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UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.1
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.2
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.3
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.4
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.5
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.6
UNICEF Dirty Water Vending MachineAs far as stunt activism goes, dropping a dirty-water vending machine in the middle of Manhattan during World Water Week is one helluva attention-grabber. For UNICEF's Tap Project, however, it also distilled the global water crisis in a way New Yorkers could not sidestep: by bottling and selling "Dirty Water" for a dollar a pop. Available flavors? Typhoid, malaria, cholera, or hepatitis.7







