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  Sierra Magazine
  September/October 2008
Table of Contents
 
  COOL SCHOOLS:
Cool Crowd
Ten That Get It
Five That Fail
Hot Jobs to Chill the Planet
Talk of the Quad
Eco-Dorms
Good Green Reads
 
  MORE FEATURES:
Staring Down Doomsday
Profiles in Courage
Carbon Confessional
Vertigo
 
  DEPARTMENTS:
Spout
Create
Enjoy
Hey Mr. Green
Smile
Ponder
Explore
Act
Grapple
Mixed Media
Comfort Zone
Bulletin
Last Words
 
  MORE:
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Lay of the Land

Salmon | WWatch | Ad Critique | Yucca Mountain | Coca in Columbia | Save Energy | Bold Strokes | Updates

Updates

Shell on the Stand. In 1995, the Nigerian military government executed nine environmentalists on trumped-up charges. Led by noted author Ken Saro-Wiwa, the activists had been protesting Shell’s polluting oil operations in their homeland, the Niger Delta. In March, a U.S. federal court that a lawsuit brought by relatives against the multinational oil giant can go forward, a decision that serves as a warning to other corporations that they could be held liable for looking the other way. (See"Priorities," March/April 1996.)

Snow Job. Less than two years after a coalition of environmental and Native American activists kept a pumice mine off Arizona’s San Francisco Peaks, another proposal threatens to befoul the mountains, considered sacred by many tribes. Faced with declining revenues from a recent drought, a local ski resort wants to start making snow from treated sewage and pumping it to its ski runs on Agassiz Peak, one of the three main summits in the San Francisco range. "We pray for natural, crystal snow on the mountains," activist Hazel James told the Arizona Republic in March. "We don’t want this deformed water treated with chemicals." (See "Profile," November/December 2000.)

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