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A group of teens cuts cardboard with X-ACTO Knives. They will soon shape this cardboard into architectural models of their bedrooms. Behind them in a classroom at the Dunwoody College of Technology, large windows frame the Minneapolis cityscape — a sampling of building types through the ages, from the early 20th-century Basilica of St. Mary to the IDS skyscraper built in 1973.“It's my first time doing something in architectural-related study,” says Dominic Stewart of Burnsville.“I'm excited to get that hands-on experience,” says Carsyn Johnson of Elk River.They are here for the weeklong Indigenous Design Camp, the first camp of its kind in the U.S. The goal is to teach Indigenous teens about career options in architecture and design, a field where Native Americans are underrepresented.Indigenous architects Two of the founders of the new camp — architects and friends Mike Laverdure and Sam Olbekson — estimate that there are only about 30 Indigenous architects total in the U.S.Laverdure is an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa and a partner at DSGW Architects as well as the president of First American Design Studio. Olbekson is a citizen of the White Earth Nation and founded the firm Full Circle Indigenous Planning and Design. They are the only two practicing Native architects in Minnesota. Renovated Minneapolis American Indian Center reflects urban Indigenous identity“The need for creating a space for kids to become designers, Indigenous designers, is great,” says Laverdure, who has wanted to start this camp for years. “Representation matters for these kids to see us as architects and designers. A lot of us who grew up in reservations or urban Indigenous communities only see a few career types.”“This is the first time anyone has ever done this in the U.S.,” Olbekson adds. “It's the right time for Indigenous communities, tribal communities, nonprofits, to really take a self-initiated approach to design, to hire architects to understand the value and the importance of designing and operating a project from an Indigenous lens.”The campersThe campers are Indigenous teens ages 14-18 from the metro area. They will be constructing architectural models all week. Campers will also tour the University of Minnesota School of Architecture and local architecture firms.They will also visit the American Indian Cultural Corridor on Franklin Avenue, where both Laverdure and Olbekson have designed buildings, as well as another Olbekson project, the recently completed expansion of the Red Lake Nation College downtown.Olbekson says, “to actually go and see [the buildings] and see the impact that they're having on the community, not only as individual buildings, but how they're forming an identity for the American Indian Cultural Corridor and how these projects are supporting education, economic development, community building, cultural development, and youth and elder spaces, I think is going to be a great way for them to understand the impact of what design, urban design, interiors, landscape, can have on creating a healthy, Indigenous urban community.”The camp began Monday morning with a welcome from Laverdure, Olbekson and University of Minnesota assistant architecture professor Jessica Garcia Fritz, a citizen of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe. Fritz also helped start the camp.“If you think about your home reservations, or your urban communities, you think about all the buildings that are there,” Laverdure told the class, “Ninety-nine percent of all the buildings built that Indigenous people sit in are not designed by indigenous designers. They're designed by other people who don't have a stake in the game, who don't really have a connection to that community.”Laverdure continued, “When you have Indigenous designers be a part of that process, what happens is that those buildings have a special kind of connection to the communities and that makes those buildings extra special.”Indigenous architecture, past and presentNext came a presentation on Indigenous architecture, past and present, by Tammy Eagle Bull, who did a video call from her home in Arizona. Eagle Bull is a member of the Oglala Lakota Nation of Pine Ridge, South Dakota. In 1994, she became the first Native woman in the U.S. to become a licensed architect. Camper Carsyn Johnson says this fact caught her by surprise.“I was surprised about it, though, a little disappointed, because I feel like as a society, we should move further ahead a little bit,” Johnson says.For the remainder of the first day of camp, Jessica Garcia Fritz guided campers in a design exercise to create their sleep space or bedroom. First, they taped 10 by 10-foot squares on the classroom floor to help them visualize the scale. Then they sketched blueprints of their bedrooms. Finally, they cut and scored cardboard to build shoebox-size models. As the week progresses, the campers will join their models to create collective spaces as well as design larger communal spaces as a group.“One of the things Tammy Eagle Bull had said this morning was, ‘I wish that a camp like this had existed when I was young.' I think that's the sentiment among many of us,” Garcia Fritz says.”Part of the motivation behind this is to be able to show Indigenous high school students what those pathways are, to bring them into the environments so that we can have more representation. I think that many of us can maybe speak to the fact that we may have been the only Indigenous people in our classes at the time. Our instructors probably didn't know how to work within what we may have wanted to do. I think that's changing.”Garcia Fritz, Laverdure and Olbekson hope this camp is the first of many. One of the goals is to expand the camp to greater Minnesota.“Right now, it's in the Twin Cities, but there are so many Indigenous communities regionally, up north and even in other states that could really benefit from this,” Olbekson says. “Long term, we want to create a space where five to 10 years from now, we've got 10, 15, 20, Native designers that are out there and being a force for change,” Laverdure says.The camp ends Friday when campers present their final architectural models.
Avant d'écouter votre podcast, n'oubliez pas vous pouvez envoyer vos critiques, vos souvenirs et autres à causmicbeast@gmx.fr, vos bafouilles feront l'objet d'un épisode du “Répondeur Entre ! Geek Des voitures qui parlent et qui roulent toute seule ?Une intelligence artificielle qui aide la police à résoudre le crime ?Des machines suréquipées, surarmées qui peuvent vous écouter quand vous lisez vos emails, assis sur un lieu d'aisance ?Des motos qui roulent à plus de 500 kilomètres ?Des avions furtifs volant plus vite qu'il ne faut de temps à Dany de dire “hmmmmmm Galaxie Pop”, c'est dire…Bienvenue en 2024 ?Et pourtant sur les téléviseurs des années 80, sur les écrans d'une décennie qui aura vu un acteur devenir président des Etats Unis et chuter un mur (qui parait il avait une santé de fer !), sont apparus des engins extraordinaires, voitures turbos, hélicoptères supersoniques et autres deux roues lancés à vive allure. Entre ! Geek, le “podcast des oeuvres oubliées mais pas oubliables™” vous proposent de (re) découvrir cette époque. Une équipe de choc a donc été constituée, en plus du taulier de service, CausmicBeast https://twitter.com/CausmicbeastAK Dallas https://twitter.com/A_K_Dallas sur le réseau du milliardaire fan de voiture intelligente et de grooooosssses fusées (oh wait !!!)BG Babar https://twitter.com/BG_Babar exfiltré du podcast Beside Games https://t.co/8oBzFgvWen et qui vient nous régaler par sa science des jeux vidéos (mais pas que) Posologie d'usage : attention, ce podcast fait plus de 3 heures mais peut être avalé avec un peu de soda amérrrrrriiiiiiicaiiiiiiiinEn cas de symptômes de type “pew pew, looping pan pan !” ou “KITT, mode super poursuite”... n'hésitez pas à vous faire aider, le podcast “Entre ! Geek” ne saurait être tenu responsable de l'achat compulsif de collections d'intégrales de DVD/Blu ray, voire d'un besoin irrépressible de nommer ses rejetons “Springfellow Hawke” Passons donc dans le dur :Knight Rider/K2000 : la série emblématique de feu la Cinq (oui CausmicBeast, de RTL télévision aussi ndlr) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083437/ la série avec un David Hasselhoff https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001327/ chanteur à ses heures (pas ?) perdues https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BSeWA8f0Qv0&pp=ygUeZGF2aWQgaGFzc2VsaG9mZiBtdXIgZGUgYmVybGluAutoman : un flic informaticien (rayer la mention inutile !) met au point une intelligence artificielle pour l'aider dans la lutte contre le crime … attendre par là de prendre un acteur au sourire éclatant, de lui coller le costume réfléchissant de Tron pour 13 épisodes https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084978/Jamais deux productions Glen A Larson sans trois : voici The Highwayman, diffusé sur TF1 sous le nom de Police 2000 (si c'est 2000, alors c'est moderne, non ?) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0094479/ . Il a un gros flingue, et son gros camion est aussi un hélicoptère. Avec l'acteur de Flash Gordon (1980) https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0080745/?ref_=nm_knf_t_1 Sam J Jones https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0429207/ , avec des bouts de Bobby Sixkiller croustillant (si si) d'ailleurs c'est Michel L'ingénieur informaticien qui nous le dit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJFKK1OboYo&pp=ygUQYm9iYnkgc2l4IGtpbGxlcg%3D%3D Sans oublier la chouchou de Aurélien (le podcasteur de T31_prod au linktree plus long que la moumoute d'un Michael Knight https://linktr.ee/t31_prod , Madame Jane Badler elle même https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000826/Et enfin pour terminer sur les engins à roues, celui qu'on appelait dans l'est de la France sinistrée, on appelait “Pomme de Terre Mécanique”, Streethawk https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0088618/ , qui contrairement à ce que raconte CausmicBeast n'est pas un Glen A Larson mais a été en partie développé par Bruce Lansbury le propre frère de celle qui fut connue pour résoudre ses enquêtes à vélo Angela Lansbury https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001450/ Une série avec trop peu d'épisode mais qui aura permis à l'acteur Rex Smith https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0809688/ de pouvoir briller comme avocat qui tabasse dans “le procès de l'Incroyable Hulk” https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098512/ Elevons le “débat” et prenons le chemin des airsEn 1982, Clint Eastwood https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clint_Eastwood réalise son 3ème film Firefox https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0083943/ où il incarne un pilote vétéran du vietnam, mandaté pour voler aux méchants russe un avion hypersonique, aux missiles commandés par la pensée, invisible aux radars (mais avec une seule taille de siège de pilote, c'est ballot Tovarich !), le tout déguisé avec une magnifique moustache https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5W4MiBuEnY&pp=ygUWZmlyZWZveCB0cmFpbGVyIGZyZW5jaA%3D%3DEn France, pendant que les américains nous servaient un Tom Cruise sur lit de Top Gun, nous avions depuis les années 80 le feuilleton, tiré de la bande dessinée Tanguy et Laverdure https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0639321/ avec un générique beuglé par notre (affreux ?) Jojo national… sous le nom des cheuuuuuvaaaaaliiiiiiierrrrrrrs du cieeeeeel (d'ailleurs CausmicBeast vous conseille plutôt le générique de la seconde saison composé par François de Roubaix, deux salles, une meilleure ambiance https://youtu.be/7-1wfA6mp24Sans oublier, un certain bellâtre nommé Alain Delon, as des as avec son concorde acrobatique dans le nanardesque Airport 80 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SK00QlWms3E , un film où Steven Segall s'étale avant la fin du générique, l'Ultime décision https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultime_D%C3%A9cisionSans parler de la bataille des maquettes d'avions sur les avions secrets https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F-19 et https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fwUyW4nauwToujours sur les grands écrans, un film pré Jeux Olympiques de Los Angeles, Blue Thunder (1983) de John Badham https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000824/ , plus connu sur les rayonnages de vidéoclub francais, comme Tonnerre de Feu, https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0085255/ un authentique film du tonnerre (spoilers sur nos avis, mais chut !!!), un film sur l'usage des techniques de surveillance, enrichi en Roy Scheider https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001702/ et du scénario de Dan O'bannon, lui même https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0639321/ (non il n'y a pas d'Alien dans ce film). Une montagne de film qui va accoucher d'une souris, la série acronyme mais qui aura au moins la chance de permettre à Garth https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001022/ du futur Wayne's World 1 et 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WrfLY0Z7Yo&pp=ygUNd2F5bmUncyB3b3JsZA%3D%3D , Dana Carvey de faire ses armes de comédie, une série oubliée et qui pour le coup peut rester oubliable.La dernière série emblématique de la Cinq, Airwolf, mieux connu par chez nous comme Supercopter (parce que c'est la Classe Américaine https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fu0PNzfLPu0&pp=ygUic3VwZXJjb3B0ZXIgbGEgY2xhc3NlIGFtw6lyaWNhaW5lIA%3D%3D) , un super hélicoptère (vous en doutiez, pourtant c'est marqué dessus !), blindé, supersonique mais qui n'affronte que des images d'archives de la guerre de Corée, du Vietnam ou d'autres hélicoptères https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKUkvIn1L0Q&pp=ygUPYWlyd29sZiB0cmFpbGVy Une série où dans l'équipe du podcast, on se rappelle plus de Dominic, joué par Ernest Borgnine https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000308/ plutôt que Jan Michael Vincent (boire ou piloter/jouer il faut choisir…) https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001821/ Une série pur reflet des années Reagan, qui se dégrade au fur et à mesure que les saisons s'enchaîne, un épisode pilote qui soufre du syndrome “women in the refrigerator” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_refrigerators ou en bon francais https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Femme_dans_le_frigo et d'un “duel” équilibré entre Springfellow Hawke et le créateur de Supercopter… Après le manche à balai, poussons à fond les manettes avec les engins extraordinaires des consoles 8 Bit et au delàMoon Patrol : un tank à roues sur la lune https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uiHQ6OXgP7Y&pp=ygUcbW9vbiBwYXRyb2wgYXJjYWRlIGxvbmdwbGF5IA%3D%3DBlaster Master : votre grenouille a disparue dans un trou dans la terre, aucun problème, sautez dans votre super tank et partez la retrouver https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2STUx_9bkB4&pp=ygUOYmxhc3RlciBtYXN0ZXI%3DChase H.Q : à fond la caisse dans votre porsche 928, mettez le gyro, et tirez sur la voiture pour l'arrêter (mais que fait la police… ah mince c'est vous) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dfz2qofmZx0&pp=ygUIY2hhc2UgaHE%3DSpyhunter : vous êtes un espion vu de dessus sur une musique de Henri Mancini (Peter Gunn) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93ds1VldZGI&pp=ygUKc3B5IGh1bnRlcg%3D%3D et sa descendance jusqu'à un certain acteur qui joue comme un rocher https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p8cWIhsXqPA&pp=ygUTc3B5IGh1bnRlciB0aGUgcm9jaw%3D%3D Les A cotés : mi américains-mi français, 100% dessins animésM.A.S.K : comment faire un dessin animé culte, comment vendre des jouets de véhicules improbable et mettre en danger un jeune garçon sur un robot scooter, bravo Mr Chalopin !!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpVnR8Fm9IA&list=PL_GZxKg9HwOcBrZkqR4nEB-7NRF7mWTLqLes délires d'enfants de CausmicBeast au sujet de la super Citroën GS sont inspiré de cette voiture https://youtu.be/-e47n2dIMmg?si=QS6sJQimHBxHBm6pDu même, avec une chanson moins bonne (quoique) … mais au moins on a hérité d'un aéroglisseur https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDyMOMFKUj8&pp=ygUgcG9sZSBwb3NpdGlvbiBnZW5lcmlxdWUgZnJhbmNhaXM%3D Et maintenant que reste t'il de nos “amours” ?La famille rapide et furieuse qui parfois sent le fioul ou le diesel https://youtu.be/QR2W7mKxQSw?si=DQTku-vzTd96ZL7cLes “suites” de K2000 : Team Knight Rider (j'ai cherché bouse dans le dictionnaire, il y avait leur photo)K2000 la nouvelle arme https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/K_2000_:_La_Nouvelle_ArmeLe reboot de 2008, vite diffusé, vite oublié https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ew4g9Li3RCI&list=PLEh7Jw_5_R5aL-1K07cbHVj03abr5AGMAOn prend les mêmes recettes et on recommence, mais on appelle ça Viper : un super véhicule, un héros avec une nouvelle identité https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LUEHKZZ_4J4&pp=ygUadmlwZXIgc2VyaWUgdHYgZW4gZnJhbmNhaXM%3DHulk Hogan et son gros bateau https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8BKiigBsa8&pp=ygUpY2FyaWJiZWFuIG9mZnNob3JlcyAtIHRodW5kZXIgaW4gcGFyYWRpc2U%3DLe taxi le plus rapide du sud de la France, écrit par Luc Besson (no comment), réalisé comme un … (censuré) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yvFfavDPwIw&pp=ygUSYmFuZGUgYW5ub25jZSB0YXhp Ce podcast est garanti sans “c'était mieux avant”, il est toutefois enrichi en mauvaise foie !!! Vous pouvez la fiction de Noël de AK Dallas à cette adresse https://le-calendrier-de-juste-avent.lepodcast.fr/23-chasse-de-noel-ak-dallas et sachez qu'il recherche un juriste podcasteur fan de cinéma https://x.com/A_K_Dallas/status/1748732958616240552?s=20 mais aussi dans les productions de Bibou et Bibounette https://chezbibouetbibounette.lepodcast.fr/AK Dallas est écoutable chez Beside game et Beside Zik, tous trouvables à cette adresse https://podcast.ausha.co/beside-games Générique de fin :Un extrait (lunaire ?) de l'enregistrement live de “Les Kids de KITT” du temps de la Cinqhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U2fZUxo-JVI&pp=ygUQbGVzIGtpZHMgZGUga2l0dA%3D%3DDavid Hasselhoff, Junie Antoni, Childeric, et une bonne grosse dose de malaiseKnight Rider vs Airwolf - Theme Song Mashup Epic Version 2021 https://youtu.be/xWmU9QPZJXo?si=mmRjkUvZh4fO6N-O Streethawk & Automan tv theme song Mashup 2022 EPIC Version https://youtu.be/NPagDHTlEv4?si=2YqeVwKVzCiPGaAuMerci à Dany pour avoir mis en image la Super Gs de mes rêves d'enfant (coeur coeur coeur)Merci à Nostalgeek https://twitter.com/Nostalgeek1 pour le petit jingle corporate de fin d'épisodePardon pour le chat de gorge de CausmicBeastEt surtout merci à mon amour “Voisine de Canapé 2000”
Au sommaire de cette spéciale BD : Retour sur la 36e aventure des Chevaliers du ciel Tanguy et Laverdure : Marée rouge en mer Noire (Dargaud), en compagnie de ses trois auteurs : les scénaristes Patrice Buendia & Frédéric Zumbiehl ainsi que le dessinateur Sébastien Philippe ; Chronique de Mortis l'éternel retour de Miguel Ferrada au scénario et Italo Ahumada au dessin (Nine éditions) ; Évocation des deux derniers-nés du Label 619 disponibles chez Rue de Sèvres, à savoir, Lowreader Tome 3 de Run, Petit Rapace, Rours et Pivwan & Clovd Livre 1 – La Dame de Birka de Florent Maudoux ; Recension des comics Nightwing Infinite Tome 4 (Tom Taylor, Bruno Redondo - Urban Comics) et Friday Livre 2 (Ed Brubaker, Marcos Martin, Muntsa Vicente - Glénat). Bonne écoute à toutes et tous !
Les propos exprimés dans ce podcast relèvent d'expériences et d'opinions personnelles dans un but de divertissement et ne substituent pas les conseils d'un.e sexologue ou autre professionnel de la santé. Cette semaine sur le podcast, les filles reçoivent l'intervenante de proximité Annie Archambault qui est venue parler de la vie en situation d'itinérance. Ressources: https://danslarue.org/ https://www.change.org/p/je-soutien-le-projet-de-la-maison-benoit-labre-%C3%A0-st-henri http://rapsim.org/ Collecte de dons: Si vous voulez donner combinaison, manteaux, tuques, mitaines et gants, bas de laine (neufs), cache-cou, pantalon de neige, hotpads ou matériel d'hygiène menstruelle (serviettes sanitaires, tampons, etc.), vous pouvez le faire aux 4 lieux de collecte suivants: Locaux de l'Auberge communautaire du Sud-Ouest (ACSO) Appeler avant au 514-768-5223 5947 Boul. Monk Locaux de Méta D'Âme Appeler avant au 514-528-9000 2250 rue Florian en semaine de 10h à 17h SDC du Village 1211 Rue Ste-Catherine Est du Lundi au Vendredi de 12h à 17h Locaux de RAP jeunesse 10780 rue Laverdure - local 105 lundi au vendredi de 9h à 21h----- Le podcast est présenté par Éros et Compagnie Utiliser le code promo : SexeOral pour 15% de rabais https://www.erosetcompagnie.com/ Les jouets dont les filles parlent: https://www.erosetcompagnie.com/page/podcast Le podcast est présenté par le Centre PHI. Pour plus d'informations: sexedesirsdata.com Le podcast est aussi présenté par Manscaped. Pour plus d'informations: https://ca.manscaped.com/ Code promo pour 20% de rabais et la livraison gratuite: SEXEORAL20 ---- Pour collaborations: info@studiosf.ca Pour toutes questions: sexeoral@studiosf.ca Pour suivre les filles sur Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/sexeoralpodcast Pour contacter les filles directement, écrivez-nous sur Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sexeoral.podcast/
Host, Adam McAtee sits down with Physical Therapist and Pilates Educator Jeremy Laverdure to discuss using simple science to help with common narrative in the Pilates Industry. If you're ready to add science-based skills to your teaching, click here to start your 7-Day Free Trial of the VIP Membership today. Click here to register (it's FREE) Want to stay connected with Jeremy? Click here to view his continuing education courses at Movement Science Made Simple. Follow Jeremy on Instagram: @Jl_DPT (His personal page) @mvmt_sci (Movement Science Made Simple's page) Follow Adam on Instagram:@AdamMcAteePilates
Learn more about Diana Laverdure-Dunetz, author of The Plant Powered Dog at https://plantpowereddog.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Plant Based / Vegan Life Coaching. If you've ever thought that avoiding or eliminating animal products would be a great idea, but you didn't know where to start, this Podcast is for you. For more information, to submit a question or topic, or to book a free 30 minute Coaching session visit micheleolendercoaching.com or email info@micheleolendercoaching.com “Buy Me A Coffee” Donate Button Facebook page Instagram Music, Production, and Editing by Charlie Weinshank. For inquiries email: charliewe97@gmail.com Virtual Support Services: https://proadminme.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vedgeyourbest/message
Be Green With Amy - Plant Based Nutrition, Weight Loss, Cooking, Traveling and more!
Are you considering feeding your dog a plant based diet? Join us as Canine Nutritionist, Diana Laverduere-Dunetz talks about the many benefits of switching dogs to a plant-based diet. Plant-Powered Dog Whole Food Plant Based Companion Dr. Pitcairn's Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs & Cats (4th Edition)
Erin Laverdure is a member of the ND Child Care Action Alliance and co-founder of the child care co-op in Hazen. After a year of research, the NDCCAA released a policy concept to address the child care crisis.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Parce que chaque semaine qui commence est un nouveau départ, j'avais envie de vous lire une histoire. Alors je vous propose le bijou comme un bisou. Il était une fois Tintin et les bijoux. Je suis allée à Genève à l'hôtel Cornavin qui arbore le buste de Tintin avec son chien Milou en vitrine. Cet hôtel est mythique car Hergé y avait ses habitudes et c'est là qu'il a placé l'enlèvement du Professeur dans l'affaire Tournesol. Alors j'ai mis mes pas dans ceux de Tintin et du capitaine Haddock et je suis arrivée à Nyon, puis, en poursuivant mon exploration j'ai rencontré Hubert Cunin, un passionné de BD en général et de Tintin en particulier. Il est le co-scénariste de « Coup de feu dans les Alpes » et « Le Pilote qui en savait trop » aux éditions Dargaud. Et comme il connait bien mon amour des bijoux, il a attiré mon attention sur ce sujet qui, dans Tintin, dépasse largement la Castafiore à laquelle on pense tout de suite. Je remercie vivement Hubert Cunin pour cet échange et vous invite à vous plonger aux éditions Dargaud dans « Coup de feu dans les Alpes » et « Le Pilote qui en savait trop », dont il est l'un des scénaristes dans cette série des « Aventure Classic de Tanguy & Laverdure ». Comme ce sont des aventures aéronautiques, j'en profite pour un clin d'œil spécial à Tony Bellone, joaillier et également pilote, dont j'aime le bracelet « Le Lien » inspiré des Rilsan, les bracelets de serrages qui retiennent les câbles dans les avions. Je suis Anne Desmarest de Jotemps et je donne une voix aux bijoux chaque dimanche. Et si vous aussi vous avez envie de faire parler vos bijoux et votre Maison je serai ravie de vous accompagner pour réaliser votre podcast de marque ou de vous accueillir en partenaire dans mes podcasts natifs. La semaine prochaine je vous retrouve sur ce même podcast. Et notre rdv avec Brillante le podcast des femmes de la joaillerie sera le 16 octobre. Quand au sujet du podcast Il était une fois le bijou, le seul podcast thématique de la joaillerie, c'est encore un secret. Pour ne manquez aucun de nos rendez-vous du dimanche autour du bijou, abonnez à chacun de mes 3 podcasts sur votre plate-forme d'écoute préférée. Si vous êtes sur Apple podcast, Spotify ou sur YouTube mettez de jolis commentaires, des pouces ou des étoiles et surtout partagez l'épisode, c'est ce qui permet de doper le référencement des podcasts ! Je vous souhaite une jolie semaine, à la semaine prochaine pour votre prochaine histoire de bijoux. Ingénierie du son : Alice Krief , Les Belles Fréquences Musique : Allan Deschamps, 0 Le Sign Graphisme : Ghinwa Achkar
Beaucoup de questions sur le plateau de la 6ème de JumpSeat. Des SAF oui, mais quand ? Prochain client Rafale : Colombie ou Irak ? Buck Danny ou Tanguy et Laverdure ? Le drone est-il l'avenir de l'Afrique ? Combien de pilotes dans le cockpit ? Hybrid electro or not hybrid electro ? Et des réponses… Retrouvez-nous sur Twitch et abonnez-vous pour être prévenu des prochaines émission : https://www.twitch.tv/jumpseat_abzHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Le sommaire : Comment la France s'y prend-elle pour dominer toutes les disciplines des sports aériens. Avec Loic Logeais, DTN FFA Aude Lemordant, triple championne du monde de voltige Rencontre avec Tanguy et Laverdure, avec deux auteurs de BD aéro à succès Vincent Patrice Buendia Nous aurons aussi avec nous, Michel Drucker Michel Hugues Jacques Simac Diffusé en live sur Twitch : https://www.twitch.tv/jumpseat_abzHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Indigenous communities have practices which have helped them reconcile differences and heal from intergenerational trauma. What are these practices? What is their definition of healing? How can we integrate indigenous wisdom into current healing and peacebuilding practices? On this special episode of the Think Peace Podcast, host Colette Rausch co-hosts this powerful discussion with Senior Producer Cam Cassar as they are joined by indigenous healers Dr. Euphrasia (Efu) Nyaki and Donald (Del) Laverdure to discuss their journey into healing, how ancestral wisdom and spirituality factor into their practices, and how their approaches to healing can help inform domestic and global healing and peacebuilding. This episode is a special one in that it was part of a live event held earlier in partnership with the Think Peace Learning and Support Hub, The Mary Hoch Foundation, and the Mary Hoch Center for Reconciliation at George Mason University's Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution. You can watch the video of the event here.
Dans ce 6e épisode, j'ai eu le plaisir d'échanger avec Lara Pageot-Laverdure, une des mes anciennes élèves qui habite depuis 8 ans en Nouvelle-Zélande. Elle nous raconte, entre autres, son parcours en jazz au collégial et comment elle a trouvé son violoncelle à plus de 2000km de chez elle. Pour en savoir plus sur la ceinture dont parle Lara dans l'épisode : https://www.cellostrap.com/ Toujours rêver d'apprendre le violoncelle? Et si c'était possible de le faire à votre propre rythme, dans le confort de votre foyer? Toutes les informations à www.praticocello.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/praticocello/message
Michael Laverdure is from the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. He's a partner with the local architectural firm DSGW and the founder of the First American Design Studio. We met with at his office in Lake Elmo, Minnesota–a small town some 14 miles outside the Twin Cities. He is part of a growing community of indigenous architects from around the world, including New Zealand and Canada. We had a wide ranging conversation with Laverdure about his views on money, his remarkable path to becoming an architect and the significance of home, Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota.
Host Charles Potts, Chief Innovation Officer of the Independent Community Bankers of America, talks with Steve Schnall, CEO of Quontic Bank about how the bank launched a cryptocurrency rewards program to generate customer interest. Brian Laverdure, Vice President, Payments and Technology Policy for ICBA offers insight on the changing crypto regulatory environment. This episode is sponsored by Atlas Platform.
We meet Deb Foster (Ojibwe), the Executive Director of Ain Dah Yung, and Mike Laverdure (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians in North Dakota), a partner with DSGW Architects. Deb Foster and Mike Laverdure both played leading roles in the creation of Mino Oski Ain Dah Yung, a beautiful new apartment building in St. Paul, where formerly homeless Native young adults can live, reconnect to culture, and get job skills. Mino Oski Ain Dah Yung opened in November of 2019.Reporter/Producer Laurie Stern joins Leah and Cole in-studio for this program, which originally aired in Season Two Episode Four of Native Lights podcast. https://minnesotanativenews.org/two-visionaries-one-project/Meaning “Our Home” in Ojibwe, Ain Dah Yung Center provides a healing place within the community for American Indian youth and families to thrive in safety and wholeness. http://adycenter.org/Check out the American Indian Science and Engineering Society here: https://www.aises.org/about/board/michael-laverdureMike Laverdure is Principal, Director of First American Design at DSGW: https://dsgw.com/category/projects/native-american/This episode originally comes from Season 2 of Native LightsNative Lights: Where Indigenous Voices Shine is produced by Minnesota Native News and Ampers, Diverse Radio for Minnesota's Communities with support from the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage fund. Online at https://minnesotanativenews.org/
On retrouve l'auteur de bande dessinée Albert Uderzo, décédé à 92 ans en mars 2020, à travers des archives de la Sonuma. Il est en 1980 avec Michèle Cédric et en 1993 avec Luc Beyer de Rycke. Uderzo évoque son parcours, et en particulier sa grande amitié pour Goscinny, avec qui il a créé les séries Oumpah-Pah et Astérix. Avec Jean-Michel Charlier, Uderzo est aussi l'auteur de la série Tanguy et Laverdure. Il évoque son enfance de fils d’immigrés italiens, une enfance modeste dans un quartier ouvrier en France. AFP PHOTO / BERTRAND GUAY
Vorbemerkung: In der Folge hüpfe ich über X Prototypen die es nie geschaft haben eine eigene Folge zu kriegen. Hoffe ihr könnt trotzdem lachen .. für mich sind das jetzt erstmal 60 Tabs in Firefox weniger ;) Musik(genauso doof wie die Episode ;) )https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwiKpARBngU Der Cliffhanger:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef_Sz%C3%A1jerhttps://www.dw.com/de/meinung-jozsef-szajer-homophober-heuchler-mit-drogen/a-55824165https://www.n-tv.de/mediathek/videos/panorama/EU-Politiker-tuermt-von-Sexparty-ueber-Regenrinne-article22209590.html Der einzig wahre Soldat:https://www.thecut.com/2020/10/gay-penguins-stole-an-entire-egg-nest-from-lesbian-penguins.html?utm_medium=s1&utm_campaign=thecut&utm_source=tw https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nils_Olav https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gIZnS77Vy40 https://www.wn.de/Specials/Netzteile/2016/08/2504092-Tiere-Schottischer-Koenigspinguin-wird-norwegischer-General Space Marines sind doof:https://theconversation.com/how-spacex-lowered-costs-and-reduced-barriers-to-space-112586 https://aerospace.csis.org/data/space-launch-to-low-earth-orbit-how-much-does-it-cost/ https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Space_Force Flugzeuge, wenn man mal großzügig ist:https://www.bleacherbreaker.com/incredible/worst-planes-and-helicopters-ever-made/?view-all&firefox=1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_XFV https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinkel_Lerche https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiller_VXT-8 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focke-Wulf_Triebfl%C3%BCgel https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryan_X-13_Vertijet https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_SC.1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SNECMA_Col%C3%A9opt%C3%A8re https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rolls-Royce_Thrust_Measuring_Rig Die Nostalgiecomics:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mick_Tanguyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_Dannyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanguy_et_Laverdure Individuelle Mobilität Marke Militär: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jet_pack https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backpack_helicopter https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Jetpack https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiller_ROE_Rotorcycle https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoppi-Copter https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XzDMlhk4Sw https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hiller_VZ-1 https://www.engadget.com/2017-02-20-hoversurf-scorpion-3-hoverbike.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS91cmw_c2E9dCZyY3Q9aiZxPSZlc3JjPXMmc291cmNlPXdlYiZjZD0mdmVkPTJhaFVLRXdqMmpvLTF3cjd0QWhVTjlhUUtIVWlCQklVUUZqQUZlZ1FJQVJBQyZ1cmw9aHR0cHMlM0ElMkYlMkZ3d3cuZW5nYWRnZXQuY29tJTJGMjAxNy0wMi0yMC1ob3ZlcnN1cmYtc2NvcnBpb24tMy1ob3ZlcmJpa2UuaHRtbCZ1c2c9QU92VmF3MGxscXVpbHZhLTdwYnZYQ1VLMWVtSw&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAABceBsXE2D9bdPiHtLpkm8lQDiAL1-_I06JLoxkLbcRahu8kzfa8YbuIYnoFKRg0fzkbC4Kw7SxaX2i1jI2ewlztRSyIgRcn2jo5Go-zPzt-6OD9OT3pH3uWS_ndsySIyeVDF9Zh3gHDj02p6R-DNDkmuws5TG5mcPYPFL0nzY40
Connaissez-vous l'approche du gestionnaire-coach? Imaginez une équipe dans laquelle des décisions sont prises à tous les niveaux... Vous aimeriez que ça soit possible dans votre équipe? Découvrez notre entrevue avec Ariane Laverdure au cours de laquelle elle nous parle de son expérience sur l'impact qu'une culture de coaching peut avoir sur une équipe et dans une organisation!
Dominique Laverdure est la présidente de Rouge Marketing, une agence située dans la région féerique de Mont-Tremblant, mais c’est aussi une entrepreneure hyper impliquée qui s’est crée tout un conte L’article Floplab – EP05: Dominique Laverdure est apparu en premier sur RadioH2O.
Founder of Plant-Powered Dog, Diana Laverdure-Dunetz, M.S., will discuss the health and ethical benefits of feeding plant-based diets to canine companions, along with information about dog-friendly fresh fruits and vegetables. Diana holds a master of animal science degree, and she is a dog health writer, vegan canine nutritionist, and passionate animal advocate. She is also the creator of She Goes Vegan, a website empowering women to create a compassionate world through veganism.
Today I am talking with Diana Laverdure-Dunetz. Diana holds a Master’s in Animal Science and is an award-winning dog health writer, vegan canine nutritionist and passionate animal activist. She went vegetarian in 2009 and vegan in 2017. Diana’s mission is to end animal abuse and exploitation in all forms and to increase legal punishments for anyone perpetrating animal cruelty. Diana is the founder of two vegan movements: The website She Goes Vegan (www.shegoesvegan.com) empowers women to create a compassionate vegan world that respects all animals, the environment and future generations. Plant-Powered Dog (www.plantpoweredog.com) educates dog guardians on the health and ethical benefits of feeding nutritious plant-based diets to our canine companions. In 2019, Diana created the Plant-Powered Dog Food Summit (www.plantpowereddogfoodsummit.com), which featured 17 global leaders in the fields of plant-based veterinary nutrition, science and animal activism to discuss the facts about plant-based vs. meat-based diets for dogs. Diana and her vegan husband, Rodney, live in South Florida and are involved with many animal rights organizations.This series features conversations I conducted with individuals who have dedicated their work and lives to Vegan research, businesses, art, and society. This podcast series is hosted by Patricia Kathleen and Wilde Agency Media. TRANSCRIPTION*Please note this is an automated transcription, please excuse any errors or typos[00:00:00] In this episode, I had the opportunity to speak with founder, author and Vegan activist Diana Laverdure-Dunetz. Key points addressed were Diana's Web site and its information and services titled She Goes Vegan. Dot com is designed to empower, educate and motivate women from all walks of life to create Vegan lives. We also discussed her recent interactive journaling book titled F Asterix C.K.. Yeah, I'm going Vegan slated to be a game changer when considering implementing veganism into one's life. You can find that on Amazon.com. Stay tuned for my riveting interview with Diana. [00:00:43] My name is Patricia Kathleen. And this series features interviews and conversations I conduct with experts from food and fashion to tech and agriculture, from medicine and science to health and humanitarian arenas. Dialog captured here is part of our ongoing effort to host transparent and honest rhetoric. For those of you who, like myself, find great value in hearing the expertize and opinions of individuals who have dedicated their work and lives to their ideals. If you're enjoying these podcasts, be sure to check out our subsequent series that dove deep into specific areas such as founders and entrepreneurs. Fasting and roundtable topics they can be found on our Web site. Patricia Kathleen dot com, where you can also join our newsletter. You can also subscribe to all of our series on iTunes, Spotify, Stitcher, Pod Bean and YouTube. Thanks for listening. Now let's start the conversation. [00:01:40] Hi, everyone, and welcome back. I'm your host, Patricia. And today I'm sitting down with Diana, Leverdure-Dunetz. [00:01:46] She's a founder, author and Vegan activist. You can find out more on her Web site. She goes Vegan dot com. Welcome, Diana. [00:01:55] Thank you so much for having me. I'm really, really honored to be here. [00:01:58] Absolutely. I'm very excited to get into your story and talk about everything that you're doing, as well as the new book you've put out, the new journal, Interactive Journal for everyone listening. [00:02:08] I'll read a quick bio on Diana to give you kind of a foundation, but before that, a quick roadmap of today's podcast and where we'll be headed so you can follow along and have a forecast. We'll first look at Diana's academic and professional history, as well as her personal Vegan story and how that kind of plays into her current endeavors. Then we'll look at two unpacking. She goes Vegan, the Web site, the future classes and services it offers and the current information that she's providing her audience. We'll also look at logistics when w where, why, how are their co-founders? Did she take funding? And we'll get into the ethos behind it. The impetus for launching that Web site. And we'll also look at her interactive journal just recently published on Amazon F Asterisk. C.K.. Yeah, I'm going Vegan. We're gonna get in to a first and foremost the name behind that. There's a reason behind that wonderful title. And then we're gonna talk about what that journal offers its audience and its users. We'll wrap everything up with goals and advice that Diana has for those of you who are looking to follow her or get involved or perhaps emulate some of her career success. As promised, a quick bio on Diana. DianaLaverdure-Dunetz holds a masters in animal science and is an award winning dog health writer, Vegan canine nutritionist and passionate animal activists. She went vegetarian in 2009 and Vegan in 2017. Diana's mission is to end animal abuse and exploitation in all forms and to increase legal punishments for anyone perpetuating animal cruelty. Diana is the founder of two Vegan movements, the site. She goes Vegan w w w dot. She goes Vegan dot com empowers women to create a compassionate Vegan world that respects all animals, the environment and future generations. Plant power dog w w w dot plant power dog dot com educates dog guardians on the health and ethical benefits of feeding, nutrition, nutritious plant based diets to our canine companions. In 2019, Diana created the plant parad dog food summit w w w dot plant Power Dog Food Summit icon, which featured 17 global leaders in the fields of plant based vegetable, veterinary nutrition science and animal activism. To discuss the fact about plant based versus meat based diets for dogs. Diane and her Vegan husband, Rodney, live in South Florida and are involved with many animal rights organizations. So, Diana, I think that's fascinating. And you and I talked off the record. I was using Vegan dog food for the past 10 years, and I'm really excited to see more companies join that revolution and can kind of unpack that. But I want to first start off with, if you could give us a brief summary of not all of it, but the pieces that you feel pertained to where you are now, of your academic background and early professional life and your Vegan story as it's kind of intertwined throughout all of that that brought you to creating. She goes Vegan. [00:05:05] Sure. And I think, like all of us, it's been a journey. And I actually started out in life and professional life as a writer. So that's what I did since I was a child. I wrote stories and and really, as a kid, didn't think I'm going to grow up to be a canine nutritionist or I'm going to grow up and start any Vegan movement. That certainly wasn't on my mind. I hear so many Vegan stories where actually they say when they were a child, they couldn't look at meat. I wish I had been that enlightened, does a child, but I was not. You know, I grew up in a family where my mom served meat and made need and animal products. My grandfather was a kosher butcher. So there you go. And that was just a fact of life. So what happened was I adopted in 2002, the dog that changed my life. His name was Chase, and he was with me for 16 and a half years. And what happened was having adopted a rescue dog. I learned, of course, so much. I got immersed in actually the shelter where I adopted him from and immersed in the community of an abused cats and dogs, which many people are into that. But what happened with me was I couldn't stop there. You know, we often think of abused cats, dogs, companion animals. And we shudder at the thought, of course, but we don't think about the torture and abuse and brutality and the hell that all of these other species endure every single day. So adopting chase expanded my mind to the abuse going on in all species. By that time, I will make a very long story short also due to health issues that Chase had. I was feeding him a fresh food diet in order to create a healthier individual. It was not Vegan and that led me into the world of canine nutrition and hence the Masters, because I was now working with veterinarians and serious scientists and I wanted to show that I was also serious and academically educated in the field. But what happened was, even as a vegetarian for many, many years, I was continuing to create meat based diets for dogs because, quite frankly, I bought into the bullshit and the hype that dogs need to eat their wolves and they need to eat meat to thrive, that you're a little Pekinese or Pomeranian or whomever is really a wolf inside and even even your German shepherd generic, which is what Chase was, you know, that they're that that they're really wolves. And when I decided I could no longer myself harm any animal in any way and said, that's it, you know, told my husband, we're not going to be vegetarian, we're gonna go vegan. He pointed out the hypocrisy of what I was doing every day and I could no longer do this and create these meat based diets for dogs. It was killing me inside. And I decided, well, maybe I'll just leave the business and my husband said, don't leave the business. Do some research and see, you know, look into this. And I did. And it turned out, thankfully, that actually plant based diets for dogs, not only can they thrive, but, you know, can they live on them, but they can thrive on them. They're super healthy. Many veterinarians believe that it's these high meat diets and the bio accumulation of toxins in animals and tissue that are causing all the cancer that we're seeing and all the chronic illnesses. Yeah. So that's what led me to create a movement called Plant Power Dog and to create the plant powered dog food summit. And now I'm just so grateful to be able to combine the dog nutrition knowledge and and help dogs without harming any other animals. So VegFest been amazing. And then I decided, well, I don't want to stop with the dog food world. You know, not everyone has a dog. What. What more can I do? So that came to she goes Vegan and why she goes vegan and not everyone goes. Yeah. Because I truly believe that women have an innate empathy. There is unfortunately my cheese mo surrounding meat eating. And you know, that's that's been more qualified people than I have studied and written about that. But women really I feel are innately. Veganism and sexuality and how women have been treated in a sexual manner. You know, as body parts, it's it's it's a really parallel type of issue. So I feel that women can really relate to what animals go through. And so I feel that we also have about seventy five, seventy seven percent of the purchasing power in the country and in the world. So, you know, we have the power, we have the empathy and we can make the difference. So that's my goal was she goes Vegan is to really empower all women to go Vegan and to create just a kind of world for everybody. And I love that. [00:11:04] And I love that you have like an audience. You know, I think that people get nervous about excluding, especially when you're trying to educate. However, it's not saying men can't get on your Web site, but that link is really fascinating. [00:11:17] And I know a lot of feminist theorists have made that comparison and analogy. Use the metaphor of, you know, a lot of the abuse that's happened towards women and women identified or populations considered other, you know, this comparison to making them animal like so that we can disassociate and actually abuse them. And therefore, even, you know, acknowledging that that's how we disassociate with animals, you can treat them less than humane. [00:11:44] And I think it's a fascinating that you've made that connection. And that's one of the impetuses for you, targeting it towards women. Women identified people. I'm wondering, when you jump on your site, you have your story there. You have articles you've presented. I know that, you know, you have classes that are there and you're kind of coming forth because this is all a very current endeavor. And I also know that you work one on one still with clients that have ailing dogs who need your personal expertize and things like that. I'm wondering, I like the articles you chose and I wonder how you curate them because you have a very specific tonality with your Vegan mission and as an animal activist and things like that. And so I'm wondering, is there any way that you choose to pepper? It must you must be aware that it brands you, you know, to to put other people's information on your site. And so I'm curious as to how you go about curating it or if it's just like a pleasure of your own and you know of your moment to, like, go through and post things for your audience. [00:12:48] Sure. Well, I write everything myself. I always have. I don't accept. Well, an unplanned powered dog. I have. I have. Except a couple of guest post from veterinarians and true experts in the field. But in general, I everything is written by myself. And as far as the content, it's very purposefully directed towards the. And I hate to use this word because none of us are average, but towards the everyday woman who wants to make a difference and who is facing her own challenges in life, whether she is a caretaker for her parents or whether she's raising children and whether she has a partner, who it's it's causing a rift in the relationship because the partner doesn't want to be Vegan. So my niche, if you will, are everyday issues that women aspiring to what we know to veganism go through. I think there are a lot of people who do great things, bringing together Vegan business people and Vegan business women, and that is completely wonderful. I want to address the everyday needs of the person of the woman who wants to go Vegan and create a kind of world. Yeah. Everything I write is is is really geared for her. [00:14:12] That's it, and it's a wonderful guide. [00:14:13] I think that people overlook this kind of need for people addressing all angles of the life, you know, because Vegan is not everyone freaked? Well, the majority of people I speak to who don't have a lot of information about veganism view it as a diet. And there's people who are involved with it, know that it very quickly becomes a lifestyle, a philosophy. It's it's a spirituality. It becomes a lot of different things quite quickly for most people who practice it, regardless of one's entry point, you know, regardless of your gateway drug, as I always say, you can come in there having just suffered a heart attack or having a spiritual awakening. But usually you'll start looking into the benefits of the health or the spirituality or the welfare of the environment and the beauty and humanity of the animals and all of those things within time. And so it's it's it's good to I think it's fascinating because your site is one of the first ones that I've seen where it's approaching veganism from that aspect. You know, you are coming at it from these social interpersonal relationships, like all of those things would matter if it wasn't just a diet, if it was really a way of living, you know, and it a reality. [00:15:19] So I'm hoping that you say that. That's exactly right. And that's sort of my credo, is that I put a plant based is a diet. Vegan is a lifestyle. [00:15:32] Yeah. OK. And that brings me to I'm really glad you just said that, because it brings me to my point. I always I wait for people to drop it. [00:15:42] I always say, you know, the podcast is called Investigating Vegan Life. And so I'm not afraid of the V word, but a lot of people I interview are. And there's a marketing reason behind that. There's a lot of other reasons. But so for you, I always ask people to define those to the second they drop in the word plant based or Vegan to differentiate. So plant based is a diet and Vegan is a lifestyle for you. [00:16:05] Correct. And as a matter of fact, I have an article just dedicated to that. What's the difference between plant based and Vegan? And why does it matter? And it does matter because so many times someone will say to me, Oh, I was vegan for ten years, and then I decided to, you know, not to be one day. You were plant based for 10 years, OK? Because that isn't Vegan is based on plant based is based on what is in it for me. And I'm not saying this in a derogatory manner, but you kind of put the nail, the nail hit the nail on the head when you said if if you're entering it from the health standpoint, that type of thing is really generally when someone becomes plant based. They've had a health crisis. Vegan is not focused on the ME. It's focused on the individual outside of us that is being harmed. Okay, so plant based, what is really this diet doing for me? What is this lifestyle doing to create peace for other individuals? So for me, when you when you're looking at what goes on in factory farms and what goes on with animal testing and what goes on with or you don't one day decide that doesn't work for you. Right. Because you have it's a core value. Right. If that's your quote, you don't. At least for me, you don't change your core values. You know, in a snap. But you might I heard I was once you don't you ever go down the Internet rabbit hole. Right? I got on a Gwyneth Paltrow Web site. And I don't I've never done that before. But something that I was researching led me there. And there was a conversation, much like you and I are having, that a woman was having with when, if and when it was disgusting how much she loves to cook. And it was all going quite well. And then I heard this woman say something that if my head could have exploded, it would have. The woman said to Gwyneth Paltrow, I was vegan for ten years and then I smelled you cooking sausage, pork, sausage, and it just smells so good. I had to have that sausage and you made me not vegan. And that just blew my mind. Yeah. That woman is not was not Vegan. That woman, if she were Vegan would have been disgusted by the sausage. She would have seen the sentient, intelligent, beautiful, loving animal. Not not a sizzling pork sausage. Right. [00:18:59] Yeah. And it sounds like the motivation for what had the way she was eating may have already been obtained. [00:19:07] You know, I know that a lot of people look into veganism for when you're not dying of a cardiac arrest, it's to lose weight or other things like that. I've had I've spoken to several people, male and female, that say, you know, idea I did that to lose some weight. Bill Clinton was Vegan for a bit. So, you know, I went for it and. And they lost the weight and they went back. And I it's it's a very similar thing. I usually try to remind them, like, well, I think what you did was engaged in a diet that worked for you, that eliminated animal products. But Vegan, I think you're right about that. That term does carry heavier. [00:19:42] And I think that's why some people stray away from it. I think that, you know this. If you have a product you're peddling, you know, you kind of want to include everybody. And now there are tons of products that there's a lot of anger in the communities, plant based Vegan and everything else, and even organic communities, because marketing is, you know, Mad Men are no stranger to adaptation. And everything was fortified in the 80s and now everything is plant based. So you can have something that has egg and, you know, gelatin in it, have this plant based like little logo on the front. And so it's clear it's I think it's good to delineate it from people who are looking for the safety label of Vegan. [00:20:21] That's right. And, you know, I want to be cautious in that. I am not. I'm grateful for everybody who eat plant based, because if you do eat plant based, then you're saving animals regardless of what your motivation is. So if everybody a plant based. That would be amazing. But I just think it's really important to understand the difference between a diet and a lifestyle. Absolutely. [00:20:50] What I'm looking at that I kind of want to unpack the interactive guided journal just published on Amazon. And it's f Asterix C.K.. [00:20:59] Yeah, I'm going Vegan exclamation point. And prior to us starting to record this, you and I got into it, you know, from one writer to another. I said, how are we going to go about this? Do you want to say the F word? And you had said it just came out. I haven't really thought about it. You know, auditorily, the spoken word was a little bit different than that written. And then we got into very, very quickly we got into the ethos of why you chose that title. So. Can you kind of enumerate on that now for us? [00:21:28] Yeah, and it's it ties in so well to what we're just talking about, I don't think. And I'm just going to say it. I don't think you'd say, fuck. Yeah. Go and plant based. OK. It's true. It does not have the same cachet that they have with say shit. [00:21:45] So it's like, yeah, I'm not just I'm not I'm not just going be in, you know, it's ongoing. Vegan fuck. Yeah. I'm go and Vegan. Yeah. You know, because it means something to me. And in the values behind it means something to me in in the concept that all animals have the right to live in peace means something to me. So it's like yeah, it's meant to purposefully just kind of really grab you. And the rationale behind it was there are tons of amazing cookbooks out there. I am not a recipe developer year. I own most of them. And, you know, tons of great books to tell you why you should be Vegan and all of that sort of thing. But what I wanted this to do was. To capture the person on an emotional level and kind of hold their hand as they explore their own their own motives and get to know them in their own self discovery journey, because I think that most of us who are Vegan will say it's a journey of self discovery. [00:22:58] And so in Ewing, ever changing, you know, I don't there is no Everest. I haven't summited yet. And I'm going on 10 years. And it's just, you know, and that's the kind of the beauty of it. [00:23:09] You know, our bodies don't stop changing. Like, why would you know your faith and your belief system and your analysis? I do want to touch on some of the aspects of the book that I scrubbed from online. The Journal you list off these things and you just said that it's kind of this accompaniment. And I'm glad that I was able to really dove in because I when someone talks about an interactive journal, I expect them to deliver. [00:23:34] And I think that that's what your analysis frequently does, even the way you come at your writing. You know, you come at this kind of whole person effect from your Web site and the way that you write things like you just mentioned, writing for the social relationships and how those can be strained by veganism. But in fuck you. I'm going vegan. You mentioned that it gets you. It's meant to get people clear, set goals get motivated. It's simple steps, easy plans. You recording options like being able to record and note things, overlook your and oversee your feelings, track your records and emotions and review your progress. And it feels like it's very stepped out as to because I think a lot of people like to keep it tight and tidy like these three steps. But that's not how we are as human beings. We have all these different facets, you know, and so having this kind of this litany of what it's going to produce if you're in you know, if you're doing this interactive journal, I think is is really empowering. And it's what someone needs because it is this all encompassing lifestyle, you know, and you're gonna have a lot of different areas that are clocking different successes and happiness barometers in the beginning than others. What would you say is, was the main impetus? You know, you have this. I will say as a side note from speaking with over the past two months, I've spoken to about 50 different vegans from all different walks of life, from scientists to mothers raising children, you know, and back again. And I will say the one thing is that when people talk about becoming Vegan, it's very much so in the exact same moment of you describing your title. [00:25:14] It's never like, well, and then after, you know, 15 years of gentle study, I slowly decided that I'd be Vegan. [00:25:20] It's this moment where they're like, I'm Vegan. This is it. You know, and so the fuck. Yeah, I'm going vegan is really appropriate to that end. But I'm wondering what inspired you to actually capture that and then help write an interactive journal? Was it your own study or was it to help someone else out? [00:25:38] It was based on my own experience because so something that's recently over the last few years, more so, I discovered a practice called Kysen. And what Kysen is is is kind of means continuous improvement in Japanese. And it's based on the ancient philosophy and ancient philosophy and. I think you can make that ready decision, like, yeah, I'm going Vegan. But a lot of times what comes next can be can seem very intimidating. OK, what do I do now? How do I step it out? How do I really do this? Maybe it isn't practical for me to just get rid of everything in one fell swoop. You know, on a practical level, it can be different. So I took the concept of Kysen, which is continuous improvement, and stepped it out over three months to guide people week by week, month, month one, month to month three and each week within that month. And how what tiny step Kaizen is all about taking small steps to reach large goals. So it might work for somebody to say overnight, I'm going Vegan into just do that. But for many people, smaller steps make more sense. So it's based on that philosophy of the accumulation of smaller, non-threatening steps to eventually reach a very large goal. And in the interim of that, you get to explore how you feel about it. So I came up with guided prompts that I felt would resonate based on my experience, with my own journey with others, other vegans. So it's really kind of I call it like having your best friend by your side to hold your hand while while you're doing this. But your best friend also happens to be like a Vegan expert. [00:27:46] Yeah, absolutely. I like the guided prompts. I think they're necessary, you know, to get anyone going. And I think that that Japanese philosophy is winning the award for this year for me. I've got a lot of people bring up different key aspects, that they have an icky guy and different things that they've kind of dropped into and thought this is life changing. And I was like, all right, we all need to take a trip to Tokyo and start reading again. [00:28:14] But I am. I love that. [00:28:16] I haven't ever heard of them, Kysen. And I'm going to look it up and look more into it. And it's true. We can't hear certain truths enough. You know, of course, every mountain has begun with a step, every skyscrapers, the first stone. But we just don't put that in place enough. And it's also very, very difficult without prompts that you're offering to know how and where to begin. Even as an adult, as it is a grown woman running, you know, a very full load. I, I still find it difficult nature and figuring out the first step of a new endeavor. I'm wondering looking forward to the future. You've got you know, you've got a lot of balls in the air and there's a lot of pivot's and things like that that you could do. And before I ask you about your goals for each of your endeavor, I'm kind of wondering everyone I've spoken to Vegan a not over the past six months for podcasting and documentary film work, has a conversation that they've had well, since the pandemic. Let's go back to January. This changed their relationship with their business and with their the way that they are viewing their diet and food and environment and sustainability. And you don't have to be Vegan. You just have to be alive and well right now in the world to have had these conversations with yourself. And I'm wondering, because you you regularly have these conversations. It's your line of work and your vegan lifestyle. Can you speak to how the COPD 19 pandemic has altered or changed or reinstated some of your core truths or axiomatic beliefs? [00:29:53] Yeah, I would say it's reinforced and reinstated them, as you're saying, and it's quite interesting because there is a wonderful research organization out there called Analytics and they are dedicated to helping those of us who are Vegan with proper research in which to which to use to influence others. And they came out with a wonderful study. And I actually wrote an article that really just took all the aspects of their study on Koban 19 and what people understood about this and where it originated from. And I believe it was something like 16 percent, maybe a little bit more of people even understood how Koven 19 originated. And then it came from animals and then it came from having lively animals and dead animals in close proximity and from these wet markets. So whereas vegans are immersed in this knowledge on a day to day basis. You know, we've seen these types of things before. We've seen mad cow disease. We've seen these things, the jet. We have to understand that the general population isn't necessarily immersed in this. So I'm hoping that there is a silver lining to this and that that silver lining will be a greater awareness that when we when we intrude upon nature, we are not just harming nature. We truly are harming ourselves. We can't we can't do it and not have it come back and bite us in the ass. It's just wrong. So even if there are those among us who haven't yet reached a point of empathy for animals and for other species, if they have empathy for their for the human race or for their own families or their own selves. This should be proof that we have to respect all living beings. [00:32:01] Yeah. And I think you said it best when you said, you know, for things not to turn around and come bite us in the ass. [00:32:07] And, you know, in early childhood, one of the first markers is when you're raising children or even in child psychology is called object permanence. [00:32:16] And it's the understanding that when something disappears, it's not truly just dropped off the face of the earth. And once a child realizes that their entire cognitive psyche kind of shifts in their personality changes and it's the same thing, the idea that there's this free lunch, that you could be hurting an animal, an environment in the world and not have it somehow come back to affect you and your own kin, one day is virtually impossible. And we've all known it since we were about two and discovered object permanence. You know, simply something not seen doesn't mean it won't come back to affect you again or doesn't exist. And so I think that is really, really great observation. I'm wondering, when you look at you just came out with your book and it's like you being in labor and my asking you when you're having your next child, but I'm gonna do it anyway. Do you see more books in your future as far as did you receive enough gratification out of it, or will you just really focus on this one for the next couple of years and then look at it? [00:33:14] So I appreciate your calling this a book. I think of it more as a book written by the person who has it more than myself. In the past, I wrote two books that took years to write each one. Mostly, though, I guess the most popular one was called Canine Neutra Genomics. And Nutro Genomics is the science of how nutrition affects our genome. Back then, I was not Vegan and I would write a very different view of that now, but nevertheless, it was. It didn't take quite a long time and was definitely about a three year birthing process. I think the beauty of this journal is that in it it really while it's my brain child and I'm very close to it, I'm giving it over more readily to other people to really make it their own. So I actually do have a kind of accompaniment to it in the works right now that I you know, it's kind of like, oh, I can now do this with this and guide people in this way and I can do this with this. So it's kind of gotten a lot of the wheels turning as to where can I go with this, because I think you seem to say the guided journal is help you and they really help me and journaling really helps me. So I'm at a point where I'm thinking, what more can I do with this to help people? I would also eventually like to do some some courses, maybe an online course. And again, that would be to help the. Every day, woman is struggling already with other aspects of her life to find balance and to make veganism a part of her life. It might not be able to be the all encompassing. You know, I think about this, you know, all day, every day. But I am Vegan and it's part of my identity and I'm putting that out there to the world. That's the type of woman that I'm hoping might want to grow more and take a course on on how to do this. So absolutely. [00:35:24] And I think you're right about that. Will there be so the courses I'm assuming would go through, she goes Vegan. Do you think you'll do any partnership thing or will you ever look into, like, bringing anyone else on? [00:35:37] I've talked to a lot of Vegan business owners that get very into the power of partnership being and multiplying the voice or sponsorships and things like that. It kind of depends on how you want to cut it and there's short term partnerships and things of that nature. But have you ever considered doing that or you're just you're just still kind of developing her as she is? [00:35:55] Yeah. Right now, I'm still in the development phase with the when I wrote the books on canine nutrition, I did partner with a very well-respected veterinarian. And that makes sense at that time. On the Vegan journey that I'm on now, right now in the development phase, I'm going to see where it takes me as a solo kronur. But I never say no to amazing opportunities and partnerships. So we'll see. It's really like a sort of we'll see how it develops type thing. [00:36:30] Yeah, absolutely. Well, I always wrap up beyond while I try to wrap up with everybody who's authored, you know, books and things of that nature. [00:36:38] I think that there is a lot of advice that you offer and you go through and some things resonate more with the author themselves and other things. And I'm curious to ask you kind of as my final inquiry today, looking at the fuck. Yeah, I'm going Vegan Interactive Journal. [00:36:53] You have this interactive guide, but you offer a lot of information or these very utility based steps that are very realistic, like you said, for implementation of taking technique from philosophy to everyday practice. And I'm wondering if you picked like a top two or three of those pieces that were you considered to be kind of your your take away points? What would they be? [00:37:20] Are we talking in the context of going Vegan? Yeah. [00:37:23] When did the Journal capturing I mean, you have these ideas of goals and motivation and things like that, like what would be the top three things that you would hope to take away from? You know, using the journal would be at first blush. [00:37:36] Yeah, I would hope the top three things would be. You said it really, really well, sort of. It's a combination of utilitarian and self discovery. So I would hope the top three things would be to take the guesswork out of the process, to actually know that on week one. Here's what I'm going to do. And on week 10. I'm now here and here's here's my next step. So really having it be very utilitarian. And then, you know, at the same time, kind of the second point would be that I get to now go on my own journal of self discovery while I'm doing this, which is just so important, because if we do anything without understanding why we're doing it, that's when it won't stick. So the combination of the utilitarian than the self discovery with the guided journal, and then it also enables us another practicality is to actually sort of have a mindfulness food planner where we're not just I as I as I'm talking, I guess I really enjoyed the combination of the practical and the mindful. So the food prep planner and the meal planner, they enable you to lay these things out. But they also ask you questions like, who was I with when I eat this? How did I feel? How did they make me feel? Because maybe you're with somebody. And they said, oh, really? You're going to, you know, have that veggie burger for lunch. You know, how can you eat that or don't you will meet Allard's and we might not think about it or give it much importance in the moment, but it affects us because part of going vegan is what I've experienced and learned from others is how we're perceived when we go to family gatherings, when we're with friends. So those are really the top three things. You know, how do I do this on a utilitarian basis and then how am I processing this emotionally and mindfully? [00:39:40] Yeah, absolutely. That's and it's exciting. I think everyone should jump on and check it out. Download even if you're Vegan do it. Buy it. Yes, I am. [00:39:49] I am so thankful for your time today, Diana. We are out of time. But I just wanted to say I really appreciate you. I know you're busy. [00:39:56] You've got a lot of projects in the works and things that have just launched. And I feel really honored that you took the time to speak with myself and let our audience hear about all of your knowledge and your personal stories within that. Thank you so much. [00:40:08] Well, thank you, Patricia. I am so grateful you've had me on and it's been a real pleasure. Thank you. [00:40:14] Definitely. And for everyone listening, we have been speaking with Diana levered to Doenitz you. She's a founder and author. You can find her more about her. On she goes. Vegan dot com. And thank you for giving us your time today. And still, we speak again next time. [00:40:31] Remember to eat clean and responsibly, stay in love with the world and always bet on yourself.
Boozhoo! We catch up with our friend Mike Laverdure (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians in North Dakota), a partner with DSGW Architects. Mike offers his perspective on how the pandemic will change building codes and designs long into the future. And when Mike shares a story about his 3-year-old twin daughters, we laugh about the joys and woes of working from home, especially with children around.
BULLES D'HISTOIRE, mardi et samedi à 10h30. Chronique animée par Stéphane Dubreil sur les bandes dessinées historiques. Avec Albert Uderzo, toute une époque s'en est allée, et surtout un peu de l'âme d'Astérix. Dessinateur d'Astérix, de Tanguy et Laverdure et de Oumpah Oumpah, Uderzo est parti le 24 mars 2020 à 92 ans. Pour évoquer son travail, Bulles d'histoire invite Patrick Gaumer, historien de la bande dessinée et grand connaisseur d'Astérix, du journal Pilote et de cette époque qui a fait naître la bande dessinée moderne en France.
Hommage à Albert Uderzo dans ce podcast. La bande dessinée Tanguy et Laverdure fêtait ses 60 ans. C'est à l'occasion du vingtième anniversaire du Mirage 2000-5, le 22 octobre 2019 sur la base aérienne 116 de Luxeuil qu'a été célébré un double événement. Un numéro spécial retraçant l'histoire des deux pilotes a été présenté ainsi que le tome 8 "Retour aux Cigognes" qui est sorti concomitamment. Air actualités revient sur l'histoire de la BD, l'occasion de se remémorer comment tout a commencé avec Albert Uderzo. Un article à retrouver dans votre magazine du mois d'octobre 2019 : https://fr.calameo.com/read/000014334ed1a8a19c422 Vidéo : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NxVALptCvL4
Ook in tijden van corona betekent woensdag een nieuwe Castard-aflevering! Hopelijk maakt iedereen het goed en zitten jullie veilig binnen tot alles overwaait. Deze week geen aflevering over het vervloekte virus, al is het alternatief helaas niet vrolijker. Op 24 maart 2020 hebben we afscheid moeten nemen van Albert Uderzo, geestelijke papa van Asterix en monument uit de eurostripwereld. In deze Castard blikken we terug op de carrière en het oeuvre van de man. Afscheid nemen doet altijd pijn Wie beter om deze Castard mee te vervolledigen dan strip-experten Dennis en Jeroen. Ook voor hen valt het afscheid zwaar. Niet alle albums van Asterix waren even geslaagd, maar de invloed van de dappere Galliërs is onmiskenbaar. Natuurlijk had Uderzo ook andere projecten. Hadden jullie al gehoord van Tanguy et Laverdure? Zo neen, dan kunnen jullie het alsnog allemaal ontdekken in deze nieuwe aflevering van Castard! Linklijsterix, bij Toutatis In 2017 ontdekte Jeroen nog deze coronavirus easter egg in Asterix en de race door de laars De bewuste Hoempa Pa grap waar Dennis over sprak Hoempa Pa heeft ook onlangs een integraal gekregen Tanguy et Laverdure - de realistische strip van Uderzo De onmisbare exemplaren Asterix de Galliër Asterix bij de Britten Asterix en het ijzeren schild Asterix bij de Belgen De langspeelfims: Asterix en Cleopatra en Asterix en de twaalf taken Die ene keer dat Asterix en Superman elkaar tegenkwamen op avontuur Hoe herdenken jullie Uderzo? Storten jullie je terug op de legendarische albums? Of houden jullie het - net als jullie host - bij alle langspeelfilms van de dappere Galliërs? Laat het ons weten! Het kan via onze Facebook, het kan op Twitter @podcastard_be of via onze officiële Geekster Discord. Mailen mag ook nog steeds naar castard[at]geekster.be. Algemene feedback en suggesties zijn nog altijd welkom via dezelfde kanalen. Als we iets beter kunnen doen, dan horen we dat graag!
Join the Payments Professor Kevin Olsen as he sits down with Brian Laverdure to discuss virtual and crypocurrency. They discuss the history, present, and the possibilities of cryptocurrencies and the effect they have on the payments industry.
Suivant le conseil de son ami Jijé, Charlier se tourne vers l'écriture et va devenir l'un des plus grands scénaristes de la bande dessinée francophone du XXe siècle. Travailleur prolifique, il sera le créateur de nombreuses séries mythiques comme « Buck Danny », « Blueberry », « Barbe-Rouge », « Tanguy et Laverdure », « La Patrouille des Castors »..., se définissant, lui-même, comme un conteur, dans la continuité des grands feuilletonistes du temps passé : Eugène Sue, Paul Féval, Ponson du Terrail, Alexandre Dumas, Michel Zévaco, etc. Jean-Michel Charlier a aussi été, avec René Goscinny et Albert Uderzo, le créateur du journal Pilote. Pendant sa longue carrière, il a été le témoin de l'évolution du travail et des conditions des scénaristes de bande dessinée francophone pour la jeunesse, du début à la fin du XXe siècle, ayant assumé des postes clés comme rédacteur en chef, directeur de collection ou défenseur du droit des auteurs.
Maître Doriane Brillier-Laverdure est avocate au Barreau de Lyon depuis 2015. Elle intervient en droit public, et est collaboratrice au sein du cabinet Doitrand & Associés. Elle a également été élue du Jeune Barreau de Lyon en 2017 et 2018.Elle nous parle :de la déclaration des droits de l’homme ;de rouage ;de tortue ;de vague ;de chartre graphique ;de plaque ;de sobriété et de modernité ;de réflexion rapide ;du Jeune Barreau,de Barreau écolo ;de rencontres ;de réflexes ; ainsi quede plongée sous-marine ; Vous pouvez joindre Doriane par email à l’adresse contact@dbl-avocat.fr ou bien sur LinkedIn.Merci à Maître Marie Duault pour la mise en relation !La Journée du Jeune Barreau des Hauts-de-Seine, dont je vous parle en introduction de l'épisode, c'est le 20 juin prochain. Vous trouverez toutes les informations sur la page Facebook de l'évènement.Bonne écoute ! Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
On this week’s show, we spoke with Dominique Laverdure, General Director @ Rouge Marketing. Dominique Laverdure is Chief Executive Officer and Partner at Rouge Marketing and Communications Inc., an integrated marketing and communications agency that she co-founded in 2004. She was president of the Grand Mont-Tremblant Chamber of Commerce for three years and a member of the board of directors for six years. In addition to this role, she is also a Director of the Laurentian Local Development Center (CLD), President of the Cabinet Centraide Hautes-Laurentides and Director of the Mont-Tremblant Strategic Action Committee. Formerly director of chamber of commerce in western Quebec, she also acted as board director of the Quebec Federation of Chambers of Commerce. Ms. Laverdure holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from McGill University as well as a major in Entrepreneurship and a minor in Human Resources from McGill University. On the show, we spoke about: How she started her career in marketing at L’Oréal Launching her own agency and positioning in a crowded market Her philosophy on remote working and the business benefit Going back to basics with marketing The future of brands Dominique has a unique view of the marketing space and a very interesting point of view. Her depth of experience is incredible. I hope that you enjoy the conversation! Let us know what you think. What types of guests would like to see on the show? What topics interest you the most? Send me your thoughts at nectar@thepnr.com Subscribe | iTunes | Google Play |Spotify | YouTube | Stitcher | Breaker
We're getting weird this week when Jenna dives deep into creating authentic social media feeds, being unapologetic with your weirdness and also unveils a new listener challenge called "MEME MY FACE!" Our guests, Cara Reeser and Jeremy Laverdure are ready to share the magic that happens when inspiration meets science with their new course offerings, Movement Science Made Simple. You'll hear the duo's history and how their collaboration is paving the way for new ways of considering movement for the future. Special Thanks To Our Sponsors: Pilates Anytime, Profitable Pilates, The Pilates Preacher, WAPilates, Keep Simple Web Design References: Greg Lehman Camp Rise Instagram pages for MEME MY FACE Challenge: Jenna / Pilates Unfiltered
"Tanguy y Laverdure" es una historieta francesa de aviación creada por Jean-Michel Charlier y Albert Uderzo. Completan la trilogía junto con Buck Danny y Dan Cooper. Si te gusta la aviación ¡tenés que sumar este comic a tu biblioteca!
"Tanguy y Laverdure" es una historieta francesa de aviación creada por Jean-Michel Charlier y Albert Uderzo. Completan la trilogía junto con Buck Danny y Dan Cooper. Si te gusta la aviación ¡tenés que sumar este comic a tu biblioteca! La entrada 132 – Tanguy y Laverdure se publicó primero en Gcomics.
Cette semaine, l'actualité du ciel, c'est la sortie en librairie du 35e album des Aventures de Tanguy et Laverdure, un grand classique de la bande dessinée d'aviation, un secteur qui se porte bien.
Director of Rouge Marketing in Mont-Tremblant, Dominique Laverdure was always a rebel at heart. See how she changed her life completely by moving to the country and building a career worthy of her love for life. Dominique started her career on a much different path: ready to dedicate herself to her successful corporate job at L’Oréal, everything changed when she realized she had to compromise too much to fit in the corporate box.
Entrevue avec Claude Laverdure, Ancien diplomate et conseiller diplomatique à M. Jean Chrétien
Native Americans have some of the highest rates of suicide, alcoholism, diabetes and maternal mortality in the country. And while the federal government passed the Indian Healthcare Improvement Act back in 1976 to make their care a priority, it spends just $3,000 a year caring for each Native patient. (We spend twice that on health care for every prisoner.) Dr. Adrienne Laverdure and Dr. Ken Bernard, two Native American doctors, know this firsthand.The mother and son are both Chippewa Indians from North Dakota, and they’re part of the Indian Health Service (IHS), the federal agency that provides health care to all Native people in the U.S. Dr. Adrienne Lavedure treats Native American patients on the reservation. (Natalie Jablonski) Laverdure had never left the reservation when she started college at the age of seventeen. She had her son during her sophomore year, and he stayed with his mom as she continued through medical school before taking a job on the Lac de Flambeau Reservation in Northern Wisconsin. Bernard applied to Yale on a lark; he had never left the Midwest before his mom and his sister drove him to New Haven for his freshman year. He went on to Harvard Medical School, and he now works on the Navajo and Hopi Indian Reservation in Northern Arizona. He said many of his patients don’t trust their doctors because the Indian Health Service has a troubled history -- a history he and his mother have seen affect their own family. In the 1970s, Laverdure’s aunt went to an IHS hospital to give birth to her son. Doctors there sterilized her, without her consent. But she didn’t realize it until she tried to get pregnant a second time. “I couldn’t believe that had happened,” Bernard said. “And more than that, I couldn’t believe that had happened less than 50 years ago.” He explained that his great-aunt’s story reminds him what’s at stake in every patient visit to the IHS. Dr. Ken Bernard is optimistic about the status of health care on Indian reservations. (Diane Hope) While both mother and son see some of the worst health care scenarios in the country, they remain optimistic. They’re not afraid to talk about the difficult situations they confront on the reservation; in fact, they believe that talking about these difficulties can only improve their patients’ circumstances in the long run. “The federal government, the Indian Health Service, [and] local tribes have a long history of hiding things that we are embarrassed about in our history,” Bernard said. “But I think the time for that is over.”