Podcasts about jonkoping

Place in Småland, Sweden

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Best podcasts about jonkoping

Latest podcast episodes about jonkoping

Great Bible Truths with Dr David Petts
313 My Story Talk 26 Off-Campus Activities

Great Bible Truths with Dr David Petts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2025 20:52


My Story   Talk 26  Off-campus Activities Most of what I have said about our years at Mattersey so far has related to what happened on the campus, and that was certainly where we spent most of our time. But our ministry was by no means confined to the campus. It was becoming increasingly international and interdenominational. So in this talk I'll begin by describing some of my activities within Britain which took place beyond the College campus before proceeding to our travels in Europe and further afield.   Activities within Britain Apart from my regular preaching in local churches around the country my main activities in Britain during this centred around:   The AoG Executive Council My relationships with the charismatic renewal and expanding my writing ministry.   The AoG Executive Council I have already mentioned some of the positions I had held within AoG before becoming Principal of the Bible College, but in 1984 I was elected to the Executive Council. This was important because it meant that the College had a voice at national level and that I could ensure that the interests of the College were always taken into consideration. And it became even more relevant when in 1987 I became its chairman, a position I held until 2007 when the structure of AoG was radically changed and about which I shall say more in a later talk.   Since its inception in 1924 the final authority in AoG was the General Council which met annually at the General Conference. The role of the Executive was to take responsibility between conferences for promoting and safeguarding the welfare of the Fellowship. It was a great privilege for me to serve alongside respected older brothers like Veyne Austin, Herbert Harrison, Aaron Linford, Keith Monument, Aeron Morgan, Keith Munday, John Phillips, Douglas Quy, and Colin Whittaker, as well as younger men like Paul Newberry, Warwick Shenton, and Paul Weaver, who were all newly appointed at the same time as me.   Each year the Executive Council elected its own chairman to serve for a year and in 1987 I was appointed. These elections were always held by secret ballot, and I was surprised to be reappointed year after year for the next 20 years. This obviously gave me added responsibility especially when it was decided in 1993 to form AoG Inc., which made Executive Council members the sole members of a new charitable company, Assemblies of God Incorporated.   The purpose of the company was to protect AoG churches and ministers from any personal liability for actions taken by AoG. This was felt necessary to avoid any crises like the vast debt that had been incurred by the Overseas Missions Council over a situation that had arisen in Paderborn, the details of which I do not need to go into here. The Board of Directors of this new company was comprised of all members of the Executive Council. As directors we were given financial responsibility for the affairs of the Fellowship with the safeguard that each director was only personally liable up to the value of £1. It also gave us legal power over all the assets of the Fellowship without reference to the Conference. However, as we were appointed by the General Council by being elected to the Executive Council at the General Conference, we were always aware of our responsibility to abide by the wishes of the Fellowship as a whole. Despite the legal authority we had been given, as a matter of integrity we would never have taken independent action on any major matter without bringing it to Conference. This, as we will see later, was to change in 2007.   My relationship with the Charismatic Renewal But my ministry in Britain was by no means confined to AoG. I had not grown up in AoG and ever since I heard about the baptism in the Spirit my heart has always been for Christians of other denominations to come into the experience. That had been a major part of my ministry when I had travelled round the universities in the sixties, preaching and laying hands on people to receive the Spirit. Those were the days when the charismatic renewal was getting under way, and in the seventies, while we were at Basingstoke, I had good fellowship with Barney Coombs, the Spirit-filled pastor of the Baptist Church, who was holding regular ministers' breakfasts and monthly All Saints Nights for Christians of all denominations to hear about the things of the Spirit.   So when, early in my time at Mattersey I received an invitation from Michael Harper to attend something called the Charismatic Leaders' Conference at Whirlow Grange near Sheffield, I was pleased to accept. It was at these conferences that I met people like Roger and Faith Forster, David Pawson, Terry Virgo, Colin Urquhart, Gerald Coates and other charismatic leaders.   For several years I was part of the planning committee that organised these conferences some of which were held at Mattersey. I was also a member of committee that planned the International Charismatic Consultation on Worldwide Evangelisation (ICCOWE) held in Brighton in June 1991.   I continued to participate in the conferences throughout and beyond my time at Mattersey, and in fact at the time of writing this I am expecting to attend one this year. I have learnt that, although Pentecostals in Britain have been considerably influenced by charismatics, there is still very much that they can learn from us. For example, I am told by friends and family members that even in flourishing charismatic churches there is still little clear teaching on the baptism in the Spirit and spiritual gifts. But sadly, the same could be said of many Pentecostal churches.   So it became my vision that Mattersey should become more than a college that prepared people to be AoG ministers and missionaries, and we advertised the college as having a distinctly charismatic emphasis. As a result several of our graduates are now doing a great job for God as Anglican, Baptist, or Methodist ministers. It also had the benefit of introducing AoG students at Mattersey to a wider cross-section of the Christian church than just their own denomination.   Expanding my writing ministry But whether it be in AoG or any other denomination, the fact is that people need teaching. Genuine spiritual experience comes from a correct understanding of biblical truth. That was surely the purpose of a Bible College! And as it is not possible for everyone to come to Bible College, I was determined to make our teaching more readily available to a wider audience. I was able to do this in some measure through articles I contributed to the AoG magazine and Renewal, but in 1998 I had a distinct impression that the Lord wanted me to write more books, using the teaching I was giving at Mattersey as a basis.   That expanding my writing ministry was the way the Lord was leading me was confirmed in a wonderful way by César Castellanos who in 1998 was the guest preacher at our AoG conference in Prestatyn. At the end of a late-night meeting where César had been speaking to the members of our Executive Council and their wives, he prayed for each one of us in turn. When he came to me, instead of praying, he prophesied. His prophecy included the following statement: This is what the Holy Spirit says: I will greatly anoint your pen and your writing will be a blessing to thousands and thousands of people. Now that prophecy was remarkable for at least three reasons. Firstly, César did not know me. He had only just met me that evening. Secondly, he knew I was a Christian leader, but he did not know that I was a writer! And thirdly, as I have said, in the weeks leading up to that conference I had been feeling that God wanted me to give more time to writing. César's prophecy came as a wonderful confirmation. Since that time I have written several more books, some of which have been translated into at least fifteen different languages. They have certainly reached thousands already. I'm so grateful to the Lord that even while we were still at Mattersey he was still using me to be a blessing beyond Mattersey, not only in the UK but much further afield. But that brings me to my ministry in Europe.   Activities in Europe In an earlier talk I explained how my ministry in Europe began in the seventies while pastoring the church in Basingstoke. This was as the result of contacts with Willy Droz in Switzerland and George and Warren Flattery, American missionaries working in Belgium. These relationships continued while we were at Mattersey. For several years Eileen and I led teams of students on missions to Switzerland and I had regular contact with the Flatterys through the work with I.C.I., Continental Bible College, and EPTA.   And indeed, most of my work in Europe was related to either: EPTA, the European Pentecostal Theological Association, or PEF, The Pentecostal European Fellowship   The European Pentecostal Theological Association EPTA was formed as a result of the Pentecostal European Conference held in The Hague in August 1978 at which I had been invited to preach. Apart from the main meetings held each morning and evening there were workshops each afternoon for various special interest groups including Bible Colleges. As the recently appointed Principal at Mattersey I was naturally interested to attend these and found them very helpful.   It was good to meet with faculty and staff from other Bible Colleges and share what we were doing and what our hopes for the future were. I found myself wondering if it would be possible for us to meet on an annual basis.  The PEC conferences were held every three years, so it was clear that something separate from PEC needed to be organised, and I suggested this while a few of us were chatting after one of the sessions.   As there seemed to be a general agreement about the matter, we decided to look for a suitable venue and dates for the following year. I knew already that the European Pentecostal Fellowship were holding a conference in Vienna in 1979 and suggested that this might be a good time to hold a planning meeting. (EPF and PEC were at that time separate bodies, but a few years later merged to form the Pentecostal European Fellowship, about which I will say more later).   So in 1979 Eileen and I, along with several other AoG personnel, attended the EPF conference in Vienna. The meeting with other Bible College people was not an official part of the conference but was tagged on at the end. However, during the conference itself I was unexpectedly asked by John Wildrianne to be the speaker at one of the sessions, as a brother from France who was scheduled to speak had been unable to come.   The subject was Spiritual Gifts and fortunately I already had plenty of material on that topic and was grateful for the opportunity to speak to leaders from across Europe on a subject that was close to my heart. The talk was well received and, together with my preaching in the Hague the previous year, proved to be the beginning of a much wider ministry in Europe than I had ever expected.   The meeting for Bible College leaders that we had arranged to take place after the conference lasted only a couple of hours but was a good starting point at which it was agreed to call ourselves EPTA, the European Pentecostal Theological Association. At the invitation of the brothers from ICI, we agreed to hold our first conference the following year in Brussels where, in addition to hearing papers on subjects of mutual interest, we would discuss a doctrinal statement for EPTA, conditions of membership and other related matters.   The meeting in Brussels was a great success and was the first of many annual gatherings of college personnel from all over Western Europe. And when Eastern Europe opened up after the destruction of the Berlin Wall in 1989, we were delighted to welcome delegates from those countries too. Over the years conferences were held in England, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Switzerland, Poland, Slovakia, France, and Portugal.   They were times of great blessing. Despite the name, they were not just an opportunity for theological discussion. Their primary purpose was for colleges to help each other by sharing mutual concerns, many of which had little to do with theology! It was good to know that other colleges faced the same problems as you did – practical issues like student discipline, catering, timetable, finance, governance and, something which was a major topic for several years, accreditation.   In addition to all this there were great times of worship and prayer. Working in a Bible College often means facing stressful challenges and faculty and staff found EPTA conferences times of refreshing and spiritual renewal. And they were especially relaxing when we held them during the summer vacations when many combined them with a family holiday. The ones held at Mattersey were particularly popular.   Eileen and I formed great relationships with many of our EPTA friends and trips to EPTA helped forge stronger relationships with our own faculty members too. I well remember the fun we had when we travelled by minibus to Germany with Dave and Beryl Allen and Brian and Audrey Quar, spending a few days relaxing in Switzerland before staying with friends in Heidenheim enabling us to attend the PEF Conference near Stuttgart followed by an EPTA conference in Erzhausen. Much of the blessing we enjoyed at Mattersey sprang from the strength of those relationships.   For many years I served on the planning committee for these conferences. In the days before the internet this necessitated flying to various venues in Europe most of which I enjoyed immensely despite the occasional problem with flights, and the anxiety you experience when you don't speak the language and the person you're expecting to pick you up doesn't arrive! The American brother who was picking me up had mistaken my arrival time at Stuttgart, which was 14.40 as 4.30 in the afternoon! But we learn from these experiences – I know he did – and these trips also gave me opportunity to preach in one of the local churches on Sunday morning before flying back in time for work at Mattersey on Monday.   But possibly the most fruitful result of founding EPTA was the openings it gave me to teach and preach in several of its affiliated colleges. I have taught courses both at bachelors and masters level in Sweden, Finland, Germany, Poland, Denmark, Germany, Portugal, and Ireland. I made several visits to Sweden where the system was rather different from the other countries I have mentioned. Because of the number of large Pentecostal churches there, there was no national college, but there were several colleges offering full-time courses based in the local church. The church at Gothenburg, for example, when I preached there had a Sunday morning congregation of over 2000 and had a large enough complex to house a full time Bible college.   Stig and Marianne Hedstrom, who led that college, had brought a party of young people to Mattersey and heard me teach on spiritual gifts, told me that they needed this teaching in Sweden and asked me if I would come. On two separate occasions they organised teaching tours for me, the first starting at Gothenburg on the west coast and travelling across to Stockholm on the east. En route I visited colleges in Jonkoping, Linkoping,  Mariannelund, and Brommaskolen and Kaggeholme,  both in Stockholm. On the second tour about two years later I visited the same places but in reverse order, this time travelling east to west.   Some of the other countries I mentioned, Belgium, Finland and Portugal for example, I also visited more frequently after my time at Mattersey and I will comment on them in a later talk. But what most of them had in common was the fact that my initial contact with each of them came through EPTA. So whether it was the annual conference, or the trips to help plan them, or teaching in some of its member colleges, EPTA was a source of personal enrichment for me, and I will always be grateful to God for the prompting he gave me to suggest it back in the PEC conference in 1978.   Next time – more about PEF and my involvement with the World Pentecostal Conference.

If Supr Says It - All Siege, All the Time.
Episode 10: Jonkoping Major Predictions featuring Drip and Nuers

If Supr Says It - All Siege, All the Time.

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2022 68:29


Drip and Nuers join supr to make predictions for the upcoming Jonkoping Major.   "If Supr Says It" is a Rainbow Six Siege Podcast hosted by Professional Rainbow Six Siege Player Seth "supr" Hoffman.

DxTalks CryptoTalks Podcast Hosted by Rudy Shoushany
Future of Money and Finance With Leoron Institute

DxTalks CryptoTalks Podcast Hosted by Rudy Shoushany

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2022 16:07


Finance is on the cusp of a technology explosion that will change its world, and finance professionals better get ready. Technological disruption is affecting all corners of business, and finance is no exception. What's in store for the future of money and finance?To answer this question, we've invited Rudy Shoushany, expert in ICT Governance, Strategies, Policies for Digital Transformation and Cybersecurity in the financial sector.With 21 years in Information Technology Field, he was recently selected as top 50 Global Thought leader and Influencer.LEORON  Institute is the EMEA's leading corporate training and professional development company.Built upon the strong experience in the manufacturing sector, which its founders developed in Sweden during the 90's global expansion, LEORON evolved into a comprehensive training institute, offering training and development solutions in all strategic corporate functions, including corporate finance, HR, SCM, operations, and engineering.With strategic distribution of our offices in leading locations, such as Skopje, Accra, Dubai, Jonkoping, Riyadh and Almaty, our team of experts delivers approximately 500 courses annually, and roughly 10000 professionals are equipped with appropriate education and the latest insights in a wide assortment of industries across the EMEA region and beyond. LEORON's mission is to help our worldwide clients increase their competitiveness by improving the competency levels of their employees, through top quality training and development solutions.Interview by Rudy Shoushany ceo DxTalks, the Digital Leaders PlatformRudy Shoushany | Founder #DxTalks Digital transformation Talks and Podcastwww.DxTalks - The Digital Leaders Platform#Dxtalks #Leoron #Finance #business #ictgovernance #futureofmoney #money #investing #financialfreedom #investment #entrepreneur 

DxTalks CryptoTalks Podcast Hosted by Rudy Shoushany
Future of Money and Finance With Leoron Institute

DxTalks CryptoTalks Podcast Hosted by Rudy Shoushany

Play Episode Play 37 sec Highlight Listen Later May 30, 2022 16:07


Finance is on the cusp of a technology explosion that will change its world, and finance professionals better get ready. Technological disruption is affecting all corners of business, and finance is no exception. What's in store for the future of money and finance?To answer this question, we've invited Rudy Shoushany, expert in ICT Governance, Strategies, Policies for Digital Transformation and Cybersecurity in the financial sector.With 21 years in Information Technology Field, he was recently selected as top 50 Global Thought leader and Influencer.LEORON  Institute is the EMEA's leading corporate training and professional development company.Built upon the strong experience in the manufacturing sector, which its founders developed in Sweden during the 90's global expansion, LEORON evolved into a comprehensive training institute, offering training and development solutions in all strategic corporate functions, including corporate finance, HR, SCM, operations, and engineering.With strategic distribution of our offices in leading locations, such as Skopje, Accra, Dubai, Jonkoping, Riyadh and Almaty, our team of experts delivers approximately 500 courses annually, and roughly 10000 professionals are equipped with appropriate education and the latest insights in a wide assortment of industries across the EMEA region and beyond. LEORON's mission is to help our worldwide clients increase their competitiveness by improving the competency levels of their employees, through top quality training and development solutions.Interview by Rudy Shoushany ceo DxTalks, the Digital Leaders PlatformRudy Shoushany | Founder #DxTalks Digital transformation Talks and Podcastwww.DxTalks - The Digital Leaders Platform#Dxtalks #Leoron #Finance #business #ictgovernance #futureofmoney #money #investing #financialfreedom #investment #entrepreneur 

Movementtalks
In conversation with Christos Papadopulos

Movementtalks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2021 33:34


Papadopoulos graduated from the School for New Dance Development (SNDO) of the Amsterdam School of the Arts, The Netherlands in 2003 and from the Dramatic School of the National Theatre of Greece in 1999. Christos is a founding member of the dance company Leon and the Wolf. His personal projects include: OPUS (Aerowaves Twenty18, Porta Theatre 2016, Théâtre de la Ville-Danse Elargie 2016, Jonkoping, Sweden 2017) Elvedon (Aerowaves Twenty16, Porta Theatre, ARC For Dance Festival, Athens 2015), Counter Reset (Melkweg Amsterdam 2003). In collaboration with choreographer Vaso Giannakopoulou, he conceived and developed the performance Digono / Panorama Dance Festival, Athens, Alexandria Egypt 2005, Istanbul Turkey and Arnhem Holland 2006. As a performer Christos has participated in dance projects by Dimitris Papaioannou, Alexandra Waierstall – Noema Dance Company, Kirstin Kuyl Anderson – WEGO dance company, Robert Stain, Fotis Nikolaou company X-it, Natassa Zouka, Marousso Karaleka, Saskia van de heur, Martin van de Drift, Mariella Nestora and Ria Higler. He has also worked extensively as a choreographer and movement director for theatrical productions. Christos was a member of the choreography team responsible for the opening ceremony of the European Games in Baku 2015 and opening and closing ceremonies of the Olympic Games in Athens 2004. Since 2013 he collaborates with Odeion Athinon Theatre Academy as an instructor of choreography, composition and improvisation. He has also taught workshops on technique, composition and improvisation in Athens, Chania, Thessaloniki, Copenhagen.

The Digital Wine
Lo Champagne del naufragio

The Digital Wine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2020 21:07


Questo è l'episodio del Natale 2020, un Natale del tutto diverso da come ognuno di noi si sarebbe aspettato. Nel 1997 furono ritrovate 2000 bottiglie di Champagne Heidsick&Co Monopole del 1907, affondate nel 1916 davanti alle coste finlandesi con il mercantile Jonkoping, fatto esplodere dal sottomarino tedesco U-22. Questa è la storia del loro affondamento e del successivo ritrovamento.Ci risentiamo nel 2021, buon Natale e davvero felice anno nuovo a tutti voi.---Se questo podcast vi piace potreste aiutarlo con un piccolo finanziamento, su Patreon o iscrivendovi alla versione in abbonamento della newsletter. Trovate tutte le indicazioni sul mio sito web, https://thedigitalwine.com. Il podcast è sponsorizzato da WineAround, la piattaforma digitale per il DTC per le aziende vinicole https://winearound.com---Musica:Touching Moments Two - Higher by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4539-touching-moments-two---higher License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/The Descent by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/4490-the-descent License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Crossing the Chasm by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3562-crossing-the-chasm License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Effetti sonori: mia elaborazione dalle basi di Freesound.org

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast
234 - Coin Concede “Outlandish Theorycrafts”

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2020 137:37


On episode 234, The guys are back to talk about the new ladder system and what decks they've been battling with. There's a ton of discussion about the new set and recent changes before each host presents a few theory-crafted decks for Ashes of Outland! News Highlights - 12:53   New Ladder Demon Hunter prologue 17.0 Hotfix Online Masters Tours Daily Quest Notes Ben Lee &Nathon Lyons interview   Tournaments - 1:02:49   Jonkoping qualifiers Ladder   Decksplanations -1:17:30   Ashes of Outland Theory Crafts   The Show Notes for this week’s episode are on our Website You can monetarily support our show on Patreon Join us every week live, by following us on Twitch Join our community chats in our Discord channels and write in to our Email Follow us on Twitter as well as like share and follow us on Facebook Save our RSS feed or subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Music Play And please leave a review on iTunes or Stitcher

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast
232 - Coin Concede “M’shuffle Msshi’fn”

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2020 151:21


On episode 232, The Hearthstone team has been incredibly busy! We've got TWO HOURS OF NEWS to share with you on everything covered in the reveal for Year of the Phoenix, including (but not limited to) discussion of the new Demon Hunter class and the new Ashes of Outland expansion. What more can be said? Check it out and get hype with us!!! News Highlights - 10:48   Patch 16.6 Live Now BG stuff 2020 Roadmap Card Pack Changes Free Deck for New and Returning Players Ranked Mode Overhaul Priest Update HoF announcement New Demon Hunter Class Ashes of Outland   Tournaments - 1:50:18   Jonkoping qualifiers   Decksplanations -1:53:02   Ashes of Outland   The Show Notes for this week’s episode are on our Website You can monetarily support our show on Patreon Join us every week live, by following us on Twitch Join our community chats in our Discord channels and write in to our Email Follow us on Twitter as well as like share and follow us on Facebook Save our RSS feed or subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Music Play And please leave a review on iTunes or Stitcher

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast
231 - Coin Concede “That Thing With The Cards”

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2020 166:45


On episode 231, Our review for the last year is huge, but we hope it doesn't drag-on! Special guest DeckTech joins us to take some time and look back at all the events since last rotation - there's quite a bit! Not to mention the news, which includes a teaser of what's to come for the next year as well as our first reverted card reveal. Hang out with us before the storm next week! News Highlights - 39:34   A Storm is Coming Sludge Slurper confirmed to be Unnerfed Hall of Champs Brawl is back! Devs favorite wild cards BG fun facts   Tournaments - 1:21:50   Jonkoping qualifiers Ladder   Decksplanations -1:30:30   Year of the Dragon Review   The Show Notes for this week’s episode are on our Website You can monetarily support our show on Patreon Join us every week live, by following us on Twitch Join our community chats in our Discord channels and write in to our Email Follow us on Twitter as well as like share and follow us on Facebook Save our RSS feed or subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Music Play And please leave a review on iTunes or Stitcher

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast
230 - Coin Concede “Craigular Show”

Coin Concede: A Hearthstone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 101:47


On episode 230, Buckle up because the CraigOfCanada rollercoaster is taking off! Craig joins Hat and Bott this week to chat about everything from Masters Tour LA going online only to his new show Born to be Wild, coming out this week with NateWolfeTCG. We also have some Wild speculation to discuss with Iksar's post about reversions. Decksplanations continues the discussion from the last bonus episode and has the gang trying out their new method of evaluation with cards they may have Got or Goofed from DoD. News Highlights - 24:40   Masters Tour LA moved to Online-Only Reverting a handful of card nerfs 16.4.1 patch The Spirit of Competition HS Anniversary Event   Tournaments - 53:28   Jonkoping qualifiers Ladder   Decksplanations -58:04   Got it or Goofed it   The Show Notes for this week’s episode are on our Website You can monetarily support our show on Patreon Join us every week live, by following us on Twitch Join our community chats in our Discord channels and write in to our Email Follow us on Twitter as well as like share and follow us on Facebook Save our RSS feed or subscribe to us on iTunes, Stitcher, or Google Music Play And please leave a review on iTunes or Stitcher

Ammertime Podcast
Episode 49 - Wettcon 2020 And A Beginners View Of The 9th Age

Ammertime Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 200:05


We travel up to Jonkoping, Sweden for Wettcon 2020. We have a bit of a list discussion and sing along in the car on the way up. We review some Aenor Miniatures models and some Raging Heroes models: https://www.aenorminiatures.com/en​ ​ https://www.ragingheroes.com/​​ Posthumously we do an overview of Henry's games from the tournament. Lastly Casimir the Swede and Henrypmmiller talk with special guest and 9th Age Beginner, Alex about his first foray into the 9th Age and what he thinks about the game from a beginners perspective. Enjoy!

Gränsland
Avsnitt 1

Gränsland

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2018 21:30


I premiäravsnittet pratar Niklas med ungdomar från Vetlanda om deras känslor inför studenten, framtidsdrömmar och hetsen i sociala medier.

Fika Med En Pensionär
Gösta Henriksson - 96 år

Fika Med En Pensionär

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2018 58:43


Vilken solstråle vi fick lära känna i Bankeryd! Gösta gled in på ett bananskal i polisvärlden och tillbringade sen hela sitt liv som Kriminalinspektör. Gösta visade sig vara en riktig charmör som vi redan saknar.  

vilken gosta fika henriksson engh albinsson jonkoping bankeryd
Trygghetspodden - Länsförsäkringar Jönköping

I andra avsnittet intervjuar Jennike Jarlback vår skadeförebyggare Jonas Ander som ger råd och tips inför sommaren och semestern. Vad ska man tänka på när man reser utomlands, vad ingår i hemförsäkringen, vad gör man om olyckan är framme och kan man skydda bostaden när man är bortrest?

WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
WIHI: Improving Health Care: The Global View

WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2017 61:15


Date: July 7, 2011 Featuring: Lord Nigel Crisp, Strategic Advisor on Global Health and Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement; Author, Turning the World Upside Down: The Search for Global Health in the 21st Century Pierre Barker, MD, Senior Vice President for IHI improvement initiatives in South Africa, Ghana, Malawi, and India Pedro Delgado, MSc, Executive Director for IHI large-scale health system improvement efforts in Europe and Latin America Health care improvers in the US have so much on their plates these days, it can seem like a luxury to focus on what’s happening in other countries. That’s unfortunate because health care improvement has become a global endeavor, and nations of all sizes and stages of development are confronting strikingly similar issues. These include how to care for aging populations, how to give individuals the tools to be shared decision makers and managers of their chronic conditions, and how to design systems that optimize communication and coordination across the continuum of care. Also, how to take advantage of the resourcefulness patients and communities themselves bring to the table. On any given day, improvers on several continents are taking part in collaboratives and applying improvement methods to increase cancer screenings, improve maternal and child health, track the days a hospital’s ICU is infection-free, and more. The riches of new ideas and innovations now come as equally from South Africa as South Carolina… as generously from Jonkoping, Sweden, as Green Bay, Wisconsin.Lord Nigel Crisp, Dr. Pierre Barker, and Pedro Delgado join WIHI host Madge Kaplan to discuss the maturing work in Ghana and South Africa, new improvement initiatives in Latin America, and what Nigel Crisp meant when he titled his recent book, Turning the World Upside Down. There isn’t a country, anywhere, that can afford to stand still when it comes to rising health care costs, and this creates a tremendous opening for the international improvement community to demonstrate what’s possible when the focus shifts to quality, safety, and overall population health.

Victor M. Christiansenn's Podcast
Portable Penetrator Around the World - June 2013 - Dreamhack Jonkoping Sweden

Victor M. Christiansenn's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2013 1:01


http://www.secpoint.com/portable-penetrator.html Portable Penetrator Around the World - June 2013 - Dreamhack Jonkoping Sweden

Year of Kenya Lecture Series (2006-2007)
Security Issues in the Great Lakes Region

Year of Kenya Lecture Series (2006-2007)

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2006 57:22


BIO: Theodora O. Ayot is currently Professor of History at North Park University in Chicago, Illinois. She taught previously at Kenyatta University, Nairobi, Kenya, State University of New York, College at Fredonia, New York, and as a Visiting Professor at the University of Jonkoping, College of Health Sciences, Jonkoping, Sweden. Major academic publications include A history of the Luo of Western Kenya 1590-1930, (1987), The Luo Settlement in South Nyanza (1987), and Women and Political Leadership in Precolonial Period: Case Study of Chief Mang’ana of Kadem in Western Kenya (1994). She is the Director of Daniel Katete Orwa Foundation for Humanity.