Seeing Green: XL-size me: pipelines, pinholes and ethical spillover Holly Moeller October 7, 2011 1 Comment When I was little, I really wanted to go to Prudhoe Bay, on Alaska’s northern shoreline. Not because I wanted to see pristine coastline or frolicking wildlife, but because I wanted to see the place... Read More »
Seeing Green: How Tree-Hugging Became a Competitive Sport Holly Moeller May 26, 2011 0 Comments In 2007, I wrote my first “Seeing Green” piece while stranded in Princeton’s student center (I went to the public rival-down-the-road, Rutgers) as my boyfriend coached swim practice. The column,... Read More »
Seeing Green: Trust me, I’m your friend. Holly Moeller February 24, 2011 0 Comments Last week, my grandmother forwarded me an e-mail with that stunning punchline. Here’s how the logic flowed: the United States has tremendous oil and gas reserves in the Bakken Formation, beneath the... Read More »
Seeing Green: A stone’s throw away? Holly Moeller February 9, 2011 0 Comments I haven’t had a TV in my life for the past few years. So, when I finally caught video clips from Cairo last week, I was astounded. Still images, no matter how provocative, miss so many dimensions of... Read More »
Report targets GCEP contract Tyler Brown October 22, 2010 2 Comments A report from the Center for American Progress questions the extent of big-name energy companies' control over sponsored research at Stanford. Read More »
Strangely Charming: Kill Baby Krill Jack Cackler May 5, 2010 1 Comment Is offshore drilling worth the risks? Read More »
Former CIA head ties oil, terror Robert Toews February 25, 2010 0 Comments Former head of the Central Intelligence Agency Jim Woolsey ’63 spoke Wednesday afternoon to a packed auditorium at Stanford Law School about the challenges that the future generation of policy... Read More »