Articles: 23 results from the past year. For older articles, see advanced options.
Tainted Montana town reaches cleanup milestone
BILLINGS, Mont. — Grass and freshly planted trees are sprouting in a new town park that sits atop the site of a vermiculite plant that once spewed asbestos dust across the mountain community of Libby — a welcome dose of normalcy for a city that has become synonymous with lung disease and death.
Monday, July, 16, 2012 - INFORUM - News
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BILLINGS, Mont. — Grass and freshly planted trees are sprouting in a new town park that sits atop the site of a vermiculite plant that once spewed asbestos dust across the mountain community of Libby — a welcome dose of normalcy for a city that has become synonymous with lung disease and death.
Monday, July, 16, 2012 - INFORUM - News
New market strategy
Summer is peak season for Washington state’s farmers markets
SEATTLE – They make dough from scratch – enough for more than 100 pizzas – and chop mountains of local herbs and vegetables. Then, on Saturday morning, they pack up a trailer with firewood and a pizza oven fashioned from a propane tank cut in half and capped with a recycled mooring buoy.
Sunday, June, 17, 2012 - INFORUM - Life
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Summer is peak season for Washington state’s farmers markets
SEATTLE – They make dough from scratch – enough for more than 100 pizzas – and chop mountains of local herbs and vegetables. Then, on Saturday morning, they pack up a trailer with firewood and a pizza oven fashioned from a propane tank cut in half and capped with a recycled mooring buoy.
Sunday, June, 17, 2012 - INFORUM - Life
Cooling technology helping umps handle the heat
CINCINNATI — Those summer scorchers don't make umpires melt down anymore. Cooling technology that's been used by the military for years has started helping umps get through those days when the temperatures flirt with triple-digits and the humidity makes handling home plate duties a sweaty job. They can wear a vest with cooling packs on the front and back, or slip a pack into a special pocket in their shirt when they're behind the plate.
Friday, June, 15, 2012 - INFORUM - Sports
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CINCINNATI — Those summer scorchers don't make umpires melt down anymore. Cooling technology that's been used by the military for years has started helping umps get through those days when the temperatures flirt with triple-digits and the humidity makes handling home plate duties a sweaty job. They can wear a vest with cooling packs on the front and back, or slip a pack into a special pocket in their shirt when they're behind the plate.
Friday, June, 15, 2012 - INFORUM - Sports

