Weinberg junior Jane Mavis was planning to work in a Northwestern clinical psychology lab this summer. It would have been one of her first experiences in a formal research setting, which she said would be critical for both solidifying her interest in psychology and bolstering her looming graduate school applications. But when the Office of.
Journalism is a diverse and creative profession, so there s much to learn from reading.
55 college professors suggested more than 50 book recommendations to add to your reading list.
Below, find books on writing, editing, interviewing, digital media, photography, podcasts, and more.
Real talk I m a soon-to-be journalism graduate and a major bookie, so I m always on the hunt for books that will offer new perspectives about the emerging profession of news, digital journalism, and reporting. Naturally,
I put my reporting skills to work and reached out to 55 journalism professors from schools like UPenn, Stanford, Duke, Northwestern, and many more to put together a master list of beloved recommendations from esteemed professionals.
As COVID-19 vaccines become available to more Cook County residents, an increasing number of Northwestern community members are getting vaccinated through University and local initiatives.
NU has an active clinic in Norris to administer vaccines to community members, according to an email from Luke Figora, former chief risk and compliance officer. Supplies are limited, so onsite vaccination efforts have focused on faculty and staff age 65 and older, as well as on Compass food service employees and students who qualify for the vaccine in Phase 1A or 1B, the email said.
“While vaccine supply remains low, we are grateful our partners from the City of Evanston Health and Human Services are continuing to allocate a share of their supply to Northwestern,” Figora wrote in the email. “We have administered every dose of vaccine the city has given us on the day we received it.”
Senior Home Editor, Good Housekeeping
Don t let those fickle fiddle leaf figs fool you. Not every houseplant requires a natural green thumb and extensive gardening expertise. These hardy indoor species can survive and even thrive despite serious neglect. Buy something that likes to live the way you do, advises Gwenn Fried, manager of the horticulture therapy program at NYU Langone. When you re working with a dark room, give low-light options like pothos, prayer plants, and dracaena a go. If too many rays has shriveled your plants in the past, opt for sun lovers like yucca, jade, and ponytail palm. Peace lilies and Chinese evergreen can handle the well-meaning over-waterer. If you re the set-it-and-forget-it type, ZZ plant, kalanchoe, and philodendrons might be more your speed.