nia Mother’s Day treats from Romania, where moms are revered ‘culinary bibles’ By nationalpost.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 11:45:38 +0000 In Carpathia, Irina Georgescu shines a light on the richness of Romanian food culture Full Article Eating & Drinking Culture Life Cook This Cookbooks Irina Georgescu Mother's Day Romania Romanian Cuisine Romanian Food and Cooking The Feast
nia California Sues Uber And Lyft For 'Cheating' Drivers And Taxpayers By www.npr.org Published On :: Tue, 05 May 2020 18:07:19 -0400 The state accuses the ride-hailing apps of flouting a labor law by classifying drivers as independent contractors instead of employees. Full Article
nia Ranger Betty Soskin, 93, on the Rosie the Riveter national park, California By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2015-05-08T12:30:02Z The oldest national park ranger in the US tells us why she’s proud of the second world war home front park in Richmond, just across the bay from San FranciscoI settled in the greater Bay Area as a six-year-old in 1927. When I graduated from high school in 1938, my two opportunities for employment were working in agriculture or being a domestic servant. At that time, labour unions weren’t racially integrated and, during the war, I worked as a clerk for the segregated boilermakers’ union. Continue reading... Full Article San Francisco holidays Heritage California holidays United States holidays North and Central America holidays Travel National parks
nia Tasmania's devil of a climb: a photo essay By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2019-02-28T06:30:43Z On a climbing trip in Australia – to the rock formations below Mount Wellington near Hobart – Murdo MacLeod gets more drama than he bargained forClimbing guide John Fischer Continue reading... Full Article Tasmania holidays Adventure travel Climbing holidays Travel Australia holidays Australasia holidays Travel photography Photography
nia Coronavirus causing doubts among some anti-vaxxers but others doubling down on denial, experts say By www.independent.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-22T14:23:00Z Covid-19 could be 'antidote to complacency' among those on the fence about vaccines, scientists say Full Article
nia Civilian Coronavirus Corps Aims To Get Pennsylvania Back To Work By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:45:00 -0400 Gov. Tom Wolf hopes a New Deal-inspired plan will help get the state's more than 1.7 million unemployed residents working again. Full Article
nia Melania Trump Style Diary By rssfeeds.usatoday.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 17:05:04 +0000 What designers does the first lady choose to wear? Click through to see Melania Trump's ensembles. Full Article
nia Niall Horan Reportedly Slid Into Love Island Star Arabella Chi’s DMs By www.mtv.co.uk Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 09:56:05 +0100 Not once, but twice Full Article
nia Civilian Coronavirus Corps Aims To Get Pennsylvania Back To Work By www.npr.org Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 16:45:00 -0400 Gov. Tom Wolf hopes a New Deal-inspired plan will help get the state's more than 1.7 million unemployed residents working again. Full Article
nia How Science Trumps Denial - Issue 84: Outbreak By nautil.us Published On :: Wed, 06 May 2020 15:00:00 +0000 There’s an old belief that truth will always overcome error. Alas, history tells us something different. Without someone to fight for it, to put error on the defensive, truth may languish. It may even be lost, at least for some time. No one understood this better than the renowned Italian scientist Galileo Galilei.It is easy to imagine the man who for a while almost single-handedly founded the methods and practices of modern science as some sort of Renaissance ivory-tower intellectual, uninterested and unwilling to sully himself by getting down into the trenches in defense of science. But Galileo was not only a relentless advocate for what science could teach the rest of us. He was a master in outreach and a brilliant pioneer in the art of getting his message across.Today it may be hard to believe that science needs to be defended. But a political storm that denies the facts of science has swept across the land. This denialism ranges from the initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic to the reality of climate change. It’s heard in the preposterous arguments against vaccinating children and Darwin’s theory of evolution by means of natural selection. The scientists putting their careers, reputations, and even their health on the line to educate the public can take heart from Galileo, whose courageous resistance led the way.STAND UP FOR SCIENCE: Participants in the annual March for Science make Galileo proud, protesting those in power who have devalued and eroded science. (Above: Washington, D.C., 2017)bakdc / ShutterstockA crucial first step, one that took Galileo a bit of time to take, was to switch from publishing his findings in Latin, as was the custom for scientific writings at the time, to the Italian vernacular, the speech of the common people. This enabled not just the highly educated elite but anyone who was intellectually curious to hear and learn about the new scientific work. Even when risking offense (which Galileo never shied away from)—for instance, in responding to a German Jesuit astronomer who disagreed with him on the nature of sunspots (mysterious dark areas observed on the surface of the sun)—Galileo replied in the vernacular, because, as he explained, “I must have everyone able to read it.” An additional motive may have been that Galileo wanted to ensure that no one would somehow distort the meaning of what he had written.Galileo also understood that while the Church had the pomp and magic of decades of art and music, science had the enchantment of a new invention—the telescope. Even he wasn’t immune to its seductive powers, writing in his famous booklet The Sidereal Messenger: “In this short treatise I propose great things for inspection and contemplation by every explorer of Nature. Great, I say, because of the excellence of the things themselves, because of their newness, unheard of through the ages, and also because of the instrument with the benefit of which they make themselves manifest to our sight. “ And that gave him his second plan for an ambitious outreach campaign.With alternative facts acting like real facts, there are Galileo’s heirs, throwing up their hands and attempts to make lies sound like truth. What if he could distribute telescopes (together with detailed instructions for their use and his booklet about the discoveries) all across Europe, so that all the influential people, that is, the patrons of scientists—dukes and cardinals, could observe with their own eyes far out into the heavens. They would see the stunning craters and mountains that cover the surface of the moon, four previously unseen satellites of Jupiter, dark spots on the surface of the sun, and the vast number of stars that make up the Milky Way.But telescopes were both expensive and technically difficult to produce. Their lenses had to be of the highest quality, to provide both the ability to see faint objects and high resolution. “Very fine lenses that can show all observations are quite rare and, of the more than sixty I have made, with great effort and expense, I have only been able to retain a very small number,” Galileo wrote on March 19, 1610. Who would front the cost of such a monumental and risky project?Today the papacy is arguably the single most influential and powerful religious institution in the world. But its power is mostly in the moral and religious realms. In Galileo’s time, the papacy was a political power of significance, gobbling up failed dukedoms elsewhere, merging them into what became known as the “papal states.” The persons with the greatest interest in appearing strong in front of the papacy were the heads of neighboring states at the time.So it is not surprising that Galileo presented his grandiose scheme to the Tuscan court and the Grand Duke Cosimo II de’ Medici. Nor is it surprising that Cosimo agreed to finance the manufacturing of all the telescopes. On his own, he also instructed the Tuscan ambassadors to all the major European capitals to help publicize Galileo’s discoveries. In doing so he tied the House of Medici, ruler of the foundational city of the Renaissance, Florence, to modern science. A win-win for both the Grand Duke and Galileo.Last, Galileo instinctively understood what modern PR specialists refer to as the “quick response.” He did not let even one unkind word be said about his discoveries without an immediate reply. And his pen could be sharp.For example, the Jesuit mathematician Orazio Grassi (hiding behind the pseudonym of Sarsi) published a book entitled The Astronomical and Philosophical Balance, in which he criticized Galileo’s ideas on comets and on the nature of heat. In it, Grassi mistakenly thought that he would strengthen his argument by citing a legendary tale about the ancient Babylonians cooking eggs by whirling them on slings.Really?Galileo responded with a stupendous piece of polemic literature entitled The Assayer, in which he pounced on this fabled story like a cat on a mouse.“If Sarsi wishes me to believe, on the word of Suidas [a Greek historian], that the Babylonians cooked eggs by whirling them rapidly in slings, I shall believe it; but I shall say that the cause of this effect is very far from the one he attributes to it,” he wrote. “ To discover the true cause, I reason as follows: ‘If we do not achieve an effect which others formerly achieved, it must be that we lack something in our operation which was the cause of this effect succeeding, and if we lack one thing only, then this alone can be the true cause. Now we do not lack eggs, or slings, or sturdy fellows to whirl them, and still they do not cook, but rather cool down faster if hot. And since we lack nothing except being Babylonians, then being Babylonian is the cause of the egg hardening.’”Galileo understood what modern PR specialists refer to as the “quick response.” He did not let one unkind word go without an immediate reply. Did Galileo’s efforts save science from being cast aside perhaps for decades, even centuries? Unfortunately, not quite. The trial in which he was convicted by the Inquisition for “vehement suspicion of heresy” exerted a chilling effect on progress in deciphering the laws governing the cosmos. The famous French philosopher and scientist René Descartes wrote in a letter: “I inquired in Leiden and Amsterdam whether Galileo’s World System was available, for I thought I had heard that it was published in Italy last year. I was told that it had indeed been published, but that all the copies had immediately been burnt in Rome, and that Galileo had been convicted and fined. I was so astonished at this that I almost decided to burn all my papers, or at least to let no one see them.”I suspect that there are still too few of us who can tell exactly what Galileo discovered and why he is such an important figure to the birth of modern science. But around the world, in conversations as brittle as today’s politics, with alternative facts acting like real facts, there are Galileo’s heirs, throwing up their hands at such attempts to make lies seem like the truth and worse, the truth like a lie, responding with just four words: “And yet it moves.”Galileo may have never really uttered these words. He surely didn’t say that phrase in front of the Inquisitors—that would have been insanely dangerous. But whether the motto came first from his own mouth, that of a supporter whom he met during the years the Church put him under house arrest after his trial, or a later historian, we know one thing for sure. That motto represents everything Galileo stood for. It conveys the clear message of: In spite of what you may believe, these are the facts! That science won at the end is not solely because of the methods and rules that Galileo set out for what we accept to be true. Science prevailed because Galileo put his life and his personal freedom on the line to defend it.Mario Livio is an astrophysicist and author. His new book is Galileo: And the Science Deniers.Lead image: Mario Breda / ShutterstockRead More… Full Article
nia California to use mail-in ballots for all 2020 voters... By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2020-05-09T15:46:38Z California to use mail-in ballots for all 2020 voters... (First column, 21st story, link) Related stories:DEMS MULL VIRTUAL CONVENTION...Tax Hikes No Matter Who Wins in November? Drudge Report Feed needs your support! Become a Patron Full Article
nia Ocean Plastic Once Choking Chile's Shores Now in Patagonia's Hats By science.howstuffworks.com Published On :: 2020-04-24T19:58:58+00:00 A startup is recycling tons of discarded fishing nets throughout Chile. Is this a template for tackling the global plastic waste problem? Full Article
nia Harrison Ford investigated after incident at California airport By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T01:20:00Z Harrison Ford is under investigation following an incident at a small US airport. Full Article
nia Disney is closing theme parks in Paris, California and Florida over coronavirus fears By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-03-13T14:40:00Z Disney is shutting down its theme parks in Florida and Paris for just over a fortnight in addition to its iconic facility in Los Angeles over coronavirus fears. Full Article
nia Melania Trump turns 50: we chart the First Lady's fashion evolution as she celebrates her birthday By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-24T07:30:00Z Take a look through the model turned First Lady's sartorial history Full Article
nia A millennial man's guide to managing lockdown anxiety By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-30T10:06:59Z How to banish corona fear Full Article
nia Gigi Hadid's style file: From Californian chick to catwalk queen, we chart the model's sartorial rise By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-05-01T12:30:00Z The blonde bombshell has had quite the fashion journey Full Article
nia PokeCoin System Changes Are Coming to ‘Pokemon GO’ as Niantic Begins Testing in Australia By toucharcade.com Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 09:40:32 +0000 Pokemon GO (Free) from Niantic has been improving with letting people play the game in one place or at home. … Continue reading "PokeCoin System Changes Are Coming to ‘Pokemon GO’ as Niantic Begins Testing in Australia" Full Article Android Featured Free iPad Games iPhone games News Universal
nia Fears of coronavirus cover-up grow in Tanzania as videos show night burials and bodies on the street By www.telegraph.co.uk Published On :: Mon, 04 May 2020 12:34:27 GMT Full Article structure:news structure:news/world-news topics:in-the-news/coronavirus topics:places/tanzania topics:places/africa structure:global-health-security storytype:standard
nia Mikel Arteta can make Arsenal compete with the best again, says Manuel Almunia By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-19T05:24:00Z Former Arsenal goalkeeper Manuel Almunia believes that Mikel Arteta can help re-establish the Gunners as one of the best teams in the Premier League. Full Article
nia Hibernian to display 'Thank you NHS' message on front of 2020-21 home shirt By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-23T21:53:16Z Scottish Premiership club Hibernian will don the message "Thank you NHS" on their home kit next season. Full Article
nia California surf shimmers with bioluminescence – in pictures By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T07:30:28Z Waves glow turquoise in a glorious nocturnal display from an algae bloom off America’s west coastWaves dazzle surfers: ‘Never seen anything like it’ Continue reading... Full Article Environment Marine life US news Wildlife World news Oceans Surfing California Travel Life and style
nia California becomes first state to switch November election to all-mail balloting By www.politico.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 20:22:46 GMT Full Article
nia Democrats are on verge of the unthinkable: Losing a swing district in California By www.politico.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 00:11:41 GMT The party is downplaying expectations in next week's special election for a congressional seat in the L.A. suburbs. Full Article
nia Sydney news: NSW economy loses to Tasmania, suspected hydroponic set-up damaged by fire By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Mon, 28 Oct 2019 08:50:00 +1100 MORNING BRIEFING: NSW's economy has dropped to third, behind Victoria and Tasmania, according to CommSec's State of the States report, which measures performance based on several factors. Full Article ABC Radio Sydney centralcoast newengland sydney Australia:NSW:All Australia:NSW:Kincumber 2251 Australia:NSW:Narrabri 2390 Australia:NSW:Strathfield 2135 Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000 Australia:NSW:Toongabbie 2146
nia Mike Parr performing Towards an Amazonian Black Square By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 05:57:00 +1100 Full Article ABC Radio Sydney sydney Arts and Entertainment:All:All Arts and Entertainment:Contemporary Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Performance Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Visual Art:All Australia:All:All Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000
nia Mike Parr performing Towards an Amazonian Black Square By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 05:57:00 +1100 Full Article ABC Radio Sydney sydney Arts and Entertainment:All:All Arts and Entertainment:Contemporary Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Performance Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Visual Art:All Australia:All:All Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000
nia Detailed of Mike Parr's performance Towards an Amazonian Black Square, 2019 painted inside The Eternal Opening By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 05:57:00 +1100 Full Article ABC Radio Sydney sydney Arts and Entertainment:All:All Arts and Entertainment:Contemporary Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Performance Art:All Arts and Entertainment:Visual Art:All Australia:All:All Australia:NSW:Sydney 2000
nia California is rewriting the rules of the internet. Businesses are scrambling to keep up By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Dec 2019 20:01:23 -0500 A new law that will let you opt out of the online data economy goes into effect on Jan. 1 — assuming businesses can figure out how to make that happen in time. Full Article
nia New labor laws are coming to California. What's changing in your workplace? By www.latimes.com Published On :: Sun, 29 Dec 2019 09:00:33 -0500 For California businesses, 2020 will be a year of reckoning. Sweeping new laws curbing long-time employment practices take effect, aimed at reducing economic inequality and giving workers more power in their jobs. Full Article
nia Seeing those opt-out messages about your personal information on websites? Thank California's new privacy law By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 2 Jan 2020 09:57:01 -0500 "Do not sell my info" links popped up on websites New Year's Day as companies scrambled to comply with California's sweeping new consumer privacy protection law. Full Article
nia Ad industry seeks to delay new California data privacy law By www.latimes.com Published On :: Wed, 29 Jan 2020 18:57:00 -0500 Some of the advertising industry's biggest trade associations are asking California's attorney general to delay enforcement of the state's new privacy law — which is set for July 1— by at least six months. Full Article
nia California lost more manufacturing jobs to China than any other state, report says By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Jan 2020 10:30:36 -0500 California lost more manufacturing jobs to China than any other state. Full Article
nia AB 5 is already changing how Uber works for California drivers and riders By www.latimes.com Published On :: Mon, 3 Feb 2020 09:00:56 -0500 Responding to a new California labor law, Uber making concessions drivers have long sought. But it may change the service in ways that displease drivers and riders alike. Full Article
nia New California labor law AB 5 is already changing how businesses treat workers By www.latimes.com Published On :: Fri, 14 Feb 2020 09:00:39 -0500 California employers may dislike the new law on independent contractors, but they're devising a host of strategies to comply. Full Article
nia Job losses from coronavirus are already devastating Southern California By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 09:00:05 -0400 Coronavirus unemployment hits a broad swath of industries across California. Full Article
nia Coronavirus is supercharging the fight over California's new employment law By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Mar 2020 18:11:02 -0400 The coronavirus outbreak, and the economic downturn it has ushered in, have given fresh arguments to both sides in the fight over the legal rights of independent contractors. Full Article
nia Delivery workers are keeping California fed. They say no one's keeping them safe By www.latimes.com Published On :: Sat, 28 Mar 2020 08:00:04 -0400 Coronavirus relief efforts are leaving some delivery workers unprotected, they say. Full Article
nia Employees at 6 Amazon facilities in Southern California have tested positive for coronavirus By www.latimes.com Published On :: Thu, 2 Apr 2020 22:00:32 -0400 Coronavirus: Amazon workers at 6 Southland facilities test positive Full Article
nia California sues Uber and Lyft, saying drivers are employees By www.latimes.com Published On :: Tue, 5 May 2020 14:42:08 -0400 California's suit against Uber and Lyft says the companies have illegally treated drivers as independent contractors, depriving them of benefits. Full Article
nia This day in Sports: Fernandomania makes its Broadway debut By www.latimes.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 08:00:46 -0400 A look at some of the biggest moments in sports history to have occurred on May 8. Full Article
nia New invisibility concept and miniaturization of photonic circuits using ultrafast laser By www.eurekalert.org Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 00:00:00 EDT Thanks to its unique three-dimensional manufacturing capacity, ultrafast laser writing is a prime candidate to meet the growing demand for the miniaturization of photonic circuitry, e.g., for scaling up optical quantum computers capacity. Towards this goal, scientists from Canada discovered a phenomenon related to the material electronic resonance that allows a much greater miniaturization of the laser written devices. Surprisingly, the new phenomenon allows other intriguing applications such as a new concept of invisibility. Full Article
nia Here's what Tasmania's roadmap out of coronavirus looks like By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 18:00:55 +1000 The Tasmanian Government has given a green light to the gradual reopening of the state. Here's how it will work. Full Article COVID-19 Diseases and Disorders Health Respiratory Diseases State Parliament Federal - State Issues Government and Politics
nia Science denial among top 10 greatest risks to humankind, new report claims By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 09:11:09 +1000 A new report has ranked disdain for scientific knowledge as one of humanity's biggest threats, alongside climate change, nuclear war, and artificial intelligence. Full Article Climate Change Emissions Trading Environment COVID-19
nia Spirit of Tasmania to move Victorian operations to Geelong By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Thu, 23 Apr 2020 13:31:47 +1000 The company behind the Spirit of Tasmania ferry service says its ships will no longer be docking at Station Pier in Port Melbourne, and will instead move to Corio Quay, north of Geelong. Full Article Transport Sea Transport Industry Business Economics and Finance Government and Politics States and Territories
nia What does Tasmania's economy face post-coronavirus? By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Mon, 27 Apr 2020 06:37:29 +1000 CommSec's State of the States latest report reveals Tasmania's economy performing stronger than it had for more than 10 years. But that was before the coronavirus crisis hit. What's ahead? Full Article COVID-19 Diseases and Disorders Health Community and Society State Parliament Economic Trends
nia Union takes Qantas to Federal Court over 'heartless' denial of sick leave to stood-down workers By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 16:51:47 +1000 The Transport Workers' Union urges the Federal Court of Australia to find that Qantas is still responsible for paying sick leave to 25,000 workers who have been stood down during the global coronavirus pandemic. Full Article COVID-19 Diseases and Disorders Health Government and Politics Unions Industry Air Transport Business Economics and Finance
nia 5 Relationship Lessons Millennials Can Learn From Irrfan & Deepikaâs Love Story In âPikuâ By www.mensxp.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 14:43:08 +0530 Full Article Bollywood
nia Pennsylvania: Latest updates on Coronavirus By www.livescience.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 21:58:14 +0000 Here's a look at the number of coronavirus cases in Pennsylvania and the latest news about the COVID-19 outbreak. Full Article
nia Movie props have 'undeniable charm.' A new Disney+ series spotlights the fading art By www.latimes.com Published On :: Wed, 6 May 2020 19:02:29 -0400 We chat with two movie vets featured on Disney+'s "Prop Culture": the director of "Honey, I Shrunk the Kids" and the animator of "The Nightmare Before Christmas." Full Article