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Highlights

KATIE CAMPISI

THE BALLAD OF BIKING IN BOSTON

Dispatches from my daily dance with death en route to work I edge off the sidewalk. I look left and then right. Then left and then right again. One more time to be sure. I merge towards the rightmost edge of the street, but there is no bike lane so I teeter

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KATIE CAMPISI July 9, 2017
HALEY HAMILTON

ICE COLD DEMOCRACY

Can a progressive new brewery help power the local labor movement? It behooves every American to encourage home manufactures, that our oppressors may feel through their pockets the effects of their blind folly. -Samuel Adams   What’s more innovative than another app for delivering food? Well, almost anything, really, but a

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HALEY HAMILTON June 21, 2017
DEREK KOUYOUMJIAN

CONDEMBTA

A visual essay on public transportation infrastructure and priorities in Greater Boston It’s often noted that the trains which pump through tunnels underneath our feet downtown and barrel over bridges into Cambridge, Quincy, and beyond belong to the most ancient subterranean transit matrix in America. Aside from being a great historical

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DEREK KOUYOUMJIAN June 14, 2017
KYLIE OBERMEIER

INTERSECTIONAL POLITICS (A CRASH-NOT-ACCIDENT REPORT)

When it comes to bike safety and infrastructure in Greater Boston, there’s a dangerous gap between the promises that cities make and the reality where rubber meets the road Of all the places for a cyclist or pedestrian to be killed, the intersection of Mass Ave and Somerville Ave in

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KYLIE OBERMEIER June 7, 2017
HEATHER KAPPLOW

IT’S ART, IT’S QUEER. IT’S HERE TO STAY

From “Momentum” at Kayafas Gallery | Photo by Nathaniel J. Fink Inclusivity (finally) hits Boston’s art scene, plans for longevity BLAA’s planning committee meets, as many of Boston’s most interesting (read DIY) arts organizations do, in the living room of one of its members. May’s monthly meeting gets underway at

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HEATHER KAPPLOW June 7, 2017
JONATHAN RILEY

LOBOTOMASS

From mind control experiments to taxpayer-funded black magic to housing Nazi scientists in Boston Harbor, the Commonwealth has an unparalleled dark side to its noted innovation legacy — with many shadows leading to today’s technological titans. Massachusetts, with its concentration of colleges and the presence of elite institutions like Harvard and MIT,

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JONATHAN RILEY May 30, 2017
ARNIE KING

FACING THE END ALONE

The second in a series profiling aging lifers seeking commutations from Mass prisons This is the second installment of Rolling Along as Long as It Lasts, a series of profiles and interviews from inside the Massachusetts Department of Correction. Published in coordination with the Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism, the series is

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ARNIE KING May 23, 2017
KORI FEENER

HOW TO BUILD A NATURAL GAS PIPELINE IN MASS …

… In four easy steps In 2014, natural gas giant Kinder Morgan came to Sandisfield, a small town in Western Mass, to propose its Connecticut Expansion Project (CT Expansion), an approximately 13-mile loop through Albany County (New York), Hartford County (Connecticut), and Berkshire and Hampden counties (Massachusetts). In the process, the Houston-based

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KORI FEENER May 10, 2017
G. VALENTINO BALL

AROUND MY WAY: AVENUE

Photos by John Brewer South End rapper Avenue wants to tell you a story about how it all got started way back when The slice of Boston real estate encircled by Roxbury, Back Bay, and Chinatown was the center of the city’s jazz universe, as well as one of the

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G. VALENTINO BALL May 3, 2017
LAURA KIESEL

EIGHT ISN’T ENOUGH

A Somerville Housing Needs Assessment report notes that the majority of units at risk of losing their affordability are located in Union Square (pictured), as increased gentrification due to the anticipated extension of the Green Line to the neighborhood has caused spikes in the cost of property | Photo by

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LAURA KIESEL April 26, 2017
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