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An investigation is underway in Watertown after a car allegedly grazed some protesters. Boston Police releasing two photos asking for the public's help in identifying a suspect in connection to a series of Vadalisms targeting Tesla vehicles in the area of Hemenway and Gainsborough Streets. Sleepless in Suffolk County that's the result of a new study on noise exposure. Stay in "The Loop" with #iHeartRadio.
Police investigating after a Tesla protester claims he was grazed by the side-mirror of a pickup truck claiming the driver intentionally targeted a group of demonstrators. Boston Police release photos of a suspect they say vandalized and harassed people around the Hemenway and Gainsborough Streets. Teamsters Local 26 held their 16th annual Autism Gala at Encore last night. Stay in "The Loop" with #iHeartRadio.
In today's episode of the Elevate Your Career podcast, Nicole is joined by Laura Hemenway, an accomplished advisor and consultant to Fortune 500 companies.During the conversation, Laura shares insights on navigating an environment where perception and bias play a powerful role in shaping opportunities. With years of experience in a demanding and ever-evolving field, she reflects on the subtle and not-so-subtle challenges that come with breaking traditional expectations.You'll discover the value of self-awareness and the necessity of finding advocates who recognize and support untapped potential. Hear how societal expectations often shape individual experiences and the ways in which persistence, courage, and mentorship can help break through long-standing barriers.This discussion serves as a powerful reminder that real progress often comes from those willing to challenge the status quo and create a ripple effect of positive change.Don't miss another episode of the Elevate Your Career podcast. Leave a review and subscribe today!What You Will Learn In This Show:Laura's experience with global teams and the need to adjust to different time zones for meetings.Her involvement with the Society for Information Management (SIM) and SIM Women.The transition from Wang Laboratories to becoming a consultant and solving complex IT problems for various companies. The challenges of being a woman in the IT industry, including pay disparities and unconscious biases.And so much more...
What does theology have to do with AI? A lot: Theological principles can guide values and ethics, and frankly, we need to be sure we have some around coexisting with AI. The ethical use of technology has always been a subject for debate (including around personal privacy and the digital age). But AI brings a whole new layer of ethical consideration–and existential crisis–for human beings. Technologist and theological scholar Dr. Michael Hemenway joins us to discuss the ethical implications of AI and how we can all guide responsible innovation and create space for both AI and humanity.
What does theology have to do with AI? A lot: Theological principles can guide values and ethics, and frankly, we need to be sure we have some around coexisting with AI. The ethical use of technology has always been a subject for debate (including around personal privacy and the digital age). But AI brings a whole new layer of ethical consideration–and existential crisis–for human beings. Technologist and theological scholar Dr. Michael Hemenway joins us to discuss the ethical implications of AI and how we can all guide responsible innovation and create space for both AI and humanity.
Can you believe that it is almost time to go back to school? This time of year can be stressful for students and parents, especially when there's a history of challenges with learning and transitions. Today's guests, Gabrielle Hennings and Zoe Hemenway, bring their combined experience in education, specializing in supporting neurodiverse learners, to the conversation about preparing our students for this sometimes-exciting, sometimes-stressful transition. In this episode, Gabrielle and Zoe share practical strategies to ease into the first days of a new school year. They'll discuss the importance of starting routines now, rather than waiting until the first day of school. Key tips include establishing morning routines with visual reminders and setting predictable schedules to reduce anxiety. We'll also cover how to gradually adjust sleep schedules and find the right planners or checklists for your unique learner. Additionally, Gabrielle and Zoe will emphasize the importance of focusing on students' strengths and using the new school year as an opportunity for a fresh start. Whether you're a parent or educator, this episode offers valuable insights to help neurodiverse learners thrive in the upcoming school year. Show Notes: [2:54] - Start preparing now. Don't wait till the first day of school to start a routine. [4:29] - To help with a morning routine, Gabrielle and Zoe suggest using visual reminders. [6:04] - Starting the day with a sense of predictability helps set neurodiverse students up for a smoother day and can reduce stress and anxiety. [8:35] - Begin by setting alarms earlier every day until students are accustomed to waking up earlier. Place the visual reminders someplace they can see often. [9:45] - Not all planners and checklists work for everyone. Find one that works for you. [12:48] - Using a planner for fewer tasks in the summer is a great idea to maintain the responsibility and accountability before the stakes are higher during the school year. [14:05] - If students set a goal for themselves, it is always an important and meaningful goal. [16:24] - Consider previous school year's reports and grades and help set achievable goals. [17:51] - No matter the plan or goals, executive functioning needs to be a focus. [20:14] - Students need to be given the tools to realize their capabilities. [22:17] - We need to also be mindful of implementing an afternoon routine. [25:05] - Strategies that Gabrielle and Zoe have written are designed to be understandable and digestible by students. This is important for educators to remember. [27:20] - Although there are things that are difficult, we need to remind our students of their strengths. [28:53] - This is every student's opportunity for a brand new start. What do they want their fresh start to look like? [32:09] - Don't let the bumps in the road stop you from sticking with things. About Our Guests: Gabrielle Hennings and Zoe Hemenway bring a combined dedication of 14 years to the realm of education, shaping young minds for a brighter future. Their journey has been marked by a deep commitment to understanding and appreciating neurodiverse learners, valuing the richness that diverse learning styles bring to the educational landscape. In their extensive experience, Gabrielle and Zoe have cultivated a profound insight into the unique needs of neurodiverse learners. They firmly believe in the power of meeting each learner at their individual starting point, recognizing that true educational growth happens when tailored to individual potential. Together, Gabrielle and Zoe bring a wealth of experience and a shared passion for creating an inclusive and supportive learning environment. Their commitment to recognizing and nurturing the potential in every student defines the ethos of their educational approach. Join them as they embark on a journey of personalized learning, where diversity is celebrated, and every student has the opportunity to blossom. Connect with Our Guests: ChildNEXUS Provider Profile Email: admin@hhlearningcenter.com HH Learning Center Website Links and Related Resources: Downloadable Planner Episode 147: 5 Tips to Help Students Transition Back to School Connect with Us: Get on our Email List Book a Consultation Get Support and Connect with a ChildNEXUS Provider Register for Our Self-Paced Mini Courses with LIVE AMA Sessions The Diverse Thinking Different Learning podcast is intended for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical or legal advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Additionally, the views and opinions expressed by the host and guests are not considered treatment and do not necessarily reflect those of ChildNEXUS, Inc or the host, Dr. Karen Wilson.
Locked On Hoosiers - Daily Podcast On Indiana Hoosiers Football & Basketball
Clemson transfer Alex Hemenway is set to visit Mike Woodson and Indiana Basketball on May 14th. The 43% 3-pt shooter is also visiting Vanderbilt and Maryland, places that potentially could have more to offer. Hemenway could join the portal class of Oumar Ballo, Myles Rice, and Kanaan Carlyle.Jacob Goins gives his thoughts on Hemenway visiting Indiana, and what the Indiana native could bring to Bloomington. We break down some interesting comments from Indiana AD Scott Dolson about Mike Woodson, and look at the upcoming Big Ten opponents for basketball next season.0:00 Hemenway sets visit9:45 Dolson comments on Woodson18:30 B1g Opponents Support Us By Supporting Our Sponsors! Monopoly GO!Get in the game and join your friends. Click HERE to Download MONOPOLY GO! now free on The App Store or Google Play. LinkedInThese days every new potential hire can feel like a high stakes wager for your small business. That's why LinkedIn Jobs helps find the right people for your team, faster and for free. Post your job for free at LinkedIn.com/lockedoncollege. Terms and conditions apply.GametimeDownload the Gametime app, create an account, and use code LOCKEDONCOLLEGE for $20 off your first purchase. Terms apply.FanDuelFanDuel, America's Number One Sportsbook. Right now, NEW customers get ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS in BONUS BETS with any winning GUARANTEED That's A HUNDRED AND FIFTY BUCKS – with any winning FIVE DOLLAR BET!Visit FanDuel.com/LOCKEDON to get started. eBay MotorsFrom brakes to exhaust kits and beyond, eBay Motors has over 122 million parts to keep your ride-or-die alive. With all the parts you need at the prices you want, it's easy to bring home that big win. Keep your ride-or-die alive at EbayMotors.com. Eligible items only. Exclusions apply. eBay Guaranteed Fit only available to US customers.FANDUEL DISCLAIMER: 21+ in select states. First online real money wager only. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable free bets that expires in 14 days. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit FanDuel.com/RG (CO, IA, MD, MI, NJ, PA, IL, VA, WV), 1-800-NEXT-STEP or text NEXTSTEP to 53342 (AZ), 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT), 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN), 1-800-522-4700 (WY, KS) or visit ksgamblinghelp.com (KS), 1-877-770-STOP (LA), 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), TN REDLINE 1-800-889-9789 (TN)
Kwity Paye is the latest internal re-signing to get paid. Chris Ballard promotes his own, while the Houston Texans have not been sitting around hoping they repeat as AFC South champs! Pacers are now facing a Bucks team that might feature Damian Lillard. Line has dropped to Pacers -6 1/2. Rick Carlisle needs a win to avoid a seventh straight playoff series loss. IU Basketball getting another visit from an Indiana born and bred three-point shooter. Get your sign-up bonus of up to $1,000 today! https://mybookie.website/joinwithKENT Promocode: KENT Here is the link for my book: https://www.amazon.com/Oops-Art-Learning-Mistakes-Adventures/dp/173420740X Donate! https://www.paypal.com/donate/?business=9FHFLVDQ7ZRW8&no_recurring=0¤cy_code=USD Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Killers of the Flower Moon has brought the world's attention to one of the most vile murder cases in American history, and at the center of it all was Mollie Kyle-Burkhart. Mollie would have grown up in the traditional way of her Osage ancestors, but by the time she was an adult, her family was wealthy, and she lived in a big home with white servants and with a white husband. Mollie lost all of her family members during the reign of terror, and I can't imagine what it must have been like to go through something that horrible. On today's episode, we get into her story of resilience. Bibliography Osage Nation. “About.” Accessed February 25, 2024. https://www.osagefoundation.org/about. Blakemore, Erin. “Erin Blakemore.” National Geographic, September 15, 2023. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/osage-murders-killers-of-the-flower-moon. Contributors to Wikimedia projects. “Ernest Burkhart.” Wikipedia, February 24, 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Burkhart. ———. “Mollie Kyle.” Wikipedia, February 6, 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mollie_Kyle. ———. “Osage Nation.” Wikipedia, February 23, 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osage_Nation. ———. “William King Hale.” Wikipedia, February 19, 2024. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_King_Hale. Evans, Elinor. “Who Was Mollie Burkhart in Killers of the Flower Moon?” HistoryExtra, October 19, 2023. https://www.historyextra.com/period/20th-century/mollie-burkhart-who-killers-flower-moon/. Grann, David. Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI. Vintage, 2018. ———. “The Rare Archival Photos Behind ‘Killers of the Flower Moon.'” Atlas Obscura, May 18, 2017. https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/osage-murders-photos-killers-of-flower-moon. Hemenway, Megan. “What Happened To Mollie & Ernest's Children After Killers Of The Flower Moon.” Screen Rant, October 26, 2023. https://screenrant.com/killers-flower-moon-mollie-ernest-children-what-happened/. Sam Noble Museum - The Sam Noble Museum at The University of Oklahoma inspires minds to understand the world through collection-based research, interpretation, and education. “History Behind A Giving Heritage - Sam Noble Museum,” October 1, 2019. https://samnoblemuseum.ou.edu/history-behind-osage-weddings-exhibit/. Kaplan, Anna. “What Happened To Mollie Burkhart, Subject of Killers Of The Flower Moon?” TODAY, January 11, 2024. https://www.today.com/popculture/movies/killers-of-the-flower-moon-what-happened-to-mollie-burkhart-now-rcna121685. McCluskey, Megan. “How Killers of the Flower Moon Captures the True Story of the Osage Murders.” Time: October 20, 2023. https://time.com/6325586/killers-of-the-flower-moon-true-story/. Montalvan, Karla. “The True Story of Osage Woman Mollie Burkhart.” Fierce, November 16, 2023. https://fiercebymitu.com/entertainment/mollie-burkhart-true-story-killers-of-the-flower-moon-osage/. Kansas Historical Society. “Osage - History and Culture From Early 20th Century to Present - Kansapedia.” Accessed February 25, 2024. https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/osage-history-and-culture-from-early-20th-century-to-present/19296. Oklahoma Historical Society | OHS. “Osage Murders.” Accessed February 25, 2024. https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=OS005. Quinn, Liam. “‘Killers of the Flower Moon True Story': All About the Real Events That Inspired the Martin Scorsese Film.” PEOPLE, October 20, 2023. https://people.com/killers-of-the-flower-moon-real-events-inspired-martin-scorsese-film-8364150. Romano, Aja. “Killers of the Flower Moon: What Is the True Story about the Osage Murders?” Vox, October 18, 2023. https://www.vox.com/culture/23920002/killers-flower-moon-true-story-osage-murders-reign-of-terror-mollie-burkhart-what-happened. Solly, Meilan. “The Real History Behind ‘Killers of the Flower Moon.'” Smithsonian Magazine, October 18, 2023. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-real-history-behind-killers-of-the-flower-moon-180983086/. World, Lenzy Krehbiel-Burton Tulsa. “Following the Headrights: Mollie Burkhart's Many Connections to the Osage Reign of Terror.” Tulsa World, October 4, 2023. https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/indigenous/following-the-headrights-mollie-burkharts-many-connections-to-the-osage-reign-of-terror/article_de635c84-5268-11ee-abe5-8b306bd2c14c.html.
This should get a Longest DIstance Traveled award. Hemenway's Restaurant, located at 121 South Main Street in Providence, Rhode Island, will host a four-course wine dinner on Monday, March 4th, featuring the acclaimed wines of Hartford Court, part of the Hartford Family Winery in Sonoma County, California. The evening will be presented by Don Hartford, CEO and co-owner of Hartford Family Winery and a Massachusetts native. Your Food Dude Spanning The Globe to bring you an amazing night. As broadcast on Food Dude Radio Feb 24 2024,
Amante della natura e degli animali, pioniera nella difesa della fauna selvatica, promotrice di una battaglia per difendere dall'estinzione gli uccelli migratori e per questo soprannominata “Birds Lady”, la Signora degli Uccelli, Harriet Hemenway inizia la sua lotta da cappellini e copricapi. Dopo aver scoperto che i produttori di piume per cappelli stanno provocando l'estinzione di tante specie di uccelli selvatici, si batte per proteggerli. Con impegno e perseveranza, in un'epoca in cui le donne dell'alta società hanno poche opportunità per uscire di casa e ancora meno per farsi ascoltare, Harriet Hemenway sfrutta proprio il salotto di casa sua per coinvolgere altre donne e creare così un movimento che riesce a ottenere una legge contro la caccia agli uccelli migratori e che apre la strada a tutte le associazioni che ancora oggi difendono la fauna selvatica. Biografia di HARRIET HEMENWAY, scritta e letta da Carmen Laterza Tratta da Donne Intrepide vol. 9 – Ambientaliste & Animaliste Music from Uppbeat License code: HWIJMAQJUEUSKPUU Scopri tutti i libri e podcast di LIBROZA
HR2 Jim Hemenway CO CD7 Candidate | Hamas and the Gaza Strip. 10-10-23 by John Rush
Paul Hemenway's dynamic journey at Delta Structural Steel Services is a close mirror of the company's technological evolution. Starting out as a detailer, he now spearheads client relations and manages estimating while championing innovative solutions. Listen in as he shares his journey—with a few humorous detours—and explains Delta's commitment to innovation, which began with their early adoption of SDS2 and later, SDS2 Cloud and other technology. Hear why it's so important to be tech-savvy in today's marketplace and why Paul is so pumped up for SDS2 Summit 2023—and why you should be, too!
Paloma Greenwald and Rob Buelow with AZNext and Laura Hemenway with Paradigm Solutions Arizona State University's AZNext Program is a public-private partnership, funded by grants from the U.S Department of Labor designed to create a bold, innovative, and sustaining workforce development ecosystem that addresses the need for more skilled workers in IT, cybersecurity, and advanced […] The post Paloma Greenwald and Rob Buelow with AZNext and Laura Hemenway with Paradigm Solutions appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
TranscriptThis morning I went for a run in the woods, on these really beautiful trails that are used by snowmobiles.The organization that maintains the trails and works with landowners to allow access is called VAST - The Vermont Association of Snow Travelers.I'm not really sure if you're supposed to walk on them, but I don't really mind it, I meanI'm not a snowmobiler. I don't think it messes up the trails when they're really hard to walk on them, or to run on them. And they're really the only trails I could walk on right now without snowshoes around here. So I just kind of do it.The run goes up the hill beyond the yard and down into a field and it crosses a little road. And then it goes into some woods. The woods are pretty young, I'd say between 10 and 50 years old at the absolute maximum of the trees. There are a lot of beech trees with this canker disease, they have some yellow birch, silver birch. And a couple of maple trees, paper birch, and once in a while there's a pine tree. Kind of a scraggly woods over there.But the trail is nice, it goes up and down following the grade of a hill. And it eventually gets to this really large field that's owned by a family called the Mudges. And they are summer people, so they aren't here right now. There, the field opens up, the view opens up to something more than you'd expect in Colorado or something. There's a split rail fence and a grove aspen trees and you can see a far ridge with trees on top. If you took a photo of the right way, and people didn't really notice that you're surrounded by deciduous forests, you probably would think that you are in the Rockies or something.And the magic thing about it is of course, besides the snowmobiles that sometimes go by, there's no one on the trail ever. Because, this part of Vermont is pretty remote. It's not really close to anything, it's about an hour away from everything. And that makes it nice in some ways, but also pretty lonely.I ran up a steep hill after that through a different set of woods after crossing another road. And into this area that was a logging tract that's owned by owned by this guy named Hemenway who owned a couple thousand acres of forests around here. And he is a good forester type of a person. He contracted out to companies that just do very careful cutting. And so there's a lot of diversity in his woods. And he himself loved to walk in them. And there's been some memorials about him because he did such a beautiful job of preserving access and the woods themselves.And so those woods are pretty nice, they're pretty well thinned, and some pretty old trees in there that he left, probably told the loggers to leave some of the old trees, which is really good for wildlife.It's quite a steep hill over there, and running in the snow makes it really hard. And I think it's probably 500 feet vertical from the bottom to the top of it, maybe a little bit more. And the whole course is around 1000 or 1200. I would say it's about three and a half miles one way.I was trying to run in a pretty decent pace today. But running is always weird. I just I never know how fast I'm gonna run. Maybe it's because I have a phone that's like five years old. Doesn't really record stuff very accurately. But anyway, it was a good run.As I was coming back down to the big field. I started thinking about something that has been on my mind for a while. Which is this experience that I had when I got a vasectomy recently because this morning I had talked to my friend Beau, who's a Chinese medicine doctor, acupuncturistand herbalist, Alexander Technique practitioner, Tai Chi practitioner, lots of different things he's, he's into and really skilled at, and I was doing a consult with him. And so something I wanted to ask him about was this experience that happened during the vasectomy that I just had. I went to the Planned Parenthood in Burlington because I've only had good experiences with Planned Parenthood. With my girlfriend's needs, different gynecological needs over the years. And everything went pretty well.But there was this moment when I was on the table, when the nurse practitioner had cut the wrong part of some tissue, that was supposed to be the vas deferens. And the situation with this surgery is that they have to find the vas deferens by palpating them, touching them with the fingers, and then essentially using forceps or some kind of a clamp to pull them out of the pelvis.And it's extremely traumatic.I didn't really know that going into it. But it's like the worst pain I've ever felt, probably is like getting shot in the pelvis or getting kicked or hit with something really hard.And so she had to do that sensation, where she grabbed the vas deferens with some kind of forceps like three times instead of just two. And it did some damage.In the moment, what happened was I had what's called vessel vaso-vagal syncope, which means that you're fainting. It's like a state of shock. So what happened was, my hands and my feet started to go numb.And I started to get really cold and the pulse and the pulse oximeter on my finger, which is those little clamp-clamp things that measure your pulse in your blood pressure and stuff. Actually started to stop working because there was no blood in the extremities anymore. It started pool in the organs. Basically what was happening is I was undergoing a shock—because I saw some indecisiveness in the nurse and I was wondering how long this procedure was going to be prolonged because it was extremely uncomfortable. And I was wondering if she had done it right. I was wondering if she had hurt me.I have pretty good control over my physical reactions to things. But I guess this was a little too much. And I started to kind of go into that state of fainting.And it was really strange because the nurse and her assistants just wouldn't look at me. I think they felt embarrassed or afraid. And so they didn't look at me. They looked at the monitor. And the monitor wasn't reading anything. And so they were frustrated with the technology not showing them my vitals.And I felt disconnected from the experience.And I felt afraid of course.And in the end, what helped me was they said one thing I could do at the beginning was squeeze the assistants hand, so I reached out and took their hand and squeezed it. And it felt really warm and strong.And that's what brought me back.The nurse had me breath some oxygen from a tank, and that didn't really seem to do anything. But squeezing the person's hand, feeling that warmth and that comfort, was really what worked. And I remember at the end, standing up feeling fine. Saying something to nurse like, well, I guess this is a learning experience for all of us. Which probably wasn't the right thing to say. But I don't know, I can be kind of straightforward sometimes. And maybe she needed to be humbled a little bit. I don't know.What I felt like when I was laying there was that I wanted to get away from the experience. Things flooded through my mind. Places that I've been beautiful places that I've kind of left a part of myself, so to speak. Places I've hiked, camped, slept, places outside in nature, really. And it was really interesting that my mind went to this specific meadow, in the Gros Ventre wilderness, in northern Wyoming. It's extremely unused and extremely remote, even though it's close to a couple of national parks. And my mind went there to that place in that moment of fear, which I found pretty interesting.And then, as I recovered from reflecting on that experience, I started to feel bad about myself, I actually apologized to the nurses after the procedure, because I didn't want to inconvenience them, because I felt weak.Now, weakness comes from fear, or fear, creates weakness, or fear is part of the feeling of weakness. Anyway, they're related somehow. And I've always felt weak. I've never felt like a strong, physically strong person. And so weakness is something that I've always battled with. Athletic activities and stuff have never come naturally to me. And I never really was fast or strong, or any of those things that that men and boys are often expected to be. And so I've always felt kind of weak overall.And so when I was laying there, and I couldn't handle the pain, seemingly, of this operation, I felt weak. And I thought I had long ago left behind that kind of feeling. Because when I first left my home, which happened to be Nebraska, I started going on trips across the country alone in my car, and I wouldn't choose the direction, except West, and I wouldn't really choose a path and make a plan. And I wouldn't really decide on campsites or anything like that. My only rule was that I didn't want to pay for camping.And when a person is 18, or 19, or are in their early 20s, and they're pretty young and inexperienced, the world seems like kind of a scary place. At least it did to me. I had a lot of anxiety about my car breaking down, or getting lost or getting stuck somewhere, somebody yelling at me and telling me to leave or—just kind of unfounded fears that have since I've learned about now, that don't make any sense, but they were there. And I've always wondered about where those fears came from. And now even though I'm perfectly comfortable with traveling like that now, not paying for camping, camping wherever I find a flat space, on bike or on foot or in a car or whatever, just finding some pull off and going into the trees—my favorite kind of camping now, which used to terrify me. I used to not sleep when I did that. But that kind of a fear I thought I'd gotten over. Yet when I was on the table, experiencing that shock from the surgery kind of going wrong—I realized I hadn't. Or at least that fear still lives inside of me somewhere because I still felt weak, which is really the source of where that fear came from.In other words, I felt bad about myself.I felt like I wasn't good enough or strong enough.A friend of mine is a really good runner. I can't even explain how beautiful he looks when he runs. I've never actually seen him run in person just videos. Which makes me sad to say. But the fact is, if we ever tried running together, he'd just completely leave me behind. So it probably wouldn't be much fun for him.But he's the kind of person that I look up to. Because he seems so strong. I know that he's probably got his own problems. Everybody does. But it seems like he's a representative of something that I feel like I'm never really going to be that good at, which is physical strength and endurance.I've often wondered where that damage came from.Because if I look at my genealogical history, I've come from very strong people.One of my grandpa's lived to 92. And the only reason why he died is because he let his prostate cancer go untreated.Another one of my grandpa's was 87 or 88, when he died, and he basically died of a broken heart because he was so he was a mountain of a man with a laugh like a volcano.And he was a logger. And my other grandfather was a logger as well. But then he was a farmer. And then he was an insurance salesman. At the end of his life, like probably for the last 30 or 40 years or so. They're really strong old style dudes. They knew how to do everything you needed to do know how to do on a farm.And then my dad ran many marathons. He grew up on a farm. He knows how to do everything that you need to do on a farm.And my mom grew up on a ranch, raising horses. She knew most of what you needed to know how to do on a ranch. She also ran marathons. So I always have found it strange that I have not been as strong as my parents or grandparents.And I've always been curious about that.And I think that, for me, the things that I've struggled with in life have been emotional damage.Growing up, my parents got divorced, which I had no idea—I didn't understand what was going on when I was seven, eight years old when that happened. But I can see that that influenced my growth or inhibited my growth in a certain way now.And it made me addicted to things to try and escape that pain.And I think it influenced me to this day. And I think that it gave me an anxiety disorder that I've more or less taken care of—through extreme amounts of effort, and care for myself.But it's just so interesting to see how generations of people can be changed by emotional trauma.What that can do to someone for their entire life at least, that's what I think my legacy is.So to stop these endless digressions, I'll just read this poem now and call it done.The title of it is Swallows from Capistrano, and it's about my grandpa on my mom's side.Swallows from CapistranoHe had bright blue eyes, with an old-timers folded lidsthe blue that looks like cracks in a glacier, they glowedout from his stony countenance, his bear-like laughfilled the low room where he satwith his wisdom about everything.The scent of pine smoke hung even in summeraround the eaves, the fresh pine needle scent wafted toodown the hill from the hot sun, and he watchedin the spring the swallows who came backfrom the eaves of the mission in far south and hotCapistrano. My mom says she has a strange mind like him, seeselements as part of people, the rising of fire into smokeas a type of person, or a water-earth type, my grandpa,he must have been a volcano under a glacier—those blue eyesand his rumbling chest, pouring forth wisdom and lovefor sitting in the sun. Once everyone could handle him no morehe lit fires with diesel fuel and wet wood through the cold winterand in springhe sat and watched the swallows.So I guess my hope is that by noticing what has hurt me, in life, I'll be able to heal certain things.But I also don't think life is just about focusing on what's wrong.I think it's about listening to what feels good to me.And one of those things is being outside.I think that's why my mind went there, when I was laying on that table, in the Planned Parenthood clinic in Burlington.It's because that's my place of refuge.And I'm lucky to have traveled to the places that are so unimaginably beautiful that they don't seem like they exist on the same earth as everywhere else.And I'm also lucky to be able to find those places seemingly anywhere. It's more about how you inhabit them, maybe, then the places themselves.My grandpa, both of them were tough guys.Somehow, even though they sustained a lot of damage, they were very physically strong, despite all that.I guess that kind of a damage that they got went deeper, and it changed their ability to listen.Fortunately, I've become a pretty good listener. So now, through my running habit, I'll hopefully be able to become stronger physically too.And heal all these things that have transpired.Thanks for listening. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.walkaround.run
The mind works in mysterious ways, and sometimes it gets things wrong. In this mini-series, we explore how our biases and misinformation can hinder our happiness. In today's episode, we discuss social comparisons. Transcript: Welcome to Everyday Happiness where we create lasting happiness, in 2 minutes a day, through my signature method of Intentional Margins® (creating harmony between your to-dos and your priorities), happiness science, and musings about life. I'm your host Katie Jefcoat and I was listening to the Yale happiness course by Dr. Laurie Santos. Yesterday we talked about reference points that were mostly internal. I may make 30K a year and I want to make 50K, for example. But today, we're talking about reference points when it comes to social comparison. Look, it's everywhere, right? Whether it's on TV or on your street, social comparison is out there, and we are constantly using it as a reference point to determine our own happiness. Some more than others. There is a study, where they looked at office workers and they found that if you knew you earned less than the other peers you worked with, you would be less happy. For no other reason. You could buy the car, the house, the life you wanted. But you were less satisfied with your job if you knew others were making more money than you. This is a problem when we ask, what counts as a reasonable social comparison? Is it Beyonce or Real Housewives of Beverly Hills? Or is it the colleague with the similar background and work? When we are scrolling Instagram, watching TV, glued to Tik Tok, we are watching all of these highlight reels with people with so much more means that us. What this is doing, is messing up our intuition as to what “normal” is. We start to think, to use as a reference point, that this wealth is normal and we start to feel really crappy about our own circumstances and our brain tricks ourselves into thinking more of this stuff will make us happier. But that's just not how this works. The lesson is that we have to be intentional and check ourselves when it comes to who and why we use social comparison, because we are on auto-pilot doing it anyway, this is the opportunity to take a step back and be more mindful. Until next time, we'd love for you to follow us over on Instagram @everydayhappinesswithkatie where we share quotes, episodes and have conversations with all of you. The science mentioned in this episode can be reviewed at: Solnick and Hemenway (1997). Is more always better?: A survey on positional concerns. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 37, 373-383. Get Everyday Happiness delivered to your inbox by subscribing at: https://www.katiejefcoat.com/happiness And, let's connect on social at @everydayhappinesswithkatie and join the community on the hashtags #IntentionalMargins and #everydayhappinesswithkatie on Instagram Links: https://onamission.bio/everydayhappiness/
For the past 50 years, professional ecologist and conservationist Budd Titlow has used his pen and camera to capture the awe and wonders of our natural world. His goal has always been to inspire others to both appreciate and enjoy what he sees. Now he has one main question: Can we save humankind's place — within nature's beauty — before it's too late? Budd's two latest books are dedicated to answering this perplexing dilemma. PROTECTING THE PLANET: Environmental Champions from Conservation to Climate Change, a non-fiction book, examines whether we still have the environmental heroes among us — harking back to such past heroes as Audubon, Hemenway, Muir, Douglas, Leopold, Brower, Carson, and Meadows — needed to accomplish this goal. Next, using fact-filled and entertaining story-telling, his latest book — COMING FULL CIRCLE: A Sweeping Saga of Conservation Stewardship Across America — provides the answers we all seek and need. Having published five books, more than 500 photo-essays, and 5,000 photographs, Budd Titlow lives with his music educator wife, Debby, in San Diego, California. You can learn more about Budd on his website www.buddtitlow.com. ~ Mariah Tinger is an author and educator teaching sustainability at Boston University's Questrom School of Business. Additionally, she is pursuing her Ph.D. in climate communication at Otago University and applying her knowledge as a co-host on the podcast, The Climate Minute. When she is not chasing chickens or her children in her Massachusetts home, she is dreaming of new ways to tell the climate story. You can learn more about Mariah on her website www.mariahtinger.com. TOPICS OF CONVERSATION: About Coming Full Circle and the inspiration behind the storyline Writing the story as a fictional tale as opposed to a non-fiction narrative Climate Change and Biodiversity Loss Sanctity and equality of all living things The biggest danger to our planet and ways we can fix the problem COMING FULL CIRCLE Amazon Synopsis: Is there a winning re-write of United States history that everyone will feel good about? Following a multi-generational family across America and back again, this book sets the record straight. The skillful, entertaining story-telling shines a light on the origins of our current conservation crises—climate change and biodiversity loss—while convincing readers that we have immediate solutions right at our fingertips. Only one question remains: Will we use these solutions in time? Buy a copy of "Coming Full Circle" and find out what happens! (from Budd Titlow and Mariah Tinger, the authors of "Protecting the Planet") CONNECT WITH BUDD TITLOW! Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/protectingtheplanetashome/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/budd.titlow/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/btitlow/
In today's Dayquil-fueled episode, Ash & Lindsey talk about the Rainbow Wave that swept Election Night, Christmas stuff, Qatar, and Lindsey tests whether or not Ash is a demon or something via a tried and true method -- Buzzfeed. Special guest Zach Hemenway chats with Ash about being a Gay man working in a Christian church, coffee, and misconceptions.Check out Epiphany Seattle on their website https://epiphanyseattle.org/ Vote in our 2nd annual Readers Choice Awards by clicking HERE! RADIO SGN INFO Merch: www.seattlegaynews.redbubble.com Instagram: @radio.sgn Twitter: @radiosgn Music Intro: Meatball by Jesse Spillane Transitions: Night Sun by TRG Banks --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/seattle-gay-news/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/seattle-gay-news/support
In this episode of Colloquy, part two of our discussion of guns and public health in America. In part one, we got a sense of the scope of the problem: nearly 400 million guns owned by US civilians, over 45,000 gun deaths in 2020, dramatically elevated risk of suicide among people who own handguns, and much more. So, can anything be done about the problem in a society as politically polarized as ours? David Hemenway, one of the country's leading experts on guns and public health, says yes. If we set aside our prejudices and assumptions and focus on areas of common concern, we can work together to improve safety and public health—even in places where gun rights are sacrosanct. But Hemenway says we shouldn't stop there. There's plenty to be done in states like Massachusetts, where guns are more strictly regulated.David Hemenway is a professor of health policy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. The author of five books, Professor Hemenway, has written widely on injury prevention, including firearms, violence, and suicide. He headed the pilot for the National Violent Death Reporting System, which provides detailed and comparable information on suicide and homicide. In 2012, he was recognized by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as one of the 20 most influential injury and violence professionals over the past 20 years. Professor Hemenway got his PhD from GSAS in 1974.
Michael Hemenway, a Twin Cities filmmaker, joins us today to discuss how Facebook helped bring his first film crew together to shoot his debut short film, Miracle of Science, in the fall of 2019. That film went on to premiere at the Z-Fest Film Festival. His second film, Mind Breaking, took home Best Thriller at the Tokyo Film Awards. His first documentary, Just Breathe Normally, was released earlier this year and is currently on the festival circuit. He explains how he shot the underwater scenes for this film. He also tells us about his collegiate experience at the University of Iowa… Go Hawks!!!
Dr. Lois Lee is an emergency medicine physician at Boston Children's Hospital and an associate professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School. Stephen Morrissey, the interviewer, is the Executive Managing Editor of the Journal. L.K. Lee, K. Douglas, and D. Hemenway. Crossing Lines — A Change in the Leading Cause of Death among U.S. Children. N Engl J Med 2022;386:1485-1487.
3'ish Things, Community Story with Ralf & Tim Kempe and today's message from Pastor Scott.
Scott Hemenway - John Jantzen Book Of Matthew
During the Allotment & Assimilation Era (1887-1930) the U.S. government moved to assimilate Native peoples into American society and the economy. One of the most devastating tactics was the Indian Boarding School, which aimed to strip Native children of their culture and train them for manual or domestic labor. Students resisted in many ways: attempting to run away, stealing food, and even setting fire to their schools. Students also formed their own kinship networks.Although the schools changed over time, some remained in operation until the 1980s. Among the many long-term impacts, these institutions disrupted the intergenerational transmission of knowledge and practices related to traditional diets. For some community members today, reconnecting to ancestral foodways helps them reclaim parts of their identity and history.Spirit Plate is part of the Whetstone Radio Collective. Learn more about this episode of Spirit Plate at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at /WhetstoneRadio.
This week on The Encrypted Economy, our guest is Brett Hemenway Falk, Research Professor at the University of Pennsylvania. We discuss Brett's recent research on oblivious ram, data leakage, and other concepts that are critical to our understanding of privacy-enhancing technology. Be sure to subscribe to The Encrypted Economy for more insight into privacy preservation and the progress we have made in the space. Topics Covered:· Introduction· The State of PET as it Relates to Cost Improvement and Computational Limitations· Does Higher Processing Speed Help Secure Computation?· Privacy-Preserving Network Analytics · Capturing the Benefits of Encryption for Cheap · Drawing a Distinction Between Circuit Based And RAM Based· Building a Trustless Environment in KYC Technologies Resource List:· Brett's LinkedIn· Brett's Publications· 3-Party Distributed ORAM from Oblivious Set Membership· Privacy-Preserving Network Analytics· Solar Winds· Intel SGX· Oblivious Ram· Avalanche Bridge· Address Ownership Proof Protocol Follow The Encrypted Economy on your favorite platforms! Twitter LinkedIn Instagram Facebook
During the Allotment & Assimilation Era (1887-1930) the U.S. government moved to assimilate Native peoples into American society and the economy. Private land ownership was forced onto Indigenous peoples by breaking apart communal lands into family parcels, effectively altering relationships to land and food. In many cases, Native peoples were forced to shift from subsistence lifestyles and traditional forms of trade to growing food as a commodity. This commodity-based approach to food was and continues to be in conflict with traditional relationships, knowledge, and practices related to growing food.Spirit Plate is part of the Whetstone Radio Collective. Learn more about this episode of Spirit Plate at www.whetstoneradio.com, on IG and Twitter at @whetstoneradio, and YouTube at /WhetstoneRadio. Guest: Eric Hemenway
Scott Hemenway Book Of Matthew
Scott Hemenway Matthew - Surrender and Sacrifice
Laura Hemenway With Paradigm Solutions Rob Buelow and Amy O’Reilly With AZNext Paradigm Solutions leads knowledge driven success through Technology and Business Transformation. Paradigm Solutions’ portfolio includes Fortune 10, Small Business, Public, Private, Public Sector, and Non-Proit industry wide initiatives ranging from Assessment to Optimization to Transformation. Paradigm Solutions LLC is a woman owned consultancy […] The post Laura Hemenway With Paradigm Solutions Rob Buelow and Amy O’Reilly With AZNext appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
Devin Hemenway (LHP Baseball) With Darek From Bulls Beat 1-26 by USF
Scott Hemenway Making Space For God
Scott Hemenway Reflections
In this episode Candace talks with an aspiring olympian, who is just 9 years old. Grace Hemenway is 9-year-old and a leap year baby. Grace is a very independent, strong willed, disciplined and self-motivated young lady. Her first words as a child were 'leave me do it". This happened when her dad, Carl was attempting to help her down a flight of stairs. Some of her favorite things include singing, swimming, playing tag with her cousins, gymnastics, Karate and dancing with friends. She is a fast learner in karate, geometry and piano. Her favorite Ghanaian food is fufu and light soup. She likes to bake cakes with her brother and mother. Grace received her first 2 gold medals at the 2021 Miami Open International Karate Championship. She then went on to win the Queen of the Ring at the 2021 Boston Open Massachusetts Karate Championships along with 2 gold medals. She recently became the 2021 AAU Karate National Championships and also 2021 USANKF USA National Championships and Team Trials Karate Champion-wining 2 individual gold medals and 3 team gold medals.Follow Grace on FacebookGet a copy of Grace's book hereIn this episode Candace talks with an aspiring olympian, who is just 9 years old.
In the new podcast series for Be UniQue we have the 1st ever episode of "Triggered" with the brother of your host, Kyle Hemenway. They both bring up the heavy topic of the past year in the situation with the vaccines, gay & straight, racism & idiotic sports fans. If you get triggered easy you may or may not want to listen in.Support the show (http://paypal.me/LucasHemenway)
Today in the guest chair is Patience Hemenway. She is an international bestselling author. Founder of The Anxiety Support Group for Women.Patience Hemenway was born in Ghana and moved to the U.S. to model. She resided in Hawaii on the island of Maui until her modeling contract ended. She decided to visit the mainland. Today, she is married and she's the loving mom of two young boys.She recently completed her Business Administration & Management Doctorate at Provident University. She has a master's degree in Biotechnology and her undergraduate degree is in Applied Biology-Microbiology.She seeks to help c-suite level women who are dealing with insomnia, loss, of appetite, and loss of energy in their personal and professional life to overcome their stress and anxiety and to reclaim their emotional, physical, and spiritual mojo in her sold out online coaching program: www.patienceserenitygrove.com.Questions I Asked In This Show:What is it about hiking that you enjoy so much?Can you explain some of the challenges you faced when you came to the U.S. from Ghana?How has having a degree in science and your personal experiences empowered the grit and resilience you demonstrate towards the great work you do today?What is the point-click method, and how does it help your clients unsubscribe from anxiety and subscribe to serenity?What advice would you give someone for handling heated conversations?What is a fear you've overcome that has become a skill or superpower?What are you optimistic about now?What does the phrase "Get In Good Trouble" mean to you?And so much more ...What You'll Learn In This Show:Two of the biggest challenges she faced coming to AmericaHow food is such an important part of the immigrant experience in AmericaDetails about her personal experiences that forced her to stop and shift how she responded to the demands of her jobHow ignoring her body resulted in her being admitted to the ER 2x a weekWhat she found out from other women in her network when she disclosed her medical problemsWhat you should know about the marketing of NEW drugsThe actions she decided to take to manage her panic attacks and anxiety instead of taking medicationBreathing techniques to embrace your inner calmThe importance of sharing your voiceAnd so much moreContact Patience Hemenway PhDWebsiteLinkedInInstagramFacebookMusic Credit:Adobe SuccessSubscribe to Podcast: Apple Itunes | Spotify | Amazon TuneIn | iHeartRadioGo Be Great Podcast Intro Support the show (https://paypal.me/jackiecapersbrown?locale.x=en_US)
Sunday Gathering - Relaunch - August 29 - Scott Hemenway
In this episode, Matson Montilla interviews Clemson Basketball guard, Alex Hemenway, as they discuss his career at Clemson, March Madness, the team's goals for next season, and more.
In this episode of Voices of Courage, Ken D. Foster interviews Travis Believes, the CEO of InnerLight Media, an impact-driven social media marketing agency that is changing the world by helping some of the biggest online influencers, entrepreneurs, and brands tell powerful and life affirming messages to hundreds of millions of people. They discuss overcoming the self-doubt, difficult circumstances, and negative self-images we all face, why our internal dialogue is more important than anyone else's opinion, and how we can use our gifts and story to connect with people and create a massive impact. If you would like to have more peace, happiness, and a better relationship with yourself, listen to this amazing interview. Ken is also joined by Dr. Patience Hemenway, an award-winning speaker, international best-selling author, speaker, Wellness Competency Mindset Coach, and the owner of Patience Serenity Grove International LLC. As a result of working with Patience, high-achieving top business executive African immigrant women thrive in their personal and professional endeavors. In this interview, she and Ken discuss the secret tools that successful leaders have used to overcome stress, anxiety, and burnout. Listen to this masterful interview and learn the secrets to overcoming the most challenging times with ease and grace. Visit: https://voicesofcourage.us/
Hot N Cold's first NIL athlete, Alex Hemenway, joins us to discuss this upcoming season at Clemson. (40:00) In our first segment we discuss The Latest on Kofi Cockburn, Kentucky Out? Kevin Obanor's recruitment Marcus Carr
It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia is the longest running TV sitcom in American history. We use examples from the controversial comedy to ask: Should the working class be portrayed as largely good people in a bad system (a la Ken Loach) or as highly flawed? How should our politics treat human nature? (Do Marxists ignore it? Are anarchists too positive about it?) What role should humour play in getting along with each other and our differences (and indeed prejudices)? What stance should socialists hold on gun control? We also discuss political correctness, transphobia, Israel, antisemitism, consent and more. Our Five Minute Focus this week is about the uncovering of an extensive, multi-million dollar, network of anti-LGBT and anti-women activity from the religious far right. Buy our merch Second Row Socialists on Twitter Comradio on Twitter ‘It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia' Creator Says the Show Doesn't Take Political or Social Stances Netflix removes It's Always Sunny episode over blackface scenes Blackface Was Never Harmless Intent - It's...Magic! Narcissistic People Are More Likely To Take Part In Political Activities Violent Death Rates: The US Compared with Other High-income OECD Countries, 2010 (2016) - Grinshteyn and Hemenway GOOD GUYS WITH GUNS: Hegemonic Masculinity and Concealed Handguns in Gender & Society (2012) - Angela Stroud America's gun obsession is rooted in slavery - Carol Anderson Co-operation and evolutionary stable strategies Tip of the Iceberg: Religious Extremist Funders against Human Rights for Sexuality & Reproductive Health in Europe Sian Norris on anti-gender funding Marxists Internet Archive
Hello hello! This is part 2 of my review of 'The Thinking Beekeeper' by Christy Hemenway. This half of the book goes in depth on how to manage your top bar hive colony during its first year, complete with some very handy-dandy diagrams. Please see my website for a rundown of everything discussed plus photos. Here is the garlic-water varroa treatment study I mention, and here is Christy Hemenway's guide to chemical-free varroa mite treatments. Thanks for listening!
Hello hello! This week, I'll be covering the first half of 'The Thinking Beekeeper' by Christy Hemenway, which is an excellent how-to guide on getting started with top bar hives. I also announce the winner of my giveaway! As always, please see my website for a rundown of everything discussed as well as photos from the book. Additional resources: Scientific Beekeeping (Trial of HoneySuperCell Small Cell Combs) Honey Bee Suite (Monday Morning Myth: small-cell foundation discourages varroa mites) Mann Lake Ltd. Unassembled Top Bar Hive Etsy
In this episode, we do our first interview with a college basketball athlete. We interview Alex Hemenway who is from the Evansville area(Newburgh, Indiana to be exact) that plays guard at Clemson University. In the 2019-2020 season, he averaged 4.7 points and 1.3 rebounds shooting 38.7% from the 3pt line. We ask him how he got recruited by Clemson, what he plans to work on over the offseason to prepare for his junior year, and so much more so make sure you guys tune into our first interview. Enjoy!Continue to give us 5 star reviews on Apple Podcast and Spotify and leave comments on our YouTube videos if you agree or disagree with our hot takes. We love you all! Thank you guys for all the love and support on our podcast. We appreciate it and we will continue to drop fire content. ROAD TO 1,000 SUBSCRIBERS!!!Alex Hemenway's Socials:Instagram : @a1exhemenwayTwitter: @HemenwayAlex
50 years ago, on May 16 and 17, 1971, a fire destroyed Hemenway Hall in downtown Wilmington. The New Hanover County Board of Education building, built in 1915, was formerly Hemenway School. The cause of the fire remains a mystery, but the anniversary opens a window to a time of great unrest in Wilmington. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
We continue with our five-part series on hive types other than the standard Langstroth, with Christy Hemenway. Christy has been working with top bar hives for just over 14 years now and has developed a good sense of how they work. She started out liking them because – It's all about the wax – clean wax was important to her and top bar hives produce clean wax. No foundation to fuss with and no contaminants to worry about, so it's perfect for cut comb honey, or the crush and drain method of harvesting liquid honey. But there's a lot more. NO heavy lifting is a definite plus with these hives, because all you ever have to lift is a single frame at a time. The top bars are set such that they snuggle up next to each other, so no openings in the top of the hive when you open a top bar hive, which keeps the bees inside, not flitting around, giving you a hard time. And, because they are beveled on the bottom, there is actually more surface for the bees to attach the comb than if just a straight wooden stick. There are a few tricks to learn when handling top bar hive frames, but overall, pretty straight forward with lifting and turning and rolling frames. The only downside she sees is that these hives won't produce a ton of honey for you and they are a tad more difficult to move around than a Langstroth, but they are perfect for a smaller scale backyard beekeeper who worries more about the bees than the honey. In a lot of ways, these are very different from a Langstroth hive, but again, if it's good for the bees, it's probably not so good for the beekeeper. Which would you prefer? Links and websites mentioned in this podcast: Gold Star Honey Bees - https://www.goldstarhoneybees.com Christy's Amazon Books Author's Page - https://www.amazon.com/Christy-Hemenway/e/B008C8BNAS Honey Bee Obscura Podcast - https://www.honeybeeobscura.com ______________ We welcome Betterbee as sponsor of today's episode. BetterBee's mission is to support every beekeeper with excellent customer service, continued education and quality equipment. From their colorful and informative catalog to their support of beekeeper educational activities, including this podcast series, BetterBee truly is Beekeepers Serving Beekeepers. See for yourself at www.betterbee.com Thanks to Strong Microbials for their support of Beekeeping Today Podcast. Find out more about heir line of probiotics in our Season 3, Episode 12 episode and from their website: https://www.strongmicrobials.com This episode is brought to you by Global Patties! Global Patties is a family business that manufactures protein supplement patties for honey bees. Feeding your hives protein supplement patties will help ensure that they produce strong and health colonies by increasing brood production and overall honey flow. Global offers a variety of standard patties, as well as custom patties to meet your specific needs. Visit them today at http://globalpatties.com and let them know you appreciate them sponsoring this episode! We want to also thank 2 Million Blossoms as a sponsor of the podcast. 2 Million Blossoms is a quarterly magazine destined for your coffee table. Each page of the magazine is dedicated to the stories and photos of all pollinators and written by leading researchers, photographers and our very own, Kim Flottum. _______________ We hope you enjoy this podcast and welcome your questions and comments: questions@beekeepingtodaypodcast.com Thanks to Bee Culture, the Magazine of American Beekeeping, for their support of The Beekeeping Today Podcast. Available in print and digital at www.beeculture.com Thank you for listening! Podcast music: Young Presidents, "Be Strong"; Musicalman, "Epilogue". Original guitar background instrumental by Jeff Ott Beekeeping Today Podcast is an audio production of Growing Planet Media, LLC
In Talking Culture's final full episode in season one, Alejandra, Meghan, and Daniel explore the work of Zora Neale Hurston. They discuss the boundaries she came up against in her pursuit of anthropology as well as the disciplinary boundaries between anthropology and folklore studies and where much of her work sits on the line of fiction and nonfiction. Throughout the episode the point to the debt anthropology owes to Hurston, and how her work paved the way for much of what anthropology strives to do today. Sources:Bascom, William R. 1953 Folklore and Anthropology. The Journal of American Folklore 66(262):283-290. https://www.jstor.org/stable/536722. Ben-Amos, Dan.1971 Toward a Definition of Folklore in Context. The Journal of American Folklore 84(331):3-15. https://www.jstor.org/stable/539729.Boyd, Valerie. 2003. Wrapped in rainbows: the life of Zora Neale Hurston. New York: Scribner.Darnell, Regna. 1973 American Anthropology and the Development of Folklore Scholarship: 1890-1920, Journal of the Folklore Institute 10(1/2):23-39. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3813878. Dorson, Richard M. 1963 Current Folklore Theories. Current Anthropology 4(1):93-112. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2739820. Hemenway, Robert. 1976 Folklore Field Notes from Zora Neale Hurston. The Black Scholar 7(7):39-46. DOI: 10.1080/00064246.1976.11413814.Hurston, Zora Neale. 1939 Sound Recordings by Zora Neale Hurston. Library of Congress. Hurston, Zora Neale, Franz Boas, Arnold Rampersad, Henry Louis Gates, and Miguel Covarrubias. 2008. Mules and Men 1St Harper Perennial Modern Classics ed. Harper Perennial Modern Classics. New York: Harper Perennial.Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Zora Neale Hurston." Encyclopedia Britannica, January 24, 2021. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Zora-Neale-Hurston.Pooley, William G. 2018 Native to the Past: History, Anthropology, and Folklore. Past and Present 239(1): e1–e15. https://doi.org/10.1093/pastj/gtv038.Russell, Mary Catherine. 2017 Zora Neale Hurston: Scientist, Folklorist, Storyteller. Pursuit - The Journal of Undergraduate Research at the University of Tennessee 8(1):124-138. http://trace.tennessee.edu/pursuit/vol8/iss1/13.
Christian sits down with the host of the rapidly growing podcast BeUnique, hosted by Lucas Hemenway. BeUnique is a podcast is all about uniQue voices of the world. Everyone has something that sets them apart and Lucas loves to showcase their gifts to the world, while also adding his own uniQue twist.
Alex joins the show at 28:30
KBS chats with musical duo Dennis Russell and Laura Hemenway about taking live performance into the digital space, virtual piano lessons, and adapting to the Zoom generation.Connect with them at dennisrussellroad.com Reach out to KBS at kbenwrites on Instagram and TwitterBumper track is:Pocket Full of Change by Dennis Russell© 2017 Dennis Russell
Everyone's favorite coma romance! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/romanceeverafter/message
At the end of 2020, Kyle Hemenway & I break down the state of Chicago Sports. Every franchise is in a completely different state of mind. We talk Bears, Bulls, & Cubs. Notre Dame football & Illinois Basketball. We were born anti White Sox fans BUT they do look exciting to watch for years to come. Also, talk a little fantasy football championship matchup with ourselves!SQUADCAST REFFERAL CODE-https://squadcast.fm/?ref=lucashemenwayINSTACART REFFERAL CODE-https://instacart.oloiyb.net/kmAGNBUZZSPROUT REFFERAL CODE-https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=814291Support the show (http://paypal.me/LucasHemenway)
This week in the Encrypted Economy explore the foundations of how the ability to secure data fundamentally changes the very economics of our society and the business, legal and technical forces shaping that. To some, introducing concepts like Secure Multi Party Computations and Homomorphic Encryption sounds like it is simply academic research or just asecurity discussion...but its so much more. Both of these terms relate to the ability to secure processing of data BY DESIGN and that opens up a whole world of WHAT we can do with that data. Once you understand this, you can see that what we are really talking about are truly transformative forces for our society. We were really excited to have Brett Hemenway Falk, a leading expert in applied cryptology from the University of Pennsylvania on the podcast. We began with the basics of cryptography and privacy-preserving computations, thendelved into practical applications that will shape the future of secure computing. From banks sharing security secrets, to de-centralized social science research, to underwriting satellite collisions. I know that you will learn just as much as I did, which is why I am excited to share this latest episode of the Encrypted Economy. Be sure to keep an eye on Brett's continued work in this areaand stay tuned for more great content from the Encrypted Economy. Topics Covered Brett's Background Symmetric vs Asymmetric Cryptography Zero Knowledge Proofs Homomorphic Encryption What keeps it from being viable? How is it being used right now? Secure Multiparty Computation (MPC) What is it? Finance Applications Healthcare Applications Social Science Applications Competitors Collaborating Through MPC Blockchain Privacy Blockchain Oracles The Costs and Benefits of Decentralization Smart Contracts Secret Sharing Among Distributed Servers Collusion Resistance Password Hashing Resource Links Brett's UPenn Website Brett's Publications Brett on Appetite For Disruption Part 1 & Part 2 My article on Homomorphic Encryption Highlighted Homomorphic Encryption Libraries IBM- HElib Microsoft - Seal Library Duality – Palisade Library Inpher - TFHE Stealth Software Website Unbound Technology Website
24 OCT 2020 Kingdom Living in a Politically Divided World | Interview with Steve Hemenway by by Church of the Advent Hope
Leann Hemenway is the Product Manager, VP for Herring Bank, for the MRB division. She has more than 20 years of banking experience and has lived in the El Paso County area for 24 years. Her focus for Herring Bank is to help develop business and assist existing clients and new clients to have an exceptional banking experience at Herring Bank.Herring Bank began banking Cannabis-Hemp related businesses in April of 2019, with the goal of building lasting relationships.Herring Bank is a privately-owned Bank, based in Amarillo Texas. The Bank opened in 1899 and has been owned by the same family since its inception. Since 1899, Herring Bank has built all of its business on the platform of developing “Relationships for a Lifetime.” Leann talks with Russell and Jesse about the cannabis-hemp industry and their banking needs.
We will discuss Directing, Acting, Mimes and Film in Ann Arbor with Christina Morales Hemenway.
Eric Hemenway is an Anishnaabek/Odawa from Cross Village, Michigan, whose work centers around repatriation of remains and sacred objects under NAGPRA, as well as speaking and teaching about Native American history and culture. In this episode, Eric discusses the interconnectedness of his work and identity, the unique challenges of preserving Native American heritage, and the need for more education and awareness of the true history and popular culture of America in schools. Transcript: tinyurl.com/npi-episode4 This episode is sponsored by Maria Marable-Bunch, Fred McCoy, Darwina L. Neal, Jacy Romero, and Gail C. Rothrock. This episode was written, edited, and produced by Hannah Hethmon for Better Lemon Creative Audio. Additional editing by Julia Letts. Narration and hosting by Jane I. Seiter, Ph.D. Research and support from Jere Gibber.
In which I call out what is wrong or missing in Permaculture and suggest changes so we can build something that actually can end the mass extinction, reverse climate change and provide abundantly for humanity. ResourcesPermaculture in One PageEdenicity Reference DesignCurtis Stone, What Permaculture Got Wrong, Medium, June 15, 2018Lillklobb Permaculture, A Response To Curtis Stone’s What Permaculture Got Wrong, June 30, 2018Mollison Lazy Gardener VideoHolzer, Sepp, Sepp Holzer's Permaculture: A Practical Guide to Small-Scale, Integrative Farming and Gardening (Chelsea Green, 2004)Mollison, Bill, Permaculture: A Designer's Manual (Tagari Press, 1988)Hemenway, Toby, The Permaculture City: Regenerative Design for Urban, Suburban, and Town Resilience (Chelsea Green, 2015)Support the show (https://teespring.com/stores/edenicity)
Lucas is the host of the podcast BeUniQue. His podcast is all about UniQue voices of the world. Everyone has something that sets them apart and Lucas is here to showcase their gifts to the world, while also adding his own UniQue twist. Website: www.thechristianhansenshow.com
Be who you are, where you are, and when you lack strength, have the courage to ask for help. Regardless of where you are in your professional or personal life, there is no greater sign of strength than knowing you don't know it all and asking for help when you know you could use it. No one is an expert at everything, it doesn't matter who you are or what you do. We as individuals can only handle so much and its important to recognize that and practice humility often because it's only a matter of time before our egos come back to bite us. This is the vision of Meta Hemenway-Forbes, a very close family friend of mine, which I normally just refer to as my second mom. Ever since I was 7 years old and her family moved in a few houses down from mine, we have been in each other's lives non-stop. Growing up I probably spent more time at Meta's house than I did my own so it's no surprise that we have become as close as we have. This was a unique episode to do because this is the first time I've done one with somebody so close to me so I hope that you enjoy listening to this one as much as I did recording it! Thank you for your time.
November 16, 2019 | Theologies of the Digital Presentation: Response to Hemenway and van Oorschot Speaker: Alex Miller-Knaack, MDiv candidate, Princeton Theological Seminary
November 16, 2019 | Theologies of the Digital Presentation: “Bible as Interface: Reading Bible with Machines” Speaker: Dr. Michael Hemenway, Chief Information Officer, Iliff School of Theology Read Dr. Hemenway's research paper at https://cursor.pubpub.org/pub/hemenway-bible-interface.
This episode features: -How do people behave differently when they are high vs low status? -How did human social status evolve? -Should you try to dampen your desire for status? -Are EAs too credential-focused? -Is publishing in academic journals overrated? -Can you get more done by working alone than by starting an organization? -What causes groups to splinter? -How has effective altruism “professionalized?” What are the upsides and downsides of this trend? Full transcript -References- Apply Psychology: Anderson, C., Hildreth, J. A. D., & Howland, L. (2015). Is the desire for status a fundamental human motive? A review of the empirical literature. Psychological Bulletin, 141(3), 574. Cheng, J. T., Tracy, J. L., & Anderson, C. (Eds.). (2014). The psychology of social status. New York, NY: Springer. Puts, D. A. (2010). Beauty and the beast: Mechanisms of sexual selection in humans. Evolution and human behavior, 31(3), 157-175. Solnick, S. J., & Hemenway, D. (1998). Is more always better?: A survey on positional concerns. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 37(3), 373-383. Celebrating failed projects Estimating readership of different EA/LW writings (EA Forum comment) Check This Rec: The Dissenter YouTube channel The Dissenter podcast
This week we talk to artist, Dana Hemenway! We discuss growing up in Petaluma, being a punk kid, tutu material, art handling, and the sounds of electricity.Most of the music in this episode is by Nineteen EightyfourDana HemenwayEleanor Harwood GalleryCamille UtterbackTasmania50 Best ASMR Youtube Videos That Tingle and RelaxThis is a Tasmanian devil.
On today's episode, we'll hear the story of Carl Hemenway. From growing up Mormon, to surviving the foxhole's of Vietnam, we'll Carl shares how Jesus has shaped his story, every step of the way.
This week, we have a very special collaborative show with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s podcast, This Week in Health. We are featuring perspectives on gun violence from the trauma bay of the emergency room with Megan Ranney, and from public health, with David Hemenway. Megan Ranney, MD MPH is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Rhode Island Hospital/Alpert Medical School of Brown University and also Chief Research Officer for the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine, a non-partisan philanthropy focused on filling the funding gap for high-quality, medically-focused, firearm injury research. David Hemenway is Professor of Health Policy, is Director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center at the TH Chan School of Public Health. Dr. Hemenway teaches classes on injury and on economics. Dr. Hemenway has written widely on injury prevention, including articles on firearms, violence, suicide, child abuse, motor vehicle crashes, fires, falls and fractures. This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
Historium Unearthia: Unearthing History's Lost and Untold Stories
This trailblazer became the most successful and significant black woman writer of the first half of the 20th century. In the 1970s, during the second wave of feminism, Alice Walker helped revive interest in this pioneer’s writings, bringing them back to public attention. Have you ever heard of Zora Neale Hurston? DOWNLOAD NOW Credit: It was a deep honor and absolute pleasure to speak with Valerie Boyd, author of Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston, and DaMaris Hill, a professor at the University of Kentucky and author of A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing, for this episode. Sources: Wrapped in Rainbows: The Life of Zora Neale Hurston; Boyd, Valerie; Scribner; February 3, 2004. Dust Tracks on a Road; Hurston, Zora Neale; Harpers; 1942, updated 2017. A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing: The Incarceration of African American Women from Harriet Tubman to Sandra Bland; Hill, DeMaris; Bloomsbury Publishing; January 15, 2019. Zora Neale Hurston; Official Website; Maintained by the Zora Neale Hurston Trust; Retrieved February 2019. Zora Neale Hurston: A Literary Biography; Hemenway, Robert; University of Illinois Press, September 1, 1980.
Each year in the U.S. more than 30,000 people are killed by guns—with two-thirds of those deaths being suicide. And there are tens of thousands non-fatal injuries. Yet research into preventing firearm violence remains limited and under-funded. In a special collaborative episode with Review of Systems we’re taking an in-depth look at gun violence in America: why we know so little about the toll of firearm injuries and deaths, what researchers want to know, and how they are engaging gun owners and enthusiasts as key stakeholders in advocating for more research. Full Transcript: hsph.me/gun-violence-pod You'll hear perspectives on gun violence from the emergency room, with Megan Ranney, and from public health, with David Hemenway. Ranney is an associate professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Rhode Island Hospital/Alpert Medical School of Brown University and also chief research officer for the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine, a non-partisan philanthropy focused on filling the funding gap for high-quality, medically-focused, firearm injury research. Hemenway is a professor of health policy at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. He has written widely on injury prevention, on topics including firearms, violence, suicide, child abuse, motor vehicle crashes, fires, falls, and fractures.
Each year in the U.S. more than 30,000 people are killed by guns—with two-thirds of those deaths being suicide. And there are tens of thousands non-fatal injuries. Yet research into preventing firearm violence remains limited and under-funded. In a special collaborative episode with Review of Systems we’re taking an in-depth look at gun violence in America: why we know so little about the toll of firearm injuries and deaths, what researchers want to know, and how they are engaging gun owners and enthusiasts as key stakeholders in advocating for more research. You'll hear perspectives on gun violence from the emergency room, with Megan Ranney, and from public health, with David Hemenway. Ranney is an associate professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Rhode Island Hospital/Alpert Medical School of Brown University and also chief research officer for the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine, a non-partisan philanthropy focused on filling the funding gap for high-quality, medically-focused, firearm injury research. Hemenway is a professor of health policy at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. He has written widely on injury prevention, on topics including firearms, violence, suicide, child abuse, motor vehicle crashes, fires, falls, and fractures. You can subscribe to Harvard Chan: This Week in Health by visiting iTunes or Google Play and you can listen to it by following us on Soundcloud, and stream it on the Stitcher app or on Spotify. Learn more Doctors affirm commitment to reducing gun violence (Harvard Chan School news) New recommendations urge doctors to talk to patients about guns (Harvard Chan School news) Uncommon Ground (Harvard Public Health magazine)
The Geneva Suites is a residential senior home model run by Marlena Hemenway and her husband Scott. The core values of The Geneva Suites are: Safety of residents and staff Improve service continually through education We are acountable for our actions and decisions We face challenges with optimism The Geneva Suites has six residential homes for seniors (each home can house six seniors) and the renovations are being completed for a seventh home set to open in early 2019. Marlena encourages family with elderly loved ones to start having the necessary conversations about end-of-life care. She notes it is best to consider the options and make decisions before a crisis happens, and it is often best to transition a senior out of their home and into an alternative living facility sooner rather then later. Get in touch with Marlena: - www.thegenevasuties.com - info@thegenevasuites.com - 612.208.8888
Ep29 Austin "Poi" Hemenway joins me for a good episode in which we consume beers, and discuss his poi performing, and also find out that he is a bit of a rapper as well.
The world of honey bees has always been a mystery to me. I feel confident taking care of plants, animals, building and even fungi, but bees? In todays interview I spoke with one of the most outspoken advocates of beekeeping Christy Hemenway, found of Gold Star Honey Bees and author of the book “The Thinking Beekeeper: a guide to natural beekeeping in top bar hives.” In this interview Christy introduced me to the way that bees have been managed at an industrial level and some of the many nuanced causes of colony collapse disorder. She also goes in depth about the many benefits that bees have for our environment and agriculture that go far beyond honey production, and wraps up by giving some invaluable advice on how to start and manage your own home scale hive. Christy has tons of great resources including a great TEDx talk she gave a few years back Resources: Get the book, "The Thinking Beekeeper" Christy's TEDx talk goldstarhoneybees.com
March 22, 2018 — On February 14, 2018, a gunman opened fire inside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., killing 17 people and wounding 17 more. That shooting and the students who survived have reignited a national conversation about guns under the banner "Never Again." On March 24, people across the country will gather for the March for Our Lives to protest gun violence—and to call for changes in firearm policy. Ahead of the nationwide marches we spoke to David Hemenway, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, and one of America’s top firearms researchers. Hemenway discussed why these student-led protests may finally be the tipping point for gun legislation in America. Plus—he explained the public health approach to preventing gun violence and shared the changes to firearms policy that could have the biggest impact on saving lives. You can subscribe to this podcast by visiting iTunes, listen to it by following us on Soundcloud, and stream it on the Stitcher app or on Spotify. Learn more Firearms research (Harvard Injury Control Research Center) Lethal means and suicide (Harvard Injury Control Research Center)
On February 14, 2018, a gunman opened fire inside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., killing 17 people and wounding 17 more. That shooting and the students who survived have reignited a national conversation about guns under the banner "Never Again." On March 24, people across the country will gather for the March for Our Lives to protest gun violence—and to call for changes in firearm policy. Ahead of the nationwide marches we spoke to David Hemenway, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, and one of America’s top firearms researchers. Hemenway discussed why these student-led protests may finally be the tipping point for gun legislation in America. Plus—he explained the public health approach to preventing gun violence and shared the changes to firearms policy that could have the biggest impact on saving lives.
October 31, 2017
In the wake of a mass shooting on October 1 in Las Vegas that left at least 59 people dead and more than 500 injured, David Hemenway, professor of health policy at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, speaks with us about the public health approach to gun control. Hemenway discusses what made the Las Vegas shooting so deadly, how Australia effectively responded to a mass killing in 1996, and why restrictions on federally funded gun research hamper efforts to prevent violence. We also re-play a story on background checks and gun purchases from January, 2017.
In the wake of a mass shooting on October 1 in Las Vegas that left at least 59 people dead and more than 500 injured, David Hemenway, professor of health policy at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, speaks with us about the public health approach to gun control. Hemenway discusses what made the Las Vegas shooting so deadly, how Australia effectively responded to a mass killing in 1996, and why restrictions on federally funded gun research hamper efforts to prevent violence. We also re-play a story on background checks and gun purchases from January, 2017. You can subscribe to this podcast by visiting iTunes, listen to it by following us on Soundcloud, and stream it on the Stitcher app. Learn more Tackling gun control as a public health problem (Boston Globe op-ed) The Harvard Injury Control Research Center Even as more gun buyers undergo background checks, millions still don’t (Harvard Chan School news)
Originally released on January 26, 2014.
The days of storing photos, letters and other correspondence in a keepsake box are over. Now, everything is online. But what happens to those assets when the account holder is gone? Who, if anyone, currently has the authority to access them? Mike Avitzur sits down with Andy Rothstein of Goulston & Storrs and Joe Bierwirth of Hemenway & Barnes -- co-chairs of the Boston Bar's Trusts & Estates Section -- to find out.
Dr. Melanie Hemenway is a State Field Veterinarian for the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets and coordinates the New York State Cattle Health Assurance Program (NYSCHAP). She is currently overseeing a 3 year grant from FDA for outreach to animal agriculture groups about the new Veterinary Feed Directive and Antibiotic Stewardship. She has given several presentations on this topic to veterinarians, farmers, feed companies and educators. The new Veterinary Feed Directive went into effect 1/1/2017 creating changes in the availability, oversight and use of medically important antibiotics used in animal feed and water. This presentation will help clarify the reasons for this change, what drugs are affected, the emphasis being placed on veterinary oversight of the use of these drugs on farms and the responsibilities of the veterinarian, feed company/mill and the farmer.
2015 Pen-Hemingway Winner Arna Hemenway talks creativity, writing and life.
Toby is the author of a new book on urban and suburban permaculture, The Permaculture City, as well as Gaia's Garden, the best-selling permaculture book in the world, which won the 2011 Nautilus award and was named one of the ten best gardening books of 2010 by The Washington Post. He has been an adjunct professor at Portland State University and Scholar-in-Residence at Pacific University. Toby is a well-known permaculture teacher and has taught over 70 Permaculture Design Courses. He and his wife, Key el, live in Sebastopol, California. Listen in to our 100th episode and hear Greg and Toby chat about one of their favorite topics: Permaculture. Go to our Podcast page at www.urbanfarm.org/blog/podcast/ to find photos, links, and more information on this podcast, as well as for each of our other great guest interviews. You can also sign up for weekly email summaries of the interviews.
Toby Hemenway joins me to talk permaculture - how permaculture has changed and how we can work more permaculture into our lives.Toby also talks about being one of instructors for the new Ecological Landscaper Immersion Program that is being put on by the Erik Ohlsen and the Permaculture Skills Center. Key TakeawaysIt really benefits anyone in almost any field to be able to think in whole systems. Someone who embraces permaculture can do a lot more than teach and design property. Apply permaculture techniques and principles to what you do. Find good mentors. Many people want to help others. You just have to ask.Some standard economic training is good. You can get a great toolkit and then apply it however you want. Standard training is a tool, a means to an end if you goal is ecological design. Catch kids while thinking in whole systems. Before they are trained out of it into compartmentalized thinking.Starting with soil fertility and building organic matter is a good idea. It is almost a universal panacea along with being careful with water. Move to the highest generalization. For example, do you want to open a store, or do you want to make a living providing good products for your community.Find the things in life that you are really good at and do those things. It gives you good feedback and then you start building confidence and making forward progress.Want to transition careers? Find ways to make it less scary - lower expenses. Show Notes: www.permaculturevoices.com/37
Listen to the podcast On Tuesday, January 22, Harvard public health researcher David Hemenway participated in a special Doctors for America “Ask the experts” policy call to share his insights on President Obama's gun violence prevention plan and other matters in health policy. David Hemenway, Ph.D., is Director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. He has won ten teaching awards at Harvard School of Public Health. He has written widely on injury prevention, including articles on firearms, violence, suicide, child abuse, motor vehicle crashes, fires, falls and fractures. He headed the pilot for the National Violent Death Reporting System, which provides detailed and comparable information on suicide and homicide. Dr. Hemenway has written numerous books and peer-review articles. His book, Private Guns Public Health(2006) describes the public health approach to reducing firearm violence, and summarized the scientific studies on the firearms and health. While You Were Sleeping: Success Stories in Injury and Violence Prevention (2009) describes more than sixty successes, and over thirty heroes who have made the world safer. Listen to the podcast
New music in this episode from Hemenway, Ketsumeishi, Sekitori Hana and more. Also, be sure to stick around for a guest set from Mr. Evan Jones featuring the orchestral stylings of Hiroki Inui. As I mentioned on the show, Haikarahakuti ... Read More » The post Nihongaku Radio Episode 29: This One Has a Kazoo Solo appeared first on Nihongaku!.
This podcast was recorded in Denver, Colorado, and features a round table discussion with Tom Theobald and Miles McGaughey of Boulder County and Christy Hemenway, who was visiting from Maine. We focused on the current situation in the USA regarding agriculture in general and beekeeping in particular, looking at what we feel needs to be done to put right the damage caused by the use of toxic insecticides and herbicides.
Toby Hemenway, author of the best selling book Gaia's Garden, tells us how to create beautiful and functional ecosystems in our own backyards. Hemenway, a Permaculture teacher, writer, and lecturer, talks about basic Permaculture principles, guilds, and how to build soil fertility.