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Biden said America had gained the upper hand over Covid – has Delta changed the game? | Joe Biden

Natasha Trethewey, Former U S Poet Laureate, Named Rutgers University s Commencement Speaker

Natasha Trethewey, Former U S Poet Laureate, Named Rutgers University s Commencement Speaker
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New York University: Laurie Garrett, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist, will deliver COVID-19: What Comes Next—And the Future of Global Health, a virtual lecture, on April 13 – India Education,Education News India,Education News

Share Laurie Garrett, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist, will deliver “COVID-19: What Comes Next And the Future of Global Health,” a virtual lecture, on Tues., April 13, at 5:30 p.m. EDT. The event, NYU’s College of Arts and Science Irving H. Jurow Lecture, is free and open to the public. An RSVP is required by emailing cas.events@nyu.edu. Zoom coordinates will be sent to attendees the day of the event. Garrett, author of The Coming Plague: Newly Emerging Diseases in a World Out of Balance, has won two Polk Awards and a Peabody Award, in addition to the Pulitzer Prize, which she received in 1996 for her coverage on the Ebola outbreak as a reporter for Newsday.

COVID-19 and the Ongoing Global Workplace Revolution

For most of the recent past, economic geography has shifted to ever-larger cities across the globe. By the end of the last decade, many were convinced that we were entering a supreme era of the glittering, high-rise “superstar” city that would inevitably swallow all the best bits of the economy, and serve as unparalleled centers of tech, culture, political activism, and global trade. Globally, the ranks of city-dwellers more than doubled over the last 40 years, from 1.5 billion in 1975 to 3.5 billion according to data from the OECD. Yet now this urban-centric pattern may be slowing, and even reversing. Three critical factors are at play here. First, of course, the pandemic has weakened the appeal of urban life by the very logic of social distancing and higher levels of infections and fatalities. The second factor has been an alarming uptick in urban crime and disorder, particularly in the United States but elsewhere as well. Finally, there has been a move to dispersed and online

Time of the Hunger Moon: saints, wolves and the global pandemic

Lessons from wolves Stopping by a roadside antique shop in a small Upper Peninsula hamlet a year ago last January, shortly before the beginning of the pandemic, I spent time looking over a rusty link of chain attached to a set of steel jaws hanging from a ceiling post. A tag read, Wolf Trap: $50. My wife looked at it, then remarked, I don t really want this in our home. We moved on to the secondhand glass and dish displays. The dilapidated steel trap was a relic from the past. It also carried a warning of what might be coming. In Michigan, legal protection of gray wolves has been part of our political landscape for close to 50 years. The U.S. Endangered Species Act, originally passed in 1973, initially provided federal protection. Under that legislation, any trapping of wolves in the Great Lakes Basin was forbidden.

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