
AZ Luminaria
Articles
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6 days ago |
myheraldreview.com | Yana Kunichoff |AZ Luminaria |Wyatt Myskow
This story is published in partnership with Inside Climate News, a nonprofit, independent news organization that covers climate, energy and the environment. Sign up for the ICN newsletter here. “If it can’t be grown, it has to be mined,” Denogean said of the centrality of mining to modern life.
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2 months ago |
news.azpm.org | Hannah Cree |John Washington |AZ Luminaria
AZPM and Arizona Luminaria partnered to tell this local news story. It originally aired on the February 21, 2025 episode of The BuzzPat Grenier and his next-door neighbor were going at it again. The kind of dispute that flares up and then is forgotten until something nettlesome sets off another round of bickering. On a bright fall morning in 2019, after Pat had allegedly thrown trash in his neighbor’s mailbox and yard, she called the police.
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2 months ago |
azpm.org | Hannah Cree |John Washington |AZ Luminaria
AZPM and Arizona Luminaria partnered to tell this local news story. It originally aired on the February 21, 2025 episode of The BuzzPat Grenier and his next-door neighbor were going at it again. The kind of dispute that flares up and then is forgotten until something nettlesome sets off another round of bickering. On a bright fall morning in 2019, after Pat had allegedly thrown trash in his neighbor’s mailbox and yard, she called the police.
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Oct 31, 2024 |
shorturl.at | Chelsea Curtis |AZ Luminaria
Lori Long Chase disappeared in 1983, and so did much of her life story. Her body had been unknowingly found almost a month after she was last seen by family. But she remained nameless for decades and her homicide went unsolved. Now after 41 years, Lori is able to reclaim her name, as the details of her life and death begin to unfold. Lori was adopted out of the San Carlos Apache Reservation in about 1965 when she was only days old, her little sister, Memory Long Chase, says.
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Sep 13, 2024 |
shorturl.at | Carolina Cuellar |Irene McKisson |AZ Luminaria
El segundo caballero Doug Emhoff, o simplemente “¡Doug!” como la multitud de seguidores le gritaba cariñosamente, hizo campaña por su esposa, la candidata presidencial demócrata Kamala Harris, en un evento en el centro de Tucson el jueves por la noche. En el evento, que requería de invitación, Doug habló en una sala abarrotada de seguidores de los derechos reproductivos y partidarios de la carrera presidencial. Harris estaba haciendo campaña en Carolina del Norte ese día.
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