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The Latest

#169 June 2023/Culture

Death doulas offer guidance and comfort through the inevitable

Kai Wonder was preparing for graduate school when everything changed. Just as they were getting ready to pursue a master’s degree in social work, their mother was diagnosed with terminal cancer. She was given less than a year to live. In the process of grappling with their anxiety about death, Wonder began to research the

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May 29, 2023
4 mins read
#169 June 2023/Culture

Final Impact

Many of us are committed to living sustainably, but few of us have given much thought to dying sustainably. But as with any other phase of our life cycle, the impact of our death can vary based on the choices we make. What we do with the deceased body is the obvious place to start:

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May 29, 2023
1 min read
#169 June 2023/Editor's Notes/Environment/Environmental Justice/Urban Nature/Water

Editor’s Notes: Holding Our Ground

It’s hard to know which battles to choose. We are confronted with such an overwhelming list of environmental problems (global warming, biodiversity loss, air pollution, environmental racism, sewage flooding into our rivers…) — not to mention all the interrelated social ills such as systemic racism, poverty and unabating gun violence — that we can excuse

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May 29, 2023
2 mins read
#169 June 2023/Community/education/Race and Equity

Advocates and mentors step up to help Black male youth succeed

I was a student at King [High School] when I heard about the Men [Who Care of Germantown (MWCOG)],” says Jewel Gadson, 19. “I was a hothead. Sometimes I didn’t go to class,” says Gadson, the third oldest of 15 siblings. Gadson, like his brothers and sisters, was in and out of foster care from

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May 29, 2023
10 mins read
#169 June 2023/Art/Urban Nature

Artist Honors Victims of Bird-Window Collisions

In the fall of 2020 Maria DiMauro, an artist who lives in Old City, opened her Facebook account and clicked through pictures of warblers, vireos and catbirds that had died by crashing into Center City windows. She saw more than just dead birds. The pictures had been taken on October 2, 2020 by Stephen Maciejewski,

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May 29, 2023
2 mins read
#168 May 2023/Circular Economy

Infographic: The path our discarded clothes take can have a big impact

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May 1, 2023
1 min read
#168 May 2023/Community/Urban Nature

Volunteer steward Nicole Chandler continues to lead the charge to care for Morris Park

Nicole Chandler has tended Overbrook’s Morris Park for so long that, when she talks, one imagines the scent of clean earth. “The City had written the park out of its 2005 budget,” says Chandler, 53, who lives across the street from the 64-acre site. “They were … going to let it naturalize, which means let

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May 1, 2023
5 mins read
#168 May 2023/Art/Urban Nature/Water

Angler artist shares love of wildlife through retro glassware

The biggest muskie that Eric Hinkley has landed in the Schuylkill was almost four feet long. Muskie (short for muskellunge) are possibly the most challenging (and awesome) game fish to catch in North America. The long and muscular ambush predators sit and wait for food to swim by, but their discriminating eye makes it hard

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May 1, 2023
2 mins read
#168 May 2023/Urban Nature/Water

As Atlantic sturgeon numbers dwindle, revised oxygen standards from the EPA could help

Everyone is invited to a baby shower taking place from June 22 to 23 at Independence Mall in Philadelphia. There’s no need to bring gifts. Just be ready to advocate for Atlantic sturgeon, which will be hatching right about then a mile to the east, in the Delaware River. The shower will be held by

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May 1, 2023
4 mins read
#168 May 2023/Recycling

A company with decades of reuse experience aims at zero waste

Long after its contents have been unpacked and used, the humble cardboard box can keep on working. Finding a second life for a box is relatively simple in the home, where it can help organize storage in a basement or closet, serve as a play hideout for kids and even morph into an end table.

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May 1, 2023
3 mins read
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