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As part of the "Unexpected answers" mission, the health faculty organized a Q&A panel on the topic "Will I always be anxious?" with Jeremy Ward and Chris Cipollone. Jeremy is a Christian counsellor in the Inner West and pastorally cares for people with anxiety. Chris is pastor and an author. Chris wrote a book called "Down, Not Out" on his personal experience and reflection on anxiety and depression. This episode is a 30min Q&A. The questions were sent in from attendees via slido. The MC is Emmy, a nursing student. Series: Unexpected Answers Speakers: Jeremy Ward, Chris Cipollone Panel title: Will I always be anxious? To find out more about the Sydney Uni Evangelical Union, or to join us on campus, visit https://sydneyunieu.org.
Greg Marchildon interviews Jeremy Ward, the curator of the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough, Ontario, about the role of the canoe in the history of the portion of North America that would eventually become Canada and about the extraordinary collection of this unique museum of Canadian history. The conversation covers the role of curator in a history museum and what can be learned about Canadian history from an intimate viewing of material objects. Ward also explains how documentary history, including the work produced by the Champlain Society, is used to select and then explain the objects displayed in the museum. This podcast was produced by Jessica Schmidt. This interview was produced with the support of The Champlain Society. The mission of The Champlain Society is to increase public awareness of, and accessibility to, Canada's rich store of historical records. Gregory P. Marchildon is the Ontario Research Chair in Health Policy and System Design with the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Greg Marchildon interviews Jeremy Ward, the curator of the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough, Ontario, about the role of the canoe in the history of the portion of North America that would eventually become Canada and about the extraordinary collection of this unique museum of Canadian history. The conversation covers the role of curator in a history museum and what can be learned about Canadian history from an intimate viewing of material objects. Ward also explains how documentary history, including the work produced by the Champlain Society, is used to select and then explain the objects displayed in the museum. This podcast was produced by Jessica Schmidt. This interview was produced with the support of The Champlain Society. The mission of The Champlain Society is to increase public awareness of, and accessibility to, Canada's rich store of historical records. Gregory P. Marchildon is the Ontario Research Chair in Health Policy and System Design with the Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation at the University of Toronto. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Welcome to the first ever episode of the Cloudy Business Podcast series with Roshni Daswani. More and more of our clients are asking whether they should move to the Cloud, and if so, where do they even start with this process? Is their organisation ready? Does their team have the skillset required to drive this? And more importantly, who can help them succeed in their journey to the Cloud? That's how the Cloudy Business Podcast was born. Each episode we'll be answering your most pressing questions about Cloud migration by hearing from top experts in the field. In this first episode Roshni is joined by enterprise cloud strategist and associate at Atos, Jeremy Ward, who brings his extensive experience on Cloud migration, being perfectly placed to kick-off the series. If you're considering moving to the Cloud or even just want to find out what all the fuss is about, this episode is a great introduction to this hot topic.
Ready to play tourist? This week, we're going on a private on-site tour of the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough. Michelle speaks with museum Executive Director, Carolyn Hyslop, and Curator, Jeremy Ward, and learns all about the museum's collection of more than 600 watercraft. We'll also hear an essay by journalist Paul Rush about dealing with a medical emergency when you are alone at the lake. Special thanks to:Carolyn Hyslop, executive director, Canadian Canoe MuseumJeremy Ward, curator, Canadian Canoe MuseumLinks:For more information on the Canadian Canoe Museum, visit their website. You can donate to the new museum here.Photos referenced:Photo 1Photo 2Photo 3Photo 4Photo 5Articles referenced:“In sickness and in health” by Paul Rush (Cottage Life magazine, June 1998)Connect with Cottage Life:cottagelife.comFacebook: www.facebook.com/cottagelife/Twitter: @cottagelifeInstagram: @cottagelifePinterest: www.pinterest.ca/cottagelife/Youtube: www.youtube.com/user/CottageLifeMagazine/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Managing director of East By West Ferries Jeremy Ward and owner of Smith the Grocer Mary Meachen join Nick Mills on the Business Panel.Together they discuss the independent panel reviewing our electoral laws, cycleways, Te Reo within business, this year's budget and whether Wellington is bouncing back after lockdown restrictions.LISTEN ABOVE
There is a war going on. A war between the streaming giants. Netflix' recent results gave a bit of a warning shot for tougher times to come. The company is losing subscribers for the first time. Other big streaming companies have reported since and as everything in life gets more expensive people might just think twice about how many streaming services they really need. Jeremy Ward is Jarden's global equities analyst. He joined Heather du Plessis-Allan. LISTEN ABOVE
The South is home to some of the most economically dynamic cities and metropolitan areas in the country--but also a large number of places left behind by the ending of the previous economic order in the late 20th Century. Why do some Southern communities thrive while others lag? How do history, policy, and geography shape the economic fortunes of the South's small towns? And finally, what practical steps can be taken to help the South's small towns and rural areas thrive once again? Matt Simmons is joined by Jeremy Ward, a 2021 graduate of the University of South Carolina's economics department who is currently doing graduate work at Georgia Tech, to discuss these exact questions.
Australian PGA Professional Jeremy Ward joins host Brent Davis for this episode. The discussion covered topics such as using mentors, his experience as a club professional and coaching, his coaching ideas, social media, coaching overseas, being a caddy on tour as well as much more. Find Jeremy at the links below. Instagram YouTube
It's the Christmas episode! A bumper-length special to close out Season 1 featuring festive sketches, a totally normal song about totally normal traditions, and some very special guests! Get those plastic sheets down on the carpet, come and join me by the staircase and have a listen as the characters you know and tolerate get ready to celebrate a very irregular Christmas. Thank you to my wonderful quiz contestant Josie Maunders, And thank you to all the angelic voices of the Highly Irregular Christmas Choir: James Andrew Coning Watson (BSc Hons, Bronze Swimming Certificate), Varun Manthri, Melina Mousoupetros, Yolanda Chácon Gámez, Anthony Hewitt, Austin Lederman, Josie Maunders, Alice Horgan, Laura Jane Regan (BA Hons, MA (soon)), Jordan Thompson, Matt Baker, John Mousoupetros, Mackenzie Nelson, James Blay, Jeremy Ward, Lauren Larue, Jonny Miller and Peter Debono. Merry Christmas and I'll see you some time next year. Get in touch... Email: podirregular@gmail.com, Twitter: https://twitter.com/podlyirregular (https://twitter.com/podlyirregular) Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podlyirregular/ (https://www.instagram.com/podlyirregular/) Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/podlyirregular (https://www.facebook.com/podlyirregular) And don't forget you can listen to the songs again on the https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgXzTE-4sWXXAP8qdfs1MCA (Highly Irregular Podcast channel) on Youtube! Sound credits: 'Relaxation music #13' by ShortRecord on Freesound: https://freesound.org/people/ShortRecord/sounds/523006/ (https://freesound.org/people/ShortRecord/sounds/523006/) 'Boiling water, large, A' by InspectorJ on Freesound: https://freesound.org/people/InspectorJ/sounds/412843/ (https://freesound.org/people/InspectorJ/sounds/412843/) 'a quack' by crazyduckman on Freesound: https://freesound.org/people/crazyduckman/sounds/185549/ (https://freesound.org/people/crazyduckman/sounds/185549/)
The first electric ferry in the southern hemisphere is soon to hit the seas in Wellington. Ika Rere is its name - it means 'flying fish'. It will join the East by West ferry fleet, as part of the return service from Wellington to Eastbourne. East by West managing director Jeremy Ward decided to bring electric passenger ferries to New Zealand after seeing them in action in fjiords of Norway. In 2018 he set up the Wellington Electric Boat Building Company - a subsidiary of East by West - with boatbuilder Fraser Foote. Not only did the pair bring the electric ferry to Wellington, they've helped bring boat building back to the capital - 20 years after it fizzled out, and they hope to keep building electric ferries from their Lower Hutt base. On Thursday Ika Rere will be opened up to guests to look at, with sailings set to start before Christmas - and the ferry going into full service in the new year.
The first electric ferry in the southern hemisphere is soon to hit the seas in Wellington. Ika Rere is its name - it means 'flying fish'. It will join the East by West ferry fleet, as part of the return service from Wellington to Eastbourne. East by West managing director Jeremy Ward decided to bring electric passenger ferries to New Zealand after seeing them in action in fjiords of Norway. In 2018 he set up the Wellington Electric Boat Building Company - a subsidiary of East by West - with boatbuilder Fraser Foote. Not only did the pair bring the electric ferry to Wellington, they've helped bring boat building back to the capital - 20 years after it fizzled out, and they hope to keep building electric ferries from their Lower Hutt base. On Thursday Ika Rere will be opened up to guests to look at, with sailings set to start before Christmas - and the ferry going into full service in the new year.
“Crisis” is a catch-all phrase used in modern rhetoric typically attached to any movement or belief that aims to point out an issue. However, it is as important as ever to rationally conclude what constitutes a crisis, and to what extent eras of “crises” defend government intervention.In this episode, Acton Institute's research associate and librarian Dan Hugger sits down with participants of Acton's Emerging Leader program, Grace Hemmeke, Ben Luker, and Jeremy Ward to discuss their Capstone project on the rights and responsibilities of government action in times of crisis.The three Emerging Leaders discuss the ordered role of the United States government during times of crisis through the Acton Institute's framework of a free and virtuous society, characterized by individual liberty, and sustained by religious principles. Their research was prompted by the government's role in the COVID-19 crisis, and is extended to practical judgement in both historical and current analysis of catastrophic periods.Are crises an agent in government force and control? And how will American society return to normalcy if and when this Coronavirus crisis is ever over?COVID-19 bailout unleashed a pandemic of fraudIs big government a near occasion of sin? COVID-19: the tyranny of experts Acton Line | Covid relief bill's side effects on our future economy Subscribe to Acton Vault podcastSubscribe to Acton Unwind podcast See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Southern Hemisphere's first fully electric ferry is about to be launched on Wellington waters next month. The East by West Ferry company operates between Queen's Wharf in Wellington's CBD and Days Bay in Lower Hutt. After being delayed by a year due to the Covid pandemic, the electric ferry, built by Wellington Electric Boat Building Company, will under go a series of final trials this month before launching in September. Kathryn speaks with East by West managing director Jeremy Ward.
To learn how school districts plan to make up for the lost learning that occurred for many students in the past academic year, Valley Edition Host talked with Alyson Crafton, director of student services for Madera Unified, Natalie Wheatfall-Lum, director of P-16 education policy at The Education Trust-West, and Heather Hough, executive director of Policy Analysis for California Education (PACE). Also joining the conversation from Fresno Unified were Jeremy Ward, the assistant superintendent of college and career readiness and Heather Allen, executive officer for the district's instructional division.
S2E20. Music: from The Wilds by Jeremy Ward and Tim MacDonald.
S2E17 - Music: Bony Jeane III. Vivace by Jeremy Ward and Tim MacDonald
L’arrivée des vaccins anti-covid-19 semble raviver les vieilles plaies de l’antivaccinalisme. Mais attention à ne pas mettre tous les “antivax” dans le même sac ! L’hésitation vaccinale est en réalité bien plus répandue que l’opposition à toute forme de vaccination. Alors, qui a vraiment peur des vaccins ? Pour quelles raisons ? Quelles réponses les institutions scientifiques peuvent-elles apporter ?Invités :Laurent-Henri Vignaud, historien à l’université de Bourgogne, co-auteur avec Françoise Salvadori de “Antivax : la résistance aux vaccins du 18ème siècle à nos jours” (2019, éditions Vendémiaires).Paul Guille-Escuret, doctorant en sociologie à Sorbonne Université et Aix-Marseille Université. Liens :Françoise Salvadori et Laurent-Henri Vignaud, Antivax, la résistance aux vaccins du XVIIIe siècle à nos jours, Editions Vendémiaire, 2019. Jeremy K. Ward, Paul Guille-Escuret et Clément Alapetite, « Les « antivaccins », figure de l’anti-Science», Déviance et Société, 2019/2 (Vol. 43). Florian Cafiero, Paul Guille-Escuret, Jeremy Ward. “I’m not an antivaxxer, but…”: Spurious and authentic diversity among vaccine critical activists, Social Networks, 2021, 65. A partir de 47min : Chronique sur la grippe Russe
This episode will feature a discussion with VitFriends member Jeremy Ward. We'll talk about his journey with vitiligo and his thoughts on living life and dating with vitiligo.
East Coast Radio — Jeremy Ward is the latest cell C Sharks player to sign a new contract and PSG through to their first ever champions league final.
East Coast Radio — The Protea Women's tour of England has been called off. Jeremy Ward becomes the latest player to recommit to the Cell C Sharks. Expect to pay between R500 and R3000 for a ticket to one of the British and Irish Lions tests next year.
East Coast Radio — Tributes pour in for renowned sports writer Sbu Mseleku. England goalkeeper Joe Hart signs for Spurs. Jeremy Ward recommits to the Cell C Sharks
Witness to Yesterday (The Champlain Society Podcast on Canadian History)
Greg Marchildon interviews Jeremy Ward, the curator of the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough, Ontario, about the role of the canoe in the history of the portion of North America that would eventually become Canada and about the extraordinary collection of this unique museum of Canadian history . This podcast was produced by Jessica Schmidt.
The advice about face masks continues to be confusing so Dan asks whether we should be made to wear them. Founder of the masks4all movement Jeremy Howard tells us why wearing face masks is a no brainer and special correspondent for the New Statesman Harry Lambert opens the lid on government failings dating back 15 years and how they have affected our handling of COVID-19. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Skye and Anthony interview Jeremy Ward, a Correctional Officer at ISCC (Idaho State Correctional Center), a 2,170-bed men's prison south of Boise. It houses inmates in minimum-security, medium-security and close-custody. Jeremy's great grandfather worked as a guard at the Old Pen, and his grandfather grew up as a child on the prison grounds. He compares his work experience to that of his grandfather's, and provides insight into the life of a modern day Correctional Officer.
Margaret and Jeremy Ward have been active members of the disability community in Queensland since the 1980’s. They have invested in collective family advocacy efforts and in developing their own leadership skills and the skills of others. They were also instrumental in the creation of organisations such as QPPD, CRU, QAI and Pave the Way.In this story they share the personal struggle for their daughter Mena to attend the local school alongside her peers. They describe the importance of clarifying their vision; learning about new ways of doing things and getting the right people around the table to help make it happen.
Discover Library and Archives Canada: Your History, Your Documentary Heritage
For many Canadians, paddling in a canoe serves as a refuge from our hectic day-to-day lives, and as a means of reconnecting with nature, family and friends. But thousands of years before European settlers arrived in what we now call Canada, the lakes and rivers served as vital trade routes for the Indigenous peoples here, with the canoe at the heart of that experience. In this episode, we pay a visit to the Canadian Canoe Museum in Peterborough, Ontario, and get a behind-the-scenes tour of its incredible canoe collection with curator Jeremy Ward.
Découvrez Bibliothèque et Archives Canada : votre histoire, votre patrimoine documentaire
Pour bien des Canadiens, le canot est un moyen d’échapper au rythme effréné du quotidien. Or, des milliers d’années avant l’arrivée des colons européens sur le territoire que nous appelons aujourd’hui le Canada, les lacs et les rivières servaient de routes essentielles au commerce pour les peuples autochtones d’ici, et le canot était au cœur de cette activité. Dans cette émission, nous visitons le Musée canadien du canot, à Peterborough en Ontario, en compagnie du conservateur Jeremy Ward.
In this episode John talks with Jeremy Ward of Ward Realty Services about independent brokerages and his business structure.
On this episode of the Infinite Game Podcast, I am joined by Jeremy Ward, entrepreneurship mentor and couch, as well as a small business owner himself. We talk about how he got his start and the power of mentors in his life, and how he now gives back to others wanting to start their own journey in entrepreneurship.
New York City flipped the switch and enabled Wi-Fi and cellular network in all underground subway stations. Jeremy Ward, of Transit Wireless, joins us to talk about this large scale project and what it took to do it. This episode is sponsored by Metageek New York City – A Connected City Jeremy Ward of Transit […] The post CTS 091 – New York City – A Connected City appeared first on Clear To Send.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: The Sharks have have set themselves a goal of going undefeated during their next three games, which all takes place within a space of eight days.
The Sharks will be out to avoid another horror show in front of their home fans when they face the Western Force at Kings park on Saturday.