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University of Mass. Study: Green Projects Create More Jobs

A recent University of Massachusetts study concluded that spending $100 billion nationwide on clean, green economic recovery projects (wind, solar, biofuels, etc.) would “create nearly four times more total jobs than spending the same amount of money within the oil industry, and 300,000 more jobs than a similar amount of spending directed toward household consumption.”
Check out the study!

2009 Cornell Native American Alumni Association (CNAAA) Reunion Iroquois Social

The American Indian Program (AIP) and the Cornell Center for a Sustainable Future (CCSF) are pleased to co-sponsor the 2009 Cornell Native American Alumni Association (CNAAA) Reunion Iroquois Social in celebration of the vital role of indigenous peoples in sustainability. Please join us at the Social at Bailey Hall Square, Cornell University. Indigenous peoples have been implementing the principle of sustainability for millennia. Here, among New York’s Finger Lakes, the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) peoples, who cared for the region before Cornell, live by the principle: In every decision we must consider the impact on the seventh generation. As New York State’s land grant university for over 140 years, Cornell respects this ethic as a way to make the Big Red and Planet Earth places where all generations can prosper.
For more information contact Kathy Halbig at (607)255-5991 or klh37@cornell.edu
Cornell American?Indian Program – www.aip.cornell.edu
Cornell Center for a Sustainable Future – www.ccsf.cornell.edu 

"Aqua-lujah!" Green candidate Billy damns drilling

Reverend Billy and fellow activists protesting against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Villager photo by Jefferson Siegel

Reverend Billy and fellow activists protesting against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Villager photo by Jefferson Siegel

“Aqua-lujah!” Green candidate Billy damns drilling (The Villager):

Performance-artist preacher Reverend Billy “baptized” 3-month-old Noah Salinger, held by his mother, Tracy Gary, on the Christopher St. Pier on Sunday, World Water Day. The baptism was part of the ceremony of the Blessing of the Water, as well as a protest against plans to drill for natural gas in the Upstate watershed. Billy, real name Bill Talen, is the Green Party candidate for New York City mayor. “If you poison the ground water, you’ve lost the ability to drink,” said Christabel Gough, a longtime Christopher St. resident. Gough sat on the pier’s grass with dozens of others, many holding signs, each bearing the name of a New York neighborhood whose water would be affected by the drilling. “We have the purest water here in the city,” Ellen Peterson Lewis said, holding a “West Village” sign with her husband, Lewis. “We owe it to future generations to keep the water pure,” she said. “Water is not a profit center,” Reverend Billy proclaimed as the crowd chanted, “Aqua-lujah!” Billy said that, if elected, he would advocate for the city’s takeover of the watershed by eminent domain.