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AlabamaCongressman Moore offers bill to permanently ban transgenders in militaryGov. Ivey signs the FOCUS Act into law effectively immediatelyGov. Ivey signs bill that bans and regulate the sale of hemp products in ALHeath Allbright wins the GOP special primary election for HD 11 seatA worship leader in Decatur, John McCall is arrested for child sex exploitationMadison Utilities to move forward with removing fluoride in water supplyNationalThe Trump's DHS is asking SCOTUS to rule on use of Alien Enemies ActHouse speaker says Dems who harassed ICE agents will face consequencesWI Senator is decrying the "big beautiful bill" for no cuts to spendingChaos erupts at hearing for RFK Jr. as he tackles bad food for youthReuters reports on Chinese energy products having remote control devices that were not identified in product listing when sold to US
More Like Jesus in Our Relationships - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
More Like Jesus In Compassion And Mercy - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Teaching the Truth in Love - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Living Waters - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Send us a textVeteran writer and podcaster Bob Smith (former PWI managing editor and writer for WCW Magazine and Wrestling's Main Event) has met a lot of unique people since starting The Outdated Wrestling Hour podcast (available at all podcast apps and YouTube) - but perhaps no one as different as Luke Jennings ... who hosts a series of wrestling podcasts on Hamburg WWWF matches and Memphis wrestling ... and he does it all from the UK! Jennings is a unique and pleasing individual who joins the long list of wrestling podcasters such as John McAdam and Steve Gennarelli, Brian R. Solomon, Rick Del Santo, "Mayor" John McCall, Dave Dynasty, Gene Jackson, and many more that Smith has welcomed to his show. "I think we should grow the nostalgia podcast community rather than compete," insists Smith - and when you hear Mr. Jennings on this show, we think you'll agree.Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showContact us at outdatedwrestling@gmail.com!
The Sword Of The Spirit - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
The Belt Of Truth - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
The Lust Of The Flesh - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Recently Larry had an opportunity to visit with Dr. John McCall and Joe Cunningham with Stealth Vision about their revolutionary new rifle scopes, which are setting a new standard in both the hunting and long range shooting arena! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's a special edition of The Outdated Wrestling Hour With Bob Smith (formerly managing editor of Pro Wrestling Illustrated and a writer for many of the best-known wrestling magazines in history) as he welcomes fellow podcaster "Mayor" John McCall (Wrasslin' Talk With Mayor McCall) for a truly deep dive into the history of major mat stars that plied their trades in Memphis, Tennessee. Sure, you'll hear about the career of Jerry "The King" Lawler - that's a given. But we expect you to be surprised at who McCall considers the very top performers in Memphis wrestling history - and Smith rounds out the topic with a long list of greats who passed through this legendary wrestling territory. Take a listen and compare your favorite stars of the CWA and USWA with the grapplers this pair of popular podcasters talk about!Support the showContact us at outdatedwrestling@gmail.com!
Who Is Worthy - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Numbers 13 - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Godly Women - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
The Work Of A Deacon - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Christ, Our Redeemer - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Unity In Purpose - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Goodness - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Joy - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Who Is God - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
John McCall - Edification In The Assembly by Somerville St Church of Christ
Doctrine - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
One of the hottest new regional wrestling podcasts is Wrasslin' Talk with Mayor McCall - hosted by longtime area fan and historian John McCall. Former PWI managing editor and The Outdated Wrestling Hour host Bob Smith flipped when he heard this new podcast, because even though he's a "city slicker," he loves classic Memphis wrestling as much as anybody. Together, Smith and McCall take a walk down memory lane that's so vivid you'll think you've landed on Beale Street - or better yet, at ringside at The Mid-South Coliseum!Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showContact us at outdatedwrestling@gmail.com!
United We Stand - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Add To Your Faith - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Jesus Is Lord - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Saving Faith - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
John McCall MacBain a fait de sa priorité la formation des leaders de demain. Né dans l'Ontario au Canada, il entreprend un cursus académique brillant : l'Université de McGill, Harvard Business School ou encore l'Université d'Oxford en Angleterre. Une fois diplômé, il s'oriente vers le marketing pendant quelques années avant de se faire rappeler par l'entrepreneuriat, qu'il avait découvert dès ses 17 ans. Une aventure qui lui réussit puisque son entreprise de petites annonces, Trader Classified Media, devient la plus grande de son secteur dans le monde au bout de quelques années. Mais sa mission de vie est ailleurs… En 2007, il revend sa boîte, devient milliardaire crée sa Fondation par laquelle il finance de nombreuses bourses afin d'améliorer l'accès aux études et de favoriser l'égalité des chances, son cheval de bataille. Avec un don de 120 millions de dollars à la Rhodes Trust et un don de 200 millions à l'Université McGill, il s'impose en tant que plus grand donateur canadien. Le temps d'une pause, l'entrepreneur philanthrope revient sur son parcours et évoque avec nous ses engagements pour former les générations à venir.
Heavenly Love - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Just For Today - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Be Ye Thankful And Rejoice - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
On this Get Over The Hump Edition of The Joe Lockett Show - My Step Kids Trying To Stick Me For My Paper. Are You Ready For Retirement? John McCall My Stock Guy Is In The Building Tell us your thoughts, connect with us here: https://www.joelockettshow.com/ Missed the Live stream? Watch live on Facebook and TikTok - The Joe Lockett Show - weekdays from 4-5 p.m. CT --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joe-lockett/support
Is Your Word Your Bond - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Mothers - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Ancient Words - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
David's Prayer For David - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
The Names Of God - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Renewing Our Minds - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Its Not About You - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
I Know Your Name - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Here He Comes - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Welcome back to MYLIFEplus25, in today's episode Vendetta we will be covering how a presidential appointed federal agent and bureaucrat demanded justice with such impetus that the constitutional rights of the accused was essentially trampled so as to achieve that end. I had hoped that the issues of my innocence and the illegality of my conviction would be resolved through the judicial channels of the appellate process here in New Mexico. But something happened in early 2019 while seated before the honorable Jacqueline Flores in an evidentiary hearing. John McCall, my lawyer at the time, returned to the defense table from the bench conference and suddenly informed me that I was not going to receive justice on my case due to “external influences.” What are you talking about? What external influences? I said. McCall signaled to none other than Richard T. Taylor, U.S. Marshall assigned by President Trump, who was seated behind A.D.A. Treich. To say the least, I was incensed but not surprised. After all, I had been on the receiving end of U.S. Marshall Taylor's Wrath for the last 15 years at that point. And months later, when the honorable Flores issued her opinion, John McCall's words were confirmed as prophetic. Listen now for the full episode. To learn more about me, Mario Chavez, and my fight for freedom and exoneration, visit https://mylifeplus25.com Thank you for supporting MYLIFEplus25 and for listening to today's podcast. All posts are public, so feel free to share it. And follow me on Twitter here: Follow @lifeplus25 Follow me on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/MYLIFEplus25-106918954788500 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mylifeplus25/support
This week on The Land Show with Dave and Johnny: Dr. John McCall and Dr. Brian Keener from the University of West Alabama, join us to discuss the Cahaba River Biodiversity Center in Bibb County, Alabama. https://www.uwa.edu/cbc Dr. Andrew Lovelady, large animal veterinarian, discusses improving cattle herd genetics and artificial insemination techniques. Russ Walters shares an update from their family farm in Covington County, and gives information about a new property for sale near Enterprise. www.selandgroup.com/agents/russ-walters Dave and Jonathan answer a listener question regarding surveys, and when you might need one.
Forgiveness - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Walk Humbly With Your God - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
BECOME A PRODUCER! http://www.patreon.com/themidnighttrainpodcast Find The Midnight Train Podcast: www.themidnighttrainpodcast.com www.facebook.com/themidnighttrainpodcast www.twitter.com/themidnighttrainpc www.instagram.com/themidnighttrainpodcast www.discord.com/themidnighttrainpodcast www.tiktok.com/themidnighttrainp And wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Subscribe to our official YouTube channel: OUR YOUTUBE Picture the scene: It's a beautiful day outside, you're walking your dog and soaking in the sunshine, it's relatively peaceful and quiet, and you're enjoying your time out with your dog. What could possibly ruin this moment. Well what if your dog started acting strange, pulling you towards a spot in the dirt. He keeps pawing at it and won't leave it alone. Eventually he unearths a bone. No big deal you find animal bones all the time on your walks. But this bone seems different, it's too long, too big to be an animal bone. You get kind of creeped out. But has that feeling completely ruined the moment, maybe not yet but it's about to get worse. On a whim you decide to take a picture of the bone and send it to your sister who is a nurse. Your good time is officially ruined when your sister confirms your suspicions, the bone is, in fact, not animal, it's human. A human femur to be exact. This is the exact scenario that led to the discovery of one of the, if not the, largest crime scenes in American history and a series of crimes that would as of yet, go unsolved. Christine Ross was the unfortunate soul that came across the body in the scenario described at the outset of the episode. She was walking her dog Ruka in an area that had recently been cleared out for a new neighborhood to be built. After the bone was found she called the police and that's when things get crazy! So let's get further into this story! The West Mesa is an elevated landmass lying west of the Rio Grande stretching from south of Albuquerque northward to Bernalillo in the state of New Mexico. A large portion of West Mesa is part of Petroglyph National Monument and is bisected by Interstate 40 and Historic Route 66. There are numerous subdivisions with new homes being built on the lower portion of the West Mesa as the City of Albuquerque continues to expand further to the west. Further west on the mesa are the mobile home communities of Pajarito, located to the south of I-40, and Lost Horizon, located about 1/2 mile north of I-40. The bodies of 11 women and one unborn child would be uncovered in West Mesa. It would take a year to identify all of the victims. Police would follow many leads but to no avail. We're going to look at the victims then discuss the most likely suspects and evidence did them being there killer and even discuss how this may be connected to a small sex trafficking ring that could be part of a larger global ring! The story may start earlier than you think. In the early 2000s, in an area called The War Zone, a tumor began to spread about a killer in albuquerque. There were stories of a killer roaming the streets and murdering sex workers. The war zone is an area now known as the international district. It is one of the most diverse areas of the city. It is also one of the poorest areas in the city and has a high crime rate. A 1991 article from the Albuquerque Journal described East Central as "a loose-jointed carnival of sex, drugs and booze" with drug dealers and prostitutes operating openly. In 1997, the city put up barricades in the neighborhood to make it harder for criminals to get in and out. Eventually, thanks in part to efforts by neighborhood residents, the crime rate decreased and the barricades were removed. In 2009, residents who resented the War Zone name persuaded city leaders to officially re-brand the area as the International District, highlighting its diverse community rather than crime. The first International Festival was held later that year. Despite these changes, crime has continued to be an issue in the neighborhood. It was here in 2004 that Cinnamon Elks, a sex worker that often worked in the war zone, came to hear a crazy story. She had told her friends there was a dirty cop murdering and decapitating sex workers and burying their bodies on the West Mesa. Soon after she related this story she disappeared. Years before the bodies are found, police detective Ida Lopez found that a number of sex workers were going missing. She began to compile a list, which included Cinnamon Elks, and began to try to bring notice of the issue to light. Lopez had a list of 16 women that had gone missing. When the body's were found Lopez feared the bodies were the same women on her list. She was partially correct, 10 of the 11 women identified we in fact on her list. For homicide investigators, the case posed challenges from the start, said Dirk Gibson, a communications and journalism professor at the University of New Mexico who has authored numerous books on serial killings. Years had passed from the time the women and girls disappeared, probably limiting available evidence. “You can’t have a colder cold case,” Gibson said. “In this case, there was almost nothing but bones.” Let's take a look at the victims. All but one of the women were sex workers from New Mexico. Many were known to live hard lives. Several were mothers. None of them deserved what happened to them. Jamie Barela, 15, was last seen with her 23-year-old cousin Evelyn Salazar heading to a park at San Mateo and Gibson SE in April 2004. Neither woman was ever seen again until their bones turned up in the mass grave site on the West Mesa in 2009. Jamie was the final skeleton to be identified, almost a year after the first bone was found. But Jamie’s mom believed investigators would find her daughter’s body long before she was named. Unlike the other West Mesa victims, Barela had no known prostitution or drug arrests. Evelyn Salazar was reported missing on April 3, 2004, by her family. She was 23 when she disappeared. She was the 10th victim to be identified, and her 15-year-old cousin Jamie Barela was the final one to be identified. The two were last seen together at a family gathering and then went to a park at San Mateo and Gibson. Salazar liked camping and outdoor activities, was a good cook and taught her daughter how to roller skate, according to her obituary. Michelle Valdez: The last time Dan Valdez saw his daughter Michelle, he asked her to not stay away too long. Michelle Valdez had a daughter who she cared for deeply, and had a big heart, Dan Valdez said. “Michelle was quite a gal, she would give you the shirt off of your back if you needed it,” he said. “She was good-hearted, kind, and didn’t deserve what she got.” He said he couldn’t remember exactly when she got involved with drugs. But she started disappearing for days, sometimes a week at a time. Later it turned to months. When she did show up, he would give her small sums of money — even though he knew she would use it on drugs — in the hopes that she would come back again. Eventually, she stopped altogether. Dan Valdez reported her missing in February 2005, when she was 22. Her bones were the second set to be identified in late-February 2009 after investigators started digging for bodies. They also discovered the remains of Michelle Valdez’s 4-month-old unborn baby. Michelle had dreamed of one day being a singer, her mother said, or maybe a lawyer like her aunt. “Drug addiction certainly wasn’t the lifestyle she wanted,” Jackson said. “She wanted help, but she didn’t have money or insurance, so it was very hard for her to get it.” Veronica Romero was 27 when she was reported missing by her family on Valentine’s Day 2004. Her family laid her to rest in July 2009 after her body was one of the 11 unearthed. “We’re putting her to rest finally, but considering what’s been done, and now we’re finding out more of what’s happened to her, and it’s sad,” family member Desiree Gonzales told KOB-TV at the time. “She was hurt real bad.” Julie Nieto grew up in Albuquerque’s South Valley and Los Lunas, and loved chile peppers and jump rope. She later went to Job Corps, which teaches under-priveleged young people different professions. Her mom, Eleanor Griego, said Nieto started doing drugs when she was around 19. She tried to get her treatment to no avail. Griego says she last saw Nieto, then 23, in August 2004 at Griego’s dad’s house. She left behind a young son, who Griego said she had doted over. Two years after Nieto went missing, her sister Valerie Nieto was found dead in a motel on Central Avenue after overdosing. “She couldn’t handle it. She was depressed all the time, crying all the time,” Griego said. “That was the only sister she ever had.” Doreen Marquez loved jewelry and fashionable clothes and had a huge personality, according to her friends and family. She went to West Mesa High School where she was a cheerleader, and later had two daughters who she was devoted to, throwing them extravagant birthday parties. But as the girls got older, Marquez’s boyfriend was jailed and she turned to drugs. She spent less and less time with her daughters, leaving them with her sister or other family members. “I had kicked her out of my house. That was the last time I saw her,” Julie “Bubbles” Gonzales, Marquez’s sister, said in an interview last year. “I just told her, ‘You know, it’s better if you just go. Whenever you feel like you’re not going to use, or you just want somewheres to come and eat, shower, or whatever, my door is open.’ And she never came back.” Garcia said the last time she saw Marquez, she told her she could help her deal with her addiction. But Marquez refused. Unlike many of the other women whose bones were found on the West Mesa, Marquez didn’t have any prostitution arrests. But police believe she engaged in it nonetheless. When Diana Wilhelm didn’t hear from her daughter on her birthday in August 2004, she knew something was wrong. But it would take nearly five years for police to confirm what Wilhelm already believed — her daughter Cinnamon Elks was dead. Elks, who was 32 when she went missing, was the third of the West Mesa victims to be identified after the first bone was found in early 2009. She, like many of the others, had a string of prostitution and solicitation arrests — 19 total, with 14 convictions. She was friends with at least three of the other victims — Gina Michelle Valdez, Victoria Chavez and Julie Nieto. Syllannia Edwards stands apart from the other West Mesa victims. She had no known friends or family, and was a runaway from foster care in Lawton, Okla. Edwards, who was 15, was the only African American victim. She never knew her father, and last saw her mother when she was 5. Police believe she may have been a “circuit girl,” meaning she was traveling along the I-40 corridor as a prostitute. Early in the investigation, a tipster told investigators Edwards was seen in Denver in the spring and summer of 2004. The tipster said she had been at a motel on East Colfax Street in Denver. “They were high-prostitution areas,” then-APD spokeswoman Nadine Hamby said in 2009. Police believe she may have been travelling in a group. “We’ve received information that Syllannia was associated with three other females and that she may have gone by the aliases Chocolate or Mimi,” Hamby said. Early on, investigators hoped Edwards’ background, because it’s different from the other victims, would provide the details needed to crack the case. Virginia Cloven grew up in a small trailer heated by a wood-burning stove in Los Chavez. She was funny, loved doing her makeup and was a favorite at school. Tragedy struck the family when she was in high school. Her brother was shot and killed in a homicide that would later be ruled self-defense. Virginia Cloven ran away from home a week later, when she was 17. Another brother ran away too. “They said they couldn’t stand it anymore,” Robert Cloven said. At first Virginia Cloven lived with her grandfather in Albuquerque, then moved in with a boyfriend. He got hit by a car and went into a coma, and soon Virginia Cloven had lost her home and was living on the streets of Albuquerque’s International District. One year, she called her dad asking what he wanted for his birthday. He asked her to clear up her citations and then they were supposed to meet in Albuquerque. They last heard from her in June 2004. She called to say she had a new boyfriend who had just gotten out of prison and that she was probably going to marry him. “We said we’d like to meet him, but we never heard from her again,” Robert Cloven said in 2009. “After that, everything just went dead.” Robert Cloven reported his daughter missing four months later, in October 2004. She was 23 at the time. Victoria Chavez, 26, was the first woman whose bones were identified after they were found on the mesa — before the public learned the women were likely murdered by a serial killer. “To have them come and knock on my door, I was devastated,” stepfather Ambrose Saiz said at a memorial event in 2009. “I never thought it would end like this. I just had that hope.” Chavez’s mother reported her missing in March 2005 after she hadn’t seen her in more than a year. The mother also said in the missing persons report that Chavez was on probation and was a “known drug user and prostitute.” She had five prostitution convictions, according to court records. Sheriff’s deputies investigating the disappearance of Monica Candelaria in 2003 heard from her friends that she had been killed and buried on the mesa. It turns out, those friends were right. When the 21-year-old never showed up, detectives turned it over to the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office cold case unit. The case stayed cold until she was identified as one of the women found on the mesa in 2009. She was last seen near Atrisco and Central in Southwest Albuquerque. Deputies said she lived a “high-risk lifestyle” and may have had gang ties. She had been convicted of prostitution once, according to court records. But her obituary highlights a happier side. “Monica enjoyed laughing, joking, taking care of babies, and spending time with her family,” the obituary reads. “She will be remembered as a loving daughter, mother, granddaughter, niece, cousin and friend who will be truly missed.” 11 women who all list their lives too soon. Most likely in a terrible manor. The police have not revealed the causes of death of the women. It was difficult to figure out how the women died and they are keeping that nugget to themselves to use as a gage of the beauty of claims and tips. After several years of nothing some suspects started popping up. Some actually fit the profile very well. Even still no official suspects have been named. Here's a look at some of the suspects that police have checked out. Lou Fred Reynolds, who police said was a pimp, died of natural causes on Jan. 2, 2009. Police found pictures of several West Mesa victims at his home but no physical evidence linking him to the murder. Reynolds, of Albuquerque, was arrested in 2001 and in 1998 on suspicion of promoting prostitution. Reynold was supposedly very focused on some of the West Mesa victims back when they were still missing. Lori Gallegos and Amy Reid both have connections to the mystery. Reid's sister and many friends started to disappear around the same time. Gallegos's close friend Doreen Marquez vanished in 2003. Gallegos said her search led her to Reynolds who supposedly ran an escort service. "When I met Fred Reynolds I wasn't looking for a suspect of a murder case at that point I was looking for my friend that was missing," said Gallegos. In October 2008, he showed her pictures of Doreen. He also had photos of missing women he claimed he was looking for. "He told me he was a former heroin addict himself and this was the reason he wanted to help the women that worked for him, he wanted them to have a good life," said Gallegos. Reynolds passed away a couple months later from health complications. What came as a surprise to Gallegos was Fred Reynolds was one of the names initially mentioned as a person of interest in the case. Reid who also knew Reynolds and considered him a friend. She said there is no way he was involved. "He wasn't violent and he wasn't abusive and he wasn't in anyway a killer," said Reid. Reid said Reynolds was someone who truly cared about the missing women and wanted to help find them. Another really suspect was Ron Erwin. Erwin has a connection to I've of our previous episodes. He is a photographer from Joplin Missouri. Erwin fell under a cloud of suspicion in the serial murders case investigators from New Mexico showed up at his properties in Joplin armed with search warrants. In the first interview he has granted about the matter, Erwin told the Joplin Globe he does not know how he became a suspect in the case, only that the experience has resembled a nightmare. “There’s an old ‘Twilight Zone’ episode,” Erwin said, “where a man wakes up to the world he’s always known and suddenly nobody recognizes him and he’s running around trying to say, ‘Don’t you remember me? I’ve known you for 40 years,’ and all this. “Well, that’s what my life’s been in that time,” he said during the interview at the office of Joplin attorney Phil Glades. “I don’t know how it all got to that stage before it suddenly exploded that morning,” he said. “I don’t know.” Erwin spent the better part of a year trying to prove his innocence behind the scenes. He hired lawyers in Joplin and New Mexico to advise him, even though he has never been charged with the murders, and he declined all interview requests.Erwin went to Alexandria, Va., in December to have the polygraph exam administered by former FBI polygrapher Barry Colvert. Glades said Colvert determined that Erwin was not being deceptive in his answers regarding the West Mesa murders. The results of that exam were provided to Albuquerque investigators a few months later when they asked, as a last request, if he’d be willing to take a polygraph. While no real reason was given to the public about why Erwin was a suspect, it is said that he was seen often at the fair in Albuquerque where the women were known to frequent and men were known to pick up prostitutes. Erwin and his attorneys provided the Globe with a copy of the final page of an Albuquerque police report dated June 26 of this year that concludes: “Ron Erwin is not a viable suspect in the killing of the 11 victims located at the 188th Street S.W. site.” The paragraph specifies dates in 2004 when victims Veronica Romero, Evelyn Salazar and Jamie Barela are known to have disappeared. The report states that detectives were able to verify that Erwin was in Joplin on both the day that Romero vanished and the day Salazar and Barela turned up missing. “I believe there weren’t too many specific dates in this case, but those were two of them,” Erwin said. “And I was able to account for all my days in 2004.” “Why he was a suspect — that’s all in sealed warrants, that’s still part of our pending investigation,” said Sgt. Tricia Hoffman, spokeswoman for the Albuquerque Police Department, in a phone interview. “But, at this point, we’ve been able to eliminate him as a viable suspect.” So at least they know who didn't do it. Scott Lee Kimball is a convicted serial killer from Boulder County, Colorado. He is serving a 70-year sentence after pleading guilty in 2009 to the murders of 5 people. All four victims died between January 2003 and August 2004, while Kimball was on "supervised release" after a prior check fraud conviction, serving as an FBI informant. In December 2010, Kimball told a cousin that he had been proposed as a suspect in the West Mesa murders in New Mexico, which were committed during the same 2003-2005 time period. He denied involvement. Even though he's denied involvement, he has boasted about committing other murders although authorities have yet to uncover direct evidence to back up his claims. Another suspect, and one of the most viable ones was Lorenzo Montoya, we say was as he was killed while in the act of committing another murder. When Lorenzo Montoya was killed in 2006, the bodies of the West Mesa victims had not yet been found. Police Chief Ray Schultz said at the time that police had been looking into him in connection to prostitutes who had vanished from the city. He has since been named as a possible suspect in the West Mesa deaths. That’s likely because, like another possible suspect Joseph Blea, who we'll get to in a bit, Montoya cruised the East Central corridor and was known to be violent. His first prostitution-related arrest was in 1998 when he picked up an undercover detective posing as a prostitute. He offered her $40. She took him to a motel room near Washington and Central, where officers arrested him. That apparently didn’t deter him. In 1999, vice detectives watched him pick up a prostitute near Central and San Mateo and followed him to a dark dead-end road near the airport. Police believe they caught him in the act as he was trying to rape and strangle her. Montoya had apparently never planned to pay her — he only had $2 in his wallet. He was arrested, but the case was later dismissed. About four years later, he was still at it. Detectives watched him pick up a prostitute on Central Ave. and arrested him. The woman told officers he paid her $15. By that time, Montoya already had a history of violence. According to a domestic violence form his girlfriend filled out after an alleged assault, Montoya repeatedly beat her. The woman said he had also done “gross things to me,” but didn’t detail what they were in the document. She wrote that Montoya threatened “to kill me and bury me in lime.” That threat may shed light on Montoya’s last crime. In December 2006, he invited an escort to his trailer and killed her, according to a search warrant affidavit. “She was bound by the ankles, knees and wrists, with duct tape and cord,” a detective wrote in the warrant. When the woman’s boyfriend came to check on her, he shot and killed Montoya. The woman’s body was found outside Montoya’s trailer partially wrapped in a blanket. Her legs and wrists were wrapped in duct tape, and a thick layer circled her neck. An unrolled condom, pillowcase, and the woman’s belongings were in a trash bag in the trunk of the car Montoya had rented. Inside Montoya’s trailer, investigators found duct tape next to his bed. They also found hardcore pornography and some homemade sex tapes. One of those recordings shows Montoya having sex with a woman and the tape goes black. In a following scene on the same tape, the camera is focused on Montoya’s bedroom wall. The camera doesn’t capture what’s happening, but the audio captures what sounds like tape being pulled from a roll. At least one trash bag is opened and there’s minutes of rustling noises. Police have sent that audio to the FBI and other crime labs for enhancement, but haven’t been able to determine what Montoya was doing. Two years after Montoya’s death, the decomposed remains of the West Mesa victims were found. Montoya was immediately a potential suspect. But police have never detailed conclusive evidence tying him to the crime. Police spokesman Tanner Tixier said detectives tested Montoya’s living room carpet for DNA of all the victims found on the mesa and it came back negative. They also found nothing suspicious in his financial records around the time that the women went missing. Although Montoya’s family has declined to speak with the press, some of their comments were captured in interviews recorded by police the day he was killed. His mother expressed disbelief that Montoya could have done what police accused him of. And his girlfriend told them through sobs that she was supposed to be at Montoya’s trailer the night Hill was killed, but she had canceled because she wasn’t feeling well. “He was very aggressive when he was younger, but he changed a lot,” she said. “He was good to me.” Police announced in October 2016 they were looking for two escorts shown in one of the sex tapes. “We need those two women identified,” Tixier said. “We’re trying to figure out if they are still alive.” Next up is the aforementioned Joseph Blea. Joseph Blea caught the attention of investigators almost immediately after the first remains of the West Mesa victims were unearthed. April Gillen, Blea’s first wife, contacted police seven days after the discovery of a bone on the mesa and said she thought police should look into him. They already knew a lot about him. Blea is currently serving a 90-year prison sentence after he was convicted of four sexual assaults unrelated to the West Mesa case. He’s faced other sex-related charges as well, including accusations that he raped a 14-year-old girl he knew with a screwdriver. That case was later dropped, according to online court records. And his DNA was found on a prostitute left dead on a curb in 1985. He’s never been charged in connection with that crime. Police knew him even before many of those allegations surfaced — they had run across him more than 130 times between 1990 and 2009, and many of those encounters were along the East Central corridor known for prostitution and drugs, according to a search warrant affidavit unsealed late last year. It’s an area many of the victims reportedly frequented. In one report six years before the West Mesa victims went missing, a woman who had been walking on Central Avenue said Blea called her over to his car and exposed himself. Police found rope and electrical tape on his passenger seat. In the weeks after the victims’ remains were found, detectives with APD’s Repeat Offender Project tailed Blea for four days as he appeared to stalk prostitutes on the stroll. “On two separate occasions Mr. Blea drove Central Ave from the west part of Albuquerque to the east part of Albuquerque,” the detective wrote in the warrant. “He slowed and circled the block in areas where prostitutes were working. He did not approach any prostitutes but appeared to be closely watching them.” When detectives interviewed a prostitute who knew him, she said he took her to his house and tried to tie her up. She said she didn’t let him. About eight months after the West Mesa murder investigation began, detectives searched Blea’s home and collected women’s jewelry and women’s underwear. His wife, Cheryl Blea, told police he enjoyed wearing women’s underwear when having sex. She said she had on occasion found jewelry that didn’t belong to her or her daughter in their home. And she said her daughter had found women’s underwear hidden in their shed. In a 2015 interview with the albuquerque Journal, Robert Cloven, the father of victim Virginia Cloven, said some families had noticed the women’s jewelry was missing. Detective Mark Manary, who is the only investigator on the West Mesa case full-time, won’t say if the jewelry or underwear found at Blea’s house matched any of the victims’ DNA. “Due to this being an ongoing criminal investigation this question cannot be answered at this time,” he said in an email in January 2016. Blea also reportedly discussed the West Mesa case with others. When detectives interviewed a former cellmate, he said Blea told him he knew the victims. He said he had paid them for sex acts. “Mr. Blea spoke poorly about other identified victims, calling them trashy,” officers said cellmate Monroe Elderts told them. Blea told Elderts he hit one of the victims when she tried to take his money. Most of the evidence detectives present in the search warrant is circumstantial, but there’s one piece of physical evidence they believe may tie him to the crime. Officers digging up the bones found a plant tag for a Spearmint Juniper next to Virginia Cloven’s remains. Detectives traced that tree tag to a nursery in California that sends plants to Albuquerque, and Blea’s business records indicate he bought plants from nurseries that sold the California plants. It’s unclear if detectives were ever able to directly tie that tree tag to Blea. Blea began his lengthy prison sentence for the sexual assault cases in 2015. He is appealing his conviction in those. His former attorney, John McCall, said Blea says he had nothing to do with the West Mesa murders. “We dealt with issues relating to all of this,” McCall said in January 2016. “But it doesn’t seem like they really had any conclusive evidence regarding Joseph Blea. He’s denying involvement in West Mesa consistently.” Authorities believe that the women may have been involved in a large interstate sex trafficking operation. According to the El Paso Times, the presence of Syllannia Edwards among the victims has led authorities to believe that sex trafficking gangs could have been involved. Edwards was from Oklahoma, but was known to have been in Texas and Colorado before ending up in Albuquerque. It is unknown, however, if she traveled on her own or was trafficked there. Several arrests and convictions in El Paso, Texas, indicated that Albuquerque is part of a broader sex trafficking route that includes the states of Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas, as well as the Mexican city of Juarez. According to New Mexico State University, the FBI has investigated long-haul truck drivers as suspects in murders of sex workers along major highways, and authorities have reason to believe that Edwards was one such victim. The El Paso Crime Stoppers office received an anonymous tip in 2010 that a suspect whose last name was Cota had killed a girl nicknamed "Mimi" and "Chocolate," both of which were names Edwards was known to go by. Despite the tip, however, the West Mesa Murder case remains unsolved. So what about this Cota feels anyways. The following is taken from a new Mexico state university article. A truck driver who used to belong to El Salvador’s military special forces allegedly could be linked to serial crimes of girls and women in El Paso, Texas, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, according to a Crime Stoppers tip included in court documents related to the appeal of Texas death row inmate David Leonard Wood. The tip, which is part of the Crime Stoppers report, refers to Wood’s case and to the West Mesa murders of Albuquerque. The report states that the victim or victims of the alleged suspect, whose last name in the Crime Stoppers report is Cota, were nicknamed “Mimi” and “Chocolate.” New Mexico authorities had identified one of the 11 victims that were found in shallow graves in Albuquerque’s West Mesa in 2009 as Syllannia Edwards, whom police stated may have used the nicknames “Mimi” and “Chocolate.” The West Mesa case remains unsolved. Edwards, who was 15 years old, was reported missing in 2003 in Lawton, Oklahoma. Police there said they considered her an endangered runaway. Police said she was also seen in Aurora, Colorado in May of 2004, and may have been associated with prostitutes in that city. It is not known when and how Edwards traveled to Albuquerque. “Edwards was killed sometime between 2004 and 2005 and then buried in a mesa located adjacent to 118th Street SW in Albuquerque,” police authorities stated. “(The Cota) suspect would lure the females with narcotics,” the tipster told Crime Stoppers. An anonymous caller provided the tip on Feb. 22, 2010 to Crime Stoppers of El Paso, Inc. According to court records, El Paso Detective Arturo “Tury” Ruiz, who was assigned to follow up on the tip, went as far as to prepare a grand jury document so that he could request more details about the tipster’s information. An official with the Albuquerque Police Department confirmed today (Sept. 13, 2016) that the El Paso Police Department had shared the 2010 Crime Stoppers report with authorities investigating the West Mesa murders. No further comment was available due to the ongoing nature of the investigation. According to the Crime Stoppers report, “The caller (tipster) advised they have information regarding the crimes for which a man named David Leonard Wood will be executed soon. The caller advised (that) the suspect [Cota]… is responsible for these crimes.” “The caller advised two of the victims’ nicknames were Mimi and Chocolate,” the Crime Stoppers report stated. “The caller advised the suspect never admitted to killing the women, but did admit to having picked up the women and paid them in exchange for sex.” “The caller has reason to believe the suspect … is responsible for the West Mesa, NM murders as well … (and) may also be responsible for several murders in Milwaukee, WI,” the Crime Stoppers report stated. The tipster claimed that the suspect had been a member of El Salvador’s military special forces. The tipster further alleged that the suspect is “very violent” and “exhibits a very strong hate towards women.” The tipster told Crime Stoppers that Cota allegedly once boasted that “You will see me all over the news one day.” The suspect, the tipster alleged, used to be involved in drug-trafficking, and had a relative that was arrested on drug charges in California. The tipster alleged that the suspect ‘s nickname was “El Tigere,” was between 55 and 56 years old (in 2010), had a thin build, reddish hair, and drove a light burgundy-colored van. The suspect reportedly worked as an interstate 18-wheel truck driver, and had lived in Albuquerque and West Oakland, California. Wood was convicted in the deaths of six girls and young women who disappeared in 1987 in El Paso. Their bodies were found in shallow graves near what is now the Painted Dunes Golf Course in Northeast El Paso. The victims were Ivy Susanna Williams, Desiree Wheatley, Karen Baker, Angelica Frausto, Rosa Maria Casio and Dawn Marie Smith. Three others who went missing in 1987, two from Northeast El Paso, and one who lived in nearby Chaparral, New Mexico, were Melissa Alaniz, Cheryl Vasquez and Marjorie Knox; they were never seen alive again. El Paso police said they had suspected Wood in their disappearances. Wood has steadfastly denied killing the six victims and denied any connection with the disappearances of Knox, Alaniz and Vasquez. After his conviction by a jury trial, Wood was sentenced to death, and was scheduled to be executed in 2009. The Texas Criminal Court of Appeals granted him a stay the day before he was to be executed so he could prepare his appeal. There is thought that the same person responsible for the west mesa killings was also responsible for the cringes that Wood was convicted of. So there you have it… the unresolved story of the West Mesa killings. Who did it? Why did they do it, where are the rest of the missing girls? We may never know. Sources for today were an amazing special article series from the Albuquerque Journal, the New Mexico state university article on the Cota suspect, the El Paso times and their article on the subject. Those were the main sources although we did find some smaller bits scattered around various random websites. Horror movies filmed in new mexico: https://wheninyourstate.com/new-mexico/14-awesome-horror-movies-you-didnt-know-were-filmed-in-new-mexico/
Love Mercy - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Do Justly - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
How Deep The Father's Love - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
In The Shadow Of The Cross - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Joe chats to John McCall, Director of Claims and Provider Relations at Laya Healthcare about the construction of the new clinic in the city See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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O The Little Things We Do - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
We Are Not Alone - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
STEVE HESS & SOUTHERN SALVATION, resident artists at the Ark Encounter in Williamstown, Kentucky, will be the featured artists this week on The Gospel JubileeGo to: https://api.spreaker.com/v2/episodes/39823673/download.mp3Steve Hess and Southern Salvation are one of Southern Gospel's music's most exciting groups. This unique trio features a great blend, outstanding voices, and music you can sing along with. When you hear the group live, you will be treated to a music filled event that is energetic, fun and spirit filled.Steve Hess and Southern Salvation have the honor and privilege of being the resident artist at the Ark Encounter, performing around 400 concerts a year in the Answers Center Theater. The Ark Encounter is the Number One Christian-themed attraction in the world. This means this unique trio has a platform to sing the Gospel to hundreds of thousands of people each year.Steve Hess says, "One of the thrills of being the resident artist at the Ark Encounter, aside from singing daily, is the great teaching we hear from Ken Hamm and other great speakers.Steve says they are a group of men who love God, and they have been saved by the blood of Jesus, and they take every ounce of talent he has given them and humbly sing his praise!Steve Hess sings baritone and plays piano. He played live concerts with the likes of Jake Hess, JD Sumner and the Stamps quartet and many others.Steve has played and sang on albums and concert videos with some of Gospel music's legend's. For a number of years while signed to Polygram records, Steve was blessed to work on the west coast and across this country, on live dates and in the studio, with many of the world's best known artist, producers and choreographers. He truly feels all of these experiences have led him to this moment and the most exciting time of his life.John McCall truly brings one of music's great voices to the group. John's whose life testimony is moving and amazing reaches people all over the country... John is a true tenor, in a world where there are very few. His high notes, just like his life are real.... We are thrilled to have he and his family as part of the SHSS family !!!, says Hess.The third member of SHSS is lead singer Matt Randell... This young man is a crowd favorite everywhere... There is no limit to the styles and inflections Matt can bring to a song... Matt's passion for Christ comes through.. What a blessing to have Matt and his family as part of the SHSS Family, again says Hess.The group has had multiple Christian Music charting songs, toured nationally and recorded multiple albums over the years. Their 2019 single, “Three Beating Hearts”, was a personal message of the sanctity of life and a ministry message of Ken Ham, founder and CEO of the Ark Encounter and Creation Museum.The group has also been regularly featured on Paul Heil's, The Gospel Greats, radio program. Syndicated on over 200 outlets, including Sirius XM. Together these men have dedicated their talent and their lives to Presenting the Gospel through music. The next time you are at the Ark Encounter, catch a Steve Hess & Southern Salvation concert. Visit ArkEncounter.com for scheduling information.The Ark Encounter's resident Gospel Trio will be sure to touch your heart with their music.You can also catch The Gospel Jubilee Saturday evenings at 7:00 and Wednesday afternoons at 4:00 CDT on Praise Radio.Go to: www.PraiseRadio.netPlaylist:Artist | Song Title | Album01. The Down East Boys - Amazing amounts of amazing grace - “Faithful Still”02. The LeFevre Quartet - Practice what you're preaching - “Hope”03. The Gaither Vocal Band - Hallelujah band - “We Have This Moment”04. Steve Hess & Southern Salvation - Burden lifter - “Three Beating Hearts”05. Steve Hess & Southern Salvation - Foundation - “Three Beating Hearts”06. The Talleys - Never been a time - “The Music Goes On” 07. The Browns - Better off there - “Brave”08. Jeff & Sheri Easter - Never been too sad to sing - “You Are Loved”09. The Barnett Trio - Power in the name of Jesus - “Mix Tape Sessions - Restoration”10. Canton Junction - How great Thou art - “Great Is Thy Faithfulness Live”11. The Old Paths - Look at all I lost - “What Love Does”12. Steve Hess & Southern Salvation - In an instant - “Three Beating Hearts”13. Steve Hess & Southern Salvation - Three beating hearts - “Three Beating Hearts”14. Steve Hess & Southern Salvation - We'll need no light in that city - “Three Beating Hearts”15. The Freemans - Til the end - “Til The End Single”16. The 3 Heath Brothers - Dream small - “Who We Are”17. The Chandlers - Go answer the door - “Seasons”18. The Lore Family - In His presence - “Hidden Blessings”19. The Whisnants - He will be God - “He Will Be God”20. Mercy's Well - I'll see you soon - “Skywriting”21. 11th Hour - Room with a view - “Steppin' Out”Send your request to:request@gatewayfortheblind.comor call 636-428-1500
His Mercy Endures Forever - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
John McCall MacBain, Founder McCall MacBain Foundation by CJAD800
Comparing Ourselves - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Reconciliation - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Nebuchadnezzar - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
Integrity - John McCall by Somerville St Church of Christ
John McCall speaks about the impact of the Cross
What do you do when your favourite Jazz Festival takes a year off? Follow Nichaud Fitzgibbon’s approach and create your own! Nichaud has been instrumental in collaborating with John McCall to create the St Kilda […] http://media.rawvoice.com/joy_bentnotes/p/joy.org.au/bentnotes/wp-content/uploads/sites/107/2019/10/Nichaud-Fitzgibbon-20191020.mp3 Podcast: Play in new window | Download (Duration: 8:25 — 11.6MB) | Embed Subscribe or Follow Us: Apple Podcasts | Android | Email | Google Podcasts | Spotify | RSS The post St Kilda’s Jazz Summit appeared first on Bent Notes.
John McCall is a Vietnam veteran who served in the 101st Airborne Division. Thank you to all the veterans out there protecting this great country of ours with their lives. In this episode we talk about the greatest scam in the history of America and other problems we face as a nation.
Our guest preacher, Rev. John McCall, preaches a sermon about dreaming God’s dream for our church, for our world, and for ourselves.
Spring Fever! Start Name Artist Album Year Comments New Sun In The Sky Jelani Eddington A Change of Seasons [JATOE Rialtofest 13 / 2009] 2009 4-27 Barton, Rialto Square Theatre, Joliet, IL 2:30 Spring Is Here Bob Wyatt The Happy Organ of Bob Wyatt [Forum SF 9023] 1959 4-36 Wurlitzer, Paramount Theatre, New York - NOT 4-21 Wurlitzer, Paramount Studio, NYC (With thanks to John McCall for the correction) 5:33 Voices Of Spring Douglas Reeve Bright 'n Early [COS CD 126] 4-49 HNB Christie, Dome, Brighton 10:04 April Love Ed Gress Concert: Metropolitan Theatre, Boston 1958 1958 4-26 Wurlitzer, Metropolitan Theatre, Boston, MA 13:18 April In Portugal Bill Vlasak Music! Music! Music! [WJV Productions CD] 1996 4-42 Wurlitzer, Paramount Music Palace, Indianapolis, IN; then to Roaring 20s Pizza & Pipes, Ellenton, FL (Original 4-20, Paramount Oakland) 15:58 I'll Remember April Bill Thomson A Quiet Evening With The Mighty Wurlitzer [Pacifica P-2001] 1956 ??/?? Wurlitzer, Armin H "Bud" Wittenberg, Jr. Residence, Beverly Hills, CA; ex-Manchester Theatre, Los Angeles, augmented with parts from the Lincoln Theatre, Los Angeles 20:23 On A Spring Note John Giacchi Keymedia VTPO 2007 3-19 Connoiseur VTPO 22:54 The Love Nest Del Castillo Pipe Dreams [Concert Recording CR-0084] 4-32 Robert Morton, Fox Theatre, San Diego, CA 26:58 Let's Fall In Love Barry Baker Midwest Fall Fling 1996 1996 3-20 Robert Morton, Van der Molen residence, Chicago, IL; 8 November 1996 29:40 April Showers Ed Gress Concert: Metropolitan Theatre, Boston 1958 1958 4-26 Wurlitzer, Metropolitan Theatre, Boston, MA 32:25 Spring Fever David Peckham Electro-Pneumatic Action [Veteran Hill CD] 1992 4-20 Marr & Colton, Clemens Center, Elmira, NY 36:24 April in Paris Ken Rosen Theater Organ Idols: Reimagined [Vinyl Gold CD] 2017 2-11 Wurlitzer, Ken & Jenice Rosen Residence, Granada Hills, CA; ex-Pig 'n' Whistle Restaurant, Hollywood, CA; in the style of Buddy Cole 41:23 Tip-Toe Through The Tulips Mark Herman, David Gray Back Home Again In Indiana - ATOS 2014 2014 3-18 Barton & Allen T321Q-SP, Warren Performing Arts Centre, Indianapolis, IN 45:02 Spring Parade: When April Sings; Waltzing in the Clouds; It's Foolish but it's Fun Reginald Dixon Regal-Zonophone MR3503 1941 3-8 Compton, EMI Studio 1, Abbey Road, London 48:53 When You've Got A Little Springtime In Your Heart Dudley Savage The Tuneful 30s & 40s [Savage CD] Wyvern Organ 50:56 The Rustle Of Spring Dean Herrick Cinema Organ Encores Vol 41 [Deroy 1040] 1974 3-18 Wurlitzer, Dean Herrick Residence, Johannesburg, SA; ex-Metro Theatre (3-13), Johannesburg, South Africa 54:11 It Might As Well Be Spring Lance Luce Memories From The Senate - Live 2009 4-34 Wurlitzer, Senate Theatre, Detroit, MI 59:39 Wake Up And Live Lyn Larsen Pipes And Pedals [PRS-01] From 15" Master 1973 5-24 Wurlitzer, Bray Organ Loft, Salt Lake City, UT
Spring Fever! Start Name Artist Album Year Comments New Sun In The Sky Jelani Eddington A Change of Seasons [JATOE Rialtofest 13 / 2009] 2009 4-27 Barton, Rialto Square Theatre, Joliet, IL 2:30 Spring Is Here Bob Wyatt The Happy Organ of Bob Wyatt [Forum SF 9023] 1959 4-36 Wurlitzer, Paramount Theatre, New York - NOT 4-21 Wurlitzer, Paramount Studio, NYC (With thanks to John McCall for the correction) 5:33 Voices Of Spring Douglas Reeve Bright 'n Early [COS CD 126] 4-49 HNB Christie, Dome, Brighton 10:04 April Love Ed Gress Concert: Metropolitan Theatre, Boston 1958 1958 4-26 Wurlitzer, Metropolitan Theatre, Boston, MA 13:18 April In Portugal Bill Vlasak Music! Music! Music! [WJV Productions CD] 1996 4-42 Wurlitzer, Paramount Music Palace, Indianapolis, IN; then to Roaring 20s Pizza & Pipes, Ellenton, FL (Original 4-20, Paramount Oakland) 15:58 I'll Remember April Bill Thomson A Quiet Evening With The Mighty Wurlitzer [Pacifica P-2001] 1956 ??/?? Wurlitzer, Armin H "Bud" Wittenberg, Jr. Residence, Beverly Hills, CA; ex-Manchester Theatre, Los Angeles, augmented with parts from the Lincoln Theatre, Los Angeles 20:23 On A Spring Note John Giacchi Keymedia VTPO 2007 3-19 Connoiseur VTPO 22:54 The Love Nest Del Castillo Pipe Dreams [Concert Recording CR-0084] 4-32 Robert Morton, Fox Theatre, San Diego, CA 26:58 Let's Fall In Love Barry Baker Midwest Fall Fling 1996 1996 3-20 Robert Morton, Van der Molen residence, Chicago, IL; 8 November 1996 29:40 April Showers Ed Gress Concert: Metropolitan Theatre, Boston 1958 1958 4-26 Wurlitzer, Metropolitan Theatre, Boston, MA 32:25 Spring Fever David Peckham Electro-Pneumatic Action [Veteran Hill CD] 1992 4-20 Marr & Colton, Clemens Center, Elmira, NY 36:24 April in Paris Ken Rosen Theater Organ Idols: Reimagined [Vinyl Gold CD] 2017 2-11 Wurlitzer, Ken & Jenice Rosen Residence, Granada Hills, CA; ex-Pig 'n' Whistle Restaurant, Hollywood, CA; in the style of Buddy Cole 41:23 Tip-Toe Through The Tulips Mark Herman, David Gray Back Home Again In Indiana - ATOS 2014 2014 3-18 Barton & Allen T321Q-SP, Warren Performing Arts Centre, Indianapolis, IN 45:02 Spring Parade: When April Sings; Waltzing in the Clouds; It's Foolish but it's Fun Reginald Dixon Regal-Zonophone MR3503 1941 3-8 Compton, EMI Studio 1, Abbey Road, London 48:53 When You've Got A Little Springtime In Your Heart Dudley Savage The Tuneful 30s & 40s [Savage CD] Wyvern Organ 50:56 The Rustle Of Spring Dean Herrick Cinema Organ Encores Vol 41 [Deroy 1040] 1974 3-18 Wurlitzer, Dean Herrick Residence, Johannesburg, SA; ex-Metro Theatre (3-13), Johannesburg, South Africa 54:11 It Might As Well Be Spring Lance Luce Memories From The Senate - Live 2009 4-34 Wurlitzer, Senate Theatre, Detroit, MI 59:39 Wake Up And Live Lyn Larsen Pipes And Pedals [PRS-01] From 15" Master 1973 5-24 Wurlitzer, Bray Organ Loft, Salt Lake City, UT
A friend of a friend procured (a word Chance botched in this episode) a 1990s JHF2 Dallas Arbiter Reissue Fuzz Face. If you think the title of this pedal is big, check out the inclosure of this thing. It's footprint is massive, but its tone is as well, so we're totally down with it. Listen in and find out why this thing is a classic. And just for fun, we threw a Walrus Audio Luminary Octave Generator into the mix, which really put this thing over the top, as demonstrated on the bass by our first ever special guest, John McCall. Gear used: 1992 Fender Telecaster 2009 Gibson Les Paul Traditional 1998 Fender Vibrolux Reverb Shure SM57
The balance between global consistency and local nuance in recruitment marketing is a difficult issue that provokes a lot of debate. It has become clear to me from working with a number of employers in this area that there are no right answers and every company needs a bespoke approach to be successful. My guest this week is John McCall who oversees Talent Branding for Groupon in the EMEA region. Groupon has grown via acquisition in EMEA, creating a number of challenges for brand and marketing consistency. In the interview we discuss: • Groupon’s definition of Talent Branding and how they are positioning themselves as an employer of choice. • Creating a core central truth with local variations • Marketing effectively in multiple languages • The role of mobile video and social engagement • The importance of messaging consistency throughout the business John also talks about what is next for Groupon and gives us his thoughts on the future of Talent Branding This episode of the podcast is kindly supported by Lever, where ATS meets CRM Subscribe to this podcast in iTunes