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The Latest

#109 June 2018/All Topics

Local poet Francis Daulerio’s final collaboration with Frightened Rabbit’s Scott Hutchison

The first thing you notice about “Please Plant This Book,” a collection of poems by Francis Daulerio with illustrations by Scott Hutchison, is that it is not a book.It’s eight packets of heirloom seeds, rubber-banded together. The fronts of each packet bare a drawing by the hand of Hutchison, the former lead singer and guitarist

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June 18, 2018
6 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

Access to Justice: A Case for Fair School Funding

Can the legal system improve the quality of public education? A  Pennsylvania Supreme Court case gives cause for optimism. But first, let’s review how the system works now.In the United States, your Zip code determines whether or not you have access to high-quality education. According to an NPR investigative study, a wide disparity in educational

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June 18, 2018
2 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

Bike Talk: Slow Down on the Trails

It was a hot August morning when Suzanne Hagner joined the Bicycle Club of Philadelphia for a ride from the art museum to the airport. They took off behind the museum and onto the Schuylkill River Trail, riding single-file, calling out, “Passing on the left!” as they rode by other cyclists and joggers. But one jogger,

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June 15, 2018
2 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

Gardens from A-Z

Philadelphia is America’s Garden Capital, with a whopping 36 public gardens within 30 miles of the city—a distinction that no other city in America can claim. Peruse our guide to these glorious green spaces to plan your next garden trip. 

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June 12, 2018
9 mins read
#108 May 2018/All Topics/Environment/Urban Nature/Water

Research center launches efforts to aid freshwater bivalves and shad

Racks of tanks with plastic tubes feeding in and out stand against the thick stone walls of the Fairmount Water Works. Together with the microscopes and other lab equipment, it looks like a mad scientist’s underground workshop—that is, until you start reading the cheerful interpretive panels about freshwater mussel restoration. “We’re demonstrating why we care about

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June 11, 2018
3 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

The future of food convenience meets the triple bottom line

Over the past 75 years, Americans have relentlessly pursued liberation from household tasks. How we eat has been at the heart of this movement. Fast food, TV dinners and microwaves have all promised more free time—no more food shopping, cooking or, for the most part, cleaning.  Unfortunately, that promised free time has been filled up

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June 6, 2018
11 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

Action Mom: An Inclusion Revolution

Several years ago, Chinatown resident Anna Perng was grappling with her child’s autism diagnosis. For friends of hers in similar situations who had language barriers, access to information was even more challenging to find. When people started asking her for help, she became involved with a support group and decided to serve on the Philadelphia

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May 31, 2018
2 mins read
#109 June 2018/All Topics

Stoneleigh, the region’s newest public garden, faces a possible seizure by the Lower Merion School District just as it opens its doors

Stoneleigh: a Natural Garden—the Villanova estate turned rustic public green space profiled in Grid’s May 2018 issue—is the most recent addition to the 36 public gardens that earned Philadelphia the moniker of America’s Garden Capital. But the uniquely beautiful green space wasn’t even open to the public yet when Natural Lands executive director Molly Morrison found

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May 30, 2018
2 mins read
#108 May 2018/All Topics

Higher Ed’s Inclusion Problem

"So, what do your parents do [for a living]?”When a prominent law firm partner casually posed this question to a group of Penn Law students I was part of, I shifted uneasily. My peers responded with the professions held in the highest esteem in our country, and the most lucrative: They were the sons and

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May 22, 2018
2 mins read
#108 May 2018/All Topics

Bike Talk – Biking: Affront to the Moral Order?

More than 150 people met at the Gershman Y in April to discuss subtle safety changes to the bike lanes on Spruce and Pine streets. Not everyone was on board.For example, the Society Hill resident who told me that, first, we need to regulate what cyclists wear: Too many cyclists do not wear high-visibility neon

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May 17, 2018
2 mins read
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