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The Barnard Primary Care Health Service recognizes that serious illness will not always be confined to weekday, daytime hours. For those urgent or potentially dangerous situations that cannot wait until Primary Care re-opens, telephone advice is available after hours. We hope you stay healthy day and night… but if an after-hours emergency arises, the Clinician On-Call is available to help.

The health and well-being of all members of our community is our top priority. Below is information about transmission, symptoms, diagnosis for the virus, preventive measures, and resources to contact immediately if you have any symptoms.

Transmission: Like other coronaviruses, this new virus is spread through respiratory droplets from coughing or sneezing, but can also be transmitted on surfaces such as handles and knobs.

Students: Whether you are local or not, students are free to discuss your symptoms with a provider in Primary Care who can direct you to either self-monitoring or to seeking an in-person evaluation of your symptoms. If it is not during these hours, you can call the Clinician-on-call at Preventive Measures : There is currently no vaccine to prevent this virus. The best way to prevent infection is to avoid being exposed. The PCHS is open for clinical care during the academic year.

We are closed for all College holidays. For more information about our clinical hours please click here. If you are a survivor of sexual assault or other physical violence , please click on the link below for a list of the resources available to you at Barnard: Title IX and Equity Resource.

Below are directions for scheduling an appointment at the PCHS. There will be no walk-in appointments or online appointment scheduling for the Fall semester. For sick visits, STI screenings, vaccine appointments, follow up appointments, physical exams and routine gynecological exams, please call to schedule an appointment.

We all stood on stage together and watched highlights of our careers with the cameras rolling and the fans cheering—and I looked around and had a moment of awe. I felt so grateful to be there—included in the company of Kobe and Peyton. I had a momentary feeling of having arrived: like we women had finally made it.

Then the applause ended and it was time for the three of us to exit stage left. And as I watched those men walk off the stage, it dawned on me that the three of us were stepping away into very different futures. Their hustling days were over; mine were just beginning.

We talk a lot about the pay gap. We talk about how we U. Over time, the pay gap means women are able to invest less and save less so they have to work longer.

When we talk about what the pay gap costs us, let's be clear. It costs us our very lives. Just feeling grateful. Grateful to be one of the only women to have a seat at the table.

I was so grateful to receive any respect at all for myself that I often missed opportunities to demand equality for all of us. Women have learned that we can be grateful for what we have while also demanding what we deserve. Like all little girls, I was taught to be grateful. I was taught to keep my head down, stay on the path, and get my job done. I was freaking Little Red Riding Hood. Little Red Riding Hood heads off through the woods and is given strict instructions: Stay on the path.

And she does… at first. But then she dares to get a little curious and she ventures off the path. I stayed on the path out of fear, not of being eaten by a wolf, but of being cut, being benched, losing my paycheck. So when I was entrusted with the honor of speaking here today, I decided that the most important thing for me to say to you is this:. In , around the year of your birth, wolves were re-introduced into Yellowstone National Park after being absent for seventy years. In those years, the number of deer had skyrocketed because they were unchallenged, alone at the top of the food chain.

They grazed away and reduced the vegetation, so much that the river banks were eroding. Once the wolves arrived, they thinned out the deer through hunting. But more significantly, their presence changed the behavior of the deer. Wisely, the deer started avoiding the valleys, and the vegetation in those places regenerated. Trees quintupled in just six years. Birds and beavers started moving in. The river dams the beavers built provided habitats for otters and ducks and fish. The animal ecosystem regenerated.

The rivers actually changed as well. The plant regeneration stabilized the river banks so they stopped collapsing. We will not Little Red Riding Hood our way through life. We will unite our pack, storm the valley together and change the whole bloody system.

Teams need a unifying structure, and the best way to create one collective heartbeat is to establish rules for your team to live by. So they hide it, pretend it never happened, reject it outright—and they end up wasting it. Failure is the highest octane fuel your life can run on. You gotta learn to make failure your fuel. You know her? See More. Digital Literacy Across Disciplines Dancers research the data of movement.

Learn More. Conscious Consumption. A Family Affair. Senior PoV Thesis projects showcase students' creative visions. Find your inspiration. Podcasting in French Laurie Postlewate, senior lecturer in French, guides students through a comprehensive understanding of the language in this advanced course.

Theatre Traditions in the Global Context Through workshops and independent projects, professor Shayoni Mitra immerses her students in six international styles of theatre. Get into the Act. American Monument Cultures Art history professor Elizabeth Hutchinson helps students explore the significance of monuments throughout history, using digital humanities platforms to engage with the cultural and political power of public structures.

Learn the stories behind the statues. Computational Text Analysis In this course, computer science professor Adam Poliak teaches students the skills needed to answer their biggest research questions. Dive into the data. Commune with nature. Understand your vision. Karen I.



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