Podcasts about perkiss

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Best podcasts about perkiss

Latest podcast episodes about perkiss

Mighty Finland Podcast
Kenttäarmeijan varustaminen ja uuden rynkyn kaliiperi? Sotatalouspäällikkö Mikko Heiskanen

Mighty Finland Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2024 66:38


Mikä uuden rynkyn kaliiperiksi tulee? Paljon Suomessa on rynnäkkökiväärejä ja uusitaanko kaikki? Entä mitä varusteita PerKissä jaetaan reserviläisille ison punaisen pillin tilanteessa? Vieraana kenraaliluutnantti ja Puolustusvoimien sotatalouspäällikkö Mikko Heiskanen! Mitä kannattaa ottaa mukaan inttiin? Mitä maavoimille hommataan kun luonnonvoimat on saaneet omansa? Entä dronetuotanto ja Ukraina? Mitä on sotatalous?Meidän moraalimerkki on myynnissä ainoastaan Varustelekassa: https://www.varusteleka.fi/fi/product/mighty-finland-moraalimerkki/68131Meitä maanpuolustuksen etulinjassa tukee yhteistyökumppanit:Savox - Kriittisen kommunikaation kärkiosaaja. Never Alone. - savox.comSavotta - Huikeita kantojärjestelmiä ja muita varusteita maanpuolustukseen ja ulkonaliikkumiseen - Savotta.fiVarusteleka - Reserviläisen karkkikauppa ja meidän luotettu huoltopiste jo vuosien ajan - Varusteleka.fiOta meihin yhteyttä Instagramin directissä tai laita mailia osoitteeseen mighty.finland1917@gmail.com, jos sulla on aiheideoita, ajatuksia vieraista tai muuten vaan rakentavaa palautetta.Instagram: @mighty_finland_

Australian Property Investment Podcast
Credit Unions: How They Are Leveling The Playing Field Against Big Banks with Anthony Perkiss

Australian Property Investment Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2021 28:01


In this episode, we talk to Anthony Perkiss, Chief Executive Officer of the Illawarra Credit Union. Anthony has more than 25 years of experience across retail banking, wealth management, superannuation and investment banking. We are going to talk about the lending industry, risk perceptions, credit policy, decision-making processes on loaners, exposure limits on loans and so much more.In this episode:Anthony shares his professional background.Things that have changed in the industry.Explaining risk perceptions in the industry of lending.Understanding credit policy.The process of making decisions on loaners.Working within exposure limits on approving loans.Anthony's perspective on the market outlook.LinksIllawarra Credit Union Website

Neil Gill For Breakfast - Triple M Central West 105.1

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

perkiss
RDA Central West Podcast Series
Episode 18: Daniel Perkiss, CEO of Orange Ex-Services Club

RDA Central West Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2020 27:15


In episode eighteen of the Business Leaders Breakfast Series, Sam is joined by CEO of the Orange Ex-Services' Club , Daniel Perkiss.   Heading up one of the Central West's largest hospitality operations, Daniel is in a unique position to reflect on the challenges of the past six months from both a local business and community perspective.   W: https://oesc.com.au/

IronWomen podcast
Ins and Outs of Title IX - Abby Perkiss(S13E8)

IronWomen podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2020 54:31


This week, Alyssa and Haley welcome back Abby Perkiss, Assistant Professor of History at Kean Univesity, to pick her brain about the updated Title IX regulation on sexual violence. She explains the rule in detail and how remote education affects these guidelines. Abby then leads us through some history on gender equality, what brought about Title IX, and how federal institutions like colleges implement the law. Abby answers some difficult questions on how courts enforce the gray areas of Title IX and her thoughts on paying collegiate athletes. Plus, hear how Abby's adventure racing company Rootstock Racing is adapting to the current times. Alyssa gets ready for a backpacking adventure and Haley recommends a good trainer movie. Plus, our hosts answer a mailbag question about how to carry nutrition and hydration on long runs.

IronWomen podcast
The Women of Adventure Racing - Abby Perkiss (S11E5)

IronWomen podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2019 61:14


This week, Alyssa and Haley talk all things Adventure Racing with expert racer and 2x national champion Abby Perkiss. Abby tells us about the details of adventure racing including the necessary gear, why people decide to get into the sport, and the unique team and co-ed aspect. We hear about the Women of Adventure Racing campaign that provides scholarships for all-female teams and how barriers for women in adventure racing are being broken down. Plus, learn about Abby's company Rootstock Racing and upcoming adventure races. Alyssa runs through her 6-day race through the desert, and our hosts answer a mailbag question from brand new pro triathlete Brandi about what to expect before your first pro race.

Boom Howdy
Scary Stories from Camp Roanoke EP 53. A Haunted Home in Portsmouth, England

Boom Howdy

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2018 58:32


Katy has returned from her New England road trip with a tale from ye olde England! Using Haunted Homes as her guide, she tells of the plight of the Perkiss family who have been experiencing phenomena for two decades. Sometimes comforting and nice, other times downright demonic, what will the show’s medium, Mia Dolan, have to say? Find out!

Scary Stories from Camp Roanoke
53. A Haunted Home in Portsmouth, England

Scary Stories from Camp Roanoke

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2018


Katy has returned from her New England road trip with a tale from ye olde England! Using Haunted Homes as her guide, she tells of the plight of the Perkiss family who have been experiencing phenomena for two decades. Sometimes comforting and nice, other times downright demonic, what will the show’s medium, Mia Dolan, have to […]

england new england haunted portsmouth england perkiss
TA 1
Episode 167 Rootstock Racing

TA 1

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2017 67:57


The one where we don't talk about a throwing up dog. This weeks links Brett's book https://rootstockracing.wordpress.com/2017/08/22/cowboy-tough/ Rootstock Racing https://rootstockracing.wordpress.com/ The Stockville http://rootstockracing.org/index.php/the-stockville/ My Photos of the race https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1644348475577450.1073742253.100000069414517&type=1&l=f93281e917

TA 1
Episode 83 Abby Perkiss and Brent Freeland

TA 1

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2015 69:13


The one about the married couple nurturing a baby and a race team. This weeks links Rootstock Racing http://rootstockracing.org/ Me and Phil Liggett https://youtu.be/7kZ_cUlAVeM GOALS AR http://goalsara.org/

New Books in History
Abigail Perkiss, “Making Good Neighbors: Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2014 50:41


Sitting in my home office this morning, I’ve periodically looked up from my computer screen and out the window to see who the dog is barking at. Sometimes it’s a young mother pushing a stroller, sometimes an older man walking his dogs, occasionally a young woman jogging. Regardless of age, gender or agenda, all of the people I’ve seen have one thing in common. They are white. This is not unusual, of course. Blacks and whites throughout America live separate lives. They attend separate schools. They worship in separate sanctuaries. And, most obviously, they live in different neighborhoods. This remains true despite the dramatic migrations of the mid-Twentieth Century. The racial identity of specific neighborhoods changed. But the persistence of segregation even after the gradual dismantling of legal and extralegal barriers to black mobility and choice is striking. However, there are a few neighborhoods that chose strategically to invite certain black families to put down roots in their part of the city. This was not an easy task. The obstacles, institutional, cultural and economic, were great, and often subverted such efforts. But a few neighborhoods surmounted these to become national models of what integration might look like. Abigail Perkiss discusses one of these neighborhoods, West Mount Airy in Philadelphia, in her wonderful new book Making Good Neighbors:  Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia (Cornell University Press, 2014).  Having grown up in the neighborhood, Perkiss has both an instinctive sympathy for the residents of the neighborhood and a thorough understanding of  the cultural, economic and demographic challenges facing the city.  Her study reflects this familiarity while remaining analytically rigorous.  As a bonus, she writes beautifully.   The result is a book that sheds much light on what the residents of West Mount Airy meant when they talked about integration, how they strove to integrate their neighborhood and how they struggled to address the challenges to that accomplishment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Abigail Perkiss, “Making Good Neighbors: Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2014 50:15


Sitting in my home office this morning, I’ve periodically looked up from my computer screen and out the window to see who the dog is barking at. Sometimes it’s a young mother pushing a stroller, sometimes an older man walking his dogs, occasionally a young woman jogging. Regardless of age, gender or agenda, all of the people I’ve seen have one thing in common. They are white. This is not unusual, of course. Blacks and whites throughout America live separate lives. They attend separate schools. They worship in separate sanctuaries. And, most obviously, they live in different neighborhoods. This remains true despite the dramatic migrations of the mid-Twentieth Century. The racial identity of specific neighborhoods changed. But the persistence of segregation even after the gradual dismantling of legal and extralegal barriers to black mobility and choice is striking. However, there are a few neighborhoods that chose strategically to invite certain black families to put down roots in their part of the city. This was not an easy task. The obstacles, institutional, cultural and economic, were great, and often subverted such efforts. But a few neighborhoods surmounted these to become national models of what integration might look like. Abigail Perkiss discusses one of these neighborhoods, West Mount Airy in Philadelphia, in her wonderful new book Making Good Neighbors:  Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia (Cornell University Press, 2014).  Having grown up in the neighborhood, Perkiss has both an instinctive sympathy for the residents of the neighborhood and a thorough understanding of  the cultural, economic and demographic challenges facing the city.  Her study reflects this familiarity while remaining analytically rigorous.  As a bonus, she writes beautifully.   The result is a book that sheds much light on what the residents of West Mount Airy meant when they talked about integration, how they strove to integrate their neighborhood and how they struggled to address the challenges to that accomplishment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Abigail Perkiss, “Making Good Neighbors: Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2014 50:15


Sitting in my home office this morning, I’ve periodically looked up from my computer screen and out the window to see who the dog is barking at. Sometimes it’s a young mother pushing a stroller, sometimes an older man walking his dogs, occasionally a young woman jogging. Regardless of age, gender or agenda, all of the people I’ve seen have one thing in common. They are white. This is not unusual, of course. Blacks and whites throughout America live separate lives. They attend separate schools. They worship in separate sanctuaries. And, most obviously, they live in different neighborhoods. This remains true despite the dramatic migrations of the mid-Twentieth Century. The racial identity of specific neighborhoods changed. But the persistence of segregation even after the gradual dismantling of legal and extralegal barriers to black mobility and choice is striking. However, there are a few neighborhoods that chose strategically to invite certain black families to put down roots in their part of the city. This was not an easy task. The obstacles, institutional, cultural and economic, were great, and often subverted such efforts. But a few neighborhoods surmounted these to become national models of what integration might look like. Abigail Perkiss discusses one of these neighborhoods, West Mount Airy in Philadelphia, in her wonderful new book Making Good Neighbors:  Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia (Cornell University Press, 2014).  Having grown up in the neighborhood, Perkiss has both an instinctive sympathy for the residents of the neighborhood and a thorough understanding of  the cultural, economic and demographic challenges facing the city.  Her study reflects this familiarity while remaining analytically rigorous.  As a bonus, she writes beautifully.   The result is a book that sheds much light on what the residents of West Mount Airy meant when they talked about integration, how they strove to integrate their neighborhood and how they struggled to address the challenges to that accomplishment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in African American Studies
Abigail Perkiss, “Making Good Neighbors: Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia” (Cornell UP, 2014)

New Books in African American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2014 50:15


Sitting in my home office this morning, I've periodically looked up from my computer screen and out the window to see who the dog is barking at. Sometimes it's a young mother pushing a stroller, sometimes an older man walking his dogs, occasionally a young woman jogging. Regardless of age, gender or agenda, all of the people I've seen have one thing in common. They are white. This is not unusual, of course. Blacks and whites throughout America live separate lives. They attend separate schools. They worship in separate sanctuaries. And, most obviously, they live in different neighborhoods. This remains true despite the dramatic migrations of the mid-Twentieth Century. The racial identity of specific neighborhoods changed. But the persistence of segregation even after the gradual dismantling of legal and extralegal barriers to black mobility and choice is striking. However, there are a few neighborhoods that chose strategically to invite certain black families to put down roots in their part of the city. This was not an easy task. The obstacles, institutional, cultural and economic, were great, and often subverted such efforts. But a few neighborhoods surmounted these to become national models of what integration might look like. Abigail Perkiss discusses one of these neighborhoods, West Mount Airy in Philadelphia, in her wonderful new book Making Good Neighbors:  Civil Rights, Liberalism and Integration in Postwar Philadelphia (Cornell University Press, 2014).  Having grown up in the neighborhood, Perkiss has both an instinctive sympathy for the residents of the neighborhood and a thorough understanding of  the cultural, economic and demographic challenges facing the city.  Her study reflects this familiarity while remaining analytically rigorous.  As a bonus, she writes beautifully.   The result is a book that sheds much light on what the residents of West Mount Airy meant when they talked about integration, how they strove to integrate their neighborhood and how they struggled to address the challenges to that accomplishment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/african-american-studies