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The talk is part of the Irish History and Culture Module at University College Cork Language Centre, Ireland. If you are learning English or are already proficient in English and would like to learn about Irish history, language, music and much more this course is for you. This course will introduce you to some people and places you might meet or see one day when you visit the Emerald Isle. Level: CEFR B2-C2 minimum. You have the option to take this course for 12, 8 or 4 weeks. Term Two January to April 2021 Block 1 Topic* *may be subject to change Oliver Cromwell in Ireland Biodiversity: Sealife of Irish Waters Home Rule, the First Dáil & Irish Independence Extraordinary Women in Irish history Course Date 2021 14 January 21 January 28 January 4 February Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 12 weeks €225 Block 2 Topic* *may be subject to change Celtic Mythology: The Children of Lir & Deirdre of the Sorrows Springtimein Cork: flora and fauna Newgrange: Ireland’s Megalithic Wonder Strongbow, Aoife & the Norman Invasion of Ireland Course Date 2021 11 February 18 February 25 February 4 March Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 8 weeks €150 Block 3 Topic* *may be subject to change William Butler Yeats and the Irish Literary Revival Irish Ballads & Music Collectors of the 19th Century Irish Biodiversity: Garden Birds Grace O'Malley, The Pirate Queen Course Date 2021 11 March 18 March 25 March 1 Aprill Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 4 weeks €75 How To Apply: Open for applications click here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/ A computer, tablet or smartphone with audio and video. Reliable internet connection. You will need to be able to access MS Teams, Zoom or Canvas for your classes (dependent on course applied for) Further details here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/
The talk is part of the Irish History and Culture Module for EFL students at University College Cork Language Centre, Ireland. If you are learning English or are already proficient in English and would like to learn about Irish history, language, music and much more this course is for you. This course will introduce you to some people and places you might meet or see one day when you visit the Emerald Isle. Level: CEFR B2-C2 minimum. You have the option to take this course for 12, 8 or 4 weeks. Term Two January to April 2021 Block 1 Topic* *may be subject to change Oliver Cromwell in Ireland Biodiversity: Sealife of Irish Waters Home Rule, the First Dáil & Irish Independence Extraordinary Women in Irish history Course Date 2021 14 January 21 January 28 January 4 February Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 12 weeks €225 Block 2 Topic* *may be subject to change Celtic Mythology: The Children of Lir & Deirdre of the Sorrows Springtimein Cork: flora and fauna Newgrange: Ireland’s Megalithic Wonder Strongbow, Aoife & the Norman Invasion of Ireland Course Date 2021 11 February 18 February 25 February 4 March Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 8 weeks €150 Block 3 Topic* *may be subject to change William Butler Yeats and the Irish Literary Revival Irish Ballads & Music Collectors of the 19th Century Irish Biodiversity: Garden Birds Grace O'Malley, The Pirate Queen Course Date 2021 11 March 18 March 25 March 1 Aprill Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 4 weeks €75 How To Apply: Open for applications click here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/ A computer, tablet or smartphone with audio and video. Reliable internet connection. You will need to be able to access MS Teams, Zoom or Canvas for your classes (dependent on course applied for) Further details here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/
The talk is part of the Irish History and Culture Module at University College Cork Language Centre, Ireland. If you are learning English or are already proficient in English and would like to learn about Irish history, language, music and much more this course is for you. This course will introduce you to some people and places you might meet or see one day when you visit the Emerald Isle. Level: CEFR B2-C2 minimum. You have the option to take this course for 12, 8 or 4 weeks. Term Two January to April 2021 Block 1 Topic* *may be subject to change Oliver Cromwell in Ireland Biodiversity: Sealife of Irish Waters Home Rule, the First Dáil & Irish Independence Extraordinary Women in Irish history Course Date 2021 14 January 21 January 28 January 4 February Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 12 weeks €225 Block 2 Topic* *may be subject to change Celtic Mythology: The Children of Lir & Deirdre of the Sorrows Springtimein Cork: flora and fauna Newgrange: Ireland’s Megalithic Wonder Strongbow, Aoife & the Norman Invasion of Ireland Course Date 2021 11 February 18 February 25 February 4 March Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 8 weeks €150 Block 3 Topic* *may be subject to change William Butler Yeats and the Irish Literary Revival Irish Ballads & Music Collectors of the 19th Century Irish Biodiversity: Garden Birds Grace O'Malley, The Pirate Queen Course Date 2021 11 March 18 March 25 March 1 Aprill Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 4 weeks €75 How To Apply: Open for applications click here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/ A computer, tablet or smartphone with audio and video. Reliable internet connection. You will need to be able to access MS Teams, Zoom or Canvas for your classes (dependent on course applied for) Further details here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/
The talk is part of the Irish History and Culture Module at University College Cork Language Centre, Ireland. If you are learning English or are already proficient in English and would like to learn about Irish history, language, music and much more this course is for you. This course will introduce you to some people and places you might meet or see one day when you visit the Emerald Isle. Level: CEFR B2-C2 minimum. You have the option to take this course for 12, 8 or 4 weeks. Term Two January to April 2021 Block 1 Topic* *may be subject to change Oliver Cromwell in Ireland Biodiversity: Sealife of Irish Waters Home Rule, the First Dáil & Irish Independence Extraordinary Women in Irish history Course Date 2021 14 January 21 January 28 January 4 February Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 12 weeks €225 Block 2 Topic* *may be subject to change Celtic Mythology: The Children of Lir & Deirdre of the Sorrows Springtimein Cork: flora and fauna Newgrange: Ireland’s Megalithic Wonder Strongbow, Aoife & the Norman Invasion of Ireland Course Date 2021 11 February 18 February 25 February 4 March Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 8 weeks €150 Block 3 Topic* *may be subject to change William Butler Yeats and the Irish Literary Revival Irish Ballads & Music Collectors of the 19th Century Irish Biodiversity: Garden Birds Grace O'Malley, The Pirate Queen Course Date 2021 11 March 18 March 25 March 1 Aprill Class Time & Day 18.00-19.30 Thursday Price 4 weeks €75 How To Apply: Open for applications click here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/ A computer, tablet or smartphone with audio and video. Reliable internet connection. You will need to be able to access MS Teams, Zoom or Canvas for your classes (dependent on course applied for) Further details here: https://www.ucc.ie/en/esol/courses/parttimecourses/irishculture/
D and C both hit you with some great history lessons today!First D teaches us how some very valuable historical trash became treasure!Than C informs us on how beds were used over 200,000 years ago!
Questions You Never Thought to Ask. Interviews with Whitewater Kayakers
I chat with expedition legend Ben Stookesberry about his more recent trip in Colombia, hitting First D's and also getting detained/kidnapped/something. You decide what his situation is described as
This Reboot Republic Podcast talks to Tanya Ward, the Chief Executive of the Children’s Rights Alliance (CRA) and former Deputy Director at the Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL). We discuss the CRA's 2019 Report Card that identifies and evaluates the Government's progress on actions for Children. The highest individual grade in Report Card 2019 is an ‘A-‘ for ‘LGBTI+ Children and Young People’, with the lowest grade being awarded for ‘Child and Family Homelessness. We also talk affordable childcare and discuss the scandal of child poverty in Ireland, solutions and policy alternatives - and the collaboration with the Irish Times and the Children’s Rights Alliance in the No Child 2020 campaign - to build this conversation on the causes of child poverty and what it will take to end it. The conversation is inspired by the one hundred year anniversary of the Democratic Programme of the First Dáil on 21 January 1919. To keep up to date with this national conversation, visit No Child 2020 here: https://www.childrensrights.ie/resources/no-child-2020-new-national-conversation Join us at patreon.com/tortoiseshack
Episode 82: Hey, it’s been a long time, but it’s HAPPY HOUR! Not only do we welcome back our chanteuse, but we dive into a couple of the many listener topics you’ve been submitting. First D. Marie helps one listener through her short hair woes then Erin advises another listener on how to uninvite a friend from her wedding party. As always, our conversation gets a close buzz cut, all the while talking and drinking in Minneapolis. Features Strong Language, Mature Themes, and wedding. Drunk-O-Meter Rating: 5 out of 5 Subscribe and rate us on iTunes. Visit our website for more content at http://www.twodrinksinpod.com Like us on Facebook: twodrinksin Tweet us at @twodrinksinpod Make sure to use the hashtag #twodrinksinpod Hosts: D. Marie Long, Dana Severson, Erin Roberts, James Lekvin Producer: James Lekvin The Drinks: Miller High Life, Trader Joe’s Box Wine, Miller 64 TDI Sponsor: Burnt Brews - http://www.burntbrews.com
In 1971 a mysterious man hijacked an airliner in Portland, Oregon, demanding $200,000 and four parachutes. He bailed out somewhere over southwestern Washington and has never been seen again. In today's show we'll tell the story of D.B. Cooper, the only unsolved hijacking in American history. We'll also hear some musical disk drives and puzzle over a bicyclist's narrow escape. Intro: In 1973, Swedish mathematician Per Enflo won a goose for solving a problem posed 37 years earlier. Established in 1945 by a sympathetic actor, the Conrad Cantzen Shoe Fund will reimburse working artists $40 toward a pair of shoes. Sources for our feature on D.B. Cooper: Ralph P. Himmelsbach and Thomas K. Worcester, Norjak: The Investigation of D.B. Cooper, 1986. Kay Melchisedech Olson, The D.B. Cooper Hijacking, 2011. Associated Press, "First D.B. Cooper Clue Discovered," Jan. 18, 1979. Associated Press, "Clue to D.B. Cooper's Fate Found by a Washington Family on Picnic," Feb. 13, 1980. Farida Fawzy, "D.B. Cooper: FBI Closes the Books 45 Years After Skyjacking Mystery," CNN, July 14, 2016. Christine Hauser, "Where Is D.B. Cooper? F.B.I. Ends 45-Year Hunt," New York Times, July 13, 2016. FBI, "D.B. Cooper Hijacking" (retrieved Sept. 18, 2016). FBI, "Update on Investigation of 1971 Hijacking by D.B. Cooper" (retrieved Sept. 18, 2016). David A. Graham and Juleyka Lantigua-Williams, "D.B. Cooper's Final Escape," Atlantic, July 12, 2016. Peter Holley, "The D.B. Cooper Case Has Baffled the FBI for 45 Years. Now It May Never Be Solved," Washington Post, July 12, 2016. Listener mail: Listener Mike Burns sent these photos from the Museum of World War II in Natick, Mass.: A coal torpedo with instructions. Playing cards concealing maps. A baby carriage rigged by the French Resistance to conceal sabotage equipment and a radio. Brian Dewan's song "The Cowboy Outlaw," about Elmer McCurdy. MrSolidSnake745's Musical Floppy Drives on Facebook. Star Wars' "Imperial March" on eight floppy drives. "In the Hall of the Mountain King," from Grieg's Peer Gynt, by Sammy1Am. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was contributed by listener Philip Ogren. You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on iTunes or Google Play Music or via the RSS feed at http://feedpress.me/futilitycloset. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- on our Patreon page you can pledge any amount per episode, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!
My Name is Sage LaRue I guess this all goes back to 87 that’s when I started to bang on a lot of stuff I never could understand why I was always banging g on things it did not matter. I guess I come from where most of us come from the ghetto, My mother was a big drug addict and so was my father. I changed my name not legally but for my self about 9 yrs ago so I spent most of my time as a youth locked up in and out of jail. I have done 10 years already and I am not even in my mid 30’s, About 10 years ago I said I was not going back to jail I simply had enough I told my family that I was going to produce music, of course they all laughed except for a few I didnt have a laptop so I broke into a hame and found one it didn’t have a battery pack nor a charger chord so I found where I can go buy one and it was on. I downloaded magic Music Maker was the First D.A.W that I used and I thought i was the bomb and my music was the best at that time and it sounded like trash but its still trash that