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Revisiting Joplin

In Region

2:02 pm on Thu, 09.22.11

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.

The music of 'Milk Eggs Vodka' and Bill Keaggy's humor

In Books

10:20 am on Fri, 06.17.11

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

Will patients benefit if hospitals go lean?

In Health

10:38 am on Wed, 05.11.11

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.

COCA continues the legacy

In Performing Arts

9:55 am on Wed, 03.02.11

"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 for fun, not fundraising

In Out & About

10:20 am on Wed, 02.09.11

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

Photo booth fanatic

In Out & About

2:03 pm on Mon, 12.06.10

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

As crafting expands

In Out & About

3:00 pm on Wed, 11.03.10

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

New Tuscumbia bridge brings safety

In Region

5:05 am on Tue, 09.14.10

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:

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Conference of American nuns will mull response to Vatican charges

In Nation

7:55 am on Fri, 08.03.12

Meeting in St. Louis next week, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious will have its first opportunity as an assembled group to consider what to do after the Vatican issued a mandate for change this spring. It calls on the conference to reorganize and more strictly observe church teachings.

The 'free' Zoo

In Commentary

7:51 am on Tue, 05.22.12

When a family of four goes to the St. Louis Zoo, they can be forgiven for not knowing it will cost them $60, $72 if they park. If they can't pay, the alternative is to tell the kids they can't do what kids do at the zoo.

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Internal Republican splits and guns dominated Missouri's legislative session

In Region

1:02 am on Sat, 05.18.13

With the exception of its laser focus on gun rights, the 97th session of the Missouri General Assembly that ended at 6 p.m. Friday pretty much reflected the recent tradition: The Republican majority portrayed it an “immense success,’’ the Democrats called it an extremist failure and Gov. Jay Nixon declined to say.

Shearwater charter school closing its doors

In Education

Updated at 4:12 pm on Fri, 05.17.13

The school, which was designed to help students who had dropped out come back to class to earn their degrees, started three years ago. But founder Stephanie Krauss said it was unable to overcome obstacles that had kept its target audience from succeeding in school.

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Save that dirt, Howard Buffett says

In Science

11:09 am on Wed, 05.15.13

Speaking to reporters at Monsanto, Howard Buffett warned that future generations would foot the bill for irresponsible soil use. He urged leaders to address thorny issues such as malnutrition and environmental destruction.

Arch Grants winners set for debut

In InnovationSTL

11:32 am on Tue, 05.14.13

Twenty winners will split a million dollars and a wide array of professional services after this year's Arch Grants competition. Victors will also see one-on-one business mentoring in their prize package. The diverse group includes everything from biotech concerns to fashion enterprises.

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Innovation and entrepreneurial activity are on the rise in St. Louis, especially in bioscience, technology and alternative energy. The Beacon's InnovationSTL section focuses on the people who are part of this wave, what they're doing and how this is shaping our future. To many St. Louisans, this wave is not yet visible. InnovationSTL aims to change that. We welcome you to share your knowledge, learn more about this vibrant trend and discuss its impact.

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Save that dirt, Howard Buffett says

In Science

11:09 am on Wed, 05.15.13

Speaking to reporters at Monsanto, Howard Buffett warned that future generations would foot the bill for irresponsible soil use. He urged leaders to address thorny issues such as malnutrition and environmental destruction.

Supreme Court rules unanimously for Monsanto in Roundup case

In Law Scoop

10:42 pm on Mon, 05.13.13

Vernon Bowman's challenge to Monsanto Co.'s patent on its Roundup Ready soybean seeds was billed as a David vs. Goliath contest. Goliath won and won big. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that an Indiana soybean farmer had violated Monsanto's patent on its genetically engineered soybean seeds.

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Immigration reform: a dialectical paradox

In Commentary

12:10 am on Thu, 05.16.13

Hegel may explain the trajectory of politics: A thesis breeds its antithesis. The dissonance between these polar opposites results in a new state of affairs called a synthesis. That synthesis becomes the new thesis as the process repeats itself. Thus does history travel its tangled paths.

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