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The New Saturday Night

With billions of people staying home, the world is reinventing the weekend.




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Forest of night [manuscript] / by Noni Braham Durack

Durack, Noni, 1917-




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Night fantasy: for clarinet and piano (1978) / Dorothy Rudd Moore

STACK SCORE Mu pts M7819 nig




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When the Earth had two moons: cannibal planets, icy giants, dirty comets, dreadful orbits, and the origins of the night sky / Erik Asphaug

Dewey Library - QB603.O74 A86 2019




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The darker the night, the brighter the stars: a neuropsychologist's odyssey through consciousness / Paul Broks ; with drawigs by Garry Kennard

Hayden Library - BF311.B736 2018




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American nightmares: social problems in an anxious world / Joel Best

Dewey Library - HM1027.U6 B47 2018




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Short Course: Caffeine may worsen menopausal hot flashes, night sweats




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Register now for "Starry Spring Nights"

Learn to identify the constellations and stars you see.




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Introducing "The Longest Night"

Morehead collaborates with Paperhand Puppet Intervention on its newest fulldome planetarium show.




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Starry Nights: Fall Skies

The perfect opportunity to learn how to identify the planets, bright stars and constellations that are most prominent this season.




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International Observe the Moon Night

Sorry -- this Oct. 12 skywatching session is cancelled (the clouds won't go away!).




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Starry Nights: Winter Skies

Explore the night sky with an expert guide on Dec. 18 from 7:30-9 p.m.




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Night Lights - A Family New Year's Eve

Registration for this event is now closed. Thank you to all that signed up!




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Teen Science Fiction Movie Night: Contagion

Watch a free showing of "Contagion" on June 27 and discuss it with scientist.




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Register now for "Starry Nights: Summer Skies"

What constellations can you identify in the Summer sky?




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Evacuation ends a youngster’s nightmare

Felix’s condition deteriorated into pneumonia while he was still in Abu Dhabi




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TONIGHT: Garth Brooks & Trisha Yearwood with Librarian Carla Hayden

TONIGHT, Monday, March 2 beginning at 7pm ET

Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden will host a conversation with Grammy Award-winning country music singer and songwriter Garth Brooks. Brooks and Hayden will be joined by country music artist, actress, author, celebrity chef and wife of Brooks, Trisha Yearwood. They will discuss their success as a country music power couple, their careers as music industry changemakers and the humanitarian projects they devote their efforts to each year.

Brooks will receive the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize for Popular Song later that week on Wednesday, March 4. The country music titan and multiple hall of famer is the youngest recipient of the prestigious prize.

You can follow and join in on the #GershwinPrize conversation via Twitter.

Watch here on the Library's YouTube page.

Watch here on the Library's Facebook page.
Tune in to Facebook at 6:30 pm ET for a special edition of Garth Brooks' "Inside Studio G" Facebook program LIVE from the Library of Congress!

 

 




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TONIGHT: Author John Barry on 1918 Pandemic

Tonight, April 7 at 8 p.m. (ET): John M. Barry, author of “The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History," talks with David Rubenstein about the 1918 influenza pandemic, how the world responded and what it can teach us about COVID-19. The program will repeat this Saturday, April 11, at 3 p.m. (ET) and will be available on the Facebook, YouTube and the Library of Congress website.




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Muhammad: forty introductions / Michael Muhammad Knight

Hayden Library - BP135.8.M85 K65 2019




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Nine night / Natasha Gordon

Hayden Library - PR6107.O675 N56 2018




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Night boat to Tangier / Kevin Barry

Hayden Library - PR6102.A7833 N54 2019




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Sociology Short Cuts: Crime and Deviance : Part 5: Policing the Night [electronic resource]




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Britain facing no ‘dramatic overnight change’ in lockdown rules

Mr. Johnson is due to announce the next steps in Britain’s battle to tackle the novel coronavirus following a review by ministers of the current measures




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All days are night / Peter Stamm ; translated from the German by Michael Hofmann

Hayden Library - PT2681.T3234 N3313 2014




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The Moravian night: a story / Peter Handke ; translated from the German by Krishna Winston

Hayden Library - PT2668.A5 M6713 2016




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Podcast: Scientists on the night shift, sucking up greenhouse gases with cement, and repetitive stress in tomb builders

 This week, we chat about cement’s shrinking carbon footprint, commuting hazards for ancient Egyptian artisans, and a new bipartisan group opposed to government-funded animal research in the United States with Online News Editor David Grimm. Plus, Science’s Alexa Billow talks to news writer Sam Kean about the kinds of data that can only be gathered at night as part of the special issue on circadian biology.  Listen to previous podcasts.  [Image: roomauction/iStockphoto; Music: Jeffrey Cook]




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Race and disease risk and Berlin’s singing nightingales

Noncancerous tumors of the uterus—also known as fibroids—are extremely common in women. One risk factor, according to the scientific literature, is “black race.” But such simplistic categories may actually obscure the real drivers of the disparities in outcomes for women with fibroids, according to this week’s guest. Host Meagan Cantwell speaks with Jada Benn Torres, an associate professor of anthropology at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, about how using interdisciplinary approaches— incorporating both genetic and cultural perspectives—can paint a more complete picture of how race shapes our understanding of diseases and how they are treated. In our monthly books segment, book review editor Valerie Thompson talks with David Rothenberg, author of the book Nightingales in Berlin: Searching for the Perfect Sound, about spending time with birds, whales, and neuroscientists trying to understand the aesthetics of human and animal music. This week’s episode was edited by Podigy. Download the transcript (PDF) Listen to previous podcasts. About the Science Podcast [Image: Carlos Delgado/Wikipedia; Matthias Ripp/Flickr; Music: Jeffrey Cook]





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Cyclone Phailin super relief: The night govt and IMD saved the day

The death toll in the state stood at 18, most of them dying under falling trees as winds battered Ganjam and other districts.




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Tehelka case: Tejpal Shares cell with two murder accused, five others on first night

Tejpal entered the lock-up around 2.30 am, after his check-up at the Goa Medical College Hospital.




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Bank credit contracts by ₹69,000 cr. in a fortnight

Goldman Sachs says rate cut in offing




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Panic at midnight: residents flee area fearing second leak

Will take action against those spreading rumours, say police




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153 JSJ Careers for Junior Developers with Aimee Knight

02:26 - Aimee Knight Introduction

02:48 - Figure Skating => Programming

  • Persistence
  • Balance Between Mind and Body

05:03 - Blogging (Aimee’s Blog)

06:02 - Becoming Interested in Programming

08:43 - Why Boot Camps?

10:04 - Mentors

  • Identifying a Mentor
  • Continuing a Mentorship

13:33 - Picking a Boot Camp

16:23 - Self-Teaching Prior to Attending Boot Camps

20:33 - Finding Employment After the Boot Camp

26:27 - Being a “Woman in Tech”

30:57 - Better Preparing for Getting Started in Programming

  • Be Patient with Yourself

32:07 - Interviews

  • Getting to Know Candidates
  • Coding Projects and Tests

41:05 - Should you get a four-year degree to be a programmer?

Picks

Aarti Shahani: What Cockroaches With Backpacks Can Do. Ah-mazing (Jamison)
Event Driven: How to Run Memorable Tech Conferences by Leah Silber (Jamison)
The Hiring Post (Jamison)
Kate Heddleston: Argument Cultures and Unregulated Aggression (Jamison)
Axios AJAX Library (Dave)
Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand (Dave)
[YouTube] Good Mythical Morning: Our Official Apocalypse (AJ)
Majora's Mask Live Action: The Skull Kid (AJ)
The Westin at Lake Las Vegas Resort & Spa (Joe)
Alchemists (Joe)
Valerie Kittel (Joe)
The Earthsea Trilogy: A Wizard of Earthsea; The Tombs of Atuan; The Farthest Shore by Ursula K. Le Guin (Chuck)
Traction: Get a Grip on Your Business by Gino Wickman (Chuck)
Freelancers’ Answers (Chuck)
Drip (Chuck)
Brandon Hays: Letter to an aspiring developer (Aimee)
SparkPost (Aimee)
Exercise and Physical Activity (Aimee)




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MJS #019: Aimee Knight

On today's episode, Charles Max Wood features My JS Story Aimee Knight. Aimee first appeared in episode 153, where talked about her career as a Junior Developer. She eventually became one of the awesome panelists of JavaScript Jabber. Tune in to learn about her journey in programming!




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MJS 085: Chris McKnight

Panel: Charles Max Wood

Guest: Chris McKnight

This week on My JavaScript Story, Charles speaks with Chris McKnight who is a software developer who knows Angular, Ruby, Node.js, and iOS. He went to college at Louisiana State University and graduated with a computer science degree from LSU. They talk about Chris’ background, past/current projects, among other things. Check out today’s episode to hear the panel talk about JavaScript, Angular, C and C++, Node, React, and much more!

In particular, we dive pretty deep on:

0:00 – Advertisement: Get A Coder Job!

1:12 – Chuck: Hello! Introduce yourself, please!

1:15 – Guest: I am a software engineer outside of Nashville, Tennessee. I work for a medium consultancy company. I know JavaScript, Angular, NativeScript, and JS, too.

1:41 – Chuck: Cool! Tell us your story and how you got into programming?

2:00 – Guest: I was a really big nerd in high school and grew up in Louisiana, USA. There was one other person in the school that knew what I was talking about. I was learning C++ and Visual Studio in 2003. That was really back in the day and Microsoft Foundation class was a thing. I moved onto PHP and started working for a company in Baton Rouge after graduating college. I have a computer science degree with a secondary discipline in mathematics. I graduated from LSU and got a job offer before I graduated. Doing some part-time work for them b/c they were swamped. I was writing PHP and they said that they used jQuery a lot.

4:47 – Chuck: You got started and you said you used C and C++, why those languages?

5:05 – Guest: I did a little bit of Java, but it was the “new kid on the block.” I wanted to get into a program that was user-friendlier.

6:21 – Chuck: I took C and C++ classes in college. Eventually I did Ruby on Rails. I totally understand why you went that way.

6:44 – Guest: I picked-up Rails, because a company (that I worked for at the time) used it. I usually reached for jQuery among other options.

7:31 – Chuck: When did you start taking JavaScript seriously?

7:40 – Guest: 2012-2013. Frustrations of not using JavaScript as good as I could. For jQuery you have to call when you have an issue. Then you run into all of these bugs, and...

9:18 – Chuck: It sounds like it was more out of necessity.

9:30 – Guest: Yep, exactly. Those pain points have been reduced b/c I have been using Type Script and Angular and now version 6 and version 7. You try to call a number method on a string and vice versa, and app development time.

10:03 – Chuck: ...it has a process running with it.

10:13 – Guest: Catching a lot of those easy mistakes (bugs) and it’s a 5-10 minute fix. It takes a lot of that away. Sometimes you can say: I want to ignore it.

Or it doesn’t give you runtime guarantees.

Some other libraries out there have been on the forefront of fixing those problems. REST TYPE is an example of that.

11:39 – Chuck: When I talk to people about JavaScript a lot of times I get basically that they are saying: I started doing more things in Node or React – I fell in love with the language. Your reasons for starting JavaScript are because “I hated running into these problems.” Did you start loving to work in JavaScript?

12:11 – Guest: I did start loving it but it took a while. I could write a short amount of code and then at the end I get a result.

Another thing that bothers me is FILTER. What does it return? It’s actually FIND and FIND INDEX and you use the pattern of filter and run this expression and give me index zero.

14:16 – Chuck: What work have you done that you are proud of?

14:20 – Guest: I started a new job last month; beforehand I worked at a mortgage company. I was proud of the Angular application and applications that I worked on. 

16:55 – Chuck: How did you get into Angular?

17:00 – Guest: Interesting story. October of 2016 – at this time I was all against Angular. However someone came to me and said we have to...

At the time I wasn’t impressed with the language. I learned about Angular at the time, though, and learned through Egghead. I learned a lot in 2 days, and I got pretty decent at it. I was writing Angular applications pretty quickly, and it made sense to me.

20:53 – Chuck: I am a fan of the CLI b/c that’s what we have in Rails. It’s really nice. What are you working on these days?

21:13 – Guest: Less on Angular b/c of the new job. I will do Angular on my free time. I work on Angular at nighttime. I build some things in React these past few weeks.

23:07 – Chuck: Any part of your experience that could help people?

23:17 – Guest: Learn what’s happening under the hood of libraries such as jQuery. Explore and find resources to help you. Keep learning and keep at it. Tools are so god now – such as Prettier and Lint – they will tell me “you don’t want to do this.” Use the tooling and learn the fundamentals. Also, use Babel! Those are my tips of advice.

25:55 – Chuck: That’s solid. Yes, the fundamentals and the poly-fills will fill in the gaps. So now it’s: what do I want to stack on top of this? Once you know the fundamentals.

26:55 – Guest: Learn what the frameworks and libraries are doing.

Don’t get overwhelmed. That’s my advice.

28:16 – Chuck: Where can people find you?

28:24 – Guest: GitHub and Twitter. I’ve been working on a website, but not ready, yet.

29:08 – Chuck: Picks!

29:15 – Advertisement – Fresh Books! 30-Day Trial!

35:45 – Cache Fly

Links:

Sponsors:

Picks:

Chris

Chuck




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JSJ 426: Killing the Release Night with Progressive Delivery with Dave Karow

JavaScript Remote Conf 2020

May 14th to 15th - register now!


Dave Karow is a developer evangelist for Split. He dives into how you can deliver software sustainably without burning out. His background is in performance and he's moved into smooth deliveries. He pushes the ideas behind continuous delivery and how to avoid getting paid to stay late in "free" pizzas.

Panel

  • AJ O’Neal

  • Aimee Knight

  • Charles Max Wood

  • Dan Shappir

Guest

  • Dave Karow

Sponsors

____________________________________________________________

"The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today!

____________________________________________________________

Links

Picks

Aimee Knight:

Dan Shappir:

AJ O’Neal:

Charles Max Wood

Dave Karow:

Follow JavaScript Jabber on Twitter > @JSJabb




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Reading Romans backwards : a gospel of peace in the midst of empire / Scot McKnight

McKnight, Scot, author




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Night comes : death, imagination, and the last things / Dale C. Allison Jr

Allison, Dale C., Jr., 1955- author




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Indian found dead in Bahrain after partying all night



  • DO NOT USE Indians Abroad
  • World

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Fly-by-night problems

Better regulation of deposit schemes a must




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Part 3 – Ch49 – In The Dead Of Night

These are the recordings of the complete collection of all the talks by Ajahn Chah that have been translated into English and are published in 'The Collected Teachings of Ajahn Chah', 2011. This was read by Ajahn Amaro during the winter of 2012

The post Part 3 – Ch49 – In The Dead Of Night appeared first on Amaravati Buddhist Monastery.




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Vegetable sales at Thirumazhisai to begin from Sunday night

Suppliers informed of new location; finding workers an issue




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Transhumanist dreams and dystopian nightmares : the promise and peril of genetic engineering / Maxwell J. Mehlman

Mehlman, Maxwell J





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Societal Perceptions of Physicians: Knights, Knaves, or Pawns?

Interview with Sachin H. Jain, MD, MBA and Christine K. Cassel, MD, authors of Societal Perceptions of Physicians: Knights, Knaves, or Pawns?




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Effect of a Protected Sleep Period on Hours Slept During Extended Overnight In-hospital Duty Hours Among Medical Interns: A Randomized Trial

Interview with Kevin G. Volpp, MD, PhD, author of Effect of a Protected Sleep Period on Hours Slept During Extended Overnight In-hospital Duty Hours Among Medical Interns: A Randomized Trial




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Complications of Daytime Elective Laparoscopic Cholecystectomies Performed by Surgeons Who Operated the Night Before

Interview with Christopher Vinden, MD, author of Complications of Daytime Elective Laparoscopic Cholecystectomies Performed by Surgeons Who Operated the Night Before





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Night boat to Tangier / Kevin Barry

Barry, Kevin, 1969- author




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Good night paradise / Joshua Dysart, writer ; Alberto Ponticelli, art ; Giulia Brusco, color art

Barker Library - PN6728.G653 2018