Sentences with phrase «john vidal»

This stuff is in our food, our clothes — and in us, writes John Vidal, a former Guardian environment editor
And then the next day (fatefully) I went for spin and shot some video with John Vidal from the Guardian.
I made the same point to John Vidal, Guardian Environment editor, when he quoted the same research back in March.
John Vidal is the environment editor and Damian Carrington is the head of environment at the Guardian
Environmental groups split over calls for IPCC boss to resign John Vidal, The Guardian, 4 February 2010
Alternatively, why not have a go at e-mailing to John Vidal, the Guardianâ s environmental editor [email protected] (thatâ s from memory) so; perhaps alert him to this somewhat dodgy graph.
As Bishop Hill pointed out, it was the Guardian's Environmental Editor, John Vidal, who had said,
As blogger Andrew Montford has pointed out, it was theGuardian's environment editor, John Vidal, who wrote: «The world's biggest physical changes in the past few years are mostly seen nearest the poles where climate change has been most extreme.
From the Guardian, 3 Jan 2007: John Vidal: «For the sake of the environment, we must put an end to bovine flatulence».
The UK Guardian's same - day variation written by John Vidal contained the identical quote from Davies, but Vidal skipped the last sentence in the Reuters article where Dr Soon said he'd gladly accept Greenpeace funding.
The Guardian jumped on it, naturally, calling on George Monbiot, Mark Lynas and John Vidal to hit its significance home.
Greenpeace's own ExxonSecrets web site (created and run by Davies) has a page dedicated to Dr Soon, where it cites the above John Vidal Guardian article as the source to say Dr Soon received a million dollars of «big oil» funding.
Let's not confuse John Vidal with other more famous Vidals, e.g. Gore Vidal (i.e. the use of the term Vidal is ambiguous).
John Vidal: You're not in the business of predictions -LSB-?!]
People like John Sulston and John Vidal are always SO enthusiastic about reducing OTHER PEOPLE's consumption and re-distributing OTHER PEOPLE's wealth.
Yesterday Hickman put up an extract from an audio interview of Sir John Sulston in which the inteviewer John Vidal puts to Sir John some points made by Matt Ridley.
John Vidal's audio interview with Sir John Sulston is now available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/audio/2012/apr/30/science-weekly-podcast-sleep (starting 32 minutes in).
John Vidal asks him whether the things he predicted 40 years ago have come to pass, and he responds: «most of the things have gotten worse... The things that have been coming up have been much worse than we predicted, and that's what's got the scientific community scared.»
Climate change threat to tropical forests «greater than suspected», says John Vidal in the Guardian.
Climate scientists warn of wild weather in the year ahead as El Niño begins El Niño expected to increase drought, floods and other extreme events, and cause a hot summer in the UK John Vidal, environment editor theguardian.com, Monday 13 July 2009 16.30 BST
John Vidal limits his coverage to reports of people affected in exotic tropical locations.
Food shortages could force world into vegetarianism, warn scientists Water scarcity's effect on food production means radical steps will be needed to feed population expected to reach 9bn by 2050 John Vidal, environment editor The Guardian, Sunday 26 August 2012 19.00 BST
Only slightly off - subject: the Guardian's environment editor John Vidal has just published dire predictions of future temperatures worse than Monbiot's worst wet dreams, issuing from an MIT Global Change (that's what they call themselves) thinktank, which is financed by ExxonMobil, Shell, BP and Electricité de France, among others.
On the subject of the evils of being financed by Big Business: On March 31st Guardian environment editor John Vidal published an article quoting the MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change, to the effect that temperatures are due rise 5 - 7 °C this century.
John Vidal, «There are many tiger widows here,» Guardian, Sep. 25, 2008, http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/sep/25/conservation.climatechange 44.
Pops The Graun has already spent the extra cash sending Suzanne Goldenberg from Washington to Nepal, which was also visited a few years back by Guardian environment editor, John Vidal, who has also done the Andes and Mexico.
-LSB-...] John Vidal and Jonathan Watts.
The Guardian: Rajendra Pachauri: human society will see sense on climate change Recent extreme weather in the UK, US and Asia is consistent with climate change, Rajendra Pachauri, the chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, tells John Vidal.
note 31, p. 49; John Vidal, «Fears for the World's Poor Countries as the Rich Grab Land to Grow Food,» (London) Guardian, 3 July 2009.
As John Vidal of The Guardian described it:
This is why it's important to read today's report from John Vidal of The Guardian, in which he describes what appears to be a document outlining the communication and negotiation strategy of President Obama's climate - diplomacy team.
«Great names were argued over, and unknown ones surfaced,» wrote John Vidal, the paper's environment editor.

Not exact matches

Cast: Brian Murray, Gore Vidal, Harry Lennix, John Ottavino, Robert Stanton, Kelly Willis, Giancarlo Esposito, Rebecca Jenkins, Harry J. Lennix, Ray Wise, Tim Robbins
by Walter Chaw Bearing no relationship to the Gore Vidal biography with which it shares its name, Steven Spielberg's predictably uneven Lincoln features moments of real grandeur narrated to death by John Williams's inspiring ™ and rousing ™ score.
From one, there are original screenwriter (the adapter remains uncredited) Gore Vidal and the Serious British Actors (including no less than Sir John Gielgud and Peter O'Toole), who obviously believed they were making a serious exposé of the decadence of the Roman empire, namely the reign of the megalomaniacal title character (Malcolm McDowell).
Gore Vidal Taylor Caldwell John Le Carre John Updike Catherine Marshall
The 21 participating artists are both emerging and mid-career, and work in a variety of media, generally with an unconventional or conceptual approach: Trudy Benson, Anna Betbeze, Michael Berryhill, Kari Cholnoky, David Kennedy Cutler, Michael DeLucia, Jess Fuller, Elizabeth Ferry, Alicia Gibson, E.J. Hauser, Butt Johnson, Matt Keegan, Michael Mahalchick, Sam Moyer, Sheryl Oppenheim, John O'Connor, Josh Reames, Emily Mae Smith, Siebren Versteeg, Jacques Louis Vidal and Wendy White.
Featured artists include (as of February 14): Sandra Ayala, John Conn, Richard Fremund, Jasmine Murrell, Peter Baker, Melanie Crean, Edwin Gonazalez - Ojeda, Laura Napier, Kimber Berry, Linda Cunningham, Esteban Jimenez Guerra, Tammy Nguyen, Elena Bouza, Irina Danilova, Skowmon Hastanan, Chen Carrasco, Sharon De La Cruz, Tim Hetherington, Dionis Ortiz, Athena Castillo, Antonio Dejesus, Malang Jobarteh, Alexandra Phillips, Vidal Centeno, Alejandra Delfin, Lady K Fever, José Rivera, Amaru Chiza, Donna Diamond, Lisa Kahane, Marco Saavedra, Onyedica Chuke, Nicky Enright, Ian Charles Scott, Carey Clark, Michael Ferris Jr, John Martin, Stephanie Sinclair, Josue Guarionex Colon, Xavier Figueroa, Alexis Mendoza, Bice Wilson, Ricky Flores, Natalie Collette Wood, Circa» 95, Marisol Diaz and Dionis Ortiz.
Miuccia Prada, who designed the costumes for the show (available through November 30 in an online auction to benefit the museum), seated Gore Vidal to her right, Frank Gehry to her left, and John Baldessari and Germano Celant opposite.
Taking part in these discussions have been renowned writers, artists, art historians and philosophers, such as: Tom McCarthy, Okwui Enwezor, Carsten Höller, Simon Critchley, Navin Rawanchaikul, Stephane Goxe and Jordi Vidal, Tris Vonna - Michell, Ultra-Red, Flávia Müller Medeiros & Nasrin Tabatabai, Tania Bruguera, TJ Demos & Eyal Weizman, John Smith and Zoran Naskovski.
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