Skip to main content
Give Earth a Chance: Environmental Activism in Michigan
  • Home
  • About
  • Exhibit
  • Origins
    • National Parks
    • Great Society
    • Citizen Activism
    • "Environmental Crisis"
  • Earth Day 1970
    • Environmental Action for Survival at U-M
    • ENACT Teach-In March 1970
    • National Earth Day April 22
    • Environmental Action
  • Michigan Activism
    • Michigan Environmental Protection Act
    • Ecology Center of Ann Arbor
    • Nuclear Power Debate
  • Air & Water Politics
    • Clean Air Act of 1970
    • Reforming the Auto Industry
    • Clean Water Laws
    • Great Lakes Pollution
  • Legacies
    • ENACT Personal Stories
    • Commemorating Earth Day
    • Ecology Center Impact
    • Environmental History Matters
  • Interviews
    • David Allan
    • Doug Scott
    • Elizabeth Grant
    • George Coling
    • Denis Hayes
    • Barbara Reid
    • Peter Harnik
    • Mike Schechtman
    • Mike Garfield and Tracey Easthope

Browse Items (799 total)

    • Browse All
    • Browse by Tag
    • Search Items
  • Previous Page
  • of 80
  • Next Page
Sort by:
  • Title
  • Creator
  • Date Added

A Pledge of Social Responsibility

Screen Shot 2017-12-15 at 10.01.09 AM.png

A Citizen's Critique of the Pigeon River EIS, 1976

A Citizen's Critique of the Pigeon River EIS 2.1976.pdf

A Benefit for the Fermi II Resistance Legal Defense Fund

%2F20171128_122824.jpg

9. Mike Garfield and Tracey Easthope on the Ecology Center's success

8. Mike Garfield on later Ecology Center programs

7. Mike Garfield on early Ecology Center programs

6. Mike Garfield and Tracey Easthope on environmental justice

5. Mike Garfield and Tracey Easthope on workplace and industry reform campaigns

4. Tracey Easthope on the Ecology Center's toxic waste campaigns

4. Letter from Michigan Citizen; September 19, 1973

Philip A. Hart Papers Box 211 - Subject Files 1973, Pollution, Water Pollution_5Letter4.png
  • Previous Page
  • of 80
  • Next Page

Featured Item

No featured items are available.




Created by Michigan in the World and the Environmental Justice HistoryLab, projects of the U-M History Department.