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Grigori Raspoutine est sans aucun doute l'homme religieux qui a le plus marqué l'époque des derniers Tsars de Russie. Mais comment un homme issu du milieu paysan a-t-il réussi à devenir un intime de la famille impérial et par la même occasion devenir l'homme à abattre du palais ? Entre mystique, organisateur d'*rgie, guérisseurs et potentiel manipulateur, qui était Raspoutine ? C'est ce que l'on va essayé de voir en semble dans un nouveau moment d'Occulture ! --------------------------- La majorité des musiques de la sponso ont été créées par @Creeptorecords ! --------------------------- Devenez membre de cette chaine pour bénéficier d'avantages exclusifs : https://www.youtube.com/c/Occulture/membership --------------------------- Tous les liens utiles de la chaine (réseaux sociaux, boutiques, chaine secondaire...) : bento.me/occulture --------------------------- Sources : LIVRES Radzinsky, Edvard (2010). Le dossier Raspoutine Fuhrmann, Joseph T. (1990). Raspoutine : une vie Smith, Douglas (2016). Raspoutine : la foi, le pouvoir et le crépuscule des Romanov Smith, Douglas (2017). « Grigori Raspoutine et le déclenchement de la Première Guerre mondiale : juin 1914 » Prince Youssoupoff, La Fin de Raspoutine, Paris, Plon, 1927 Félix Youssoupov, Avant l'exil (1887-1919), Paris, Plon, 1952 Michel Heller, Histoire de la Russie et de son empire, Paris, Perrin, 2015 Henri Troyat, Nicolas II, le dernier tsar, Paris, Flammarion, 1994 Raspoutine, Maria ; Barham, Patte (1977). Raspoutine : l'homme derrière le mythe SITES https://phantommanorlegends.wordpress.com https://tvtropes-org. https://pm20-zbw-eu.translate.goog/mirador/?manifestId=https://pm20.zbw.eu/iiif/folder/pe/023964/manifest.json&_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=fr&_x_tr_hl=fr https://powo.science.kew.org/ https://www.genialvegetal.net/-Bistorte- https://fr.wikipedia.org http://calendrier.egliseorthodoxe.com www.tyumen-city.ru https://fr.orthodoxwiki.org Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
What do High Priest Imhotep, Druidic Leader Diviciacus, Edward Alexander Crowley, Franz Anton Mesmer, and Grigori Rasputin all have in common? Find out during this latest episode where we explore some key examples throughout history of the archetypal Mystic. Works Cited: Wildung, D. (1977). Egyptian Saints: Deification in pharaonic Egypt. New York University Press. p. 34. Fuhrmann, Joseph T. (2012). Rasputin: The Untold Story. Trade Paper Press. Kristy Bohan Edmunds is a cofounder and contributor to The Cognitive Dissonance Podcast. Kristy received her BS in Psychology with a minor in Chemistry in 2018, and an MS in Psychology in 2020 and is a Board Certified Behavior Analyst. She serves clients with intellectual and developmental disabilities such as Autism Spectrum Disorder as a behavior consultant in Oregon. Kristy takes a behavior analytic perspective to life and uses this philosophy to inform her work and her day to day life. Kristy believes in psychology as a hard, natural science. Mitchell Croot is one of the founders and contributors to The Cognitive Dissonance Podcast. A father of four, a US Army veteran, and a high school educator, Mitchell holds a BA in History with a minor in Secondary Education from Catawba College and an MA in History from the University of North Carolina in Charlotte. His interests include colonial North America, the American Revolution, culture and cultural transmission, philosophy, psychology, and music.
In this episode I dive into what inspired the Chicano Movement but also what caused it to suddenly fall. References Hurtado, Aída. 1998. “Sitios y Lenguas: Chicanas Theorize Feminisms.” Hypatia 13, no. 2 (Spring): 134-161. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3810642. Martínez, Sara E. 2017. The Chicano Movement: A Historical Exploration of Literature. N.p.: ABC-CLIO. Rhea, Joseph T. 1997. Race Pride and the American Identity. N.p.: Harvard University Press. Saldívar-Hull, Sonia. 2000. Feminism on the Border: Chicana Gender Politics and Literature. N.p.: University of California Press.
Welcome to Connect, a podcast featuring one-on-one interviews with some of the top movers and shakers in the mortgage industry. Our 85th episode features Joseph T. Lynyak, III, Partner, Dorsey & Whitney LLP Topics of Discussion: 3:36 - How did you get your start in the industry? Why did you pursue the financial services industry for your law career? 6:05 - You have been on the Washington DC list of Super Lawyers every year since 2016, recognized as exhibiting excellence in the practice of law. Do you mentor other attorneys? 10:04 - As a nationally recognized leader for the financial services industry, what do you think is top of mind for the new CPFB Director? 11:57 - Fair lending has been an issue for the mortgage industry for many years, but now we're also focusing on fair servicing – especially as we see many borrowers exiting forbearance. What should lenders be thinking about relative to fair servicing in their shops? 15:44 - What would you suggest is the number one area of regulatory compliance lenders should be focused on/reviewing for correct policies and procedures going into 2022? 19:42 - You have been a very active member with us for many years – what can you share with listeners about why you volunteer with the California MBA? Thank you to our sponsor, Insellerate. To learn more visit insellerate.com or call 855-973-1646 To learn more about the California MBA visit www.cmba.com and don't forget to subscribe to our podcast and stay tuned for our next episode!
Photo: Joseph T. Robinson. Franklin Roosevelt's Ninth Fireside Chat was on the Judiciary Reorganisation Bill, in March 1937. The Senate Majority Leader, Joseph T. Robinson, was entrusted by President Roosevelt with the court reform bill's passage; Robinson's unexpected death doomed the proposed legislation. The Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937, frequently called the "court-packing plan", was a legislative initiative proposed by U.S. PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt to add more justices to the U.S. Supreme Court in order to obtain favorable rulings regarding New Deal legislation that the Court had ruled unconstitutional. The central provision of the bill would have granted the president power to appoint an additional justice to the U.S. Supreme Court, up to a maximum of six, for every member of the court over the age of 70 years. 2/2: Court-packing in the 21st Century; and what is to be done? @RichardAEpstein @HooverInst https://www.hoover.org/research/supreme-court-commission-comes-through Richard A Epstein, @RichardAEpstein Tisch Professor of Law NYU Bedford Senior Fellow; Hoover Institution; senior lecturer, University of Chicago Law School.
Learn about a bacterial electric grid; traits females have evolved to avoid harassment; and why tea leaves sink. There's a bacterial electric grid beneath our feet by Grant Currin Hidden bacterial hairs power nature's “electric grid.” (2021, September). EurekAlert! https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/927031 Gu, Y., Srikanth, V., Salazar-Morales, A. I., Jain, R., O'Brien, J. P., Yi, S. M., Soni, R. K., Samatey, F. A., Yalcin, S. E., & Malvankar, N. S. (2021). Structure of Geobacter pili reveals secretory rather than nanowire behaviour. Nature, 597(7876), 430–434. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03857-w Specktor, B. (2020, September 18). Scientists find “secret molecule” that allows bacteria to exhale electricity. Livescience.com; Live Science. https://www.livescience.com/electron-breathing-geobacter-microbes.html Basic Biology of Oral Microbes. (2015). Atlas of Oral Microbiology, 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-12-802234-4.00001-x Many females have evolved traits to avoid harassment by Cameron Duke Berlin, S. (2021, August 30). Female Octopuses Throw Debris at Unwanted Mates Who Pester Them, Study Shows. Newsweek; Newsweek. https://www.newsweek.com/female-octopuses-throw-debris-unwanted-mates-who-pester-them-study-shows-1624345 Feldblum, Joseph T., Wroblewski, Emily E., Rudicell, Rebecca S., Hahn, Beatrice H., Paiva, T., Cetinkaya-Rundel, M., Pusey, Anne E., & Gilby, Ian C. (2014). Sexually Coercive Male Chimpanzees Sire More Offspring. Current Biology, 24(23), 2855–2860. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2014.10.039 Female hummingbirds avoid harassment by looking as flashy as males. (2021). Female hummingbirds avoid harassment by looking as flashy as males. Phys.org. https://phys.org/news/2021-08-female-hummingbirds-flashy-males.html Godfrey-Smith, P., Scheel, D., Chancellor, S., Linquist, S., & Lawrence, M. (2021). In the Line of Fire: Debris Throwing by Wild Octopuses. https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.08.18.456805 Hosken, D. J., Alonzo, S., & Wedell, N. (2016). Why aren't signals of female quality more common? Exeter.ac.uk. https://doi.org/http://hdl.handle.net/10871/19606 Male-like ornamentation in female hummingbirds results from social harassment rather than sexual selection. (2021). Current Biology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.07.043 Power Play. (2018). National Wildlife Federation. https://www.nwf.org/Magazines/National-Wildlife/2018/Oct-Nov/Animals/Animal-Aggression Wielgus, R. B., & Bunnell, F. L. (1994). Sexual Segregation and Female Grizzly Bear Avoidance of Males. The Journal of Wildlife Management, 58(3), 405. https://doi.org/10.2307/3809310 Why do tea leaves sink? by Ashley Hamer originally aired June 10, 2018 https://omny.fm/shows/curiosity-daily/the-cutest-kind-of-puppy-rural-happiness-and-the-s James Norwood Pratt. (2010, August 16). The Ancient and Best Way to Brew Loose-Leaf Tea. The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2010/08/the-ancient-and-best-way-to-brew-loose-leaf-tea/61479/ Inglis-Arkell, E. (2014, May 6). Why Do Your Tea Leaves Move To The Middle Of The Cup? Gizmodo. https://gizmodo.com/why-do-your-tea-leaves-move-to-the-middle-of-the-cup-1572125743 Ouellette, J. (2016). The Strange Physics of Tea Leaves Floating Upstream. Nautilus. https://nautil.us/blog/the-strange-physics-of-tea-leaves-floating-upstream Follow Curiosity Daily on your favorite podcast app to learn something new every day withCody Gough andAshley Hamer. Still curious? Get exclusive science shows, nature documentaries, and more real-life entertainment on discovery+! Go to https://discoveryplus.com/curiosity to start your 7-day free trial. discovery+ is currently only available for US subscribers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Pradeep K. Chintagunta is the Joseph T. and Bernice S. Lewis Distinguished Service Professor of Marketing at the University of Chicago.Chintagunta is interested in empirically studying consumer, agent and firm behavior. He has studied packaged goods, pharmaceutical, technology and online markets to answer questions related to pricing, advertising and channels of distribution.
Today on That Tech Pod, Laura and Gabi speak to the leadership team of Aitheras. Andrew Milisits, founder and managing partner, and partners, Joseph T. Friend and Benjamin Hankins. Andrew founded AITHERAS, LLC in 2002 and has since led the successful growth of this well-positioned and well-managed 8(a) small business enterprise. With 20+ years’ experience in business development and managing $80M to $220M portfolio accounts, Joseph has a successful track record of multiplying profit for small to mid-size businesses. Ben is an expert in the provision of program and acquisition management support, with a career that spans over 30 years in the federal sector. Follow That Tech Pod: Twitter-@thattechpod LinkedIn: LinkedIn.com/thattechpod website: thattechpod.com
On this episode from our “Reinventing Customer Experience” podcast, ZS Principal Arun Shastri and Associate Principal Gopi Vikranth chat with Pradeep Chintagunta, Joseph T. and Bernice S. Lewis distinguished service professor of marketing at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, about how businesses can maximize their customer relationships and drive impact in emerging economies.
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture, sponsored by Steven and Cassandra Torello. Recorded at the Mises Institute on March 20, 2021. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno. The Austrian Economics Research Conference is the international, interdisciplinary meeting of the Austrian School, bringing together leading scholars doing research in this vibrant and influential intellectual tradition. The conference is hosted by the Mises Institute at its campus in Auburn, Alabama, and is directed by Joseph Salerno, professor of economics at Pace University and academic vice president of the Mises Institute.
You're listening to the Westerly Sun's podcast, where we talk about the best local events, new job postings, obituaries, and more. First, a bit of Rhode Island trivia. Today's trivia is brought to you by Perennial. Perennial's new plant-based drink “Daily Gut & Brain” is a blend of easily digestible nutrients crafted for gut and brain health. A convenient mini-meal, Daily Gut & Brain” is available now at the CVS Pharmacy in Wakefield. Now for some trivia. Did you know that The Ocean State Waves are a collegiate summer baseball team based in South Kingstown? The team, a member of the New England Collegiate Baseball League, plays its home games at Old Mountain Field in South Kingstown. Now, for our feature story: The Rhode Island Office of Healthy Aging has awarded a total of $200,000 in grants to 10 organizations to help connect the state's older residents with their families through modern technology. The funded agencies will equip residents living in areas hit hard by the coronavirus pandemic with smart devices, internet services and related training to help them better access online resources, work and study remotely, and virtually connect with family and friends. According to the Pew Research Center, an estimated 41% of Rhode Islanders age 65 and older are not broadband users, and more than 25% of older adults in the state are not online. Director Rosamaria Amoros Jones said in a statement: “The internet is a basic necessity today.” “So much of how we manage our lives and connect with one another and to services is driven by technology now; yet inequities persist, with many older adults and families in lower-income neighborhoods lacking access to, or fluency in, digital tools." To learn more about how to access these programs or to help older people access technology, head over to oha.ri.gov to learn more. Remember to check out www.westerlysun.com for the latest news and COVID updates. Are you interested in a new opportunity? You're in luck! Today's Job posting comes from PetSmart. They're looking for a bather / groomer trainee. This will jumpstart your career and give you the opportunity to attend PetSmart's Grooming Academy. If you're interested and think you'd be a good fit for the role you can apply using the link in our episode description. https://www.indeed.com/jobs?l=Westerly%2CRI&mna=5&aceid&gclid=Cj0KCQiApsiBBhCKARIsAN8o_4geJyS6n79TwQG2ktZAmKcsmb2le2ia051w7_jX4xxoVYxGqcIf8SQaAlFrEALw_wcB&advn=18883501435730&vjk=48e82ba9e2afe52b Today we're remembering the life of Carol Piezzo. Growing up in Norwich, CT she graduated from Norwich Free Academy and then married Joseph T. Piezzo, Jr. in 1967 in Westerly where they raised their family. Carol was the proud co-owner and operator of Piezzo Construction with her husband for over thirty years. She was a dedicated communicant of the Church of St. Clare where she touched the lives of many of the parish's children as the Director of Religious Education. She also was honored to serve as a Eucharistic Minister. Family meant everything to Carol. She had such a special gift of always bringing people together to celebrate accomplishments, big or small. Carol's grandchildren were the light of her life and she loved them "a bushel and a peck." No matter the event, she brought her love and support to proudly cheer them on. Carol will always be remembered for her soft blue eyes, her kindness toward everyone she met and her fantastic cooking. The family wishes to extend special gratitude to Jodi and Kelly, two angels whom she loved like family, for their amazing care. Thank you for taking the time today to remember and celebrate Carol's life. That's it for today, we'll be back next time with more! Also, remember to check out our sponsor Perennial, Daily Gut & Brain, available at the CVS on Main St. in Wakefield! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
ESCAPADE, the latest release from composer Joseph T. Spaniola, brilliantly illuminates the many facets of his extensive body of work. Featuring pieces for symphonic orchestras and for small ensembles, ESCAPADE captures the composer’s overall concept of his music as a journey, one defined as much by the listener’s experience as it is by his own creative vision. Purchase the music (without talk) at: http://www.classicalsavings.com/store/p947/Escapade.html Your purchase helps to support our show! Classical Music Discoveries is sponsored by La Musica International Chamber Music Festival and Uber. @khedgecock #ClassicalMusicDiscoveries #KeepClassicalMusicAlive #LaMusicaFestival #CMDGrandOperaCompanyofVenice #CMDParisPhilharmonicinOrléans #CMDGermanOperaCompanyofBerlin #CMDGrandOperaCompanyofBarcelonaSpain #ClassicalMusicLivesOn #Uber Please consider supporting our show, thank you! http://www.classicalsavings.com/donate.html staff@classicalmusicdiscoveries.com
Text: Hebrews 12:2-3 Series: “Seven ‘Ups’ for the New Year" You may have noticed as you’ve driven around town in the last year or so those ALDOT informational signs that are posted along local interstates and major thoroughfares. Those signs tell you if an accident has taken place or if road work is up ahead or if a child has been abducted so that you can be on the lookout. The signs tell you, given the pace of the traffic, how much time it will take you to drive from one mile marker to the next. Or, if everything is reasonably quiet on the roadways, it will offer you a reminder as to how you can make sure that things stay that way, a reminder such as one I saw the other day, which read: “Eyes Up. Phone Off. Save Lives.” If this were confession time, where we invited sinners to come forward and acknowledge their wrongdoing, I would imagine that, if more people were present, we could fill this altar with all of us who at one time or another have violated that reminder of not texting while we drive. Oh yes, in our heads we know that it’s not a good thing to do such a thing. But in our hearts we have managed to convince ourselves that such a warning is really for other people, people who can’t multitask like we can, people who are easily distracted and end up running off the road or, perhaps even worse, running into a car in front of them. Speaking of multitasking, someone has described it as one of the great myths of our postmodern age. In other words, while we may think that we are fully capable of focusing our attention on several tasks at the same time, the truth of that matter is that our attention is actually jumping back and forth between the tasks and we end up not doing any of them very well. In fact, according to software engineers, not even a computer can multitask, which is where the term came from in the first place. The computer may look like it’s running programs at the same time, but in reality, it is switching back and forth between them several thousand times per second. It just appears to us that everything is happening simultaneously (Joseph T. Hallihan, Why We Make Mistakes, p. 78). If that be true, if multitasking is a myth, then we best aim our gaze in one direction; ideally a direction that will secure our lives, especially in times when we find ourselves facing stiff challenges, challenges that distract us from the possibilities of what lies ahead, challenges that can cause us to lose control of life’s steering wheel, endangering our futures and, at least with respect to our faith, jeopardizing our eternities. That was the counsel of the writer of the book of Hebrews. An anonymous letter, the letter to the Hebrews was what students of the New Testament call a “general” epistle. Unlike Paul’s letters, which he wrote to specific churches in specific communities throughout the Roman Empire, Hebrews was written to encourage Christians across a broad region to persevere in their faith by not allowing anything or anyone to distract them from following Jesus. We call the letter “Hebrews” because of how its recipients were from a Jewish background, which explains the preponderance of references to the Old Testament sacrificial system and how that system represents Jesus as our perfect high priest, who on the cross in effect entered the Holy of Holies in the heavenly sanctuary, to reconcile us to God by making atonement for our sins in his own blood. Following Jesus is no piece of cake today, but it was especially difficult at the time this letter was written. Most Christians in the first century were poor and had no real prospects of bettering themselves, at least not materially speaking. Furthermore, they were politically powerless and therefore pushed to the margins of their prevailing culture because of how they were often viewed as threats to the Empire. It’s important that readers today understand this background of persecution so that we might appreciate why the temptation to walk away from Jesus was such a powerful one in their first century world. So, when the writer offers his readers examples as to how to endure their harsh sufferings, he digs back into his Old Testament files and lists example after example of characters, some prominent and some not, who faced overwhelming odds but did not forsake their faith. And at the conclusion of the list in the eleventh chapter, as you would expect, at the beginning of the twelfth chapter the writer offers up Jesus. “Let us fix our eyes on Jesus,” he says, “the pioneer and perfecter of faith, who for the joy that was set before him, endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God.” You could write a textbook in theology on just that one verse. For example, in the first place, everything with respect our faith begins with Jesus and it ends with Jesus. Moreover, Jesus in the face of unspeakable agony and bearing the weight of the world’s sins made the choice to be joyful in the face of the cross. That is to say that Jesus made the choice to renounce everything the cross stood for in the first century world, so that far from being victimized by the cross, Jesus, in the power of God, repurposed it and reframed it into a symbol of power, authority, and victory. And then, if that’s not enough, the writer goes on. “Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary or lose heart.” That word “consider” suggests an intense concentration, a laser-type focus, not a passing glance and certainly not something we attempt while also doing other tasks. You can’t multitask your devotion to Jesus. For if you try, you will never understand what Jesus went through on the cross on your behalf and you will never appreciate how, in spite of the pain he experienced, Jesus chose to do so because of the joy that was set before him, which, as much as anything, was the joy of securing your salvation. That may be the challenge you’re faced with this morning. Like most people in our community, you’ve got a lot on your plate. There are demands and responsibilities. There are tasks you’ve got to get done and commitments you’ve got to honor. And you just feel distracted. None of these things are bad in and of themselves but when any of them causes you to be distracted from following Jesus, that’s what they become because of how they keep you from the joy that following Jesus enables you to know. I remember back in my college days being awakened early one Saturday morning by a loud banging on the door of the Baptist Student Union center where I lived during my senior year. It was a classmate of mine, and he was bleeding from a cut on his face. When I asked what had happened, he pointed across the street to where his car had run into a telephone pole, which had caused him to cut his face on the steering wheel. It was a quiet street on a beautiful Saturday morning. How does someone run his car into a telephone pole? This was of course years before cell phones. My first thought was that he was drunk even though it was early morning. But he wasn’t; he was as sober as a judge. He sheepishly explained that he had noticed a button on his shirt had somehow become unbuttoned and when he reached down to button it up, the next thing he knew, he had driven his car off the road and into the pole. “If only I had not been looking down,” he bemoaned. “If only I had kept my eyes on the road.” But he didn’t and now you know what came from it. A.E. Houseman was an English poet of the last century and was considered by many to be one of the greatest scholars of his generation. In his collection of poems, titled “Last Poems,” he has this line: “Could a man be drunk forever/With liquor, loves, or fights, Gladly should I rouse at morning/ And gladly lie down of nights. But men at whiles are sober/And think by fits and starts. And if they think, they fasten/Their hands upon their hearts” (“Last Poems,” X). In other words, where we direct our full attention, not our divided attention, will be the place where we have our hearts. Maybe that’s why the Bible speaks of repentance as changing the way you think, which in turn changes everything else – your attitude, your orientation, your focus, your heart. So, if you’ve been looking down, look up. Look up before it’s too late. Look up and fix your eyes upon Jesus. Consider him who thought only of honoring God and fastened his heart in that direction. Because when you do, the life that you save, or better I should say that life that Jesus saves for you, will most definitely be your own.
This podcast is provided by Ben Glass and Steve Emmert www.BenGlassReferrals.com - www.Virginia-Appeals.com Granted Appeal Summary Case C. ROBERT JOHNSON, III, ET AL. v. CITY OF SUFFOLK, ET AL. (Record Number 191563) From The Circuit Court for the City of Suffolk; L. Farmer, Judge. Counsel L. Steven Emmert (Sykes, Bourdon, Ahern & Levy, P.C.), Joseph T. Waldo and Russell G. Terman (Waldo & Lyle, P.C.) for appellants. David L. Arnold, D. Rossen S. Greene, and Matthew R. Hull (Pender & Coward, P.C.), and Christopher D. Pomeroy and Paul T. Nyffeler (AquaLaw PLC) for appellees. Assignment of Error The trial court erroneously sustained the demurrers, because the declaratory-judgment petition states a facially valid claim for inverse condemnation, and: A. The trial court erroneously based its ruling on federal caselaw interpreting the United States Constitution, because the oystermen’s claims are based on the Constitution of Virginia. B. The trial court erroneously ruled that the City and HRSD have the right to pollute the Commonwealth’s waters and that they need not pay just compensation to the oystermen. In doing so, it erroneously relied on now-obsolete caselaw and erroneously applied that caselaw. Assignments of Cross-Error (City of Suffolk) 1. The trial court erred in overruling the demurrers on the ground that an inverse condemnation case will not lie against the City because the City lacks the authority to exercise eminent domain over the oyster ground leases in this case. 2. The trial court erred in failing to consider the argument in the City’s demurrer that the Petition should have been dismissed because the Appellants failed to allege a public use and failed to allege facts sufficient to show that their property was taken or damaged for a public use. 3. The trial court erred in failing to consider the argument in the City’s demurrer that the Petition should have been dismissed because oyster ground leases do not guarantee lessees water of a certain purity or pollution level. 4. The trial court erred in failing to consider the argument raised in the City’s demurrer that the Petition should be dismissed because whatever taking or damage the Appellants did allege was due to the state’s exercise of its police power. 5. The trial court erred in failing to consider the argument raised in the City’s plea in bar that the Petition should be dismissed as time-barred because the claims are premised on conditions which have existed continuously since before the three-year statute of limitations. Assignment of Cross-Error (Hampton Roads Sanitation District) 1. The Circuit Court erred in denying in part HRSD’s demurrer by finding that HRSD has condemnation authority over Petitioners’ alleged oyster planting ground leases despite Virginia Code § 28.2-628, which removed its condemnation authority over grounds leased by the Commonwealth to third parties pursuant to Virginia Code §§ 28.2-600 et seq http://www.courts.state.va.us/courts/scv/appeals/191563.pdf
Every year on September 10th, individuals and organizations in over 50 countries connect and work together to prevent suicide, by supporting those who are struggling and to help those who are grieving. This year we will address this topic with Barbara Rubel the author of the fictional novel "But I Didn't Say Goodbye – Helping Families after a Suicide". In her reader-friendly and well researched book, she addresses the loss of her father through suicide in a meaningful and thought provoking read, and discusses WHAT she learned in the process of grieving and healing. Barbara will share her unique approach to suicide prevention and post-vention, on how can develop personal resiliency and reclaim hope after loss in this month's "Bear Psychology radio show" on Realityradio101.com program. Whether you know someone who has attempted or completed suicide, or felt so much despair that you have considered it yourself ... we want to open up the dialogue today about this important topic. Let's start by clarifying that whatever is going on in your life today, the pain of the moment can elevate us to open up and and there are many people and sources of information that can provide relief. We will begin the conversation with two numbers and resource links so we have a safe reference point right from the start: In Canada: https://suicideprevention.ca/WSPD 1.833.456.4566 In the U.S.: https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/ 1-800-273-8255 We will discuss: The WHY of suicide Reflect on feelings of anger, guilt and grief Barbara's own experience of losing her father to suicide and how she was able to reconstruct meaning into her life after such a sudden loss Learn about her unique Dual Process Model and 4 Tasks of Grief and apply them to the impact of suicide loss Does the current COVID-19 Pandemic complicate grief from suicide of someone in your life? Barbara will reflect from the lens of her own tragic loss and personal experience. What do you do when your father dies by suicide while you are in the hospital awaiting the birth of your triplets? What do you do when you can't attend your father's funeral because physician orders include complete bed rest? What do you do when you realize that you experienced a devastating loss and that you are not alone in that experience? You write a book and dedicate your life to helping others affected by suicide. Barbara Rubel's fictional characters in "But I Didn't Say Goodbye" are a compilation of what individuals may experience throughout their lifetime as a suicide loss survivor. "But I Didn't Say Goodbye: Helping Families After a Suicide" tells the story, from the perspective of an eleven-year-old boy Alex and his family, as they are rocked by suicide and reeling from the aftermath. Through Alex's eyes, the reader sees the transformation of feelings after going through death by suicide. New to the book's 3rd edition, each chapter ends with Alex reflecting 10 years later on his experience, introducing family members and friends in his recollections. Barbara Rubel has combined our modern academic theories of grieving, and the research that supports those theories, and then translated them into a readable story for anyone bereaved by suicide. The revised edition is an evidence-informed and contemporary treatment of a devastating form of loss that uses the artful device of a hypothetical case study to render it in human terms. Through the story, the reader understands what losing someone to suicide might be like for a family, how to make meaning of the loss, and ways to experience personal growth. This self-help book was revised to provide guidance and education for clinicians and families to help suicide loss survivors. Links & Resources: But I Didn't Say Goodbye: Helping Families After a Suicide (3ed.) (2020), NJ: Griefwork Center, Inc. https://amzn.to/2FwS6JI Loss, Grief, and Bereavement: Helping Individuals Cope (4ed) (2019), MA: Western Schools https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/help-yourself/ https://suicideprevention.ca/Need-Help https://www.helpguide.org/articles/suicide-prevention/suicide-prevention.htm https://www.ted.com/talks/jeremy_forbes_how_to_start_a_conversation_about_suicide? https://www.ted.com/search?q=suicide++ Suicide Postvention Resources listed in the new and updated edition of But I Didn’t Say Goodbye: Helping Families After a Suicide (3rd ed.) by Barbara Rubel After a Suicide: A Toolkit for Schools (2nd): https://afsp.org/our-work/education/after-a-suicide-a-toolkit-for-schools/ After a Suicide: A Postvention Primer for Providers: tripod.com/After_a_Suicide.pdf After a Suicide: Religious Services: https://theactionalliance.org/faith-hope-life/after-suicide-recommendations-religious-services-and-other-public-memorial-observances A Guide for Medical Examiners and Coroners: Best Practices for Talking with Families About Suicide https://docs.wixstatic.com/ugd/a0415f_3160611bae3f4be69c8e86b1ec7ed4ce.pdf Alex Blackwood Foundation for Hope (Camp Alex): com Alliance of Hope for Suicide Loss Survivors: org American Academy of Bereavement: com American Association of Suicidology (AAS): org AAS-Helping Survivors of Suicide: What Can You Do? https://www.preventionlane.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Hepling-Survivors-of-Suicide_What-Can-You-Do.pdf American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP): org AFSP-Children, Teens and Suicide Loss: https://afsp.org/wp-content/flipbooks/childrenteenssuicideloss/?page=1 AFSP-Healing Conversations: Personal Support for Survivors of Suicide Loss: org/find-support/ive-lost-someone/healing-conversations/ Association for Death Education and Counseling (ADEC): The Thanatology Association: org Befrienders Worldwide: org/ Best Practices for Talking About Suicide for Medical Examiners and Coroners: https://www.mecrecs.org/ Beyond Blue: https://www.beyondblue.org.au/the-facts/suicide-prevention/understanding-suicide-and-grief/supporting-a-loved-one-after-they-have-lost-someone-to-suicide Breaking the Silence in the Workplace: http://www.sprc.org/sites/default/files/migrate/library/Breaking%20the%20Silence%20Final.pdf California Institute for Behavioral Health Solutions: After Rural Suicide: A Guide for Coordinated Community Postvention Response: https://www.cibhs.org/sites/main/files/file-attachments/after_rural_suicide_guide_2016rev.pdf Camp Kita: Children’s Bereavement Camp for Suicide Loss Survivors: https://campkita.com/ Carson J. Spencer Foundation: org The Catholic Charities: Loving Outreach to Survivors of Suicide: https://www.catholiccharities.net/GetHelp/OurServices/Counseling/Loss.aspx The Center for Complicated Grief: https://complicatedgrief.columbia.edu/professionals/complicated-grief professionals/overview/ Center for Grief and Loss: org/ Center for Suicide Awareness: https://www.centerforsuicideawareness.org/ Centering Corporation: org/ Clinicians as Survivors: After a Suicide Loss:/pages.iu.edu/~jmcintos/basicinfo.htm Comfort Zone Camp: https://www.comfortzonecamp.org/ Compassion Books: compassionbooks.com Compassionate Friends: Surviving Your Child’s Suicide: https://www.compassionatefriends.org/surviving-childs-suicide/ Cope Foundation: org/ Davenee Foundation: org/ Digital Memorial Quilts: org/find-support/ive-lost-someone/digital-memory-quilt/create-a-new-quilt-square/ The Dougy Center: National Center for Grieving Children and Families: org/ Emma’s Place of Staten Island: emmasplacesi.com/ Find a Suicide Loss Survivors Support Group: org/find-support/ive-lost-someone/find-a-support-group/ Friends for Survival: Offering Help After a Suicide Death: org/ The Gift of Second: http://thegiftofsecond.com/ The Glendon Association: org/ Griefwork Center, Inc. Suicide Postvention Speaker Services griefworkcenter.com Heartbeat: https://www.heartbeatsurvivorsaftersuicide.org/ Help at Hand: A Guide for Funeral Directors: http://www.sprc.org/sites/default/files/migrate/library/funeraldirectors.pdf Hope Squad: com/postvention/ How to Talk to Kids About Suicide: https://drrobynsilverman.com/how-to-talk-to-kids-about-suicide-with-dr-dan-reidenberg/ International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP): info/postvention.php International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies: org The Jason Foundation: jasonfoundation.com The JED Foundation: org/ The Joseph T. Quinlan Bereavement Center: org Kara: kara-grief.org/support-for/adults/ Lifesavers Blog-AFSP: https://afsp.org/lifesaver-blog/ LOSS Team: com/ A Manager’s Guide to Suicide Postvention in the Workplace: org/Portals/14/docs/Survivors/Loss%20Survivors/Managers-Guidebook-To-Suicide-Postvention.pdf Mental Health America: net/ Moyer Foundation (Camp Erin): moyerfoundation.org National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention: Recommended Standard Care for People with Suicide Risk: Making Health Care Suicide Safe: org/sites/actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org/files/Action%20Alliance%20Recommended%20Standard%20Care%20FINAL.pdf National Alliance for Grieving Children: org/ National Alliance on Mental Illness: org/ National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN): nctsn.org/what-is-child-trauma/trauma-types/traumatic-grief NASPA Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education, Postvention: A guide for response to suicide on college campuses https://www.naspa.org/focus-areas/mental-health/postvention-a-guide-for-response-to-suicide-on-college-campuses National Organization for Victim Assistance: org National Center for Victims of Crime: org/ National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, 24/7, Free and Confidential Support: 1-800-273-TALK (8255); for Hard of Hearing 1-800-799-4889; en Español 1-888-628-9454 org/ National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: Lifeline Online Postvention Manual http://www.sprc.org/sites/default/files/migrate/library/LifelineOnlinePostventionManual.pdf Open to Hope: com/ Our Side of Suicide: http://www.oursideofsuicide.com/ Parents of Suicides/Friends & Families of Suicides: pos-ffos.com/ Pastoral Postvention: https://theactionalliance.org/sites/default/files/fhl_competencies_v8_interactive.pdf Posttraumatic Growth Research Group: uncc.edu/ The Public Health Approach to Prevention org/sites/sprc.org/files/library/phasp.pdf QPR Institute for Suicide Prevention: qprinstitute.com/ Reach Out.com: reachout.com/loss-and-grief/supporting-a-friend-after-someone-dies-from-suicide/ Riverside Trauma Center: http://traumacenter.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Postventionguidelines.pdf SAFE-T Pocket Guides for Clinicians: samhsa.gov/product/Suicide-Assessment-Five-Step-Evaluation-and-Triage-SAFE-T-Pocket-Card-for-Clinicians/SMA09-4432 The Samaritans: https://www.samaritans.org/ NYC: org/MA: samaritanshope.org/ Sibling Survivors of Suicide Loss: com/ Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration: samhsa.gov/ Suicide Attempt Survivors Task Force of the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention: org/sites/actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org/files/The-Way-Forward-Final-2014-07-01.pdf Suicide Awareness Voices of Education (SAVE): org Suicide: Finding Hope: com/ Suicide Grief Support Forum: com/ Suicide Prevention Resource Center (SPRC): org SPRC Toolkit for Schools http://www.sprc.org/resources-programs/after-suicide-toolkit-schools Suicide Safe:org/sites/actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org/files/Action%20Alliance%20Recommended%20Standard%20Care%20FINAL.pdf Suicide Safety Plan: com Support After a Suicide: org.au/ Surviving After a Suicide Loss Blog: https://survivingafterasuicide.com/blog/ Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS): https://www.taps.org/suicidepostvention Trauma Institute & Child Trauma Institute: com/ Trevor Project (LGBTQ): org/ United Suicide Survivors International: https://unitesurvivors.org/ Violent Death Bereavement Society: org/html/director.html Yellow Ribbon: org/ Zero Suicide in Health and Behavioral Health Care Toolkit: zerosuicide.sprc.org/toolkit
Joseph Tähtelä har en musikplattform, en label och gör även musikvideos. Radio 14 träffade honom för att höra mer om hans projekt.
For our Halloween episode, we discuss Rasputin the Untold Story by Joseph T. Fuhrmann! Grab a beverage or a out of the season spooky beverage to hear us ramble about the book.
Listen to the top five general aviation news updates for the week of October 14, 2019, in under five minutes! Hear the inside scoop on the 28th Joseph T. Nall Report from the Air Safety Institute, and find out why you'll need to switch from the FAA Web Portal to SWIM before next year. We also have an update on uAvonix and some great destinations via GA if you like to get spooked for Halloween.
Joseph T. Jones, Jr. is founder of the Center For Urban Families, a Baltimore nonprofit service organization established to strengthen urban communities by helping fathers and families achieve stability and economic success. Mr. Jones is a national leader in workforce development, fatherhood and family services programming, and through his professional and civic involvement influences policy direction nationwide. Mr. Jones has received numerous awards and honors including the Johns Hopkins University Leadership Development Program’s Distinguished Leadership Award, the Walter Sondheim Public Service Award, the White House Champion of Change and was a 2013 CNN Hero. He served on President Obama’s Taskforce on Fatherhood and Healthy Families and several boards including: the Open Society Institute-Baltimore, the Baltimore Workforce Development Board, and the National Fatherhood Leaders Group. He was a community advisor on fatherhood issues to Vice President Al Gore and contributed to First Lady Laura Bush’s Helping America’s Youth initiative.
DEA and Controlled Substance Quotas CDC Guidelines on Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain:https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdf/Guidelines_Factsheet-a.pdf TN Chronic Pain Guidelines on Opioids: https://www.tn.gov/content/dam/tn/health/documents/ChronicPainGuidelines.pdf Joseph T. Rannazzisi Due Diligence Compliance, LLC PO Box 292 Annandale, VA 22003 jralchemist@aol.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
DEA and Controlled Substance Quotas CDC Guidelines on Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain:https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/pdf/Guidelines_Factsheet-a.pdf TN Chronic Pain Guidelines on Opioids: https://www.tn.gov/content/dam/tn/health/documents/ChronicPainGuidelines.pdf Joseph T. Rannazzisi Due Diligence Compliance, LLC PO Box 292 Annandale, VA 22003
Following the American-Oneida victory at Fort Stanwix rifts grow deeper within the Six Nations. Over three-hundred members of the Haudenosaunee gather at Albany for a Conference. Just as it finishes however word arrives that Burgoyne's British army has crossed the Hudson River at Saratoga. Sources: GUYASUTA AND THE FALL OF INDIAN AMERICA BY BRADY J. CRYTZER Forgotten Allies: The Oneida Indians and the American Revolution by Joseph T. Glatthaar and James Kirby Martin WITH MUSKET & TOMAHAWK VOLUMES 1, 2 & 3 BY MICHAEL O. LOGUSZ
Ryan M., Worcester, MA - What is your opinion of Dr. Michael Brown of the line of fire radio? Joseph T., Loudon, TN - Why do you take such detail on how one must be baptized and then gloss over the real presence in the elements in the Lord's...
British General Barry St. Ledger begins the siege of Fort Stanwix August 3, 1777. American General Herkimer is on his way to help. Joining him are a group of Oneida led by Two-Kettles-Together (Tyonajanegen) and her husband Han Yerry (Tewahangarahken). Sources: GUYASUTA AND THE FALL OF INDIAN AMERICA BY BRADY J. CRYTZER Forgotten Allies: The Oneida Indians and the American Revolution by Joseph T. Glatthaar and James Kirby Martin WITH MUSKET & TOMAHAWK VOLUMES 1, 2 & 3 BY MICHAEL O. LOGUSZ
December 2012 - In his welcoming address to attendees at the 23rd Annual ACFE Fraud Conference in Orlando this past June, ACFE founder and Chairman Dr. Joseph T. Wells forecasted four fraud trends he expected to see in 2013: identity fraud, health care fraud, international corruption and cyber crime. This month, we talk to ACFE Faculty Member Cynthia Hetherington, CFE, president of The Hetherington Group about Dr. Wells’ prediction of an increase in cyber crime, specifically crimes and investigation involving social media networks.
August 2013 - To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the ACFE, John Gill, J.D., CFE, ACFE VP of Education, digs into the rich history of the Association with three of the ACFE's earliest founders and supporters: Dr. Joseph T. Wells, CFE, CPA, ACFE founder and Chairman; James D. Ratley, CFE, ACFE President and CEO; and Jeanette LeVie, CFE, ACFE VP of Administration.
Dr. Erin Albert welcomes back Joseph T. Rannazzisi Deputy Assistant Administrator (RETIRED), Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) for the final segment of the 3 part series. About Joseph T. Rannazzisi Joe Rannazzisi, JD, RPh, began his career with the U.S. Drug Enforcement (DEA) in 1986. He served as a staff pharmacist at the Veterans Administration for the 18 months preceding his employment with DEA. During his DEA career, he served as a Diversion Investigator (Indianapolis), Special Agent/Criminal Investigator (Indianapolis/Detroit), Clandestine Laboratory Coordinator (Detroit), Homicide Task Force Supervisor (Detroit), Staff Coordinator (Domestic Operations-Headquarters), Section Chief (Dangerous Drugs and Chemicals Section-Headquarters), Assistant Special Agent in Charge (Detroit), and Deputy Chief (Office of Enforcement Operations-Headquarters). In January 2006 he was appointed
Part 2 - We address: -Rescheduling of drugs, ex: benzodiazepines -Opioid crisis -Heroin addiction -How we might fix the problem of opioid addiction in the US Mr. Joseph T. Rannazzisi — Deputy Assistant Administrator (RETIRED), Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Joe Rannazzisi, JD, RPh, began his career with the U.S. Drug Enforcement(DEA) in 1986. He served as a staff pharmacist at the Veterans Administration for the 18 months preceding his employment with DEA. During his DEA career, he served as a Diversion Investigator (Indianapolis), Special Agent/Criminal Investigator (Indianapolis/Detroit), Clandestine Laboratory Coordinator (Detroit), Homicide Task Force Supervisor (Detroit), Staff Coordinator (Domestic Operations-Headquarters), Section Chief (Dangerous Drugs and Chemicals Section-Headquarters), Assistant Special A
Part 2 - We address: -Rescheduling of drugs, ex: benzodiazepines -Opioid crisis -Heroin addiction -How we might fix the problem of opioid addiction in the US Mr. Joseph T. Rannazzisi — Deputy Assistant Administrator (RETIRED), Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Joe Rannazzisi, JD, RPh, began his career with the U.S. Drug Enforcement(DEA) in 1986. He served as a staff pharmacist at the Veterans Administration for the 18 months preceding his employment with DEA. During his DEA career, he served as a Diversion Investigator (Indianapolis), Special Agent/Criminal Investigator (Indianapolis/Detroit), Clandestine Laboratory Coordinator (Detroit), Homicide Task Force Supervisor (Detroit), Staff Coordinator (Domestic Operations-Headquarters), Section Chief (Dangerous Drugs and Chemicals Section-Headquarters), Assistant Special Agent in Charge (Detroit), and Deputy Chief (Office of Enforcement Operations-Headquarters). See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Joseph T. Rannazzisi Deputy Assistant Administrator (RETIRED), Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Joe Rannazzisi, JD, RPh, began his career with the U.S. Drug Enforcement(DEA) in 1986. He served as a staff pharmacist at the Veterans Administration for the 18 months preceding his employment with DEA. During his DEA career, he served as a Diversion Investigator (Indianapolis), Special Agent/Criminal Investigator (Indianapolis/Detroit), Clandestine Laboratory Coordinator (Detroit), Homicide Task Force Supervisor (Detroit), Staff Coordinator (Domestic Operations-Headquarters), Section Chief (Dangerous Drugs and Chemicals Section-Headquarters), Assistant Special Agent in Charge (Detroit), and Deputy Chief (Office of Enforcement Operations-Headquarters). In January 2006, he was appointed to Deputy Assistant Administrator in the Office of Diversion Control, a p
Joseph T. Rannazzisi Deputy Assistant Administrator (RETIRED), Office of Diversion Control, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration Joe Rannazzisi, JD, RPh, began his career with the U.S. Drug Enforcement(DEA) in 1986. He served as a staff pharmacist at the Veterans Administration for the 18 months preceding his employment with DEA. During his DEA career, he served as a Diversion Investigator (Indianapolis), Special Agent/Criminal Investigator (Indianapolis/Detroit), Clandestine Laboratory Coordinator (Detroit), Homicide Task Force Supervisor (Detroit), Staff Coordinator (Domestic Operations-Headquarters), Section Chief (Dangerous Drugs and Chemicals Section-Headquarters), Assistant Special Agent in Charge (Detroit), and Deputy Chief (Office of Enforcement Operations-Headquarters). In January 2006, he was appointed to Deputy Assistant Administrator in the Office of Diversion Control, a position he held until his retirement in October 2015. In this capacity, Mr. Rannazzisi was responsible for overseeing and coordinating major pharmaceutical and chemical diversion investigations; the drafting and promulgating of regulations; establishing drug production quotas; and conducting liaison with the pharmaceutical industry, international governments, state governments, other federal agencies, and local law enforcement agencies. Mr. Rannazzisi earned a BS degree in pharmacy from Butler University and a JD degree from the Detroit College of Law at Michigan State University. He is a Registered Pharmacist in the State of Indiana and a member of the Michigan State Bar Association. Mr. Rannazzisi's LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joseph-rannazzisi-35a35a58/ Careers at DEA: https://www.dea.gov/careers/agent/mobile/diversity.html See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On September 29th, 1962, Mississippi Governor Ross Barnett spoke before a halftime crowd at a University of Mississippi football game. He said he loved Mississippi's heritage. This compelled him to personally block African-American James Meredith from enrolling at Ole Miss. Eventually Meredith was enrolled, violence followed, and 28 clergy, white Methodist clergy, signed a statement, Born of Conviction, opposing the white power structure and its racism. Of the 28 signers, three lost their positions immediately, 18 had left the state in two years. Joseph T. Reiff, chair of the Religion Department at Emory and Henry College, has written about this time, these clergy, and their statement in his book, Born of Conviction: White Methodists and Mississippi's Closed Society.
101 Tips for the Enlightened Project Manager by Joseph T. Drammissi I have a great chat with Joseph about his book and all the amazing knowledge that is packed into it. Applying just some of the tips from the book will significantly improve the performance of you and your team in ways that will be…
This week on … For the People... law in plain language with Debra D. Rainey, Esq. A Domestic Violence roundtable, Featuring The Men of G-town Radio Domestic violence, is it an epidemic in our society or is the epidemic that society has finally realized and awakened to the idea that domestic violence is not acceptable? The FTP Fam along with Special Guests, the Men of G-town Radio, Jim Bear Founder and Host of Neu-Matic heard on Sundays from 3-5 pm on G-town; Joseph T. Heard, Host of Science 2.0, Science for the Rest of us, heard on Saturdays from 3-4pm on Gtown and Randy Green aka SuperTribble, Co-host of The Black Tribbles, heard every Thursday from 9-11pm on Gtown, and Ann Colley, M.B.A., M.F.T., CEO/Owner of AL Colley & Associates, a licensed clinical therapist and FTP’s favorite Clinician, Dared to be bold and engaged in a rousing, invigorating and at times intellectually psychotic dialogue about our Society’s seeming de-sensitivity to Domestic Violence. Tune in check this episode out! Let’s get the word out Domestic Violence/Domestic Abuse, it’s never ok Women Against Abuse Toll Free Hotline 1 866 723-3014 National Domestic Violence Hotline 1 800 799-SAFE (7233) G-Town Studio Line (215) 609-4301 FTP Message/Text Line (215) 435-4099 Email: info@ftplawradio.com Listen. CALL. talk LIVE. DiScUsS. TUESDAY'S 8-9:30 PM (EST) Host: Debra D. Rainey, The Compassionate Lawyer Cohosts: Blaq aka the “Broke Poet and BreeAyre Anderson aka “Breeze” Executive Producer: Renee Norris-Jones Acting Managing Producer: Breeayre Andersons aka “Breeze” Associate Producer: Robbin K. Stanton aka “Aunt Robbin” FTP Team: Asia Proctor aka P-roc & Marcha Hilaire aka Marci H This episode was produced by Renee Norris-Jones, PhD Candidate Weekly Podcasts: FTPLawradio, iTunes & Podomatic Like us FACEBOOK ~ Follow us TWITTER Air date: October 21, 2014 ~ LISTEN with the TUNEIN APP on your SMARTPHONE ~
Join Jeanne Catherine Gray as she interviews Joseph T. Hallinan, Author of Why We Make Mistakes. Learn how your brain trades visual details for abstract understandings, which impact what you see.
As is tradition around these parts, we like to dedicate one show of the year towards thanking you, the loyal listeners of the Paleoposse. This year we're 1) a bit late, sorry, and 2) doing it a bit differently by thanking specifically those who have donated to the show and have sent in a question we might be able to take a crack at answering. Yes, one of the questions is a repeat, we're not sure why we're terrible at this, we just are and people donate anyways. We think it best not to question these small miracles. 00:00:00 - Our first batch of donations come from Danielle N., who gets her voicemail about self-driving cars and traffic answered for a second time but with a refreshingly different answer. That's followed up by Christopher L., who reminds us about a term we taught him in the first place, completing some sort of twisted cycle of knowledge. And we end the segment with a query from Joseph T., who needs ammunition to argue about whether or not something can be "more evolved" than something else. It's a good question, followed by a good discussion. 00:21:39 - Next, we toast our donors with a drink. Charlie re-caffeinates with some Earl Grey. Patrick is let down by an apparent macguffin in the form of Sweet Baby Jesus Peanut Butter Port by Duclaw. And Ryan enjoys a Wipeout IPA from his good friend Shelly. Thanks, Shelly! 00:26:15 - Much like hoards of teenagers, the Paleopals have all read The Hunger Games trilogy of books, and share their thoughts about the trailer to the 'upcoming' sequel film Catching Fire in this week's Trailer Trash Talk! 00:33:53 - We end the show with more feedback! This round comes from Keith K., who asks us a physics question he sounds better qualified to answer than any of us. Fortunately, a remote answer from the physics-bot Ben arrives in the knick of time. Next, Sarah J. confirms that Ryan's afternoons of posting Science... sort of flyers around UCSC were not spent in vain. And finally, a voicemail from Billy Nitro(!) asks a question that seems tricky, but might have a fairly simple answer. Now, for some plugs: Patrick appeared on a recent episode of The Collapsed Wavefunction (our network's newest member, if you didn't know) Ryan has been on the Deconstructing Comics podcast to talk about Chew Ryan also interviewed former guest of the show James Robinson about his upcoming Fantastic Four run for Marvel.com And some of Ryan's research was written up in the The Economist, no big deal Thanks again to everyone who listens and contributes to the podcast. We literally couldn't do it without all your support and look forward to another excellent year of spreading the science love all around the world wide web! Be sure to check out the Brachiolope Media Network for more great science podcasts! Music for this week's show: I Don't Wanna Stop - Good Charlotte Jesus Is Just Alright - The Byrds This Fire - Franz Ferdinand
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture sponsored by Helio Beltrão, presented at the Austrian Economics Research Conference. Recorded 21 March 2013 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno. Full title: "The Global Curse of the Federal Reserve: How Its Monetary Virus Stimulates Destructive Waves of Irrational Exuberance and Depression"
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture sponsored by Helio Beltrão, presented at the Austrian Economics Research Conference. Recorded 21 March 2013 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno. Full title: "The Global Curse of the Federal Reserve: How Its Monetary Virus Stimulates Destructive Waves of Irrational Exuberance and Depression" Music by Kevin MacLeod.
The Henry Hazlitt Memorial Lecture, sponsored by James M. Rodney, presented at the Austrian Economics Research Conference. Recorded 21 March 2013 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno.
The Henry Hazlitt Memorial Lecture, sponsored by James M. Rodney, presented at the Austrian Economics Research Conference. Recorded 21 March 2013 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno. Music by Kevin MacLeod.
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture, presented at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 9 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno.
The F. A. Hayek Memorial Lecture, presented at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 9 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno.
The awarding of the Lawrence W. Fertig Prize in Austrian Economics and The O.P. Alford III Prize in Libertarian Scholarship. Presented by Joseph T. Salerno at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 10 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
The F. A. Hayek Memorial Lecture, presented at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 9 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno.
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture, presented at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 9 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama. Includes an introduction by Joseph T. Salerno.
The awarding of the Lawrence W. Fertig Prize in Austrian Economics and The O.P. Alford III Prize in Libertarian Scholarship. Presented by Joseph T. Salerno at the 2012 Austrian Scholars Conference. Recorded 10 March 2012 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
Francis Flavin, historian at the U.S. Department of the Interior, discusses a portrait of Zitkala-Sa, Native American writer and educator, by Joseph T. Keiley
Joseph T. DearingerSermon preached in Boulder Colorado.
Joseph T. DearingerSermon preached in Boulder Colorado.
Joseph T. DearingerSermon preached in Boulder Colorado.
Joseph T. DearingerSermon preached in Boulder Colorado.
Joseph T. DearingerSermon preached in Boulder Colorado.