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Lorsque le pneu de votre vélo est crevé et que vous ne trouvez pas le trou, il suffit de gonfler la chambre à air et de la plonger dans l'eau pour voir d'où les bulles s'échappent… C'est la métaphore employée par Abston, un des patrons du FBI. Pourquoi ? Les russes semblent au courant de l'envoi de matériel militaire en Europe, ce qui signifie qu'il y a une fuite au Pentagone. Il charge Frank Moïk de se charger de cette affaire délicate. C'est alors que démarre la filature d'un suspect beaucoup trop “propre” : Norbert Stratton. Pierre Bellemare raconte cette extraordinaire histoire dans cet épisode du podcast "Les récits extraordinaires de Pierre Bellemare", issu des archives d'Europe 1. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Send us a textThanks for tuning in! In today's episode, we are taking a deep dive into the fascinating world of Retro Technology, specifically examining the overhead projector, microfiche, and word processor! You will learn how these technologies came out, what they were used for, and why they ultimately have found a spot in your local landfill (unfortunately). I found a ton of great resources about these relics, take a look:OverheadsMicrofiche & more Microfiche (BU Article)Word ProcessorsSupport the showVisit: https://www.popcultureretrospective.com/ for all things Pop Culture Retrospective! Follow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/popcultureretrospective/ Follow me on Twitter!: https://twitter.com/PopCultureRetroReview the show! https://www.popcultureretrospective.com/reviews/new/Pop Culture Retrospective Merch!: https://pop-culture-retrospective-pod.myspreadshop.com/allEmail me anytime: amy@popcultureretrospective.com
Giulia Depentor"Dinastia"Alla ricerca della tua storia di famiglia tra segreti e misteri.Feltrinelli Editorewww.feltrinellieditore.itNon servono avi illustri o nobili natali per appassionarsi alla propria dinastia. Anche se le storie dei nostri antenati non raccontano grandi viaggi, gloriose imprese o scoperte straordinarie sono sempre capaci di rivelare aspetti sorprendenti del nostro passato.La ricerca genealogica è un'avventura che assorbe a poco a poco e, quando l'esplorazione dei meandri della nostra dinastia si dirama e moltiplica, finisce con l'avvinghiarci nelle sue affascinanti spire. Il bello è che bastano pochi strumenti, qualche racconto e una connessione a Internet per iniziare questo viaggio nel tempo. Comincia così un'indagine paziente e accurata per costruire un legame tangibile con le nostre radici, in grado di regalarci particolari indispensabili per preservare la memoria e anche per capire meglio chi siamo oggi.Giulia Depentor, come una consumata detective, ha imparato a orientarsi tra le carte polverose di archivi parrocchiali e comunali, tra documenti militari e ambasciate straniere, a interpretare foto d'epoca e a porre domande chiave per progredire nelle sue indagini. Ha guardato la storia dei suoi avi dipanarsi e prendere forma, commuovendosi talvolta per i loro destini: li ha seguiti sulle navi dirette in Brasile, accompagnati attraverso la guerra fredda e osservati nella loro quotidianità fatta di avventure, tragedie e segreti di famiglia.In questo libro, a partire dalle esperienze e dalle tappe della sua ricerca familiare, ci guida nella costruzione della nostra personale “detective history”. Dotandoci di metodi e strumenti, ci instrada nel reperire e decifrare indizi e, mentre indaga storie ordinarie, miti e misteri, ci contagia con la sua instancabile passione per la genealogia.Un'unica precauzione: crea dipendenza.Giulia Depentor è scrittrice e content creator. Definita dalla stampa “l'influencer dei cimiteri”, è esploratrice dei luoghi di sepoltura, a partire dai quali conduce ricerche storiche e genealogiche. Negli ultimi quindici anni ha lavorato, specializzandosi nella creazione di contenuti audio e podcast, tra Parigi, Barcellona, Berlino e Auckland. Durante i suoi viaggi ha coltivato le passioni di sempre, che ha riversato nei suoi fortunati podcast “Camposanto”, dedicato agli amanti dei cimiteri, e “Microfilm”, che racconta i grandi eventi della storia dal punto di vista di chi non è finito in prima pagina. Per Feltrinelli ha pubblicato Immemòriam (2023).IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.
December 12, 1948 - Jack Tries to Relax at Home, Eddie Cantor stops by briefly. References include the Pumpkin Papers, "White Christmas" and "Who Threw The Overalls In Mrs. Murphy's Chowder" by Bing Crosby, bandleader Spike Jones, and the books "City Boy" by Herman Wouk and "Wine, Women and Words" by Billy Rose.
In celebration of National Native American Heritage Month, the Twin Cities Film Fest will host the MNmicro Cultural Film Festival: Indigenous on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024 at the Marcus West End Cinema at the Shops at West End (1625 West End Blvd. St. Louis Park, Minn.). The event will showcase six feature presentations (features and shorts) by local filmmakers. All screenings are FREE and open to the public. In true Twin Cities Film Festival fashion, we'll have pre-screening red carpet filmmaker interviews, post film discussions and mixer event in celebration. Stacey Thunder joined Vineeta to discuss the film she stars in “The Jingle Dress.” For more information https://twincitiesfilmfest.org/mnmicro-film-festival/
In celebration of National Native American Heritage Month, the Twin Cities Film Fest will host the MNmicro Cultural Film Festival: Indigenous on Sunday, Nov. 17, 2024 at the Marcus West End Cinema at the Shops at West End (1625 West End Blvd. St. Louis Park, Minn.). The event will showcase six feature presentations (features and shorts) by local filmmakers. All screenings are FREE and open to the public. In true Twin Cities Film Festival fashion, we'll have pre-screening red carpet filmmaker interviews, post film discussions and mixer event in celebration. Stacey Thunder joined Vineeta to discuss the film she stars in “The Jingle Dress.” For more information https://twincitiesfilmfest.org/mnmicro-film-festival/
Thanks for sharing this show with your friends! New episodes every Monday. Follow the transcript on our website. Do you want to be a guest?! Apply to be interviewed for the show, no matter what you do, at our website, where you can also see transcripts, buy merch and buy us a coffee! Pull back the curtain with these short, anonymous and lighthearted insights into the lives of working people to help you understand their attitudes to careers, desires for work/life balance, where they've come from and where they are going to in their employment lives. These professionals are from all parts of the world and all walks of life, but they are not your careers advisor or employment agency and they won't help you understand everything about a job. Hell, they won't even tell you what their title is! This is all about entertaining you with a bitesized, off-centre glance at all of the weird, wonderful and woeful ways to make money in this world, as we present random people asking themselves, What The Hell Is My Job?! Music by DJ Mood Lighting Are you looking for a new job or new career? Are you looking for a a seasonal or temp employment or are you looking for a career change? Or are you just one of those weird curious people who can get into anything especially if it's in podcast form, like we are? Then this is for you! We're not just about employment, money and careers. We look at global work life stories that are inspiring, funny and candid. Thanks to https://www.leslieannfitness.com for this interview! Other podcasts we like: 99% Invisible Articles Of Interest If Books Could Kill Hanging Out With Audiophiles You're Wrong About Queer As Fact Decoder Ring Growing Up With Gal-Dem Twenty Thousand Hertz Stuff The British Stole The Brown Bullet by Bill Poehler is out now
Barrie Craig, Confidential Investigator 51-10-24 Microfilm in the Fish tank
Fort Laramie "The Captain's Widow" 2/26/1956 Jack Benny "Submarine D-1" 2/20/1938 The Man Called X "A Tiny Bit of Microfilm" 2/24/1951 Dragnet "The Big Grifter" 2/23/1950 Nero Wolfe "The Malevolent Medic" 2/23/1951 Dark Fantasy "Spawn of the Subhuman" 2/27/1942 --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/norman-gilliland/support
La transmission du rapport de Ludovik van den Zaterkulereï a prit cinq jours et cinq nuits et s'achève sur une négation du président congolais. Nicolas Leroidec, très déçu de ce non-intérêt pour les plans du Biglotron, s'emporte. Son ami belge lui conseille alors de se méfier tout particulièrement de ses amis. *** Fiction radiophonique de Pierre Dac et Louis Rognoni - Producteur : Jean Bardin - Réalisation : Jean Wilfrid Garrett - Avec : Héléna Bossis, Anne Caprile, Roger Carel, Pierre Dac, Claude Dasset, Paul Préboist, Jacques Provins, Lawrence Riesner et Alain Rolland - Première diffusion : 12/04/1966 sur France Inter - Un podcast INA.
In this episode, James-Michael is joined by the dynamic duo behind Microfilm to discuss their music; join us as we discuss all sorts of horror news and get to know the group behind Giallo Mi Amore!Horror topics include:GhostbustersThe Walking DeadBlumhouse Horror MuseumMondo and Elijah WoodAnd more!A special thank you to all our Patreon supporters! Join us on Patreon; membership starts at just 1 dollar per month!https://www.patreon.com/HORRORPRESS
Two hours of CrimeFirst a look at this day in History.Then Dangerous Assignment starring Brian Donlevy, originally broadcast December 10, 1952, 71 years ago, Vienna. An attack between Austria and Hungary seems to be a frame-up. Followed by Mr District Attorney starring Jay Jostyn, originally broadcast December 10, 1941, 82 years ago, The Museum Murder Mystery. A man breaks into the city museum and stuffs the night watchman into a mummy case, but a priceless Egyptian miniature hasn't been touched.Then Let George Do It starring Bob Bailey and Virginia Gregg, originally broadcast December 10, 1951, 72 years ago, The Last Payoff. An ex-convict, trying to go straight, has his room ransacked. Murder in the rain follows. Followed by Counterspy starring Don MacLaughlin and Mandel Kramer, originally broadcast December 10, 1950, 73 years ago, The Case of the Infiltrating Agents. Foreign agent Ivors Sanderson is moving from South America to Mexico. It seems they're smuggling microfilm from Mexico into America with a plan to invade a Hydrogen bomb plant. Finally Front Page Drama, originally broadcast December 10, 1950, 73 years ago. An older man comes into the police to confess to a forty-year-old murder. Thanks to Robert for supporting our podcast by using the Buy Me a Coffee function at http://classicradio.stream
"TOP THAT!" We conjure one of the most important pieces of filmmaking to come out of the 80s this week, and watched Teen Witch staring Robin Lively with our friend Matt Keppel from the band Microfilm. After a flop theatrical run in 1989, this kooky teen comedy about a sixteen year-old named Louise who discovers she has magical powers, ended up in heavy rotation on Disney Channel where it got its devoted following. Ya'll this movie is an insane explosion of late 80s camp! Complete with denim yoked skirts, crimped hair, and the whitest of rap battles, the famous musical sequences (Top That, and I Like Boys) have been burned into everyone's brain since. We discuss Joshua Miller's stealing the movie with his insane portrayal of younger brother Richie, Louise's Doctor Manhattan-level witchy powers, and what this movie has in comon with Teen Wolf and Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The rules of witchraft as laid out in Teen Wich may be muddy (did Louise erase her nerdy/hot blind date from existence?), but the fashions, catchphrases and spontaneous rap battles will always be a part of our collective consciousness. Thanks for listening and don't forget to subscribe, rate and review us on Apple Podcasts! www.patreon.com/moviesthatmadeusgay Facebook/Instagram: @moviesthatmadeusgay Twitter: @MTMUGPod Scott Youngbauer: Twitter @oscarscott / Instagram @scottyoungballer Peter Lozano: Twitter/Instagram @peterlasagna
Steve (Brian Donlevy) goes to Havana to find the head of a spy ring that's been stealing U.S. Government secrets putting g them on microfilm and smuggling them out of the country. Features Lyle Talbot Original Air Date: Fall 1951 Season 1, Episode 14
Barrie Crain Confidential Investigator was an NBC Radio detective drama from 1951 to 1955. Barrie Craig , played by William Gargon, worked alone from his Madison Ave. office and was less "hard-boiled" than some of his radio counterparts like Sam Spade and Philip Marlowe. Try the new "Tales of Escape & Suspense"- links below! ANDROID USERS- 1001 Tales of Escape & Suspense at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/2HQYk53AJHTOgBTLBzyP3w 1001 Stories From The Old West at Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/0c2fc0cGwJBcPfyC8NWNTw 1001 Radio Crime Solvers at Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/0UAUS12lnS2063PWK9CZ37 1001's Best of Jack London at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2HzkpdKeWJgUU9rbx3NqgF 1001 Radio Days at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5jyc4nVoe00xoOxrhyAa8H 1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rzDb5uFdOhfw5X6P5lkWn 1001 Heroes, Legends, Histories & Mysteries at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6rO7HELtRcGfV48UeP8aFQ 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories & The Best of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/4dIgYvBwZVTN5ewF0JPaTK 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5P4hV28LgpG89dRNMfSDKJ APPLE USERS New! 1001 Tales of Escape and Suspense at Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-tales-of-escape-and-suspense/id1689248043 Catch 1001 Stories From The Old West- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-from-the-old-west/id1613213865 Catch 1001's Best of Jack London- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-best-of-jack-london/id1656939169 Catch 1001 Radio Crime Solvers- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-crime-solvers/id1657397371 Catch 1001 Heroes on Apple https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-heroes-legends-histories-mysteries-podcast/id956154836?mt=2 Catch 1001 Classic Short Stories at Apple Podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-classic-short-stories-tales/id1078098622 Catch 1001 Stories for the Road at Apple Podcast now: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-stories-for-the-road/id1227478901 NEW Enjoy 1001 Greatest Love Stories on Apple Devices here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-greatest-love-stories/id1485751552 Catch 1001 RADIO DAYS now at Apple iTunes! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-radio-days/id1405045413?mt=2 NEW 1001 Ghost Stories & Tales of the Macabre is now playing at Apple Podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-ghost-stories-tales-of-the-macabre/id1516332327 NEW Enjoy 1001 History's Best Storytellers (Interviews) on Apple Devices here: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-historys-best-storytellers/id1483649026 NEW Enjoy 1001 Sherlock Holmes Stories and The Best of Arthur Conan Doyle https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/1001-sherlock-holmes-stories-best-sir-arthur-conan/id1534427618 Get all of our shows at one website: https://.1001storiespodcast.com My email works as well for comments: 1001storiespodcast@gmail.com SUPPORT OUR SHOW BY BECOMING A PATRON! https://.patreon.com/1001storiesnetwork. Its time I started asking for support! Thank you. Its a few dollars a month OR a one time. (Any amount is appreciated). YOUR REVIEWS ARE NEEDED AND APPRECIATED! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Mark and Norbert (@eddiecaine on X) discuss the 1985 action classic Yes, Madam. Directed by Corey Yuen, and starring Michelle Yeoh, Cynthia Rothrock, and Dick Wei, the movie focuses on the hunt for a microfilm MacGuffin. In this episode, they also talk about spin kicks, overalls, and the greatness of Michelle Yeoh and Cynthia Rockrock. Enjoy!This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3382899/advertisement
1. US Attorney David Weiss Appointed to Special Counsel in Case Against Hunter Biden; Who Is David Weiss? What Does Special Counsel Status Mean? Why Are Republicans and Democrats Both Displeased? (2:16)2. UBS Settles Mortgage-Backed Securities Fraud Case with DOJ for $1.4B (13:14)3. Watchdog Report Says IRS Cannot Locate Thousands of Missing Microfilm Cartridges (15:22) 4. Hawaiian Electric Facing Two Lawsuits in Aftermath of Maui Wildfire (21:14)5. Fulton County DA Mistakenly Uploads Document Signaling Potential Charges Against Trump; Here's What It Said (29:05) **NOTE: Donald Trump was indicted in Georgia late Monday night following the recording of this episode. The indictment will be covered in full on Friday's episode but this episode will give you a general idea. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave me a review and share it with those you know that also appreciate unbiased news!Subscribe to Jordan's weekly free newsletter featuring hot topics in the news, trending lawsuits, and more.Follow Jordan on Instagram and TikTok.All sources for this episode can be found here.
This is the second episode of Barrie Craig - Confidential Investigator - Starring William Gargan - "Microfilm in The Fishtank" This was a popular 1950's PI type program, but this Investigator was quite different from the other shows of the same genre. That is what made it popular. This track is stored in the "Barrie Craig" Playlist. Thanks for listening.
Welcome to Episode 81 Pierre the slayer of Ikea tables wants to know where is the microfilm? Steve the Guinea Pig Cuddler wants to eat a vacuum cleaner !!! Sadly there will be no podcast next week due to some family commitments, so why not go listen to one of your old favourite episodes. A Big thanks to everyone for listening to the show your all awesome and Please pass the Pod onto a friend or even an enemy! And don't forget your pets they love the show stick some headphones on the cat or the dog, the fish could be tricky! We launched our Patreon page and we are so blown away by your response so thank you so much we both really appreciate your support Thanks very much to all our Patreons Special thanks to our existing top tier patreons Arne @mangesysleren, Rich Coney @coneywoodcreations, Ola Skytteren @olaskytteren, Marius Bodvin @mariusbodvin & @arendalleather, Richard Salvesen @salvesendesign, Bjorn from @interiormaker.b.hagen. and Rodger Anderson @rvadesign182 If you want to support the Show and listen to the aftershow we have a Patreon page please click the link https://www.patreon.com/user?u=81984524 Steve Follows Martin on instagram and Martin from Oakfileds Creative Workshop has just started his YouTube Chanel and he launched with 5 really interesting videos so go support Martin and enjoy some great viewing at Oakfields creative workshop on YouTube and also on instagram @oakfields_creative_workshop Pierre Wants to say a big thanks to Drew who has a cameo in Pierre recent video. Drew is a great creator and he also makes great videos on YouTube go take a look at wittworks and Drew is also on instagram @witt_works Don't forget the aftershow on Patreon and Our Discord link is in our instagram profile The Three Northern Makers Are Steve @stevebellcreates on instagram and YouTube at Steve Bell Creates lives in North Yorkshire in the UK Pierre @theswedishmaker on Instagram and The Swedish Maker on YouTube Pierre lives near Gothenburg in Sweden We can be found on instagram @threeNorthernMakers so check us out We also have our own woodworking/makers community on Discord.com We will be releasing a new episode every Sunday morning so please subscribe like and leave a review to hear our humble ramblings about making things and all that life throws at us If you have any questions or comments please email the show at threenorthernmakers@gmail.com
Modernization has been a keyword for agencies throughout government in the 21st century. Paper records are a big part of the digitization effort, but what if your agency's role is to be a steward of the preservation and documentation of government and historical records? In the case of the national archives and records administration, it means that the agency has an extra responsibility to make its work accessible to the public and be responsible in its digital record preservation of records. As part of GovExec Media's Genius Machines event series recently, Nextgov Senior editor Aaron Boyd spoke to NARA Chief Innovation Officer Pamela Wright, about how the agency is modernizing. In this episode, you'll hear part of their conversation about NARA as it remakes itself into a digital-first agency. *** Follow GovExec on Twitter! https://twitter.com/govexec
Today's Mystery:Steve is sent on a chase across Great Britain and Ireland to try and locate stolen microfilm.Original Radio Broadcast Date: August 30, 1950Support the show monthly at patreon.greatdetectives.netSupport the show on a one-time basis at http://support.greatdetectives.net.Mail a donation to: Adam Graham, PO Box 15913, Boise, Idaho 83715Take the listener survey at http://survey.greatdetectives.netGive us a call at 208-991-4783Follow us on Instagram at http://instagram.com/greatdetectivesFollow us on Twitter @radiodetectivesJoin us back here tomorrow for another old time radio detective drama.
Today's Mystery:Steve is sent on a chase across Great Britain and Ireland to try and locate stolen microfilm.Original Radio Broadcast Date: August 30, 1950Support the show monthly at patreon.greatdetectives.netSupport the show on a one-time basis at http://support.greatdetectives.net.Mail a donation to: Adam Graham, PO Box 15913, Boise, Idaho 83715Take the listener survey at http://survey.greatdetectives.netGive us a call at 208-991-4783Follow us on Instagram at http://instagram.com/greatdetectivesFollow us on Twitter @radiodetectives
Release Date: June 13, 2011When Barrie's tailor is killed and and a fire is set to the tailor's shop. TO find the murder, Barrie investigates the rackets.Original Air Date: October 24, 1951Support the show monthly at patreon.greatdetectives.netSupport the show on a one-time basis at http://support.greatdetectives.net.Mail a donation to: Adam Graham, PO Box 15913, Boise, Idaho 83715Take the listener survey at http://survey.greatdetectives.netGive us a call at 208-991-4783Follow us on Instagram at http://instagram.com/greatdetectivesFollow us on Twitter @radiodetectives
When it comes to camera brands that we hear listeners of this show want to hear about, Pentax seems to come up more often than any other brand. As the world's number one open source film photography podcast, the guys and I are never ones to deprive the world of what you want to hear, so for episode 38 we devote almost the entire time to everyone's favorite makers of quick return SLRs, Asahi Pentax! Joining us on this episode are returning callers, Robert Rotoloni, Hong Joon Lee, Miles Libak, and Mario Paper, and also first time caller, Dave Roberts. From the earliest Asahiflexes all the way to the Ricoh Digital Pentaxes... Okay, we never actually made it that far, as it turns out there is far more Pentax talk we could fit into a single episode, so we had to stop at the end of the M42 era. But for the hour plus we talk about Pentax, there is quite a large amount of Takumar and Pentax love! Listen to this episode to learn about one of the coolest Pentax prototypes ever made, where did the Pentax name come from, and what the element layouts of many early Takumar lenses. Although there is a great deal of Pentax info in this episode, we get off track at the very beginning episode talking about 127 cameras, including some of our recent 127 camera pickups and what our favorite recent shooters have been. No worries though, we eventually pull ourselves out of the 127 rabbit hole and get back on topic. As always, the topics we discuss on the Camerosity Podcast are decided by you. The guys and I rarely know where each episode is going to go until it happens, so if you'd like to join us on a future episode, be sure to look out for our show announcements on our Camerosity Podcast Facebook page, and right here on mikeeckman.com. We record every other Monday and announcements, along with the Zoom link are typically shared 2-3 days in advance. If you want to join us for our next episode, we will record Episode 39 on Monday, December 19th. Be sure to stay tuned for the official announcement! This Week's Episode Curing COVID-19 With Lens Fungus and Radioactive Takumars / Miles Picks Up a Late Double Stroke Leica M3 Who is Shooting 127 on 127 Day? / Mario Loves the Toa Koki Gelto DIII / KW Pilot TLR / KW Pilot Six / KW Patent Etui / KW Praktina Can You Bulk Roll 127 Film? / Bulk 46mm Portrait Film / Zeiss-Ikon Kolibri / Vest Pocket Exakta Was 127 A German Film? / Kodak Created the first Vest Pocket Kodak in 1912 / 127 Eventually Became the Format for Cheap Cameras Pentax Never Made a Rangefinder Camera, They Started with SLRs / Asahi's Early History / They Were Primarily a Lens Maker Some Takane Mine Six Cameras Have Asahi Lenses / Saburo Matsumoto Created the first Asahiflex Quick Return vs Instant Return Mirrors / Asahiflex M37 Lenses Takumar 58mm f/2.4 Lens, Is It a Heliar? ** College Football Intermission ** Gerjan van Oosten's Ultimate Asahi Pentax Screw Mount Guide / Other f/2 and f/2.2 Takumars Auto Takumars vs Super Takumars / Early Yashinon M42 Lenses are Very Similar to Takumar M42s The Birth of the Pentax / Asahi Had to License the name Pentax from Zeiss-Ikon Mike's Favorite Pentax is the Pentax K / Only the AP, S, and K Pentaxes Came in Brown Leather Cases Photo Books Are Hard to Find Today / The Cost of Printing is Sky High Differences in the Pentax S and H Models / The Spotmatics Do Not Have a Spot Meter m/ The Pentax Metalica! m/ / Coming Up with a Bayonet Mount in the M42 Era The Spotmatics are the Honda Accord of Cameras / You Bought a Pentax to Get the Lenses Anthony Loves the Pentax ES II / More Pentaxes Are Engraved with Social Security and ID Numbers Than Any Other Camera How Good Was the Build Quality of the Spotmatics? / Plastic vs Metal Gears 1963 Pentax Prices Compared to Everyone Else / Journalists Used Nikon, Sports Photographers Used Canon, and Artists Used Pentaxes Mike Get's Paul in Trouble and Convinces Him to Buy a Nikon S2 at 8:25am / He Then Buys a Contax IIa From the Same Seller Hong Doesn't Like the Contax IIa / Christopher May Gifts a Black Canon FTb and a Miranda Auto Sensorex EE to Mike Theo Gets a Mamiya 43mm Lens, Viewfinder, and Polarizing Filters / Mario Gets a Steky Use 16mm Microfilm to Bulk Load Films for 16mm Cameras Show Notes If you would like to offer feedback or contact us with questions or ideas for future episodes, please contact us in the Comments Section below, our Camerosity Facebook Group or Instagram page, or email us at camerosity.podcast@gmail.com. The Official Camerosity Facebook Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/camerositypodcast Camerosity Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/camerosity_podcast/ Camerosity Twitter - https://twitter.com/CamerosityPod Episode 12: The Pentax Episode - https://mikeeckman.com/2021/11/episode-12-the-pentax-episode/ Mario Piper – https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/gen-x-photography/id1494585131 Theo Panagopoulos - https://www.photothinking.com/ Paul Rybolt - https://www.ebay.com/usr/paulkris and https://www.etsy.com/shop/Camerasandpictures Anthony Rue - https://www.instagram.com/kino_pravda/ and https://www.facebook.com/VoltaGNV/
Today we take a trip to the provincial archives where there are some big smiles these days. A new machine is helping archivists digitize microfilm on the quick, ensuring better access to some very popular documents.
Join host, Carl Amari, for a radio re-broadcast of The Man Called X. Featuring narration by Herbert Marshall.An espionage radio drama which premiered July 10, 1944 on CBS, Herbert Marshall had the lead role of Ken Thurston, an American Intelligence Agent. The series was an immediate favorite amongst its audience, as The Man Called X took listeners on nail-biting adventures that often took place in some of the world's most exotic locations. From tracking hot diamonds in Argentina to recovering a cholera virus in Guatemala, The Man Called X serves up perfect listening for anyone who loves a good spy adventure!Originally airing 2/24/1951, gather around for this week's spy adventure in "A Tiny Bit of Microfilm," with Agent Ken Thurston!Enjoying The Film Detective?You can watch this episode here.Or connect with us here:FacebookInstagramTwitterYouTubeWant even more? Subscribe to our Newsletter here. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
Interesting coincidence- Pete has interviewed drummer Stewart Copeland, and a week later, I hear an interview with Tim Ferriss, and who else? Stewart Copeland! What can we conclude from this, Rebels? Stewart Copeland is clearly avoiding me. But that has little bearing on today's episode. Pete has definitely spent time with greats, near-greats, and people who will leave you in wide-eyed wonder. And he gets their stories out with the passion of a former spy. I'm glad he was able to discuss this portion of his life without someone showing up in the room to announce that the interview was over, and the Zoom screen going dark. (Sometimes that happens to me when I'm at my parents' chalet.) His shows aren't always what you expect-they're actually more than what you'd expect. Give the guy a listen, will ya? Thanks for coming on the show, Pete! Pete's info: Website- breakitdownshow.com , Facebook: @breakitdownshow ; Twitter: @BreakItDownshow; YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzpPhHDkj4ZsuLX6JWJTx9w Email: pete@breakitdownshow.com These are the shows that were sampled this week for "Sherpa Samples": Up First Planet Money The Indicator Throughline Wait, Wait, Don't Tell Me! Fresh Air All Songs Considered How I Built This with Guy Raz The TED Radio Hour Next week, it's "The Sherpa Screening Room" with returning guest Dale Niehaus! You can hear this podcast on the Helium Radio Network Fridays at 8:30 AM EDT, on Channel 1, Life Improvement Radio. Follow the show on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok at @Sherpalution, and check out my website, sherpalution.com , for older episodes, Sherpa Sheets, and Spotify playlists. You'll also find the link to "The Tee Sherpa Shop". Podcast merchandise!! Email me at jimthepodcastsherpa@gmail.com. #VivaLaSherpalution! Publicist Extraordinaire: Steven Joiner Music Credits/Voiceovers: Bruce Goldberg ( aka Mr. Bruce) Other Voices: The Sherpalu Studio Players If you'd like to support the show with a donation, (You know, like with money?) feel free to click here. No pressure. I'll just hold my breath the entire next episode if you don't. But seriously, the free option is to leave a nice review on my website or Apple Podcasts. Thanks for listening! You can subscribe and listen to this show on vurbl.com , sherpalution.com . or any podcast app, like Goodpods, or website listed on sherpalution.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jim-the-podcast-sherpa/message
Extreme Genes - America's Family History and Genealogy Radio Show & Podcast
Host Scott Fisher opens the show with David Allen Lambert, Chief Genealogist of the New England Historic Genealogical Society and AmericanAncestors.org. The guys begin with kudos to FamilySearch on their historic announcement (with plenty more on it coming in Segment 2). Fisher talks to David about his latest research project… tracking a suspect in a cold case murder. David then reviews some of the finds the WikiTree Challenge people made on his own tree last week. There were some fascinating discoveries, as usual. Next, hear about the oldest “art” probably ever found… made by children. In a cave. A LONGGGG time ago! Then it's a happy birthday greeting to America's oldest living World War II vet. You won't believe how old he is! In Segment 2, David Rencher, Director of the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah, comes on to talk about the remarkable milestone FamilySearch.org just achieved… the digitization of some 2.4 million rolls of microfilm that were accumulated over 80 years! They haven't all been published just yet, but this collection covers BILLIONS of name listings. David also explains the Library's reactivated look up service, and on line consultations. The rerouting of resources due to the pandemic has brought about remarkable upgrades! Then, Fisher visits with Bob Taylor, the originator and Director of Development for The Family History Guide website, TheFHGuide.com. This site can train you, for free, on how to use any of the major sites including FamilySearch.org, Ancestry.com, MyHeritage.com, and FindMyPast.com. Bob explains how it all works. Then David Lambert rejoins Fisher for a pair of questions on Ask Us Anything. That's all this week on Extreme Genes, America's Family History Show!
The Man Called X travels to Tehran to meet a contact on a plane who has details for the Soviet plans for Iran. Original Air Date February 24, 1951 Read more ...
The Man Called X travels to Tehran to meet a contact on a plane who has details for the Soviet plans for Iran. Original Air Date February 24, 1951 Read more ...
Find out what considerations should be taken into account when you are contemplating document migration/conversion projects such as Aperture Cards, Microfilm, Microfiche, or even paper-based documents. Specialized high-speed equipment, intelligently designed software, and secured Cloud-based services are just a few items that need to be thought through, but it doesn't stop there. Watch this 3-minute video and learn how it's done.
Welcome to Radio Muse ! Today it's the turn of Radio Pulsar, from Poitiers, as member of the French Radio Campus network. Radio Muse - Independent Radio Exchange - is an European project promoting emerging musicians all over Europe. We're gonna make a 1-hour trip with some of the most amazing musical gems coming from Poitiers and the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region. So we're in the South-West of France, that wide region goes from Poitiers at the North to the west side of the Pyrénées mountains, from the wide French Atlantic coasts to the amazing countryside of the "Plateau de Millevache" or the Dordogne to make it short. Musically speaking, some well-known artists emerged from the local scene here inPoitiers such as Seven Hate, Microfilm, UZI, Malik Djoudi or Carpenter Brut, and the region is also the birthplace of Vicious Circle, KIM, Gojira, Kap Bambino, Lescop... Today let's talk about and listen to more hidden local projects, we will : Have a fresh bowl of energy with Vyen/ Speak about ritual house with Albinos/ Learn how to produce analogical techno-rap with Dampa/ Take anotherlook at ancient music with the band Artusand Pagansrecords / Focus on wide ambient with Grand Ciel. Here we go ! Production : @radio-pulsar-680924920 --------------- NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus TW @radiocampus FB @radiocampus NOUS ECOUTER | LISTEN liste des fréquences FM sur www.radiocampus.fr webradio: bit.ly/RCFRenDIRECT podcasts: @radiocampus
Want to become financially free through real estate? Check out our eBook to learn how to jump start a cash flowing real estate portfolio here https://www.therealestateinvestingclub.com/real-estate-wealth-bookIn this episode of The Real Estate Investing Club I interview James Prendamano, . James Prendamano is a real estate investor who has a great story to share and words of wisdom to impart for both beginning and veteran investors alike, so grab your pen and paper, buckle up and enjoy the ride. Want to get in contact with James Prendamano? Reach out at .Enjoy the show? Subscribe to the channel for all our upcoming real estate investor interviews and episodes.************************************************************************GET INVOLVED, CONNECTED & GROW YOUR REAL ESTATE BUSINESSLEARN -- Want to learn the ins and outs of real estate investing? Check out our book at https://www.therealestateinvestingclub.com/real-estate-wealth-bookCONNECT -- Want to join one of the most active Facebook Groups for Real Estate Investors? Click here to join: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2940993215976264PARTNER -- Want to partner on a deal or connect in person? Email the host Gabe Petersen at gabe@therealestateinvestingclub.com or reach out on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/gabe-petersen/GROW -- Want for us to bring you leads and run your real estate digital marketing? Reach out to our partner agency at https://www.therealestateinvestingclub.com/off-market-lead-generation-servicesWATCH -- Want to watch our YouTube channel? Click here: https://bit.ly/theREIshowMASTERY -- Want to learn how to master your life by mastering your health, wealth, relationships and spirit? Check out our sister podcast, Pursuing Greatness, at https://www.pursuinggreatnesspodcast.com************************************************************************ABOUT THE REAL ESTATE INVESTING CLUB SHOWThe Real Estate Investing Club is a podcast and YouTube show where real estate investing professionals share their best advice, greatest stories, and favorite tips as a real estate investor. Join us as we delve into every aspect of real estate investing - from self-storage, to mobile home parks, to single family flips and rentals, to multifamily syndication!#realestateinvesting #passiveincome #realestateSupport the show (https://paypal.me/GabrielWPetersen?locale.x=en_US)
Welcome to Radio Muse ! Today it's the turn of Radio Pulsar, from Poitiers, as member of the French Radio Campus network. Radio Muse - Independent Radio Exchange - is an European project promoting emerging musicians all over Europe. We're gonna make a 1-hour trip with some of the most amazing musical gems coming from Poitiers and the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region. So we're in the South-West of France, that wide region goes from Poitiers at the North to the west side of the Pyrénées mountains, from the wide French Atlantic coasts to the amazing countryside of the "Plateau de Millevache" or the Dordogne to make it short. Musically speaking, some well-known artists emerged from the local scene here inPoitiers such as Seven Hate, Microfilm, UZI, Malik Djoudi or Carpenter Brut, and the region is also the birthplace of Vicious Circle, KIM, Gojira, Kap Bambino, Lescop... Today let's talk about and listen to more hidden local projects, we will : Have a fresh bowl of energy with Vyen/ Speak about ritual house with Albinos/ Learn how to produce analogical techno-rap with Dampa/ Take anotherlook at ancient music with the band Artusand Pagansrecords / Focus on wide ambient with Grand Ciel. Here we go ! Production : @radio-pulsar-680924920 --------------- NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus TW @radiocampus FB @radiocampus NOUS ECOUTER | LISTEN liste des fréquences FM sur www.radiocampus.fr webradio: bit.ly/RCFRenDIRECT podcasts: @radiocampus
Welcome to Radio Muse ! Today it's the turn of Radio Pulsar, from Poitiers, as member of the French Radio Campus network. Radio Muse - Independent Radio Exchange - is an European project promoting emerging musicians all over Europe. We're gonna make a 1-hour trip with some of the most amazing musical gems coming from Poitiers and the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region. So we're in the South-West of France, that wide region goes from Poitiers at the North to the west side of the Pyrénées mountains, from the wide French Atlantic coasts to the amazing countryside of the "Plateau de Millevache" or the Dordogne to make it short. Musically speaking, some well-known artists emerged from the local scene here inPoitiers such as Seven Hate, Microfilm, UZI, Malik Djoudi or Carpenter Brut, and the region is also the birthplace of Vicious Circle, KIM, Gojira, Kap Bambino, Lescop... Today let's talk about and listen to more hidden local projects, we will : Have a fresh bowl of energy with Vyen/ Speak about ritual house with Albinos/ Learn how to produce analogical techno-rap with Dampa/ Take anotherlook at ancient music with the band Artusand Pagansrecords / Focus on wide ambient with Grand Ciel. Here we go ! Production : @radio-pulsar-680924920 --------------- NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus TW @radiocampus FB @radiocampus NOUS ECOUTER | LISTEN liste des fréquences FM sur www.radiocampus.fr webradio: bit.ly/RCFRenDIRECT podcasts: @radiocampus
Die Sendung von Chaoten für Chaoten, für die, dies warn und jene, die es werden wollen. 1. DELTA KOPINSKI – mein Plan 2. SEX CRIME – goody goody bye bye 3. X-RAY SPEX – oh bondage up yours 4. DOWNTOWN BOYS – somos chulas no somos pendejas 5. GLUEAMS – mental 6. MIKAN MUKKU – chindan 7. BOLCHOI – gueules cassees 8. FAST TIMES – new blood 9. DUCHESS SAYS – travailler 10. MICROFILM – centrefold 11. HANS-A-PLAST – Lemminger Punks 12. TACK FÖR INGET – det är dags 13. LARSEN – flower 14. WEBELOS – feministas 15. VAN KAYE + IGNIT – negroe in N.Y. 16. ÖSTRO 430 – Randale & Bier * Sendung vom 8. März 2021 um 21:00 Uhr auf Radio Corax. ## SUBjektiv SUBjektiv, das ist deliziösester Punk-Funk jenseits von „Schlachtrufe BRD Teil 478“ und aktuellen „Bad Religion – Produkten“. Für diese Sendung stöbern die Moderatoren sowie zigtausende Studiogäste in ihren Musikarchiven und Plattensammlungen, um der geneigten HörerInnenschaft feinste Melodien ins Hirn zu ballern. *
Die Sendung von Chaoten für Chaoten, für die, dies warn und jene, die es werden wollen. 1. DELTA KOPINSKI – mein Plan 2. SEX CRIME – goody goody bye bye 3. X-RAY SPEX – oh bondage up yours 4. DOWNTOWN BOYS – somos chulas no somos pendejas 5. GLUEAMS – mental 6. MIKAN MUKKU – chindan 7. BOLCHOI – gueules cassees 8. FAST TIMES – new blood 9. DUCHESS SAYS – travailler 10. MICROFILM – centrefold 11. HANS-A-PLAST – Lemminger Punks 12. TACK FÖR INGET – det är dags 13. LARSEN – flower 14. WEBELOS – feministas 15. VAN KAYE + IGNIT – negroe in N.Y. 16. ÖSTRO 430 – Randale & Bier * Sendung vom 8. März 2021 um 21:00 Uhr auf Radio Corax. ## SUBjektiv SUBjektiv, das ist deliziösester Punk-Funk jenseits von „Schlachtrufe BRD Teil 478“ und aktuellen „Bad Religion – Produkten“. Für diese Sendung stöbern die Moderatoren sowie zigtausende Studiogäste in ihren Musikarchiven und Plattensammlungen, um der geneigten HörerInnenschaft feinste Melodien ins Hirn zu ballern. *
Microfilm no longer serves as a viable method for distribution in today's digital world. However, microfilm still plays a vital role in record retention especially with land records and pharmaceutical companies. John's family developed a process called eBeam technology that converts digital images to microfilm. In this episode, John will explain the viability and need for microfilm in today's digital world. You will find it interesting how John adapts his leadership style to the needs of his teams. BIO A proven general manager with extensive product and business development experience in high tech, publishing, and government contracting environments. Highly effective self-starter in leading cross-functional operations, project management, vendor, and client relationships. WORK EXPERIENCE Manager of Business Development Innovative Document Imaging LLC - Advocate Business Development opportunities for Innovative Document Imaging ( IDI ) - Administer US Government registration, compliance, and contracts management for IDI - Established the IDI Connecticut Conversion Center known as eBeam Imaging - Superintend day to day operations for eBeam Imaging - Manage Advanced R&D projects including Electron Beam and Dosimetry Technologies General Manager eBeam Film LLC • Manager of day-to-day operations and business development for eBeam Film. • Established a five-year service contract with a major government agency. • Collaborated with the government agency to set up appropriate employee security clearances • Established Cyber Security Policies for handling Classified Materials • Authored the company Emergency Occupancy Manual and Physical Security Manual • Managed and provided input to the companies Cybersecurity Compliant Computer Security Manual • Implement all Physical and Cybersecurity improvements John volunteered as a Youth Sports Coach for both Basketball and Baseball For additional information visit his LinkedIn page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-grosso-32917353/
Right here, right now, there is no other place you want to be...besides listening to internet audio pop culture comedy gold forever and ever, amen. In a world full of strife, stupidity, and Heineken Light, why not take a load off by listening to Damian and Eric share their random inane opinions on pop culture? Good question. In this episode, the gang goes deep into why they constantly change their podcast name (despite expert advice not to), how their families are doing in month ten of the quarantine, whether or not "The Simpsons" is worth watching still, a review of the new Disney/Marvel show "Wandavision," and if Damian will indeed watch the four-hour Zack Snyder cut of "Justice League" (the topic you've all been waiting for!) This episode also marks the end (for now) of Microfilm HQ! RIP! So pour out a Microfilm beer for Mankoke's lair and then pop a bottle of champagne to christen the new DD HQ. #RIPHQ2021 Intro/Outro music from www.bensound.com.
The Man Called X was an espionage radio drama which aired on CBS and NBC from July 10, 1944 to May 20, 1952. Herbert Marshall had the lead role of agent Ken Thurston who took on dangerous cases in a variety of exotic locations. Gordon Jenkins Orchestra supplied the background music.---------------------------------------------------------------------------Entertainment Radio Stations Live 24/7 Sherlock Holmes/CBS Radio Mystery Theaterhttps://live365.com/station/Sherlock-Holmes-Classic-Radio--a91441https://live365.com/station/CBS-Radio-Mystery-Theater-a57491----------------------------------------------------------------------------Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Season Two: The History of Mormon History Historiography—We are doing it…. Join the Sunstone Mormon History podcasters Bryan Buchanan and Lindsay Hansen Park for a special second season of Deseret Dramas. This miniseries will explore the history of how Mormon history was told and came to be.
Season Two: The History of Mormon History Historiography—We are doing it…. Join the Sunstone Mormon History podcasters Bryan Buchanan and Lindsay Hansen Park for a special second season of Deseret Dramas. This miniseries will explore the history of how Mormon history was told and came to be.
After Locke beat Anterguard at his own game, someone started to warn Locke to leave. Wondering who could be sending the notes, Locke chases a man down to find out he's not alone. Two twins (because that's how they come) kidnap Locke and tell him everything they know about Anterguard and an evil organization known as SMUSH. But Locke wants no part. Later, while cooking a TV dinner, Locke is visited by the she-devil who begs him to reconsider. But why?Music:"Covert Affair" and "Bass Walker" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
A new episode
When your business is digitizing documents for the State of Illinois and no one is in the office, how do you survive the pandemic? Craig Williams of Com Microfilm and CMC Imaging tells us how his Dirksen Parkway shop has overcome the challenges. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Aus der Preshow: Kochbeutelreis, Pringlesdosendeckelklau Heute mit Public Domain, Mikrofilm, Lichtverschmutzung, Schienen, Astrobin Das Smithonian Institute wirft 2.8 Millionen Bilder auf ihre Open-Access-Plattform. Diese Bilder sind Public Domain. Artikel bei Petapixel Früher diente Microfilm als Speichermedium. Silica brennt binäre Informationen in Glas. #hsnachtrag zu SpaceX Starlink: Aufruf der NASA – Fotografiert Starlink mit dem Smartphone. … „#651 – Iss doch andere Kekse“ weiterlesen Der Beitrag #651 – Iss doch andere Kekse ist ursprünglich hier erschienen: Happy Shooting - Der Foto-Podcast.
Aus der Preshow: Kochbeutelreis, Pringlesdosendeckelklau Heute mit Public Domain, Mikrofilm, Lichtverschmutzung, Schienen, Astrobin Das Smithonian Institute wirft 2.8 Millionen Bilder auf ihre Open-Access-Plattform. Diese Bilder sind Public Domain. Artikel bei Petapixel Früher diente Microfilm als Speichermedium. Silica brennt binäre Informationen in Glas. #hsnachtrag zu SpaceX Starlink: Aufruf der NASA – Fotografiert Starlink mit dem Smartphone. … „#651 – Iss doch andere Kekse“ weiterlesen Der Beitrag #651 – Iss doch andere Kekse ist ursprünglich hier erschienen: Happy Shooting - Der Foto-Podcast.
Aus der Preshow: Kochbeutelreis, Pringlesdosendeckelklau Heute mit Public Domain, Mikrofilm, Lichtverschmutzung, Schienen, Astrobin Das Smithonian Institute wirft 2.8 Millionen Bilder auf ihre Open-Access-Plattform. Diese Bilder sind Public Domain. Artikel bei Petapixel Früher diente Microfilm als Speichermedium. Silica brennt binäre Informationen in Glas. #hsnachtrag zu SpaceX Starlink: Aufruf der NASA – Fotografiert Starlink mit dem Smartphone. … „#651 – Iss doch andere Kekse“ weiterlesen Der Beitrag #651 – Iss doch andere Kekse ist ursprünglich hier erschienen: Happy Shooting - Der Foto-Podcast.
Aus der Preshow: Kochbeutelreis, Pringlesdosendeckelklau Heute mit Public Domain, Mikrofilm, Lichtverschmutzung, Schienen, Astrobin Das Smithonian Institute wirft 2.8 Millionen Bilder auf ihre Open-Access-Plattform. Diese Bilder sind Public Domain. Artikel bei Petapixel Früher diente Microfilm als Speichermedium. Silica brennt binäre Informationen in Glas. #hsnachtrag zu SpaceX Starlink: Aufruf der NASA – Fotografiert Starlink mit dem Smartphone. … „#651 – Iss doch andere Kekse“ weiterlesen Der Beitrag #651 – Iss doch andere Kekse ist ursprünglich hier erschienen: Happy Shooting - Der Foto-Podcast.
If you like this episode, check out https://otrpodcasts.com for even more classic radio shows! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Bill Saffady, an independent consultant and researcher, tells the story of his movements from history to libraries to archives to records management, his peripatetic life teaching records management to a generation, and something about what drives him to work and teach and write. Caution: Laughter.
Bill Saffady, an independent consultant and researcher, tells the story of his movements from history to libraries to archives to records management, his peripatetic life teaching records management to a generation, and something about what drives him to work and teach and write. Caution: Laughter.
The Good the Bad and the Garbage of 2018! ________________________ Welcome back to This is Not Real! In this episode we talk about the things we watched and read and loved (and hated of course) in 2018. Jess says 2018 was the year of absurdism. Sammi is a little more positive. ________________________ Mentioned in this Episode Movies/Shows: Sorry To Bother You, Proud Mary, Breaking In, Black Panther, Ready Player One, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-verse, Aqua-Man, The Green Book, The Upside, Charmed, Where Hands Touch, Loving, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, 10 Things I Hate About You, A Cinderella Story, The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Serial, Westworld, Widows, If Beale Street Could Talk, Predator, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Game of Thrones, Us, The Twilight Zone (w/Jordan Peele), The Lion King, Little, Surviving R. Kelly, Birdbox, Joker, Walk the Line, Cold Pursuit, Miss Bala, Brick, Looper, Roma, Deadly Class, Nightflyers, Star Trek Discovery, Misfits, The Lizzie McGuire Movie, Travelers, Altered Carbon, Inuyasha, Akira, Ouran High School Host Club, Aggretsuko, Naruto, Attack on Titan, Dragon Ball Z, Pokémon Music: Soulja Boy (Tell ‘Em), Beyonce (Beychella), Nao, Paramore (After Laughter Tour), Dirty Computer, Books, Papers, and Comics: Eloquent Rage, The Hate U Give, Well Read Black Girl, Tereneh Idia (Pittsburgh City Paper), Deadly Class ________________________ Upcoming: Museum of African Civilizations, Queen and Slim, Deadly Class, New Selena Show, Us, The Umbrella Academy, Running With the Devil/Mandy, Little, Spider-Man: Far From Home, Unsolved Mysteries, Disney “Hakuna Matata” Lawsuit, Fortnite “Carlton Dance” Lawsuit, JoJo re-releasing her albums Special Shoutout to Brian Tyree Henry!!! ________________________ Put Me On The Gospel According to André, Met Resource, Microfilm of Black Love “Something Good: Negro Kiss”, “I Was A Cable Guy. I Saw The Worst Of America.”
Podcast mensuel présenté et programmé par Dick Tomasovic. Durée : 60 minutes. 50e émission ! Le cinéma samplé ! 50 numéros, ça se fête, avec une émission spéciale un peu différente puisque Post-synchro s’intéresse aujourd’hui non pas aux bandes sonores filmiques, mais bien aux chansons qui ont samplé les bandes sonores du cinéma. Les voix et les dialogues de Charlie Chaplin, Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, Audrey Hepburn, Jean-Pierre Léaud, Peter Fonda, Jean Gabin et bien d’autres hantent ces mélodies pop. Playlist : Get Misunderstood – Troublemakers Act won (things fall apart) – The Roots Murder – New Order At the Speed of Life - Xzibit Rabbit in Your Headlights - UNKLE 1-800 Suicide - Gravediggaz Frontier Psychiatrist – The Avalanches The Booklovers – The Divine Comedy Loaded – Primal Scream M1 A1 – Gorillaz Iron Sky – Paolo Nutini Margaret on the Rocks – Microfilm Les cerfs-volants – Benjamin Biolay Nantes - Beirut
The Genealogy Gems Podcast with Lisa Louise Cooke - Your Family History Show
Change is something we can always count on, but that doesn't make it any easier, does it? Understanding why the change is happening, how it affects you personally, and what you can do to adapt, does. So, when announced the end of their long-standing microfilm lending program, I immediately sought out the key expert who can answer these questions for you. FamilySearch's Goal for Microfilm and the Family History Library It seems like only yesterday I was interviewing Don R. Anderson, Director of the Family History Library about the future of the library and FamilySearch. Back then, in 2009, he made the startling statement that their goal was to digitize all of the microfilms in FamilySearch's granite vault. ( to that interview in my Family History: Genealogy Made Easy podcast episode 16.) Fast forward to today, and we see that in less than ten years that end goal is within sight. We are also seeing the ending of a service nearly every genealogist has tapped into at some point: the microfilm lending program. Family historians have been able to place orders for microfilm to be shipped to their local Family History Center where they could then scroll through the images in search of ancestors. On August 31, 2017, this service comes to an end. Fear of the Unknown It's sort of scary to see this come to an end before every last roll of microfilm has been digitized and put online (just head to social media to read some of the concerns). It's definitely been comforting to know that the records you need are just an order form and two weeks away. I have always found that being armed with information helps alleviate fear, and so upon hearing the news, I reached out to FamilySearch to arrange a special interview with Diane Loosle, Director of Patron Services at FamilySearch. In this special Genealogy Gems Podcast interview, we take the time to really comb through what the end of the microfilm lending program means for you, and what your options are for records access going forward. I've been anxious to get this information into your ears and hands, and have spent the entire weekend producing this episode and transcribing it for you. The Interview: The End of the FamilySearch Microfilm Lending Program Lisa: One of the constant challenges for genealogists is gaining access to genealogical records that they need for their particular family history research. I imagine that you've had that challenge yourself. Thankfully, since 1938 the FamilySearch organization has been microfilming records around the world. They've been making these records available through the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, and through a tremendous lending program with their Family History Centers located worldwide. And that may be where you've gotten your hands on a couple of microfilms and records over the years. But of course, as the Internet has been more accessible over the last two decades, this is changing the landscape of record access. So more and more we are gaining access to digitized records online, and this has led to a really big change in the long-standing microfilm lending program. I've invited Diane Loosle, the Director of Patron Services Division at FamilySearch, to talk about the change that's occurred, what it means for you, and what your record access options are going to be going forward. Diane, thanks so much for joining me today. Diane: I'm so happy I could come, and thank you for inviting me. The Reasons Microfilm Lending is Coming to an End Lisa: I imagine that you've been very busy with the changes. I know that the last day of the microfilm ordering was August 31, 2017. And you know FamilySearch has been digitizing records for years, so we are going to be shifting from microfilm to digitization. Why is right now the time that the change is happening, where you're actually discontinuing the physical microfilm lending? Diane: This is such an exciting time Lisa. We've been looking forward to this day for many, many years because when you think about the fact that you can get access to these images immediately in your home, for the most part - there are some that you have to access through a center or library, but the majority are in your home - that's pretty wonderful. And so we are moving to a place where all of our fulfillment for your needs for your records is going to be digital and that's what this change is all about. So the reason that it's happening now is that, a couple of different reasons. First, we have moved through a lot of the microfilm and have had those digitized and they are up online. So it was a good point with that. We've also seen a huge drop in the orders of microfilms. So there's not very many being ordered now, so that kind of lined up. And then also our supplier. We have a single supplier for vesicular microfilm, and I think that's important to understand that we're talking about a certain type of microfilm because we use that type to make the copies and send them out to you. We have a single supplier, and that supplier has been kind of raising prices and giving us the indication that they would rather not be in that business. And so with all those things together, and the fact that we would like to take the resources that we are currently using to duplicate films, and send them out, and ship them and all of that, we'd like to take those resources and move them towards bringing you more records digitally. It seemed like the right time to make this decision to finally finish it. Now we do have some of the collection that has not been completed of course, and I think that's what's causing most people concern is, "What happens? Can I get access to that during this time that you are still finishing it off?" Lisa: Exactly, and you know I have visited the distribution center for your lending program, and it was massive and it looked really complicated. And then when you add on the idea that the access to the actual film itself is changing. I just got a camera from my uncle, and it's got 25-year-old film in it. It took me all day to find a local store that could develop it for me! So, it's like a perfect storm of a lot of technological changes, which is exciting, because as you said we can access things from home. Digitization and Publishing Limitations I know that when it comes to the microfilm that you guys have, the goal has been to digitize all of it. But explain to folks what the limitations are in terms of, do you have the rights to lend it, do you have the rights to digitize and put up online everything that you have microfilmed? Diane: Right. So we are always limited by the rights associated with the collections because the record custodians stipulate those when we do the agreements. And in microfilm, we've been circulating things. Our intention is to circulate digitally everything possible legally for us to do. And that's the majority of the collection. Now in the process of doing this, what's happened over the years is that laws have changed around Data Privacy, particularly in Europe and some other locations around the world. And as we're going through and reviewing all of these, you can imagine these thousands of contracts for this process, we're discovering that there are some that because of the changes in the Data Privacy laws, they really should not have been continuing to circulate because of those changes. So those would then in the future be restricted because of the Data Privacy issues. And those are usually very modern records, those that have living people in them. So there will be a set of records that maybe you could have gotten on microfilm previously that you would not now be able to get digitally. But that's because they shouldn't have been in circulation anyway because of the data privacy changes. But for the most part, what we're circulating microfilm-wise you will have access to digitally. Now, about 20% of the collection you have to access through the Family History Library, or through a Family History Center or affiliate library because of the contracts we have. And that was also true with the microfilm of course, and now it's true with the digital images as well, based on the contracts, so there will be a certain set that is in that category. Family History Center Affiliates Lisa: Help us understand what affiliate centers are. Diane: Affiliates don't have to return the film they have. Affiliates are usually public libraries or Family History Centers in an LDS chapel. Local leadership will decide. So if they keep them, you can still access them. And the Family History Library in Salt Lake City will maintain a large microfilm collection as well. Go to familysearch.org and in the right corner, you'll find the Get Help link (and click Contact Us). for affiliates near you. They will appear on a map. Libraries have extended hours compared to Family History Centers. The best way to find out where the films are still located, both physical and digital, is the . Many people aren't that familiar with the card catalog. Look for the Camera icon, then click to go to the document image. Lisa: Let's dig into that a little bit. So we're talking about, you mentioned the term "affiliate centers" and I know that there are some locations which aren't technically affiliates. Can you help define that for us? How do we figure out, before we make the jaunt over to the local family history center if that's one that actually can still have some of the microfilm. Help us sort that out. Diane: So if you go to any center or affiliate library out there, and I'll tell you how to find those in just a minutes, they can keep whatever film they already have on hand. There's nothing that's saying that they need to send it back. Now that is dependent on decisions made at the local level. So, you know, the leadership of either the affiliate library, which is normally in a public library, or a family history center which is often in an LDS chapel, the local leadership there will make a decision about, you know, the film and what happens to them in the future, but we're not asking them to send them back. So you'll still be able to access them. And the library here in Salt Lake will maintain a large microfilm collection as well. So, it will still be available that way. Now the way that you find these locations is if you go into FamilySearch, up in the right-hand corner there's a Get Help link, and the Get Help link lets you get in touch with us. And then you can search actually using your zip code to find which centers and affiliate libraries are near you, and both will appear on the map that appears. So, uhm, you can find out which ones are near your location. The affiliates are, as I said, often public libraries, so they may have extended hours beyond what the family history center might have because the family history center is often as I said in a chapel and manned by volunteers. And so they may not have as many hours as your affiliate libraries may have. How to Identify Where the Films are Located Lisa: So whatever they may have had on hand when the lending program came to an end, they had the option to decide if they were going to hang onto it, or if they were going to send stuff back. There's going to be some just at the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. Do we go into the card catalog to identify where the existing films are still located? Diane: Yes, so the best way to find out what's available both digitally and where the films might be physically located is through the FamilySearch Catalog on . So if you go to Search on FamilySearch, and then Catalog, you can look up your location, look up the records your interested in, and it will tell you where those can be found. Now, if it's available digitally, and actually most people I've talked to where they would have this concern about "oh goodness, I'm not going to have access to my films!", when I've talked with them, and we've looked them up, their records were already available digitally, they just didn't know it. So, if you go in the catalog and look it up where it lists the microfilm, there will be a little camera icon out to the right-hand side, and if you see that little camera icon, you can click on that and that takes you straight in to the digital images for that record. Now we publish those, we do about digitize about 1,500 microfilms a day at the vault. And we publish those pretty immediately up on to the website through the catalog. You will not find those through the Historical Records part of FamilySearch under Search Records. They're just through the catalog, so there's a much larger collection available through the catalog than what you see in the Historical Records section. How Films are Prioritized for Digitization Lisa: When we get notifications, I know I get your press releases and such on the new records that are coming out, does that include those? Because we do publish every Friday kind of a run down for all of our listeners out there, what the newest records are that are coming online. Diane: It does not currently. That publication only includes things that are published online in the Historical Records section of the website. However, with this change, we're looking to change that so it will include those being published to the catalog. Now the challenge with that is the volume! Because 1,500 films a day is a lot. And these films, because the way that we did this initially, we prioritized all of the films that had been ordered in the last five years to make sure that those were available digitally, so it's been kind of piecemeal a little bit. So, you might have two or three films in a full collection that have been digitized and the rest maybe not, at this point, and so trying to help you understand what is and is not available through that publication. We're still working through the details. But the intention is, as we go forward, will be to prioritize filling in those collections where maybe one or two films have been digitized and the rest have not yet. We will go through and make sure the whole collection has been digitized. And then we are going to introduce a process where you will be able to let us know if there is a film that you absolutely need. You can let us know, and we will work that into our prioritization and try to get that to you as quickly as we can. You know if you think about how long it took to get a microfilm to be delivered to you once you ordered it, you can think about it's kind of the same time frame when it might then be available to you digitally. How to Request that a Microfilm be Digitized Lisa: How could they be contacting you to make that kind of request? Diane: We are working on that process right now, trying to finalize it. So there's kind of two options we're looking at at the moment: One, you would contact us through our support line, the Help Line. The other is that we would just have a form up that you would fill out. Now the form is going to take more time to get established and up. So we may go out of the gate with not as ideal of a process, but we want to make sure that we can let us know, so we'll be clear about what that is as we get closer to September 1st. Lisa: When we get into the catalog, have you already flagged which ones are going to have restrictions, they are just not going to be able to be digitized? Because I think some people might be thinking "Maybe I should just hold on and wait, over the next couple months maybe they'll get to this one, I'll put in a request." But I imagine that's going to be a big job if you have to go in and try to flag every single one that you know you're not going to have the rights to digitize. Tell us how you're going to deal with that. Diane: Well, that has not occurred and would be pretty impossible to do at this stage, just because of the volume of what we're dealing with trying to go through. We're doing it as we go to digitize the films. And so, we discover it as we go, as opposed to knowing it ahead of time. Lisa: So if they put in a request, you pull it out, go 'OK well let's look at doing this,' and then realize, no, this one's not going to be able to do it. Then at least they would get that information? Diane: Yes, they would. Well, what would happen is we're working on a way so that in the catalog you would be able to identify that. So for example, a request actually came from the community out there that we be able to distinguish if a record can be viewed in my home, or if I have to be at the facility to view it, or if there is some other restriction on it. And so, because of that feedback, we thought "So let's see if we can figure out a way to help people understand that." Now, these things probably won't be ready right out of the gate. But we're looking for ways to make it simpler for you to understand what the challenges are with the record that you're trying to access. Gaining Access to Microfilm and Some Restricted Digitized Records in Person Lisa: Sure. So, if we're looking online and we see a record, and it's not been digitized yet, would we at this point, until you get more formalized processes going, would you still encourage people to get in touch with the in Salt Lake City? What other options are they going to have to gain access? Diane: So first what I would do is I would look, because we'll maintain the film inventory, so we know where the films are located, so I would first look and see, is this film available somewhere near me? Or if I have an opportunity to come to the Family History Library, and the film is there, great. But, so first look and see if you can locate it, then you can let us know through the channels that we'll have available to you what the film is, and then we'll put it into the list to be prioritized to be digitized. But I would always encourage folks to look and see if they are located near where that film already is because that would be much quicker for them to get access to that. Lisa: If Salt Lake City is the only place, then, of course, this really whittles down to the big fear of everybody, is "Oh that one film I'm going to need, it's only going to be in Salt Lake City and I can't get there." What other kinds of options might a person like that have? Diane: Well, so I think that there are some options available to them because we have a large group of professional researchers who come to the library every day, and those folks could probably be useful to you in looking up those records and getting copies of whatever is needed. So that's one option that people could take to do that. The majority of what we'll have, I don't think the case would be that the only place you can get it is the Family History Library. If we do have a fair number of collections that are in that category as we finish this process off, then we'll look at ways to provide some access where we can. But that access would probably be in a digital way as well. So that would be my suggestion, that they reach out to those who are here every day and could take a look at that. And I think you know there are other websites where you can get access to professionals as well, or just good samaritans, you know, that want to help you out. Lisa: Absolutely, and there are lots of those. Finally, are there any records that the people listening are going to completely lose access to? Diane: The only ones that would be in that category is because of data privacy. So, if there was an issue with, you know, a law changed, that made it so that we could no longer provide access to those. But that would have been true in the microfilm world as well. Lisa: Exactly. So really, it really doesn't change in that respect. We're not losing records, we're changing up how we access them. And I think you've helped shed a lot of light on kind of what the process will be and it sounds like you have a big job ahead of you. "We're not losing records, we're changing up how we access them." Lisa Louise Cooke Shifting Resources to Meet the Goal Lisa: How quickly do you think it's going to help once the lending process is let go of, that the resources start going to all of this other work now that you have to do on the digital side? Diane: I think it will move pretty quickly for us to, you know, start to do more with the resources we have. For example, we're collecting around three million images with three hundred camera crews out there, about a week. So, that's a lot! And we want to shift a lot of resources. Another place we'd like to capture more is with Africa and the oral genealogies project that we have, and gain more access there. So, we'll be shifting to those. And then, of course, the vault is moving at a pretty good clip already, with about 1,500 films a day, so I think we'll be able to keep up pretty well with the demand that's coming at us from people. But, we'll evaluate that as we go, and determine if we need to boost up more there or not, to be able to move more quickly for folks. Empowering Genealogists to Learn More Lisa: Any other questions that I didn't think about that you've been hearing online, in social media, that you'd love to give us some input on? Diane: Well, we have had some questions from some of the affiliate libraries about how do they get the access? So that's been happening online a little bit. And so we just want them to know that we'll be reaching out to them via calling all of them actually, and helping them through this process of setting up the things that they need to technically to be able to get access to the images digitally. So that's definitely something they should know. The other thing is that we have a lot of people who don't actually know how to use the catalog [laughs] because you know they've grown up in a search world, or looking at the historical records the browsable images, and a lot of people don't understand that there's a lot of different ways to access the records on FamilySearch. So you have Search, which is a very small percentage of the collection actually, compared to the whole, and then you have the Historical Records that are only browsable, and that you can go in and look at the images browsing, and then you have everything that's been published through the catalog. So there's kind of three places that they need to look. So I think that's the biggest piece I've seen: people just don't know. They're not aware of where to find those things. And you know eventually, it will be nice, maybe when those things come together. But at this point in time, they're separate. And that's because we wanted to ensure that you would maintain access. If we could just publish them quickly and maintain access for you, that's the best in our minds. Lisa: Absolutely! Well, I know that is going to be joining us in future episodes talking more about just those different areas. And I love the way that you kind of laid it out for us because I think a lot of people weren't that familiar with the differences. And she's going to be helping us get a little savvier in that ongoing research. Diane, thank you so much for taking time to visit with me, and to answer some of the questions. I know that you know that the emotions that run high are only because people are so passionate about family history, and they are so appreciative of what FamilySearch has done. It's been an amazing resource that you guys provide to the public for free, which is just absolutely invaluable. And I know that I have a lot of confidence in where you guys are going because you always are out there looking forward. How far out into the future you guys look and you plan for is just phenomenal! It's not just about us accessing records, it's going to be for generations to come, and I love the fact that you guys are really laying the groundwork for that. Diane: Well, thank you, Lisa! We are all about getting you access to records so that you can find your ancestors, and we will always be about that. I'm glad that I could come and help people to understand what's happening and hopefully be a little less concerned about the change. I know it's difficult, but it's a wonderful change too. Lisa: Thanks again Diane! Diana: Thank you, Lisa!
Extreme Genes - America's Family History and Genealogy Radio Show & Podcast
Host Scott Fisher opens the show with David Allen Lambert, Chief Genealogist of the New England Historic Genealogical Society and AmericanAncestors.org. David opens “Family Histoire News” with word of new progress coming in the War of 1812 Project. Having been delayed for a time, the Federation of Genealogical Societies begins the next phase of noting our ancestors’ service in that war soon. Hear all about it. Then, it’s word of the passing of the world’s oldest man, who had an amazing history. Hear how old he was and the things he experienced. Then, David shares a report that the inspiration for the famed “Rosie the Riveter” poster has been identified… and she’s still living. Find out who she is and more about the real “Rosie the Riveter.” David then shares a fascinating story about how people slept in earlier times. It’s nothing like today! Next, it’s another astounding DNA victory uniting a family separated for 46 years. Hear their story. Next, Fisher calms the nerves of researchers everywhere in a sit down interview with Diane Loosle, Director of the Family History Library in Salt Lake City. The Library, through FamilySearch.org, recently announced that it will no longer be lending out microfilm to satellite libraries around the world. But the move is based on good news! Hear what that is, and more of what’s to come from the Family History Library and FamilySearch.org Fisher then visits with Beth Wylie, blogger of LifeInThePastLane.org. Beth talks about her recent post describing the challenges she has experienced in dealing with the discovery of having had slave holding Southern ancestors, and her plans for sharing what she learns with descendants of the slaves her ancestors held. Then, Tom Perry is on the road from Massachusetts where he is speaking at the NEHGS Preservation Conference. Tom addresses a question from a listener concerning an old camera found in his aunt’s attic. Hear Tom’s advice. That’s all this week on Extreme Genes, America’s Family History Show!
Listen to The Guys on the “Talk Back Florida” radio show broadcast on Saturday, 23 May 2015. The recorded broadcast is available at http://www.newstalkflorida.com/talk-back-florida-creating-your-family-tree-with-the-genealogy-guys/ . The news includes: · MyHeritage has unveiled their new MyHeritage Stories website, showcasing some videos and stories capturing amazing discoveries made by users around the world. It can be found at http://www.myheritage.com/stories. (A link labeled User Stories can also be found at the bottom of the MyHeritage website.) · The Federation of Genealogical Societies has announced new editors of their electronic FORUM Magazine. Julie Tarr is the new Managing Editor and Jennifer Alford is the new Associate Editor. Congratulations! · Drew discusses the more than 13.4 million new records released by FamilySearch in recent weeks. · Findmypast has released a large collection of Dublin Workhouse records and additions to British newspapers. The Guys review new books and magazines available for your reading and reference pleasure. All of the items are available through Amazon.com unless otherwise noted. The list includes: The In-Depth Genealogist is a publishing company that provides educational resources to the genealogical community. Drew reviews: Going In-Depth magazine and a new book, Ancestors in a Nation Divided: An In-Depth Guide to Researching Your Civil War Ancestors, by Cindy Freed. Other reviews include: George reviews Discover English Parish Registers, and Buried Treasure: What's in the English Parish Chest, both written by Paul Milner and published by Unlock the Past. The books are available at their website at http://www.unlockthepast.com.au. Drew reviews Photo Organizing Practices: Daguerreotypes to Digital by Maureen A. Taylor. He also reviews How to Archive Family Photos: A Step-by-Step Guide to Organize and Share Your Photos Digitally by Denise May Levenick. George reviews James M. Beidler's book, the fourth edition of The Best of Roots & Branches. The book is available through the online store of the Lancaster Mennonite Historical Society at http://www.biblio.com/bookstore/lancaster-mennonite-historical-society-lancaster/genealogy-genealogical-research-aids . George reviews a new book, Guide to Hanover Military Records, 1514-1866, on Microfilm at the Family History Library by Teresa S. McMillin, CG. Drew reviews a new book, When Descendents Become Ancestors by David A. Kendall, PhD. George reviews a new publication by Moorshead Magazines in their Tracing Your Ancestors series. The new title is titled Tracing Your Female Ancestor, Volume II. It is available at the online store at Moorshead Magazines at http://your-genealogy-history-store-usa.myshopify.com/collections/tracing-your-ancestors-series .
The internet radio show for people who love to shoot film! The Nikon Report! Kodak Signet 40! Shooting 35mm Microfilm and lots more!
Engineering students turn obsolete technology into advanced learning tools with a microfilm projector in Africa
Slow rappin', new theme song, Jordy's bug, 2012: A Year In Revyou, Jordy's Dog Days with Rich Monahan, Sunny Funny Sunday Funnies, Rich's interview with Bane and Jonathan Davis, PT TeeVee, and mouth slappies.
When Barrie’s tailor is killed and and a fire is set to the tailor’s shop. TO find the mur Read more ... [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]
Kelly Barrick describes the Gay Rights Movement microfilm collection, a rich resource for the study of the LGBTQ community and its history, both in the United States and internationally.
Award-winning historian Henry Wiencek, presently residing in Chestertown as Washington College's first-ever Patrick Henry Fellow, unveiled some of the startling discoveries he has made researching his upcoming book about Thomas Jefferson and slavery in "Sex, Lies & Microfilm: What Historians Don't Tell You About Thomas Jefferson," a lecture at Washington College's Casey Academic Center Forum on Tuesday, April 21.
Barry Craig, Confidential Investigator is one of the few detective radio series that had separate versions of it broadcast from both coasts. Even the spelling changed over the years. It was first "Barry Crane" and then "Barrie Craig". NBC produced it in New York from 1951 to 1954 and then moved it to Hollywood where it aired from 1954 to 1955. It attracted only occasional sponsors so it was usually a sustainer.
Season Two: The History of Mormon History Historiography—We are doing it.... Join the Sunstone Mormon History podcasters Bryan Buchanan and Lindsay Hansen Park for a special second season of Deseret Dramas. This miniseries will explore the history of how Mormon history was told and came to be.