Vol. 8 No. 4, June 2002
Index
- An experiment in green.
- A new way to save the environment.
- CLF and Coastal Maine: saving the soul of the state.
- Putting culture back in aquaculture.
- No speedways for coastal towns.
- PG&E--PrestidiGitation & Evasiveness?
- An Emerald arc for the artery.
- CLF's conservation wisdom watch.
- The CLF "T" party.
- "I, 93....." (New Hampshire).
- Green values triumph in Natick.
- Protecting wetland: establishing critical precedent.
- The monster on the bay.
- Woodsman, spare that tree.
- CLF, Quonset, and Almond: a tough nut to crack.
- Getting the lead out in Rhode Island.
- Quotes of note: "heard around New England".
- Judith C. Skinner, Esq.
- Sewage and another S-word.
- Saving Vermont's family farms.
- Stopping the Circ.
- A commitment to Core Values.
- Moooove over, dairy processors.
- The greenest of plants for the Granite State; CLF Ventures helped Virginia's AES Corporation site New Hampshire's AES Granite Ridge, the cleanest, greenest power plant in New England history. Emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxide, and carbon dioxide will be amazingly low, and much wildlife-rich conservation and forest land will adjoin the plant--eventually totalling more than 1200 acres.
- Revitalizing urban brownfields: goodbuys for troubled neighborhoods: CLF Ventures is helping to revitalize four brownfields, one on East Boston's Chelsea Creek, where oil tanks once stood; one in nearby Lynn, the former site of a commercial laundry; and two problem sites in New York's storied Harlem neighborhood.
- A glorious win for a troubled tradition; when the U.S. government illegally failed to protect New England's fabled but dwindling stocks of cod, haddock, and flounder, CLF and its allies sought remedy in federal court--and won a great victory.
- A sporting man with a public view; Attorney Alan Wilson's strong background in business and financial management helps him to carry out the demanding duties of CLF Ventures vice president. And he still finds time for many civic activities, to climb in the Alps, sail a 42-foot sloop, and row-an ocean shell.
- The volunteer spirit lives.
- Tom Winship (1920-2002): an extraordinary life.