Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!

Subject: Peabody

  • Dark Days on Black Mesa

    The Hopi want one of the largest coal mines in North America to stop using their groundwater. If springs and wells continue to dry up, they say, their ancient culture may disappear, too.

    April 24, 1997
  • A People Betrayed

    Recently discovered documents indicate that the lawyer who represented the Hopi Tribe in crucial negotiations with Peabody Western Coal Company was working for the mining company at the same time

    May 1, 1997
  • Letters

    May 15, 1997
  • A Fortune Runs Through It

    Tempe has long given the impression its Rio Salado project costs $45 million. The actual taxpayer tab could surpass $200 million.

    May 20, 1999
  • Letters

    June 10, 1999
  • Wisdom of the Ancestors

    A Hopi leader fought a lonely battle to stop a mining company from stealing water that helped build Phoenix. He succeeded. Finally

    December 1, 2005
  • Sacred Hypocrisy

    Navajos say making Snowbowl snow from reclaimed water is "genocide." Please!

    March 31, 2005
  • Getting the Shaft

    A water dispute puts both the economy and the environment at risk

    October 3, 2002
  • They Hide; We Seek

    Tempe hopes the public will see no evil if it sees no records

    September 6, 2001
  • Righteous Run

    Native Americans protest water loss from mining company

    August 9, 2001
  • The Pains of Mel

    Gibson may have a reputation for machismo, but pull it all together, and it looks more like masochismo

    July 13, 2000
  • Lake Eerie

    Java magazine's mysterious architectural digress

    January 20, 2000
  • Hodgepodge Lodge

    January 4, 1996
  • Rasta Redmon: Hopi Reggae Artist Casper Lomayesva Brings Redemption Songs to the Desert

    October 1, 2009