Podcast appearances and mentions of carl schurz park

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Best podcasts about carl schurz park

Latest podcast episodes about carl schurz park

Stage Whisper
Whisper in the Wings Episode 509

Stage Whisper

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 36:57


On the latest Whisper in the Wings from Stage Whisper, we welcomed on founding artistic director, Stephen Burdman, of New York Classical Theatre. They are celebrating their 25th anniversary with a new production of Henry IV. This was such a fantastic show and organization to learn about, and it's even more exciting with it being the only production of Shakespeare in Central Park this year. So, make sure you tune in, and turn out for this wonderful company and show!New York Classical Theatre PresentsHenry IVJune 11th-July 14tth@ Central Park, Carl Schurz Park, and Battery ParkMore information are available at nyclassical.orgAnd be sure to follow NY Classical Theatre to stay up to date on all their upcoming projects and productions:nyclassical.org

Desperately Seeking the '80s: NY Edition
Riot in the Park + Quiet in the Park

Desperately Seeking the '80s: NY Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 35:58


Meg visits Tompkins Square Park to find its denizens and the NYPD in a battle royale. Jessica searches for inner peace at Strawberry Fields.

Our House
14. A gifted speaker grabs the bullhorn

Our House

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2020 25:00


Justin Maffett is a lawyer and activist living in Yorkville on the Upper East Side of New York. Here's his story of growing up as a Black kid in predominantly white spaces, becoming an activist, and how a protest in his local community helped him find his voice in the recent and ongoing Black Lives Matter demonstrations following the horrific police murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. ***BLACK LIVES MATTER - TAKE ACTION!*** Get a list of NEXT STEPS and RESOURCES below this episode on our website: https://arthumanityaction.com/ep-14-justin-maffett -- OUR HOUSE Credits: Speech audio from Carl Schurz Park via @ justinmaffett on Instagram. Production and editing by Jeff Rose. Music by Audioblocks. Hosted by Nicole Ferraro.

The Update with Brandon Julien
The Update OTR (Carl Schurz Park)- April 7th

The Update with Brandon Julien

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 36:38


From New York, the greatest city in the world, it's The Update with Brandon Julien! Today's road stop is over at Carl Schurz Park near Gracie Mansion where Mayor of New York City lives. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brandon-julien/support

Student of the Gun Radio
SOTG 939 - Govt Admits Tracking your Mobile Phone and Water Purification

Student of the Gun Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 55:37


Do our inalienable rights, as codified by the Bill of Rights, end when the government declares a crisis or emergency? If the US Constitution can be ignored because of a “state of emergency”, then why even have a Constitution? We have good news from the State of Idaho. The Idaho Governor has signed a new bill expanding Constitutional Carry in that state. How does this example apply to the rest of the nation?  We have a Warrior of the Week question. What is more important right now, gear or training? Professor Paul is happy to address that question in detail  Thanks for being a part of SOTG! We hope you find value in the message we share. If you’ve got any questions, here are some options to contact us: Send an Email Send a Text Call Us Enjoy the show! And remember…You’re a Beginner Once, a Student For Life! Topics Covered During This Episode: We have another new setup today! Brownells Bullet Points - brownells.com TOPIC: Replacement Filters for LifeStraw & Other Water Filtration Replacement Filters for LifeStraw www.brownells.com/emergency-survival-gear How to Manually Filter Water www.h2odistributors.com Bleach purification https://www.cdc.gov/healthywater Huge thanks to our Partners: Brownells | Century Arms | Crossbreed | Duracoat | SWAT Fuel DuraCoat Badass Challenge: www.studentofthegun.com/news SOTG Homeroom brought to you by Crossbreed Holsters TOPIC: More Important Now than Ever - Dangerous on Demand Inmates Released to Protect Against Covid-19 Already Committing Murder www.gunsamerica.com L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti Admits Using Cell Phone Tracking to Monitor Coronavirus Compliance theconservativetreehouse.com NYPD Releases Orwellian Video of Drones Spying on Citizens to Enforce Social Distancing thefreethoughtproject.com New York City has released 900 inmates in response to coronavirus pandemic thehill.com VIDEOS: https://youtu.be/YSg4UXWwiwY?t=3s https://youtu.be/DVLStumDzOE FEATURING: Guns America, The Conservative Treehouse, The Free Thought Project, The Hill, Brownells, Crossbreed Holsters, Madison Rising, Jarrad Markel, Paul G. Markel, SOTG University PARTNERS: Brownells Inc, Crossbreed Holsters, Century Arms, SWAT Fuel, DuraCoat Firearm Finishes FIND US ON: United Gun Group, iHeart Radio, Apple TV, Roku, Amazon, iTunes, Stitcher Radio, Google Play, YouTube, Full 30, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, tumblr SOURCES From www.gunsamerica.com: Inmates across the country who were released to protect prison populations from COVID-19 are already committing crimes in their local communities, including at least one former inmate who admitted to stabbing a man to death just four days after his release. Jacob Burnett was released in Louisville, KY, two days into his two-year sentence for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Four days after being released, he admitted to stabbing and killing a 60-year-old man in a subdivision just east of the city, according to local media. Another Louisville inmate, Kenneth Walker, was released to “home incarceration” even though he was accused of shooting local officer John Mattingly on March 13th. Corrections FOP Spokesperson Tracy Dotson told the media that his lodge has denounced Walker’s release. (Click Here for Full Article)   From thefreethoughtproject.com: In a matter of weeks, Americans have watched a police state unfold in front of their eyes. The phrase “that could never happen here” has taken a back seat to “omg what will they do next." Well, next up on the “holy sh*t we have reached 1984 status” list is the fact that residents in New York and California are now being monitored by drones — and officials are bragging about it. On Thursday, Police Commissioner Dermot Shea posted a video to Twitter of some of the aerial footage over multiple locations throughout the city of New York, including Carl Schurz Park, Inwood Hill Park and Juniper Valley Park. (Click Here for Full Article)   From thehill.com/homenews: New York City has released 900 inmates to avoid the risk of coronavirus spreading in the city's jails, Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) said Tuesday. De Blasio made the announcement at a press briefing while reporting that a second member of New York City's corrections department had died from the disease. The mayor added that corrections officers remain "resolute" in their efforts to keep themselves and inmates safe from the virus even as city officials have reported dozens of inmates under quarantine around the city. (Click Here for Full Article)

NEW YORK-PODDEN
#72: Parkhäng på Upper East Side

NEW YORK-PODDEN

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2018 28:12


New York-podden grottar ner sig i New Yorks oaser, dess många parker.

NEW YORK-PODDEN
#71: I svalkan på New York Public Library

NEW YORK-PODDEN

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2018 23:27


New York-podden besöker New Yorks vackraste bibliotek där de svalkar sig och snackar om sommarhettan. Här ligger New York Public Library:

New Books in History
Mason B. Williams, “City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York” (W.W. Norton, 2013)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2014 57:17


“Today, many New Yorkers take the FDR to get to La Guardia,” Mason B. Williams jokes in the opening line of his new book City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York (W.W. Norton, 2013) . And, depending on where they start, they pass any number of vital, iconic features in Gotham’s landscape that were built thanks to both men: Carl Schurz Park, the Triborough Bridge, Randall Island’s Stadium, the Astoria Pool, the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, William Cullen Bryant High School, the Queensbridge Houses, etc. These public works are the physical legacy of the New Deal, and the legendary partnership between the city’s famous mayor, Fiorella La Guardia, and the state’s former Governor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, during the latter’s presidency. That heritage stands everywhere around us, not just in New York but all over the country. Yet, as Williams notes, the history of this paradoxically productive era in America’s past (a stark contrast to politics in the Great Recession) has been “obscured in turns by ideology and neglect.” City of Ambition tells that story with sophistication and verve. It is difficult for any scholar, particularly a junior one, to say something interesting about the New Deal, the Big Bang in modern American political history. But Williams uses this quasi dual-biographical approach to make a point we sometimes forget: that federalism, so often the Achilles heel of reform in the United States, actually lay at the heart of this seminal moment. Washington lacked the operational capacity to administer large-scale programs, and so relied heavily upon municipal governments. Far from a zero-sum game, the growth of federal power “enabled local action.” Heavily researched, ambitiously broad, and finely written, Williams’s book explores a number of other local and national themes, as well. Read and enjoy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Mason B. Williams, “City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York” (W.W. Norton, 2013)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2014 57:17


“Today, many New Yorkers take the FDR to get to La Guardia,” Mason B. Williams jokes in the opening line of his new book City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York (W.W. Norton, 2013) . And, depending on where they start, they pass any number of vital, iconic features in Gotham’s landscape that were built thanks to both men: Carl Schurz Park, the Triborough Bridge, Randall Island’s Stadium, the Astoria Pool, the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, William Cullen Bryant High School, the Queensbridge Houses, etc. These public works are the physical legacy of the New Deal, and the legendary partnership between the city’s famous mayor, Fiorella La Guardia, and the state’s former Governor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, during the latter’s presidency. That heritage stands everywhere around us, not just in New York but all over the country. Yet, as Williams notes, the history of this paradoxically productive era in America’s past (a stark contrast to politics in the Great Recession) has been “obscured in turns by ideology and neglect.” City of Ambition tells that story with sophistication and verve. It is difficult for any scholar, particularly a junior one, to say something interesting about the New Deal, the Big Bang in modern American political history. But Williams uses this quasi dual-biographical approach to make a point we sometimes forget: that federalism, so often the Achilles heel of reform in the United States, actually lay at the heart of this seminal moment. Washington lacked the operational capacity to administer large-scale programs, and so relied heavily upon municipal governments. Far from a zero-sum game, the growth of federal power “enabled local action.” Heavily researched, ambitiously broad, and finely written, Williams’s book explores a number of other local and national themes, as well. Read and enjoy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Mason B. Williams, “City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York” (W.W. Norton, 2013)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2014 57:17


“Today, many New Yorkers take the FDR to get to La Guardia,” Mason B. Williams jokes in the opening line of his new book City of Ambition: FDR, La Guardia, and the Making of Modern New York (W.W. Norton, 2013) . And, depending on where they start, they pass any number of vital, iconic features in Gotham’s landscape that were built thanks to both men: Carl Schurz Park, the Triborough Bridge, Randall Island’s Stadium, the Astoria Pool, the Queens-Midtown Tunnel, William Cullen Bryant High School, the Queensbridge Houses, etc. These public works are the physical legacy of the New Deal, and the legendary partnership between the city’s famous mayor, Fiorella La Guardia, and the state’s former Governor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, during the latter’s presidency. That heritage stands everywhere around us, not just in New York but all over the country. Yet, as Williams notes, the history of this paradoxically productive era in America’s past (a stark contrast to politics in the Great Recession) has been “obscured in turns by ideology and neglect.” City of Ambition tells that story with sophistication and verve. It is difficult for any scholar, particularly a junior one, to say something interesting about the New Deal, the Big Bang in modern American political history. But Williams uses this quasi dual-biographical approach to make a point we sometimes forget: that federalism, so often the Achilles heel of reform in the United States, actually lay at the heart of this seminal moment. Washington lacked the operational capacity to administer large-scale programs, and so relied heavily upon municipal governments. Far from a zero-sum game, the growth of federal power “enabled local action.” Heavily researched, ambitiously broad, and finely written, Williams’s book explores a number of other local and national themes, as well. Read and enjoy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

German Traces NYC Podcast

On October 2, 1910, crowds gathered at what was then known as the East River Park to mark the 9th annual German day celebration of the United German Societies of New York City. The day’s festivities included orchestral and choral … Continue reading →

Upper East Side Living Videos from Uppereast.com

Carl Schurz Park is an ideal location to take your pet. Join Jake Sasseville as he explores Carl Shurz Park on a recent sunny April afternoon. Download the video podcast of Pet Park.

park carl schurz park