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This week's
featured blog: Choking on Wrapping Paper
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Lifestyle
Even the part in your hair leaves you vulnerable to skin cancer if left unprotected from the sun.
Artists and community members gather on the dry, sandy bed of the Rillito River to draw attention to the disappearing rivers in the Southwest by playing live music and hosting other live performances. And once a year, they go there to hold a festival and watch 45,000 bats fly out from under a bridge.
Matthew Scarborough shares his observations on Monterey, Calif., after spending nine days on spring break in the coastal town.
Some beauty and health product manufacturers are only interested in green as a marketing campaign, but others have turned eco-friendly products into a way of life.
Materials that would normally be taken to a landfill are turned into art.
Artists, enthusiasts and environmental activists came out to the Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block Feb. 27 to celebrate much more than just art.
Christian churches across the nation have begun to focus on how to take a stand against environmental dilemmas.
Changes in church practices range from smaller actions like serving all vegetarian meals and cutting down on paper plate and cup use to larger actions like building “green” facilities and auditing energy and water use on the church campus. St. Mark's Presbyterian Church tackles environmental justice in Tucson. See the story and video of the church's current actions and future plans.
Reusable bags are becoming more and more popular with consumers. However, plastic bags are still slowly killing the environment.
When artist and gallery owner Diana Madaras saw David Lovitt's photos of African animals, she knew she wanted to paint them.
And so she did. |