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...early April when San Francisco Correspondent John Austin, swaddled in lay ers of arctic gear, stepped warily out of a warm airplane at Prudhoe Bay on Alaska's oil-rich North Slope to begin reporting the story in the Nation section on the Alyeska pipeline project. Though the temperature was a nippy-50° F., old North Slope hands assured Austin he was enjoying unusually balmy spring weather. "Maybe so," he recalls, "but I didn't see any of them getting out the volleyball...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jun. 2, 1975 | 6/2/1975 | See Source »

...mounted a complex legal attack on the Alaska pipeline. They won in court in 1973, and Congress included new environmental safeguards when it subsequently rewrote laws to allow the building of the pipeline. Because the groups had advanced "substantial public interests," the Washington, D.C., Court of Appeals ordered the Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. to pay them legal fees that might have topped $100,000. Last week the U.S. Supreme Court voted 5 to 2 to kill the award. The decision carried a gloomy message to public interest lawyers: they can no longer look to the courts as a significant source...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: Fee Gloom | 5/26/1975 | See Source »

...proposed trans-Alaska oil pipeline. The statement, a prerequisite to any major environmental decision, sets forth no specific recommendations. But its analysis of the various routes for taking oil from the North Slope appears to pave the way for Administration approval of the 789-mile pipeline that the Alyeska Pipeline Service Co., a consortium of seven oil companies, wants to build from Prudhoe Bay to the ice-free port of Valdez in southern Alaska. Conservationists say that a pipeline across Canada to the Midwestern U.S. would cause less ecological damage from oil spills, and they plan to fight for their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Team Player | 4/3/1972 | See Source »

...Prudhoe Bay alone, almost 165 miles of 48-in. pipe lay stacked in seemingly endless rows of 60-ft. sections. The pipe is supposed to be used for construction of the 789-mile trans-Alaska pipeline by the Alyeska Pipeline Service Co., which was formed last year by seven oil companies. But the project remains mired in environmental controversy. Even if permission to build the pipeline is granted by the Department of the Interior within the next several months, as appears likely, the project stands to be delayed. A series of court injunctions won by such diverse groups...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ALASKA: Dealing with a Northern Sheik | 11/29/1971 | See Source »

...contradicts the basis of our competitive enterprise system," and the chairman of Sohio, Charles Spahr, warned that the plan had "cast a dark cloud over the future of private enterprise in Alaska." Last week, after meeting with Governor Egan in Juneau, top executives of the seven companies that own Alyeska agreed to provide the state with technical and engineering information about the pipeline -perhaps because they figured that the complexity of the problems could change the Governor's mind. They may also have reasoned that under a state-owned system, the state would still have to hire a private...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ALASKA: Dealing with a Northern Sheik | 11/29/1971 | See Source »

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