#research fellowships 2018
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sagan-starstuff · 3 months ago
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XF Meta: Scully's Medical Training Timeline
At the request of @randomfoggytiger, I wanted to do my damnedest to make Scully's education and training timeline make even a little sense. I'm a physician (specifically a specialist in adult infectious diseases), and it's fairly clear to me that CC and Co probably didn't actually talk to any doctors about how medical training works. Love my girl - I'm a Scully Effect kid, I don't think I'd be a doctor at all if it weren't for the inspiration of Dana Scully. But her timeline is...iffy at best.
Disclaimer: My medical school and post-med school training occurred from 2009-2018, Scully's occurred in the 1980's-90's. From what I can tell, the durations of many residencies and fellowships don't seem to have changed much, but I can't say that for certainty for all programs at all institutions. I am also from the US, so I cannot speak to medical training in other countries.
Our girl was born in 1964, and so unless she skipped a grade (which some schools would do if students were classified as "gifted" or otherwise exceptional, she would have graduated from high school at age 18 in 1982 and went straight to college. Let's assume she didn't skip a grade, for the sake of argument.
You have to have a Bachelor's degree to apply to medical school. These degrees typically take 4 years, though if someone arrives at college with credits from dual-enrollment high school classes or AP exam credits OR if they take summer classes some people can complete them in 3 years. I don't know what the availability of dual enrollment or AP classes was like in the early 80's (and like CC, I'm too lazy to do the research to find out), so we can assume that Scully graduated from college in 1986.
Medical school is 4 years long - no shortening this at that point in time, and even now in almost all cases. So that puts medical school graduation in 1990 IF she's following a traditional timeline and went straight from college to medical school.
Now, if someone is going to go into practice they have to do a residency in at least one of a variety of specialties (Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Surgery, etc.) in order to be board certified and practice independently. There are very, very few job options in clinical medicine if you DON'T do a residency, so if you want to practice, you have to do it. Residencies can be anywhere from 3-5 years, depending on the specialty. You can also further subspecialize after a residency by doing one or more fellowships (typically 1-3 years depending on the fellowship) before sitting for your board certification exams and starting independent practice. For example - after medical school I did a 3-year residency in adult internal medicine, then a 2 year fellowship in adult infectious diseases to be eligible to sit for the boards and enter my specialty, so 5 years further training after medical school before I could get a job, get board certified, and practice.
Scully is a forensic pathologist. She would have had to do a 3 or 4 year pathology residency (both were options at the time) followed by a 1 year forensic pathology fellowship. You CANNOT perform autopsies right out of medical school, if you are going to be a forensic pathologist you HAVE to do this training. So, following a traditional timeline this puts her as having completed forensic pathology training in 1994 or 1995. Pilot starts March 7th, 1992, so this is loooooong after she's canonically already an FBI agent and teaching at the academy.
But our girl's a smart cookie, so let's take a little leeway with her timeline. Let's say she skipped a grade some time in K-12. This puts high school graduation in 1981. Let's say she ALSO graduates with a bunch of AP credit and does summer semesters and finishes her undergraduate degree in Physics in 3 years. This puts her as starting medical school in 1984, with graduation in 1988. She'd still need to do that pathology residency and forensic pathology fellowship - let's assume a 3 year residency, then 1 year fellowship, so she'd finish training in 1992.
Still doesn't fit.
Let's go totally off the rails here - we know Scully was recruited out of medical school to the FBI, so she didn't do a traditional residency at all - UNLESS the FBI has an internal forensic pathology residency. It would HAVE to be accelerated in some way - some programs combine residency and fellowship by giving less elective time and more focus to the fellowship content. It's not common but they exist. Let's say in theory the FBI has an accelerated forensic pathology residency that takes 3 years, in addition to the 20 weeks of the FBI academy training. This has her finishing residency AND FBI academy training some time in 1991.
This is the ONLY way she could have finished forensic pathology training AND the FBI academy with enough time to be a fully certified forensic pathologist and FBI agent with some time left to teach at the FBI academy before being assigned to the X-Files on March 7th, 1992.
I can suspend my disbelief enough to be on board with this. You'd have to be pretty damned special, which we know she is, to get recruited out of medical school by the FBI. Maybe they even developed the accelerated combined residency/fellowship just for her! She's Dana Katherine Motherf***ing Scully, people!
Now, IWTB is where things get REALLY unbelievable. (Disclaimer: I have not watched IWTB since seeing it in theaters in 2008. I'll get around to rewatching it someday soon. Probably with a bottle of wine. Not a glass. A bottle.)
Mulder and Scully go on the run in 2002. We don't know how long they were in the wind, but by 2008, she's been allowed to resume a career and is practicing at Our Lady of Sorrows. Clearly in pediatrics - but general pediatricians sure as hell don't do stem cell transplants, so she'd almost certainly have to be a pediatric oncologist. We aren't told what her specialty is specifically, but that's what she'd have to be to do a stem cell transplant.
(That scene in the OR isn't even what stem cell transplants LOOK LIKE but that's a rant for another day, back to my point.)
MEDICAL BOARDS DON'T JUST LET YOU CHANGE YOUR SPECIALTY FOR FUNSIES.
(Deep breaths. Serenity now. Ok, let's do this.)
Scully would have had to do an ENTIRELY NEW residency AND fellowship in order to practice as a pediatric oncologist. Pediatrics residency is 3 years long. Pediatric Hematology/Oncology fellowship is 3 years long. In order for this to be even remotely possible, she would have had to START residency in 2002 to finish fellowship by 2008 and start her job at Our Lady of Sorrows.
And she's a former FBI agent harboring a known felon, on the run from government officials and alien hybrids who want her and Mulder dead.
There is absolutely no way even the smallest, most hard-up pediatric residency program is going to accept her with that hanging over her head. I'm not going to get into all the details of how rigorous and stressful the post-medical school residency application and match process is, but even if she didn't apply until she KNEW it was safe to come out from underground, she'd still have to explain a multi-year gap in her resume/CV to the program directors. Multi-year gaps in career and training without a reasonable explanation like a medical issue, time off to care for an ailing family member, time off for research, time away in a different, legitimate career are NOT looked on kindly when applying for residency positions. She would have a HELL of a time getting into a totally different residency.
It could happen - if anyone could do it, she could. But there's absolutely no way there's enough time for her to complete that training by 2008.
"But sagan-starstuff, it's CC, it's X-Files, we know there was no show bible and no one but the fans gave a shit about continuity or things making sense, there's no logic just vibes"
I KNOW, OK. I KNOW. And I love this insane, beautiful masterpiece anyway. I love exploring the possibilities of how and when it all could have happened with my fellow insane Philes who work so hard to glean meaning and order from this perfect mess of a show.
But couldn't CC have talked to one (1) doctor about what medical training is like at some point between 1993 and 2018? Just one?
Anyway. Yeah. That's my meta. Scully's training timeline makes no goddamned sense. Compels me, though.
@randomfoggytiger, this is for you. Honorable mention to @precedex-files who I ranted about this with in messages a while back.
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justinspoliticalcorner · 4 months ago
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John Knefel at MMFA:
At least four organizations involved in Project 2025, a sprawling effort to provide policy and staff to a future Trump administration, have spent years arguing against birthright citizenship — a cornerstone of U.S. immigration policy that is guaranteed by the 14th Amendment.  Project 2025 is organized by conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation — which has opposed birthright citizenship for decades — and has more than 100 right-wing groups on its advisory board. Of those, high-ranking figures at both the MAGA-aligned think tank The Claremont Institute and the Center for Immigration Studies, which was founded by the nativist John Tanton, also oppose birthright citizenship. So does former Trump adviser Stephen Miller; he recently delisted his organization America First Legal from Project 2025’s board, but his fingerprints are all over it. 
Although ending birthright citizenship is an extreme and unpopular proposal, these are not fringe groups. Heritage has been at the center of the conservative policy ecosystem for decades. In a 2018 fundraising email recently unearthed by Media Matters, Heritage bragged, “President Trump has already embraced 64% of our recommendations.” Miller is expected to exert even more control under another Trump administration than during Trump’s first term. Claremont is home to at least two former Trump advisers who oppose birthright citizenship — attempted coup participant John Eastman and Michael Anton, who wrote an op-ed for The Washington Post on the topic. Claremont also serves as a clearinghouse for right-wing media figures who move through their influential fellowship programs. CIS and other nodes of the Tanton network were instrumental in making policy and staffing the Department of Homeland Security under Trump.
As the American Immigration Council explains, the guarantee of citizenship for people born on U.S. soil has been a bedrock of Constitutional law for more than 150 years. And as AIC argued more than a decade ago, ending birthright citizenship wouldn’t slow unauthorized immigration. The conservative argument fails on its own merits but succeeds in advancing Project 2025’s broader anti-immigrant agenda. 
The Heritage Foundation
As lead organizers of Project 2025, Heritage deserves pride of place in analyzing the right’s long campaign against birthright citizenship, not least because the think tank has been hammering the argument for nearly two decades. In 2006, Heritage published a report by then-senior research fellow John Eastman — the same John Eastman who, as mentioned earlier, would later go on to try to help Trump overturn the results of the 2020 election while at Claremont — arguing against birthright citizenship. 
[...]
Center for Immigration Studies
If Heritage and Claremont are the higher-profile opponents of birthright citizenship, the Center for Immigration Studies — which the Southern Poverty Law Center has designated as a hate group — is the workhorse that keeps the issue percolating in the conservative policy world. In 2010, CIS’ Jon Feere wrote a white paper called: “Birthright Citizenship in the United States: A Global Comparison.” Although Feere discusses the 14th Amendment and Howard’s quote, he foregrounds decidedly more nativist concerns: “chain migration,” “birth tourism,” and the supposed “burden” unauthorized immigrants place on the social safety net (a common but false trope).  Since 2010, CIS has published at least 70 posts under the tag “Birthright Citizenship” on its website. One key entry, a companion piece of sorts to Feere’s initial offering, came in November 2018 in response to Trump’s Axios interview. In “Birthright Citizenship: An Overview,” CIS’ Andrew Arthur argues that birthright citizenship “remains an open question,” and that “the costs of births for the children of illegal aliens is staggering.” (Numerous studies have shown undocumented immigrants to be net contributors to the economy.) [...]
America First Legal
Stephen Miller is known as a leading advocate of some of Trump’s most xenophobic policies, including the administration’s “Muslim ban” and its family separation policy. It should come as no surprise then that in August 2019 Miller — then a White House senior adviser — told Fox News that the Trump administration was “looking at all legal options” to end birthright citizenship. 
Four months later, Rolling Stone revealed a series of emails between Miller and Jon Feere, who at the time was serving as a senior adviser in Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Feere — no longer at CIS, though he would return in 2021 — was Miller’s man at ICE, and although the heavily redacted emails don’t appear to reference birthright citizenship, Feere was so closely associated with eliminating it that Rolling Stone highlighted his published work on the subject near the top of its report.  After Trump’s defeat in 2020, Miller founded America First Legal, a conservative advocacy group that bills itself as the right's answer to the American Civil Liberties Union. Although it doesn’t appear that AFL has taken up birthright citizenship, the same can’t be said for Miller. On at least four occasions, Miller has posted content disparaging of birthright citizenship on X (formerly Twitter).
[...] The issue, it seems, is not going away. In this recent history, Eastman, Feere, and Anton have all played outsized roles — not to mention Miller, who remains Trump’s immigration-whisperer. All four are central to Project 2025, which in turn is intended to serve as a specific and detailed roadmap for what another Trump term would look like. The threat these figures pose to a cornerstone of U.S. immigration policy is plain, their shoddy scholarship notwithstanding.
Project 2025 partner organizations, such as America First Legal and The Heritage Foundation, call for the end of birthright citizenship. Such calls are rooted in nativism.
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fort-cozy-mcblanket · 2 years ago
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As of The Change Constant, Sheldon and Amy have had coitus 12 times. But do we know all 12 times? 
The Shamy Coital Count: What We Know, What We Don’t, and What We Can Wildly Speculate
1. Amy’s 36th Birthday The Opening Night Excitation
Date: December 17th, 2015 Location: Amy’s bed in her apartment #314
Obviously we all know the first time. Sheldon skipped the advance screening of Star Wars: The Force Awakens to be with Amy on her birthday, and coitus was his gift to her. It is implied that it lasted for approximately the runtime of the movie, which is 2 hours and 16 minutes. When they are done, Sheldon says he looks forward to her next birthday when they will do it again, to which Amy agrees. 
2. Amy’s 37th Birthday The Birthday Synchronicity
Date: December 17th, 2016 Location: Apartment 4B, most likely on Sheldon and Amy’s shared bed
Per their verbal agreement after their first time, Sheldon and Amy do not have coitus again until Amy’s next birthday. Sheldon wakes Amy up right at midnight for it, however they are interrupted by Bernadette going into labor. They do not end up doing it until after the birth and after returning from a trip to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter. Harry Potter roleplay may or may not have been involved. 
3. Amy Leaves for Princeton The Gyroscopic Collapse
Date: May 6th, 2017 (estimated) Location: Sheldon and Amy’s shared bed in apartment 4B
Amy is offered a summer research fellowship at Princeton, and they break their rule of only having coitus on her birthday to do it once before she leaves. This is the first time we hear Sheldon refer to it as “lovemaking.” They fold their clothes neatly before they do it. Leonard, Penny, and Raj hear them going at it from out in the hallway of the apartment building. The exact date this occurs is uncertain, but if we assume the episode’s airdate of May 4th, 2017, to be the date at the start of the episode, they have coitus 2 days later on May 6th, 2017. 
4. Amy’s 38th Birthday The Celebration Reverberation
Date: December 17th, 2017 Location: Unoccupied bedroom in Howard and Bernadette’s house
Back to tradition, the next time they have coitus is on Amy’s birthday. It almost didn’t happen, as the day prior they both got food poisoning from the Little House on the Prairie-inspired frontier dinner Sheldon prepared. They were still sick that morning, but felt good enough later in the day to attend Halley’s first birthday party. At the party, while everyone else is distracted by the baby, Sheldon and Amy jump in the inflatable bounce house and then find an unoccupied bedroom for their own celebration. This is the first known time they do it as an engaged couple and the first known time they do it outside of one of their own bedrooms. 
5. Wedding Night The Bow Tie Asymmetry/The Conjugal Configuration
Date: May 12th, 2018 Location: Hotel room outside of Legoland California
Per The Athenaeum Allocation, we know Sheldon and Amy got married on May 12th. Nothing beyond the wedding ceremony is shown in The Bow Tie Asymmetry, but when we see them again in The Conjugal Configuration they are just waking up the next morning. Sheldon confirms that they consummated. Apparently Sheldon made Lego snapping sounds during the consummation. 
6. Honeymoon in New York The Conjugal Configuration
Date: May 15th, 2018 Location: Hotel room in New York City
Sheldon and Amy get into an argument over Sheldon’s need to schedule their coital encounters, and this comes to a head while they are on the Nikola Tesla tour. Later, they reach a compromise and decide that Sheldon can make a schedule and just not tell Amy about it. He plans to create an algorithm that will generate a pseudo-random schedule to accomplish this, and Amy’s explanation of why it cannot be a true random schedule excites him so much, they rush back to the hotel so she can explain it to him again naked. 
7. Three Weeks Ago The Donation Oscillation 
Date: January 19, 2019 (estimated) Location: Unknown, but most likely their shared bed in apartment 4B
When Leonard goes to apartment 4B to get away from Penny, who was trying to seduce him, Amy asks him why he is trying to avoid having sex. Sheldon, mistakingly thinking the question was directed at him, says they just did it three weeks ago. The exact date this occurred is uncertain. Based on the airdate and events of the episode, they had this conversation on February 9th, 2019. Three weeks prior would be Saturday, January 19th, 2019. 
Because this is a seemingly insignificant date, this could be one of Sheldon’s randomly scheduled sessions. It is important to note, though, that this does fall around the events of the Confirmation Polarization, where their super-asymmetry theory is proven by Drs. Pemberton and Campbell and they decide to fight them for the Nobel Prize. Perhaps they made love to celebrate that their theory got proven? Or as a physical manifestation of their commitment to either win the Nobel together or not at all? Something to think about. 
8 & 9. The Avengers Trailer The Change Constant
Date: December 7th, 2018 or March 14th, 2019 (estimated) Location: Unknown, but most likely their shared bed in apartment 4B
When Penny says Sheldon has had sex almost as many times as she has fingers, Sheldon corrects her and says it was more by two, thus bringing the grand total up to 12. He then goes on to say it was because of the Avengers trailer. The dialogue is a little ambiguous, but this implies that those two extra times are both because of the trailer. I’m going to go ahead and count them both here, because that is my interpretation and also because I think it’s funny that seemingly the first time they go two rounds is because Sheldon got too excited about a movie trailer release. 
Anyway, most likely Sheldon is referring to Avengers: Endgame, which hit theaters April 26th, 2019. The first trailer was released on December 7th, 2018, which potentially puts this prior to the previous list entry. However, considering this the events of the Change Constant take place in October 2019 (due to the Nobel ceremony taking place in December every year and this episode being set two months prior to that), it’s a little strange that Sheldon would bring up an example from so long ago. It’s possible too that it could have been the release of the second Endgame trailer on March 14, 2019, although that still is quite some time ago. (Unsure about any subsequent trailers.) Then again, perhaps Sheldon just knew that Penny was unaware of these two instances in particular, eidetic memory and all that.
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So, that brings us up to 9 confirmed coital encounters. What about the other 3? 
Well, I have some suggestions . . .
10. Amy’s 39th Birthday
Date: December 17th, 2018 Location: Unknown
Although Amy was not given a birthday episode in season 12, I feel very confident in saying this was one of the missing instances. It’s their tradition, after all. In the timeline of the show, this would fall somewhere between the VCR Illumination and the Paintball Scattering, so while they’re still working on their super-asymmetry paper, before it was published. 
11. Honeymoon Round Two
Date: May 14th - May 20th 2018 (estimated) Location: Hotel room in New York City
This is less of a sure thing than Amy’s birthday, but I still think it is likely that they did it another time while away on their honeymoon. Actually, I originally was counting their arrival in New York as a confirmed coital encounter, as Sheldon says they can either make love or steam their wizard robes once the bellman leaves them alone in their room. I ended up removing it as the dialogue is just ambiguous enough that I can’t say for sure, plus when they get back from the Harry Potter play they are wearing the same clothes and the bed looks untouched. I could see Sheldon wanting to remake the bed after sex, but putting back on the same clothes that they assumedly also were traveling in earlier? In any case, if not on their arrival, I think they could have found at least one more time to do it before leaving, especially considering Sheldon originally scheduled multiple rounds for them. It’s unclear exactly how long their honeymoon was, but I assume it would be for at least a week, hence the date range. 
12. Randomly Scheduled Session
Date: Unknown but between May 21st, 2018 and early-middle October 2019 Location: Unknown
I know this isn’t terribly exciting, but the final time was likely due to the pseudo-random schedule Sheldon said he was going to create. Assuming he created one at all, it would almost have to be, as there’s only one other instance that could qualify as part of the schedule (the “three weeks ago” one discussed earlier). Clearly the dates are pretty spread out, so whatever algorithm he created must be set to generate dates at a fairly low frequency. But you could also disregard my additional honeymoon suggestion and say the remaining 2 were from the schedule. 
Other opportunities that I think are less likely but still possible:
The Nobel announcement - This could have worked except remember that the announcement came in the very early hours of the morning and then they still went to work. Would they have had time to make love and still get some sleep in? Uncertain.
Wedding anniversary - Because the last two episodes had to skip ahead in time, Sheldon and Amy’s first wedding anniversary is not mentioned, but this does seem like a likely time for them to do it. 
Valentine’s Day - They never had coitus on Valentine’s Day before but there’s no reason they couldn’t start.
Amy’s return from Princeton - Seems like a great way to welcome Amy home and get reacquainted, but I do get the impression that Sheldon was still more or less sticking to the birthday tradition at this point with only the one exception before she left. 
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So, now that we’ve covered all that, where do we go from here?
The Future of Shamy Coitus
Sheldon and Amy started out having sex only once a year, but the number has been increasing. Here’s the information above placed into a handy graph:
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I made some executive decisions for the dates we are unsure on. For the Avengers trailer instance, I split the 2 rounds between the 2 possible dates, and for the unknown 12th time, I placed it in 2019. 
Now, this is just for the 12 times Sheldon mentioned as of October 2019. The year wasn’t over, and I personally believe they manage a few more times before it ends. In particular: 
Make up coitus when Sheldon returns to the apartment after the Change Constant
Celebratory coitus after the Nobel Prize ceremony
Amy’s 40th birthday
So here’s a new graph:
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Again, this is just speculative. 
I would like to think it continues to increase for a few years, but perhaps that’s wishful thinking on my end. At the very least, I think it’s safe to say they continue the tradition of birthday coitus for Amy, and so it never drops down to zero. 
Keep in mind, we know from Young Sheldon that Sheldon and Amy have children. How this affects their sex life is hard to say. Would the count jump way up when they’re trying to conceive? Would it drop down significantly while the children are young? Would Sheldon continue using his randomly scheduled coitus algorithm once they have a family? Would they need it?
No one knows, but perhaps as new episodes of Young Sheldon continue to air, we can get a better idea. It remains to be seen. But here’s to hoping!
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xtruss · 2 months ago
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Evelyn Berezin in 1976 at the Long Island office of her company Redactron. She developed one of the earliest word processors and helped usher in a technological revolution. Evelyn Berezin said her word processor would help secretaries become more efficient at their jobs. Photo By Barton Silverman/New York Times.
Evelyn Berezin, “Godmother of the Word Processor!” The Woman That Made Bill Gates and Steve Jobs Possible
Evelyn Berezin (1925-2018) was born in the Bronx to poor Russian-Jewish immigrants. Growing up, she loved reading science fiction and wished to study physics. She excelled at school and graduated two years early. Berezin had to wear make-up and fake her age to get a job at a research lab. She ended up studying economics because it was a more “fitting” subject for women at the time. During World War II, she finally received a scholarship to study physics at New York University. Berezin studied at night, while working full time at the International Printing Company during the day. She continued doing graduate work at New York University, with a fellowship from the US Atomic Energy Commission. In 1951, she joined the Electronic Computer Corporation, designing some of the world’s very first computers. At the time, computers were massive machines that could only do several specific functions.
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Evelyn Berezin, “Godmother of the Word Processor.” Born: April 12, 1925, The Bronx, New York City, NY — Died: December 8, 2018, ArchCare at Mary Manning Walsh Nursing Home & Rehabilitation Center, New York, NY
Berezin headed the Logic Design Department, and came up with a computer to manage the distribution of magazines, and to calculate firing distances for US Army artillery. In 1957, Berezin transferred to work at Teleregister, where she designed the first banking computer and the first computerized airline reservation system (linking computers in 60 cities, and never failing once in the 11 years that it ran). Her most famous feat was in 1968 when she created the world’s first personal word processor to ease the plight of secretaries (then making up 6% of the workforce).
“Without Ms. Berezin There Would Be No Bill Gates, No Steve Jobs, No Internet, No Word Processors, No Spreadsheets; Nothing That Remotely Connects Business With The 21st Century.” — The Times of Israel (12 December 2018)
The following year, she founded her own company, Redactron Corporation, and built a mini-fridge-sized word processor, the “Data Secretary”, with a keyboard and printer, cassette tapes for memory storage, and no screen. With the ability to go back and edit text, cut and paste, and print multiple copies at once, Berezin’s computer freed the world “from the shackles of the typewriter”. The machine was an in instant hit, selling thousands of units around the world. Berezin’s word processor not only set the stage for future word processing software, like Microsoft Word, but for compact personal computers in general. It is credited with being the world’s first office computer. Not surprisingly, it has been said that without Evelyn Berezin “there would have been no Bill Gates, and no Steve Jobs”.
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Evelyn Berezin Pioneered Word Processors and Butted Heads With Men! A ‘loud woman,’ she studied physics and found that to get to the top she had to start her own company. Evelyn Berezin later became a mentor to entrepreneurs, venture capitalist and director of companies. Photo: Berezin Family. Wall Street Journal
“Why Is This Woman Not Famous?” British Writer Gwyn Headley Wrote In A 2010 Blog Post. — The Times of Israel
Redactron grew to a public company with over 500 employees. As president, she was the only woman heading a corporation in the US at the time, and was described as the “Most Senior Businesswoman in the United States”. Redactron was eventually bought out by Burroughs Corporation, where Berezin worked for several more years. In 1980, she moved on to head a venture capital group investing in new technologies. Berezin served on the boards of a number of organizations, including Stony Brook University and the Brookhaven National Laboratory, and was a sought-after consultant for the world’s biggest tech companies.
She was a key part of the American Women’s Economic Development Corporation for 25 years, training thousands of women in how to start businesses of their own, with a success rate of over 60%. In honour of her parents, she established the Sam and Rose Berezin Endowed Scholarship, paying tuition in full for an undergraduate science student each year. Sadly, Berezin passed away earlier this month. She left her estate to fund a new professorship or research centre at Stony Brook University. Berezin won multiple awards and honourary degrees, and was inducted into the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame.
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By: Aaron Sibarium
Published: May 31, 2024
The ‘iDIVERSE’ program bars white and Asian researchers from applying.
The University of California, Los Angeles, medical school was hit last week with whistleblower allegations that its admissions office has for years discriminated on the basis of race, in violation of California law, by holding black and Latino applicants to lower standards than their white and Asian counterparts.
The allegations triggered an email message from the dean of the medical school, Steven Dubinett, who denied the claims and said that students and faculty "are held to the highest standards of academic excellence." He subsequently told an obscure Los Angeles Times opinion columnist that the allegations, published in the Washington Free Beacon, are "fact-free."
Hiring and admissions decisions, he wrote in his message last week, are "based on merit," not race, "in a process consistent with state and federal law."
But Dubinett himself directs a center within the medical school, the Clinical and Translational Science Institute, that houses a race-based fellowship experts say is illegal.
Participants in the "iDIVERSE" program "must be" black, Hispanic, Native American, Pacific Islander, LGBT, or a woman, according to screenshots of a now-deleted webpage obtained by the Free Beacon. Fellows research ways to increase diversity in clinical trials as part of a study funded by Pfizer, the American Heart Association, and Gates Ventures, the personal LLC of Microsoft founder Bill Gates.
The website indicates that the deadline to apply to the program, which has existed for two years, was March 1.
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"This is obviously illegal," said Adam Mortara, the lead trial lawyer for Students for Fair Admissions in its lawsuit against Harvard, which led to the Supreme Court decision last year that outlawed affirmative action. "Every time we sue a company or institution for doing this, they settle by ending the program."
Dubinett and UCLA medical school did not respond to requests for comment.
The program is an awkward albatross for a school that spent Memorial Day weekend doing damage control after a Free Beacon report showed that record numbers of UCLA medical students are failing basic tests of clinical knowledge—in part, admissions officers said, because standards have been lowered by affirmative action.
On Saturday, a fourth-year student posted data on X, formerly Twitter, that he claimed had been released internally to refute that report. Though the new data showed that students did better on a recent round of tests, known as shelf exams, than some other cohorts, UCLA has not addressed the rise in failure rates over time or the fact that nearly a quarter of students in the class of 2025 failed three or more shelf exams.
Nor has it explained how the percentage of Asian matriculants shrunk by almost 50 percent since 2018, with most of the drop occurring after a new dean of admissions, Jennifer Lucero was hired in 2020. That decline coincided with a sharp increase in the number of students who come from "medically under-served" areas or identify as "disadvantaged"—indicators that admissions officials say are being used as proxies for race.
Matriculants from under-served areas nearly doubled as a percentage of the incoming class after Lucero took the helm in 2020, rising steadily from 34 to 56 percent of first-year students over four years, per data from the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).
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The number of first-year students indicating disadvantage likewise rose by nearly 60 percent, from 42 percent in 2020 to 67 percent in 2023. No other elite medical school has come close to these numbers, according to a review of AAMC data for the top 20 schools on U.S News & World Report’s rankings for medical research.
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While the trends don’t provide proof of discrimination, they are consistent with the accounts of racial gerrymandering from UCLA admissions officers. Lucero has allegedly told officials that the class should reflect the "diversity" of California, where racial preferences have been illegal since 1996, and has attacked those who raise concerns about minority candidates with low test scores. She even made the entire admissions committee sit through a two-hour presentation on Native American history after a Native American applicant was rejected, three sources said.
Together with the iDIVERSE fellowship, which launched in 2022 and involves partnerships with other institutions, the accounts paint a picture of a medical school suffused with racial preferences and determined to skirt civil rights law by any means necessary. They come as the medical school is reviewing its entire first-year curriculum in the wake of a separate Free Beacon report on a required course, "Structural Racism and Health Equity," in which students learn that weight loss is a "hopeless endeavor."
That course also hosted a guest speaker, Lisa Gray-Garcia, who has referred to the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks as "justice" and led students in chants of "free, free Palestine." Days later, two residents in the medical school’s psychiatry program delivered a talk that glorified self-immolation as a form of "resistance" in the context of the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
Both incidents were cited in a congressional probe of UCLA’s response to anti-Semitism—another ongoing controversy. At a hearing on Capitol Hill this month, UCLA chancellor Gene Block said the medical school was investigating Gray-Garcia’s talk but offered no further details on the review.
The whistleblower allegations are not the first admissions scandal to hit UCLA. In 2021, a former soccer coach was sentenced to eight months in prison after he helped two applicants pose as athletic recruits so they would be accepted to the university.
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The de Havilland Comet Disaster - A Story of Fatigue
A public lecture on the iconic de Havilland Comet and its fateful series of crashes in 1954 delivered by Prof. Paul Withey at the University of Bristol on 29 April 2019. This recording is funded by the Royal Academy of Engineering under Research Fellowship RF\201718\17178. The de Havilland Comet was the first commercial jet aircraft and ushered in the “Jet Age” on 2nd May 1952 by taking fare-paying passengers from London to Johannesburg. However, two accidents in 1954 grounded the Comet fleet and the subsequent investigation has ensured that the Comet remains a notorious example of fatigue failure. This talk looks at the history of the Comet aircraft, from concept to entry into service, reviews the accident investigation, and uses modern analysis to review the fatigue failure that sparked the research. Using this analysis, the general perceptions of the causes can be examined and a likely chain of events which led to the failure is proposed. Prof. Paul Withey joined the University of Birmingham School of Metallurgy and Materials in 2018 after a career at Rolls-Royce, culminating as the Engineering Associate Fellow in Casting Technology. Paul’s interests revolve around investment casting with a focus on single crystal casting for aerospace components.
While the failure of the de Havilland Comet 1 airplanes is often attributed to stress concentrations as a result of square windows, the truth is a bit more complicated than that... because it turns out the windows didn't even have sharp corners!
Long video above for our Failure Friday post this week. If you're looking for something a little shorter, here's a few other options:
More aviation focused (~20min)
11min
More engineering focused (~10min)
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ambuschool · 5 months ago
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Personal Statement
I started my career as a monitoring and evaluation associate at NICE Indonesia in 2019. We provide a 5-year grant to 12 CSOs in Indonesia to develop their organizations. During those 5 years, we evaluate their performance annually based on the training and financial interventions provided. Some of the organizations I directly supervised include Yayasan Gerak Bareng, Yayasan Munashoroh Indonesia, and Yayasan Gema Insani.
In addition to the annual reviews I conducted, I also took on side jobs to measure the impact of several organizations. My team and I have measured the impact for Schneider Electric Foundation Indonesia, Yayasan Infra Digital Indonesia, Perkumpulan Ibu Pembelajar Bahagia (Lab Belajar Ibu), Komunitas Happiness Family, and wrote impact reports for the SMK Pusat Keunggulan assistance program in 2023 on behalf of the Directorate of Vocational High Schools, Ministry of Education and Culture of the Republic of Indonesia. I attached some files here : https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mbhbs0wAkwZtBzbxgJ-1xzdZhXMX3XdJ/view?usp=sharing 
Apart from working in monitoring and evaluation, as a registered nurse in Indonesia, I am also active in several health education initiatives, particularly regarding the impact of the environment on health. My friends and I founded the Emcekaqu Sehat Berdaya Foundation, which campaigns for open defecation-free zones in Pandeglang, Banten. We observed the impact of poor sanitation on children's health, especially given the high stunting rates in the area, and we actively campaign for behavior change to eliminate open defecation. From this work, I had the opportunity to participate in several fellowships related to the environment, such as the Young Water Fellowship in Belgium in 2017, the Young South East Asia Leadership Initiative in Environmental Management in the USA in 2018, and the International One Health Camp in Vietnam in 2019.
Besides my professional life, I experienced a turning point in my personal life when my first daughter died during the delivery process. As a nurse, I know it's not just me but thousands of mothers in Indonesia who have experienced this. Since then, I pledged to contribute to reducing neonatal mortality. I decided to become a breastfeeding counselor, and now I have more than 50 clients, both online and offline.
Pursuing an MPH at the University of Melbourne, I blend my interest in planetary health and maternal and child health. Last semester, I took nutrition policy and politics as my elective because nutrition issues are currently rising in Indonesia, and I wanted a broader perspective beyond health. This semester, I took Planetary Health and Women’s and Global Health as my electives to accommodate my interests. As an Australia Awards Awardee, I know my studies are not just for me but for the greater good of Indonesia.
My grades might not be very good because the first semester of my MPH was the first time I lived abroad with only my family of three. I juggled academic life, being a wife, and being a mother to a 2.5-year-old daughter. Therefore, this semester, I strategized to take courses with shorter durations, so I can better balance my work and life. Thus, being involved in evaluation studies in maternal and child health excites me greatly. Furthermore, 1000 Days Of Fund is one organization I keep an eye on because they address issues holistically, from cadre training to providing growth blankets to parents.
ceritanya bikin personal statement untuk ngelamar jadi research assistant gitu di kampus, hwaa bismillah ya Allah dengan panduan dan pendampinganmu :" laa hawlaa walla quwwata illa billah
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brookstonalmanac · 14 days ago
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Holidays 11.18
Holidays
Antibiotic Day (EU)
Army Day (Haiti)
Battle of Vertieres Day (Haiti)
Botox Cosmetic Day
Cabaret Day
Calvin & Hobbes Day
Chinita's Fair (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
Constitution Day (South Africa)
Day of Army and Victory (Haiti)
Day of Sergeants & Warrant Officers of the Armed Forces (Ukraine)
Did Moroz Day (Russia)
European Antibiotic Awareness Day
European Day on the Protection of Children Against Sexual Abuse & Sexual Exploitation
Family and Community Day (Australia)
Fish on Fridays OK Day
Flag Day (Solomon Islands; Uzbekistan)
Have Sex With A Guy With A Mustache Day [ website ]
Hel Anseilak (Elder Scrolls)
High Five a Librarian Day
Homeland War Victims Remembrance Day (Croatia)
International Cult Awareness Day
International Day for Child Sexual Abuse & Exploitation Prevention, Healing & Justice
International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Men
International Day of Islamic Art
International Day of LGBTQ+ People in Science, Technology, Engineering & Maths
International Survivors of Suicide Loss Day
Lenny Face Day (a.k.a. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°); Abeldane Empire)
Married To A Scorpio Support Day
Mickey Mouse Day
National Adoption Day
National Cash Back Day
National Day (Oman)
National Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) Awareness, Research & Education Day
National Goodness Pays Day
National Injury Prevention Day
National Princess Day
Ned Ludd Memorial Machine-Smashing Day
Occult Day
Push-Button Phone Day
Quince Day (French Republic)
Rehang La Day (India)
Remembrance Day of the Sacrifice of Vukovar (Croatia)
Sergeant Day (Ukraine)
Sonic R Day
Standard Time Day (US)
Teddy Bear Day
Time Zones Day
Total Disregard for Taste Day
Vertieres Day (Haiti)
Virtual Reality Day
William Tell Day
World Adult Day (India)
World Day of the Anticoagulated Patent
World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
World Day of Research for Health
World Fellowship Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Poitín Day
National Apple Cider Day
National I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter Day
National Vichyssoise Day
Independence & Related Days
Belcity (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Lanevinia (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Latvia (from Russia, 1918)
Morocco (from France & Spain, 1956)
Western Sahara (from Morocco, 1976)
3rd Monday in November
American Education Day [3rd Monday]
Manic Monday [3rd Monday of Each Month]
Meatball Monday [3rd Monday of Each Month]
Meditation Monday [Every Monday]
Monday Musings [Every Monday]
Motivation Monday [Every Monday]
Odd Socks Day [3rd Monday]
Revolution Day (Mexico) [3rd Monday]
Weekly Holidays beginning November 18 (3rd Full Week of November)
American Education Week (thru 11.22) [M-F before Thanksgiving Week]
GERD Awareness Week [3rd Week]
National Bible Week [3rd Week]
National Family Week [3rd Week]
National Game & Puzzle Week [3rd Week]
National Global Entrepreneurship Week (thru 11.24)
National Hunger & Homeless Awareness Week [3rd Week]
World Antibiotic Awareness Week [3rd Week]
World Antimicobial Awareness Week (thru 11.24)
World Nursery Rhyme Week [3rd Week]
Festivals Beginning November 18, 2024
Cologne Christmas Market (Cologne, Germany) [thru 12.23]
MFBF [Montana Farm Bureau Federation] Convention (Billings, Montana) [thru 11.21]
Middle East Organic & Natural Products Expo (Dubai, UAE) [thru 11.20]
Feast Days
Abhai of Hach (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Alan Dean Foster (Writerism)
Aleister Crowley Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Alphaeus and Zacchaeus (Christian; Saint)
Angrboda’s Blot (Pagan)
Ardvi Suva (Mother of Stars; Ancient Persia)
Barulas (Christian; Saint)
Bon Om Touk begins (Water Festival; Cambodia)
Charles Fort Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Constant (Christian; Saint)
Cornelis Ruhtenberg (Artology)
David Wilkie (Artology)
Dedication of Saints Peter and Paul (Christian; Saints)
Dios (Festival to the Sun God; Ancient Rome)
Discussion Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Dolores (Muppetism)
Elizabeth of Hungary (Church of England)
Embrace Chaos Day (Pastafarian)
Endre Rozsda (Artology)
Feast of the Dedication of the Basilica of St. Peter and of St. Paul (Roman Catholic)
Feast of the Virgen de Chiquinquirá or Chinita's Fair (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
Gabrielle (Muppetism)
Gaspar de Crayer (Artology)
Hap-Dancing and Tiger-Turning (Shamanism)
Hilda (a.k.a. Hild; Christian; Saint)
Jean Paul Lemieux (Artology)
Juthwara (Christian; Saint)
Lhabab Duechen (Descending Day of Buddha; Buddhism)
Louis Daguerre (Artology)
Mabyn (Roman Catholic Church and Anglicanism)
Margaret Atwood (Writerism)
Maudez (a.k.a. Mawes; Christian; Saint)
Nazarius (a.k.a. Nazaire; Christian; Saint)
Odo of Cluny (Christian; Saint)
Romanus of Caesarea (a.k.a. of Antioch; Christian; Saint)
Rose Philippine Duchesne (Christian; Saint)
Talk Like Donald Duck Day (Pastafarian)
William the Silent (Positivist; Saint)
Wyndham Lewis (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [63 of 71]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
Achtung Baby, by U2 (Album; 1991)
Adam’s Rib (Film; 1949)
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1937)
Ben-Hur (Film; 1959)
Blink-182, by Blink-182 (Album; 2003)
Brainwashed, by George Harrison (Album; 2002)
Britney, by Britney Spears (Album; 2001)
BURN-E (Pixar Cartoon; 2008)
Bushy Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1950)
Calvin and Hobbes, by Bill Watterson (Comic Strip; 1985)
Cat and the Pinkstalk (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1978)
The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, by Mark Twain (Short Story; 1865)
A Christmas Story (Film; 1983)
A Date to Skate (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1938)
Disenchanted (Film; 2022)
Dr. Schpritzer, I Presume? (George of the Jungle Cartoon; 1967) [#11]
The Edge of Seventeen (Film; 2016)
Fagin’s Freshman (WB MM Cartoon; 1939)
Fair Weather Fiends (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1946)
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Film; 2016)
The Fat Man (Super Chicken Cartoon; 1967) [#11]
The Froze Nose Knows (And and the Aardvark Cartoon; 1970)
Gidget Makes the Wrong Connection (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Movie; 1972)
Gulliver’s Travels (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Special; 1979)
Housewife Herman (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1938)
I Know What You Did Last Summer (2015)
Interplanet Janet (Science Rock Cartoon; Schoolhouse Rock; 1978)
It (TV Mini-Series; 1990)
I Tawt I Taw a Buddy Tat (WB LT Cartoon; 2011)
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, by Genesis (Album; 1974)
The Land Before Time (Animated Film; 1988)
Léon: The Professional (Film; 1994)
Made in Heaven, by Queen (Album; 1995)
Malcolm X (Film; 1992)
The Menu (Film; 2022)
Merlin the Magic Mouse (WB MM Cartoon; 1967)
Monkey Wretches (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1935)
MTV Unplugged in New York, by Nirvana recorded (Album; 1994)
Oedipus, by Voltaire (Play; 1718)
Oliver & Company (Animated Disney Film; 1988)
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (Novella; 1962)
Pink Daddy (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1978)
Porky the Giant Killer (WB LT Cartoon; 1939)
Powderpuff Girls (Animated TV Series; 1998)
Radio, by LL Cool J (Album; 1985)
ReLoad, by Metallica (Album; 1997)
Star Trek: Generations (Film; 1994)
Steamboat Willie, featuring Mickey Mouse (Ub Iwerks Disney Cartoon; 1928) [1st Sound Cartoon]
The Swan Princess (Animated Film; 1994)
Unplugged in New York, recorded by Nirvana (Musical Concert; 1993)
Up All Night, by One Direction (Album; 2011)
Walk the Line (Film; 2005)
The Wall, by Jean-Paul Sartre (Short Stories; 1939)
The Winter of Our Discontent, by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1961)
Today’s Name Days
Odo, Philippine (Austria)
Leonard, Odo, Pavao, Petar, Roman (Croatia)
Romana (Czech Republic)
Hesychius (Denmark)
Ilo, Ilu (Estonia)
Jousia, Max, Tenho (Finland)
Aude (France)
Alda, Bettina, Odo, Roman (Germany)
Plato, Platonas (Greece)
Jenő (Hungary)
Aida, Oddone (Italy)
Aleksandrs, Brive, Doloresa (Latvia)
Ginvydas, Ginvydė, Otonas, Romanas, Salomėja (Lithuania)
Magne, Magny (Norway)
Aniela, Cieszymysł, Filipina, Galezy, Klaudyna, Odo, Otto, Roman, Tomasz (Poland)
Platon (Romania)
Eugen (Slovakia)
Odón, Román (Spain)
Lillemor, Moa (Sweden)
Roma, Roman, Romanna, Romona (Ukraine)
Odelia, Odell, Odo, Sutherland, Sutton (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 323 of 2024; 43 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 1 of Week 47 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Hagal (Hailstone) [Day 23 of 28]
Chinese: Month 10 (Yi-Hai), Day 18 (Bing-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 17 Heshvan 5785
Islamic: 16 Jumada I 1446
J Cal: 23 Wood; Twosday [23 of 30]
Julian: 5 November 2024
Moon: 89%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 15 Frederic (12th Month) Ximenes]
Runic Half Month: Nyd (Necessity) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Autumn or Fall (Day 57 of 90)
Week: 3rd Full Week of November
Zodiac: Scorpio (Day 26 of 30)
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slowtides · 2 years ago
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Reading List for 2023
I have settled on my reading list for the year and my reading goal. The books below encompass the books I will choose from (I don't expect to finish all of them). My goal is to read 52 books this year, not including JAFF. I will probably return to this list several times just to discuss how it is going.
Nonfiction
This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate by Naomi Klein (2014)
Zami: A New Spelling of My Name by Audre Lorde (1982)
Warrior Poet: A Biography of Audre Lorde by Alexis de Veaux (2006)
The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion (2007)
Blue Nights by Joan Didion (2011)
Let Me Tell You What I Mean by Joan Didion (2021)
A House of My Own: Stories from My Life by Sandra Cisneros (2015)
A Taste of Power: A Black Woman’s Story by Elaine Brown (1992)
Some of Us Did Not Die by June Jordan (2002)
On Call: Political Essays by June Jordan (1998)
The Cultural Politics of Emotion by Sara Ahmed (2004)
Upstream: Selected Essays by Mary Oliver (2016)
Funny in Farsi: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America by Firoozeh Dumas (2004)
The Choice: Embrace the Possible by Edith Eger (2017)
Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner (2021)
Ohitika Woman by Mary Brave Bird (1994)
And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos by John Berger (1991)
Time is the Thing a Body Moves Through by T Fleischmann (2019)
Ex Libris by Anne Fadiman (1998)
The Care Manifesto by The Care Collective (2020)
Dancing at the Edge of the World by Ursula K. Le Guin (1997)
Fiction
A Book of Common Prayer by Joan Didion (1977)
Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage by Haruki Murakami (2014)
On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong (2019)
The Story of a New Name by Elena Ferrante (2013)
Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay by Elena Ferrante (2014)
The Story of the Lost Child by Elena Ferrante (2015)
The Lost Daughter by Elena Ferrante (2008)
The Bone People by Keri Hulme (1986)
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson (2006)
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen (1811)
Mansfield Park by Jane Austen (1814)
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen (1817)
Atonement by Ian McEwan (2003)
The Sentence by Louise Erdrich (2021)
The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams (2021)
The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien (1954)
The Two Towers by J.R.R. Tolkien (1954)
The Return of the King by J.R.R. Tolkien (1955)
Babel by R.F. Kuang (2022)
Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz (2020)
The Word is Murder by Anthony Horowitz (2018)
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce (2013)
Poetry
Time is a Mother by Ocean Vuong (2022)
Blue Iris: Poems and Essays by Mary Oliver (2006)
Work
The Hidden Inequities of Labor-Based Contract Grading by Ellen Carillo (2021)
Queer Silence: On Disability and Rhetorical Absence by J. Logan Smilges (2022)
Our Body of Work ed. by Melissa Nicolas and Anna Sicari (2022)
Teachers as Cultural Workers by Paulo Freire (2005)
Living a Feminist Life by Sara Ahmed (2017)
The Cultural Politics of Emotion by Sara Ahmed (2004)
The Vulnerable Observer by Ruth Behar (1997)
Getting Lost by Patti Lather (2007)
Race, Rhetoric, and Research Methods by Alexandria Lockett, Iris D. Ruiz , James Chase Sanchez, and Christopher Carter (2021)
Opening Spaces by Patricia Sullivan and James Porter (1997)
Decolonizing Methodologies by Linda Tuhiwai Smith (2021)
Counterstory by Aja Y. Martinez (2020)
The Courage to Teach by Parker Palmer (2017)
We Make the Road by Walking by Paulo Freire and Myles Horton
Writing with Power by Peter Elbow (1998)
Writing without Teachers by Peter Elbow (1998)
The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop by Felicia Chavez (2021)
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theoffingmag · 1 year ago
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B.B.P. Hosmillo is a practice-led researcher at The University of New England, Australia. Author of Breed Me: a sentence without a subject / Phối giống tôi: một câu không chủ đề (AJAR Press, 2016) with Vietnamese translation by Hanoi-based poets Nhã Thuyên and Hải Yến, their writings have also been translated into Indonesian, Bulgarian, and Korean. Founder and co-editor of Queer Southeast Asia: a literary journal of transgressive art, their poetry has appeared in The Ilanot Review, Palaver, Prairie Schooner, and Tupelo Quarterly as well as in anthologies Bettering American Poetry 2015, The Bookends Review Best of 2018 Anthology, and Quarterly Literary Review Singapore Anthology. B.B.P. Hosmillo has received fellowships from The Japan Foundation in Tokyo, Asia Research Institute of the National University of Singapore, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia. They have served as a guest poetry editor for Cha: An Asian Literary Journal and Anomaly. In 2019, they were awarded Honorary Mayor by the city government of Jeonju, South Korea. In August 2023, they are participating in Winter Blooming, a festival that celebrates First Nations, multicultural, LGBTQA+ arts, culture, communities, and allies; co-curated by Dr. Christina Kenny of The University of New England and Rachael Parsons of the New England Regional Art Museum in New South Wales, Australia.
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skinnerhousebooks · 2 years ago
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We’re thrilled to announce our newest title, The Rough Side of the Mountain: Black Women’s Ministries in Unitarian Universalism, edited by Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman. It’s available to pre-order now from inSpirit: The UU Book and Gift Shop.
In The Rough Side of the Mountain, editor and scholar Qiyamah A. Rahman collects and explores the unique journeys of Black Unitarian Universalist clergywomen, celebrating their wisdom, resilience, and contributions within and beyond Unitarian Universalism. Rahman provides crucial historical background and context, outlining the history of female Black spiritual leaders going back to ancient times, African spirituality, the Black church, the Civil Rights Movement, and Unitarian Universalist history. This singular anthology lifts up the stories and wisdom of Black Unitarian Universalist clergywomen past and present, whose contributions to this faith are just beginning to be recognized. 
Rev. Dr. Qiyamah A. Rahman is a Unitarian Universalist minister residing in St. Croix, Virgin Islands where she served the UU Fellowship of St. Croix, from 2012 to 2018. Inspired by the social justice witness of Unitarian Universalism, she devotes her primary research to the richly diverse narratives of Black Unitarian Universalist women and girls. Her scholarship and writing have appeared in Darkening the Doorways: Black Trailblazers and Missed Opportunities in Unitarian Universalism, Standing Before Us: Unitarian Universalist Women and Social Reform, Voices from the Margins, and BLUU Notes.
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jbojorquez9 · 10 days ago
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Research Post #2: David Maisel
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Background of The Artist
David Maisel was born in New York City in 1961. He is an artist whose work includes photography, painting, and video. His photographs, multi-media projects, and public installations have been exhibited internationally and are included in many public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, etc. For over thirty years, Maisel has produced aerial photographs of compromised landscapes in a multi-chaptered series titled Black Maps, revealing the physical impact of activities such as mining, logging, urban sprawl, and military testing.
Education
Princeton University (BA)
California College of the Arts (MFA)
Studied at Havard University Graduate School of Design
Photographic Style
Maisel's style has 4 major consistencies: Aerial Perspectives, Environmental and Geographical Themes, Abstracted Landscapes, and Use of Color and Contrast. Aerial Perspectives is to capture expansive landscapes from above. This viewpoint allows him to convey a sense of vastness and scale, often revealing the patterns and structures that emerge from both natural and man-made environments. Environmental and Geographical Themes in his work often address themes of environmental degradation, human impact on the earth, and the transformation of the natural world. Abstracted Landscapes are shown often by blurring the distinction between representation and abstraction, where shapes, lines, and colors create compositions that may resemble abstract paintings rather than traditional landscape photography. Color and Contrast in his work by using vibrant hues, and contrast of light and dark create a sense of mystery
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Tailings Pond 14, Vicinity of Pedro de Valdivia, Atacama, Chile, 2018 Archival Pigment Print | 48 by 48 inches, edition of 6 + 2AP | 29 by 29 inches, edition of 6 + 2AP
Desolation Desert, David Maisel brings his focus to the massive mining operations in the vast territory of Chile’s Atacama Desert. Maisel’s aerial images of these sites are abstract, graphic, and painterly offering viewers detailed, open-ended information that operates on a metaphorical level as much as a documentary one.
Awards
Some of the Awards received by David Maisel include the following:
2018 Recipient of Fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation
recipient of Fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation
2011 Investing in Artists Grant from the Center for Cultural Innovation
2008 Artist in Residence at the Headlands Center for the Arts; a 2007 Scholar in Residence at the Getty Research Institute
1990 Individual Artists Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts
1984 Francis LeMoyne Page Award in the Visual Arts from Princeton University
References:
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brookston · 14 days ago
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Holidays 11.18
Holidays
Antibiotic Day (EU)
Army Day (Haiti)
Battle of Vertieres Day (Haiti)
Botox Cosmetic Day
Cabaret Day
Calvin & Hobbes Day
Chinita's Fair (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
Constitution Day (South Africa)
Day of Army and Victory (Haiti)
Day of Sergeants & Warrant Officers of the Armed Forces (Ukraine)
Did Moroz Day (Russia)
European Antibiotic Awareness Day
European Day on the Protection of Children Against Sexual Abuse & Sexual Exploitation
Family and Community Day (Australia)
Fish on Fridays OK Day
Flag Day (Solomon Islands; Uzbekistan)
Have Sex With A Guy With A Mustache Day [ website ]
Hel Anseilak (Elder Scrolls)
High Five a Librarian Day
Homeland War Victims Remembrance Day (Croatia)
International Cult Awareness Day
International Day for Child Sexual Abuse & Exploitation Prevention, Healing & Justice
International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Men
International Day of Islamic Art
International Day of LGBTQ+ People in Science, Technology, Engineering & Maths
International Survivors of Suicide Loss Day
Lenny Face Day (a.k.a. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°); Abeldane Empire)
Married To A Scorpio Support Day
Mickey Mouse Day
National Adoption Day
National Cash Back Day
National Day (Oman)
National Feline Infectious Peritonitis (FIP) Awareness, Research & Education Day
National Goodness Pays Day
National Injury Prevention Day
National Princess Day
Ned Ludd Memorial Machine-Smashing Day
Occult Day
Push-Button Phone Day
Quince Day (French Republic)
Rehang La Day (India)
Remembrance Day of the Sacrifice of Vukovar (Croatia)
Sergeant Day (Ukraine)
Sonic R Day
Standard Time Day (US)
Teddy Bear Day
Time Zones Day
Total Disregard for Taste Day
Vertieres Day (Haiti)
Virtual Reality Day
William Tell Day
World Adult Day (India)
World Day of the Anticoagulated Patent
World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
World Day of Research for Health
World Fellowship Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
International Poitín Day
National Apple Cider Day
National I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter Day
National Vichyssoise Day
Independence & Related Days
Belcity (Declared; 2019) [unrecognized]
Lanevinia (Declared; 2018) [unrecognized]
Latvia (from Russia, 1918)
Morocco (from France & Spain, 1956)
Western Sahara (from Morocco, 1976)
3rd Monday in November
American Education Day [3rd Monday]
Manic Monday [3rd Monday of Each Month]
Meatball Monday [3rd Monday of Each Month]
Meditation Monday [Every Monday]
Monday Musings [Every Monday]
Motivation Monday [Every Monday]
Odd Socks Day [3rd Monday]
Revolution Day (Mexico) [3rd Monday]
Weekly Holidays beginning November 18 (3rd Full Week of November)
American Education Week (thru 11.22) [M-F before Thanksgiving Week]
GERD Awareness Week [3rd Week]
National Bible Week [3rd Week]
National Family Week [3rd Week]
National Game & Puzzle Week [3rd Week]
National Global Entrepreneurship Week (thru 11.24)
National Hunger & Homeless Awareness Week [3rd Week]
World Antibiotic Awareness Week [3rd Week]
World Antimicobial Awareness Week (thru 11.24)
World Nursery Rhyme Week [3rd Week]
Festivals Beginning November 18, 2024
Cologne Christmas Market (Cologne, Germany) [thru 12.23]
MFBF [Montana Farm Bureau Federation] Convention (Billings, Montana) [thru 11.21]
Middle East Organic & Natural Products Expo (Dubai, UAE) [thru 11.20]
Feast Days
Abhai of Hach (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Alan Dean Foster (Writerism)
Aleister Crowley Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Alphaeus and Zacchaeus (Christian; Saint)
Angrboda’s Blot (Pagan)
Ardvi Suva (Mother of Stars; Ancient Persia)
Barulas (Christian; Saint)
Bon Om Touk begins (Water Festival; Cambodia)
Charles Fort Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Constant (Christian; Saint)
Cornelis Ruhtenberg (Artology)
David Wilkie (Artology)
Dedication of Saints Peter and Paul (Christian; Saints)
Dios (Festival to the Sun God; Ancient Rome)
Discussion Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Dolores (Muppetism)
Elizabeth of Hungary (Church of England)
Embrace Chaos Day (Pastafarian)
Endre Rozsda (Artology)
Feast of the Dedication of the Basilica of St. Peter and of St. Paul (Roman Catholic)
Feast of the Virgen de Chiquinquirá or Chinita's Fair (Maracaibo, Venezuela)
Gabrielle (Muppetism)
Gaspar de Crayer (Artology)
Hap-Dancing and Tiger-Turning (Shamanism)
Hilda (a.k.a. Hild; Christian; Saint)
Jean Paul Lemieux (Artology)
Juthwara (Christian; Saint)
Lhabab Duechen (Descending Day of Buddha; Buddhism)
Louis Daguerre (Artology)
Mabyn (Roman Catholic Church and Anglicanism)
Margaret Atwood (Writerism)
Maudez (a.k.a. Mawes; Christian; Saint)
Nazarius (a.k.a. Nazaire; Christian; Saint)
Odo of Cluny (Christian; Saint)
Romanus of Caesarea (a.k.a. of Antioch; Christian; Saint)
Rose Philippine Duchesne (Christian; Saint)
Talk Like Donald Duck Day (Pastafarian)
William the Silent (Positivist; Saint)
Wyndham Lewis (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lucky Day (Philippines) [63 of 71]
Sakimake (先負 Japan) [Bad luck in the morning, good luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
Achtung Baby, by U2 (Album; 1991)
Adam’s Rib (Film; 1949)
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, by Dr. Seuss (Children’s Book; 1937)
Ben-Hur (Film; 1959)
Blink-182, by Blink-182 (Album; 2003)
Brainwashed, by George Harrison (Album; 2002)
Britney, by Britney Spears (Album; 2001)
BURN-E (Pixar Cartoon; 2008)
Bushy Hare (WB LT Cartoon; 1950)
Calvin and Hobbes, by Bill Watterson (Comic Strip; 1985)
Cat and the Pinkstalk (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1978)
The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, by Mark Twain (Short Story; 1865)
A Christmas Story (Film; 1983)
A Date to Skate (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1938)
Disenchanted (Film; 2022)
Dr. Schpritzer, I Presume? (George of the Jungle Cartoon; 1967) [#11]
The Edge of Seventeen (Film; 2016)
Fagin’s Freshman (WB MM Cartoon; 1939)
Fair Weather Fiends (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1946)
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them (Film; 2016)
The Fat Man (Super Chicken Cartoon; 1967) [#11]
The Froze Nose Knows (And and the Aardvark Cartoon; 1970)
Gidget Makes the Wrong Connection (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Movie; 1972)
Gulliver’s Travels (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Special; 1979)
Housewife Herman (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1938)
I Know What You Did Last Summer (2015)
Interplanet Janet (Science Rock Cartoon; Schoolhouse Rock; 1978)
It (TV Mini-Series; 1990)
I Tawt I Taw a Buddy Tat (WB LT Cartoon; 2011)
The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway, by Genesis (Album; 1974)
The Land Before Time (Animated Film; 1988)
Léon: The Professional (Film; 1994)
Made in Heaven, by Queen (Album; 1995)
Malcolm X (Film; 1992)
The Menu (Film; 2022)
Merlin the Magic Mouse (WB MM Cartoon; 1967)
Monkey Wretches (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1935)
MTV Unplugged in New York, by Nirvana recorded (Album; 1994)
Oedipus, by Voltaire (Play; 1718)
Oliver & Company (Animated Disney Film; 1988)
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (Novella; 1962)
Pink Daddy (Pink Panther Cartoon; 1978)
Porky the Giant Killer (WB LT Cartoon; 1939)
Powderpuff Girls (Animated TV Series; 1998)
Radio, by LL Cool J (Album; 1985)
ReLoad, by Metallica (Album; 1997)
Star Trek: Generations (Film; 1994)
Steamboat Willie, featuring Mickey Mouse (Ub Iwerks Disney Cartoon; 1928) [1st Sound Cartoon]
The Swan Princess (Animated Film; 1994)
Unplugged in New York, recorded by Nirvana (Musical Concert; 1993)
Up All Night, by One Direction (Album; 2011)
Walk the Line (Film; 2005)
The Wall, by Jean-Paul Sartre (Short Stories; 1939)
The Winter of Our Discontent, by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1961)
Today’s Name Days
Odo, Philippine (Austria)
Leonard, Odo, Pavao, Petar, Roman (Croatia)
Romana (Czech Republic)
Hesychius (Denmark)
Ilo, Ilu (Estonia)
Jousia, Max, Tenho (Finland)
Aude (France)
Alda, Bettina, Odo, Roman (Germany)
Plato, Platonas (Greece)
Jenő (Hungary)
Aida, Oddone (Italy)
Aleksandrs, Brive, Doloresa (Latvia)
Ginvydas, Ginvydė, Otonas, Romanas, Salomėja (Lithuania)
Magne, Magny (Norway)
Aniela, Cieszymysł, Filipina, Galezy, Klaudyna, Odo, Otto, Roman, Tomasz (Poland)
Platon (Romania)
Eugen (Slovakia)
Odón, Román (Spain)
Lillemor, Moa (Sweden)
Roma, Roman, Romanna, Romona (Ukraine)
Odelia, Odell, Odo, Sutherland, Sutton (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 323 of 2024; 43 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 1 of Week 47 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Hagal (Hailstone) [Day 23 of 28]
Chinese: Month 10 (Yi-Hai), Day 18 (Bing-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 17 Heshvan 5785
Islamic: 16 Jumada I 1446
J Cal: 23 Wood; Twosday [23 of 30]
Julian: 5 November 2024
Moon: 89%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 15 Frederic (12th Month) Ximenes]
Runic Half Month: Nyd (Necessity) [Day 12 of 15]
Season: Autumn or Fall (Day 57 of 90)
Week: 3rd Full Week of November
Zodiac: Scorpio (Day 26 of 30)
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padhegaindiabook · 2 months ago
Text
Ruminations
Publisher:Penguin
| Author: B.N. Goswamy
| Language: English
| Format: Hardback
₹1,299 ₹779 Save: 40%
Releases around 15/10/2024
This book is on PRE-ORDER, and it will be shipped within 1-4 days after the release of the book.
Note : Price and release dates of pre-order books may change at the publisher's discretion before release.
In stock
ISBN: 9780143464556
Categories: History, Preorder
Page Extent: 568
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B.N. Goswamy (1933–2023), one of the most eminent art historians of our times, put India’s art on the global map. His lucid interpretation of art made the subject accessible to a wider audience. He was a master chronicler who offered ‘slight sketches of large subjects’.
Ruminations, Goswamy’s last work of, rues the vanishing traces of artisans’ guilds in Europe, celebrates the illustrations to La Fontaine’s fables produced in Lahore, opens a window to the Jain legend of Ilaputra who was driven to the edge of renunciation, explores the pioneering map of the world drawn by the Turkish admiral, Piri Reis, admires the dazzling range of embroideries in the Calico Museum, chronicles the ensigns of royalty that belong to the Mughal period, brings to light Timurid kitab-khanas, the Tibetan sand-mandalas and much more.
Lucid, comprehensive and engaging, Ruminations is the most definitive primer on art in India and South Asia.
About Author
B.N. Goswamy (1933-2023), distinguished art historian, was Professor Emeritus of Art History at the Panjab University, Chandigarh. His work covers a wide range and is regarded, especially in Indian painting, as having influenced much thinking. He has been the recipient of many honors, including the Jawaharlal Nehru Fellowship, the Rietberg Award for Outstanding Research in Art History, the JDR III Fellowship, the Mellon Senior Fellowship and, from the President of India, the Padma Shri (1998) and the Padma Bhushan (2008). Apart from the Panjab University, Professor Goswamy has taught, as Visiting Professor, at major universities across the world, including Heidelberg, Pennsylvania, University of California, Berkeley, University of California, Los Angeles, Austin and Zurich. He has been responsible for significant exhibitions of Indian art at international venues, including Paris, San Francisco, Zurich, New Delhi, San Diego and New York. He is the author of over 25 books on Indian art and culture, including: Pahari Painting: The Family as the Basis of Style(1968); Painters at the Sikh Court(1975);A Place Apart: Paintings from Kutch(with A.L. Dallapiccola; 1983); The Essence of Indian Art(1986); Wonders of a Golden Age: Painting at the Court of the Great Mughals(with E. Fischer; 1987); Pahari Masters: Court Painters of Northern India(with E. Fischer; 1992); Indian Costumes in the Calico Museum of Textiles(1993); Nainsukh of Guler: A Great Indian Painter from a Small Hill State(1997); and Domains of Wonder: Selected Masterworks of Indian Painting(with C. Smith; 2005); and, more recently, The Spirit of Indian Painting: Close Encounters with 101 Great Works(2014 and 2016); Manaku of Guler: Another Great Indian painter from a Small Hill State (2017); Oxford Readings in Indian Art (2018); The Great Mysore Bhagavata (2019); Conversations: India's Leading Art History: India's Leading Art Historian Engages with 101 themes, and More (2022) and The Indian Cat: Stories, Paintings, Poetry, and Proverbs (2024).
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jcmarchi · 4 months ago
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Alex Shalek named director of the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/alex-shalek-named-director-of-the-institute-for-medical-engineering-and-science/
Alex Shalek named director of the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science
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Alex K. Shalek, the J. W. Kieckhefer Professor in the MIT Institute for Medical Engineering and Sciences (IMES) and Department of Chemistry, has been named the new director of IMES, effective Aug. 1.
“Professor Shalek’s substantial contributions to the scientific community as a researcher and educator have been exemplary. His extensive network across MIT, Harvard, and Mass General Brigham will be a tremendous asset as director of IMES,” says Anantha Chandrakasan, chief innovation and strategy officer, dean of the School of Engineering, and the Vannevar Bush Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. “He will undoubtedly be an excellent leader, bringing his innovative approach and collaborative spirit to this new role.”
Shalek is a core member of IMES, a professor of chemistry, and holds several leadership positions, including director of the Health Innovation Hub. He is also an extramural member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research; a member of the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard; an institute member of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard; an assistant in immunology at Mass General Brigham; and an instructor in health sciences and technology at Harvard Medical School.
The Shalek Lab’s research seeks to uncover how communities of cells work together within human tissues to support health, and how they become dysregulated in disease. By developing and applying innovative experimental and computational technologies, they are shedding light on a wide range of human health conditions.
Shalek and his team use a cross-disciplinary approach that combines genomics, chemical biology, and nanotechnology to develop platforms to profile and control cells and their interactions. Collaborating with researchers across the globe, they apply these tools to study human diseases in great detail. Their goal is to connect what occurs at a cellular level with what medical professionals observe in patients, paving the way for more precise ways to prevent and treat diseases. 
Over the course of his career, Shalek’s groundbreaking research has earned him widespread recognition and numerous awards and honors. These include an NIH New Innovator Award, a Beckman Young Investigator Award, a Searle Scholar Award, a Pew-Stewart Scholar Award, an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship in Chemistry, and an Avant-Garde (DP1 Pioneer) Award. Shalek has also been celebrated for his dedication as a faculty member, educator, and mentor. He was awarded the 2019-20 Harold E. Edgerton Faculty Achievement Award at MIT and the 2020 HMS Young Mentor Award.
Shalek received his bachelor’s degree in chemical physics from Columbia University and his master’s and PhD in chemical physics from Harvard University. Prior to joining MIT’s faculty in 2014, he was a postdoc at the Broad Institute.
Shalek succeeds Elazer Edelman, the Edward J. Poitras Professor in Medical Engineering and Science, who has led IMES since April 2018.
“I am grateful to Professor Edelman for his incredible leadership and service to IMES over the past six years,” says Chandrakasan. “His contributions to IMES have been invaluable, and we are thankful for his dedication and vision during his tenure as director.”
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sunaleisocial · 4 months ago
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Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
New Post has been published on https://sunalei.org/news/knight-science-journalism-program-at-mit-announces-2024-25-fellows/
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT announces 2024-25 fellows
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The Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT (KSJ) will welcome 12 fellows in August. In addition to 10 Academic-Year Fellows, KSJ welcomes the inaugural Fellow for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East, and co-hosts a Sharon Begley Fellow with Boston-based publication STAT.
The Knight Science Journalism Program, established at MIT in 1983, is the world’s leading science journalism fellowship program. Fellows come to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to explore science, technology, and the craft of journalism in depth.
The class of 2025 represents the expansive media environment of today’s journalism. Together, the group has award-winning experience in a wide array of journalistic media, reaching the public through podcasts, documentaries, photographs, books, YouTube, TV, and radio.
“It is a privilege to welcome journalists to our programs who are so deeply aware of the importance of quality science coverage, who are eager to improve their craft, and who will continue to contribute positively to the public understanding of science once they leave here,” says Deborah Blum, KSJ director.
The fellows will spend their time in Cambridge studying at MIT and other leading research universities in the Boston area. They’ll also attend seminars by leading scientists and storytellers, take part in hands-on classes and workshops, and visit world-renowned research laboratories. Each journalist will also pursue an independent research project, focused on a topic of their choice, that advances science journalism in the public interest.
“Many of the biggest headlines of our era derive from science and technology — and the way we apply it to the world around us,” says Blum. “Our fellowship program recognizes the dedication and understanding required for stories that do justice to these issues. We bring fellows to MIT to provide them with an opportunity to enrich and deepen that understanding.”
Fabiana Cambricoli is an award-winning Brazilian journalist based in São Paulo, working as a senior health correspondent for Estadão newspaper, with a focus on in-depth and investigative stories. Before that, she contributed to major media outlets like Grupo Folha and was a fellow at ProPublica. She earned her bachelor’s degree in journalism and a master’s degree in public health from the University of São Paulo, receiving over 10 awards and grants for her work. Cambricoli’s reporting uncovered government negligence during epidemics, highlighted health disparities, and investigated funding behind scientific disinformation. She also co-founded Fiquem Sabendo, a nonprofit promoting transparency and supporting journalists in accessing public information.
Emily Foxhall is the climate reporter at The Texas Tribune, where she focuses on the clean energy transition and threats from climate change. She joined the Tribune in 2022 after two years at The Los Angeles Times and its community papers and seven years at The Houston Chronicle, where she covered the suburbs, Texas features, and the environment. She has won multiple Texas Managing Editors awards, including for community service journalism, and was part of the team named a 2018 finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for coverage of Hurricane Harvey. She is a Yale University graduate.
Ahmad Gamal Saad-Eddin is a science journalist based in Egypt. He graduated from the faculty of medicine at Zagazig University in Egypt, and worked as a psychiatrist before leaving medicine and beginning a career in science journalism, first as a head of the science section in Manshoor.com, then as an editor at Nature Arabic Edition. He is currently working as a script writer and the fact-checker of “El-Daheeh,” the leading science YouTube show in the Arab region. His writings have also appeared in several outlets including Scientific American Arabic Edition and Almanassa News. His main writing interest is the interaction between science, its history, and the human experience.
Bryce Hoye is a journalist with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He covers a range of topics, from courts and crime to climate, conservation, and more. His stories appear on TV, radio, and online, and he has guest-hosted CBC Manitoba’s “Weekend Morning Show” and “Radio Noon.” He has produced national documentaries for CBC Radio, including for the weekly science program “Quirks & Quarks.” He has won several Radio Television Digital News Association national and regional awards. He previously worked in wildlife biology monitoring birds for several field seasons with Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Jori Lewis writes narrative nonfiction that explores how people interact with their environments. Her reports and essays have been published in The Atlantic Magazine, Orion Magazine, and Emergence Magazine, among others, and she is a senior editor of Adi Magazine, a literary magazine of global politics. In 2022, she published her first book, “Slaves for Peanuts: A Story of Conquest, Liberation, and a Crop That Changed History,” which was supported by the prestigious Whiting Creative Nonfiction Grant and a Silvers Grant for Work in Progress. It also won a James Beard Media Award and the Harriet Tubman Prize.
Yarden Michaeli is a journalist serving as the science and climate editor of Haaretz, Israel’s sole paper of record. During his 10 years as a writer, reporter, and editor at Haaretz, he became best known for editing the newspaper’s science vertical during the Covid-19 pandemic and founding its climate desk. Among other things, Yarden served as Haaretz’s first reporter on the ground during the war in Ukraine, covered the war in Gaza, and was dispatched to report on the forefront of the climate crisis during storm Daniel in Greece. Yarden was born in Israel and he is based in Tel Aviv. He has a bachelor’s degree in American studies and economy from the Humboldt University in Berlin and he is a member of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network.
Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi is a two-time winner of the CNN Africa photojournalist award. He is currently with the Associated Press in Zimbabwe. Previously, he was the chief photographer at the Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe. With an eye for detail and a passion for multi-format storytelling, he has managed to capture the essence of humanity in his photographs across Africa, Europe, and Asia. He instilled his dedication to his craft and hard work in other photojournalists in his past teaching role with the Norwegian Friedskorp, World Press Foundation in the Netherlands, the Pathshala Institute in South-East Asia, and in his pioneering gender and images work with SAMSO across the southern and East African region.
Aaron Scott is an award-winning multimedia journalist and the creator of the podcast Timber Wars, which was the first audio work to win the MIT Knight Science Journalism Program’s Victor K. McElheny Award, along with the National Headliner Award for Best Narrative Podcast and others. Most recently, he was a host of NPR’s science podcast “Short Wave.” Before that, he spent several years exploring the natural wonders of the Pacific Northwest as a reporter/producer for Oregon Public Broadcasting’s television show “Oregon Field Guide.” His stories have appeared on NPR, Radiolab, This American Life, Outside Podcast, Reveal, and elsewhere.
Evan Urquhart is a freelance journalist whose work has focused on science and medical questions relating to the transgender community. Based in Charlottesville, Virginia, his stories have appeared on Slate, Politico, the Atlantic, Vanity Fair, and many other outlets nationwide. In 2022, Evan founded Assigned Media, a news site devoted to fact-checking misinformation relating to trans issues. He has appeared as an expert on propaganda and misinformation relating to trans issues on radio shows and podcasts including NPR’s “St. Louis on the Air,” Slate’s “Outward,” The American Prospect’s “Left Anchor,” “What the Trans?,” and “It Could Happen Here.”
Jane Zhang is a technology reporter and the China representative of Bloomberg’s global AI squad based in Hong Kong. Over the years she has covered the Chinese internet and Beijing’s tensions with the United States over tech supremacy before jumping feet-first into reporting China’s historical crackdown on its largest corporations, including Alibaba. She has won awards for extensive on-the-ground reporting and exclusive interviews with industry heavyweights like Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei. Her current focus is on covering the incipient AI technology and the regulations around it. Zhang holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong.
Sharon Muzaki joins KSJ as the 2024 recipient of the Fellowship for Advancing Science Journalism in Africa and the Middle East. She has been with UGStandard Media since 2019, reporting on the environment and climate change in Uganda. Muzaki graduated from Makerere University in 2019 with a degree in journalism and communication. While working for UGStandard Media, she has attended numerous trainings at the Aga Khan University Graduate School of Media and Communications, honing skills in storytelling, data journalism, and mobile storytelling. Muzaki will be the first recipient of the Africa and Middle East Fellowship. The fall semester fellowship, created in honor of the pioneering Egyptian science journalist Mohammed Yahia, is funded by Springer Nature. It is designed to enrich the training of a journalist working in Africa or the Middle East so they can contribute to a culture of high-quality science and health journalism in those regions.
Anil Oza is co-hosted by KSJ and Boston-based publication STAT as the 2024-25 Sharon Begley Science Reporting Fellow. Oza earned a bachelor’s degree in science from Cornell University, where he reported for the campus newspaper, The Cornell Daily Sun. Oza has interned at Nature, Science News, and NPR’s “Short Wave.” Oza also interned at STAT during summer 2023, helping produce the health-equity-focused podcast, “Color Code.” Oza will be the fifth recipient of the Sharon Begley Fellowship. This fellowship pays tribute to Sharon Begley’s outstanding career while paving the way for the next generation of science journalists and fostering better coverage of science that is relevant to all people.
More than 400 leading science journalists from six continents have graduated from the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT. KSJ also publishes an award-winning science magazine, Undark, and offers programming to journalists on topics ranging from science editing to fact-checking.
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