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The Latest

#124 September 2019/All Topics

Curbed Progress: The PA Senate is standing in the way of protected bike lane installations across the state.

By Randy LobassoUrging his colleagues in the state legislature to act swiftly on parking-protected bike lanes and pedestrian plaza legislation, Pennsylvania State Senator Larry Farnese of Philadelphia penned a dire warning June 19.“If we fail to act ... we risk the loss of several major bike lane projects funded for construction this year,” Farnese wrote

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September 10, 2019
2 mins read
#124 September 2019/All Topics

Tick Tock: Pennsylvania is ground zero for Lyme disease, and one Drexel professor is pursuing a cure.

By Claire Marie PorterKerry Boland doesn’t remember getting a tick bite. It was 2002 and she was entering her first semester at Georgetown University when she began experiencing flu-like symptoms, which landed her in the emergency room.  A short time later, she started experiencing extreme food intolerances. She couldn’t eat gluten without hours of vomiting

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September 10, 2019
7 mins read
#124 September 2019/All Topics

Stable Genius: Flourtown business turns damaged trees and discarded materials into high-end furniture

By Claire Marie PorterIt’s the imperfect trees that make a beautiful piece of furniture for John Duffy of Stable Tables. “I don’t really consider myself an artist or anything like that,” Duffy explains. “I’m more of a business person.”Stable Tables, he says, began after he bought a table from a carpenter in Maryland and had to

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September 10, 2019
3 mins read
#124 September 2019/All Topics

The Second Shift: These talented black women have had extraordinary side gigs

By Constance Garcia-Barrio Devaluing black women’s work is a holdover from slavery time. It often cuts our employment opportunities, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C. think tank focused on economic issues. The view prevails that women of African ancestry should go on being “…de mule uh de world…” as the acid pen of

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September 10, 2019
4 mins read
#124 September 2019/All Topics

Back to School, to Strike for Climate! School-age children are protesting for new policies

By Meenal RavalThere’s a Global Climate Strike planned for Friday, September 20, days before the United Nations Climate Summit in New York City on September 23. The Global Climate Strike invites people of all ages to strike—by refusing to attend work and school—to disrupt the social order and to push our governments to act on

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September 10, 2019
2 mins read
#124 September 2019/All Topics/Feminism

Dear Lois: What is a reasonable amount of clothing to have?

It’s all relative. For each person, there is a different set of needs that a wardrobe must fulfill. The landscaper’s wardrobe will be vastly different than the ballerina’s. A better question to explore is, “How do I maintain a healthy relationship with my clothing?” From here, we can do some digging and talk about how

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September 10, 2019
4 mins read
#123 August 2019/All Topics

Choosing a Sustainability Program in an Unsustainable Society

By Claire Marie PorterDid you know that you can major in sustainability? Colleges and universities all across the nation offer programs on the subject. “A lot of people assume that sustainability is [just] environmentalism. It’s not,” says Rob Fleming, an architect, professor and director in the sustainable design program at Thomas Jefferson University. The term

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August 1, 2019
8 mins read
#123 August 2019/All Topics

A Sound Investment: High school course teaches personal finance to Philly youth

By Alexandra JonesThe teen years are an opportune time to learn smart money habits. High school students are on the verge of making big decisions—choosing colleges and career paths, opening bank accounts and sometimes getting their first cars and credit cards—that may have long-term effects on their lives. A few fundamental lessons can set them up

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August 1, 2019
5 mins read
#123 August 2019/All Topics

Whiskey Business: This father-and-son cooperage is small, and may stay that way

By Claire Marie PorterRyan Ebner is a construction consultant by day and a cooper by night. In a rented workspace in West Philadelphia, shared with Ice Sculpture Philly, he and his father, Jeff, moonlight amongst smells of smoke and wood.The father-son duo started Anthony Barrel Company in 2015 as a side hustle. Jeff  is a

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August 1, 2019
2 mins read
#123 August 2019/All Topics

Trans and Proud: Black trans women overcome adversity to help others at LGBTQ center

By Constance Garcia-BarrioFor a black transgender woman, being true to one’s self sometimes exacts a horrific price. One hears little about them unless they make lurid headlines as victims of violence—as did Michelle “Tamika” Washington, shot to death on May 19 in North Philly. 

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August 1, 2019
4 mins read
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