Revisiting Joplin
David Weinberg visited Joplin, Mo. three months after one of the deadliest tornadoes to strike the U.S. He looks at how businesses are rebuilding and where the money is coming from.
David Weinberg visited Joplin, Mo. three months after one of the deadliest tornadoes to strike the U.S. He looks at how businesses are rebuilding and where the money is coming from.
What happens when you put a microphone inside a photo booth? Some pretty funny stuff.
St. Louis native Bill Keaggy is the creator of grocerylists.org [1] -- the world's largest collection of found grocery lists. Keaggy also published a book, "Milk Eggs Vodka: grocery lists lost and found." His latest project is an entire album of
Author Charles Kenney, author of "Transforming Health Care," talks about how Seattle's Virginia Mason Hospital adapted the Toyota Production System to health care. Barnes-Jewish is in the midst of trying to make a similar transformation.
"Continuing the Legacy" is a dance and multimedia presentation that followed the history of blacks in America from slavery to today. COCADance, a student dance company, performed. Chris Page, a COCADance alumnus, choreographed the performance.
Trivia nights are time-honored fundraisers in the St. Louis area, but they have also become relatively cheap nights of entertainment for many. David Weinberg, who does slideshows and videos for the Beacon from time to time, has also become
Many Albanian Muslims faithfully followed the command of Islam and their prime minister: "All Jewish children will sleep with your children, all will eat the same food, all will live as one family." Photos by Norman Gershman (right) look back at
Tim Garrett is obsessed with photo booths. He uses them to make art photographs that range from single strips to thousand frame collages. He even owns his own photo booths. Take a look at some of the art that's come out of a little room with a
The popularity of crafting is growing, but Autumn Wiggins of O'Fallon, Ill., has a vision that's colossal. She is working on a system through which crafters would share designs and people around the country could produce enough to get the
It was the first stimulus project in the nation last year. And now Tuscumbians are celebrating a stronger span across the Osage River for themselves and for the produce that supports the region's economy. (The "new" bridge opened in 1933: