Podcast appearances and mentions of Frank Phillips

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Best podcasts about Frank Phillips

Latest podcast episodes about Frank Phillips

Vatican Insider
ST. JOHN CANTIUS, THE STORY OF A CHICAGO PARISH

Vatican Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2024 27:00


VATICAN INSIDER: ST. JOHN CANTIUS, THE STORY OF A CHICAGO PARISH My guest this week in the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” is a longtime friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. After a number of years, we met serendipitously over my vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. I've always been intrigued by the rich history of this parish and you will be too as you hear Fr. Frank talk of his 30 years here, of his love of reverent and beautiful liturgy, of his founding of a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius, and so much more. Thanks to Fr. Frank's dedication, inspiration, as well as decades of both material and spiritual renewal, the current pastor, Fr. Josh Caswell and his staff offer many liturgies during the week, including morning, afternoon and evening prayers, vespers and high and low Masses in both Latin and English. Astonishingly enough, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius today work in 3 parishes in 2 dioceses in Illinois, offering 57 public Masses weekly and hearing more than 700 confessions each week! Yes, you read that right! First called the Society of St. John Cantius by Cardinal George, the name was later changed to the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. The reference is to St. John of Kenty, Poland! Here are some of the dozens of photos I took at the Holy Sepulchre liturgy on September 24. Some kind of technical glitch prevented me today from uploading all the pictures I took but when I finally make that happen, there are many photos and many stories to tell What you see is only a small representation of the main body of the church, the reliquary room and what I call the Polish chapel, a room in which Fr. Phillips had recreated to one-third original size the main altar of St. Mary Church on Market Square in Krakow. You'll love the story of this Polish parish! (originally

Catholic
VATICAN INSIDER -092124- ST. JOHN CANTIUS, THE STORY OF A CHICAGO PARISH

Catholic

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2024 27:30


VATICAN INSIDER: ST. JOHN CANTIUS, THE STORY OF A CHICAGO PARISH My guest this week in the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” is a longtime friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. After a number of years, we met serendipitously over my vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. I've always been intrigued by the rich history of this parish and you will be too as you hear Fr. Frank talk of his 30 years here, of his love of reverent and beautiful liturgy, of his founding of a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius, and so much more. Thanks to Fr. Frank's dedication, inspiration, as well as decades of both material and spiritual renewal, the current pastor, Fr. Josh Caswell and his staff offer many liturgies during the week, including morning, afternoon and evening prayers, vespers and high and low Masses in both Latin and English. Astonishingly enough, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius today work in 3 parishes in 2 dioceses in Illinois, offering 57 public Masses weekly and hearing more than 700 confessions each week! Yes, you read that right! First called the Society of St. John Cantius by Cardinal George, the name was later changed to the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. The reference is to St. John of Kenty, Poland! Here are some of the dozens of photos I took at the Holy Sepulchre liturgy on September 24. Some kind of technical glitch prevented me today from uploading all the pictures I took but when I finally make that happen, there are many photos and many stories to tell What you see is only a small representation of the main body of the church, the reliquary room and what I call the Polish chapel, a room in which Fr. Phillips had recreated to one-third original size the main altar of St. Mary Church on Market Square in Krakow. You'll love the story of this Polish parish! (originally from 10/14/22)

Dr. Creepen's Dungeon
S4 Ep183: Episode 183: Alternative Timeline Horror Stories

Dr. Creepen's Dungeon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2024 141:41


If you want to take ownership of your health, try AG1 and get a FREE 1-year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 Free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase.  Go to www.drinkAG1.com/creepen Tonight's opening tale of terror is ‘Blobster', an original work by Johnathan Nash, shared with me via the Creepypasta Wiki and read here under the conditions of the CC-BY-SA license. https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/Blobster https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/User:JohnathanNash Tonight's second tale of terror is the bizarre and wonderful ‘I Made First Contact, and Now I'm Dying', a fantastic  story by Frank Phillips, kindly shared with me via the Creepypasta Wiki and narrated here for you all under the conditions of the CC-BY-SA license: https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/User:Banned_In_CP https://creepypasta.fandom.com/wiki/I_Made_First_Contact,_and_Now_I%27m_Dying Today's final phenomenal tale is ‘The Parchment', an original award-winning work by Taxi Dancer, kindly shared directly with me via my sub-reddit and narrated here for you all with the author's express permission. https://www.reddit.com/user/Taxi_Dancer/

Borger Sports Podcast
March Is Madness

Borger Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024


We're back! The guys talk about March Madness and then update us on all the Borger High and Frank Phillips sports we've missed!For more information visit BorgerSportsPod.com. For questions, comments, and advertising inquiries, contact us at borgersportspod@gmail.com. The Borger Sports Podcast is brought to you by our official sponsor: Plumley Real Estate Group. Plumley Real Estate Group is brokered by Keller Williams of Amarillo.

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast
Shoutout of the Day - Rush University Medical Center 2-21-24

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2024 3:22


In this episode, Scott Becker gives a shout out to Rush University Medical Center, Dr. Omar Lateef, Dr. Brian Cole, and Dr. Frank Phillips.

Body Bangin'
Ep #87: Rivian Collision Program & Insurance with Frank Phillips

Body Bangin'

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 44:43


Frank Phillips, the collision repair program manager of Rivian and veteran of the collision industry, speaks with us about the Rivian vehicles and how their collision program works which is very impressive!They simplified the collision repair program with 4 levels and the support sounds awesome! One shop is not expected to do and be everything. What a concept!They do have some parts that are restricted to only certified shops.Rivian has 3 products: SUV (R1S), pick-up truck (R1T) and the Amazon Delivery Van (EDV) with 30k units on the road today.In 2023 Rivian anticipates they'll get out an additional 50k units on the road so be on the lookout!!!If you are in SoCal there is an experience center in Venice beach where you can check out the R1S & R1T!Rivian also provides insurance directly through their company and wants their shops to perform OE repair procedures so the vehicle is repaired properly. ;) Apply to be a certified Rivian collision repair facility: https://rivian.com/support/article/certified-collision-centersReach out to Frank Phillips directly: Frank's Email: fphillips@rivian.comRivian Website: https://rivian.com/Support the showFor more info on Micki's Marketing Services to help you grow your shop's revenue click here: https://collisioncentermarketing.comEmail Micki directly at micki@mickiwoodsmarketing.com Join the Body Bangin' Facebook Group!https://www.facebook.com/groups/989546031854134

Vatican Insider
Fr Frank Phillips St John Cantius Pt2

Vatican Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2022 27:00


Tune in this week to the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” when I present Part II of my conversation with a long-time friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. As I wrote last week, we met serendipitously during my recent vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony on September 24 for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. His story intertwines with the history of the church where, over 30 years, he enriched liturgy and music, brought many devotions back to life and founded a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. And, very importantly, helped the parish grow from 75 members to over 2,000!

Vatican Insider
2022-10-23 - Fr Frank Phillips St John Cantius Pt2

Vatican Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2022 27:00


Tune in this week to the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” when I present Part II of my conversation with a long-time friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. As I wrote last week, we met serendipitously during my recent vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony on September 24 for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. His story intertwines with the history of the church where, over 30 years, he enriched liturgy and music, brought many devotions back to life and founded a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. And, very importantly, helped the parish grow from 75 members to over 2,000!

Catholic
Vatican Insider 102322 Fr Frank Phillips St John Cantius Pt2

Catholic

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 27:30


Tune in this week to the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” when I present Part II of my conversation with a long-time friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. As I wrote last week, we met serendipitously during my recent vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony on September 24 for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. His story intertwines with the history of the church where, over 30 years, he enriched liturgy and music, brought many devotions back to life and founded a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. And, very importantly, helped the parish grow from 75 members to over 2,000!

Vatican Insider
2022-10-16 - Fr Frank Phillips- St John Cantius Pt 1

Vatican Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2022 27:00


My guest this week in the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” is a longtime friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. After a number of years, we met serendipitously over my vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. I've always been intrigued by the rich history of this parish and you will be too as you hear Fr. Frank talk of his 30 years here, of his love of reverent and beautiful liturgy, of his founding of a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius, and so much more. Thanks to Fr. Frank's dedication, inspiration, as well as decades of both material and spiritual renewal, the current pastor, Fr. Josh Caswell and his staff offer many liturgies during the week, including morning, afternoon and evening prayers, vespers and high and low Masses in both Latin and English. Astonishingly enough, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius today work in 3 parishes in 2 dioceses in Illinois, offering 57 public Masses weekly and hearing more than 700 confessions each week! Yes, you read that right! First called the Society of St. John Cantius by Cardinal George, the name was later changed to the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. The reference is to St. John of Kenty, Poland!

Vatican Insider
Fr Frank Phillips- St John Cantius Pt 1

Vatican Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2022 27:00


My guest this week in the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” is a longtime friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. After a number of years, we met serendipitously over my vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. I've always been intrigued by the rich history of this parish and you will be too as you hear Fr. Frank talk of his 30 years here, of his love of reverent and beautiful liturgy, of his founding of a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius, and so much more. Thanks to Fr. Frank's dedication, inspiration, as well as decades of both material and spiritual renewal, the current pastor, Fr. Josh Caswell and his staff offer many liturgies during the week, including morning, afternoon and evening prayers, vespers and high and low Masses in both Latin and English. Astonishingly enough, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius today work in 3 parishes in 2 dioceses in Illinois, offering 57 public Masses weekly and hearing more than 700 confessions each week! Yes, you read that right! First called the Society of St. John Cantius by Cardinal George, the name was later changed to the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. The reference is to St. John of Kenty, Poland!

Catholic
Vatican Insider 101622 Fr Frank Phillips St John Cantius Pt 1

Catholic

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 27:30


My guest this week in the interview segment of “Vatican Insider” is a longtime friend, Fr. Frank Phillips, former pastor for 30 years at Chicago's well-known St. John Cantius Church. After a number of years, we met serendipitously over my vacation at a pre-investiture ceremony for the Order of the Holy Sepulchre that was held at St. John Cantius. I've always been intrigued by the rich history of this parish and you will be too as you hear Fr. Frank talk of his 30 years here, of his love of reverent and beautiful liturgy, of his founding of a religious community, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius, and so much more. Thanks to Fr. Frank's dedication, inspiration, as well as decades of both material and spiritual renewal, the current pastor, Fr. Josh Caswell and his staff offer many liturgies during the week, including morning, afternoon and evening prayers, vespers and high and low Masses in both Latin and English. Astonishingly enough, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius today work in 3 parishes in 2 dioceses in Illinois, offering 57 public Masses weekly and hearing more than 700 confessions each week! Yes, you read that right! First called the Society of St. John Cantius by Cardinal George, the name was later changed to the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. The reference is to St. John of Kenty, Poland!

Art Dealer Diaries Podcast
Shiloh Thurman: Director, Woolaroc Museum & Wildlife Preserve - Epi. 211, Host Dr. Mark Sublette

Art Dealer Diaries Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2022 63:28


Today's guest was Shiloh Thurman and he's the Museum Director of the Woolaroc Museum in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Now, might have not heard of this museum, but it's always been a personal favorite of mine. The Woolaroc is a hidden gem of a museum up in northeastern Oklahoma, an hour out of Tulsa and I encourage you, if you're in that area, to go see it as it's not your run-of-the-mill educational institution.I don't say that in a bad way at all. It's not normal because it has herds of regional animals surrounding the museum including (but not limited to) bison, elk, and water buffalo. They are a big part of the experience, as well as the old cabin that oil tycoon Frank Phillips used as his home.  It's filled with great J. H. Sharp paintings and antique textiles and it's just an amazing thing to see. The museum itself has a great collection of Frank Tenney Johnson and William R. Leigh paintings, as well as some amazing first-phase, second-phase, and third-phase chiefs blankets. Shiloh has got a story to match. Here's a kid who grew up in Bartlesville and basically did every single job in the building in order to work his way up the ladder. He eventually became the director/curator and has been thriving ever since. It's a fun and interesting story. Plus, I want to promote this museum because I happen to like it. Shiloh Thurman on Art Dealer Diaries episode 211.

WSMF Broadcast Day Podcast
1941-09 05- BBC Frank Phillips

WSMF Broadcast Day Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022


EERIE OKIE
WOOLAROC

EERIE OKIE

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2022 44:50


This week, Sumer Wensman joins Marnie for an adventure at Woolaroc. The girls discuss the founder of Woolaroc, Frank Phillips, and the attraction itself. They discuss having divorce attorney energy, a fox that escaped at the zoo, and cowboy cosplay. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

LIVIN THE GOOD LIFE SHOW
ANDREW HOWARD, actor

LIVIN THE GOOD LIFE SHOW

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 15:45


Howard has made notable appearances in several major productions, including the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers and the Guy Ritchie caper Revolver, as well as costarring alongside Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close in the 2003 TV movie The Lion in Winter.[2] He played "Bad" Frank Phillips in History Channel's Hatfields & McCoys.[3]In 2001, Howard was awarded best actor at the Tokyo International Film Festival for his portrayal of Jon in Mr In-Between.[4] He co-wrote the screenplay for Shooters, a 2002 British crime drama in which he also starred.[2] In 2009, he played Thomas Luster in the thriller film Luster under the direction from Adam Mason.[5]In 2009, he was also in the film Blood River,[6] for which Howard won Best Actor Award at the Honolulu Film Festival and the Jack Nance Breakthrough Performance Award at the New York Film Festival Downtown. In 2011, he starred in Limitless, a film by Neil Burger originally titled The Dark Fields.[7]In 2014, he played a supporting role as the lead Russian henchman, Maxim, in Taken 3.[1] Since 2015, he has appeared in the television series Bates Motel as Will Decody, who was originally portrayed by actor Ian Hart in the first season.[8]In 2020, he played Stephen in Tenet. In the same year, he starred as Officer Merk, a racist NYPD officer, in the Oscar-winning short film Two Distant Strangers. 

The Clarke County Democrat Podcast

Ethel Lene Phillips Jackson, 55, the youngest of her siblings, was born to the late Cora and Frank Phillips on July 8, 1966 in Manila. On May 9, 2022, at Providence Hospital in Mobile, her eternal Father picked Ethel from our midst and moved her to her eternal home. She is now with her parents; her grandparents, Hattie and Willie Phillips and Cornelia Washington; and her sisters, Mary Phillips and Clearetta Abston. Ethel began her early Christian journey as a child at Little Burrah Baptist Church in Manilla. She served as the church secretary and in any capacity in which...Article Link

The Scott Townsend Show
#116 Bob Fraser: 15 Magical Years at WOOLAROC w / Bob Fraser

The Scott Townsend Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 44:48


Sponsored by:Pops Daylight Donuts - https://bit.ly/3x6DvOx​Castafly Outdoor Adventures YouTube channel  -  https://bit.ly/3aojRnE​In this episode, I visit with the CEO of the Frank Phillips Foundation and the Operating Officer of Woolaroc Museum and Wildlife Preserve, Bob Fraser.  Bob talks about retiring this year after 15 years of overseeing one of the United States' premier historic sites, art collections, and game preserves.For more information on Woolaroc, or to contact Bob Fraser, go tohttps://www.woolaroc.orgOilman:  The Story of Frank Phillips and the Birth of Phillips Petroleumhttps://amzn.to/3llMlUXSend me an email at scott@scotttownsend.info if you would like to leave a comment, have a question, etc.  And as always, feel free to leave a comment in the Comments section.► Subscribe to my Youtube channel --- https://bit.ly/3iV8sOTYou can look for these episodes every week, so please hit SUBSCRIBE to stay in the loop for each new show!The Scott Townsend Show Merchandise https://teespring.com/stores/tsts-2I get a cut of the merchandise sold.I ♥ my podcast host @Buzzsprout. This link will get us both a $20 Amazon gift card if you upgrade! https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1087190 #You can join me over at Goodreads to find out what I've read, what I'm reading, and what I want to read in 2021http://bit.ly/2PYSIjRResources and Links--------------------------------------------My contact info:LinkedIn https://bit.ly/2ZZ4qweTwitter  https://bit.ly/3enLDQaFacebook   https://bit.ly/2Od4ItOInstagram  https://bit.ly/2ClncWlSend me a text: 918-397-0327Transcribe your podcasts and videos with Otterhttps://otter.ai/referrals/ICNJ76HUExecutive Producer:  Ben TownsendCreative Consultant:  Matthew Blue TownsendShot with a 1080P Webcam with Microphone, WebCam USB Camera, Computer HD Streaming Webcam for PC Desktop & Laptop w/Mic, Wide Angle Lens & Large Sensor for Superior Low Light-wb-4 https://amzn.to/32gfgAuBlue Yeti USB Mic - Midnight Bluehttps://amzn.to/3ygBBf4Follow The Scott Townsend Show podcast onSpotify  https://spoti.fi/3eDwLgGiTunes  https://apple.co/3jAwCyuStitcher  https://bit.ly/3gYaDiOTuneIn  https://bit.ly/2OzlH9VGoogle Podcasts  https://bit.ly/3Gva916Amazon Music  https://amzn.to/3nHavJxiHeart Radio  https://ihr.fm/3Epy3t1Pandora  https://bit.ly/3vT9L7LPodcast Addict  https://bit.ly/3mnBFpiPodchaser  https://bit.ly/2XT0iAHPocket Casts  https://pca.st/94zyffgnDeezer  https://bit.ly/3blHVHSListen Notes  https://bit.ly/3vT6ANtPlayerFM

Robert Cabral's Canine Conversations - Dog Training Podcast
Episode 77 - Frank Phillips IPO Schutzhund Judge and World Champion

Robert Cabral's Canine Conversations - Dog Training Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 58:53


You can't get a better perspective on IPO / IGP / Schutzhund than from Frank Phillips.  He's a top level judge for the sport as well as a top level competitor on a world level.  He's stood on the international podium on several occasions and judged countless trials.  He knows the sport inside and out and brings almost 30 years of experience.  This is one of my all-time favorite podcasts and it will be for you too!

Only in OK Show
Woolaroc Museum and Wildlife Preserve

Only in OK Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2021 23:04


Do you wanna Roc?   On today's episode of the Only in OK Show, we discuss the Woolaroc Museum & Wildlife Preserve in Bartlesville, Oklahoma.   Founded in 1925 by oilman Frank Phillips, Woolaroc is a 3,700 acre working ranch that has a 50,000 square foot museum with a collection described by Christie’s of New York as “one of the finest collections of southwest art in the world” along with the original Lodge home and a large herd of bison, elk, longhorn cattle, scotch highland cattle and hundreds of deer. Woolaroc museum hosts an outstanding collection of western art and artifacts, Native American material, and one of the finest collections of Colt firearms in the world. The name WOOLAROC is derived from three words—the woods, lakes and rocks that make up the beautiful Osage Hills of northeast Oklahoma where Woolaroc is located. The name was originally intended for the rustic Lodge ranch house, but it was so unique that it soon became the name for the entire Frank Phillips ranch. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Will Rogers once said, 'When you are visiting the beauty spots of this country, don't overlook Frank Phillips' ranch and game preserve in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. It's the most unique place in this country.’   Bartlesville is a city mostly in Washington County. The city hosts several annual festivals and shows, nearly all focused in the downtown.  Sunfest is the first weekend of June. It includes an arts and crafts show, a music festival, a kids festival, and a classic cars show.    Check out our sponsor for this episode - Holliday Tax Group   #TravelOK #onlyinokshow #Oklahoma #MadeinOklahoma #oklaproud #BetterTogether #SupportLocalEverything #positivenews #itunes #podcast #okherewego #traveloklahoma  #history #Attraction #Event #Venue #Historic #Animal #Hiking #Museum #Wildlife #Preserve

Midnight Train Podcast
82 - The Hatfields & McCoys' New Years Massacre

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 105:21


     This here episode marks the last episode of a very tumultuous year. At Least we gave you the super upbeat story of the Dozier School For Boys for your Christmas listening. This week we are going out with a bang! You may think you know the story, you probably know the names, you didn't know that Moody's wife is directly related to both families, and lastly you probably want us to get to the point. So here it is…. This week we celebrate the new year by talking about none other than the Hatfields and the McCoys...and the new years day massacre.         The patriarchs of each family during the majority of the feud were William Anderson Hatfield and Randolph McCoy.  Hatfield was born September 9, 1839, in western Virginia (now Logan, West Virginia), the son of Ephraim and Nancy (Vance) Hatfield. His nickname "Devil Anse" has a variety of supposed origins: it was given to him by his mother; by Randolph McCoy; earned from his bravery during battle in the American Civil War; or as contrast to his good-tempered cousin, Anderson "Preacher Anse" Hatfield.A Southern sympathizer, Hatfield enlisted in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. He was commissioned a First Lieutenant of Cavalry in the Virginia State Line in 1862, a group made to protect the territory along the Kentucky-Virginia border where resident loyalties to the North and South were mixed. The Virginia State Line eventually disbanded in 1863 and Hatfield enlisted as a private in the newly formed 45th Battalion Virginia Infantry, before being appointed first lieutenant and later captain of Company B. His unit spent most of its time patrolling the border area against bushwhackers sympathetic to the Union as well as engaging in guerrilla warfare against Union soldiers. Devil Anse himself has been connected to battles and killings of several Union fighters, including trackers Ax and Fleming Hurley in 1863.Devil Anse and his uncle Jim Vance later formed a Confederate guerrilla fighting unit called the "Logan Wildcats." One of the group's victims was Union General Bill France; killed in revenge for losing one of their members to France's unit.[ In 1865, he was suspected of having been involved in the murder of his rival Asa Harmon McCoy, who had fought for the Union Army and was waylaid by The Wildcats on his return home. Hatfield had been home ill at the time of the killing, which was probably committed at the instigation of his uncle, Jim Vance. This may have sparked the beginning of the notorious feud between the two families that claimed many lives on both sides.Devil Anse was the patriarch leader during the Hatfield-McCoy feud. His family and Randolph McCoy's fought in one of the bloodiest and most well-known feuds in American history. He was instrumental during the execution of McCoy boys Tolbert, Pharmer and Bud, as well as being present during the Battle of Grapevine Creek before most of his sons and friends were arrested for the murder of the McCoys.Hatfield was baptized on September 23, 1911 in Island Creek by William Dyke "Uncle Dyke" Garrett and converted to Christianity (he had maintained a largely agnostic or anti-institutional view of religion prior to this conversion). He went on to found a Church of Christ congregation in West Virginia. He was an uncle of the eventual Governor of West Virginia, and United States Senator, Henry D. Hatfield.         Randolph "Randall"(or sometimes Ol’ Ran’ll) McCoy grew up in the Tug River Valley, which marked the boundary between Kentucky and West Virginia. He was born on the Kentucky side of the valley, one of 13 children. There he learned to hunt and farm, two main ways people living in this part of Appalachia supported themselves. McCoy grew up in poverty. His father, Daniel, had little interest in work, so his mother, Margaret, had to struggle to care for, feed and clothe the family. In 1849, McCoy married his first cousin, Sarah "Sally" McCoy. Sally inherited land from her father a few years after they married. They settled on this 300-acre spread in Pike County, Kentucky, where they had 16 children together.  During the Civil War, McCoy served as a soldier for the Confederacy. He may have even been a part of the same local militia as his later nemesis, William Anderson "Devil Anse" Hatfield.  The Family trees of these men are huge. There are many descendants around to this day. This also made keeping track of some of the issues tricky. Lots of people involved. First cousin marriage. Romeo and juliet type relationships between the families...crazy shit.          The Hatfield–McCoy feud, also described by journalists as the Hatfield–McCoy war, involved two rural American families of the West Virginia–Kentucky area along the Tug Fork of the Big Sandy River in the years 1863–1891. The McCoy family lived mostly on the Kentucky side of the Tug Fork; the Hatfields lived mostly on the West Virginia side. The majority of the Hatfields, although living in Mingo County (then part of Logan County) fought for the Confederacy in the American Civil War; most McCoys also fought for the Confederates, with the exception of Asa Harmon McCoy, who fought for the Union.    The Hatfields were more affluent than the McCoys and were well-connected politically. Anse's timbering operation was a source of wealth for his family, while the McCoys were more of a lower-middle-class family. Ole Ran'l owned a 300-acre farm. Both families had also been involved in the manufacturing and selling of illegal moonshine, a popular commodity at the time. The first event in the decades-long feud was the 1865 murder of Randolph’s brother, Asa Harmon McCoy, by the Logan Wildcats, a local militia group that counted Devil Anse and other Hatfields among its members. Many people—even members of his own family—regarded Asa Harmon, who had served in the Union Army during the American Civil War, as a traitor. At the time of his capture, he was recovering from a gunshot wound to the chest. During the early months of the Civil War, Asa joined a company of the Pike County Home Guards, under the command of Uriah Runyon, and it is thought he sustained the wound while serving in this unit. Asa's Company E was mustered out on December 24, 1864, in Ashland. He was killed near his home on January 7, 1865, just thirteen days after leaving the Union Army. A group of Confederate guerillas took credit for the killing and his wife's pension application states that he was "killed by Rebels". There are no existing records pertaining to his death and no warrants were issued in connection with the murder. McCoy family tradition points to James "Jim" Vance, an uncle of Anse and a member of a West Virginia Militia group, as the culprit.         Relations between the two families continued to sour over the next decade before flaring again over a seemingly small matter: a dispute over a single hog. In 1878 Randolph McCoy accused Floyd Hatfield, a cousin of Devil Anse, of stealing one of his pigs, a valuable commodity in the poor region. Floyd Hatfields’s trial took place in McCoy territory but was presided over by a cousin of Devil Anse. It hinged on the testimony of star witness Bill Staton, a McCoy relative married to a Hatfield. Staton testified in Floyd Hatfield’s favor, and the McCoys were infuriated when Floyd was cleared of the charges against him. Two years later, Staton was violently killed in a fracas with Sam and Paris McCoy, nephews of Randolph. Sam stood trial for the murder but was acquitted for self-defense reasons. Within months of Staton’s murder, a heated affair of a different sort was set ablaze. At a local election day gathering in 1880, Johnse Hatfield, the 18-year-old son of Devil Anse, encountered Roseanna McCoy, Randolph’s daughter. According to accounts, Johnse and Roseanna hit it off, disappearing together for hours. Supposedly fearing retaliation from her family for mingling with the Hatfields, Roseanna stayed at the Hatfield residence for a period of time, drawing the ire of the McCoys. Although they certainly shared a romance, it rapidly became clear that Johnse was not about to settle down with Roseanna. Several months later he abandoned the pregnant Roseanna and quickly moved on. In May 1881 he married Nancy McCoy, Roseanna’s cousin. According to the romanticized legend, Roseanna was heartbroken by these events and never recovered emotionally. The real turning point in the feud, according to most historical accounts, occurred on another local election day in August 1882. Three of Randolph McCoy’s sons ended up in a violent dispute with two brothers of Devil Anse. The fight soon snowballed into chaos as one of the McCoy brothers stabbed Ellison Hatfield multiple times and then shot him in the back. Authorities soon apprehended the McCoys, but the Hatfields interceded, spiriting the men to Hatfield territory. After receiving word that Ellison had died, they bound the McCoys to some pawpaw bushes. Within minutes, they fired more than 50 shots, killing all three brothers. Though the Hatfields might have felt their revenge was warranted, the law felt otherwise, quickly returning indictments against 20 men, including Devil Anse and his sons. Despite the charges, the Hatfields eluded arrest, leaving the McCoys boiling with anger about the murders and outraged that the Hatfields walked free. Their cause was taken up by Perry Cline, an attorney who was married to Martha McCoy, the widow of Randolph’s brother Asa Harmon. Years earlier Cline had lost a lawsuit against Devil Anse over the deed for thousands of acres of land, and many historians believe this left him looking for his own form of revenge. Using his political connections, Cline had the charges against the Hatfields reinstated. He announced rewards for the arrest of the Hatfields, including Devil Anse.         The media started to report on the feud in 1887. In their accounts, the Hatfields were often portrayed as violent backwoods hillbillies who roamed the mountains stirring up violence. The sensationalist coverage planted the seed for the rivalry to become cemented in the American imagination. What had been a local story was becoming a national legend. The Hatfields may or may not have been paying attention to these stories, but they were certainly paying attention to the bounty on their heads. In an effort to end the commotion once and for all, a group of the Hatfields and their supporters hatched a plan to attack Randolph McCoy and his family. This attack would become known as the New Year's Day Massacre.       Ever on the offensive, the Hatfields staged a sneak attack on the McCoy homestad. On New Year's Day 1888, they set fire to the McCoy home in what was eventually dubbed the New Year's Night Massacre. According to some accounts, the fire was set while the family was still in the house, asleep, as a means of forcing Randolph McCoy to come outside where a Hatfield ambush awaited him. As the flames grew, the Hatfields opened fire on the house.  McCoy did come out, but managed to escape into the woods along with some children, who suffered frostbite. Other members of the McCoy clan weren't so lucky. Two of his children were killed during the blaze, and his wife was beaten so badly she was permanently disabled. With his house burning, Randolph and his remaining family members were able to escape to the woods; his children, unprepared for the elements, suffered frostbite. The remaining McCoys moved to Pikeville to escape the West Virginia raiding parties.  During the 1888 New Year's Night Massacre, the Hatfields set fire to the McCoy homestead in hopes of flushing the family out in the open. During the mayhem, Randolph McCoy's wife, Sarah, was so badly beaten her skull was crushed. His son Calvin and daughter Alifair were killed in the crossfire Sarah McCoy had never participated in the violence of the feud, so beating her almost to death served no purpose other than sending a message. And send a message it did – to the local authorities. Sarah McCoy's gruesome beating, and the murder of her children, brought about the murder trial that judicially ended the feud between the warring families.  This incident led to the last great skirmish of the feud as tensions were at an all time high! After the murders and the burning of the house there was an outcry for the Hatfields to be brought to justice. This led to the battle of grapevine creek. On January 19 Devil Anse and a large party of his supporters faced off with Frank Phillips and his men in a large gun battle which entered local lore and the legend of the feud as the Battle of Grapevine Creek. Despite involving a large number of men, and despite being the single biggest engagement of the entire feud only two were killed in the battle, though a deputy who supported the Hatfields was executed by Phillips after the battle. Following the engagement Phillips withdrew to Kentucky, having succeeded in rounding up nine members of the Hatfield clan. Once there he learned that another Governor, E. Willis Wilson of West Virginia, had entered the fray, and at least to all appearances on the side of the Hatfields. Wilson demanded that the illegally taken prisoners be returned to West Virginia.Wilson expressed outrage to both governor Buckner and to the federal government, sued the government of Kentucky for the illegal arrest of the nine prisoners being held there, and demanded reparations for the raids into his state. He also ordered the West Virginia Guard to mobilize and move units to the border with Kentucky to prevent further incursions into the state. In response, Buckner dispatched units of Kentucky’s guard to the border area as protection against retaliatory raids by either West Virginia troops or supporters of the Hatfields. Only two decades after the end of the Civil War the military assets of two states were facing each other over their shared border, as a result of the feud between the Hatfields and the McCoys.Among the nine men taken to Kentucky to stand trial for the murder of Alifair McCoy and others was Valentine Hatfield, known as Wall and a man with some connections in the government of West Virginia. Through his ministrations, Governor Wilson demanded the return of the prisoners by arguing that they had been denied due process and had been illegally extradited by Kentucky. Kentucky argued that the prisoners were in custody, under indictment, and that the state had no obligation to release them to West Virginia or any other entity, regardless of the circumstances of their arrest. In April the case was appealed by Governor Wilson to the Supreme Court of the United States. The Court issued no finding regarding the legality or illegality of the arrest, but agreed with Kentucky in their argument that no federal law existed which would prohibit the prisoners from being tried for the crimes committed in Kentucky, regardless of the nature of events which resulted with them being in custody. The finding was 7-2 in favor of Kentucky. With the nine men in custody pending trial the feud was effectively over, at least as pertains to violence against the other family. But several questions over the feud itself and the many participants arose in the aftermath of the arrests. Devil Anse was not among the prisoners, and neither West Virginia nor Kentucky authorities sought his arrest, despite his physical location being well known. Nor was Cap Hatfield in custody. One of the prisoners taken to Kentucky for trial was Valentine Hatfield, and at his trial he was convicted of involvement in the murders of the McCoy children and sentenced to life in prison. Wall Hatfield may not have been involved in the attack for which he was charged, in 2014 his great-grandson, an Episcopal priest, told the Bluefield (West Virginia) Daily Telegraph that family lore was that Wall surrendered voluntarily and that he hadn’t been guilty of the crime for which he had been charged. He also recounted a story of another relative visiting the Kentucky State Prison to review the records of his great-grandfather and learning of a different cause of death than that recorded by most historians.ADVERTISEMENTAccording to most accounts of the feud, once he was convicted Wall communicated with his brothers, asking for their assistance in getting him out of jail, but they refused over fears of being arrested. Wall died in prison under circumstances which remain officially unknown. According to his great-grandson, an official of the Kentucky prison system reviewed the records at the request of a relative of the Hatfields, and reported to her that he was placed in a cellblock alongside several convicted members of the McCoy clan, who killed Wall Hatfield in prison. The cause of death and the location of his grave were never released officially to the Hatfield family, who still question the nature of his role in the feud.     According to the accounts of several historians regarding the feud, Kentucky Special Officer Frank Phillips captured a deputy named Bill Dempsey who had been supporting the Hatfields, and executed him on the spot, an act of outright murder, though he was not held accountable for the crime. Other accounts have Phillips similarly executing Uncle Jim Vance rather than taking him into custody. Phillips referred to himself as “Bad Frank”, and claimed to have ridden at one time with the James-Younger Gang. Whether or not true, he did name one of his sons Jesse James Phillips, and he was indicted at various times in several jurisdictions. MORE ON THE FUEDGoing back to Perry Cline, Whether Perry Cline instigated the feud, using Randolph McCoy and his family as a red flag to enrage Devil Anse, has been debated by many over the years. The story of Anse using the courts to deprive Cline of a significant section of valuable land has been cited as the motive for Cline to try to damage the Hatfield clan. Some writers and historians have laid the blame for the feud at the feet of Perry Cline, using his many instances of arousing the anger of the McCoy’s against the Hatfields as evidence that he manipulated the feud, and inflamed it during its several periods of near-dormancy. But other aspects of Cline’s character and his achievements in Pike County call this judgment into question in many ways.There is little doubt that the McCoy family and their supporters suffered more deaths and the destruction of property over the course of the feud, and Randolph McCoy’s frustrations were elevated by his failures to obtain justice in the courts. Cline may have just been using his influence and political connections to help the McCoy family. Cline was well respected in Pike County and its environs; he started the first school for black children in the county and was elected to the state legislature, where he exhibited significant political skills. The theory that Cline incited the feud to get back at Devil Anse also falls flat when it is considered that Anse’s business remained intact and profitable in the feud’s aftermath, and if anything his influence in Logan County was enhanced.One of the motivating factors for the Hatfield attack on Randolph McCoy’s home was the bounty placed on the heads of several members of the clan, including a $500 bounty on Devil Anse, the recognized leader of the Hatfield’s and their supporters. Anse has gone down in history as the undisputed leader of the West Virginia Hatfield clan, despite the fact that he was not arrested and was never tried for any of the multitude of violent crimes he supposedly directed. While some have ascribed his eluding prosecution to his political connections in West Virginia, it has been noted that his brother Wall held similar connections, which did not preclude him from being tried, convicted, and imprisoned in Kentucky, where he died. Anse was never, except when attempting to outmaneuver Frank Phillips and his posse of vigilantes, on the run; his whereabouts were well-known to both members of the Hatfield clan and the McCoy faction attempting to bring him to justice. Court records also demonstrate that Anse was prone to using the courts, both in Logan County and in Pike County, to resolve differences, as indicated by the incident with the stolen hog. Nor was he present during the attack on the McCoy home. He was part of the murder of the three McCoy brothers following the murder of his own brother, an incident which much of the Tug Valley found to be justified. If he was in fact the leader of the Hatfield clan, as most accounts claim, he nonetheless escaped legal retribution, and attempts to exact justice upon him ended with the trial of the Hatfield’s in Kentucky. Cap Hatfield was the second son of Devil Anse, a man known to have a violent streak and a quarrelsome nature throughout the Tug River region. Cap was the type of man who preferred fighting to discussion and believed that vengeance was a duty of the offended. Cap was one of many of the feud’s participants of which there are conflicting accounts, some say he was arrested by Frank Phillips on the same day that the latter killed Uncle Jim Vance, others recount that he escaped Phillips on that day. At one point he was in the Logan County (later Mingo County) Jail, from which he reportedly escaped and eluded justice, probably with the help of his father. Cap was never brought to justice.ADVERTISEMENTDuring the trial which led to the sentencing of Ellison Mounts to death, eyewitness testimony from Randolph McCoy was that it was Cap Hatfield who had killed Alifair McCoy, testimony which conflicted with the confession offered by Mounts. As Cap frequently sided with his mentor, Jim Vance, who consistently recommended violent solutions to perceived slights, it seems likely that he was present during the attack, probably leading it along with his uncle. Cap escaped the feud and the pursuit of the vigilantes and vanished. In 1930, he died at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland, one of the last survivors of the feud. His death was described in the New York Times as being the result of a brain ailment.James Vance was well-known in both Logan and Pike Counties, referred to as Crazy Jim Vance by the McCoy family and as Uncle Jim Vance to the Hatfield clan. The McCoys liked to point out that his father, Abner Vance, had been hanged and had never been married to Jim’s mother. A guerrilla fighter in Logan and Pike Counties during the Civil War, Vance was widely believed to have been the killer of Asa Harmon McCoy in 1865. Vance was accused by the McCoy’s of being the leader of the assault on the McCoy home during the New Year’s attack, and there was testimony that it was he who had severely beaten Sarah McCoy with a rifle butt as she attempted to reach her wounded daughter.Vance has been portrayed down the years as a psychopathic killer, one of the leading proponents of the violence which marked the feud. Following his death and the disappearance of Cap Hatfield, the violence of the feud subsided, despite Devil Anse, the presumed leader of the Hatfield clan, remaining at large. Some historians believe that Cap Hatfield witnessed the execution of the wounded Jim Vance at the hands of Frank Phillips, which led to Cap’s decision to flee the region. Despite his criminal history, Vance at one point served as a constable, though many of the Hatfield’s did so in Logan County, despite being considered outlaws in Pike County, so Vance’s service with the law cannot be a consideration when evaluating his true character.    Throughout the twentieth century, the Hatfield and McCoy feud grew in legend. It became sensationalized in newspapers and magazines, fictionalized in periodicals and film, satirized in vaudeville, and trivialized in cartoons and comics. Portions of the feud were presented as romantic drama, as in the film Roseanna McCoy, released in 1949, which approached the feud from the perspective of star-crossed lovers of the Romeo and Juliet type. Mark Twain was one of the first to use the feud as a basis for one of his tales, describing the feud between the Grangerfords and the Sheperdsons in his novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Even Betty Boop appeared in the cartoon with a feud as a backdrop.On June 14, 2003, in Pikeville, Kentucky, the McCoy cousins partnered with Reo Hatfield of Waynesboro, Virginia, to declare an official truce between the families. Reo Hatfield said that he wanted to show that if the two families could reach an accord, others could also. He had said that he wanted to send a broader message to the world that when national security is at risk, Americans put their differences aside and stand united: "We're not saying you don't have to fight because sometimes you do have to fight," he said. "But you don't have to fight forever." Signed by more than sixty descendants during the fourth Hatfield–McCoy Festival, the truce was touted as a proclamation of peace, saying "We ask by God's grace and love that we be forever remembered as those that bound together the hearts of two families to form a family of freedom in America." Governor Paul E. Patton of Kentucky and Governor Bob Wise of West Virginia signed proclamations declaring June 14 Hatfield and McCoy Reconciliation Day. Ron McCoy, one of the festival's founders, said it is unknown where the three signed proclamations will be exhibited and that "the Hatfields and McCoys symbolize violence and feuding and fighting, but by signing this, hopefully people will realize that's not the final chapter.the Hatfield and McCoy Reunion Festival and Marathon are held annually in June on a three-day weekend. The events take place in Pikeville, Kentucky, Matewan, West Virginia, and Williamson, West Virginia. The festival commemorates the famed feud and includes a marathon and half-marathon (the motto is "no feudin', just runnin'"), in addition to an ATV ride in all three towns. There is also a tug-of-war across the Tug Fork tributary near which the feuding families lived, a live re-enactment of scenes from their most famous fight, a motorcycle ride, live entertainment, Hatfield–McCoy landmark tours, a cornbread contest, pancake breakfast, arts, crafts, and dancing. Launched in 2000, the festival typically attracts thousands with more than 300 runners taking part in the races.[29]Statue honoring Randolph McCoy at the McCoy Homeplace in Hardy, KYIn August 2015 members of both families helped archeologists dig for ruins at a site where they believe Randolph McCoy's house was burnedIn September 2018, a wooden statue, standing over 8 feet tall, was erected in honor of Randolph McCoy at the McCoy homeplace in Hardy, Kentucky. Carved by chainsaw carver Travis Williams and donated to the property, this statue had been commissioned by McCoy property owner and Hatfield descendant Bob Scott. The statue was unveiled during Hatfield-McCoy Heritage Days in Pike County, Kentucky, an event that occurs every September that brings Hatfield and McCoy descendants back to Pike County to celebrate the long-standing peace between the families. The McCoy homeplace, like many others associated with the feud, is open to tourists year-round Top horror movies set in kentucky...there is only 4 apparently…Films set in Kentucky - IMDb Horror movies set in west virginiaFilms set in West Virginia - IMDbThe Midnight Train Podcast is sponsored by VOUDOUX VODKA.www.voudoux.com Ace’s Depothttp://www.aces-depot.com BECOME A PRODUCER!http://www.patreon.com/themidnighttrainpodcast Find The Midnight Train Podcast:www.themidnighttrainpodcast.comwww.facebook.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.twitter.com/themidnighttrainpcwww.instagram.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.discord.com/themidnighttrainpodcastwww.tiktok.com/themidnighttrainp And wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Subscribe to our official YouTube channel:OUR YOUTUBE

The Snowboard Project
Remembering Jake Burton Carpenter - Bonus Episode

The Snowboard Project

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2020 63:59


This week marks the one year anniversary of losing the sport's most influential rider - founder of Burton Snowboards, Jake Burton Carpenter. This was a heavy episode to put together, as it all so fresh and the people close to him so profoundly affected.  But we did manage to talk with Chris Karol, the sport's first World Champion, Steve Hayes, arguably Burton's first prodigy rider, Ross Powers who won two Olympic medals and ushered the sport into the mainstream and two former Burton employees, Mike Arzt and Frank Phillips who run a business together (thepublicworks.biz.)   This episode is sponsored by:   Cardiff Snowcraft  @cardiffsnow www.cardiffsnow.com Coupon Code: “THESNOWBOARDPROJECT15” {15% off at their website)  Never Summer www.neversummer.com   Melvin Brewing www.melvinbrewing.com   Tow Pro Lifts @towprolifts www.towpro-lifts.com   United Shapes @unitedshapes www.unitedshapes.us   Check them out!   Subscribe to us on YouTube for video content {including Real Talk} www.youtube.com/c/thesnowboardproject   Please support The Snowboard Project: www.patreon.com/thesnowboardproject  

Creative Coaching
Chris Hackett - Head Coach-Frank Phillips College Men's Basketball

Creative Coaching

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2020 32:13


We talk to Coach Hackett about: Comparisons between the US and European game, How basketball has created opportunities, and You have to be willing to change.

Becker’s Healthcare Virtual Events presents Standing Room Only
12. Fireside Chat With Dr. Frank Phillips

Becker’s Healthcare Virtual Events presents Standing Room Only

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2020 21:11


This episode features a session from Becker's Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + the Future of Spine Virtual Event: Fireside Chat With Dr. Frank PhillipsThe conversation include insight from the following speaker:- Frank Phillips, MD, Director, Division of Spine Surgery, Professor, Orthopaedic Surgery, Rush University Medical Center

Osagin' It
Woolaroc with the King of the County, Mr. Bob Fraser

Osagin' It

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 22:07


Join Woolaroc's CEO, Mr. Bob Fraser and the Tourism Gal up on the screened-in porch at the Lodge at Woolaroc. Listen in as Bob tells of the timeless history and living legacy of oil tycoon Frank Phillips. Re-live the days of outlaws, oil deals, and cattle barons as Bob lets you in on an inside look at the ranch.

The Snowboard Project
Real Talk: Remembering Jake Burton Carpenter • Episode 127

The Snowboard Project

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2019 74:59


Real Talk: This Week in Snowboarding - Episode 127 Remembering Jake Featuring Chris Karol, Steve Hayes, Ross Powers, Mike Arzt and Frank Phillips Shout out to the sponsors of this episode Never Summer Snowboards and 686 Technical Outerwear. We ask that you support the brands that support disruptive snowboard media. Find out more about these guys at their websites.   http://neversummer.com   http://686.com   Last Thursday we lost the sport's most influential rider - founder of Burton Snowboards, Jake Burton Carpenter. This was a heavy episode to put together, as it all so fresh and the people close to him so profoundly affected.  But we did manage to sit talk with Chris Karol, the sport's first World Champion, Steve Hayes, arguably Burton's first prodigy rider, Ross Powers who won two Olympic medals and ushered the sport into the mainstream and two former Burton employees, Mike Arzt and Frank Phillips who run a business together (thepublicworks.biz.) Clip of the Week - Scroll Awards Share your favorite clip from this week's selection of Burton riders (In honor of Jake) to be entered to win a Haglöfs Nengal PROOF Kurbits jacket (Worth $595). http://haglofs.com   Kimmy Fasani Mark McMorris Terje Haakonsen Danny Davis Gigi Rüf Red Gerard Darcy Sharpe Mikkel Bang   Please consider supporting us at http://www.patreon.com/thesnowboardproject   And remember to call our Tip Line at 208 471 8007   You can follow us on Instagram @thesnowboardproject   THE SNOWBOARD PROJECT Real Talk: This Week in Snowboarding - Episode 127 Remembering Jake Featuring Chris Karol, Steve Hayes, Ross Powers, Mike Arzt and Frank Phillips Hosted by Mark Sullivan Produced by Mark Sullivan Associate producer Dustin James Art by Aaron Draplin and Sarat

Boston Public Radio Podcast
BPR Full Show 08/19/19: Margery Holds A Poop Pen

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2019 161:31


Today on Boston Public Radio: WGBH's own Adam Reilly and Boston Globe reporter Frank Phillips provided a politics round table. WGBH News Analyst Charlie Sennott discusses President Donald Trump's role in Israel banning two Congresswomen from visiting the country on a political trip. Medical Ethicist Art Caplan discussed a new report that one in every 1,000 black men dies at the hands of police officers in America. We opened the lines to hear listeners' thoughts on an impending recession. Reverends Irene Monroe and Emmett G Price III joined us for another edition of All Rev'd Up, where they discussed Jay Z's new deal with the NFL. Industrial designer Garrett Benisch discussed his efforts to design products with sustainability in mind, including a pen made with ink from refined human waste. Inaugural poet Richard Blanco joined us for another edition of Village Voice.

This is the Panhandle
The State of Higher Education in the Texas Panhandle: Frank Phillips College

This is the Panhandle

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2019 25:33


[vc_row type="in_container" full_screen_row_position="middle" scene_position="center" text_color="dark" text_align="left" overlay_strength="0.3" shape_divider_position="bottom" bg_image_animation="none"][vc_column column_padding="no-extra-padding" column_padding_position="all" background_color_opacity="1" background_hover_color_opacity="1" column_link_target="_self" column_shadow="none" column_border_radius="none" width="1/1" tablet_width_inherit="default" tablet_text_alignment="default" phone_text_alignment="default" column_border_width="none" column_border_style="solid" bg_image_animation="none"][vc_column_text][/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row type="in_container" full_screen_row_position="middle" scene_position="center" text_color="dark" text_align="left" overlay_strength="0.3" shape_divider_position="bottom" bg_image_animation="none"][vc_column column_padding="no-extra-padding" column_padding_position="all" background_color_opacity="1" background_hover_color_opacity="1" column_link_target="_self" column_shadow="none" column_border_radius="none" width="1/1" tablet_width_inherit="default" tablet_text_alignment="default" phone_text_alignment="default" column_border_width="none" column_border_style="solid" bg_image_animation="none"][vc_column_text]Dr. Jud Hicks has been at Frank Phillips College for well over a decade and President of the institution since 2011.  Frank Phillips college has campuses in Borger, Dalhart, Hereford, Dumas, and Perryton, and provides education to the northernmost parts of Texas. Hicks and his faculty and staff work diligently to ensure student success.  FPC partners with the other higher education institutions in the Panhandle to create the quality workforce needed to meet the demands of the Texas Panhandle. More about Frank Phillips College: Website: CLICK HERE Phone: (806) 457-4200 (Borger)[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Boston Public Radio Podcast
BPR Full Show 4/1/2019: Joe Biden, Cuba, and Antarctica's Melting Glaciers

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2019 164:54


Today on Boston Public Radio: We went over the latest political headlines with Frank Phillips and Peter Gelzinis. Phillips is the State House Bureau Chief for The Boston Globe* *and Gelzinis is a columnist emeritus for The Boston Herald. Deal or no deal? Charles Sennott, WGBH news analyst and founder of The GroundTruth Project, talked about the latest on Brexit and what it means for Prime Minister Theresa May. In a recent piece for New York magazine, former Nevada state politician Lucy Flores alleged that Joe Biden inappropriately touched her at a political rally. We asked our listeners: Does Biden's history disqualify him from running for president? Television expert Bob Thompson weighed in on the final season of "Veep" and shared his picks for the best and worst TV of the week. Thompson is the founding director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture and a Trustee Professor of Television and Popular Culture at the Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse. For seven weeks, Carolyn Beeler — the environmental reporter for The World — was on an Antarctic expedition living and working among a group of scientists who were studying Thwaites Glacier. She shared her takeaways from the trip. Richard Blanco helped us ring in National Poetry Month by teaching Jim and Margery how to pen their own acrostic poems. Blanco is the fifth inaugural poet in U.S. history and author of, most recently, "How To Love A Country." Joe Mathieu, host of WGBH's Morning Edition*, *shared his reflections on a recent reporting trip to Cuba with Congressman Jim McGovern.

Been There Doing That Podcast
#54 - A Birthday Adventure to Woolaroc

Been There Doing That Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2019 27:33


It was Robert's Birthday and he wanted to go somewhere special. We left home and headed west into Kansas then south to Oklahoma. We ended up at the Woolaroc Museum & Wildlife Preserve in Bartlesville, Ok. It is a special place that was created by Frank Phillips back in the 1920s. Frank Phillips was also in the oil business. You might know it as Phillips 66! The museum is set on 3700-acre wildlife preserve that is home to buffalo, deer, and zebras and also boasts a petting zoo. The 50,000 sq ft museum houses an array of Plains Indian artifacts as well as many early settlement artifacts. You will find everything from moccasins to airplanes in this wonderful museum. If you are in the area please go check it out. We spent 5 hours in the museum alone and we still felt like we didn't see everything. Check out our video. Another trip is already planned for a return visit in April of 2019!!!

TRADCAST: The Traditional Roman Catholic Podcast

TRADCAST 022 (05 JUL 2018) Contents Segment 1: Miscellany of recent news stories; Ascension Day conundrum for the SSPX; "Cardinal" Blase Cupich's treatment of "Fr." Frank Phillips; "Fr." Linus Clovis' talk about the arrival of the Anti-Church; Fr. Joseph Pfeiffer's false argument about Pope Adrian VI and the Papacy Segment 2: Unspinning Christopher Ferrara; From the Jorge's Mouth: a review of recent Bergoglian utterances; Vatican says Muslims have a duty to share their religion; blatant heresy in The Remnant; if it weren't for Francis! Total run time: 1 hr 18 min Links to Items mentioned in the Show & Related Information News Article: Cindy Wooden, "Humanity 2.0: Vatican hosts experts to discuss tenderness", Crux (Apr. 20, 2018) News Article: Edward Pentin, "Author: Pope Francis Is a ‘Mystic’ Trying to Solve Left-Right Dichotomy in the Church", National Catholic Register (Apr. 21, 2018) News Article: "Holy Father’s In-Flight Press Conference on Return from Geneva (Full Text)", Zenit (June 22, 2018) News Article: Deborah Castellano Lubov, "Vatican to Commemorate 3rd Anniversary of Laudato Si", Zenit (June 26, 2018) Forum Thread: "Is the obligation to attend Mass on Ascension Thursday binding according to SSPX", CathInfo.com (May 11, 2018) Blog Post: "It seems we'll never know what happened at St. John Cantius, Chicago", Rorate Caeli (June 25, 2018) Blog Post: Matt C. Abbot, "Embattled Pastor of St. John Cantius Proclaims Innocence, Seeks ‘Reconciliation With’ Cardinal", One Peter Five (July 2, 2018) Article: Rev. Linus Clovis, "The anti-Church has come. Why faithful Catholics should not be afraid", Life Site News (May 18, 2017) Book: Karol Wojtyla, Sign of Contradiction (New York, NY: The Seabury Press, 1979) -- see SCAN OF PAGE 17 HERE YouTube Video: Fr. Joseph Pfeiffer, "LIVE 2018 Doctrinal Conference: Day Two Conference 4 Padre Pfeiffer June 23", Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church (uploaded June 23, 2018) [relevant location: 1:17:42 - 1:18:09] Novus Ordo Watch, "The 'Heretical' Popes I: Adrian VI" (Mar. 9, 2015) Novus Ordo Watch, "The Question of a Heretical Pope considered by the First Vatican Council" (Apr. 7, 2015) Novus Ordo Watch, "A Dangerous Experiment: Taking Francis’ Claim to the Papacy Seriously" (July 4, 2017) Blog Post: Christopher A. Ferrara, "Fatima Perspectives #1212: Francis’ Scarlet Letter: A Little 'F' from Francis Gives the Schismatic German Bishops Everything They Want", The Fatima Center (June 28, 2018) News Article: Edward Pentin, "German Bishops Allow Holy Communion for Protestant Spouses in ‘Some Cases’", National Catholic Register (Feb. 22, 2018) Novus Ordo Watch, "'Not Ready': Vatican blocks German Intercommunion Proposal — for now" (June 4, 2018) News Article: Christopher White, "Pope says local bishop should make the call on intercommunion", Crux (June 21, 2018) Blog Post: Maike Hickson, "German Bishops Publish Intercommunion Handout with a Rhetorical Trick", One Peter Five (June 27, 2018) Novus Ordo Document: Reinhard Marx, "Note für den Heiligen Vater" (June 12, 2018), dbk.de Church Document: Pope Gregory XVI, Encyclical Mirari Vos (1832) Church Document: Pope Pius XII, Encyclical Mystici Corporis (1943) Novus Ordo Document: Benedict XVI, "Letter to the Bishops on the Occasion of the Publication of the Apostolic Letter 'Motu Proprio Data' Summorum Pontificumon the Use of the Roman Liturgy Prior to the Reform of 1970" (2007), The Latin Mass Society of England and Wales Novus Ordo Document: Benedict XVI, Apostolic Letter Summorum Pontificum (2007), Vatican.va Novus Ordo Document: Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Letter Quattuor Abhinc Annos (1984), Adoremus Novus Ordo Document: Francis, Message for Second World Day of the Poor(2018), Vatican.va Book: Fr. E. Sylvester Berry, The Apocalypse of St. John (Columbus, OH: John W. Winterich, 1921) News Article: "Geneva: Holy Father’s Address to WCC Ecumenical Meeting (Full Text)", Zenit (June 21, 2018) News Article: "Pope to seminarians: Beware of the devil’s temptations, keep a sense of humor", Crux (June 6, 2018) Novus Ordo Document: Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, Message to Muslims for the Month of Ramadan and 'Id al-Fitr (2018), Vatican.va Article: Elizabeth Yore, "Anatomy of a Coverup: An Open Letter to Pope Francis", The Remnant (May 25, 2018) Blog Post: Louie Verrecchio, "Remnant takes bold stand: 'Cardinals should immediately remove Francis'", AKA Catholic (May 28, 2018) Novus Ordo Watch, "The Impossibility of Judging or Deposing a True Pope" (Mar. 15, 2016) Church Document: Vatican Council, Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus (1870) Blog Post: Steven O'Reilly, "Keeping one’s eyes on the ball", Roma Locuta Est (May 8, 2018) TRADCAST: Complete Episode List TRADCAST EXPRESS: Complete Episode List Support TRADCAST/NovusOrdoWatch by making a tax-deductible donation HERE Follow Novus Ordo Watch on Twitter Follow TRADCAST on Twitter Automatic Subscription Options for TRADCAST TRADCAST by Email (receive automatic notifications of each new episode by email) The TRADCAST RSS Feed (for use with any podcast service) TRADCAST on iTunes TRADCAST on Stitcher TRADCAST on Google Play TRADCAST on Soundcloud More Information at TRADCAST.org

Boston Public Radio Podcast
Full Broadcast 6/25/18

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2018 131:21


The full broadcast of Boston Public Radio from Monday, June 25th, 2018. The Trump administration says it has a system for reuniting families separated at the border. Over the weekend, a Democratic delegation toured immigration facilities in Texas to see what exactly that system looks like. Rep. Katherine Clark was among them. She joined us on the line for a debrief about what she did and didn’t see. Then we discussed how the border issue is reverberating locally (and other headlines) with Frank Phillips, state house Bureau Chief for the Boston Globe and Peter Gelzinis, columnist emeritus for the Boston Herald. We continued the immigration conversation with Charlie Sennott of the Groundtruth Project. Boston Public School students aren’t the only ones getting a summer break. Tommy Chang, Boston Public Schools superintendent, has agreed to resign in response to Mayor Walsh’s lack of confidence in Chang’s leadership. Paul Reville, former Secretary of Education and professor at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education, joined us to talk about what this means for the school system and how appealing this position will look to another group of candidates. In the old days the restaurant rules use to be: no shirt, no shoes no service. Now, no service has taken on a new meaning. Sarah Huckabee Sanders learned that the hard way when the owner of the Red Hen restaurant asked her to leave for working for President Donald Trump. Earlier in the week, Secretary of Homeland Security, Kirsten Nielsen, was heckled while eating at a Mexican restaurant. We opened the lines to ask you, where are you on this? Attorney General Jeff Sessions is getting blowback from his own fellow church-goers for his immigration policy and the scripture that he used to defend it. Rev. Irene Monroe discussed that with us. Next, it’s the death of the Frappuccino. Starbucks is putting the blame on people who are trying to avoid their own death by cutting out excess fat and sugar. Food writer Corby Kummer joined us for that and more.

Boston Public Radio Podcast
Full Broadcast: 4/23/2018

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2018 160:55


The full broadcast from Monday, April 23, 2018. Includes: Political roundtable with writer Joanna Weiss and Boston Globe State House bureau chief Frank Phillips, Charles Sennott of The GroundTruth Project, Reverends Irene Monroe and Emmett Price, Eric Jackson of "Eric In The Evening," and Heather Goldstone of "Living Lab Radio."

politics talk local massachusetts broadcast eric jackson frank phillips joanna weiss groundtruth project boston public radio charles sennott
Boston Public Radio Podcast
Cooking Is A Family Affair For Chef Jacques Pépin

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2017 164:28


Famed Chef Jacques Pepin joined us with his granddaughter Shorey to talk about his new book, "Grandfather’s Lessons: In the Kitchen with Shorey." Plus, TV Expert Bob Thompson, poet Richard Blanco, Charlie Sennott, and Frank Phillips and Peter Gelzinis on local and national politics. (Full Show 10/09 )

The Andy Seth Show
The Hands-On Creative Behind Airstream Basecamp, RedBull's Custom DJ Booths, and Veuve Clicquot's Champagne Bar

The Andy Seth Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2016 56:01


Mike Arzt is one badass creative and thank god he picked up a snowboard 20+ years ago. His passion for snowboarding became a career, which became a business, which is now five businesses. The Public Works is creative agency that he co-founded with Frank Phillips but they don't just dream up cool shit, they build it. Mike... The post The Hands-On Creative Behind Airstream Basecamp, RedBull's Custom DJ Booths, and Veuve Clicquot's Champagne Bar appeared first on Andy Seth.

The Scrum
Know Thy Gatekeepers

The Scrum

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2014 24:19


Boston Globe reporters Jim O'Sullivan and Frank Phillips on how gatekeepers decide who and what to keep behind the gates, how they manage spin from the campaigns, and what the media hit and missed during the hotly contested 2014 campaigns.

Wealthy Sistas® Radio
Wealthy Sistas® PR Communications Expert Frank Phillips

Wealthy Sistas® Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2012 43:00


Frank Phillips, is the President and CEO of Phillips, Phillips, and  Allen (PPA), a Washington, DC area based consulting firm providing public relations, marketing and other services. PPA services Corporate, Defense and other Government clients worldwide. Mr. Phillips extensive background includes, top strategic communication and public relations professional with Capitol Hill, Pentagon, corporate and academic experience in strategic planning, public/media relations, corporate communication and training.

Pundit Review Radio
I hate the Globe, please don't leave

Pundit Review Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2009 47:32


Last night I was joined in-studio by Jay Fitzgerald of the Boston Herald and the outstanding Hub Blog as well as Todd Hyten, aka Armchair General Savin Hill, for a discussion about the sudden, near-death experience of the Boston Globe specifically, and newspapers in general. There was a great deal of schadenfreude among the callers who won't be shedding any tears over the Globe's demise. I can sympathize and appreciate those feelings, for sure. The point I tried to make was, for all their liberal leanings and biases, we still need to the Globe to do the kind of reporting necessary to keep an eye on the hacks on Beacon Hill. These people already run unopposed about 90% of the time. The thought of them operating without media coverage is scary. We need the Globe as a community, not for their liberal world view, but for the reporting on state government. If you think reform is nearly impossible now, what do you think will happen without the Globe around? For one, Marion Walsh would be making $175K and in her new hack-for-life position. It was Frank Phillips who broke the story and pushed it until we (taxpayes) got a happy resolution (Walsh taking a hike). What is Pundit Review Radio? Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Pundit Review Radio
I hate the Globe, please don't leave

Pundit Review Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2009 47:32


Last night I was joined in-studio by Jay Fitzgerald of the Boston Herald and the outstanding Hub Blog as well as Todd Hyten, aka Armchair General Savin Hill, for a discussion about the sudden, near-death experience of the Boston Globe specifically, and newspapers in general. There was a great deal of schadenfreude among the callers who won't be shedding any tears over the Globe's demise. I can sympathize and appreciate those feelings, for sure. The point I tried to make was, for all their liberal leanings and biases, we still need to the Globe to do the kind of reporting necessary to keep an eye on the hacks on Beacon Hill. These people already run unopposed about 90% of the time. The thought of them operating without media coverage is scary. We need the Globe as a community, not for their liberal world view, but for the reporting on state government. If you think reform is nearly impossible now, what do you think will happen without the Globe around? For one, Marion Walsh would be making $175K and in her new hack-for-life position. It was Frank Phillips who broke the story and pushed it until we (taxpayes) got a happy resolution (Walsh taking a hike). What is Pundit Review Radio? Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.

Desert Island Discs: Fragment Archive 1960-1969

Roy Plomley's castaway is newsreader Frank Phillips. Favourite track: Etude No 13 in A Flat Major (Opus 25 No 1) by Frédéric Chopin Book: A Dictionary of Origins by Eric Partridge Luxury: Armchair