
Rebecca John
Articles
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2 months ago |
desmog.com | Royce Kurmelovs |Rebecca John
It was a Friday when the phone rang in the office of a New Zealand-born accountant named William Gaston Walkley. On the other end of the line was Terry Southwell-Keely, deputy chief of staff at the Sydney Morning Herald, who had just received a cable from Standard Oil of California announcing that oil had been found at a place they were calling Rough Range-1. Southwell-Keely had called Walkley to congratulate him on his success.
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Jan 27, 2025 |
desmog.com | Rebecca John |Geoff Dembicki
An Israeli private investigator wanted by U.S. authorities for allegedly carrying out a hack-and-leak operation commissioned on behalf of ExxonMobil is fighting against his extradition to a Brooklyn, NY, detention center.
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Jan 17, 2025 |
dialnet.unirioja.es | Rebecca John
Ayuda Buscar en la ayuda Buscar en la ayuda Las grandes petroleras dijeron hace setenta años que las emisiones de combustibles fósiles podrían afectar a la «civilización» Autores: Rebecca John Localización: Mientras tanto, ISSN 0210-8259, Nº. 241, 2025 Idioma: español EnlacesTexto completo Resumen El 6 de abril de 1955 era un perfecto día de primavera en Los Ángeles.
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Dec 6, 2024 |
counterpunch.org | Rebecca John
April 6, 1955, was a perfect spring day in Los Angeles. Downtown, the skies were unusually smog-free as Lauren B. Hitchcock, president of the Air Pollution Foundation, made his way up the marble steps of the city’s exclusive California Club for a meeting with some of the West Coast’s most powerful businessmen. Waiting inside the club’s oak-paneled rooms were top executives from California’s major oil companies. They were the Air Pollution Foundation’s largest funders, and they were not happy.
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Nov 12, 2024 |
nationofchange.org | Rebecca John
April 6, 1955, was a perfect spring day in Los Angeles. Downtown, the skies were unusually smog-free as Lauren B. Hitchcock, president of the Air Pollution Foundation, made his way up the marble steps of the city’s exclusive California Club for a meeting with some of the West Coast’s most powerful businessmen. Waiting inside the club’s oak-paneled rooms were top executives from California’s major oil companies. They were the Air Pollution Foundation’s largest funders, and they were not happy.
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