High Fives: Kristen Hare
Parking lot photos, Jennifer Holliday and the art of fatherhood top this reporter's list of favrotite Beacon moments.
Parking lot photos, Jennifer Holliday and the art of fatherhood top this reporter's list of favrotite Beacon moments.
How can you tell a vampire likes baseball? Every night he turns into a bat. Don't groan; it's no worse than many of the puns kids will share with neighbors in exchange for candy. But the joke tradition, it turns out, is a St. Louis thing.
The U.S. Census Bureau issues periodic reports on the census. Most recently, it looked at the country's racial composition. Among the most interesting trends is the number of those reporting a biracial background: For example, the number of
The Missouri Botanical Garden is awarding the Greensfelder Medal to Beth Rothschild, who has worked in conservation, garden restoration and with the Botanic Gardens Conservation International. She talks about how her interest developed and the
Strickland, known to some as Coach Buck and others as the book man, began working for the Greater St. Louis Book Fair 40 years ago, driving the large white delivery van through the streets of St. Louis collecting donated books for the book fair.
On Sunday, St. Louis Earth Day celebrates with an event in Forest Park. The event has blossomed since 1989 when Matt Diller organized one of the first Earth Day events, in Creve Coeur Park. Diller talks to the Beacon about the changes he's seen
"Earth Day Every Day" is more than just a slogan for the St. Louis group. From 2006 to 2010, its Recycling on the Go program worked with 132 events to divert 110 tons of waste from landfills with the help of recycling and compost stations,
In 2008, the mood was electric; voters were excited. Flash forward two years, and the dominant emotions are disappointment, anger and disgust at the negative political ads. At polling places, voters were more enthusiastic about the propositions
Today, working mothers with children still in their homes tell their stories. These women work in a world where working mothers have become the norm. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, three quarters of moms are in the labor force,
The working moms profiled in this two-part series may seem to have little in common, at least on the surface. One's a senator and one's in the circus. There's a doctor and a woman who has her own start-up. There's a law professor, a Science