Jan. 19th, 2019

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My walk home last night from Dufferin station through Dovercourt Village was enjoyable, in the chill and the dark.

Looking south down Gladstone #toronto #dovercourtvillage #bloorgladstonelibrary #gladstoneave #night


Walking north up Bartlett #toronto #dovercourtvillage #bartlettavenue #night #lights


Looking east across Dovercourt Park #toronto #dovercourtvillage #dovercourtpark #bartlettavenue #night #lights
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  • Bad Astronomer Phil Plait explains the astounding brilliance of distant quasar J043947.08+163415.7, as bright as ten trillion suns.

  • The Broadside Blog's Caitlin Kelly considers elements of her personal style. (It makes me wonder about revising my own, to be perhaps more flamboyant.)

  • John Quiggin at Crooked Timber links to a Guardian article of his, imagining a democratic socialist Australia in 2050.

  • The Dragon's Tales links to Project Lyra, a proposal for a rendezvous mission to 'Oumuamua.

  • Far Outliers places the Three Gorges Dam construction, and the mass population displacements involved, in the context of a long Chinese history of like relocations.

  • Gizmodo examines a paper suggesting, based in part on lunar impact rates, an increase in the numbers of asteroids colliding with Earth in the era 300 million years ago.

  • JSTOR Daily looks at the watchers, the now-forgotten profession of women who would attend to the dying.

  • The NYR Daily looks at the problems that women encounter in getting their medical concerns taken seriously.

  • Towleroad writes about sex advisor Alexander Cheves.

  • Window on Eurasia notes a report that the inhabitants of the Belarus village of Oslyanka, transferred from Russia in 1964, have no wish to be transferred back.

  • Arnold Zwicky notes the publication of a study of the English auxiliary system begun by his late colleague Ivan Sag.

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  • The TTC needs $C 33.5 billion over the next 15 years to keep going, of which two-thirds is not yet sourced. Ben Spurr reports at the Toronto Star.

  • Urban Toronto notes the demolition of the noteworthy modernist Davisville Junior Public School.

  • blogTO highlights a new basement apartment at 1080 Dupont Street, at $C 1500 a month.

  • Toronto Life notes that E Condos is beset by screams, produced by the interaction of high winds on unfinished exterior fixtures.

  • This NOW Toronto feature by Richard Longley makes the point that Ontario Place needs innovative newness if it is to escape being ravaged by bad planning under Ford; the same old will no longer work.

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  • Hazel McCallion, the nonagenarian former mayor of Mississauga, has been appointed an advisor to the Ford government in Ontario. Global News reports.

  • A Simcoe County that faces a threat of amalgamation under the Ontario provincial government is already composed of communities feeling they lack adequate representation. The Toronto Star reports.

  • CityLab notes how a history of racism complicated efforts to plant new trees in Detroit.

  • Douglas Todd at the Vancouver Sun notes how ethnic tensions in multicultural South Burnaby surfaced in the former Liberal candidate's treatment of NDP leader Jagmeet Singh.

  • The NYR Daily looks at what is going on in and around El Paso as the Mexican-American border facing further closing.

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  • JSTOR Daily notes the extent to which sister-city relationships actually do matter.

  • CityLab looks at how the relationship of British cities with their sister-cities in the EU-27, their "twin towns", will be affected by Brexit.

  • This article at The Conversation makes excellent points about the need for major cities to support local farm economies.

  • Markus Moos at The Conversation suggests that the philosophical stance of existentialism provides useful angles for thinking about climate change in cities.

  • Politico Europe hosts an article justly skeptical of the idea of setting up semi-autonomous trade cities under European supervision in Africa to hold off migrants from that continent.

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  • Motherboard notes that climate change endangers a majority of the coffee species growing in the wild.

  • Universe Today notes that CERN is planning to build a successor to the LHC, one a hundred kilometres in diameter.

  • A review of data from Cassini, Universe Today reports, suggests the probe saw rain fall in the north polar region of Titan.

  • A new analysis suggests that mysterious object in the heart of the galaxy, HCN–0.009–0.044, is actually a black hole massing 32 thousand suns. Universe Today has it.

  • Universe Today shares an ambitious proposal for future humanity to use interstellar probes to seed life on potentially hospitable but lifeless worlds, a planned panspermia.

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  • CBC reports on the discovery of a substantial store of quinoa seeds in an Indigenous archeological site in Brantford, showing the existence of vast trade networks connecting the Andes to Canada.

  • Oil exploration in the Gaspé peninsula, La Presse reports, upsets the Mi'gmag of the Listuguj there.

  • National Observer reports on how the Dzawada'enuxw of British Columbia have filed suit against Canada over fish farm development.

  • Angela DeMontigny is the first Indigenous fashion designer in residence at Ryerson University, CBC reports.

  • Global News reports on how Sharon McIvor, founder of the first healing lodge in the Canadian correction system, says government interference has undermined its nearly completely.

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