Thursday, December 3, 2020

12-3: Another mysterious monolith pops up; Salmon death mystery solved; Doubts about going to college; Don't be a 'pandejo' about the pandemic!

✅ Silverado residents say this fire is different: ‘This one is the real McCoy’
 
—OC Reg 

✅ Gavin Newsom announces new California stay-at-home order, determined by regional ICU capacity -- On Thursday, Newsom announced a new, regional stay-at-home order, which will force additional restrictions in any of the five regions of the state where fewer than 15% of intensive care units remain available. None of the regions — defined as Northern California, the Bay Area, Greater Sacramento, the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California — currently meet the threshold but some could “in the next day or two,” Newsom said. Evan Webeck in the San Jose Mercury$ Adam Beam Associated Press John Myers, Rong-Gong Lin II in the Los Angeles Times$ Alexei Koseff in the San Francisco Chronicle$ Victoria Colliver and Jeremy B. White Politico -- 12/3/20 

✅ 
Arellano: Don’t be a ‘pandejo.’ Take the pandemic seriously -- Never heard of the term? It’s of recent coinage, a portmanteau of “pandemic” and “pendejo,” the Mexican Spanish term for a blockhead. Pandejo is an uncharitable — but sadly accurate — word to describe Latino covidiots who proudly flout coronavirus protocols. Gustavo Arellano in the Los Angeles Times$ -- 12/3/20

✅ Scientists solve mystery of mass coho salmon deaths. The killer? A chemical from car tires -- These mysterious die-offs — an alarming phenomenon that has been reported from Northern California to British Columbia — have stumped biologists and toxicologists for decades. Numerous tests ruled out pesticides, disease and other possible causes, such as hot temperatures and low dissolved oxygen. Rosanna Xia in the Los Angeles Times$ Kurtis Alexander in the San Francisco Chronicle$ -- 12/3/20 

✅ Mysterious monolith pops up in SLO County — the first to appear in California -- A giant mystery awaits at the top of the Pine Mountain loop in Atascadero’s Stadium Park. The first glimpse of something unusual is the glint of sunlight off metal as you round a curve on one of the many trails hugging the hillside above the city. Kaytlyn Leslie in the Sacramento Bee$ -- 12/3/20

More than a third of prospective college students are reconsidering higher education. And 43 percent of prospective students for one- and two-year programs are looking to delay enrollment, survey finds. 
—Inside Higher Ed 

—Inside Higher Ed 
     A federal judge on Tuesday set aside two Trump administration rules that narrowed eligibility for H-1B skilled worker visas and substantially increased wages for many H-1B holders. Colleges joined with businesses in suing to roll back the rules, which the Trump administration promulgated without normal notice-and-comment procedures, citing emergency circumstances related to the COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White ruled that the government failed to demonstrate that the rise in domestic unemployment caused by the COVID pandemic justified skipping normal rule-making processes, concluding that the administration “failed to show there was good cause to dispense with the rational and thoughtful discourse that is provided by the APA's [Administrative Procedures Act's] notice and comment requirements.”

—Inside Higher Ed 
     In a move they said will help students get a better idea of how much they can borrow and afford to pay back, Education Department officials are expanding the College Scorecard to show how much graduates at institutions make based on their areas of study. 
    The scorecard now provides new median income data for students two years out from their date of graduation. At Princeton University, for example, graduates with a bachelor’s degree in computer engineering made $103,078 two years after graduation. Those who graduated with a bachelor’s in English language and literature, however, made $47,260. 
    “This is not to tell students not to pursue their jobs and passions,” but to give them the information they need to “borrow responsibly,” the department’s principal deputy under secretary, Diane Auer Jones said at the Federal Student Aid Training Conference Wednesday. 

The fall semester was chaotic, but a few revelations about controlling Covid-19 shone through. They could inform a safe spring semester. 
—CHE


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