• Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind

The Latest

#117 February 2019/All Topics

A children’s book publisher reflects on the healing power of empathy

By Cynthia KreilickMy 92-year-old mother was sitting in the dining room of her nursing home, eating her first breakfast there. Everything was unfamiliar—the food, the place, the people. When my daughter and I arrived, she was disoriented and emotionally unhinged. As we tried to comfort her, a very frail, white-haired woman in a wheelchair rolled over,

More
January 28, 2019
1 min read
#117 February 2019/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature

Birders document the impressive array of wintering bird species

By Bernard BrownDawn over the Delaware River painted clouds rose and orange in the frigid morning air as three participants in the Philadelphia Mid-Winter Bird Census stepped out of a hatchback.Keith Russell, Shawn Towey and Patrick McGill stood at the base of the driveway for Pulaski Park in North Philadelphia, binoculars in hand, and confronted

More
January 28, 2019
2 mins read
#117 February 2019/All Topics

Our city’s bike community keeps getting stronger. What are we doing right?

By Randy LoBassoEach year, the U.S. Census conducts its American Community Survey, asking people around the country what sort of transportation they use to get to work. Every time it’s released, it seems someone in the media attempts to use the numbers to come to a definitive conclusion about bicycling. For instance, bicycling in Philadelphia fell

More
January 28, 2019
3 mins read
#116 January 2019/All Topics

A veteran environmentalist offers some words of wisdom for young activists

Dear Millennials,I am in awe of your enthusiasm, optimism and relentless quest for justice. When I work with you, I am reminded of my own feelings, at the age of 16 in 1969. It was the dawn of the environmental movement. I made a commitment the next spring—the first Earth Day—to a lifetime of work

More
January 22, 2019
2 mins read
#116 January 2019/All Topics

A Guide for Body-Scan Meditation

Interested in trying meditation but unsure where to begin? Here is an Inner Strength technique you can use to get started. Begin by sitting in a comfortable, upright position, straightening your spine and neck, and letting your hands rest gently on your thighs or on the table in front of you.Direct your attention toward

More
January 22, 2019
2 mins read
#113 October 2018/All Topics/Food

Honest Tom says goodbye to the butcher

When I saw that my butcher was calling, I dreaded answering the phone. Yes, when I decided to replace meat with an entirely plant-based menu at Honest Tom’s, I knew there would be blowback. I knew there’d be a lot of social media sniping, and maybe even some people stopping into my restaurant to give

More
January 22, 2019
2 mins read
#114 November 2018/All Topics/Culture/Race and Equity

Colonial women of color shaped history and paved the way for others

Given the unruliness of time machines, apt to choose their own destinations, you’ll need a bike, car or SEPTA to see the scattered sites where enslaved Black women helped to get colonial Philadelphia going.Take Black Alice, aka Alice of Dunks Ferry, who reached age 116, c.1686 to 1802, historians say. Her parents, from Barbados, arrived

More
January 14, 2019
4 mins read
#115 December 2018/All Topics

Politically-minded Germantown coffee shop is steeped in black history

Located in the city’s historic Germantown area, Uncle Bobbie’s has all of the warm aesthetic qualities of a quaint coffee shop and bookstore, but a quick look at its shelves reveals a deeper purpose. Among its selections, the shop carries fresh copies of titles like “Malcolm X: Socialism and Black Nationalism,” Aimé Césaire’s “Discourse on

More
January 14, 2019
2 mins read
#115 December 2018/All Topics

Two women—one an escaped slave of George Washington—are memorialized in Old City

By the time the Continental Army and its French allies crushed British forces at Yorktown, Virginia, in October 1781, enslaved Black women in Philadelphia had long begged Jesus to make them as free as their white neighbors. In Old City these days, you can “meet” two Black women who likely said such prayers—and had them

More
January 14, 2019
4 mins read
#115 December 2018/All Topics

Bike Talk: Cyclin’ in a Winter Wonderland

Winter cycling isn’t as popular, or comfortable, as in other seasons. Snow in the bike lane, ice on your brakes and icicles in your hair—it’s all going to happen if you ride in the winter. But as an urban adventurer determined to ride all year, I’ve gathered tips to make my winters less terrible, because even

More
January 14, 2019
2 mins read
Previous 1 … 110 111 112 113 114 … 398 Next

Recent Comments

  1. Bill Rees on A pair of chestnut trees in Wissahickon Valley Park are mysteriously unscathed by pathogenic fungus
  2. Bernard Brown on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  3. Dawn M on After several centuries, a dam is set to be removed from Cobbs Creek. Red tape continues to delay the project
  4. Suzanne Hagner on Despite its popularity, Pennsylvania’s solar energy future remains stalled
  5. Ebo Nunoo on Artisanal chocolate brings a Ghanaian immigrant back to his roots

© 2022 - All rights reservedGrid Magazine

  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Online Store
  • Donate
  • Distribution
  • Magazine
  • Contact
  • Race and Equity
  • Environment
  • Food
  • Circular Economy
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Grid Podcast: The People Left Behind