Chickpea Crust Pizza
Posted by Ben Tiffany onFriday night is pizza night. Stay true to your diet by creating this easy chickpea pizza recipe. Level: Easy Prep Time: 10-15 min Cooking Time: 40 min Serves: 4 People Ingredients: Tomato Sauce: 8 oz...
Thank-ing Outside the Box
Posted by Mark Dowd onGiving Thanks & Well-being, It’s Scientific!
Posted by Mark Dowd on104 Evidence Based Benefits of Yoga: Why You Should Do Yoga
Posted by Whitney Goldman onI soon realized was that this ancient practice did more good than what we give it credit for. When I began, I thought it was all about the stretching and poses.
But, I found out it’s much, much more.
Science confirms what many yogis have been telling us all along.
Yoga is good for you.
Women's Month: 6 Women Behind the Science of Wellness
Posted by Whitney Goldman onBut it turns out that Franklin would not have been eligible for the prize—she had passed away four years before Watson, Crick, and Wilkins received the prize, and the Nobel is never awarded posthumously. But even if she had been alive, she may still have been overlooked. Like many women scientists, Franklin was robbed of recognition throughout her career. She was not the first woman to have endured indignities in the male-dominated world of science, but Franklin's case is especially egregious, said Ruth Lewin Sime, a retired chemistry professor at Sacramento City College who has written on women in science.
Over the centuries, female researchers have had to work as "volunteer" faculty members, seen credit for significant discoveries they've made assigned to male colleagues, and been written out of textbooks.