Articles
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Oct 11, 2024 |
wrbh.org | Ian McEwan |John Hersey |Raymond Benson |Ursula K. LeGuin
Tuesday, March 12th @ Southeastern LA | 6:00pm First Pitch | 5:45pm Pregame Friday, March 15th VS Pepperdine | 6:30pm First Pitch | 6:15pm Pregame Saturday, March 16th VS Pepperdine | 2:00pm First Pitch | 1:45pm Pregame Sunday, March 17th VS Pepperdine | 1:00pm First Pitch | 12:45pm Pregame Monday March 11th VS TEMPLE | 8:00pm Tip-Off | 7:40pm Pregame Best Selling Non-Fiction: Ending Tuesday…THE ICEPICK SURGEON: MURDER, FRAUD, SABOTAGE, PIRACY, AND OTHER DASTARDLY DEEDS PERPETRATED IN THE...
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Jun 6, 2024 |
brooklyneagle.com | Kevin J. Krizek |John Hersey
For the past century, the public and private sector appear to have agreed on one thing: the more parking, the better. As a result, cities were built up in ways that devoted valuable space to storing cars, did little to accommodate people who don’t own cars and forced developers to build expensive parking structures that increased the cost of living.
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Jan 7, 2024 |
concertmonkey.be | John Hersey
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Feb 27, 2023 |
nextcity.org | Kevin J. Krizek |John Hersey
This article was originally published by The Conversation. For the past century, the public and private sector appear to have agreed on one thing: the more parking, the better. As a result, cities were built up in ways that devoted valuable space to storing cars, did little to accommodate people who don’t own cars and forced developers to build expensive parking structures that increased the cost of living.
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Feb 26, 2023 |
chicago.suntimes.com | Kevin J. Krizek |John Hersey
For the past century, the public and private sector appear to have agreed on one thing: the more parking, the better. As a result, cities were built up in ways that devoted valuable space to storing cars, did little to accommodate people who don’t own cars and forced developers to build expensive parking structures that increased the cost of living.
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