/* FILE ARCHIVED ON 9:38:39 Dec 6, 2014 AND RETRIEVED FROM THE AN OPENWAYBACK INSTANCE ON 1:41:28 Aug 4, 2024. JAVASCRIPT APPENDED BY OPENWAYBACK, COPYRIGHT INTERNET ARCHIVE. ALL OTHER CONTENT MAY ALSO BE PROTECTED BY COPYRIGHT (17 U.S.C. SECTION 108(a)(3)). */ var sc_blogfeed = { "entries": { "Michael Brune": {"url": "https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/dentonfracking/20141206093839/http://blogs.sierraclub.org/michaelbrune/", "title": "From Shadows to Security", "text": "Last night, President Obama announced that he will use his executive authority to take the first significant steps toward fixing what has become an increasingly dysfunctional national immigration policy. As with climate and energy policy, he has not done all that is needed, but as much as he believes he can. In the face of a Congress that routinely passes on opportunities to do anything constructive, and political ideologues who cry foul before the ball is even in play, Obama is determined to do his job.
Why should the Sierra Club care about this latest announcement? For the same reasons anyone ...", "pubdate": "21 Nov 2014 12:16:36"}, "The Green Life": {"url": "https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/dentonfracking/20141206093839/http://blogs.sierraclub.org/greenlife/", "title": "Hiking Guru Shares Perfect Paths", "text": "Robert Manning is a hiking guru. At the University of Vermont, he researches and teaches park managment, which in practice means that he does a lot of hiking. With his wife, Martha, he cowrote the book Walking Distance (Oregon State University Press), which details 30 walks for any hiker's bucket list. Sierra spoke with Manning about his book, his experience with park management, and the best trail in the world.
The subtitle of your book is Extraordinary Hikes for Ordinary People. Who's "ordinary"? I mean, what's the face of the American hiker today?
I ...", "pubdate": "30 May 2014 17:15:22"}, "Compass": {"url": "https://webarchive.library.unt.edu/dentonfracking/20141206093839/http://blogs.sierraclub.org/compass/", "title": "Grassroots Activists Leading The Fight For A Nuclear Free Future", "text": "Susan Corbett, team leader of the Sierra Club Nuclear Free Campaign, has been a leader in anti-nuclearactivism since the 1970’s. Growing up in South Carolina, the state with the highest dependence on nuclear energy in the US, she was drawn into the anti-nuclear movement when a nuclear plant was built 10 miles from her childhood home.
This past weekend, Corbett joined over 70 other leaders in the anti-nuclear movement, representing over 30 U.S. states, Canada and Japan for The Summit for a Nuclear Free Future in Chevy Chase, Maryland. The Sierra Club’s Nuclear Free Campaign was there in force, ...", "pubdate": "21 Nov 2014 11:11:16"}}, "mostRecent": "Michael Brune"};