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Charlie Eisenhood and Keith Raynor discuss the final weekend of College regionals, the finalized College Nationals qualifiers field and the recently released Top 25 players in the College Division! They then check in with the WUL, PUL, and UFA with some Semi-Pro Small Ball.It is the 20th anniversary of Breakmark and they are celebrating by doing giveaways on Instagram every Friday. When you enter, add code TOP25 this week to get double the entries! That's at @Breakmark on Instagram.Catch Up on the 2025 College season!Check out the Top 25 in the Women's Division!Check out the Top 25 in the Men's Division!Make sure to join the Ultiworld Discord for the Live Deep Look subscribers-only bonus segment, Out the Back! Charlie and Keith simulate a draft of College players to the Pros! Starting directly after the show.
Community Connection Tuesday, September 17th, 2024 Today on Community Connection, it is National Voter Registration Day! Join us for a jampacked first hour of information as we welcome members of the NAACP Youth & College Division for a fresh perspective from the younger generation. Also joining us is Martin University EVP Dr. John Girton with an event to help the community Empower their Vote! Finally, we shift gears and welcome our own Rita Green and Leatrice Riley, CEO & Founder of the Riley Center! Tune in as we discuss their powerful initiative to aid children & families in need! For more information on the Riley Center, visit: trycc.org or Call (317) 297-7078See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
If Jesus were alive today, would he be an activist? In our seventh episode of Jesus' Favorite Podcast, we pose this question to Alexia Dukes, an activist who has experience with cultural diversity training and nonprofit activism work.Alexia currently serves as the President of the Youth and College Division of the St. Louis County National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). She was also Miss NAACP 2018-2019, and she graduated in 2022 from Harris-Stowe State University, where she studied psychology.Our host, Javi Zubizarreta, sat down with Alexia to learn about her story and her understanding and experience with Jesus, as well as her work with the NAACP. Listen to the full episode here or wherever you listen to podcasts. SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube Channel for more!Connect with us on social media! Instagram Threads Facebook Pinterest Visit us at grottonetwork.com/Subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Shortly after Longwood College became fully co-ed, Robert Boyd, Tim White, and company set the tone for Longwood Men's Golf. Arriving in 1977-78, Longwood experienced early success. White was named Division III All-American in 1980 and is the only golfer named to the Longwood Athletic Hall of Fame (2016). In 1982, the Lancers won the College Division of the Virginia Intercollegiate Championship. Robert is retired and lives in Daniel Island, S.C. Tim is the golf pro at Lake Chesdin Golf Club in Chesterfield County.
Chip Patterson, CBS Sports, on the ACC/Big 10/Pac 12/SEC trying to figure things out. What does Chip believe that the deal the Pac-12 proposed is the beginning of the end? Has anything else happened within the Big 10 recently? Chip lists off why said proposal was a bad idea. Will a TV alliance help the Pac-12? And, more importantly, could it help the ACC? What were Chip’s thoughts on the ACC preseason poll and its results? What did he find significant when it comes to FSU?
#SCOTUS finally strikes down affirmative action, an excellent win for the individual American. Government talking heads and media types tell you that it's a sad day in America and that SCOTUS is taking us back to Jim Crow. Nothing could be further from the TRUTH. If you want to begin the process to Stop Discrimination on the Basis of Race then just STOP. Join me today as we listen to an ABC reporter do a pretty fair job questioning Vivek Ramaswamy on the subject. His answers are brilliant and my comments are equally brilliant! The conservative majority of the U.S. Supreme Court has declared race-conscious admissions policies at colleges and universities across the country to be unlawful, effectively ending affirmative action in education. The landmark 6-3 ruling was along ideological lines and strikes down decades of precedent, but stops short of banning legacy admissions and allows military academies to continue using affirmative action. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the first Black woman to serve on the court, assailed the majority's "let-them-eat-cake obliviousness" to questions of racism and equity. We host a roundtable discussion on the ruling and its impact with Wisdom Cole, national director of the NAACP Youth and College Division; Janelle Wong, director of Asian American studies and a professor of American studies and government and politics at the University of Maryland; and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Maria Hinojosa, founder of Futuro Media and host of the Latino USA podcast. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODskHiGCNlQ Jun 29, 2023 #vivekramaswamy #affirmativeaction #scotusABC News' Linsey Davis spoke with GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy about the Supreme Court's decision ending the use of affirmative action in college admissions. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J70qkP1He-0 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/seth-martin0/message
“A More Perfect Union" Hour 2 with Nii-Quartelai Quartey | @drniiquartelai| Podcast Hosted by changemaker, journalist, educator, and KBLA Talk 1580 Chief National Political Analyst Dr. Nii-Quartelai Quartey, “A More Perfect Union” promises to deliver national news of consequence, informed opinion, and analysis beyond the headlines. Earlier this week our young brothers ages 18- 35 met with Vice President Kamala Harris to talk squarely about issues impacting Black men and boys. Listen to NAACP's Dominick Whitehead, Joshua Harris of NAACP Baltimore Branch, and NAACP Youth and College Division, Youth Leader Ty'Leik Chambers take us into the room, share insights gleaned, and make clear this meeting was more than a photo opp. Learn more about the creative solutions they discussed to boost the economy, support young Black entrepreneurs and small businesses, and Black men's dreams deferred. We've got a lot to talk about!
In this second part of the episode on Ella Baker, I talk to Gerald Taylor. We discuss the influence Baker's approach and vision had on him as an organizer, how he sees her understanding of organizing play out on the ground, and his own involvement in myriad grassroots democratic initiatives. Along the way, he recounts a compelling set of stories and reflections on what it means to do organizing in the spirit of Ella Baker. GuestGerald Taylor was a national senior organizer with the Industrial Areas Foundation (IAF) for nearly 35 years, and for much of this time he was the IAF's Southeast Regional Director. In 2015, he co-founded Advance Carolina, the first state-wide Black led 501c (4) in North Carolina focused on building Black political power. His organizing career began as a teenager through involvement in the civil rights movement, with him eventually being elected as New York State President of the NAACP Youth and College Division at 17 years old. He then organized with the National Democratic Party of Alabama, an interracial third political party, in their historic election victories of 1970. He went to be involved in numerous organizing initiatives in the US, most notably in New York City, Baltimore, Memphis, Nashville, Atlanta, and Jackson, Mississippi. Immediately after Hurricane Katrina, he spent four years organizing African American communities along the Mississippi Gulf Coast to receive disaster relieve leading to the formation of a coalition that negotiated nearly one billion dollars in disaster relieve funding for these communities. He has trained thousands of leaders, including clergy, over the past forty years in community organizing and congregational development. He has also lectured at colleges and universities, including Shaw Divinity School, Hood Divinity School, North Carolina Central Law School, Duke Divinity School, Vanderbilt Divinity School, Garrett Evangelical Methodist Seminary, and UNC Chapel-Hill on theories of social change, community organizing, and leadership. He has also worked internationally with organizations such as Bread for the World, the Sidney Alliance in Australia, and been a consultant to democratization initiatives in Swaziland, Zimbabwe, and South Africa.Resources for Going DeeperSee the show notes for the previous episode
My guest today is Kyree Oliver. With a background in College Division 1 football, Kyree started his Marketing company in November 2015 & moved from California to Arizona in 2016 & never looked back. Without a real father figure at a young age (as he says, “movies were pretty much my dad at the time”), he learned that he would need to teach himself how to be a man. Along the way, he learned that he could take pieces of people, coaches, teachers, friends' fathers and build the picture of the man he wanted to become. At 19, Kyree started interviewing people to gather as much information as possible and get a clear view of people & what makes us tick. He has interviewed well over a thousand people now (any type of person you could think of). He's done 65 end-of-life interviews at a senior home. As Kyree's goal is to help people, he's using his knowledge and experience to support the generation of young men.But no matter if you're young or … even more youthful, you can always learn something from a person with this kind of incredible experience.So, let's dive into this episode with Kyree Oliver. Additional sources:If you're a passionate business builder yourself, visit http://voltageb2b.com to get in touch now.
Cindy Potter is CoSIDA President and Senior Deputy Director of Athletics at Columbia College (Mo.). She discusses her favorite parts of working in collegiate athletics communications as well as the importance of work-life balance in the industry. She joins 2021-22 CoSIDA intern Brandon Jones for the finale of the Executive Session podcast series with the 2021-22 executive board. Potter is the first CoSIDA President from an NAIA institution and the fifth woman from any division to serve in the role. When she received the presidential gavel in June 2021 from Sam Atkinson, is was the first time in CoSIDA history that one College Division president passed the gavel to another. In June 2022, she will again make history when the gavel is passed to Jessica Poole — the first time two women have served as President in consecutive years. She first served on the CoSIDA Board of Directors as a College Division Representative from 2011-2014. Potter was a 2008 CoSIDA Rising Star Award winner and also received the 2020 Warren Berg Award. At #CoSIDA22 she will receive the Bud Nangle Award, which is presented to a CoSIDA member or an individual outside of CoSIDA who embodies the ideals of intercollegiate athletics by showing ethics, integrity, compassion and/or bravery in a singular act or under an unusual or stressful personal or professional situation.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1Dv2BUSEbF9PpR8dInGit5J_QMl-AQ9qe351NgZKMUwE/edit#responses (Click Here To Join The Podcast Email List ) https://www.ncaa.org/ (NCAA Website) Contact Camryn Monfort: crmonfort10@gmail.com The College Admissions Process Podcast - Social Media Links: https://www.facebook.com/jdurante8/ (My Personal Facebook Page) https://www.facebook.com/The-College-Admissions-Process-Podcast-104675558791500/ (The Podcast Facebook Page) https://twitter.com/theCAPP_Podcast (The Podcast Twitter Page) https://www.instagram.com/thecollegeadmissionsprocesspod/ (The Podcast Instagram Page) https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-durante-248b35143/ (My Personal LinkedIn Page)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
Official Entry for the PUP Radio Festival 2022 - Radio News Production category (College Division)
It is NCAA Tournament time in college basketball. Division I is a couple weeks away, but the field is set for the Division III men's and women's tournaments, and we have a lot of local squads taking part. The Neumann University men's squad out in Aston is in the field -- the Knights are champions of the Atlantic East Conference and they bring a 21-7 record into a first round matchup with Williams College on Friday in Alliance, Ohio. Matt Leon had the chance to speak with Neumann head coach Jim Rullo about a great season for his squad. Neumann's first round game with Williams is set for a 3:20 tip on Friday.
Today's guest hosts are Edwith Theogene and Charlotte Hancock, Organizing Director and Communications Director for Generation Progress. During today's show they discuss how four different proposals have been released in the past month that aim to make college affordable and accessible and prevent students from having to choose between obtaining higher education and going into debt. These proposals represent significant progress on the issue of college affordability, and are a testament to the hard work that advocates have put into ending the student debt crisis and addressing its root causes. The four proposals share common elements—including federal-state partnerships and crucial investments in historically underfunded HBCUs, minority-serving institutions, and community colleges, and expanding financial aid eligibility to DREAMers. The American Families Plan proposed by the Biden-Harris administration would also make public community colleges free for students, and provide two years of subsidized tuition at HBCUs, TCUs, and MSIs. To talk with Edwith and Charlotte more about what these proposals represent for the college affordability crisis and where we should go from here, they are joined by two expert guests. They are Antoinette Flores, managing director for Postsecondary Education at the Center for American Progress, and Russell Boyd, national field organizer for the NAACP Youth & College division. Generation Progress' website is GenProgress.org and their Twitter handle is @GenProgress. Edwith Theogene's Twitter handle is @WhoIsEdwith and Charlotte Hancock's handle is @CharlatAnne. Antoinette Flores' Twitter handle is @TheToniFlores and the handle for the Center for American Progress Higher Education Team is @CAPHigherEd. The Twitter handle for the NAACP Youth & College Division is @NAACPYC_.
Today, we discuss the college football history of the Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles. Long ago, this program was a powerhouse – a two-time National Champion in the Small College Division and more recently, fielded two of the greatest players over to enter the gridiron. Two National Championships at the College Division level, the one coach who took them there, one coach with nothing but dominant teams, one coach with eleven bowl berths, one wingback reverse, one upset over a legendary coach, one Hail Mary, one field goal attempt off the right upright, three stellar teams, one undefeated untied national champion, the greatest punter in the history of college football, one Hall of Fame quarterback, one longtime rival, one string of shutouts, one season where they were shutout every game, one roller coaster of a two game stretch, and of course, one eagle. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jay-abramson/support
Part 2 of the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion series of Charge Up Charge on explores the topic of Equity. Hear from the former Equity intake officer, Brandie Roberts, the VP of Diversity Equity and Inclusion as well as the Title IX Coordinator for UAH, Laterrica Shelton, as well as Joshua Thompson, an ODEI Ambassador and the President of Alabama's NAACP Youth and College Division.
On this episode Kyle Brown and Marc Hart discuss the System, Division 3 Basketball, St Mary's College and his In the Gaps Website and more: DDM A to Z Instruction Series Promo Code Save $ 10 dollars: tbp Sign up for DDM A to Z instructional Course: https://gum.co/pURON Sign up for Free System Basketball Virtual Basketball Zoom Clinics: https://www.systembasketball.com/system-clinics.html The Baskipedia Facebook Page System Basketball Youtube Channel Baskipedia Podcast Twitter Account Baskipedia Podcast Instagram Account Kyle Brown Bio: This will be my 17th year in College Basketball. The last 12 years I have been an assistant at the Division 3 level. ● UW-Parkside: Division 2 School in Wisconsin. Student Assistant. Had a great experience and was basically treated as an assistant coach with scouting, recruiting, and player development responsibilities. ● St. Norbert College; Division 3 school in Wisconsin. Asst Coach. 5 years total. In charge of scouting, recruiting, and guard development. We won 95 games in 5 years, won the conference 3 times, and went to the NCAA tourney 3 times. ● Cornell College: D3 school in Iowa. 3 years. In charge of all recruiting, player development, and scouting/defense. Improved quite a bit over my three years and the year after I left they made the Midwest Conference tourney for the first time. ● St. Mary's: D3 school in Minnesota. This will be year 5. All recruiting, scouting, Player development, and defense. 2 years ago we went 1-24 and then this year we made the conference tournament for the first time in 35 years, first winning record in 35 years, and won the first conference tournament game ever. We also returned almost 80% of our Website: Inthegaps.com ● Started it this Spring as a way to share what I am learning. ● Weekly blog post where I dive into a certain aspect of basketball ● Started a free newsletter in May called “5 Play Friday” in which I share 5 plays, 4 articles, 3 podcasts, 2 quotes, and a video. Have grown to 350 subscribers. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/systembasketball/support
"Helene Atwan is the Director of Beacon Press, an independent non-profit book publisher founded in 1854. She began her publishing career in 1976 at Random House in New York as an assistant editor in their College Division, before moving to Alfred A. Knopf in 1977 as a publicity associate. She then joined The Viking Press in 1979 as the associate director of publicity. In 1981, she moved to Farrar, Straus and Giroux, where she began as the director of publicity. She also became a vice president of the house in 1987 and the associate publisher in 1991. In 1993, she joined the Pocket Books division of Simon & Schuster as a vice president and director of marketing. She was appointed director of Beacon Press by the board of trustees of the Unitarian Universalists Association in October of 1995." We met at her offices in Boston to talk about Emerson and the history of the Beacon Press, plus its connection to the Unitarian Universalists; Helene's role with the press; social justice - slavery, reparations, inter-sectional issues, and the environment; about the price of paper, the function of design, and the process of editing books at Beacon; plus Victor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning, and newly discovered Yes to Life, and much more.