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Drive less, drive smart


Wednesday, June 20, 2007

In United States, about half the air pollution comes from cars and trucks. Two important ways to reduce air pollution are to drive less, even a little less, and to drive smart. Taking fewer trips in your car or truck helps cut air pollution. And adopting smart driving habits reduces your car’s emissions.

Driving less doesn’t mean you have to stay home. Try combining driving with alternative modes of transportation

  • Carpool.
  • Walk or ride a bicycle.
  • Shop by phone or mail.
  • Ride public transit.
  • Telecommute.

Driving smart keeps pollution at a minimum

  • Accelerate gradually.
  • Use cruise control on the highway.
  • Obey the speed limit.
  • Combine your errands into one trip.
  • Keep your car tuned and support the smog check program.
  • Don’t top off at the gas pumps.
  • Replace your car’s air filter.
  • Keep your tires properly inflated.

What about smoking vehicles?

Contact the EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning & Standards,

When shopping for your next car

Look for the most efficient, lowest polluting model–or even use either a non-polluting car or zero emission vehicle. Check out these Web sites for information that will help you identify clean and fuel efficient vehicles in any part of the country:

EPA’s Green Vehicle Guide

The DOE/EPA Fuel Economy Guide

If you must drive on days with unhealthy air, drive your newest car. Newer cars generally pollute less than older models.

Have fun

An Excuse to Celebrate

National Hunger Awareness Month

Nachos

November is Hunger Awareness Month. Ways to curb hunger in America: 1. Volunteer your time or money to charities that feed the hungry. 2. Eat some good food so that you are no longer hungry. We can help you do both!
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 »Local volunteer opportunities

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You Decide What's the Best

Best Barbecue Restaurant [poll]

Best Dayton Ohio Barbecue Restaurant

Here's where you get to tell the world what you think. Every week you get to vote on the best that the Dayton area has to offer in entertainment, restaurants, recreation & and a few other bizarro categories.

Voting in this category ends on Nov. 24.

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Kenny G and ice, what could be better? [things to do]

Kenny G

What would Brian Boitano do? If he lived in the Miami Valley, he'd check out "Skate for the Heart" featuring saxophonist Kenny G. and Olympic and World Champion figure skaters at 7:30 p.m. tonight, Nov. 19, at the Nutter Center. Boitano won't be there, unfortunately, but here's who will: Ekaterina Gordeeva, Irina Slutskaya, Viktor Petrenko, Jeffrey Buttle, US Pairs Champions Rockne Brubaker and Keauna McLaughlin, Shae-Lynn Bourne, Caryn Kadavy, Jozef Sabovcik and Steven Cousins. Tickets are $42 to $100. More »

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'Quantum of Solace'[movies]

Men have curious ways of getting over a romantic betrayal. Some try avoidance. Some go on the rebound. James Bond's method, as seen in "Quantum of Solace," involves shooting, ducking, running, bleeding, locking dudes in car trunks and the massive destruction of parts of Italy and Bolivia. Obviously Daniel Craig is back as the shoot first, drink cocktails later version of 007 in the follow-up to 2006's "Casino Royale". More »

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Call it comfort food, gourmet style. From crab raviolis with vanilla lobster sauce, to a hand-cut and brined pork chop served with a fig jam, to a simply "Big-Ass Cake" that's a chocolate lover's dream, Amelia's has the potential to become a destination restaurant — worth the drive to Bellbrook. More »