Podcasts about lare

  • 71PODCASTS
  • 84EPISODES
  • 38mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Apr 29, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about lare

Latest podcast episodes about lare

Engineering Influence from ACEC
Navigating Economic Turbulence with Sarah Wolfe

Engineering Influence from ACEC

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2025 21:26 Transcription Available


Welcome to the Engineering Influence podcast, where we delve into the complexities and opportunities in today's economic landscape. Hosted by Diana O' Lare, Director of Market Intelligence for the American Council of Engineering Companies, this episode is part of our new series, The Market Edge. We are joined by Sarah Wolfe, a Senior Economist and Strategist at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management. With a wealth of experience and insights, Sarah discusses pivotal topics such as tariffs, inflation, immigration, and their impact on various sectors including construction and manufacturing. Gain an understanding of the possible recession implications and how firms can navigate these challenges. Dive in to explore the broader economic effects of current policies, potential positive catalysts like tax negotiations, and the global trade dynamics affecting engineering firms. Don't miss this insightful conversation aimed at empowering engineering businesses to adapt and grow in an ever-changing market.

Știrile zilei. Pe scurt, de la Recorder
19 FEBRUARIE 2025. Administrația Trump, călare pe calul alb al lui Georgescu

Știrile zilei. Pe scurt, de la Recorder

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 16:26


Cele mai importante știri ale zilei, alese de Recorder și grupate într-un newsletter audio. În fiecare seară, de luni până vineri.

Engineering Influence from ACEC
Navigating the Future: Insights into Higher Education and Engineering

Engineering Influence from ACEC

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2024 20:12 Transcription Available


Welcome to another episode of the Engineering Influence podcast from the American Council of Engineering Companies. Join Diana O' Lare, Director of Market Intelligence at ACEC National, as she engages in a compelling conversation with Mike Moss, President of the Society of College and University Planning. Together, they explore the evolving landscape of higher education, diving into topics such as enrollment trends, the impact of administration changes, and the future of campus planning. Discover how institutions are adapting to demographic shifts, with insights into the concept of the "enrollment cliff" and its implications. Learn about the role of international students, the influence of artificial intelligence on campus planning, and potential financial challenges faced by educational institutions. Diana and Mike discuss workforce shortages and the importance of STEM programs. This episode offers valuable perspectives for engineering firms, shedding light on opportunities that arise from trends in education and their impact on the engineering sector. Whether you're interested in integrated planning, multidisciplinary spaces, or innovative learning environments, there's something here for everyone. Don't miss this engaging discussion that weaves together the future of education with engineering excellence.   Subscribe to the Market Briefs Newsletter: https://www.acec.org/resources/market-intelligence/#newsletter Download the latest brief: https://www.acec.org/resource/educational-market-brief-fall-2024/ 

Cosmo Podcast
2/4 - GAJA FILAČ: "Morala sem doživeti ogromno ljubezenskih bolečin, da sem našla partnerja, ki mi popolnoma ustreza"

Cosmo Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2024 63:46


Tukaj je posebna jesenska serija štirih pogovorov Cosmo podkasta, kjer Flora Ema Lotrič gosti izjemne ženske iz različnih industrij. V vsaki epizodi se poda v globino njihove osebnosti in razkriva ključne lastnosti, ki so prispevale k njihovemu neverjetnemu uspehu. Ponosni pokrovitelj pogovorov je Zalando, ki v tem trenutku ponuja čudovite jesenske trende. Za vsakega se nekaj najde, zato skoči na spletno stran ali aplikacijo in si poglej, kateri kos te najbolj pokliče. V drugem pogovoru jesenske serije Cosmo podkasta z izjemnimi ženskami za mikrofonom sedi mlada igralka Gaja Filač, ki ima svoj življenjepis tako bogat, kot da bi izkušnje nabirala že desetletja. Priznana gledališka in filmska igralka, ki je trenutno najbolj znana po svoji vlogi Lare v priljubljeni slovenski seriji Skrito v raju, se v iskrenem pogovoru dotakne tudi življenja v dvoje in lahko bi rekli, da o tem še nikoli ni govorila tako široko. Več o intervjuju z Gajo Filač si lahko preberete tukaj! Gostja: Gaja Filač Voditeljica: Flora Ema Lotrič Vsebino podpira Zalando.

Parliamo di Criminologia
C*glioni da inc*lare, ops, ops Wanna Style!

Parliamo di Criminologia

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 9:11


La grande incertezza ha scalzato la Grande Bellezza, le difficoltà nel trovare lavoro, la disoccupazione, i problemi economici e la speranza di risolvere (in fretta) la propria situazione negativa, hanno spinto un numero crescente di italiani a cercare risposte nella cartomanzia, negli oroscopi a pagamento, nella magia, nella formazione miracolosa finendo sempre più spesso nelle mani di personaggi senza scrupoli che approfittano delle difficoltà e delle fragilità delle persone per ottenere, oltre al denaro, anche prestazioni sessuali.(...)Diventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/accademia-di-criminologia--1771463/support.

Svet kulture
Mapa ilustracij Veličastnih 30 in razstava Slovenske krave Lare Ješe

Svet kulture

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2024 14:00


Slovenske krave hudomušno kraljujejo na slikah, grafikah, fotografijah in v skulpturah akademska slikarka Lara Ješe, ki je to žival izbrala za izpoved svoje družinske zgodbe. Postopoma jo je namreč začutila kot izraz povezave s svojimi koreninami. Svojo dvanajstletno produkcijo zdaj predstavlja v Škofjeloškem Sokolskem domu. V Vodnikovi domačiji Center pa so predstavili ekskluzivno mapo tridesetih reprodukcij slovenskih knjižnih ilustracij, ki je pri Mladinski knjigi izšla v omejeni seriji tristotih izvodov.

ExtraTime
Are the Crew the best MLS team ever? Why do LAFC keep losing finals? Plus - Matchday 29 True or False!

ExtraTime

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 88:41


2:25 - How Columbus got it done in Leagues Cup final 13:20 -  lAre the Crew the best MLS team ever? 25:25 - Why LAFC have struggled in finals 34:04 - Rapids win 3rd place game… is CCC a curse in disguise 41:50 - Is the Shield race over? 47:05 - Are RSL at risk of dropping out of the top 4? 50:38 - Marco Reus debuts, balls 53:43 - Can Dallas grab the last playoff spot in the West?  57:00 - The Revs… will make the playoffs?  59: 15 - What in the world is going on with Houston? 1:01:30 - Portland's defense is going to sink them in the playoffs  1:04:55 - Is there any hope for SKC? 1:05:24 - How much do you believe in NYC? 1:08:15 - Did Charlotte and RBNY do enough in the transfer window? 1:13:24 - U.S. Open Cup Semis Preview  

REFRESHER Rozhovory
Kedy Lare z Ruže 2 upadol rešpekt voči Dolli a čo sa stalo s Juliou pri slonovi? (ROZHOVOR S MIŠOM)

REFRESHER Rozhovory

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 47:26


Ruža pre nevestu 2 vrcholí, tentokrát nás navštívila Lara, ktorá zo šou odišla minulý týždeň. Čo nám prezradila?

Q&A
Zachary Treitz & Christian Hansen, "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders"

Q&A

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 64:50


Filmmakers Zachary Treitz and Christian Hansen discuss their 4-part Netflix docuseries "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders," about the events surrounding the death of freelance journalist Danny Casolaro (cas-uh-LARE-oh) in 1991. At the time of his death, officially ruled a suicide, Mr. Casolaro was working on a story about a series of crimes – including drug running, money laundering, and murder – that he argued were connected to a cabal of ex-government officials associated with the Reagan administration and the CIA. He referred to this group as "the Octopus." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

C-SPAN Bookshelf
Q&A: Zachary Treitz & Christian Hansen, "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders"

C-SPAN Bookshelf

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 64:50


Filmmakers Zachary Treitz and Christian Hansen discuss their 4-part Netflix docuseries "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders," about the events surrounding the death of freelance journalist Danny Casolaro (cas-uh-LARE-oh) in 1991. At the time of his death, officially ruled a suicide, Mr. Casolaro was working on a story about a series of crimes – including drug running, money laundering, and murder – that he argued were connected to a cabal of ex-government officials associated with the Reagan administration and the CIA. He referred to this group as "the Octopus." Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Mischbenzim
Püppi 423. Guest Larissa Papenmeier

Mischbenzim

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 122:28


Eure Wünsche wurden erhört: zu Gast in Folge #64 von Mischbenzim, der Podcast den Keiner braucht, den wir aber alle lieben werden ist the one and only Larissa Papenmeier aka Lare. Coach Jan und Benedikt bekommen bei bester Verpflegung einen Einblick in Lare's Karriere als Racer, Promoter und Teamchefin. Wie es um die Mädels im deutschen MX bestellt ist, was es mit und um den DMV Ladies Cup und einen einzigen DM Lauf der Frauen zu berichten gibt und welche Einfluss der weibliche Zyklus auf die sportliche Performance hat, das alles hört ihr nach dem obligatorischen Fragengeballer.Lare's Heißer Scheiss: @‌hondamotorrad_deSelbstredend darf Lare sich auf der Mischbenzim Playlist verewigen:Lare: Wellerman - Nathan EvansFolgen!IG: @‌coach_janIG: @‌benzim .officialIG: @‌benzim_fashionIG: @‌lare423IG: @‌sye_racing_team_423IG: @‌dmvladiescupMaciag Offroad SENDERWEEK DEALS vom 12.04. bis einschließlich 25.04.2024!- 2 Wochen lang satte Rabatte auf ausgewählte MX/MTB Gear und Technik Produkte- Maciag Offroad Dekore für nur 89,95€ (40% Rabatt) - Motocross Combos (Jersey + Hose) schon ab 79,95€Und viele weitere ständig wechselnde Top Angebote mit bis zu 70% Rabatt - nur solange der Vorrat reicht!Send it!

Architectette
(Bonus 005) Licensure in Landscape Architecture with Claire Kern

Architectette

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 35:49


On today's BONUS episode of Architectette we welcome Claire Kern. Claire is a landscape architect and founder of Pass the LARE. We chat about her work experience in landscape architecture, the process and challenges of obtaining a license, parallels to architecture and the AREs, and her hopes to make the study and examination process a bit easier for candidates. Links: Connect with Claire on LinkedIn More about the LARE/CLARB Pass the LARE Architectette Podcast Website: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.architectette.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Connect with the pod on ⁠⁠⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, Instagram (⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@architectette⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠), and TikTok (⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@architectette⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠) Exclusive Content on our Newsletter: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.architectette.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Connect with host Caitlin Brady on ⁠⁠LinkedIn⁠⁠. Music by ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠AlexGrohl⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ from ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Pixabay⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/architectette/support

Jag vet vad du skrev...
11. ”som författare så är man antingen en oljemålare eller akvarellmålare” - Mats Strandberg

Jag vet vad du skrev...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2024 69:13


Jag vet vad du skrev...
11. ”som författare så är man antingen en oljemålare eller akvarellmålare” - Mats Strandberg

Jag vet vad du skrev...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2024 71:36


Heartland POD
Friday News Flyover - December 8, 2023 - Government and Elections News Roundup

Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 27:28


Friday News Flyover, December 8, 2023Intro: On this episode of The Heartland POD for Friday, December 8th, 2023A flyover from this weeks top heartland stories including:Texas abortion bans creating legal confusion | MO Pastor jailed facing sexual abuse charges | Sen Josh Hawley and Rep Cori Bush speak against defense bill without funds for St. Louis residents exposed to radiation | AL Senator Tommy Tuberville gives up his misguided military holds | Dolly Parton gives books to millions of kids, if you didn't knowWelcome to The Heartland POD for a Flyover Friday, this is Sean Diller in Denver, Colorado. With me as co-host today is Adam Sommer, how you doing Adam?We're glad to have you with us. If you're new to our shows make sure you subscribe and leave a 5 star rating wherever you listen. You can also find Heartland POD content on Youtube and on social media with @ THE heartland pod, and learn more at thehearltandcollective.com Alright! Let's get into the storieshttps://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/12/06/1217637325/texas-woman-asks-court-for-abortion-because-of-pregnancy-complicationsUpdated Thursday, Dec. 7 at 1:55 p.m."Kate Cox needs an abortion, and she needs it now." Thus began a petition filed in a Texas district court this week, asking a judge to allow the abortion to be performed in the state, where abortion is banned with very limited exceptions.On Thursday, Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of Travis County, Texas, ruled from the bench, granting permission for Cox to have the abortion she is seeking. Cox's fetus has a genetic condition with very low chances of survival and her own health and fertility are at risk if she carries the pregnancy to term.The petition was filed by the Center for Reproductive Rights, which is the group behind a high profile case heard at the Texas Supreme Court last week.In that case the group's senior staff attorney Molly Duane argued on behalf of 20 patients and two OB-GYNs that the medical exception to the ban on abortion in the state's laws is too narrow and vague, and that it endangered patients during complicated pregnancies. An attorney for the state argued the exception is already clear and that the plaintiffs didn't have standing to sue.On the very day of those arguments, Nov. 28, Kate Cox, a 31-year-old mother of two who lives in the Dallas area, got "devastating" news about her pregnancy, the filing says. At nearly 20-weeks gestation, she learned that her fetus has Trisomy 18 or Edwards Syndrome, a condition with extremely low chances of survival.So, as the Texas Supreme Court considered whether its abortion laws endangered patients with pregnancy complications in the past, Cox was trying to figure out what to do in her present situation.Cox had already been in the emergency room three times with cramping and other concerning symptoms, according to court documents. Her doctors told her she was at high risk of developing gestational hypertension and diabetes, and because she had had two prior cesarean sections, carrying the pregnancy to term could compromise her chances of having a third child in the future, the brief says.Last Thursday, she reached out for the Center for Reproductive Rights. Five days after that, the group filed this petition on her behalf.The filing asked a Travis County district court for a temporary restraining order against the state of Texas and the Texas Medical Board, blocking enforcement of Texas's abortion bans so that Cox can terminate her current pregnancy. It also would block enforcement of S.B. 8, which allows civil lawsuits to be filed against those who help patients receive abortions.That would protect the other plaintiffs in the case, Cox's husband, Justin, and Dr. Damla Karsan, who is prepared to provide the abortion if the court grants their request. Karsan is one of the OB-GYN plaintiffs in the Zurawski v. the State of Texas case.Thursday's ruling will allow Karsan to provide an abortion without threat of prosecution. It only applies to Cox, her husband and Karsan. Issuing the ruling, Judge Guerra Gamble said: "The idea that Ms. Cox wants so desperately to be a parent and this law may have her lose that ability is shocking and would be a genuine miscarriage of justice."There are currently three overlapping abortion bans in Texas. Abortion is illegal in the state from the moment pregnancy begins. Texas doctors can legally provide abortions only if a patient is "in danger of death or a serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function, " the law says."I don't know what that means," Duane says of the language of the medical exception. "But I think [Cox's] situation must fall within whatever it is that that means."The Texas Attorney General's office did not respond to a request for comment on Cox's case, but the office argued in the Zurawski case that the medical exception needs no clarification.Sponsor MessageTexas Alliance for Life, a group that lobbied in the state legislature for the current abortion laws, published a statement about Cox's case Wednesday. "We believe that the exception language in Texas laws is clear," wrote the group's communication director Amy O'Donnell, and accused the Center for Reproductive Rights of pretending to seek clarity while really attempting to "chisel away" at Texas's abortion laws.The timeline of this case was very quick. "I have to be honest, I've never done this before, and that's because no one's ever done this before," Duane says. "But usually when you ask for a temporary restraining order, the court will act very, very quickly in acknowledgement of the emergency circumstances."The hearing was held via Zoom on Thursday morning.The State of Texas cannot appeal the decision directly, says Duane. "They would have to file what's called a writ of mandamus, saying that the district court acted so far out of its jurisdiction and that there needs to be a reversal," Duane explains. "But filing a petition like that is not does not automatically stay the injunction the way that an appeal of a temporary injunction does."In the meantime, the justices of the Texas Supreme Court are considering the Zurawski case, with a decision expected in the next few months. "I want them to take their time to write an opinion that gets this right and will protect patients, doctors and their families going forward," Duane says."But the reality is that in the meantime, people are going to continue to be harmed," and Cox couldn't afford to wait for that decision, Duane says.Duane praises Cox for her bravery in publicly sharing her story while in the midst of a personal medical crisis. "She's exceptional – but I will also say that the pathway to this has been paved by all the other women in our lawsuit," she says. "There is strength in numbers."https://www.kmbc.com/article/court-documents-independence-missouri-pastor-charged-child-molestation/46058889Court documents state that multiple people under the age of 18 accused Virgil Marsh of sexually assaulting them between 2011 and 2018.Marsh, 71, is now in the Jackson County jail.He was charged with two counts of first-degree of child molestation and first-degree statutory sodomy.A probable cause statement indicates that Marsh told police he was a current pastor in Independence and admitted he had "inappropriately touched" one of the victims.He did tell police he 'potentially kissed' a second victim on the mouth but denied sexually touching them.He also told police he has asked for forgiveness with God and is no longer the man who "had previously done things to the victim," the probable cause reads.https://missouriindependent.com/2023/12/07/compensation-for-st-louis-victims-of-nuclear-waste-stripped-from-federal-defense-bill/Compensation for St. Louis victims of nuclear waste stripped from federal defense billProvisions that would have compensated those exposed to radioactive waste left over from the Manhattan Project were removed on WednesdayBY: ALLISON KITE - DECEMBER 7, 2023 9:03 AM      A joint investigation by The Independent and MuckRock.U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley said Thursday he would do everything he could to stop a federal defense spending bill after a provision offering compensation to Americans exposed to decades-old radioactive waste was removed. Speaking on the floor of the Senate, the Missouri Republican called the decision to remove compensation for Americans who have suffered rare cancers and autoimmune diseases a “scar on the conscience of this body.”“This is an injustice,” Hawley said. “This is this body turning its back on these good, proud Americans.”This summer, the Senate amended the National Defense Authorization Act to expand the existing Radiation Exposure Compensation Act to include parts of the St. Louis region where individuals were exposed to leftover radioactive material from the development of the first atomic bomb. It would have also included parts of the Southwest where residents were exposed to bomb testing. But the provision was removed Wednesday by a conference committee of senators and members of the U.S. House of Representatives working out differences between the two chambers' versions of the bill.Even before the text of the amended bill became available Wednesday night, U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri was decrying the removal of the radiation compensation policy. “This is a major betrayal of thousands and thousands of Missourians who have been lied to and ignored for years,” Hawley said in a post on social media Wednesday. Dawn Chapman, a co-founder of Just Moms STL, fought back tears Wednesday night as she described hearing the “gut-wrenching” news from Hawley's staff. Chapman and fellow moms have been advocating for families exposed to or near radioactive waste for years. “I actually thought we had a chance,” Chapman said. But she said the group hopes to get the expansion passed another way. “Nobody has given up on it,” Chapman said.The St. Louis region has suffered from a radioactive waste problem for decades. The area was instrumental in the Manhattan Project, the name given to the effort to build an atomic bomb during World War II. Almost 80 years later, residents of St. Louis and St. Charles counties are still dealing with the fallout. After the war, radioactive waste produced from refining uranium was trucked from downtown St. Louis to several sites in St. Louis County where it contaminated property at the airport and seeped into Coldwater Creek. In the 1970s, remaining nuclear waste that couldn't be processed to extract valuable metals was trucked to the West Lake Landfill and illegally dumped. It remains there today.During the Cold War, uranium was processed in St. Charles County. A chemical plant and open ponds of radioactive waste remained at the site in Weldon Spring for years. The site was remediated in the early 2000s, but groundwater contamination at the site is not improving fast enough, according to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.For years, St. Louis-area residents have pointed to the radioactive waste to explain rare cancers, autoimmune diseases and young deaths. A study by the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry found people who lived along Coldwater Creek or played in its waters faced an increased risk of cancer.Chapman said she knew two individuals who made calls to members of Congress while receiving chemotherapy. It's hard to ask people to keep fighting for the legislation, she said. “They're not going to see another Christmas, and they're not going to see the compensation from this,” Chapman said. “This won't help them.” An investigation by The Missouri Independent, MuckRock and The Associated Press this summer found that the private companies and federal agencies handling and overseeing the waste repeatedly downplayed the danger despite knowledge that it posed a risk to human health.After the report was published, Hawley decried the federal government's failures and vowed to introduce legislation to help. So did U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, D-St. Louis. In a statement Wednesday night, she said the federal government's failure to compensate those who have been harmed by radioactive waste is “straight up negligence.”“The people of St. Louis deserve better, and they deserve to be able to live without worry of radioactive contamination,” Bush said. Missouri's junior senator, Republican Eric Schmitt, grew up near the West Lake Landfill. He said in a statement that the “fight is far from over” and that he will look into other legislation to get victims compensation.“The careless dumping of this waste happened across Missouri, including in my own backyard of St. Louis, and has negatively impacted Missouri communities for decades,” Schmitt said. “I will not stop fighting until it is addressed.”Already, two state lawmakers have pre-filed legislation related to radioactive waste in advance of the Missouri General Assembly reconvening in January. One doubles the budget of a state radioactive waste investigation fund. The other requires further disclosure of radioactive contamination when one sells or rents a house.In July, the U.S. Senate voted 61-37  to adopt Hawley's amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act expanding the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act to include the St. Louis area. It would have also expanded the coverage area to compensate victims exposed to testing of the atomic bomb in New Mexico. The amendment included residents of New Mexico, Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Guam and expanded the coverage area in Nevada, Utah and Arizona, which are already partially covered.The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that expanding the program could cost $147.1 billion over 10 years with St. Louis' portion taking up $3.7 billion of that. The amendment would have also renewed the program for existing coverage areas. Without renewal, it will expire in the coming months. Hawley said, however, the “fight is not over.” “I will come to this floor as long as it takes. I will introduce this bill as long as it takes,” he said. “I will force amendment votes as long as it takes until we compensate the people of this nation who have sacrificed for this nation.” https://www.azmirror.com/2023/12/06/in-bid-to-flip-the-legislature-blue-national-dems-announce-spending-on-az/With Republicans holding the barest of majorities in the Arizona Legislature, national Democrats are already making major investments in a bid to flip the state's legislature blue. The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee on Wednesday announced it would spend $70,000 in Arizona to aid in candidate recruitment for key races, hiring staff, digital investments and more. The spending is the start of the DLCC's push in swing states where the committee hopes to either solidify Democratic majorities or pick up seats and win legislative control. The money is part of an initial $300,000 push in swing states by the DLCC, with Arizona and Michigan getting the lion's share of the money. The DLCC is also spending money in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and North Carolina. In Arizona, Republicans have one-seat majorities in both the 60-member state House of Representatives and the 30-member state Senate. DLCC interim President Heather Williams told the Arizona Mirror that the committee is hoping to flip the House and Senate in part by highlighting the extreme positions of Republican lawmakers. Many proposed law changes inspired by those extreme positions earned vetoes from Gov. Katie Hobbs earlier this year. “The Republican majority in both chambers is vulnerable,” Williams said, adding that this is only the committee's “initial investment,” as the group anticipates spending much more in 2024. Williams did not elaborate on which Arizona races the group plans to target, but mentioned that the group aims to do something similar to what happened in Virginia this year. Last month, Virginia Democrats gained control of the House and solidified their control of the Senate. The DLCC hopes to mirror that in Arizona. In that election, all 140 seats in the Virginia legislature were up for grabs, and Democrat wins will block Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin's ability to fully enact his conservative agenda. The DLCC ended up spending more than $2 million in Virginia. “Here is what we know about Republicans, they are legislating in a way across the country that is not where their constituents are,” Williams said, citing access to abortion and health care for women as key. Republicans and Democrats are eyeing a number of key state house races for 2024 but Williams is confident that her party will come out on top, adding that the DLCC intends to have a dialogue with voters and to help people get registered to vote. “I think we feel really strong with our position as an organization,” Williams said, adding that having Hobbs, a former state lawmaker as a Democratic ally in the governorship will offer advantages. https://alabamareflector.com/2023/12/05/tuberville-relents-on-months-long-blockade-of-most-military-nominees-blaming-democrats/WASHINGTON — After blocking hundreds of U.S. military promotions for most of 2023 in protest of a Pentagon abortion policy, Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama said Tuesday he will lift his holds on all of them except for a handful of four-star general nominees.The senator, who sits on the Senate Committee on Armed Forces, said he told his fellow Senate Republicans “it's been a long fight” but ultimately he said Democrats were to blame for stalling hundreds of service members from moving up in the chain of command. Tuberville had said repeatedly that Democrats could bring each of the nominees to the floor for votes, which would take hours of debate.“We fought hard. We did the right thing for the unborn and for our military, fighting back against executive overreach, and an abortion policy that's not legal,” Tuberville said after announcing his about-face to his fellow Senate Republicans during their regularly scheduled weekly lunch.Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, said Tuesday that he would move the nominations to the floor “as soon as possible, possibly later this afternoon.”“I hope no one does this again, and I hope they learned the lesson of Sen. Tuberville. And that is he held out for many, many months, hurt our national security, caused discombobulation to so many military families who have been so dedicated to our country, and didn't get anything that he wanted,” Schumer said.Tuberville has blocked hundreds of nominees since the spring because he opposes a recent Pentagon policy that allows armed services members time off and travel reimbursement should they need to seek an abortion in a state where it remains legal.Roughly 80,000 active-duty female service members are stationed in states where legislatures enacted full or partial bans following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, according to a RAND analysis.The Biden administration and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin maintain the policy is legal, as did a 2022 Department of Justice opinion.The list of nominees affected by Tuberville's months-long hold grew to 451 members of the military as of Nov. 27, according to a Department of Defense official. Majority staff for the Senate Armed Services Committee list 445 affected nominees.Tuberville's agreement to halt his protest means that all but 11 of those nominees are expected to clear final Senate approval, according to figures from committee's majority staff.Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Tuesday that GOP senators are “pleased obviously that that situation seems to have been ameliorated by recent announcements by the senator from Alabama.”Sen. Jack Reed, chair of the Senate Armed Forces Committee, said in a statement Tuesday he's “glad that hundreds of our nation's finest military leaders will finally receive their hard-won, merit-based promotions.”“They, and their families, have shown us what grace and grit look like in the face of hardship. Senator Tuberville's actions have been an affront to the United States military and the Senate,” said Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island.“He has jeopardized our national security and abused the rights afforded to all Senators. No Senator should ever attempt to advance their own partisan agenda on the backs of our troops like this again.”Threat of Democratic-led procedure changeTuberville's change in course arrived as Schumer was poised to bring to the floor a Democratic-led rules resolution to bypass the Alabama senator's blockade.The proposed temporary change in floor process would have allowed senators to quickly approve large blocs of nominations simultaneously on the floor, saving hours and hours that would have been required to vote on each individually.Tuberville said Tuesday that he and fellow Republican senators decided they did not want to see any changes to Senate floor procedures and that is the reason he decided to lift his blockade.“All of us are against a rule change in the Senate, OK. We're all against it,” Tuberville said.The Alabama senator's own Republican colleagues have grown publicly frustrated with his stalling of military promotions.GOP senators, including Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Joni Ernst of Iowa and Todd Young of Indiana, have on two occasions held the Senate floor into the wee hours bringing forward the names of nominees, only to meet Tuberville's objections.Some frustrated Republicans last week mulled whether to support the Democratic-led effort to override Tuberville's blockade. Democrats would have needed nine of them to pass the change in procedure.“I have said that right now I support Tommy Tuberville, but if he makes a statement that he's going to maintain this posture through this Congress I intend to vote for nominations under the rules suspension,” Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina told States Newsroom Nov. 29.https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2023/12/06/ohio-senate-wants-to-stop-you-from-growing-weed-house-fights-back/Ohio Senate wants to stop you from growing weed; House fights backBY: MORGAN TRAU - DECEMBER 6, 2023 4:55 AMWhile Ohio Senate Republicans move to dramatically change recreational marijuana policy, the House is fighting back in a bipartisan fashion — saying the will of the voters must be followed.On Thursday, adults 21 and older in Ohio will be able to smoke weed and grow up to six plants.When Issue 2 passed in November, state Rep. Jamie Callender (R-Concord) knew he could be part of clarifying public policy. He invited WEWS/OCJ's Morgan Trau to his introduction of H.B. 354 in a “skeleton” session Tuesday morning. Skeleton sessions are when typically two lawmakers gather with the House clerk and take less than five minutes to introduce policy.“We preserve the things that the people voted on,” he told Trau after he banged the gavel and Finance Chair state Rep. Jay Edwards (R-Nelsonville) watched.Callender, who has been an outspoken supporter of marijuana, has been working on recreational implementation for years. Issue 2 came after all of his efforts were purposely stalled in the Statehouse.“The Marijuana Legalization Initiative” allows Ohioans to grow up to six plants, with 12 per household. In addition, the proposal would impose a 10% tax at the point of sale for each transaction. It also establishes the Division of Cannabis Control within the Ohio Department of Commerce.Ohioans voted in favor of the statute 57-43%.“I'm glad it passed and I'm excited that we're going to be able to take some of these measures that make it a more responsible act,” Callender said. “I want to make sure that here in this chamber, the People's House, that we carry out the will of the people — and the people have spoken.”His bill doesn't make major changes, but it does add safeguards — like guidelines on advertising, public smoking bans and provisions that give local governments more of a say in where tax revenue goes. It also explains that home grow must take place at residential addresses.“We've seen folks aggregate those six plants and, in essence, create a mega farm which is simply an aggregation or a co-op of a whole lot of home grows,” he said, saying that he is trying to prevent that.The bill, one that Callendar says has bipartisan support in the House, deeply contrasts the Senate's version.The proposal by state Sen. Rob McColley (R-Napoleon) also includes guard rails to prevent exposure to children, including advertising guidelines. It would require marijuana to be packaged in a child-resistant container and prevents “cartoon character” or other pop culture figures whose target audience is a child from being used in weed marketing.However, those safety guidelines are the end of the common ground.The Senate proposal would reduce how much weed you could possess from 2.5 ounces to 1 ounce and 15 grams of marijuana concentrates to 5 grams; It would make weed less strong by limiting THC levels for plants to 25%, when the minimum was 35%. In addition, it would limit extracts to 50%, when the minimum was 90%; and it would make marijuana more expensive by raising the tax from 10% to 15%.It also changes where the taxes go.As mentioned, it was a 10% tax at the point of sale. It was 36% revenue to the cannabis social equity and jobs fund; 36% to the host community cannabis fund to provide funds to jurisdictions with adult-use dispensaries; 25% to the substance abuse and addiction fund; and 3% to the division of cannabis control and tax commissioner fund. Issue 2 capped the number of dispensaries permitted at once to 350, but the bill cuts that down to 230.The Senate version ups to 15% tax at the point of sale. It is 30% to the law enforcement training fund, 15% to the marijuana substance abuse treatment and prevention fund, 10% to the safe driver training fund, and the remaining 45% goes to the grand revenue fund — aka, the state lawmakers.“The social equity program — when you really got down to the nuts and bolts of it — it was tax revenue being collected to be put right back into the hands of the industry,” McColley said. “It was a tax grab by the industry to prop up more dispensaries within the industry.”The “Social Equity and Jobs Program” was established by Issue 2. It is designed to fix “the harms resulting from the disproportionate enforcement of marijuana-related laws” and “reduce barriers to ownership and opportunity” to those “most directly and adversely impacted by the enforcement of marijuana-related laws,” according to the initiative.The most significant change is the proposal eliminates home grow.“The opposition has been all around the black market,” McColley said. “It's been around, ‘how do we keep these plants from then being transferred and sold illegally?'”After facing backlash, McColley assured he wasn't going against the will of the people, since he believes that the voters didn't really know everything that they were voting on.“I think what the voters really voted for would have been access to products,” the senator added.Clearly, the voters want home grow, Callender argued. Access to products means access to home grow, he said.It isn't just Callender who is frustrated with the legislation moving through the other chamber. Dozens of Republican and Democratic representatives are infuriated with the Senate.One with a unique perspective is state Rep. Jeff LaRe (R-Violet Twp.) The Senate took his legislation, H.B. 86, that revised the limit on the gallons of spirituous liquor that a micro-distillery may manufacture each year and added their marijuana proposal onto his bill.“Slap in the face of Ohio voters,” LaRe told WEWS/OCJ.The lawmaker doesn't support recreational marijuana, but he does respect the will of Ohioans, he added.“It's unfortunate they want to use a bill that is focused on helping certain small businesses recover from the pandemic to fast-track language that changes the intent of the ballot initiative,” he said. “I believe we should look into where the tax dollars are spent, but this goes way beyond those details.”Democrats agree. House Minority Whip State Rep. Jessica Miranda (D-Forest Park) says she can't and won't support the Senate version.“I'm not a fan of turning my back on the Ohio voters and the will of what they said when they overwhelmingly passed Issue 2,” Miranda said.When asked what happens if the two chambers don't reach a compromise, Callender said he will be in better standing — since the House can just block the Senate version.“I'm okay with just letting the initiated statute go into effect, which is a pretty strong bargaining position,” he said. “If we don't come up with an agreement, I'll trust the rule-making process, trust Commerce to make good rules to do this.”The Senate is expected to pass the marijuana bill out of committee Wednesday morning, putting it on the floor for a full vote later in the day. The House version is set to be heard Wednesday, as well.This article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published in the Ohio Capital Journal under a content-sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republication by other news outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.Follow WEWS statehouse reporter Morgan Trau on Twitter and Facebook.https://capitolnewsillinois.com/NEWS/dolly-parton-imagination-library-officially-launches-statewide-in-illinoisPritzker says goal is to send free books to all children, ages 0-5By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinoisphancock@capitolnewsillinois.comSPRINGFIELD – Illinois families with infants and toddlers now have access to free children's books that can be sent directly to their home, regardless of their income.Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday announced the official launch of the state's partnership with Dolly Parton's Imagination Library, a program founded by the country music legend in 1995 in her home county in east Tennessee. It now sends free books every month to nearly 3 million children in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and Ireland.“Today, I couldn't be prouder to announce that the Imagination Library is working with the state of Illinois to begin our journey to provide every child under the age of five an opportunity to receive a free book delivered to them every single month,” Pritzker said at an event at the Bloomington Public Library.Pritzker first announced in June that the state had formed a partnership with the Dollywood Foundation, Parton's philanthropic organization, after Illinois lawmakers included $1.6 million in this year's budget to fund the state's share of the program. Other funding comes from the Dollywood Foundation and local, county-based organizations.Since then, about 44 local programs have been operating in the state, serving roughly 4 percent of eligible children. But Dollywood Foundation executive director Nora Briggs said the goal is to reach all of the estimated 755,000 children under age 5 in Illinois.“We know that nothing is more basic, more essential, more foundational to a child's success in life than the ability to read,” Briggs said. “The research is clear. We cannot wait until kindergarten for children to have access or exposure to books. It must happen early. It must start in the home environment. And reading at home requires books.”People who are interested in enrolling their child in the program can find their local provider on the “check availability” tab located at imaginationlibrary.com. From there, applicants submit basic information including their address, their child's name and date of birth, and the parents' information.Once a child's eligibility is approved, they will start receiving one book each month, addressed to them. Each child within an age group receives the same monthly book. Books on the distribution list are chosen by a panel of early childhood literacy experts who review potential titles for inclusion in the distribution list. In addition to funding the Imagination Library program this year, lawmakers also approved Pritzker's “Smart Start Illinois” initiative that will provide $250 million this year for early childhood programs, including expanded access to preschool, wage support for child care workers, early intervention programs, and home visiting programs.“We're making our mark on every aspect of early childhood, and working with Dolly Parton's Imagination Library literacy efforts will begin now at the earliest ages,” Pritzker said. “Illinois is well on its way to solidifying our status as the number one state in the nation to raise young children.” Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.Stories in today's show originally appeared in the Missouri Independent, Capitol News Illinois, Alabama Reflector, Michigan Advance, Arizona Mirror, KMBC9 Kansas City, Ohio Capital Journal, and NPR News @TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post) Sean Diller (no social)The Heartland Collective - Sign Up Today!JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/

christmas united states god tv texas canada australia stories house state books news americans speaking zoom colorado ms michigan joe biden arizona elections government ohio north carolina ireland united kingdom tennessee pennsylvania alabama illinois wisconsin utah congress indiana kentucky world war ii defense iowa supreme court missouri cleveland alaska republicans threats democrats independent nevada senate montana roe v wade commerce cannabis abortion new mexico agency bush independence idaho democratic senators new hampshire cold war pentagon rhode island southwest gop slap dolly parton gov thc chapman rand ob gyn compensation associated press majority marsh hobbs dozens duane cox natural resources armed forces skeleton guam schmitt partons chuck schumer news roundup schumer hawley state house reproductive rights dan sullivan abortion rights manhattan project senate republicans us politics josh hawley dst senate committee pritzker glenn youngkin last thursday ohioans tommy tuberville national defense authorization act congressional budget office 2024 elections social equity issuing flyover jackson county ob gyns texas supreme court cannabis legalization jb pritzker trau tuberville ohio department trisomy defense secretary lloyd austin missourians louis county joni ernst missouri department dobbs decision texas attorney general ohio senate senate armed services committee imagination library travis county claire mccaskill virginia democrats charles county friday news kate cox thom tillis todd young american aquarium texas politics heather williams jack reed toxic substances arizona legislature lare dolly parton's imagination library cannabis control finance chair ohio politics missouri politics adam sommer coldwater creek muckrock missouri general assembly alabama politics radiation exposure compensation act capitol news illinois missouri independent edwards syndrome jess piper dlcc west lake landfill dawn chapman ohio capital journal ocj just moms stl
The Heartland POD
Friday News Flyover - December 8, 2023 - Government and Elections News Roundup

The Heartland POD

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 27:28


Friday News Flyover, December 8, 2023Intro: On this episode of The Heartland POD for Friday, December 8th, 2023A flyover from this weeks top heartland stories including:Texas abortion bans creating legal confusion | MO Pastor jailed facing sexual abuse charges | Sen Josh Hawley and Rep Cori Bush speak against defense bill without funds for St. Louis residents exposed to radiation | AL Senator Tommy Tuberville gives up his misguided military holds | Dolly Parton gives books to millions of kids, if you didn't knowWelcome to The Heartland POD for a Flyover Friday, this is Sean Diller in Denver, Colorado. With me as co-host today is Adam Sommer, how you doing Adam?We're glad to have you with us. If you're new to our shows make sure you subscribe and leave a 5 star rating wherever you listen. You can also find Heartland POD content on Youtube and on social media with @ THE heartland pod, and learn more at thehearltandcollective.com Alright! Let's get into the storieshttps://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/12/06/1217637325/texas-woman-asks-court-for-abortion-because-of-pregnancy-complicationsUpdated Thursday, Dec. 7 at 1:55 p.m."Kate Cox needs an abortion, and she needs it now." Thus began a petition filed in a Texas district court this week, asking a judge to allow the abortion to be performed in the state, where abortion is banned with very limited exceptions.On Thursday, Judge Maya Guerra Gamble of Travis County, Texas, ruled from the bench, granting permission for Cox to have the abortion she is seeking. Cox's fetus has a genetic condition with very low chances of survival and her own health and fertility are at risk if she carries the pregnancy to term.The petition was filed by the Center for Reproductive Rights, which is the group behind a high profile case heard at the Texas Supreme Court last week.In that case the group's senior staff attorney Molly Duane argued on behalf of 20 patients and two OB-GYNs that the medical exception to the ban on abortion in the state's laws is too narrow and vague, and that it endangered patients during complicated pregnancies. An attorney for the state argued the exception is already clear and that the plaintiffs didn't have standing to sue.On the very day of those arguments, Nov. 28, Kate Cox, a 31-year-old mother of two who lives in the Dallas area, got "devastating" news about her pregnancy, the filing says. At nearly 20-weeks gestation, she learned that her fetus has Trisomy 18 or Edwards Syndrome, a condition with extremely low chances of survival.So, as the Texas Supreme Court considered whether its abortion laws endangered patients with pregnancy complications in the past, Cox was trying to figure out what to do in her present situation.Cox had already been in the emergency room three times with cramping and other concerning symptoms, according to court documents. Her doctors told her she was at high risk of developing gestational hypertension and diabetes, and because she had had two prior cesarean sections, carrying the pregnancy to term could compromise her chances of having a third child in the future, the brief says.Last Thursday, she reached out for the Center for Reproductive Rights. Five days after that, the group filed this petition on her behalf.The filing asked a Travis County district court for a temporary restraining order against the state of Texas and the Texas Medical Board, blocking enforcement of Texas's abortion bans so that Cox can terminate her current pregnancy. It also would block enforcement of S.B. 8, which allows civil lawsuits to be filed against those who help patients receive abortions.That would protect the other plaintiffs in the case, Cox's husband, Justin, and Dr. Damla Karsan, who is prepared to provide the abortion if the court grants their request. Karsan is one of the OB-GYN plaintiffs in the Zurawski v. the State of Texas case.Thursday's ruling will allow Karsan to provide an abortion without threat of prosecution. It only applies to Cox, her husband and Karsan. Issuing the ruling, Judge Guerra Gamble said: "The idea that Ms. Cox wants so desperately to be a parent and this law may have her lose that ability is shocking and would be a genuine miscarriage of justice."There are currently three overlapping abortion bans in Texas. Abortion is illegal in the state from the moment pregnancy begins. Texas doctors can legally provide abortions only if a patient is "in danger of death or a serious risk of substantial impairment of a major bodily function, " the law says."I don't know what that means," Duane says of the language of the medical exception. "But I think [Cox's] situation must fall within whatever it is that that means."The Texas Attorney General's office did not respond to a request for comment on Cox's case, but the office argued in the Zurawski case that the medical exception needs no clarification.Sponsor MessageTexas Alliance for Life, a group that lobbied in the state legislature for the current abortion laws, published a statement about Cox's case Wednesday. "We believe that the exception language in Texas laws is clear," wrote the group's communication director Amy O'Donnell, and accused the Center for Reproductive Rights of pretending to seek clarity while really attempting to "chisel away" at Texas's abortion laws.The timeline of this case was very quick. "I have to be honest, I've never done this before, and that's because no one's ever done this before," Duane says. "But usually when you ask for a temporary restraining order, the court will act very, very quickly in acknowledgement of the emergency circumstances."The hearing was held via Zoom on Thursday morning.The State of Texas cannot appeal the decision directly, says Duane. "They would have to file what's called a writ of mandamus, saying that the district court acted so far out of its jurisdiction and that there needs to be a reversal," Duane explains. "But filing a petition like that is not does not automatically stay the injunction the way that an appeal of a temporary injunction does."In the meantime, the justices of the Texas Supreme Court are considering the Zurawski case, with a decision expected in the next few months. "I want them to take their time to write an opinion that gets this right and will protect patients, doctors and their families going forward," Duane says."But the reality is that in the meantime, people are going to continue to be harmed," and Cox couldn't afford to wait for that decision, Duane says.Duane praises Cox for her bravery in publicly sharing her story while in the midst of a personal medical crisis. "She's exceptional – but I will also say that the pathway to this has been paved by all the other women in our lawsuit," she says. "There is strength in numbers."https://www.kmbc.com/article/court-documents-independence-missouri-pastor-charged-child-molestation/46058889Court documents state that multiple people under the age of 18 accused Virgil Marsh of sexually assaulting them between 2011 and 2018.Marsh, 71, is now in the Jackson County jail.He was charged with two counts of first-degree of child molestation and first-degree statutory sodomy.A probable cause statement indicates that Marsh told police he was a current pastor in Independence and admitted he had "inappropriately touched" one of the victims.He did tell police he 'potentially kissed' a second victim on the mouth but denied sexually touching them.He also told police he has asked for forgiveness with God and is no longer the man who "had previously done things to the victim," the probable cause reads.https://missouriindependent.com/2023/12/07/compensation-for-st-louis-victims-of-nuclear-waste-stripped-from-federal-defense-bill/Compensation for St. Louis victims of nuclear waste stripped from federal defense billProvisions that would have compensated those exposed to radioactive waste left over from the Manhattan Project were removed on WednesdayBY: ALLISON KITE - DECEMBER 7, 2023 9:03 AM      A joint investigation by The Independent and MuckRock.U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley said Thursday he would do everything he could to stop a federal defense spending bill after a provision offering compensation to Americans exposed to decades-old radioactive waste was removed. Speaking on the floor of the Senate, the Missouri Republican called the decision to remove compensation for Americans who have suffered rare cancers and autoimmune diseases a “scar on the conscience of this body.”“This is an injustice,” Hawley said. “This is this body turning its back on these good, proud Americans.”This summer, the Senate amended the National Defense Authorization Act to expand the existing Radiation Exposure Compensation Act to include parts of the St. Louis region where individuals were exposed to leftover radioactive material from the development of the first atomic bomb. It would have also included parts of the Southwest where residents were exposed to bomb testing. But the provision was removed Wednesday by a conference committee of senators and members of the U.S. House of Representatives working out differences between the two chambers' versions of the bill.Even before the text of the amended bill became available Wednesday night, U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri was decrying the removal of the radiation compensation policy. “This is a major betrayal of thousands and thousands of Missourians who have been lied to and ignored for years,” Hawley said in a post on social media Wednesday. Dawn Chapman, a co-founder of Just Moms STL, fought back tears Wednesday night as she described hearing the “gut-wrenching” news from Hawley's staff. Chapman and fellow moms have been advocating for families exposed to or near radioactive waste for years. “I actually thought we had a chance,” Chapman said. But she said the group hopes to get the expansion passed another way. “Nobody has given up on it,” Chapman said.The St. Louis region has suffered from a radioactive waste problem for decades. The area was instrumental in the Manhattan Project, the name given to the effort to build an atomic bomb during World War II. Almost 80 years later, residents of St. Louis and St. Charles counties are still dealing with the fallout. After the war, radioactive waste produced from refining uranium was trucked from downtown St. Louis to several sites in St. Louis County where it contaminated property at the airport and seeped into Coldwater Creek. In the 1970s, remaining nuclear waste that couldn't be processed to extract valuable metals was trucked to the West Lake Landfill and illegally dumped. It remains there today.During the Cold War, uranium was processed in St. Charles County. A chemical plant and open ponds of radioactive waste remained at the site in Weldon Spring for years. The site was remediated in the early 2000s, but groundwater contamination at the site is not improving fast enough, according to the Missouri Department of Natural Resources.For years, St. Louis-area residents have pointed to the radioactive waste to explain rare cancers, autoimmune diseases and young deaths. A study by the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry found people who lived along Coldwater Creek or played in its waters faced an increased risk of cancer.Chapman said she knew two individuals who made calls to members of Congress while receiving chemotherapy. It's hard to ask people to keep fighting for the legislation, she said. “They're not going to see another Christmas, and they're not going to see the compensation from this,” Chapman said. “This won't help them.” An investigation by The Missouri Independent, MuckRock and The Associated Press this summer found that the private companies and federal agencies handling and overseeing the waste repeatedly downplayed the danger despite knowledge that it posed a risk to human health.After the report was published, Hawley decried the federal government's failures and vowed to introduce legislation to help. So did U.S. Rep. Cori Bush, D-St. Louis. In a statement Wednesday night, she said the federal government's failure to compensate those who have been harmed by radioactive waste is “straight up negligence.”“The people of St. Louis deserve better, and they deserve to be able to live without worry of radioactive contamination,” Bush said. Missouri's junior senator, Republican Eric Schmitt, grew up near the West Lake Landfill. He said in a statement that the “fight is far from over” and that he will look into other legislation to get victims compensation.“The careless dumping of this waste happened across Missouri, including in my own backyard of St. Louis, and has negatively impacted Missouri communities for decades,” Schmitt said. “I will not stop fighting until it is addressed.”Already, two state lawmakers have pre-filed legislation related to radioactive waste in advance of the Missouri General Assembly reconvening in January. One doubles the budget of a state radioactive waste investigation fund. The other requires further disclosure of radioactive contamination when one sells or rents a house.In July, the U.S. Senate voted 61-37  to adopt Hawley's amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act expanding the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act to include the St. Louis area. It would have also expanded the coverage area to compensate victims exposed to testing of the atomic bomb in New Mexico. The amendment included residents of New Mexico, Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Guam and expanded the coverage area in Nevada, Utah and Arizona, which are already partially covered.The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that expanding the program could cost $147.1 billion over 10 years with St. Louis' portion taking up $3.7 billion of that. The amendment would have also renewed the program for existing coverage areas. Without renewal, it will expire in the coming months. Hawley said, however, the “fight is not over.” “I will come to this floor as long as it takes. I will introduce this bill as long as it takes,” he said. “I will force amendment votes as long as it takes until we compensate the people of this nation who have sacrificed for this nation.” https://www.azmirror.com/2023/12/06/in-bid-to-flip-the-legislature-blue-national-dems-announce-spending-on-az/With Republicans holding the barest of majorities in the Arizona Legislature, national Democrats are already making major investments in a bid to flip the state's legislature blue. The Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee on Wednesday announced it would spend $70,000 in Arizona to aid in candidate recruitment for key races, hiring staff, digital investments and more. The spending is the start of the DLCC's push in swing states where the committee hopes to either solidify Democratic majorities or pick up seats and win legislative control. The money is part of an initial $300,000 push in swing states by the DLCC, with Arizona and Michigan getting the lion's share of the money. The DLCC is also spending money in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and North Carolina. In Arizona, Republicans have one-seat majorities in both the 60-member state House of Representatives and the 30-member state Senate. DLCC interim President Heather Williams told the Arizona Mirror that the committee is hoping to flip the House and Senate in part by highlighting the extreme positions of Republican lawmakers. Many proposed law changes inspired by those extreme positions earned vetoes from Gov. Katie Hobbs earlier this year. “The Republican majority in both chambers is vulnerable,” Williams said, adding that this is only the committee's “initial investment,” as the group anticipates spending much more in 2024. Williams did not elaborate on which Arizona races the group plans to target, but mentioned that the group aims to do something similar to what happened in Virginia this year. Last month, Virginia Democrats gained control of the House and solidified their control of the Senate. The DLCC hopes to mirror that in Arizona. In that election, all 140 seats in the Virginia legislature were up for grabs, and Democrat wins will block Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin's ability to fully enact his conservative agenda. The DLCC ended up spending more than $2 million in Virginia. “Here is what we know about Republicans, they are legislating in a way across the country that is not where their constituents are,” Williams said, citing access to abortion and health care for women as key. Republicans and Democrats are eyeing a number of key state house races for 2024 but Williams is confident that her party will come out on top, adding that the DLCC intends to have a dialogue with voters and to help people get registered to vote. “I think we feel really strong with our position as an organization,” Williams said, adding that having Hobbs, a former state lawmaker as a Democratic ally in the governorship will offer advantages. https://alabamareflector.com/2023/12/05/tuberville-relents-on-months-long-blockade-of-most-military-nominees-blaming-democrats/WASHINGTON — After blocking hundreds of U.S. military promotions for most of 2023 in protest of a Pentagon abortion policy, Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama said Tuesday he will lift his holds on all of them except for a handful of four-star general nominees.The senator, who sits on the Senate Committee on Armed Forces, said he told his fellow Senate Republicans “it's been a long fight” but ultimately he said Democrats were to blame for stalling hundreds of service members from moving up in the chain of command. Tuberville had said repeatedly that Democrats could bring each of the nominees to the floor for votes, which would take hours of debate.“We fought hard. We did the right thing for the unborn and for our military, fighting back against executive overreach, and an abortion policy that's not legal,” Tuberville said after announcing his about-face to his fellow Senate Republicans during their regularly scheduled weekly lunch.Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, said Tuesday that he would move the nominations to the floor “as soon as possible, possibly later this afternoon.”“I hope no one does this again, and I hope they learned the lesson of Sen. Tuberville. And that is he held out for many, many months, hurt our national security, caused discombobulation to so many military families who have been so dedicated to our country, and didn't get anything that he wanted,” Schumer said.Tuberville has blocked hundreds of nominees since the spring because he opposes a recent Pentagon policy that allows armed services members time off and travel reimbursement should they need to seek an abortion in a state where it remains legal.Roughly 80,000 active-duty female service members are stationed in states where legislatures enacted full or partial bans following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, according to a RAND analysis.The Biden administration and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin maintain the policy is legal, as did a 2022 Department of Justice opinion.The list of nominees affected by Tuberville's months-long hold grew to 451 members of the military as of Nov. 27, according to a Department of Defense official. Majority staff for the Senate Armed Services Committee list 445 affected nominees.Tuberville's agreement to halt his protest means that all but 11 of those nominees are expected to clear final Senate approval, according to figures from committee's majority staff.Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Tuesday that GOP senators are “pleased obviously that that situation seems to have been ameliorated by recent announcements by the senator from Alabama.”Sen. Jack Reed, chair of the Senate Armed Forces Committee, said in a statement Tuesday he's “glad that hundreds of our nation's finest military leaders will finally receive their hard-won, merit-based promotions.”“They, and their families, have shown us what grace and grit look like in the face of hardship. Senator Tuberville's actions have been an affront to the United States military and the Senate,” said Reed, a Democrat from Rhode Island.“He has jeopardized our national security and abused the rights afforded to all Senators. No Senator should ever attempt to advance their own partisan agenda on the backs of our troops like this again.”Threat of Democratic-led procedure changeTuberville's change in course arrived as Schumer was poised to bring to the floor a Democratic-led rules resolution to bypass the Alabama senator's blockade.The proposed temporary change in floor process would have allowed senators to quickly approve large blocs of nominations simultaneously on the floor, saving hours and hours that would have been required to vote on each individually.Tuberville said Tuesday that he and fellow Republican senators decided they did not want to see any changes to Senate floor procedures and that is the reason he decided to lift his blockade.“All of us are against a rule change in the Senate, OK. We're all against it,” Tuberville said.The Alabama senator's own Republican colleagues have grown publicly frustrated with his stalling of military promotions.GOP senators, including Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Joni Ernst of Iowa and Todd Young of Indiana, have on two occasions held the Senate floor into the wee hours bringing forward the names of nominees, only to meet Tuberville's objections.Some frustrated Republicans last week mulled whether to support the Democratic-led effort to override Tuberville's blockade. Democrats would have needed nine of them to pass the change in procedure.“I have said that right now I support Tommy Tuberville, but if he makes a statement that he's going to maintain this posture through this Congress I intend to vote for nominations under the rules suspension,” Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina told States Newsroom Nov. 29.https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2023/12/06/ohio-senate-wants-to-stop-you-from-growing-weed-house-fights-back/Ohio Senate wants to stop you from growing weed; House fights backBY: MORGAN TRAU - DECEMBER 6, 2023 4:55 AMWhile Ohio Senate Republicans move to dramatically change recreational marijuana policy, the House is fighting back in a bipartisan fashion — saying the will of the voters must be followed.On Thursday, adults 21 and older in Ohio will be able to smoke weed and grow up to six plants.When Issue 2 passed in November, state Rep. Jamie Callender (R-Concord) knew he could be part of clarifying public policy. He invited WEWS/OCJ's Morgan Trau to his introduction of H.B. 354 in a “skeleton” session Tuesday morning. Skeleton sessions are when typically two lawmakers gather with the House clerk and take less than five minutes to introduce policy.“We preserve the things that the people voted on,” he told Trau after he banged the gavel and Finance Chair state Rep. Jay Edwards (R-Nelsonville) watched.Callender, who has been an outspoken supporter of marijuana, has been working on recreational implementation for years. Issue 2 came after all of his efforts were purposely stalled in the Statehouse.“The Marijuana Legalization Initiative” allows Ohioans to grow up to six plants, with 12 per household. In addition, the proposal would impose a 10% tax at the point of sale for each transaction. It also establishes the Division of Cannabis Control within the Ohio Department of Commerce.Ohioans voted in favor of the statute 57-43%.“I'm glad it passed and I'm excited that we're going to be able to take some of these measures that make it a more responsible act,” Callender said. “I want to make sure that here in this chamber, the People's House, that we carry out the will of the people — and the people have spoken.”His bill doesn't make major changes, but it does add safeguards — like guidelines on advertising, public smoking bans and provisions that give local governments more of a say in where tax revenue goes. It also explains that home grow must take place at residential addresses.“We've seen folks aggregate those six plants and, in essence, create a mega farm which is simply an aggregation or a co-op of a whole lot of home grows,” he said, saying that he is trying to prevent that.The bill, one that Callendar says has bipartisan support in the House, deeply contrasts the Senate's version.The proposal by state Sen. Rob McColley (R-Napoleon) also includes guard rails to prevent exposure to children, including advertising guidelines. It would require marijuana to be packaged in a child-resistant container and prevents “cartoon character” or other pop culture figures whose target audience is a child from being used in weed marketing.However, those safety guidelines are the end of the common ground.The Senate proposal would reduce how much weed you could possess from 2.5 ounces to 1 ounce and 15 grams of marijuana concentrates to 5 grams; It would make weed less strong by limiting THC levels for plants to 25%, when the minimum was 35%. In addition, it would limit extracts to 50%, when the minimum was 90%; and it would make marijuana more expensive by raising the tax from 10% to 15%.It also changes where the taxes go.As mentioned, it was a 10% tax at the point of sale. It was 36% revenue to the cannabis social equity and jobs fund; 36% to the host community cannabis fund to provide funds to jurisdictions with adult-use dispensaries; 25% to the substance abuse and addiction fund; and 3% to the division of cannabis control and tax commissioner fund. Issue 2 capped the number of dispensaries permitted at once to 350, but the bill cuts that down to 230.The Senate version ups to 15% tax at the point of sale. It is 30% to the law enforcement training fund, 15% to the marijuana substance abuse treatment and prevention fund, 10% to the safe driver training fund, and the remaining 45% goes to the grand revenue fund — aka, the state lawmakers.“The social equity program — when you really got down to the nuts and bolts of it — it was tax revenue being collected to be put right back into the hands of the industry,” McColley said. “It was a tax grab by the industry to prop up more dispensaries within the industry.”The “Social Equity and Jobs Program” was established by Issue 2. It is designed to fix “the harms resulting from the disproportionate enforcement of marijuana-related laws” and “reduce barriers to ownership and opportunity” to those “most directly and adversely impacted by the enforcement of marijuana-related laws,” according to the initiative.The most significant change is the proposal eliminates home grow.“The opposition has been all around the black market,” McColley said. “It's been around, ‘how do we keep these plants from then being transferred and sold illegally?'”After facing backlash, McColley assured he wasn't going against the will of the people, since he believes that the voters didn't really know everything that they were voting on.“I think what the voters really voted for would have been access to products,” the senator added.Clearly, the voters want home grow, Callender argued. Access to products means access to home grow, he said.It isn't just Callender who is frustrated with the legislation moving through the other chamber. Dozens of Republican and Democratic representatives are infuriated with the Senate.One with a unique perspective is state Rep. Jeff LaRe (R-Violet Twp.) The Senate took his legislation, H.B. 86, that revised the limit on the gallons of spirituous liquor that a micro-distillery may manufacture each year and added their marijuana proposal onto his bill.“Slap in the face of Ohio voters,” LaRe told WEWS/OCJ.The lawmaker doesn't support recreational marijuana, but he does respect the will of Ohioans, he added.“It's unfortunate they want to use a bill that is focused on helping certain small businesses recover from the pandemic to fast-track language that changes the intent of the ballot initiative,” he said. “I believe we should look into where the tax dollars are spent, but this goes way beyond those details.”Democrats agree. House Minority Whip State Rep. Jessica Miranda (D-Forest Park) says she can't and won't support the Senate version.“I'm not a fan of turning my back on the Ohio voters and the will of what they said when they overwhelmingly passed Issue 2,” Miranda said.When asked what happens if the two chambers don't reach a compromise, Callender said he will be in better standing — since the House can just block the Senate version.“I'm okay with just letting the initiated statute go into effect, which is a pretty strong bargaining position,” he said. “If we don't come up with an agreement, I'll trust the rule-making process, trust Commerce to make good rules to do this.”The Senate is expected to pass the marijuana bill out of committee Wednesday morning, putting it on the floor for a full vote later in the day. The House version is set to be heard Wednesday, as well.This article was originally published on News5Cleveland.com and is published in the Ohio Capital Journal under a content-sharing agreement. Unlike other OCJ articles, it is not available for free republication by other news outlets as it is owned by WEWS in Cleveland.Follow WEWS statehouse reporter Morgan Trau on Twitter and Facebook.https://capitolnewsillinois.com/NEWS/dolly-parton-imagination-library-officially-launches-statewide-in-illinoisPritzker says goal is to send free books to all children, ages 0-5By PETER HANCOCKCapitol News Illinoisphancock@capitolnewsillinois.comSPRINGFIELD – Illinois families with infants and toddlers now have access to free children's books that can be sent directly to their home, regardless of their income.Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday announced the official launch of the state's partnership with Dolly Parton's Imagination Library, a program founded by the country music legend in 1995 in her home county in east Tennessee. It now sends free books every month to nearly 3 million children in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia and Ireland.“Today, I couldn't be prouder to announce that the Imagination Library is working with the state of Illinois to begin our journey to provide every child under the age of five an opportunity to receive a free book delivered to them every single month,” Pritzker said at an event at the Bloomington Public Library.Pritzker first announced in June that the state had formed a partnership with the Dollywood Foundation, Parton's philanthropic organization, after Illinois lawmakers included $1.6 million in this year's budget to fund the state's share of the program. Other funding comes from the Dollywood Foundation and local, county-based organizations.Since then, about 44 local programs have been operating in the state, serving roughly 4 percent of eligible children. But Dollywood Foundation executive director Nora Briggs said the goal is to reach all of the estimated 755,000 children under age 5 in Illinois.“We know that nothing is more basic, more essential, more foundational to a child's success in life than the ability to read,” Briggs said. “The research is clear. We cannot wait until kindergarten for children to have access or exposure to books. It must happen early. It must start in the home environment. And reading at home requires books.”People who are interested in enrolling their child in the program can find their local provider on the “check availability” tab located at imaginationlibrary.com. From there, applicants submit basic information including their address, their child's name and date of birth, and the parents' information.Once a child's eligibility is approved, they will start receiving one book each month, addressed to them. Each child within an age group receives the same monthly book. Books on the distribution list are chosen by a panel of early childhood literacy experts who review potential titles for inclusion in the distribution list. In addition to funding the Imagination Library program this year, lawmakers also approved Pritzker's “Smart Start Illinois” initiative that will provide $250 million this year for early childhood programs, including expanded access to preschool, wage support for child care workers, early intervention programs, and home visiting programs.“We're making our mark on every aspect of early childhood, and working with Dolly Parton's Imagination Library literacy efforts will begin now at the earliest ages,” Pritzker said. “Illinois is well on its way to solidifying our status as the number one state in the nation to raise young children.” Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It is distributed to hundreds of newspapers, radio and TV stations statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major contributions from the Illinois Broadcasters Foundation and Southern Illinois Editorial Association.Stories in today's show originally appeared in the Missouri Independent, Capitol News Illinois, Alabama Reflector, Michigan Advance, Arizona Mirror, KMBC9 Kansas City, Ohio Capital Journal, and NPR News @TheHeartlandPOD on Twitter and ThreadsCo-HostsAdam Sommer @Adam_Sommer85 (Twitter) @adam_sommer85 (Post)Rachel Parker @msraitchetp (Post) Sean Diller (no social)The Heartland Collective - Sign Up Today!JOIN PATREON FOR MORE - AND JOIN OUR SOCIAL NETWORK!“Change The Conversation”Outro Song: “The World Is On Fire” by American Aquarium http://www.americanaquarium.com/

christmas united states god tv texas canada australia stories house state books news americans speaking zoom colorado ms michigan joe biden arizona elections government ohio north carolina ireland united kingdom tennessee pennsylvania alabama illinois wisconsin utah congress indiana kentucky world war ii defense iowa supreme court missouri cleveland alaska republicans threats democrats independent nevada senate montana roe v wade commerce cannabis abortion new mexico agency bush independence idaho democratic senators new hampshire cold war pentagon rhode island southwest gop slap dolly parton gov thc chapman rand ob gyn compensation associated press majority marsh hobbs dozens duane cox natural resources armed forces skeleton guam schmitt partons chuck schumer news roundup schumer hawley state house reproductive rights dan sullivan abortion rights manhattan project senate republicans us politics josh hawley dst senate committee pritzker glenn youngkin last thursday ohioans tommy tuberville national defense authorization act congressional budget office 2024 elections social equity issuing flyover jackson county ob gyns texas supreme court cannabis legalization jb pritzker trau tuberville ohio department trisomy defense secretary lloyd austin missourians louis county joni ernst missouri department dobbs decision texas attorney general ohio senate senate armed services committee imagination library travis county claire mccaskill virginia democrats charles county friday news kate cox thom tillis todd young american aquarium texas politics heather williams jack reed toxic substances arizona legislature lare dolly parton's imagination library cannabis control finance chair ohio politics missouri politics adam sommer coldwater creek muckrock missouri general assembly alabama politics radiation exposure compensation act capitol news illinois missouri independent edwards syndrome jess piper dlcc west lake landfill dawn chapman ohio capital journal ocj just moms stl
Ime tedna
Anton Grobelnik, Inovativni mladi kmet 2023

Ime tedna

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 9:44


Ime tedna je Anton Grobelnik, mlad prevzemnik kmetije Podbornik, ki leži v naselju Galicija v občini Žalec. Obdelujejo 34 hektarjev kmetijskih zemljišč, ukvarjajo se z živinorejo in predelavo mesa v suhomesne izdelke, v zelo kratkem času pa se mu je uspelo prebiti na trg z vrhunskimi izdelki, ki jih ponuja v lastni trgovini na kmetiji. Prejel je naziv Inovativni mladi kmet 2023.Kandidatki sta bili še: Diana Kolenc, igralka, ki je za vlogo Lare v filmu Opazovanje na 26. Festivalu slovenskega filma v Portorožu prejela vesno za najboljšo glavno žensko vlogo. V filmu se z izjemno interpretacijo v vlogi mlade reševalke trudi odkriti, zakaj dobiva skrivnostne posnetke brutalnega zločina, ki ga je videla v živo prek Facebooka, medtem pa ji postaja jasno, da je pri njem sodelovala tudi sama. Saška Rakef, režiserka radijskega dokumentarca o ddr. Evgenu Bavčarju "Potovanje na robu noči" in koordinatorica mednarodnega projekta B-Air, ki raziskuje vlogo zvoka v razvoju človeka. Dokumentarec je bil predstavljen tudi na drugem Avdiofestivalu Radia Slovenija, ki je v ljubljanski Cukrarni izpostavil najboljše prakse in produkcijo s področja radia, avdia in podkastov v Sloveniji.

The Landscape Nerd
Landscape x Pass the LARE

The Landscape Nerd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2023 32:34


Oh the ominous LARE. The Landscape Architecture Registration Exam is something that everyone in the profession knows about. Yet, despite its popularity, the exam remains a mystery in many ways. Today we are going to talk to Claire Kern, founder of Pass the LARE, a new study resource. We are discussing the challenges of the exam and new ways to approach studying to make the exam more accessible. passthelare.com thelandscapenerd.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelandscapenerd/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thelandscapenerd/support

Word of the Day
Emolument

Word of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2023 0:42


Emolument is a noun that refers to a salary or fee from employment.  Our word of the day comes from a Latin word that referred to payment given to a miller for grinding corn. That explains why the origin of emolument is the Latin word molere (mo LARE ay) which means ‘to grind.' Here's an example of emolument in use: After three weeks of putting together a terrific presentation, I was hoping my emoluments would be pretty impressive. But sadly the pay was pretty meager. 

Word of the Day

Chafe is a verb that means to make someone annoyed or impatient. The Latin word calere (kuh LARE ay) means 'to make hot.' Initially, our word of the day's meaning was ‘to rub.' But in time, it came to define the act of annoying someone. I have to admit that the sound of our next door neighbor's drum set tends to chafe me. After a few hours of rehearsal, I'm really impatient for all that racket to stop.

Kultur
Anmälare (230212)

Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 0:22


Text: https://framtidsland.wordpress.com/a230212/ Inläst av "Astrid" på ttsmp3.com

Microfonul AGORA
Penis și vulvă sau cucușor și floricică? Educația sexuală din Moldova, între frica de destrăbălare și soluții corecte pentru o societate sănătoasă

Microfonul AGORA

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 16:53


Năsuc, guriță, mânuță, picioruș. Încă de la cea mai fragedă vârstă, copiii capătă o perspectivă asupra propriului corp pe baza informațiilor primite de la părinți. Și dacă toate organele din corpul uman sunt numite pe nume, atunci când vine vorba de organele genitale, cei mai mulți părinți simt o reținere și preferă să le înlocuiască cu diminutive mai acceptabile, din punctul lor de vedere. Astfel, până aproape de adolescență, copiii știu că penisul e cucușor, iar vulva - floricică. De asemenea, informațiile despre cum se concepe o nouă viață, dar și despre ce înseamnă, de fapt, relațiile sexuale reprezintă teme tabu în majoritatea familiilor și chiar în sălile de clasă. În consecință, tinerii ajung să afle pe cont propriu o nouă realitate și folosesc aceste informații în funcție de stabilitatea emoțională pe care o au. O soluție în acest sens o reprezintă educația sexuală. Conceptul este unul încă destul de nou în țara noastră.

Birth Stories in Color
151 | The Other Side - Lare Ngofa

Birth Stories in Color

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2022 43:26


In collaboration with Pacify Health, this month's episodes will focus on the doulas. You'll hear conversations with four Pacify Doulas, getting a chance to reflect on “ The Other Side” of birth. Today we meet Lare Ngofa.Free-Spirited, science-loving Lare is a birth and postpartum doula who entered the birth worker world when she caught her baby cousin at age 16. She deepened her knowledge of holistic pregnancy care through education and family conversations, but she waited to move forward in the work as she wanted to explore other avenues. While working through her career choices, her mother was diagnosed with cancer. Lare shifted gears to care for her and her autistic brothers. Unfortunately, treatment would not heal Lare's mother as she passed away after a brief hospice stay. Lare refocused her intentions on what family and work would look like; as she managed the waves of grief.  Lare finally trained as a doula with the support of her cousin and has developed a practice that features intuitive and holistic care in the Los Angeles area. Supporting families in-person and virtually allows Lare and other birth workers to be accessible to families who want their services. Doulas spend a lot of time educating families on their options and encouraging them to give birth without fear. Lare found that her clients teach her new techniques and advice as well. One client taught her the value of a focal point in the birthing space and reminded her that she told her, ”Surrender or be dragged; surrender to this process or be dragged through it.” The connection between doulas, birth givers, and new parents can vary based on personalities and individual needs. This unique relationship helps build trust and confidence for birth and the subsequent parenting journey. Doulas can only take credit for the role required of them and how they show up in sacred spaces. A chance encounter with a client coping with a mother fighting cancer would transform Lare's practice. She stepped into asking the hard questions that pulled back the curtains of grief as her client lost her mother during the third trimester of her pregnancy. The weight of being a motherless mother was bearing down on them. With no expectation of how to feel or be Lare held space for her client to ground herself into simply being present. These types of relationships are built one conversation at a time. Choosing to connect and open up about our experiences and concerns about pregnancy and birth is developed by taking the first step of reaching out to a known resource. Every call will not be a deep and emotional conversation, but every call is a human connection. Working with Pacify has added value to Lare's doula practice; she is now accessible to people who may not be within her reach financially or geographically. Sponsors:Pacify Health | virtual, value-based maternal and pediatric carePacify Health is the leading provider of virtual, value-based maternal and pediatric care. The Pacify tech-enabled platform provides 24/7 perinatal and infant feeding support to new and expecting parents via their smartphones. The Pacify app connects families to a nationwide network of doulas, lactation consultants, and registered nurses within minutes, reducing costs and improving outcomes for managed care organizations, public health programs, health systems and employers.

Schreib Chaos! - Einfach entspannt und systematisch schreiben mit Konzept
Deutschlands jüngste Franchise-Geberin ist im BH-Geschäft | Mit BH Träume-Gründerin Lara Pöstges

Schreib Chaos! - Einfach entspannt und systematisch schreiben mit Konzept

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2022 38:04


Hast du dich auch schon mal gefragt, was es braucht, um ein Franchise-Business aufzubauen? Und wusstest du, dass genau das auch zu 100 Prozent weiblich geht? Meine heutige Podcast-Gästin macht ihr Ding, steht ihre Frau und macht ein Business von Fraufen Für Frauen Für Frauen. ^_^ Lara Pöstges ist die jüngste Frachise Geberin Deutschlands. Davor ist sie mit einer Kellergründung mit nur 21 Jahre gestartet und hat mit 26 Jahren ihr Franchise Business BH-Träume aufgebaut. Diese wiederum hat gerade mal 3 Monate gedauert. ö.ö Ihr Ziel ist es einfach mal so Hunkemöller Konkurrenz zu machen. Sie ist eine echte Visionärin, eine Macherin und eine Frau die anderen Frauen durch ihr Business eine Bühne und einen Raum für eine eigene wunderbare Entwicklung gibt. Ich freu mich jedenfalls riesig, dass ich Lare hier bei mir im Podcast haben darf. ^^ Mehr über Lara und ihr Unternehmen BH Träume erfährst du natürlich in unserem Gespräch und in den Shownotes dieser Podcast-Folge: https://www.plattilorenz.com/deutschlands-juengste-franchise-geberin-ist-im-bh-geschaeft-mit-bh-traeume-gruenderin-lara-poestges In diesem Sinne: Play hard. Work playful. F**k compromise. Deine Platti _____ Mehr über Lara Pöstgest: Laras Website "BH Träume": https://bhtraeume.com/ ______ Du wünschst dir mehr Zeit für die wichtigen Dinge? Dann klick hier und erfahre mehr über mein Mentoring "Abundance of Time": https://www.plattilorenz.com --------- Musik: "Rocker (ac/dc Style)" by Jason Shaw ( https://audionautix.com/ ) Folge direkt herunterladen

Jensamma Tankar
#64 Tavelmålare

Jensamma Tankar

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 32:51


I veckans avsnitt babblar jag bla om konst och konstnärer och att drottningen har varit med och planerat sin egen begravning som får kosta hur mycket som helst eftersom det är drottningens begravning, något som man själv hade missbrukat. Tack för att ni stöttar podden på https://www.patreon.com/jensammatankar

Arise & Shine - Stories of Triumph
Arise & Shine: Stories of Triumph Talks Resilience with Shawn LaRe' Brinkley

Arise & Shine - Stories of Triumph

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 73:48


crypto.ro
Statele Unite sancționează Tornado Cash - platformă acuzată de spălare de bani

crypto.ro

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2022 4:06


Locked On Browns - Daily Podcast On The Cleveland Browns
The three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Two major possible lare season potholes, and playing football is great, the work that goes into it? Not so much

Locked On Browns - Daily Podcast On The Cleveland Browns

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022 35:57


Your hosts Jeff Lloyd and Garrett Bush each choose their three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Some in division, some in conference. The schedule has some late season potential pothole games they most avoid if this team is to reach the playoffs for the second time in three years. Fpptball is an incredible sport to play but some of the work that goes into it will certainly have you tested as a human being. #Browns #DeshaunWatson #NickChubb #KareemHunt #MylesGarrett #JadeveonClowney #JOKBuilt BarBuilt Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order.BetOnlineBetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts!Rock AutoAmazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you.Blue NileMake your moment sparkle with jewelry from Bluenile.com, and LOCKED ON SPORTS listeners get $50 off purchases of $500 or more using code LOCKEDON. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Locked On Browns - Daily Podcast On The Cleveland Browns
The three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Two major possible lare season potholes, and playing football is great, the work that goes into it? Not so much

Locked On Browns - Daily Podcast On The Cleveland Browns

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022 39:42


Your hosts Jeff Lloyd and Garrett Bush each choose their three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Some in division, some in conference. The schedule has some late season potential pothole games they most avoid if this team is to reach the playoffs for the second time in three years. Fpptball is an incredible sport to play but some of the work that goes into it will certainly have you tested as a human being. #Browns #DeshaunWatson #NickChubb #KareemHunt #MylesGarrett #JadeveonClowney #JOK Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Blue Nile Make your moment sparkle with jewelry from Bluenile.com, and LOCKED ON SPORTS listeners get $50 off purchases of $500 or more using code LOCKEDON. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Browns Plainly Podcast
The three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Two major possible lare season potholes, and playing football is great, the work that goes into it? Not so much

Browns Plainly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2022


Your hosts Jeff Lloyd and Garrett Bush each choose their three biggest games on the Browns '22 schedule, Some in division, some in conference. The schedule has some late season potential pothole games they most avoid if this team is to reach the playoffs for the second time in three years. Fpptball is an incredible sport to play but some of the work that goes into it will certainly have you tested as a human being. #Browns #DeshaunWatson #NickChubb #KareemHunt #MylesGarrett #JadeveonClowney #JOK Built Bar Built Bar is a protein bar that tastes like a candy bar. Go to builtbar.com and use promo code “LOCKED15,” and you'll get 15% off your next order. BetOnline BetOnline.net has you covered this season with more props, odds and lines than ever before. BetOnline – Where The Game Starts! Rock Auto Amazing selection. Reliably low prices. All the parts your car will ever need. Visit RockAuto.com and tell them Locked On sent you. Blue Nile Make your moment sparkle with jewelry from Bluenile.com, and LOCKED ON SPORTS listeners get $50 off purchases of $500 or more using code LOCKEDON. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

All Elite Podcast
Interview with Larry Legend- Under the Ropes- Episode #178

All Elite Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 93:23


This show will feature host Tiffany interview independent wrestlers/Promoters/Refs from all Welcome to Under The Ropes on the Indie Wrestling Corner. This show will feature host Tiffany as she interviews independent wrestlers/Promoters/Refs from all over! Today special guest is Larry Legend Twitter -https://twitter.com/blklkp Facebook-https://www.facebook.com/LarE.legend Instagram- @ReallarryLegend Merch -DM for merch «««« Official Theme Song by This Wolf (Enough is Enough) »»»» YouTube: [http://bit.ly/Thiswolf](http://bit.ly/Thiswolf) # Wrestling #WrestlingCommunity #Sports #IndieWrestling #IndieWrestling #WrestlingOpen #Larrylegend #ICW #ETU

Brandon Boxer
House Representatives Jeff LaRe and DJ Swearingen- The passing of HBJR2

Brandon Boxer

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2022 7:42


Public safety must be considered for bail is allowed

Word of the Day
Countervail

Word of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2022 1:25


Countervail is a verb that means to offset the effect of something. The Latin phrase contra Valere (CONE tra vah LARE ay) means ‘be of worth against.' When we countervail something, we create an equal weight. Here's an example: My attempt to countervail all the awful music my students listened to by playing opera in the classroom was not met with open arms. They simply didn't want their awful music to be offset by my awful music.

Vi Bilägares Podcast
Rost på Volvo och crossovern Qashqai snålare än småbilen Sandero

Vi Bilägares Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2022 64:18


Avsnitt 278: Det bjuds på kexiga bakdelar, felvända takboxar och så slår vi hål på myt om elbil, förbrukning och hastighet i Vi Bilägares podcast.

Botrstvo
Kako so deklice srečne že, če v šoli dobijo tri mandarine

Botrstvo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 11:38


"Nikoli mi niso pripovedovale o tem, kaj jedo v šoli ali v vrtcu, prej smo pač šli v trgovino in kupili tisto, kar smo radi jedli. Zdaj mi navdušeno povejo, da so jedle čokoladni namaz! Da so dobile pecivo! Da sošolcev ni bilo v šoli in so lahko dobile tri mandarine!" pove mama 10-letne Ane, 6-letne Nike in 4-letne Lare. Po njeni hudi bolezni in izgubi poslovne dejavnosti, ki so jo uničili ukrepi ob epidemiji, je vsak njihov strošek preračunan do centa, hrana res najosnovnejša, največji strah pa, da deklici ne bi mogli več plesati v plesni šoli. Pa čeprav s ponošenimi in premajhnimi copati.

Hantverkardagboken
Amanda Nilsson - Dekorationsmålare

Hantverkardagboken

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2022 86:51


Tänk dig att stå och måla dina föräldrars hus och helt plötsligt bestämma dig för att det är det du ska studera, redan på gymnasiet. Amanda Nilsson är en passionerad hantverkare som suger åt sig kunskap för att utvecklas inom sitt yrke och bli bland de bästa dekorationsmålarna i landet. Vi pratar om hennes resa från gymnasiet, gesällprovet, lärlingstiden ända till yrkeslivet. Vi pratar även om hur hon upplever att vara kvinna och jobba inom ett mansdominerat yrke. Amandas vardag börjar tidigt, hon tar sig till arbetsplatsen och utför sitt jobb samtidigt som hon parallellt studerar stilhistoria för att kunna identifiera olika miljöer och kunna hantera dem därefter med stor respekt. Amanda Nillson Instagram @dekorativaamanda @larsson_ornmark_maleri Gymnasiet hemsida Wendesgymnasiet Instagram @wendesgymnasiet Hantverksakademin hemsida www.hantverksakademin.se Instagram @hantverksakademin #Hantverkardagboken Instagram @hantverkardagboken Hantverkardagboken är sponsrad av: Sjöbergs Tormek sharpening innovations

Lahko noč, otroci!
Kako se napiše pravljico

Lahko noč, otroci!

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2022 6:26


Nocoj bomo slišali prvo izmed 20 novih pravljic, izbranih med 945 pravljicami, ki so prispele na naš radijski natečaj za izvirno slovensko pravljico. Njen naslov je Kako se napiše pravljico, odgovor pa pozna avtorica Tatjana Gomboc Jerman. Lahko pa vam prišepnemo, da pomaga tudi kakavček. V zgodbo nas bosta s svojima glasovoma popeljali igralka Tjaša Železnik v vlogi mame pripovedovalke in Marli Piletič Železnik v vlogi deklice Lare. Igrata/nastopata: Tjaša Železnik (mama pripovedovalka), Marli Piletič Železnik ( Lara). Avtorica besedila: Tatjana Gomboc Jerman. Režiser: Alen Jelen. Tonski mojster: Miha Jaramaz. Glasbena oblikovalka: Darja Hlavka Godina. Fonetičarka: Mateja Juričan. Pravljica z natečaja za oddajo Lahko noč, otroci! 2021. Objava v okviru projekta B-AIR Radia Slovenija. Posneto v studiih Radia Slovenija, studio 02, januar 2022.

AFGHAN NEWSWIRE - THE VOICE OF THE FREE AFGHANISTAN
DA NIME LARE YARA – VERY SAD PASHTO NEW SONG 2022

AFGHAN NEWSWIRE - THE VOICE OF THE FREE AFGHANISTAN

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2021 0:34


This episode is also available as a blog post: http://afghannewswire.com/2021/12/27/da-nime-lare-yara-very-sad-pashto-new-song-2022/

Word of the Day
Indolent

Word of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 0:47


Indolent is an adjective that means lazy. The Latin word dorere (doe LARE ay) means ‘to suffer or cause pain.' This word added the prefix I-N to mean ‘not causing pain' and became indolent in the mid 17th century. Initially it was used in a medical context to refer to a disease or condition that didn't cause pain. But it soon came to also describe someone who wanted to avoid work or exertion. Here's an example of indolent in use: Marvin could be indolent at times, but at other times he could conquer his laziness and do whatever work needed to be done.

Axess Podd
Förklara din forskning 2021 - 1880-talets kvinnliga målare med Carina Rech

Axess Podd

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 32:42


Kvinnliga nordiska målare använde ateljén som en plats för professionell självförverkligande och konstnärlig iscensättning. Det har Carina Rech, fil dr i konsthistoria och intendent på Prins Eugens Waldemarsudde, utforskat i sin avhandling. Vilken betydelse hade konstnärliga nätverk, vänskap och samarbeten för de kvinnliga målarnas erövrande av konstnärsrollen? Och vad kan man utläsa ur deras självporträtt? Programledare är Catta Neuding och Katarina O'Nils Franke.

USAVFHF
OLUORUN DA WA LARE

USAVFHF

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2021 34:17


OLUORUN DA WA LARE --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ayodele-ayetigbo/support

Word of the Day
Adulatory

Word of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2021 0:42


Adulatory is an adjective that means excessive praising or admiring. The Latin word adulari (ad you LARE ay) means ‘fawning' or ‘flattering.' To adulate is to praise someone excessively. Our word of the day is the adjective variation. An example of its use is: I understand the need to make our supervisor feel comfortable, but Tanya's adulatory tone simply embarrassed me. She made it seem as though her boss was incapable of doing any wrong.

Buddies Podcast
Buddies EP107 || We welcome in the Lare Bear

Buddies Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2021 86:07


In this episode of Buddies Podcast, the Lare Bear joins and gives us his expectation of the Lions this season. We also go over the NBA playoffs and MLB. Enjoy!

USAVFHF
OLUORUN DAWA LARE

USAVFHF

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 32:04


OLUORUN DAWA LARE --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ayodele-ayetigbo/support

Word of the Day
Equipollent

Word of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2021 0:46


Equipollent is an adjective that means equal in power and effect. The Latin word pollere (poe LARE ay) means ‘to be strong.’ Our word of the day combines that with the prefix E-Q-U-I, which means ‘equally.’ When things or people are equipollent, they are equal in power. For example: The nations engaged in trade were not exactly equipollent. One was a third world country in desperate need of food. And the other was a wealthy empire.

AutoCommunity™️
Episode 5 - What the F...lare Up?

AutoCommunity™️

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 17:42


Join Cooper and Alex this week as they dive into what a flare up is, how they've learned to attack them head on, and tips and tricks they've picked up along the way. Deep breath #namastay. #AutoCommunity --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/alexandra-cain/support

Simona Dancila
ce la vie= ce lavi, ce lavaj, ce curățare, ce spălare pe creier, laviu= CULOARE PALĂ, culoarea pielii, a da dosul/tur dos, roz-bleu, urgența delicată

Simona Dancila

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2021 29:52


a lua toată recolta informației pentru că o poți folosi cel mai bine. Nu știi pe care s-o alegi? (ma bici a denge) Păi eu usca ca ram, eu le usuc pe toate. Două personalități contradictorii= îmbin dei cul sudur

Tales from the Curtain Twitcher
Chapter 218 - 'Sanctimonious Sanctity'

Tales from the Curtain Twitcher

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2021 4:47


In which Mathew Shrove consults Benedict Morgan about Priscilla van de Lare’s border gaffe and Mandy plans her future with both Potty’s father, Somerset, and Fleur Aspall.

Real Estate Investing For Professional Men & Women
Episode 65: A Walkthrough to an Incredible Financial Tool, with Shannon Goldsmith

Real Estate Investing For Professional Men & Women

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 39:29


Episode 65: A Walkthrough to an Incredible Financial Tool, with Shannon Goldsmith Shannon Goldsmith is a 3rd generation native Angeleno, Los Angeles REALTOR®, Certified Investor Agent, and member of the Global Investor Agent Team. She holds a Bachelor’s degree from Arizona State University, is a Certified Pricing Strategy Advisor, Probate Specialist, and Short Sale & Foreclosure Resource. She is a former corporate slave who later became a real estate agent. She spent a lot of time in the corporate world working for other people until realizing in her mid-'30s that she couldn’t stick with it anymore. Hence, she was able to transition into real estate and also realized that she’s more interested in the investing side of it rather than the traditional one. A self-professed real estate junkie, Shannon believes that real estate investing is life’s greatest vehicle to personal and financial freedom. She enjoys helping seasoned or soon-to-be-seasoned investors grow and evolve their portfolios quickly while keeping their risks in check. Where some investors are comfortable spending money based on a hunch, Shannon lets the data do the talking. Shannon’s comprehensive and highly specific data enables her clients to quickly identify and target the highest performing areas in Los Angeles County--whether they’re seeking their next flip or income-generating opportunity. Behind her great interest in real estate investing is her plan of getting into a desert for sunbathing every day, all day long! She just really loves the deserts. What You Will Learn: Shannon shares about an incredible financial tool that helps you pay down your debt in record time which also works for mortgages, student loans, car loans, business loans, medical debt, and tax debt. How the said financial tool works and why it was described as a “financial GPS”. How to manage the risks despite the rapidly changing economic situations. Shannon walks through how to use the financial program as a financial planner. The best way for people to connect with Shannon. Additional Resources from Shannon Goldsmith: Cell Phone: (310) 779-4679 Email: sg@shannongoldsmith.com Calendly: https://calendly.com/shannongoldsmith/15min Website: http://www.shannongoldsmith.com/ United Financial Agent Opportunity: https://www.uffopportunity.com/fastwealthdreamteam LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shannon-goldsmith-WealthDreamTeam/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/shannon.goldsmith.LARE

The Morning Toast
177: What Do You Want, Cuh-lare?: Wednesday, October 28th, 2020

The Morning Toast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 66:40


Gwen Stefani and Blake Shelton Are Engaged: 'Thanks for Saving My 2020 and the Rests of My Life' (PEOPLE) Every Photo From Kim Kardashian's 40th Birthday Trip (E! News) Scheana Shay Reveals She Is Pregnant Again After June Miscarriage: I'm So Excited to 'Be a Mom' (PEOPLE) Kathy Hilton to Appear on RHOBH in Season 11 (Bravo) Keith Raniere, leader of sex cult Nxivm, sentenced to 120 years in prison The Bachelorette Recap Dear Toasters Advice Segment The Morning Toast with Claudia (@girlwithnojob) and Jackie Oshry (@jackieoproblems) Merch: https://shopmorningtoast.com/ The Morning Toast Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themorningtoast

Garbled Twistory: A US History Podcast told through elections!
Andrew Jackson: Oh So Po-pu-lar... Lare?

Garbled Twistory: A US History Podcast told through elections!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2020 54:35


Here we are, checking in on our FINAL Prezzy Wezzy candidate for the 1832 US Election. And as usual, the angry man who suddenly descended from an unknown place in the mountains is causing a ruckus wherever he goes! This is a REBROADCAST with the NEW INFO at the 39:35 mark! Become a Patron!

HALVBLOD
(2) 9. PR-SPAN, HÖSTMYS OCH ANMÄLARE.

HALVBLOD

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2020 45:09


I det nionde avsnittet av den andra säsongen av Halvblod hör ni Lovisa Lindén och Sara Qanbour diskutera sommarslutet, Britney, PR-knep och kräftskivor. E-post: halvblod@lulumedia.se Prod: Simon Ghidey

P1 Kultur
Anders Zorn i helfigur – målare, myt, monument

P1 Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2020 53:30


Lördag 22 augusti är det exakt 100 år sedan Anders Zorn avled. Som kulmen på vår Zorn-vecka ägnar vi i stort sett hela P1 Kultur åt den omsusade konstnären, vars målningar ännu slår rekord på auktionerna. Det är Dagens Nyheters Per Svensson, som just nu arbetar med en stor Zorn-biografi, och Kulturredaktionens konstkritiker Cecilia Blomberg som samtalar om Anders Zorn. Dessutom söker vår reporter Katarina Wikars spåren efter konstnären i hans födelsestad Mora. Vi avslutar även Zorn-serien som vi sänt i veckan - och som ursprungligen gjordes av Kerstin Svensson för P4 Dalarna. EN KLASSISK GENERATIONSROMAN Veckans Klassiker är gjord av Sandra Stiskalo och handlar om Francoise Sagans roman "Bonjour Tristesse" från 1954 - eller "Ett moln på min himmel", som den hette när den första gången kom ut på svenska. Programledare: Gunnar Bolin. Producent: Mattias Berg.

kultur ett dessutom monument zorn bonjour tristesse lare myt anders zorn katarina wikars cecilia blomberg p1 kultur kulturredaktionens p4 dalarna programledare gunnar bolin
VOXXX
Jamais deux sans toi * Hugo Larétin et Claude Rodéo

VOXXX

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2020 7:34


Ça va ? Tu es bien allongé.e là ? 
Détendu.e ?J’ai une surprise pour toi ! Ferme les yeux. Je vais chercher ton cadeau, il est caché dans la salle de bain.Ne. Triche. Pas. Je reviens.Tadaaaaaa… Regarde ce que tu as devant toi.Deux mecs. Rien que pour toi.Tu vas pouvoir nous mater, comme tu veux et te faire du bien. Ça te dit ? Si c’est un Oui franc et enthousiaste... en avant pour ton épisode !---www.voxxx.org Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

COXXX
Jamais deux sans toi * Hugo Larétin et Claude Rodéo

COXXX

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2020 7:35


Ça va ? Tu es bien allongé.e là ? 
Détendu.e ?J’ai une surprise pour toi ! Ferme les yeux. Je vais chercher ton cadeau, il est caché dans la salle de bain.Ne. Triche. Pas. Je reviens.Tadaaaaaa… Regarde ce que tu as devant toi.Deux mecs. Rien que pour toi.Tu vas pouvoir nous mater, comme tu veux et te faire du bien. Ça te dit ? Si c’est un Oui franc et enthousiaste... en avant pour ton épisode !---www.coxxx.org Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Marriage Can Win Show
Finding Your Sweet Spot! Guest Shawn LaRe` Brinkley

Marriage Can Win Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2020 68:02


Have you and your spouse discovered your “ SWEET SPOT ? “ Join us to find out how --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/marriagecanwinshow/support

The Daily Gardener
February 13, 2020 North Carolina Wildflower of the Year, Vita Sackville-West, Joseph Banks, Lewis David von Schweinitz, Jeremiah Bailey, Julia Dorr, A Sting in the Tale by Dave Goulson, and Maria L Owen

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 38:57


Today we celebrate the botanist who sailed with Captain James Cook on the Endeavor and the man regarded as the father of North American mycology. We'll learn about the man who patented the first practical lawnmower 198 years ago today. Today's Unearthed Words feature a poet and writer who used the names Flora or Florilla as her pseudonyms. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about one man's adventures with bumblebees. I'll talk about a flexible and tough garden item to help you plant your seedlings, and it is reusable to boot. And then, we'll wrap things up with the story of a woman who knew the botanical world of Nantucket like the back of her hand. But first, let's catch up on a few recent events.   Subscribe Apple|Google|Spotify|Stitcher|iHeart   Curated Articles 2020 Wildflower of the Year – North Carolina Botanical Garden The 2020 North Carolina Wildflower of the Year: marsh-pink (Sabatia angularis "Sah-BAY-tee-ah ANG-you-LARE-iss) @NCBotGarden aka: rose gentian, rose pink, or bitter-bloom. A biennial - Native to US (South & East), Grows in low, wet meadows, woods & along roadsides. Marsh-pink grows best in moist soil in full to partial sun and is infrequently offered in nurseries because of its biennial habit. It seemingly disappears in years of drought,   Vita Sackville-West on her garden at Sissinghurst (1950) | House & Garden Wow. Great share from @_houseandgarden archive: Vita Sackville-West at Sissinghurst (1950). If you are renovating or starting from scratch - read this & be inspired! "The place had been in the market for three years since the death of the last farmer-owner... Brambles grew in wild profusion; bindweed wreathed its way into every support; ground-elder made a green carpet; docks and nettles flourished; couch­ grass sprouted; half the fruit trees in the orchard were dead; the ones that remained alive were growing in the coarsest grass; the moat was silted up and so invaded by reeds and bulrushes that the water was almost invisible; paths there were none, save of trodden mud. It had its charm. It was Sleeping Beauty's castle with a ven­geance — if you liked to see it with a romantic eye. But, if you also looked at it with a realistic eye, you saw that Nature run wild was not quite so romantic as you thought, and entailed a great deal of laborious tidying up. The most urgent thing to do was to plant hedges. We were extravagant over this, and planted yew, and have never regretted it. Everybody told us it took at least a century to make a good yew hedge, but the photographs will, I think, disprove this: the hedge is now only seventeen years old, a mere adoles­cent, and, at the end where the ground slopes and it has been allowed to grow up in order to maintain the top-level, it is 16 feet high. At the end of all this is the herb garden, which always seems to allure visitors, no doubt because it is a secret, senti­mental little place. "Old world charm" is the phrase I always expect to hear, and nine times out of ten, I get it. But, less romantic­ally, the herb garden does supply very useful things to the kitchen. One needs years of patience to make a garden; one needs deeply to love it in order to endure that patience. One needs optimism and foresight. One has to wait. One has to work hard oneself, sometimes, as I had to work hard, manually, during the war years, cutting all those hedges with shears in my spare time. I hated those hedges when I looked at my blistered hands, but at the same time, I still felt that it had been worthwhile planting them. They were the whole pattern and design and anatomy of the garden, and, as such, was worth any trouble I was willing to take.”   Now, if you'd like to check out these curated articles for yourself, you're in luck, because I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. There's no need to take notes or search for links - the next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.   Important Events 1743 Today is the birthday of Joseph Banks. Banks is best known for his study of Australian flora and fauna and his role as the botanist on board the Endeavor with Captain James Cook. When they landed in Australia, neither Cook nor Banks realized that the quartz reef where they planted the British Flag contained gold. The area would remain untouched by Europeans for almost two more decades. Before returning to England, Cook worried the Endeavor wouldn't make it around the Cape of Good Hope. In a fateful decision, Cook had brought the ship to Batavia, a Dutch colony, to fortify his boat. Batavia was a dangerous place where malaria and dysentery were rampant. As a result of his stop, Cook lost a staggering 38 members of his crew. Banks, and a fellow botanist Daniel Solander, managed to survive the stop, although, at one point, they were both gravely ill. Even as they battled back from illness, they still went out to collect specimens. As gardeners, we owe a great debt to Banks. When he returned to England, it was Joseph Banks who advised George III on the creation of the Royal Botanic Garden, Kew. And, in 1778, when Linnaeus died, his belongings went up for sale. By then, Joseph Banks was the President of the Linnean Society. Joseph acted quickly, buying everything of horticultural value on behalf of the society. Linnaeus' notebooks and specimens were on a ship bound for England by the time the king of Sweden realized Linnaeus' legacy was no longer in Sweden. He sent a fast Navy ship in pursuit of Banks' precious cargo, but it was too late. And so, Banks secured the legacy of Linnaeus, which is why Linnaeus's collection is in London at the Linnaeus Society's Burlington House. And, Banks helped spread Linnaeus's ideas across the globe, which was easier for him to accomplish since he was based in London, the hub for the science of botany. At his London residence, Banks hired the Scottish botanist Robert Brown to be his botanical librarian. The two became lifelong friends. So much so, that when Banks died in 1820, he left his home, his collections, and his library to Brown, and he also endowed him with a sizeable yearly allowance.   1780Today is the birthday of the Moravian clergyman and botanist Lewis David von Schweinitz, also known as the "Father of North American Mycology." Mycology is the study of fungi. Lewis was born in Pennsylvania, and he was a descendant on his mother's side of Count Zinzendorf - the founder of the Moravian Church. Lewis's home town of Bethlehem Pennsylvania was a Moravian settlement. When Lewis was seven years old, he was placed in a Moravian boarding school called Nazareth Hall. One of Lewis's earliest memories was visiting Nazareth Hall before attending there. He passed by one of the classrooms and saw a specimen of lichen digitatus sitting on a table, and he went to inspect it. It was Lewis's first experience with botany, and it would become his favorite subject. After completing his education, Lewis moved to Niesky, Germany, with his family. He was 18 years old. In Germany, Lewis became a pastor, got married, and studied botany in his spare time. He even managed to help his professor put together a book featuring over 1,000 different types of fungi found in Niesky. Lewis used his natural talent for drawing and painting to created watercolors of the specimens featured, and they are now digitized and available online. After many years in Germany, Lewis and his wife moved back to the United States to lead a Moravian church. They settled in Salem, North Carolina. Although the church was his primary focus, throughout his adulthood, Lewis devoted all of his spare time to the study of fungi. Between 1812 and 1821, Lewis collected in and around Salem North, Carolina. He was essentially replicating the work he had performed in Germany under the direction of his botany professor. In 1818, Lewis published his work on the fungi of North Carolina. Then, four years later, in 1822, Lewis published an even more comprehensive book featuring a staggering 3,000 species of fungi. In all, Lewis single-handedly published over 1,200 new species of fungi. When Lewis died, his enormous herbarium made its way to the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. And here's a fun side note that pertains to Lewis Schweinitz: In 1986, botanists discovered the rare sunflower named for Lewis Schweinitz - the Schweinitz sunflower (Helianthus schweinitzii) near Rock Hill in South Carolina. The Schweinitz sunflower exists only in about a dozen little pockets around Rock Hill and Charlotte. Lewis, himself, initially discovered the Schweinitz sunflower in 1821.   1822 On this day, Jeremiah Bailey of Chester county, Pennsylvania, patented the first practical lawnmower; it had two wheels and was pulled by a horse. A person could mow up to ten acres a day with Bailey's machine. After locals trialed the device, they reported, “We consider it as one of the most complete and useful labor-saving machines for agricultural uses hitherto invented...” The first genuinely successful machine would be patented ten years later by Obed Hussey of Maryland.   Unearthed Words 1825 Today is the birthday of the heartfelt American poet and writer - known at Rutland's poet and Vermont's unofficial poet laureate - Julia Dorr. As a girl, her pseudonym was Flora or Florillla. The poet William Cullen Bryant once read one of her poems and wrote to tell her how much he loved the beauty of its imagery. And Ralph Waldo Emerson visited her and included one of her poems - called Outgrown - in his book called Parnassus. As you hear today's poems, imagine Julia Dorr writing in her little study next to the parlor. She had a window by her desk that overlooked her flower garden, which she called "her refuge and her inspiration."   Roly-poly honey bee, Humming in the clover, Under you, the tossing leaves And the blue sky over, Why are you so busy, pray? Never still a minute, Hovering now above a flower.  Now half-buried in it! — Honeybee   And all the meadows, wide unrolled,  Were green and silver, green and gold,  Where buttercups and daisies spun  Their shining tissues in the sun.  — Unanswered   I know a spot where the wild vines creep,  And the coral moss-cups grow,  And where at the foot of the rocky steep,  The sweet blue violets blow. —Over the Wall   And the stately lilies stand Fair in the silvery light,  Like saintly vestals, pale in prayer;  Their pure breath sanctifies the air,  As its fragrance fills the night. — A Red Rose   Often I linger where the roses pour  Exquisite odors from each glowing cup;  Or where the violet, brimmed with sweetness o'er,  Lifts its small chalice up.  — Without and Within   Plant a white rose at my feet,  Or a lily fair and sweet,  With the humble mignonette And the blue-eyed violet. — Earth to Earth   Around in silent grandeur stood  The stately children of the wood;  Maple and elm and towering pine  Mantled in folds of dark woodbine. — At the Gate   Meadow-sweet or lily fair— Which shall it be? Clematis or brier-rose, Blooming for me? Spicy pink, or violet With the dews of morning wet, Sweet peas or mignonette— Which shall it be? Blue-bells and yellow-bells Swinging in the air; Purple pansies, golden pied; Pink-white daisies, starry-eyed; Gay nasturtiums, deeply dyed, Climbing everywhere. Life is so full, so sweet— How can I choose? If I gather this rose, That I must lose! All are not for me to wear; I can only have my share; Thorns are hiding here and there; How can I choose? — Choosing   O my garden! Lying whitely in the moonlight and the dew, Far across the leagues of distance flies my heart to-night to you, And I see your stately lilies In the tender radiance gleam With a dim, mysterious splendor, like the angels of a dream! I can see the trellised arbor, and the roses crimson And the lances of the larkspurs all glittering, row on row, And the wilderness of hollyhocks, where brown bees seek their spoil, And butterflies dance all day long, in glad and gay turmoil. — Homesick   My true love sent me a valentine  All on a winter's day,  And suddenly the cold gray skies  Grew soft and warm as May!  The snowflakes changed to apple blooms,  A pink- white fluttering crowd,  And on the swaying maple boughs  The robins sang aloud.  For moaning wintry winds, I heard  The music sweet and low  Of morning-glory trumpets  Through which the soft airs blow.  O love of mine, my Valentine!  This is no winter day —  For Love rules all the calendars,  And Love knows only May! —An Answer To A Valentine    Julia died just before her 88th birthday in 1913. In Evergreen Cemetery, in Rutland, Vermont, Julia shares a tombstone with her husband, Seneca. The stone features her poem "Beyond." For your understanding, a barque is a ship with three masts. Beyond the sunset's crimson bars,  Beyond the twilight and the stars,  Beyond the midnight and the dark,  Sail on, sail on, O happy barque.  Into the dawn of that Tomorrow  Where hearts shall find the end of sorrow  And Love shall find its own! — Beyond   Grow That Garden Library A Sting in the Tale by Dave Goulson The subtitle of this book is My Adventures with Bumblebees. Dave's book is fascinating, and it will change the way you think about bumblebees. When he was a little boy, Dave became obsessed with wildlife. Although he grew up with a menagerie of pets, bumblebees were his passion. I thought you would enjoy hearing a few excerpts from Dave's book. Here's where he talks about the biology of the Bumblebee: “They have to eat almost continually to keep warm; a bumblebee with a full stomach is only ever about forty minutes from starvation. If a bumblebee runs out of energy, she cannot fly, and if she cannot fly, she cannot get to flowers to get more food, so she is doomed.” Then, here's where Dave tells us what we can do to help the Bumblebee. The answer for gardeners is a pretty simple one. Dave writes: “The key to helping our rarer species to thrive is probably simply to add more flower patches to the landscape, making it a little easier for them to find food and keep their nests well provisioned.” And Dave is hopeful about the future of the Bumblebee And about the impact that each of us can have on their survival. He writes: “Conserving bumblebees is something anyone can do. A single lavender bush on a patio or in a window box will attract and feed bumblebees, even in the heart of a city." And I love that Dave includes this fantastic quote from Andrew Downing, the 19th-century American horticulturist. “The music of the busy bee Is drowsy, and it comforts me; But, ah! ’tis quite another thing, When that same bee concludes to sting!” Dave’s book came out in 2014. You can get a used copy of A Sting in the Tale by Dave Goulson and support the show, using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for under $4.   Great Gifts for Gardeners eHabitus Sili-Seedlings Silicone Seed Starting Tray $12.50 100% SILICONE: FDA-approved, BPA free, food-grade silicone. Package quantity: 2, cell size: 2" X 2" X 2.25" STERILIZABLE – Dishwasher safe; steam clean or wash with hot water. Sterilizing your trays helps prevent cross-contamination and keeps your garden hygienic. INFINITELY REUSABLE – They last forever. Comfortably fits 2" plugs of rock wool or any material. A large drainage hole in the bottom ensures adequate bottom-watering. EASY SOIL RELEASE – Flexible silicone walls are optimal for transplanting seedlings by protecting the integrity of the roots and soil. The bendable material makes releasing soil simple and easy. No crinkling, no cracking, no ripping, no waste. These seed starter trays are built to last a lifetime. Our seedling trays will never melt, become brittle or crack, even under the most extreme conditions. THICK, HEAVY-DUTY MATERIAL - Silicone regulates the temperature of soil much better than plastic and peat. Also, our seedlings trays feel great in your hands and will never decay.   Today's Botanic Spark 1825 Today is the birthday of a student of Nantucket flora, the botanist Maria Louise Owen. Maria was born into a wealthy family in Nantucket. Her maiden name was Talent. When she was a little girl, Maria showed an interest in the plants growing around her home on Nantucket. The women in her family - her mother, her sisters, and her aunt - all shared in the hobby of botany. It wasn't long before Maria showed an aptitude for it. She had a superior intellect, memory, and processing skills. She had a scientific mind. After marrying a Harvard-educated doctor named Varillas Owen, the young couple settled in Springfield, Massachusetts. For more than 50 years, their home became a hub for scientists and academics. Maria loved to entertain, and she drew energy from connecting with the educated people in her area. One peer said that Maria was "easily the most cultivated and best-read woman of her time in Springfield." Maria served as the President of both the Springfield Women's Club and the Springfield Botanical Society for over a decade. A renaissance woman, Maria taught botany, French, astronomy, and geography. Although Maria enjoyed teaching all of these subjects equally, she always said that for her, happiness could be found in the study of botany. In 1882, Maria contributed to a little Nantucket guidebook. Maria's part featured a listing of all the plants on the island of Nantucket. The project was a bit retrospective for Maria since she was writing about the plants of her childhood and featuring specimens she'd collected as a young woman. Even after moving to Springfield, Maria still botanized in the area whenever she came back to Nantucket. Although she spent five decades of her adult life in Springfield, she always regarded Nantucket as her home. In 1888, Maria wrote her masterpiece - a comprehensive Flora of Nantucket, which featured almost 800 species and varieties. After her book, Maria made it a point to connect with new generations of Nantucket botanists. The young botanists were eager to make her acquaintance; Maria was a one-woman repository of all the plants of Nantucket. When the botanist Bicknell published a follow-up catalog about Nantucket in the early 1900s, he continually referred to Maria's work, which explicitly documented when and where plants were introduced. For instance, when she wrote about chicory, she said it was, "a roadside plant along the south end of Orange Street" where it had thrived for "fifty years." At the age of 87, Maria was asked about one of the plants in her flora - Tillaea. The plant was hard to find, and botanists were curious about a location for it. Maria wrote, "My patch of Tillaea... doubtless still exists, and there is a happy day in store for any botanist who sees it at just the right season." Maria died in 1907. She had moved back to Nantucket to live with her daughter. Walter Deane wrote in his Rhodora biography of Maria that she died, "...on a bright morning with the room flooded with sunshine, which she always loved, and filled with iris, columbine, and cornflowers…. She lived true to the [Latin] motto of her mother's family 'Post tenebris, speramus lumen de lumine,' which [Maria] always loved to translate, 'After the darkness, we hope for light from the source of light.'"

Kulturnytt i P1
Regissören Spike Lee blir ordförande för juryn i Cannes, graffitimålare i Jemen hoppas bidra till krigsslut

Kulturnytt i P1

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 8:25


Nyhetssändning från kulturredaktionen P1, med reportage, nyheter och recensioner.

Den Svarta Tråden
DST - Samhällskritiska graffitimålare berättar om hur de skapade Sveriges största ungdomsgård.

Den Svarta Tråden

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2020 42:16


- DST -Den Svarta Tråden.En podcast i videoformat.I detta avsnitt får vi lyssna till Mel, Ligisd & Psykos. Ökända på stockholms gator och ständigt jagade av staten. Men vad vill de få sagt? Varför målar de? Och är det konst, kritik eller bara skräp?

Komintern
S02E08 Taxichaufför åt ISIS, målare åt SS

Komintern

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2019 49:22


I säsongens åttonde avsnitt träffar vi Miran Kakaee. Miran är en av författarna till rapporten "Rörelsejuridiken som motstånd" och berättar hur det är att vara jurist mot juridiken. Dessutom reserapport från självständighetsmarschen i Helsingfors och östblocks-kama sutra. Läs rapporten här: https://arenaide.se/rapporter/rorelsejuridiken-som-motstand/

UNFAIR SPORTS
Cool Brees Back

UNFAIR SPORTS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2019 52:12


The Half a Bird show dishes on:The Best in the NFC? 1:30Lets ask, is It Over? 13:00$7 Challenge - 22:00 OU loses to KSU, can they still make the CFP 27:15Phrozen 5 recap 32:15Colts -5.5 LPanthers +5.5 LSeahawks -6.5 WBills -1.5 LCardinals +10.5 LAre the warriors done? 36:20NBA Week 1, what stuck out the most? 40:00

Word of the Day

Olid is an adjective that means having a strong, disagreeable smell. The Latin word olere (oh LARE ay) means ‘to smell.’ Somewhere before reaching English, the word acquired a more specific meaning and came to refer to a strong, unpleasant smell. Kevin had been stashing milk in his closet again. I could track the bottles down through the olid scent that spread down the hallways.

Wanda's Picks
Wanda's Picks Radio Show features Emma Van Lare in Cal Shakes' House of Joy

Wanda's Picks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2019 180:00


This is a black arts and culture site. We will be exploring the African Diaspora via the writing, performance, both musical and theatrical (film and stage), as well as the visual arts of Africans in the Diaspora and those influenced by these aesthetic forms of expression. I am interested in the political and social ramifications of art on society, specifically movements supported by these artists and their forebearers. It is my claim that the artists are the true revolutionaries, their work honest and filled with raw unedited passion. They are our true heroes. Ashay! 1. David Roach joins us to talk about the Oakland International Film Festival Sept. 19-29, 2019 https://www.oiff.org/schedule/ Bio https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-roach-b5a94a7/ 2. Emma Van Lare (Hamida) House of Joy by Madhuri Shekar, directed by Megan Sandberg-Zakian, at Cal Shakes extended Sat., Sept. 7, 8 p.m. and Sun., Sept. 8, 4 p.m. All seats are $40. 20 or younger, tickets are $20. Emma grew up in the Houston area and moved here just over two years ago to pursue her MFA in acting from the American Conservatory Theater. She just started her third and final year there and House of Joy is her first professional show!   3. Jewels from the Archives: Sister Act at Theatre Rhinoceros (May 2019) Shortlink: http://tobtr.com/11491173

Computers, Coffee and Curriculum
CCC0015 : Learnics and the ThinkingApp with Dr. Greg Cottrell and Dr. Doug Lare

Computers, Coffee and Curriculum

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2019 19:26


In this episode we talk with Dr. Greg Cottrell Principal at North Hunterdon High School in Nazareth Pennsylvania and Dr. Doug Lare Professor of Professional & Secondary Education, Co-Department Chair, Doctoral Program Coordinator at East Stroudsburg University about Learnics and the ThinkingApp Send us your feedback at feedback@k12ccc.com, or call our voicemail line at 346-FAQ-HELP! 04:15 Thinking App 06:55 Goal of Learnics 09:50 Surprising Trends 11:53 Looking at the Data 13:40 Scope and Sequence 14:10 Maximizing Student Engagement in Learning 15:50 What Strategies Can We Use to Personalize Learning with Technology Dr. Cottrell can be found on twitter at @NHPrincipal and the ThinkingApp can be found at www.learnics.com

Doni Jones Live
Entrepreneur Insights from A. Luck and Katherine Van-Lare

Doni Jones Live

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2019 48:16


Rapper A. Luck and YouTuber Katherine Van-are join Doni Jones Live to talk about how they transformed their visions and passion into a successful reality.

Macak Podcast
Macak Podcast S02-EP08 bersama Boasatial Lare

Macak Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2019 59:24


Macak Podcast S02-EP08 kali ini saya berbincang bersama Boasatial Lare, seorang driver ojek online. Boa bercerita tentang pengalamanya selama 3 tahun terakhir menjadi driver ojol, baik itu pengalaman yang menyenangkan, menyedihkan, hingga yang tak terduga, selamat mendengarkan!

Te escuchamos
Quiero tener confianza para aprender inglés

Te escuchamos

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2019 22:48


En la consulta de este capítulo Lare nos dice: "quiero confiar más en mi misma para poder aprender un idioma como el inglés." Porque lo intentas y no te sale..Piensas que tienes poca memoria, que no tienes facultades porque no lo hiciste de joven ... Pensar que no se tiene tiempo, requiere esfuerzo, disciplina, constancia, verlo como muy difícil ¿Qué tipo de confianza falta, que impide realizar un aprendizaje de algo que es difícil, o tenemos la creencia de que lo es? Puede ser la creencia la que lo impida. Constancia y esfuerzo, ¿hasta qué grado estás dispuesta a pagar el coste? Coste de tiempo, esfuerzo, dinero Esto y más es de lo que hablamos en este podcast. Déjanos aquí tu consulta: https://goo.gl/forms/uevyJTLkbmwbhrkH3 https://www.facebook.com/groups/248354449386487/

Your Artificial Friends
114: Begin by Gripping It, Then Proceed to Ripping It

Your Artificial Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2018 55:37


Larry gets a D in listening comprehension, but he gets an A in attendance... today, anyway.  And sure, there's shed talk, but there's also scintillating holiday music criticism, Christmas beverages, and further examination of the glory of pie.  Josh, Lare and Ange extend a (second) winter welcome to join us in enjoying the YAF podcast.

P2 Dokumentär
Prins Eugen – målare med känslighet för musik

P2 Dokumentär

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2018 56:51


Prins Eugen (1865-1947) var inte bara en centralgestalt som konstnär och konstsamlare utan också en varm tillskyndare av musiken. Den här dokumentären handlar om spåren efter prins Eugen i musiklivet. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Prins Eugen tog både intryck av musik i sitt eget konstnärsskap och bidrog till den musikaliska utvecklingen. Han var bland annat med och samlade in pengar till bygget av Stockholms konserthus 1924-26. Bland samtida tonsättare fanns Emil Sjögren och Wilhelm Stenhammar. I programmet medverkar Prins Eugen i egen hög person ur Sveriges Radios arkiv liksom konstvetaren Karin Sidén - hör en längre intervju med Sidén här nedanför! Programmet är en repris från den 19 november 2017. En P2-dokumentär av Christina Tobeck/SR Musik.

P2 Dokumentär
Prins Eugen – målare med känslighet för musik

P2 Dokumentär

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2018 56:57


Prins Eugen (1865-1947) var inte bara en centralgestalt som konstnär och konstsamlare utan också en varm tillskyndare av musiken. Den här dokumentären handlar om spåren efter prins Eugen i musiklivet. Prins Eugen tog både intryck av musik i sitt eget konstnärsskap och bidrog till den musikaliska utvecklingen. Han var bland annat med och samlade in pengar till bygget av Stockholms konserthus 1924-26. Bland samtida tonsättare fanns Emil Sjögren och Wilhelm Stenhammar. I programmet medverkar Prins Eugen i egen hög person ur Sveriges Radios arkiv liksom konstvetaren Karin Sidén - hör en längre intervju med Sidén här nedanför! Programmet är en repris från den 19 november 2017. En P2-dokumentär av Christina Tobeck/SR Musik.

Gameable Audio
Äntligen Spelmusik #33 – Sagan om en målare

Gameable Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2018


För första gången i podcastens historia så kommer det in en duo tillsammans för att gästa programmet, duon som skrivs om är Synkronosaurus och de är inbjudna för att prata om deras soundtrack till det svensk utvecklade spelet ”Passpartout: The Starving Artist” ett spel där man skall måla sig fram för att kunna bekosta sitt [...] Inlägget Äntligen Spelmusik #33 – Sagan om en målare dök först upp på Videospelsklubben.

Podcasts – Videospelsklubben
Äntligen Spelmusik #33 – Sagan om en målare

Podcasts – Videospelsklubben

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2018


För första gången i podcastens historia så kommer det in en duo tillsammans för att gästa programmet, duon som skrivs om är Synkronosaurus och de är inbjudna för att prata om deras soundtrack till det svensk utvecklade spelet “Passpartout: The Starving Artist” ett spel där man skall måla sig fram för att kunna bekosta sitt [...]

The Therapist Experience Podcast by Brighter Vision: Marketing & Business Lessons for Therapists, Counselors, Psychologists &
TTE 95: “God Made Therapists, Ya’ll” – How Shawn LaRe Helps Underserved Culture Groups in Therapy

The Therapist Experience Podcast by Brighter Vision: Marketing & Business Lessons for Therapists, Counselors, Psychologists &

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2018 37:16


Shawn LaRe found that in minority cultures such as the African American and Latino communities, people seek healing from God and/or their spirituality and not from personal services like therapy. But as Shawn LaRe says, “God made therapists ya’ll.” The post TTE 95: “God Made Therapists, Ya’ll” – How Shawn LaRe Helps Underserved Culture Groups in Therapy appeared first on BrighterVision.com.

Fans of the Genre
47: Season 2, Baby

Fans of the Genre

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2017 63:28


The men of FOTG get back together to discuss Battlefront II's progression system, Wolfenstein II, Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp, Chrono Cross, and the hills we'd die on (it's LARE-uh).

P2 Dokumentär
Prins Eugen – målare med känslighet för musik

P2 Dokumentär

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2017 56:51


Prins Eugen (1865-1947) var inte bara en centralgestalt som konstnär och konstsamlare utan också en varm tillskyndare av musiken. Den här dokumentären handlar om spåren efter prins Eugen i musiklivet. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Prins Eugen tog både intryck av musik i sitt eget konstnärsskap och bidrog till den musikaliska utvecklingen. Han var bland annat med och samlade in pengar till bygget av Stockholms konserthus 1924-26. Bland samtida tonsättare fanns Emil Sjögren och Wilhelm Stenhammar. I programmet medverkar Prins Eugen i egen hög person ur Sveriges Radios arkiv liksom konstvetaren Karin Sidén - hör en längre intervju med Sidén här nedanför! En P2-dokumentär av Christina Tobeck/SR Musik.

P2 Dokumentär
Prins Eugen – målare med känslighet för musik

P2 Dokumentär

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2017 43:44


Prins Eugen (1865-1947) var inte bara en centralgestalt som konstnär och konstsamlare utan också en varm tillskyndare av musiken. Den här dokumentären handlar om spåren efter prins Eugen i musiklivet. Prins Eugen tog både intryck av musik i sitt eget konstnärsskap och bidrog till den musikaliska utvecklingen. Han var bland annat med och samlade in pengar till bygget av Stockholms konserthus 1924-26. Bland samtida tonsättare fanns Emil Sjögren och Wilhelm Stenhammar. I programmet medverkar Prins Eugen i egen hög person ur Sveriges Radios arkiv liksom konstvetaren Karin Sidén - hör en längre intervju med Sidén här nedanför! En P2-dokumentär av Christina Tobeck/SR Musik.

Forskningspodden
30 – Strömsnålare diskmaskiner

Forskningspodden

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2017 14:51


Hur kan man minska diskmaskiners elförbrukning? Detta är vad Peder Bengtsson undersöker i sin doktorsavhandling i miljö- och energisystem. Genom experiment och simuleringar visar Peder att diskmaskiner som använder värmepumpsteknik kan minska elförbrukningen till hälften. I vårt samtal berättar Peder mer om sin forskning, och om hur den kan bidra till att spara både energi … Continue reading "30 – Strömsnålare diskmaskiner"

Primorski kraji in ljudje
Družina Kralj iz Izole: podjetnost in ljubezen do živali

Primorski kraji in ljudje

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2017 17:39


Kraljevi iz Izole so zanimiva družina. Zelo povezani, podjetni. Mama Marija je središče družinskega ognjišča, oče Marino, čeprav upokojeni podjetnik, še vedno pomaga hčerki Lari v veterinarskem centru Lara v Izoli, z ženo pomagata pri terh vnukih hčera Lare in Romine. Vedno so imeli veliko živali, Lara je že zgodaj vedela, da bo veterinarka. Da ne bi pobegnila v Zda, kamor so jo po praksi vabili, so ji starši ponudli njihove poslovne prostore n zgodaj je šla na samostojno poslpvno pot. Na klepet je očeta Marina, ki je vsem dobro znan iz Mefove skladbe v izvedbi skupine "Prizma"- "Dobrodošli" in hčerko, veterinarko Laro, povabila Nataša Benčič.

22 Kvadrat i P3
Snål, snålare, snålast

22 Kvadrat i P3

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2016 21:17


Linda är pank och nu dikterar hon nya ordningsregler. Det ska levas snålt, mycket snålt på 22 Kvadraten.

Anne Ortelee Weekly Weather Astrology
Anne Ortelee's December 6, 2015 Weekly Weather

Anne Ortelee Weekly Weather Astrology

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2015 31:00


Lare broadcast as Anne is teaching at the NCGR Education Conference  this weekend.  Anne Ortelee, a nationally (NCGR-PAA Level 3 and PMAFA) and internationally (ISAR-CAP) certified astrologer discusses the cosmic energy we can expect to experience on earth during the upcoming week. There is often a short astrology lesson.  Listen and learn how to navigate your week in alignment with the heavens... Check out her website at astroanne.com for a written version of the Weekly Weather.  

MCCC ON THE AIR
MC3OTA784 (Dolores Lare)

MCCC ON THE AIR

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2015 15:00


Michele Cuomo, Dean of Arts and Humanities, talks with Dolores Lare, Chair of the Montgomery County Community College Foundation, about Leading Women In Philanthropy.

Life In Neutral with Lee Syatt and Johnny Roque
#002 - Toking-Lare - Las Vegas Surveillance Investigator

Life In Neutral with Lee Syatt and Johnny Roque

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2015 119:37


Toking-Lare, Las Vegas Surveillance Investigator joins me on the podcast to talk about everything Las Vegas and security.   To Support this podcast visit my Amazon Link or buy a T Shirt at www.leesyatt.com My Blog can be found here: http://flyingjew.blogspot.com/

Fjällradio!
Fjällradio! möter flugfiskare, desperados och akvarellmålare som trotsar minusgrader

Fjällradio!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2013 29:35


Hur målar man fjällakvarell i minusgrader? Vem drar runt en pulka lastad med vapen och ammunition? Fjällradio! söker svaren. Och flugfiskar med rosa stjärtspröt. På fjället och vidden - Fjällradio! färdas i deckarmiljöer. Till ännu oskrivna berättelser. Och till nyskrivna. Och sanna. Som då svensk och norsk polis jagade en mördare i fjällen. – Det är egentligen inte i fjällen som den här sortens kriminalitet borde hända. Det finns ju för fasen ingen här. Ändå händer det, säger Jerk Schuitema som skrivit en roman om Fjälldesperadon. Fjällradio! visar fjällets vardag. Med människor som färdas i fjälltrakterna. Renskötare, mångsysslare, naturromantiker och exploatörer. I Fjällradio! hörs röster från ripvidet, skoterpallen och skarsnön. Fjällradio! Sänds 12, 13, 14 och 15 augusti i P 1 klockan 11:03  och repris på kvällen 20:03.