- July 28, 2009 • 11:36 am PDT
- + responses
1
What Does Teaching Creativity Look Like?
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Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
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This Valentine's Day, Celebrate All Kinds of Love
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Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
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Birth Control Costs More Than You Think—Even for the Lucky Ones
1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
Give Komen the Pink Slip: Five Ways to Support Women's Health for All
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Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
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What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
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A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork
This is why Treehugger sucks..
Transportation for America has set up a new site called My Commute Sucks to serve as a forum for collective venting and (it's not all negativity)...
A Brooklyn restaurant-cum-cultural center with an ethic of sustainability has become a social hub for the creative and diverse local community.

The cocoa in most mainstream chocolate is harvested by child laborers. Is it possible to have an ethical Halloween that's also fun and tasty?
If you were doing worse on climate action than Russia and the United States after eight years of Bush's environmental policies, you'd know you...
You can get an acute open wound to heal more quickly by applying negative pressure—suction, in other words. The theory is that suction helps draw...

Our addiction to mobile devices doesn't have to be an enormous energy suck. A new line of chargers intends to fight the perils of "vampire energy."
This is a pretty sweet interactive web piece by the Guardian, tagged "How to green your Valentine's Day." A more apt title might have been "How to...
Watch the aerial view with English commentary of a "whirlpool vortex sucking everything into it" including a closeup of a ship trapped in the center.

Sprawl development isn't just bad for the environment, but also for relationships.

All those grow lights, it turns out, inhale enough juice to power 2 million American homes.

