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#174 November 2023/Editor's Notes/Race and Equity

Editor’s Notes: A History of Erasure

The head of the Wampanoag sachem Metacomet (aka King Philip) sat on a spike at the entrance to Plymouth, Massachusetts, for two decades after his failed uprising against the English colonists was crushed in 1676. The colonists sent his family into slavery in the Caribbean. Metacomet was the son of Ousamequin (aka Massasoit), who rescued

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October 30, 2023
2 mins read
#174 November 2023/Community/Cooking/Food/Jobs

Riverfront café fosters confidence, cooperation and skill building for employees with disabilities

Asim King hopped off the 32 bus, beat the red light crossing Kelly Drive and fast-walked to the Cosmic Café at 1 Boathouse Row. “Got to be on time,” King said at the café, a bright place that brims with enticing aromas. Like 20 of the café’s 30 employees, King has a developmental disability. Disabled

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October 30, 2023
3 mins read
#174 November 2023/Urban Nature/Water

Manayunk Canal reopening will improve water quality but prevent people’s access

In 2021, Ken Conly, director at large for the Philadelphia Canoe Club, was paddling a stretch of the Schuylkill River near the Flat Rock Dam north of Manayunk when he noticed something afoot. A resident of nearby Andorra, Conly says that section of the river has traditionally been “neglected,” with trash accumulating along the river

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October 30, 2023
4 mins read
#174 November 2023/Cooking/Food

A Very Veggie Holiday: Simple tips for a vegan-friendly feast

Stuffing ourselves so full we can’t walk is a tradition of the autumn and winter holidays. But taking part in the festive gluttony is always a little harder for diners who don’t eat animal products for ethical, environmental or health reasons. That turkey, honey-glazed ham or braised brisket in the center of the table is

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October 30, 2023
3 mins read
#174 November 2023/Cooking/Food

Philly resident completes epic culinary journey, donates $100,000 to fight global hunger

It was matoke, a Ugandan spicy beef and banana stew, that inspired Dan Berger’s world spanning culinary exploration and a project that raised more than $250,000 to combat world hunger. Berger, 38, who works for global investment bank RBC Capital Markets in Center City, made the dish during the early lockdown stages of the pandemic

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October 30, 2023
5 mins read
#174 November 2023/Environment/Urban Nature

A new pathogen threatens to wipe out yet another native tree

I ventured into the Wissahickon along with Grid photographer Rachael Warriner on an unseasonably warm October afternoon to take a look at some beech trees infected by beech leaf disease (BLD). They were easy to spot. The veins of a beech leaf run out diagonally from a line down the center, dividing the leaf into

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October 30, 2023
3 mins read
#174 November 2023/Community/Race and Equity

An archaeological dig helps re-envision West Philadelphia’s demolished Black neighborhood

The small light-brown button excavated in broiling August heat rests in the palm of Megan C. Kassabaum, Ph.D., associate professor of anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania and Weingarten Associate Curator for North America at the Penn Museum. Dug up from one of three small sites in the parking lot behind the Community Education Center

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October 30, 2023
8 mins read
#174 November 2023/Food/Urban Nature

Foraging wild fruit can build a connection to nature, even in the city

It’s said that Isaac Newton was inspired to develop his theory of gravity when an apple fell on his head. But what happened to the apple after it hit him? Did he leave it there, uninterested in its value, and start working on his theory? Or did he pick it up, gather a few more

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October 30, 2023
3 mins read
#174 November 2023/Cooking/Food

Machinist-turned-baker puts her heart and soul into her desserts — and it shows

Alicia Short, the founder of Alicia’s Pies, laughs when she thinks about the personal and professional transformation that led to her launching a business devoted to baking. “Growing up, I couldn’t even hardly boil water,” she says. Even into her adult life, she was largely indifferent to making food. “I was married before, and I

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October 30, 2023
2 mins read
#174 November 2023/Compost/Cooking/Food

Students and research chefs cook up solutions to waste at university food lab

Jonathan Deutsch, the head of Drexel University’s Food Lab, likes to challenge his culinary arts students with cauliflower stems and other trimmings they too-hastily discard. “I’ll pull things out of the compost bin and I’ll say, ‘Look at this. What could we do with this?’” Deutsch asks the students what they could make with the

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October 30, 2023
4 mins read
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