In an open letter to the the Director of the Hoover Institute, the President, the Provost and the Board of Trustees, 90 Stanford faculty members call for a public accounting of Rupert Murdoch's appointment to the Hoover's Board of Overseers. They write, "we wonder what kind of signal his presence sends to our students, who we are training to seek the truth, and to our colleagues on the faculty, who are constantly held to the highest standards of honesty, truth and responsible scholarship."
Shoals small business owner told by state she might owe them for unemployment
After trying to get in touch with ADOL, Jones found out they made a mistake and she didn t owe them money.
Posted: Feb 3, 2021 5:03 PM
Updated: Feb 3, 2021 9:54 PM
Posted By: Breken Terry
A small business owner in the Shoals got the shock of her life when the Alabama Department of Labor said she owed them over $4,000.
Holland Jones owns Brow Revival and Microblading in Florence. She had to close her microblading and lash salon for about two months in 2020 because of the state s coronavirus mandate.
She filed for unemployment while she was forced to be closed, but she never imagined they d ask for it all back and then some months later.
Gendered division of labor in human societies shaped spatial behavior and landscape use
Navigating, exploring and thinking about space are part of daily life, whether it s carving a path through a crowd, hiking a backcountry trail or maneuvering into a parking spot.
For most of human history, the driving force for day-to-day wayfinding and movement across the landscape was a need for food. And unlike other primates, our species has consistently divided this labor along gender lines.
In new research published in
Nature Human Behaviour, scientists including James Holland Jones of Stanford and lead author Brian Wood of University of California, Los Angeles, argue that the increasingly gendered division of labor in human societies during the past 2.5 million years dramatically shaped how our species uses space, and possibly how we think about it.
The City of Miami Police Department (MPD) will get a new top cop next year, and more than 30 applicants from around the U.S. have thrown their hats into the ring to replace the current chief of police, Jorge Colina.
Colina, a 30-year veteran of the MPD, has led the department for three years. Earlier this year, he announced that he would step down in January, sparking a nationwide search for a replacement.
The search comes on the heels of major unrest and increased scrutiny of American police departments following the death of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer. Colina himself came under fire this year when he was accused in June of using the N-word during a law-enforcement training session in 1997, and in September when he was named in a lawsuit alleging widespread corruption in the MPD by a fired detective who testified against another officer in an FBI investigation.