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The master mason is dead; long live the master mason. Lizzy Mansfield's comedy takes us back to the golden age of cathedral building and the moment humble stonemason Bill Mason gets the call. When the Bishop asks, you don't say no. But is he the one really calling the shots?Bill ..... Edward Hogg Penelope ..... Laura Elphinstone Eliza ..... Kathryn Drysdale Bishop ..... Michael Bertenshaw Messenger ...... Aaron Gelkoff Tom Farmer ..... John LightbodySound Designer ... Peter Ringrose Production Coordinator ..... Jenny MendezDirected by Toby SwiftA BBC Studios Audio production for BBC Radio 4
Sue and Brian Mason spent 20 years on super yachts based out of Florida. Their adventures took them to many places including Cuba.
Lords: * Will * Chris Topics: * Canoes * Blowing soap bubbles with your hands, making cricket noises, "party tricks" * nissan.com * Nothing Is Too Small Not To Be Wondered About, by Mary Oliver * https://thevalueofsparrows.wordpress.com/2017/05/20/poetry-nothing-is-too-small-not-to-be-wondered-about-by-mary-oliver/ * Would zombies try to hide the fact that they were zombies? * Magic Microtopics: * Soda Drinker Pro for the Nintendo Entertainment System. * Finding someone to port your game to NES via LinkedIn. * The Vivian Clark Experience. * Making certain contortions slightly easier. * Rock climbing. (Not a topic.) * The Phantom Lapboard. * The Only Viable Product. (OVP.) * What if you could mouse and keyboard on the couch? * Growing up in a canoe family. * Paddling vs. rowing. * Carbon fiber paddles for canoe racing. * Waterwalker by Bill Mason. * Your favorite memories of a kayak. * Waking up in your kayak to see a snapping turtle staring at you. * Floating up and wiggling all over the place. * Kayaking to lunch from your office. * Living in a ski cabin and your office is at the bottom of the mountain. * Living at a Lagrange point and your office is at the bottom of the zipline. * Boston Unity Knights. * Doing a game jam every month for four years. * Knowing enough people in your field that you no longer need to network. * Five really worthy zero-hour games. * Making a therapeutic horror game. * Going to a terrifying party in an abandoned train tunnel and finding a burned-out police car. * Questionable poisonous air filled with unknown tunnel organisms. * Doing mouth stuff in VR. * Making the soda line up with your mouth. * The Ferris Bueller water drop noise. * The thing where you play a blade of grass like a reed instrument. * Cheek-flapping noises. * Magic tricks vs. Party Tricks. * Inhaler magic. * Twenty levels of spinning pens. * A different horrible knife game. * A game about chopping off fingers named "Chop the Finger." * Shooting arrows in the air while your friend run away. * The keyboard shortcut for finding someone to port your game to NES. * A web site where you endorse people as thought leaders. * Entering the LinkedIn cheat code on Xbox 360. * Porting your video game to a robotic arm. * Making it move when you think about it. * Uzi Nissan v. Nissan Motors. * It can happen to you or someone you know! * Picturing conceptual rabbit holes in your head. * Sylvester Stallone's Mom's web site. * Sylvester Stallone's mom doing palm readings of your ass. * All our favorite apps, such as buffalo wings and boneless spare ribs. * Thinking about a cricket's interiority. * Putting some nature in your poem. * Using cricket noises to tell what temperature it is. * Having the same number of wings you've always had. * Do any bugs make a plan. * Leaving "I gave up" pheromones * Leaving a map of a physical space in the space. * Sizable ants. * Fewer scorpions than you'd expect. * Putting a bug into your awareness. * Pseudoscorpions hanging out on old stuff. * Little guys in random places very occasionally. * Zombies going to Whole Foods. * Going quiescent until a dude walks by with a tasty-looking scalp. * Painting a brain on your helmet to fool the zombies. * A short-hair wig taped to your grandfather's basketball. * Dropping your scalp like a lizard tail and the zombie shakes your scalp back and forth in its teeth. * An analyst commissioned by a think tank to write a book explicating how to deal with the zombie apocalypse. * Sound Reading Trainer. * Having a bunch of magic props that you never show anyone how to use. * The casino OJ got arrested at. * Tommy Wonder. * Reviewing a product on YouTube without ever showing it or saying what it does. * How stage hypnosis works.
Spurs Chat: Discussing all Things Tottenham Hotspur: Hosted by Chris Cowlin: The Daily Tottenham/Spurs Podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A special episode from our friends at the Discover Library and Archives Canada podcast - Bill Mason: Wilderness Artist. If you enjoyed our ReCollections episode Grosse-Île: The Quarantine Island, check out their The Shamrock and the Fleur-de-Lys episode to learn more about Irish immigration to Québec. Bill Mason's films: Pukaskwa National Park and Paddle to the Sea. Plan a visit to Pukaskwa National Park in Ontario. Discover Library and Archives Canada podcast is available wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe for lots more stories about the treasures in their collection.
The guest is Bill Mason, head coach of Men's lacrosse at Bowdoin College. He looks back on his team's remarkable 18-3 season a year ago and previews what's next,
In this podcast, Jamie talks to Bowdoin Head Coach Bill Mason about his lacrosse journey, Bowdoin's historic 2022 season, setting the bar high, playing fast, his philosophies on both sides of the ball, developing players, and what he is looking for in recruits.
In this podcast, Jamie talks to Bowdoin Head Coach Bill Mason about his lacrosse journey, Bowdoin's historic 2022 season, setting the bar high, playing fast, his philosophies on both sides of the ball, developing players, and what he is looking for in recruits.
Mrs. Joyce A. Russell called Bill Mason with the following information. “Aged 82 years old at the time, she claimed that in the year 1927 or 1928 while living on a farm in the area of Marchand Manitoba, 8 to 10 miles east of town, her father shot and killed a strange creature. She said that it was about 5 1/2 feet tall, with a "fat" belly and long arms. It was covered in long,"oily" hair. ( She said she remembered how it, the hair, felt !) Its eyes were all black, with no white showing which she found odd. She said that she remembered this creature hanging around the farm for a long time that summer, and her father was afraid for the family cow, so he finally shot the creature. She remembered that her two brothers and her father went and buried the creature in the bush behind the farm in the area they buried trash etc. She tagged along being youngChris L Murphy -https://www.hancockhouse.com/products/the-murphy-collectionWebsite - https://www.sasquatchcanada.com/
Découvrez Bibliothèque et Archives Canada : votre histoire, votre patrimoine documentaire
Toute sa vie, Bill Mason a combiné ses passions pour la nature sauvage et pour l'art, créant de magnifiques œuvres inspirées par la nature. Dans cet épisode, nous discuterons de la vie et de l'héritage de Bill Mason avec l'aide de trois membres de sa famille : son épouse Joyce et leurs deux enfants, Becky et Paul. L'archiviste de BAC Jill Delaney se joindra également à nous pour parler de l'immense œuvre de Bill Mason et discuter de la vaste collection dont la famille a fait don à Bibliothèque et Archives Canada en 2016.
Discover Library and Archives Canada: Your History, Your Documentary Heritage
Passionate about nature and art, Bill Mason spent his whole life combining his two passions and creating beautiful, nature-inspired artworks. On today's episode, we will discuss Bill Mason's life and legacy with the help of three members of the Mason family: his wife, Joyce, and his two children, Becky and Paul. LAC archivist Jill Delaney will also join us to highlight Bill Mason's amazing body of work and discuss the vast collection of items that the family donated to Library and Archives Canada in 2016.
Are Mike DeWine and his colleagues pushing Ohio into a constitutional crisis over gerrymandering? See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
M. Barnett Lawley Forever Wild Field Trial Area farm manager (38 Years) Mr. Bill Mason talks about his career taking care of the 3000+ acre ranch and how he was involved with not only the hunting, fishing and birding but was host to some of the biggest national field trial and sporting dog events in the nation. https://www.alabamaforeverwild.com/m-barnett-lawley-forever-wild-field-trial-area The first ever Lake Millers Ferry Catfish Jugging Jackpot Tournament was a huge success and the outdoor reporters talk about it and what to expect if you are coming hunting , fishing or camping this weekend on the TCUB Huntin' & Fishin' Report. https://www.selmasun.com/news/state-s-first-jugging-tournament-in-camden-hooks-more-anglers-than-expected/article_7d2a94a4-77af-11ec-b581-1b8cc48373d6.html Brutally cold forecast for this weekend on the CNB detailed weather.
He showed up unannounced in the prosecutor's office to do it, and he was communicating with Budish at the time See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
CONTENT/TRIGGER WARNING: This episode talks about suicide, violent death and racism. Listener discretion is advised. This episode details the stories of Kevin Carter, Ken Oosterbroeck, Bill Mason, Alan Berg, "Peppino" Impastato, and Phillipa Schuyler. A special thanks to Evelyn (she/her), Macy (they/them) and Kaitlin (she/her) for their commentary. Intro and outro music is Petenera performed by Oscar Cantua (he/him). Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @AZ_Podcast.
For over 25 years Bill Mason has mentored people to help them break through the obstacles that seem to be holding them back. Bill says, "Life's too short to be unhappy, unsure, or unfulfilled". As a Transformational Coach, Bill will help you learn and develop better ways to handle the issues that are standing in the way of your goals. Get in touch today to see what I can do for you. As a Leadership Coach, Bill trains you with complete confidence, through direct and powerful questions that engage and energize clients, using exciting and vivid descriptions, that turn ideas into concrete actions with contagious enthusiasm. If you want to find your true self, understand who people are and live an abundant life; Bill can help you understand you who are and put you on a path towards discovering those important things! bill@rocketfuelcoach.com, 850-855-3430
Breaking news from DC as sources say Trump has selected Judge Amy Barrett to fill RBG's seat on the Supreme Court. Fresno State Bulldog Football could be back! Fresno rallies to help an 80 yo tamale vendor who was robbed. Kim Dildine of the Central California Food Bank joins us with an update of the efforts to raise $500k in the Feeding Families Fund Drive. Fri 9/25: Hour 2 Photo by Bill Mason (https://unsplash.com/@billmasoncoaching?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText) on Unsplash (https://unsplash.com/s/photos/supreme-court?utm_source=unsplash&utm_medium=referral&utm_content=creditCopyText)
This week for Spin Us A Yarn, Mel's dad Bill Mason guest stars (against his will) to tell us all about the time he lived next door to an Aussie rock icon.Want to submit your yarn? email thezestishistory@gmail.com with "Spin Us A Yarn" as the subject line! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In the retrial of Jeremy Hall, the parents of Tim Bosma have been present to support the mother of the victim, Bill Mason. Guest: Susan Clairmont. Columnist, Hamilton Spec Interview from July 14th, 2020
Martin has coached in UK, Ireland and Canada, a specialist in mens sweep he won Olympic Gold in Sydney 2000. We talk leadership, governance and good coaching. Timestamps to the show 03:00 Background in rowing 05:30 from Imperial College in 1995 where Bill Mason was coaching GB womens 8 09:30 How does junior rowing need to change to support rowing up to its Olympic peak? Do junior medalist become senior medalists? 18:00 Age group rowing and making ability the decider for crew selection 22:00 Year 12 is the finale of school and this year there's no Canadian Henley so they join clubs 24:30 Comparison between UK, Ireland and Canada for their international rowing system. 30:00 What you need in sport - at lower levels people putting things in place to catalyse action 35:00 Sanita Puspure's development as an athlete 39:00 My 1997 life lesson in understanding athlete resilience and injury to survive the training. 45:00 The expectation set by Governance in rowing is critical. Rowing suffers from homophilia - recruiting in your own likeness. e.g. no debrief after the Olympics is poor governance and poor leadership 52:00 Was the technique you coached at ICBC different from Billy Mason's Janousek inspired technique? Harry Mahon helped me take the coaching to another level. 56:30 How did you teach the harmony with the boat? Power wasn't the solution - you need efficiency too. 1:00:00 Jurgen Grobler's programme made the guys strong. After Cologne World Champs I spoke to Thor Nilsson and Jurgen and the power wasn't yet right. We assessed recovery and how to time the training sessions. 1:04:00 Bert Cocu asked are there countries with their own rowing style? When you rate over 28 all the crews start to look the same 1:10:00 How to blend styles to make a national rowing technique 1:13:00 Robin Williams said the best way to row is to be in a boat with better athletes. The second best way is to be side by side with a better crew. The third best way is to coach. 1:11:00 I just want people to enjoy moving the boat.
Becky Mason talks about growing up in and around canoes, and in a Canadian wilderness environment. She also shares what it was like having legendary Canadian filmmaker, Bill Mason as her father. Becky reminisces over the many canoe trips the family would take each summer, and from those experiences, how much she is grateful to have had the unique opportunity to do so.The Camping Show Radio Show is broadcast live at 3pm ET Fridays on W4CY Radio (www.w4cy.com) part ofTalk 4 Radio (www.talk4radio.com) on theTalk 4 Media Network (www.talk4media.com). Thispodcast is also available on Talk 4 Podcasting (www.talk4podcasting.com).
Bill Mason var einn færasti þjófur sem uppi hefur verið. Hann komst upp með hvert ránið á fætur öðru og hagnaðist gríðarlega. Bill rændi aðeins þá ríku, þar sem hann ólst upp við fátækt og vissi hvernig var að vera í þeirri stöðu.
There’s a certain magic that unfolds on a first trip to the Boundary Waters. Memories are made, experience gained, and often the trip ends with some stating the following: “When do we get to come back?” In episode 21 of the WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast, we hear from Minnesota resident Sarah Kermode and her friend Joe Schille, who is also from the land of 10,000 lakes. Sarah and her husband Andy took the lead on a summer trip in 2019 with four of their friends, including Joe, who was making his first trip. We hear about their trip that started at an entry point off of the Gunflint Trail. To kick things off on this episode, however, new Boundary Waters Podcast Host Chelsea Lloyd shares an interview with well-known (who are we kidding… famous!) paddler Becky Mason. Becky is an artist, canoe instructor and the daughter of paddling legend Bill Mason. Chelsea traveled across Canada to interview Becky for this episode, and it was well worth the journey to hear from this paddling icon, literally at her kitchen table. It’s September in the Boundary Waters! Bring on the new season…
Ted Schubel travels to 509 Jackson Street to talk with Bill Mason.
“all the enthusiasm of a man fresh from the fogs of Baker Street.” [COPP] There are a handful of names in the pantheon of Sherlockians that are legendary: Morley. Bell. Smith. Starrett. Baring-Gould. And Shaw. For as much as John Bennett Shaw influenced modern-day Sherlockians, we haven't spent much time discussing him or his impact. Fortunately, Jim Hawkins does just that. And he does it in a most wonderful way, both in this interview and more comprehensively on the website that he created. Explore with us how Jim first became aware of Shaw and how he managed to find his way into that legendary library in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It's a journey that includes a group as eclectic and wonderful as the Norman Nerudas, the oil fields of Oklahoma, a funeral home, and much more. We also have another installment of "As We Go to Press" with Mattias Boström, co-editor of the series. Try your hand at the latest Canonical Couplet quiz, see if you can figure out the story we're referring to, and you might win a prize. Please do consider becoming a . Your support helps us to ensure we can keep doing what we do, covering file hosting costs, production, and this year, transcription services. Sponsors We're proud to feature as our lead sponsor. They've been with us for nearly the entire run. Please visit their site and let them know you found them via I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere. We have room for more than one sponsor. If you're interested in advertising with us, you can find . Let's chat! Links This episode: : Collector, Mentor, Humorist, Friend (Facebook Group) Previous episodes mentioned: (Tim Johnson) (Norwegian Explorers' conference) (Bill Mason) (Ray Betzner) Many more links, articles and images are available in our Flipboard magazine at as well as through our accounts on , , and . Please subscribe on the podcast provider of your choosing: , , , , , or — or perhaps another we haven't listed here — and be kind enough to leave a rating and review for the show. And please tell a friend about us, in any fashion you feel comfortable. Your thoughts on the show? Leave a comment below, send us an email (comment AT ihearofsherlock DOT com), call us at (774) 221-READ (7323). Transcript We're still looking for your help to reach (we're currently at $90 per episode—we're so close!). That will allow us to fund transcripts of every episode. But we do need you to pitch in — please consider supporting us via or for any amount to make this process sustainable! --
Bill Mason as Cuyahoga County’s chief of staff and whether Cuyahoga County should elect a sheriff are the big-thought topics that lead off the latest episode of This Week in the CLE, the podcast discussion of the news by reporters and editors at cleveland.com. Reporter Bob Higgs covered the stories for the vacationing Courtney Astolfi and explains County Executive Armond Budish’s choice of Mason. He also explains the early thinking on the move to overturn part of the county charter voters approved a decade ago, to return to an elected sheriff. Politics editor Jane Kahoun takes us though the labyrinth of the state budget, with the latest version by the state Senate restoring a tax cut for businesses. Data guru Rich Exner explains the gyrations going on in Columbus about proposed tax cuts. Jane also provides details of an effort to bring common sense regulations to gun sales and talks about how House Speaker Larry Householder is being received, six months into his latest term. Reporter Adam Ferrise helps sort through Gov. Mike DeWine’s sudden interest in the Cuyahoga County Jail controversy. Reporter Leila Atassi hails MetroHealth Systems CEO AKram Boutros City Club speech, in which he called on Greater Cleveland to embrace the Open Table mentorship model of helping people in need. Reporter Emily Bamforth covers the Greater Cleveland Partnership’s ongoing study to find Northeast Ohio’s best bet at expanding its innovation economy as well at the GCP’s stance against Cuyahoga County’s ban on plastic bags. Rich and reporter Mary Kilpatrick provide the latest information on the earthquake that had some people shaking. Bob talks about how the huge mural in the Cleveland City Hall council chamber fails to reflect modern-day Cleveland and how one council member wants to change that. He also talks about a new place to stay for family members of patients in Cleveland’s veterans hospital. Columnist Mark Naymik provides the latest in a long line of updates on the spending habits of City Councilman Ken Johnson. And Special Projects Editor – and Rockthelake.com coordinator – Laura Johnston talks with Emily about why we are celebrating the river fire that brought disgrace to Cleveland 50 years ago. New episodes are published Thursday evenings, so you can listen on your Friday morning commute. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
James Raffan has a long and impressive resume, but if you were to boil it down to a couple of words, you might describe him as a canoe evangelist. Using the canoe as his portal, the Guelph, Ontario native has studied this nation, and especially the far north and it's people as a journalist and professor at Queen’s University. His documentaries have aired on the CBC, the National Geographic and the Discovery channels. His best selling books have included Fire in the Bones, the biography of Canadian canoeing icon Bill Mason, and Emperor of the North, about Sir George Simpson, the legendary 19th century Hudson’s Bay Company governor, as well chronicling his own adventures, such as circumnavigating the globe by following the Arctic Circle.
“the name is familiar to me” [SPEC] The parodies of Sherlock Holmes began almost as soon as the short stories began appearing in The Strand Magazine. And parody plots required parody names. Bill Mason, BSI ("White Mason") began keeping a log of the silly iterations and manifestations of Sherlock Holmes's name over the years and has turned it into a book, A Holmes By Any Other Name. But more than a cataloging of names, it's a story about how Sherlock Holmes was been inextricably woven into the fabric of popular culture over a century or more. We also touch on Pursuing Sherlock Holmes, Bill's other Sherlockian book — evidence of his polymath personality — as well as the Fresh Rashers, a rather intriguing and fun group. We also have another installment of "As We Go to Press" with Mattias Boström, co-editor of the Sherlock Holmes and Conan Doyle in the Newspapers series. Try your hand at the latest Canonical Couplet quiz, see if you can figure out the story we're referring to, and you might win a prize. Listen closely because we have a bonus contest embedded within Bill's interview as well. Information on sponsors, links, and notes available below. Please do consider becoming a . Your support helps us to ensure we can keep doing what we do, covering file hosting costs, production, and this year, transcription services. Sponsors We're proud to feature as our lead sponsor. They've been with us for nearly the entire run. Please visit their site and let them know you found them via I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere. Be sure to sign up for and the viewing of The Art of Sherlock Holmes on May 25th. We have room for more than one sponsor. If you're interested in advertising with us, you can find . Let's chat! Links This episode: (Wildside Press) (Xlibris) (the Minnesota conference) with Shannon Carlisle "" by Vincent Starrett "" by William Schweikert Many more links, articles and images are available in our Flipboard magazine at as well as through our accounts on , , and . Please subscribe on the podcast provider of your choosing: , , , , , or — or perhaps another we haven't listed here — and be kind enough to leave a rating and review for the show. And please tell a friend about us, in any fashion you feel comfortable. Your thoughts on the show? Leave a comment below, send us an email (comment AT ihearofsherlock DOT com), call us at (774) 221-READ (7323).
Cliff Jacobson wrote 'Canoeing Wild Rivers' which was a HUGE influence on me as an outdoorsman (the other two cornerstone books were 'Path of the Paddle' by Bill Mason and 'The Complete Walker' by Colin Fletcher). Cliff has spent decades paddling dangerous rivers in the remote corners of North America and Northern Europe and has some incredibly important lessons to share about mindset, teamwork and risk management. I'm thrilled that we had the opportunity to get him on the podcast. And if you are even thinking about paddling in the wild then buy his damn book - it's a goldmine of information!! https://www.amazon.com/Canoeing-Wild-Rivers-Anniversary-Expedition/dp/1493008250/
Everybody has a talent. For Bill Mason, his just happened to be burglary. Targeting the rich and famous, he didn't do it for the money. He did it just to knock them down a notch. Music by:Swelling"Night II"Meydan"Insomnia Pt. 1"SoundCrate"Squad"SoundCrate"Shady Dealings"This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.Sources:"Confessions of a Master Jewel Thief" by Bill Masonhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Mason_(jewel_thief)http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/05/03/1083436526452.html?from=storylhshttp://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0309/01/se.15.html
Everybody has a talent. For Bill Mason, his just happened to be burglary. Targeting the rich and famous, he didn't do it for the money. He did it just to knock them down a notch. Music by:Swelling"Night II"Meydan"Insomnia Pt. 1"SoundCrate"Squad"SoundCrate"Shady Dealings"This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.Sources:"Confessions of a Master Jewel Thief" by Bill Masonhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Mason_(jewel_thief)http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2004/05/03/1083436526452.html?from=storylhshttp://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0309/01/se.15.html
Episode 125 ~ July 5, 2018 Podcast Info / Topics Pimachiowin Aki is now a UNESCO World Heritage site If you have never been on a fly-in canoe trip, DO IT!!! Yukon Journey Update #5 ~ 10 things I have learned in Dawson We get some fan mail and wonder if we take Bill Mason […]
Episode 125 ~ July 5, 2018 Podcast Info / Topics Pimachiowin Aki is now a UNESCO World Heritage site If you have never been on a fly-in canoe trip, DO IT!!! Yukon Journey Update #5 ~ 10 things I have learned in Dawson We get some fan mail and wonder if we take Bill Mason […]
On this episode, Eric and Paul speak to Bill Mason of Bills Sports Cards & Memorabilia in Philly about his shop that he's been running for 20 plus years. He breaks down moving off his shelves and why he's a Rams fan in the city of brotherly love. In our feature interview, Rob Smith sits down in the studio to talk about The Collectible Card Club and what his goals are for this new subscription box and the hobby. Oh. he's also our new sponsor so we have lots to get into there and what that will mean for our listeners. All that, plus new products and pricing, the all-new Fat Packs Poll, and much more, on this edition of, The Fat Packs Podcast.
James Raffan, scholar, outdoorsman and celebrated Canadian author joins me to discuss adventure, risk, failure, teaching, wilderness journeying, lifelong learning, personal development, human potential and journal keeping, along with characters such as Kirk Whipper, Bill Mason and Sir George Simpson of the Hudson's Bay Company...
Episode 7, Part One: Ohio v. Murder (Sam Sheppard): Alex explores all sides of the "Trial of the Century" in the Buckeye State, the murder trials of Sam Sheppard in 1954 and 1966. The murder that inspired "The Fugitive" is examined. In this two-part, true crime episode we ask the listeners to tell us, whodunit? Alex interviews Bill Mason, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor and author of "Dr. Sam Sheppard on Trial". Is Sam innocent of killing his wife, Marilyn? Email us at ohiovtheworld@gmail.com or hit us up on Facebook to tell us who you think did it.
Episode 7, Part Two: Ohio v. Murder (Sam Sheppard): We go full Law & Order to wrap up the case of the "The Fugitive" Sam Sheppard. Alex interviews Bill Mason, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor, about his 2000 civil trial for wrongful imprisonment of Sam Sheppard. Is Sam innocent of killing his wife, Marilyn? Email us at ohiovtheworld@gmail.com or hit us up on Facebook to tell us who you think did it.
CBS Radio Workshop - Broadcast from 1936 through to 1947 with just an occasional break. Revived again from January 1956 to September 1957 as CBS Radio Workshop with pretty much the same format. Broadcast from 1936 through to 1947 with just an occasional break. Revived again from January 1956 to September 1957 as CBS Radio Workshop with pretty much the same format. This was drama with a difference. Columbia Workshop was not everybody’s cup of tea and in terms of audience popularity it was always noted that it was never a strong contender for the title “Radios Top Rated Drama Series” and yet it was always considered to be the drama program that led the way in radio standards. Columbia was the first to mexperiment with what radio drama was all about, introducing new techniques never before used in over the airwaves drama and because it received little encouragement from established writers, actors, etc., it was only by breaking new ground with new ideas and new techniques from writers who were not versed in the old ways that it was going to survive. THIS EPISODE:September 1, 1957. CBS network origination, AFRTS rebroadcast. "Grief Drives A Black Sedan". A motorist has hit someone on a dark road, and has kept on driving. AFRTS rebroadcast name: "Mystery Theatre." Alice Frost, Jay Johnson, Larry Haines, Lee Vines, Ralph Bell, Bill Mason. 25 minutes.
Bill Mason from EntpriseDB talks with Novell Open Audio about PostgreSQL the powerfull open source database.