Tucson’s 59th Annual Gem Show

From Australia to England, vendors from around the world are gathering in Tucson for the United States’ largest mineral and gem show. The main event, the 59th Annual Tucson Gem and Mineral Show, starts on February 14 and runs until February 17 but is preceded by two week’s worth of independent shows throughout the city.

For an event that started off as a single, free show in 1955, the Gem Show quickly grew an international reputation. “For seven years we were the only show in town, then in 1962 there was the first satellite show,” said Gloria Quigg, publicity chair for the Tucson Gem and Mineral Show.

Since the show’s initial premiere and quick growth in popularity, the excitement around the show has drawn thousands of independent vendors and promoters to Tucson. More than 3,000 vendors have unique minerals, gems, fossils, rocks, beads and jewelry for sale at nearly 40 individual shows throughout the city.

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Rep. Ron Barber Speaks to Residents of Douglas on GAO Report

[caption id="attachment_267" align="alignleft" width="1920"]Rep. Ron Barber gives his speech on the GAO report this past week in Douglas, AZ. (Photo By: Aungelique Rodriguez)Rep. Ron Barber gives his speech on the GAO report this past week in Douglas, AZ. (Photo By: Aungelique Rodriguez)[/caption]

DOUGLAS- Ariz.- U.S. Rep. Ron Barber was recently appointed to a leadership role on the Homeland Security Committee and with that role holds the responsibility of finding ways to improve the security along the Southwest Border.

The Department of Homeland Security has agreed to the Government Accountability Office’s new strategic recommendations. Barber and other public officials gave Arizona residents a brief overview of the GAO report in Douglas and Tucson earlier this week.

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Bright lights could cost Arizona observatories millions

[caption id="attachment_259" align="alignleft" width="727"]Tucson lights pollute the sky. (Photo by Jason Davis)[/caption]The moon was only a quarter full in the wee hours of January 17, 1994, when a magnitude-6.7 earthquake struck Los Angeles, Calif. With electricity out in large swaths across America’s second-most populous city, thousands of disoriented residents stumbled into pitch-black streets to assess the damage.

High above Hollywood, the Griffith Observatory received scores of phone calls. Why were there so many stars? What was that shimmering grey cloud stretching out from the horizon? Did the strange sky cause the quake?

In the midst of tragedy, Angelenos were treated to a sight normally unseen from a bright city: the Milky Way. It takes a dark sky to see the band of starlight emanating from billions of stars near the center of our own galaxy, a view that has gradually disappeared under the glare of electrically-lit progress.

In Arizona, where space sciences are worth an estimated $250 million annually, bright skies are a serious threat to astronomical research. Cities like Tucson have adopted lighting ordinances to protect the industry, but as urban sprawl increases, bad lighting affects more than stargazing scientists. Energy is wasted. Wildlife is threatened. Human health is impacted.

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Radio Station Revives Mayan Culture

TODOS SANTOS CUCHUMATÁN, GUATEMALA – There’s a new road to Todos Santos.

It used to be an uncomfortable daytrip from the departmental capital of Huehuetenango to this one-street town, tucked between mountains in northwestern Guatemala. The highway is mostly paved now, and those 17 miles of switchbacks climbing 10,000 feet only take an hour or two.

[caption id="attachment_253" align="alignright" width="3888"]Todos Santos sits in the moutains of northwestern Guatemala. (Photo by: Brenna Goth)Todos Santos sits in the moutains of northwestern Guatemala. (Photo by: Brenna Goth)[/caption]Those mountains protected Todos Santos and kept it nearly impermeable to the outside influences that caused other Mayan groups to lose their language and customs dating back to Spanish colonization. Separated by those 17 miles, Todos Santos was once a world away.

Today, Todos Santos is looking more like the rest of the world.

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