It's pretty sad to have to single out lipsticks that don't have lead in them, with the heavy metal being toxic and all, but this is what the world has come to. Check out these colors.
Associated Press investigation announces that the water systems (U.S. and Int'l) are contaminated with everything from mood stabilizer & sex hormones...what role did we play in this newest incarnation of global pollution?
Organic products have moved beyond specialty stores and farmers markets into national grocery chains and discount retailers as consumers demand increases.
Safety is the number one concern impeding people who would be otherwise interested in biking to work. Solve the safety problem and you may get bicycle commuters as you've never had them before. Cyclists in Australia have an idea: bike buses.
If you're like most of us, the last thing you need to do is buy more cartons
and totes for getting organized. Instead, take a look at our list of everyday
items--you probably have most of them around the house already!--which you can use to get organized.
Among the dwindling oil and gas fields of the North Sea, Britain has built the world's biggest wind turbines -- each has blades longer than a football field -- in the Moray Firth, a large inlet off the rugged east coast of Scotland
Dr Leigh Sheppard, of the University of New South Wales' Centre for Materials Research, believes an area approximately 160km square, or one-third the size of Kangaroo Island, could provide all of Australia's energy needs
Argentine landscape glistens with solar panels and windmills these days.
And the first to benefit are the children of this South American country's most remote and deprived schools
Groundskeepers at New York City apartment complexes are using ladybugs as an alternative to chemical-based insecticides to manage their landscaped grounds.The supplier of the ladybugs told the apartment buildings' owners the ladybugs would consume nearly
"Pedestrians are often slow in noticing the approach of electric hybrid cars, because of their quietness". Car manufacturers admit there's not an easy answer to an audible warning. Can there be a horn with a pleasant sound? C'mon, inventors!!!