, Stephen Schneider, Danielle Janes[1]
CategoriesEnvironmental
Frequencymonthly/quarterly/continuous (varied)
First issueOctober 1974
Quick facts Editor, Categories ...
RAIN Magazine
EditorSteve Johnson, Lane deMoll, Tom Bender, Greg Bryant, F. Lansing Scott, Marcia Johnson, Lee Johnson, Phil Conti, Del Greenfield, Tad Mutersbaugh, Mark Roseland, Debra Whitelaw, Karen Struening, Carlotta Collette, Steve Rudman, Scott Androes, Mimi Maduro, Steven Ames, Linda Sawaya, John Ferrell, Rob Baird, Tanya Kucak, Katherine Sadler, Jeff Strang, Nancy Cosper, Laura Stuchinsky, Stephen Schneider, Danielle Janes[1]
CategoriesEnvironmental
Frequencymonthly/quarterly/continuous (varied)
First issueOctober 1974
CountryUnited States of America
LanguageEnglish
Websitehttps://www.rainmagazine.com
ISSN0739-621X
Close

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI