Tag Archives: cities

The USDA and DOJ May Finally Address Obvious Livestock Industry Monopolies

photo: S. Novak Last week the USDA and DOJ met to discuss the current face of the livestock industry. The picture is grim. Let go of any false visions of idyllic farm animals grazing on the pasture and replace that image with the massive corporations that currently monopolize the industry. An overstatement it is not–currently, four companies process 80 percent of U.S. beef–that’s 4 out of every 5 beef cattle . Pork is much the same with 66 percent of all pigs coming from four companies. Last week, 500 ranchers, farmers, and industry wo… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The USDA and DOJ May Finally Address Obvious Livestock Industry Monopolies

Charming Colonial Streets of San Juan to Go Car Free

Traffic into the Isleta area of San Juan, Puerto Rico, will be streamlined and limited. Image via Inhabitat . I’ve had a soft spot for Puerto Rico since taking a work trip there four or five years ago. I’d heard some negative things about the island, which many people seemed to think of as a third-rate part of the Caribbean

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Charming Colonial Streets of San Juan to Go Car Free

Walk Score Adds Transit to its City Rankings

Image credit: La Citta Vita Lloyd raved about Walk Score’s online ranking of walkability of cities . The site’s ranking of the top ten pedestrian-friendly US cities got Kenny’s attention, as did the ten least walkable cities too. But a good thing just got even better, because Walk Score will now let yo… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Walk Score Adds Transit to its City Rankings

High Levels of Arsenic Found in Children’s Urine, You’ll Never Guess Where it Came From

photo: Sara Novak A story reported in Grist and first published in the Salt Lake Tribune said that alarming amounts of arsenic were found in two Utah children’s urine. The girl’s urine tested 50 percent above what’s considered safe and the boy’s tested 75 percent above acceptable levels. The culprit turne… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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High Levels of Arsenic Found in Children’s Urine, You’ll Never Guess Where it Came From

Creating a Cycling Culture in the World’s Cities

South African cyclist Aldren Muvhambe. Photo by Nic Grobler via Bicycle Portraits . The sad recent news story about a 5-year-old girl killed by a street-cleaning vehicle while riding bikes with her father in the Turkish province of Konya — a city that had previously announced plans for the country’s first bike-sharing program — got me thinking about what it wo… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Creating a Cycling Culture in the World’s Cities

The Fascinating Life and Times of the Humble Pigeon

Photo via fabriziogiordano23 If you´re a city dweller, chances are you see them everyday – strolling down the sidewalk with their friends, having lunch at a local cafe, or just hanging out in the park. But for as much as we share with our urban lifestyles , few animals are as misunderstood or as maligned as the humble pigeon . They are such a part of life around the world that it´s not so strange to… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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The Fascinating Life and Times of the Humble Pigeon

Classic Polo Meets Organic Cotton in New Men’s Fair Trade Fashion Label

Image courtesy of Tompkins Point Apparel. For those who call “The Official Preppy Handbook” a must read — if you missed it, the forthcoming follow-up called “True Prep” is coming soon — there’s a green (and pink) option for the classic polo with insignia on the left chest from new fair trade label Tompkins Point Apparel. In fact, this is the first third-party certified Fair Trade fashion available in the US. More: … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Classic Polo Meets Organic Cotton in New Men’s Fair Trade Fashion Label

Sewers as Sidewalks: Delhi Ups the Urban Reuse Ante

An artist’s rendition of a revamped “nullah.” Image via Delhi Nullahs . Urban planner and architect Manit Rastogi has an idea that makes the High Line look like child’s play: turning the 350 kilometers of storm water drains — now mostly filled with untreated

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Sewers as Sidewalks: Delhi Ups the Urban Reuse Ante

‘Avatar’: Final Burning Questions Answered

Find out why the Na’vi have only four fingers and more, directly from James Cameron and Jon Landau. By Eric Ditzian, with additional reporting by Kara Warner “Avatar” Photo: 20th Century Fox Two hundred fifty-three days have passed since “Avatar” first unveiled its blue-skinned magic on the big screen, and still we find ourselves bewitched by burning questions — intoning “What about…?” and “How come…?” like some demented incantation. Does that mean we have issues?

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‘Avatar’: Final Burning Questions Answered

Anne Frank Tree Collapses in Storm

A giant chestnut tree that comforted Anne Frank as she hid from the Nazis in an Amsterdam attic has collapsed during a rain storm. No one was hurt when the 150-year-old tree fell across a fence at the Anne Frank House. The building she hid in for over two years during the Second World War has since been turned into a museum in the Dutch capital. The tree was one of the few signs of nature Anne could she see as she hid from the Nazis. It is mentioned in her diary, which became a worldwide best-seller after her death in a concentration camp in 1945. “Our chestnut tree is in full blossom. It is covered with leaves and is even more beautiful than last year,” she wrote in May 1944, not long before she was betrayed to the Nazis. The tree had developed fungus and was set to be felled in 2007 due to concerns for the safety of the thousands of tourists who visit Anne Frank's house each year. But officials and conservationists later agreed to secure it with a steel frame to prolong its life and saplings were planted last year in an Amsterdam park and other cities around the world. http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/World-News/Anne-Frank-Giant-Chesnut-Tree-That-C… added by: SarahAna