Analysts have also criticised the cybersecurity firm’s business model but a US private equity fund is still pondering a takeover
Children are barred from hundreds of restaurants, museums, cafes, and public places in South Korea. But this could now be done away with completely on one southern island.
UScellular is looking to Find US again. Let's disconnect from our devices so we can reconnect with each other. Learn more and take our Phones Down for 5 challenge.
Centered on the worker’s voice and equity, these Five Essentials support workplaces as engines of well-being. Each essential is grounded in two human needs, shared across industries and roles. Creating a plan to enact these practices can help strengthen the essentials of workplace well‑being.
The Very Real Consequences of Weight Discrimination https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=do_zld2dS1M
Anti-Fat Bias in Healthcare with Dr. Kimberly Gudzune, MD https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ukg8i6r_seU
longer:
Weight Bias in Health Care https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZLzHFgE0AQ
Sasquatch Vienna-style lager with coffee
Are you from a "Peach" or "Coconut" culture? Knowing this will help you understand cross-cultural communication and build friendships in a new country.
What If We Just Stopped Being So Available?
Today’s norms of responsiveness are ridiculous. We shouldn’t apologize for failing to meet them.
By Joe Pinsker
This syllabus and timeline of the protests organized in Portland throughout the summer and early fall of 2020 was compiled and written by Portland State University students enrolled in Professor Katrine Barber’s HST 4/593, Introduction to Public History in Fall 2020. It was prepared in partnership with the Oregon State University Press and presented to them at the conclusion of the course. It combines local Portland journalism with a number of other scholarly resources to attempt to answer the question: “Why Portland?” The goals of the project at the outset were to correct inaccuracies or oversights in national coverage of the protests, as well as to provide context for these events. The mission of OSU Press is, in part, to “contribute to the intellectual, cultural, and social development of Oregon and the West,” as well as to “extend the benefits of the university’s teaching, research, and public service beyond the usual boundaries of the university community.” In keeping with these values, this project seeks to bring scholarly context to an event that has touched many Oregonian lives.