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National Features >
Houston Press
What mainstream publishers don't want you to know about door-to-door magazine sales.
By Craig Malisow
Riverfront Times
When these huntresses on are on the prowl, the prey very much wants to be caught.
By Unreal
Broward-Palm Beach New Times
How rumored McCain veep choice Charlie Crist wants to bail out Big Sugar.
By Bob Norman
SF Weekly
Are Asian women getting their jawbones cut to look whiter?
By Lauren Smiley
“Fruit of the Orchard: Environmental Justice in East Texas”
CLEAN focuses on the face of toxic waste
Published on August 09, 2007
“Fruit of the Orchard: Environmental Justice in East Texas” chronicles the story of Winona, Texas, a tiny town of 500, and its struggles with a nearby toxic waste facility. When it was built in 1982, residents were told that fruit trees would be planted on some of the land. However, it wasn’t fruit tress, but ominous clouds of orange smoke billowing from the facility that the residents soon started seeing. Years passed, and as the smoke continued to rise, so did cancer and birth defect rates in both humans and animals in Winona. Residents blamed the plant, but the plant dismissed the complaints outright. Photographer Tammy Cromer-Campbell’s book of the same name, the basis for the exhibit, helped raise consciousness about the plight of Winona’s people with her striking black-and-white photos. Taken with a plastic Holga camera, many of her photographs are of children, chilling for their depictions of innocence somehow warped and distorted by an unseen evil. As for Winona, the plant was closed in 1998 due to negative publicity, thanks in part to Cromer-Campbell’s images.
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