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Sermon by Gini Downing. Are you new? Let us know you were here: liminalventura.org/connectioncard
As 'Up the Down Staircase' concludes, the Mark of the Beast is everywhere, and the clue to beating the Devil—and saving Dani's brothers from his latest scheme—hides in plain sight.Support us at: https://www.patreon.com/PlanesTrainsandComicBooksFollow us on social media:https://linktr.ee/planestrainsandcomicbooks
When Dani's brothers become hopelessly ensnared in the First of the Fallen's media web, John Constantine must look for a solution in a most unlikely place.Support us at: https://www.patreon.com/PlanesTrainsandComicBooksFollow us on social media:https://linktr.ee/planestrainsandcomicbooks
John's American holiday takes a nasty turn when the First of the Fallen unveils his latest scheme; and, back home in London, John's past catches up with him.Support us at:https://www.patreon.com/PlanesTrainsandComicBooksFollow us on social media:https://linktr.ee/planestrainsandcomicbooks
The world turns by infinite fractions, creating infinite possibilities for the future. Somewhere, a potential ally becomes a deadly enemy and a possible solution becomes an enigma. John Constantine knows that his past is inescapable. But now, someone else's past is catching up with him!Support us at: https://www.patreon.com/PlanesTrainsandComicBooksFollow us on social media: https://linktr.ee/planestrainsandcomicbooks
Series: N/AService: Sun AM SermonType: SermonSpeaker: Kevin Kay
In a polarized world, where the public square has become increasingly hostile, how do we continue to make progress on the things we are called to build? Is it even possible to build anything at the moment?With a strong track record of working under challenging circumstances to bring about societal change, Baroness Philippa Stroud, Member of the House of Lords and a leading public influential in the UK, identified the steps needed to renew culture, starting with healthy institutions. Drawing on her work with the Alliance for Responsible Citizenship, Stroud discussed how policymakers can foster changes in society that ensure that citizens can take hold of the opportunities in front of them and develop the personal resilience to serve over decades. Support the Show.
I'm trying to put into words the core principles of accessible Christian theology. Not mentally or intellectually accessible, but feeling-accessible -- heart-accessible -- and therefore actually and experientially accessible! Karl Barth promulgated what was called a "theology from the top down". He saw himself as opposing theologies "from the bottom up". But it was a false dichotomy. We start from where we are -- and in base-level terms, where our hearts live (and die, sometimes daily); and then we are in a position to listen to Hope that travels from the top down. Theology, in other words, is neither from the top down (solely), i.e., entirely vertical; nor is it from the bottom up (solely), i.e., entirely horizontal. Christian theology is Up the Down Staircase! Oh, and I hope you like ABBA. "SOS" is one of the great songs of the Glacial Age. Not to mention Ash's track at the end of the cast, which is moving straight from the top end.
Hi, this is Bobby Aherne. I'm the writer and producer of ‘Nero's Class'. ‘Nero's Class' is almost like a satire of the “inspiring teacher” genre of old movies like ‘Conrack' and ‘Ciao Professore!' and movies like that… ‘Up the Down Staircase'. While also being a children's adventure series in the vein of ‘Gravity Falls', ‘Around the Twist', and ‘The Three Investigators', ‘Over the Garden Wall, ‘Eerie, Indiana'… things like that. Then things on, y'know, Cartoon Swim and Adult… Cartoon Network and Adult Swim. The first series came out last autumn. There were six episodes, and the episode you're about to hear is episode three, which is entitled ‘History 101'. In the first couple of episodes, Professor Nero… he's like a fuddy-duddy Mainlander, and he arrives over to Mrunglody, which is a weird mythical island. And there's three… there's only three children on the island and they're 12, 9 and 6. And he has to teach them, even though they've never been to school before and they don't know anything about Mainlander ways and stuff like that. And rather than them having to adjust to HIS world, he finds himself having to adjust to THEIR world. So in the first couple of episodes, it turns out that the treehouse that he's teaching them in has magical powers like the gift of flight, and can take them on these magical school tours across the world. And he gets very frustrated, because all he wants to do is teach his curriculum and teach his class. Yet they end up going on all these different adventures, which obviously the kids love. This is the third episode and, as well as Hugh Cooney (who plays Professor Nero) and our three amazing child actors (Penny O'Dwyer, Elsie Akinduko and Rian Sheridan), this episode also features a cameo from John Hodgman… which is very exciting. Please enjoy and thank you for listening! Transcript can be found at: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BlT4jSBS2PtD72PlwHVUAmAM59RvD66t/view?usp=sharing https://www.rte.ie/kids/2022/1003/1326877-neros-class-rtejr-radio/ Socials: https://instagram.com/nerosclass
We're joined by Hugh Howey to talk about Wool & Silo, crying while writing, living on a sailboat, his obsession with stairs, being an extra on Silo, and why he felt guilty during the filming process. Plus – Dave is in Tucson staring at planes, Laura has an airline security story, and Andrew has some … Continue reading Ep. 212 Going Up The Down Staircase With Hugh Howey
The summer is well underway as The Deucecast Movie Show has rolled through its twelfth June, and now past another July 4th (USA! USA!), and in this week's #FanboySummer edition, Arkansas fanboy and teacher and educator and smart cool dude Charley Wooten! First up, a little about Charley, talking about his background and his podcast Sunday Synopsis, then the very first round of a game we call HIGH SCHOOL HIGH... which high schools in movies are made up or real -- and which might be inspired. Then, the topic picked by the guest, Charley - surprisingly a topic not covered before, Fave Teachers in Movies. Some of the topics include Harry Potter... Arkansas education... ruining Mr. Holland... Butthead's hippy teacher... Matthew Broderick enjoying his pie... young Charley and his Miyagi PJs... a shared love of Kevin James... the lost art of loving a movie that you couldn't immediately access... Movies Discussed: Beavis & Butthead Do America (Paramount+) Dead Poets Society (Hulu) Dodgeball (Hulu) Drumline (Max Go) Election (Paramount+; Amazon Prime; EPIX) Fast Times at Ridgemont High (rental) Good Will Hunting (rental) Harry Potter Series (HBO Max; Peacock Premium) Here Comes the Boom (Netflix) The Highlander (HBO Max; Amazon Prime; Peacock Premium) The Karate Kid (rental) Kick-Ass (HBO Max) Mr. Holland's Opus (Disney+) Stand & Deliver (rental) The Substitute (TubiTV) Summer School (Showtime) Up the Down Staircase (rental) The X-Men Series (Disney+)
intro & wrap for Depp-Heard Trial
How do we reopen the synagogue after over a year of being virtual? For some it's procedural: distance appropriately, follow guidelines, limit numbers, maybe wait on the food. But the Temple is not a gathering of bodies, it's a gathering of souls. How do we reopen appropriately to be a holy community, one that recognizes each other as souls? One of my favorite mishnayot speaks to this, and I was happy to be scooped by Professor Naomi Kalish in applying it to us today: https://www.jtsa.edu/struggling-to-celebrate There are four categories of people who went up the downstaircase at the Temple, and down the up staircase: the one in mourning, the one caring for a relative, the one who has been isolated, and the one who has lost a precious object. In this Dvar Torah on Emor, I apply these to our norms for a holy reopening. Helpful picture: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d8/Huldah_Gates3344.JPG
Lovers of great literature will love this week’s reminiscence with Bel Kaufman, the granddaughter of Yiddish writer Sholem Aleichem, best known for his many stories about life in the shtetl, including one that was adapted as the musical Fiddler on the Roof. Aleichem died in 1916 and Bel died in 2014. But Monday Morning Radio Host Dean Rotbart and his son, Maxwell, interviewed Bel, then 102 years old, in late 2013 for a Jewish-oriented radio show the father-son duo hosted. Bel not only shares her recollections of her famous grandfather, she also talks about her own career, having penned the 1965 bestseller, “Up the Down Staircase.” Caution: Bel is a bit difficult to understand, as was her right as a centenarian. But you’ll want to listen closely anyway, so you don’t miss any of her pearls of wisdom. Photo: Bel Kaufman and her grandfather, Sholem AleichemOriginally Posted: January 19, 2014Best of Monday Morning Radio Adaptation: April 12, 2021Monday Morning Run Time: 23:14
Standardized measurements are not yet in place in the time of the Talmud. So what size is a se'ah? There's a range presented on the daf, in a bit of a whirlwind. Also - Residents of two-story homes that open to the courtyard who forgot to make an eruv - and what it means to be upstairs when it comes to exiting to the courtyard, or downstairs and sharing space with the upstairs people.
This week we celebrate National Teacher Appreciation Week. Join Amie and Tami as they discuss their reads, Dear Committee Members by Julie Schumacher and Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman--both books about teachers and teacher life! We reminisce and remember our days in the classroom AND we celebrate those still teaching (through distance learning).
Аня «Ася» Корица моя давняя приятельница и одна из самых любимых людей на свете. Мы говорим книгах, «Бегущем городе» и путешествиях. Подпишитесь на Аню в Ютубе , Телеграмме или Инстаграмме. Спонсоры и поддержка Подкаст выходит благодаря поддержке наших слушателей и спонсоров. Для подписчиков на патреоне мы выкладываем после-шоу и сольные выпуски Андрея. Для участия в подкасте свяжитесь с Андреем. Ссылки и шоу-ноты Donald Trump - Wikipedia Бегущий Город — Википедия События - Бегущий Город Asya korrica - YouTube Asya (@asyakorrica) • Instagram photos and videos Witold Szabłowski - Wikipedia The Assassin from Apricot City: Reportage from Turkey by Witold Szabłowski (3 star ratings) Mohonk Mountain House - Wikipedia Chrysler Building - Wikipedia Mexico City - Wikipedia UNESCO - Wikipedia One World Trade Center - Wikipedia J. Paul Getty Museum - Wikipedia Stephen Batchelor (author) - Wikipedia) Убить пересмешника — Википедия A Road Back from Schizophrenia: A Memoir - Kindle edition by Arnhild Lauveng. Health, Fitness & Dieting Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com. Amazon.com: The Professor and the Madman: A Tale of Murder, Insanity, and the Making of the Oxford English Dictionary eBook: Simon Winchester: Books The Professor and the Madman (2019) - IMDb The Great Gatsby - Kindle edition by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Literature & Fiction Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com. Amazon.com: Up the Down Staircase (9780871292810): Christopher Sergel, Bel Kaufman: Books Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow: Peter Hoeg: 9781860461675: Amazon.com: Books Geograf globus propil: Aleksei Ivanov: 9785170924738: Amazon.com: Books Amazon.com: Империя должна умереть: История русских революций в лицах. 1900-1917 (Russian Edition) eBook: Михаил Зыгарь: Kindle Store Amazon.com: Challenger Deep eBook: Neal Shusterman, Brendan Shusterman: Kindle Store Amazon.com: Unthinkable: An Extraordinary Journey Through the World’s Strangest Brains eBook: Helen Thomson: Kindle Store Социальные сети Твиттер Фэйсбук Вконтакте Телеграм Официальный сайт подкаста Дата записи: 2019-07-05
This week Ken welcomes singer/songwriter Nellie McKay to the show. Ken and Nellie discuss dogs, growing up in Harlem, warming yourself by the TV when the heating is turned off, David Letterman, subversive art, Conan O'Brien, Ferguson, the cutting edge on the internet, The Jimmy Dore Show, when comedy becomes the gatekeeper of the status quo, corporate overlords, Jimmy Fallon: Comedy Eunuch, Joan Rivers, leaning into viral content, cool music on TV, COPS, not watching TV shows about New York when you are actually IN New York, Catwoman, Batman '66, Eartha Kitt, Julie Newmar's cheese, your music being used in television, representation on TV, how money can corrupt, morality and humanity in art, the Telecommunications Act of 1996, State TV, fake news, commercials, reflective TV vs. aspiration TV, Roseanne, the conflict of entertaining and informing, Malcolm X's friendship with Red Foxx, the DIY Dream come to life, the comfort of money, lottery winners, accents, culture wars, Cheers, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, sports culture, Up the Down Staircase, homelessness, poverty, the wonder of old movies, William Shatner's music career, contrived popstars, Margaret Thatcher's self loathing, and everyone's grandmother's love of TV Guide crosswords.
Joseph's life was a series of defining moments and years of faithfulness and hard work. In this talk, Matt Sturdevant covers the defining moments in the life of Joseph and what we can learn from them.
Parents often wonder what their children do at school all day. How different is it from what they remember years ago? Teachers often hear similar questions from their friends. Is it like what they imagine? If these adults could really understand, what might they say about school? Does it matter? It would seem that the most effective critiques are those offered by the individuals with the most firsthand knowledge. But the analysis of outsiders is also powerful. These people can draw on their varied backgrounds to bring new perspectives to familiar challenges. They may see things that those with more experience can more easily miss, perhaps even the lived experience of students. What can we learn from those stories? In Substitute: Going to School with a Thousand Kids (Blue Rider Press, 2016), Nicholson Baker describes his month spent working as a substitute teacher with students of all ages or anyone looking to deepen their understanding of those experiences before offering their own policy proposals. Baker joins New Books in Education for the interview. To share your thoughts on the podcast, you can connect with him on Twitter at @nicolsonbaker8. During our conversation, he also recommended the following books: Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman Philosophy of Education by Nel Noddings The Way It Spozed to Be: A Report on the Classroom War Behind the Crisis in Our Schools by James Herndon Trevor Mattea is an educational consultant and speaker. His areas of expertise include deeper learning, parent involvement, project-based learning, and technology integration. He can be reached by email at info@trevormattea.com or on Twitter at @tsmattea. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Parents often wonder what their children do at school all day. How different is it from what they remember years ago? Teachers often hear similar questions from their friends. Is it like what they imagine? If these adults could really understand, what might they say about school? Does it matter? It would seem that the most effective critiques are those offered by the individuals with the most firsthand knowledge. But the analysis of outsiders is also powerful. These people can draw on their varied backgrounds to bring new perspectives to familiar challenges. They may see things that those with more experience can more easily miss, perhaps even the lived experience of students. What can we learn from those stories? In Substitute: Going to School with a Thousand Kids (Blue Rider Press, 2016), Nicholson Baker describes his month spent working as a substitute teacher with students of all ages or anyone looking to deepen their understanding of those experiences before offering their own policy proposals. Baker joins New Books in Education for the interview. To share your thoughts on the podcast, you can connect with him on Twitter at @nicolsonbaker8. During our conversation, he also recommended the following books: Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman Philosophy of Education by Nel Noddings The Way It Spozed to Be: A Report on the Classroom War Behind the Crisis in Our Schools by James Herndon Trevor Mattea is an educational consultant and speaker. His areas of expertise include deeper learning, parent involvement, project-based learning, and technology integration. He can be reached by email at info@trevormattea.com or on Twitter at @tsmattea. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Parents often wonder what their children do at school all day. How different is it from what they remember years ago? Teachers often hear similar questions from their friends. Is it like what they imagine? If these adults could really understand, what might they say about school? Does it matter? It would seem that the most effective critiques are those offered by the individuals with the most firsthand knowledge. But the analysis of outsiders is also powerful. These people can draw on their varied backgrounds to bring new perspectives to familiar challenges. They may see things that those with more experience can more easily miss, perhaps even the lived experience of students. What can we learn from those stories? In Substitute: Going to School with a Thousand Kids (Blue Rider Press, 2016), Nicholson Baker describes his month spent working as a substitute teacher with students of all ages or anyone looking to deepen their understanding of those experiences before offering their own policy proposals. Baker joins New Books in Education for the interview. To share your thoughts on the podcast, you can connect with him on Twitter at @nicolsonbaker8. During our conversation, he also recommended the following books: Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman Philosophy of Education by Nel Noddings The Way It Spozed to Be: A Report on the Classroom War Behind the Crisis in Our Schools by James Herndon Trevor Mattea is an educational consultant and speaker. His areas of expertise include deeper learning, parent involvement, project-based learning, and technology integration. He can be reached by email at info@trevormattea.com or on Twitter at @tsmattea. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Parents often wonder what their children do at school all day. How different is it from what they remember years ago? Teachers often hear similar questions from their friends. Is it like what they imagine? If these adults could really understand, what might they say about school? Does it matter? It would seem that the most effective critiques are those offered by the individuals with the most firsthand knowledge. But the analysis of outsiders is also powerful. These people can draw on their varied backgrounds to bring new perspectives to familiar challenges. They may see things that those with more experience can more easily miss, perhaps even the lived experience of students. What can we learn from those stories? In Substitute: Going to School with a Thousand Kids (Blue Rider Press, 2016), Nicholson Baker describes his month spent working as a substitute teacher with students of all ages or anyone looking to deepen their understanding of those experiences before offering their own policy proposals. Baker joins New Books in Education for the interview. To share your thoughts on the podcast, you can connect with him on Twitter at @nicolsonbaker8. During our conversation, he also recommended the following books: Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman Philosophy of Education by Nel Noddings The Way It Spozed to Be: A Report on the Classroom War Behind the Crisis in Our Schools by James Herndon Trevor Mattea is an educational consultant and speaker. His areas of expertise include deeper learning, parent involvement, project-based learning, and technology integration. He can be reached by email at info@trevormattea.com or on Twitter at @tsmattea. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bel Kaufman, American humorist and acclaimed author of "Up The Down Staircase" made a visit to Iona College. Ms. Kaufman's book topped the New York Times best-seller list for 64-weeks and has been translated into 16 languages. It is still in print today and has sold over 7 million copies worldwide since its publication in 1963. It was also turned into a prize-winning motion picture.
"Honey I Shrunk the Kids" was fucking RAW.Dave dreams about chumming around with a buzzworthy UK band, special guest Joel Prancer's roommate Lou Reed/Joe Piscopo tells him to carry his weight, and Joel and his friend jet ski for the fate of the economy.