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Fans falling from the stands; Fried Edgy in Piqua; Kentucky Lottery Winner Goes to Jail; Science News and Falling Space Junk; Are You Staying Home More; Bill Belichick and his GF; Breaking Law in NYC; UFO Conference in Fairborn
Kyle "Bam Bam" Barga joins host Jake Murren on Episode 112 of Forged in Ohio. Kyle is a 5-0 amateur mixed martial artist who recently won BCM Promotions bantamweight championship.In this episode, Kyle talks about his five-year journey in mixed martial arts, proving himself by becoming BCM's bantamweight champion, his goals for 2025, and so much more. Kyle's driven to be the best fighter at 135 pounds, and he's even more motivated now that he has a target on his back. Discover more about Kyle "Bam Bam" Barga by listening to Forged in Ohio today!Check out Kyle on social media:Instagram: @kyle.barga Facebook: @kyle.barga.5Forged in Ohio:Instagram: @forgedinohioFacebook: @forgedinohioYouTube: @forgedinohioMerchandise: @forgedinohioMusic on Forged in Ohio is from FreeMusicArchive.org: Servants by Jahzzarhttps://freemusicarchive.org/music/Jahzzar/Servants/Servants
Connor "Showtime" Smith joins host Jake Murren on Episode 109 of Forged in Ohio. Connor is a 5-3 amateur mixed martial artist at only 20 years old. In this episode, Connor talks about winning his last fight at Caged Thunder 29, how his passion for pro wrestling has influenced him as a fighter, coaching a youth BJJ class at Smile Back Training Center, and more. Connor's a rising star in Ohio MMA, and he's one of the most entertaining fighters on the mic that has ever joined the show. Discover more about Connor "Showtime" Smith by listening to Forged in Ohio today!Check out Connor on social media:Instagram: @i.am_connorsmith Facebook: @connorsmith Forged in Ohio:Instagram: @forgedinohioFacebook: @forgedinohioYouTube: @forgedinohioMerchandise: @forgedinohioMusic on Forged in Ohio is from FreeMusicArchive.org: Servants by Jahzzarhttps://freemusicarchive.org/music/Jahzzar/Servants/Servants
15-month-old Vivian Gardner was rushed to the hospital last month after her babysitter found her unconscious on the floor of her bedroom. Police in Piqua, Ohio said the babysitter's husband, Michael Mayor, confessed to slamming Vivian on the floor several times when she wouldn't stop crying. Vivian later died and Mayor is now charged with murder. Law&Crime's Angenette Levy looks at the tragic case in this episode of Crime Fix — a daily show covering the biggest stories in crime.PLEASE SUPPORT THE SHOW: Download the FREE Upside App at https://upside.app.link/crimefix to get an extra 25 cents back for every gallon on your first tank of gas.Host:Angenette Levy https://twitter.com/Angenette5Guest: Marian Braccia https://www.linkedin.com/in/marian-braccia-024634133/CRIME FIX PRODUCTION:Head of Social Media, YouTube - Bobby SzokeSocial Media Management - Vanessa BeinVideo Editing - Daniel CamachoGuest Booking - Alyssa Fisher & Diane KayeSTAY UP-TO-DATE WITH THE LAW&CRIME NETWORK:Watch Law&Crime Network on YouTubeTV: https://bit.ly/3td2e3yWhere To Watch Law&Crime Network: https://bit.ly/3akxLK5Sign Up For Law&Crime's Daily Newsletter: https://bit.ly/LawandCrimeNewsletterRead Fascinating Articles From Law&Crime Network: https://bit.ly/3td2IqoLAW&CRIME NETWORK SOCIAL MEDIA:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lawandcrime/Twitter: https://twitter.com/LawCrimeNetworkFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/lawandcrimeTwitch: https://www.twitch.tv/lawandcrimenetworkSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The Boys high school basketball game between the Tecumseh Arrow and the Piqua Indians is now available on demand at NO CHARGE!
This week was wild! JKJ set her 2025 goals, our kids have shows, the McRib is back, Moana 2 is just OK and WE ALMOST DIED. Ok so we weren't THAT close to dying but it was kind of insane and smoke was involved. We answer your questions AND we have fun gift recommendations! It's been a wonderful season! Thank Upcoming shows: Jan 10-11 Las Vegas, NV Jan 18 Ft. Wayne, IN Feb 14-15 Massillon, OH Feb 28 Piqua, OH March 1 Celina, OH March 28-29 West Jordan, UT For more JKJ and ticket links to all shows visit jennakimjones.com
It's our Christmas episode and in it we discuss all our favorite Christmas things and the ones we could live without. Turns out JKJ has some strong opinions about Christmas movies (surprise, surprise!) and #AL takes all of JKJ's very silly questions very seriously. Upcoming shows: Jan 10-11 Las Vegas, NV Jan 18 Ft. Wayne, IN Feb 14-15 Massillon, OH Feb 28 Piqua, OH March 1 Celina, OH March 28-29 West Jordan, UT For more JKJ and ticket links to all shows visit jennakimjones.com
Hannah Went, a pioneer in epigenetics, is the co-founder of TruDiagnostic and founder of Everything Epigentics. She shares her journey from the early days of TruDiagnostic to its burgeoning role in healthcare. She reflects on the rapid evolution of epigenetics, the challenges of making groundbreaking science accessible, and the gratifying shift towards mainstream acceptance. Hannah also delves into her personal growth, emphasizing the transformative impact of "The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership" and her desire to be remembered as loving and impactful. Guest links: trudiagnostic.com | everythingepigenetics.com Charity supported: Equal Justice Initiative Interested in being a guest on the show or have feedback to share? Email us at podcast@velentium.com. PRODUCTION CREDITS Host: Lindsey Dinneen Editing: Marketing Wise Producer: Velentium EPISODE TRANSCRIPT Episode 041 - Hannah Went [00:00:00] Lindsey Dinneen: Hi, I'm Lindsey and I'm talking with MedTech industry leaders on how they change lives for a better world. [00:00:09] Diane Bouis: The inventions and technologies are fascinating and so are the people who work with them. [00:00:15] Frank Jaskulke: There was a period of time where I realized, fundamentally, my job was to go hang out with really smart people that are saving lives and then do work that would help them save more lives. [00:00:28] Diane Bouis: I got into the business to save lives and it is incredibly motivating to work with people who are in that same business, saving or improving lives. [00:00:38] Duane Mancini: What better industry than where I get to wake up every day and just save people's lives. [00:00:42] Lindsey Dinneen: These are extraordinary people doing extraordinary work, and this is The Leading Difference. Hello, and welcome back to another episode of The Leading Difference podcast. I'm your host, Lindsey, and I am so excited to introduce you to my guest today, Hannah Went. Hannah has a lifelong passion for longevity and breakthrough disruptive technologies that drive radical improvement to the human condition. She attended the University of Kentucky and graduated with a degree in biology. During that time, she had multiple research internships studying cell signaling and cell biology. After graduation, she worked for the International Peptide Society as their Director of Research and Content. Through work in the integrative medicine industry, Hannah saw an opportunity for a methylation based age diagnostics and started TruDiagnostics in 2020. TruDiagnostic is a company focused on array based methylation diagnostics for life extension and preventative healthcare serving functional medicine providers. TruDiagnostic has a commitment to research with over 30 approved clinical trials investigating the epigenetic methylation changes of longevity and health interventions. Since TruDiagnostics' inception, they have created one of the world's largest private epigenetic health databases with over 75, 000 patients tested to date. Hannah has since created Everything Epigenetics, where she shares insights on how DNA regulation has an impact on your health. All right, well, welcome to the show, Hannah. I'm so excited to talk with you today. Thanks for taking some time. [00:02:14] Hannah Went: Thanks, Lindsey. I'm excited to speak with you. [00:02:17] Lindsey Dinneen: Awesome. Well, would you mind starting off by sharing a little bit about yourself and your background and what led you to MedTech? [00:02:25] Hannah Went: Yes, absolutely. I've known since I was a little girl that I've always been interested in science, how the world works, how the body works. I remember being a little girl and going in our backyard, lifting up rocks, finding roly-polies and worms and getting all down and dirty. I was definitely a tom girl, if you will, growing up. I love sports. I loved connecting with people. So I also loved the social aspect of understanding how the body works as well. And I was very athletic growing up. So I played track soccer, basketball, sports all year round, essentially. I knew I wasn't good enough though, to go to like a D1 or probably even D2 college for sports. So I was like, "All right, well, I'll just go to a larger university, maybe play some club soccer and really focus on my academic route." And I ended up going to University of Kentucky. It wasn't too far from me. I'm just from Ohio, north of Dayton, a small town called Piqua. And I did end up playing soccer, club soccer there, got involved in a lot of other activities. Ended up actually going into veterinary work, animal science. UK has a really good program for that. They have a really good agriculture department. I ended up shadowing a vet one summer and I hated it. It was one veterinarian clinic. So a lot of work, a lot of late hours. And I knew I wanted to have a family growing up. So I was like, "Eh, let me just switch to general biology. Let me just open my doors." And fast forward to senior year. I was really interested in genetics and you know, how do we have these predispositions that are passed on throughout our family? How does that affect our health outcomes essentially? So I applied to genetic counseling school, which is a very new program. It's a master's program. It is where you get your master's essentially in genetics and counseling. So it's like the best of both worlds, exactly what I loved growing up. You have the science aspect, but you're sitting down and helping people actually understand their risk. Applied to school, Lindsey, and didn't end up getting in. So I was like, "Oh, I'm heartbroken. I'm still super young. My life's over!" type of deal, a big eye roll ,and thought it was the end of the world. But really where my career took a huge turning point was at that failure point. I took a job, my best friend got me a position at a compounding pharmacy in Nicholasville, Kentucky, which is just a little bit South of Lexington. And that was when I was opened up into this entire medtech space of healthcare providers and the integrative functional medicine journey who were focusing on healthcare, like true healthcare, not sick care, not taking care of sick people when they're already sick, they're already doomed and just trying to bill them for all of these medications through insurance. So that's really how I've gotten to where I am today. [00:05:23] Lindsey Dinneen: Oh, that is so cool. Well, first of all, thank you for sharing a little bit about your background. It was fun to even hear about your childhood and how that theme of interest in all those different aspects has woven its way through your story. And I would love to hear a little bit more then about, okay, so what does present day look like and how did you end up where you are? [00:05:43] Hannah Went: Yes, so I'll try and keep it short and concise. So this pharmacy was very innovative. It was the fourth fastest growing healthcare company in the nation in 2019. And it's really focused on the unique peptide products. It was again a compounding pharmacy by trade, meaning you can compound anything in all different dosing as long as you have a prescription from a healthcare provider by it. They grew really fast. So, you know, we always had regulatory agencies come check in, make sure we were doing everything correctly, which we absolutely were. But there was always this worry that these products made people feel better, but there wasn't a lot of quantitative data behind it. So we were like, "All right. Well, what can we measure in clinical trials and institution review boards to really prove to people out there, 'Hey, these are having a massive underlying biological effect on people.' They don't just feel better." We used to joke and say, "People can become tan, they can become skinny, they can increase their libido from these products, but they also actually save people's life." They stabilize insulin sensitivity. They can help people lose weight who have metabolic disease. They can mediate a lot of the effects of specific autoimmune diseases. So there are massive impacts that these products had. And we're like, "All right, well, if you had one test, like if you could measure one thing that really relates to all of those items I just mentioned, it's aging," right? These age related diseases. So, "how do you even measure age" is the follow up question and you can do that in all sorts of different ways. But there are actually these DNA regulation markers, like these on and off switches, called your epigenetics that seems to be the best way to measure aging. So we really started measuring and doing clinical trials with these epigenetic aging biomarkers to prove the efficacy of these products. And what we ended up doing is just selling the pharmacy in 2019. It became-- oh-- pretty boring, I guess, for lack of a better word, because there were new rules and regulations in place by regulators on what you can and cannot compound. And then you have built my company now, TruDiagnostic, from the ground up. We have our laboratory in Lexington, Kentucky, and we started out with one goal, which was essentially to offer the best age testing. And now we're doing a lot of different things. So that's what I'm really involved in now on a day to day basis. [00:08:10] Lindsey Dinneen: Wow. Well, thank you for sharing about that. And okay, so, so you embrace this entrepreneurial endeavor, which is a whole second set of-- I mean, obviously you have all the skills from your experience and your education and whatnot, but then to compound that with owning your own business and then setting up a brick and mortar, it's an actual lab and whatnot. How was that transition? Did you feel prepared for it? Did it catch you off guard? What was that like? [00:08:38] Hannah Went: We were kind of creating TruDiagnostic behind the scene when we had the pharmacy. So like end of 2019, we were really creating it. But I do think it caught me off guard looking back where it was like, "Okay, pharmacy sold, full time TruDiagnostic. How the heck do we set up this lab at the beginning of 2020?" It was go mode. So we bought a building in Lexington. It was an old insurance building. We completely knocked out the top floor, which was offices, carpeted, not usable lab space and built the lab again, like I mentioned, from the ground up. So I joke and say, "I'm a construction worker. I was an interior designer." I was doing all of these other things. And of course I had a lot of amazing people helping me all throughout the way, but testing SOPs for standard operating procedures, creating those. I remember the first day we were running samples in like trialing the protocol. I was here till 5am because we were thawing things and freezing things as part of the protocol and didn't even realize that was part of the step once we started to get into it. So yeah, it definitely took me off guard. And I think furthermore, we launched right before COVID 19. So it was the worst timing in history to launch. And you know, we did it anyways. And then the first year and a half, two years, it was a lot of follow up. It was a lot of cold calling. It was chasing or following up with these healthcare providers to use these kits that we sent out because we did a really nice promotion to get the product out there, but it was hard to balance because when COVID 19, this nasty pandemic, came into the U. S., you almost felt guilty asking the healthcare providers to focus on anything else, right? You're like, "That is not what you should be worrying about right now." So it was definitely hard to balance. [00:10:23] Lindsey Dinneen: And yeah, my goodness. And honestly what resonated with me too is, you know, you're talking about, you've worn so many hats, obviously, as a business owner and setting this up. And I used to joke that, when I had a brick and mortar business and I was like, "On any given day, I'm everything from the CEO to the janitor." [00:10:40] Hannah Went: I can relate. I can definitely relate to that. I remember we needed some kind of-- I don't even know what we need this for-- it was like some type of part that had to regulate water temperature or something like that. So a traditional thermometer wouldn't work. I remember I drove across the street to a pet store and I got something that belonged in a fish tank. And I'm like, " I don't even know if this will, will work." But I mean, we are just piecing everything together. It was like you were doing yet literally everything and anything that you could just because you wanted it to work so bad. You had that passion, that, that push. And you realized that the end goal in mind, which for us, it's really just to help our people, you know, people who are working with us, and our clients, whether that's anyone from now a healthcare provider offering our services or a researcher or academic collaboration, it's someone doing third party processing at our lab or even down to the end consumer client patient, whatever you'd like to call them that come directly to our website and do our testing. [00:11:40] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah. Great. And that actually addresses my next question, which was going to be, so do you only work with healthcare providers? Is it a B2B enterprise? But it sounds like you also do the B2C and you can sell directly to them, to people who are interested. [00:11:55] Hannah Went: Definitely. Yeah. When we opened, we had that one goal in mind, which is what we knew, which were our healthcare providers that we really transitioned from the pharmacy over to TruDiagnostic. So that was like our main customer at the time. And I think we completed that goal of offering the best aging diagnostic tools at the end of last year with a large study we did with Harvard. But now what we've noticed and, of course-- we kind of got lucky in this sense, we would have never imagined where we are now-- is that epigenetics, these DNA markers, these on and off switches are really great for creating new and novel biomarkers. So you can predict almost anything with them. You can predict even how much you've smoked across your entire lifetime, how much alcohol you've consumed, your zip code based on where you live, just because of the environment you're exposed to and your behaviors in that environment. So it's pretty crazy, obviously we, we didn't expect that and I mean it's just being really blown up and everywhere you, you look, I mean it's related to every aspect of life and of course changeable as well. So even, providers who are using this test on a patient once, they'll retest them every 6 to 12 months. And then of course people coming from our website, we just released actually a subscription model a couple days ago so people can start to retest this in more of a hands off fashion. even every three to four months if they wanted to. [00:13:19] Lindsey Dinneen: Wow. So when somebody does your test and they get the results, is this something that you walk them through and say, okay "Here's where things stand now. If you make these tweaks, here's how things could stand?" Or how does it work from that perspective? [00:13:34] Hannah Went: Definitely. So just to walk you through the process, you would get your kit, we'd ship it to you, you would prick your finger. So just a little blood spot card about the size of a quarter, you ship that sample back to our lab in Lexington and we get results back to you in about two to three weeks from the time we receive it. Then you would get all these different age related reports, some of those characteristic and trait based reports I mentioned, like this smoking and alcohol. And we, we do, so we can project you out saying, "Hey, if you still stay on this trend, whether it's aging faster or aging younger, here's where you're, where you'll be in six months, 12 months." So it may be exciting to some, it may be scary to some, depending on where they are. Regardless, it's changeable. So if anyone's listening and they're like, "Oh my gosh, I don't want to know that. I'm so scared." If you've tested your genetics, that's in my opinion, even scarier. That doesn't change, right? You know your risk, you know your predisposition. So, this can all be mitigated through lifestyle factors, through supplements, medications, procedural based therapies as well. So we do give you recommendations on the report on what to do. You can absolutely again take it by yourself, but we can always help you and connect you with a healthcare provider if you're really wanting to go on this journey. But I always say, Lindsey, the first test is really fun. It's sexy. It's really trendy right now. But it doesn't mean much. It's just a baseline. It's telling you where you are, just like your hormones and your CBC panel, your second test is more important than your first third, more than the second fourth, more than the third. And so on and so forth. [00:15:09] Lindsey Dinneen: Okay. Yeah. And you addressed something else that I was going to ask. So when people are interested, they'd like to do it, but they have this like, "Ooh, I don't know if I really want to know," how do you help overcome that? Is it because things are changeable? Like everything can be changed? [00:15:26] Hannah Went: Yeah. Yeah. I'll even give you to an extent, I would say most of it, right. For the purpose of this conversation, yes. There are of course some exceptions, but my grandmother, for example, passed away from Alzheimer's when I was senior in high school. Right after that happened and what started some of my interest in genetics is I went and got my genes tested. I'm like, "Oh my gosh, that was awful to watch her go through. Am I doomed, right? Am I going to have that same risk?" And my results came back. Well, I have this specific snip. It's a single nucleotide polymorphism. So this specific variant on my genes that's APOE 3-4. So this means I'm at a more increased risk to have Alzheimer's, and even at a younger age as well. I would say you have an even further increased risk if you're at APOE 4/4. So I'm not the worst, but I'm the second worst, essentially, and I'm like, "Well, this obviously isn't good. But this can't be it, right? This can't be the end of this story." And you hear a lot of people say that too, people with metabolic disease or diabetes in their family. And, they may shrug and just say, "Oh, well, you know, I can eat whatever I want, right? I don't have to work out, like I'm doomed anyways, type of thing." And we know now that's not true, right? You're no longer really the victim of your genetic predisposition that we may have thought due to these epigenetic changes or the fact that it's changeable. So there are even peer reviewed published papers that come out showing estrogen, so optimizing your hormone levels can actually reduce your risk of Alzheimer's from an epigenetic standpoint along with everything else, exercising, eating very healthy, no artificial foods, flavoring. So you're, of course, always going to have that genetic risk, but you also have all of these other types of risks and you have this epigenetic risk, which should really be the main focus, because you're in the driver's seat again. You're no longer in the passenger seat. And that's really empowering to have all of that knowledge. [00:17:22] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I know that the test is really important in terms of telling an individual exactly what's going on and how things can change, but in doing all this research and data collection, are there certain lifestyle things that pretty much everybody regardless should pay attention to. Is that a thing? [00:17:45] Hannah Went: Of course, that's the multimillion dollar question and a very frequent one that we get. And the answer is, "Sure, yes and no, kind of, maybe so." And what I mean by that is you can look at all of these general population studies that come out, right? These clinical trials and look at what really moved the needle. But again, those are populational trials, so you really need to find out what works for you. I can tell you what works for me. There is a study on this, which is why I wanted to try it first. So again, you can start to maybe trial some things based on results that are already out there, but I've tested my aging before and what I've noticed that really slows it down is caloric restriction. So it's not necessarily intermittent fasting or time restricted feeding or skipping an entire meal, it's just continual, 10 percent caloric restriction. So if you're on a 2000 caloric based diet, take out about 200 calories, which if you're eating healthier anyways, you may not even be hitting your intake of calories based on your metabolic rate and what your specific goals are. And I've noticed that helps slow down my aging. I've also noticed that I need to do more aerobic based exercises. So things like VO2 max, increasing FEV1, we can actually quantify those on our test. So really VO2 max is your oxygen uptake, so how much oxygen you can get into the body. Your FEV1 is your forced expiratory volume, so how much oxygen you can get out in and out of your lungs. Swimmers have a really good VO2 max and FEV1. So I noticed I was doing maybe too much like weightlifting, too much HIIT type of workouts. So you can get a lot of feedback from those reports. So for me, personally, that's what works. [00:19:30] Lindsey Dinneen: Wow. That's great. That is amazing what you can test and gain knowledge about and then make those changes based off of. So on your LinkedIn profile, something that I was really intrigued by is you are a founding member of an organization, I believe, called Opscotch. Did I get that right? Okay. And one thing that really stood out to me, and I'd love to just hear your take on the organization as a whole, but you said part of your mission is to make biohacking accessible to everyone. And I really appreciated that. And I'm curious if you would share a little bit maybe more about that. [00:20:05] Hannah Went: Yeah. Obscotch is a really cool community. So it is really democratizing the way healthcare I think has been viewed, even healthcare, like the model where we should go towards rather than that sick care. So it's making it a lot less scary. And I know that the founders of Obscotch, Spencer Coppin and Matt Christensen, and they're amazing people. They really set up this community as a way for people to have a support system. I think it can be really scary when you're entering really optimizing your overall health, what do you do? You see all of these ads, what protein should you take? What supplements should you take? They're just everywhere. Whose supplements really match the label? There are a lot of studies that show, that they don't even have promised ingredients on the label included in the supplement itself. So it's really confusing. And then you go down these rabbit holes and after a while, you don't know what you're looking at. So if you're part of this community, you can choose to get a Whoop and to start tracking a lot of these markers. You probably know the quote by Peter Drucker, "You can't manage what you're not measuring," so they measure a lot of things. They do the biological age testing through TruDiagnostic, and then they do some other laboratory based testing as well. So there's different levels of the membership that you can actually get depending on how involved you want to be, but they also do these monthly quarterly type of challenges. So it could be to get your Whoop fitness score above 12 for 15 days of the month. So again, it really encourages people to come together and I love that community aspect of it. They've done a really nice job. And again, are just amazing people there. They're located in Canada too. [00:21:46] Lindsey Dinneen: Oh, nice. Yeah. So taking ownership of your health, but within a community, which makes it a lot, well, more fun, at least. [00:21:54] Hannah Went: Yeah. And the community is awesome. That's probably a really good group for you to even look into, Lindsey. It's a lot of founders and entrepreneurs and people who have like wild backgrounds. And they're from all over the world too. So it's not just like, oh, you have to be in Canada. They do have a lot of like local meetups in Canada, which is really cool for things like cold plunging or running or, you know, scheduling dinners or seeing like Andrew Huberman, he was in town like a couple of months ago or something. So they put together the events and they also send you even like recommended podcast or YouTube videos to watch. So it's really curated health information if you're looking to optimize your own health. [00:22:35] Lindsey Dinneen: Wow. Amazing. Yeah. And then, so another thing that I really enjoyed reading about you and your experience is, you mentioned that you appreciate taking complex scientific ideas and translating them into narratives that resonate with the intended audience. And I love that, and I think that's really important, but I'm wondering if you could tell us a little bit about your process in doing that, translating very technical engineering science speak into maybe what other people who aren't in that world could relate to. [00:23:14] Hannah Went: Yeah, definitely. So I have my personal company too, called Everything Epigenetics. So this is a, something TruDiagnostic wanted to do for a while is just educate others on epigenetics and what that means because there's a lot of education lacking out there. There's not much you can find. With all things that kind of got pushed under the rug in our early days, but I was just, " Screw it. I'll just make it mine." And I set up all of the social, the website domain and didn't do much with it for the first couple of months. And I was like, "Okay, I really want to get into this." And I think I started it at the end of 2022, so almost two years, which is crazy to say. And, I used it as a way to really keep myself honest and involved in the research. So I'm not as involved in our research on a day to day. So I work with a lot of postdocs or PhDs who have created epigenetic algorithms or interpretations. And basically, hopefully break those conversations down for people to easily understand. It's still very high science and not as applicable, so it can be tough sometimes. But my real goal is just educating those on this massive paradigm shift we're seeing with epigenetics in terms of not only taking over traditional lab testing, but just medicine in general. I mean, it's causing a massive wave and really, I think, flipping our understanding of how this field works, how even really the body works. So I don't monetize that at all. It's just something I do on the side. I have a podcast that runs every other week. And then I also am pretty active on Instagram doing these Journal Club Friday kind of spiels. That's where it's usually a video that's anywhere, I think, they're at least 90 seconds, but 90 seconds to four minutes long, just highlighting some type of research paper in the space and trying to do it in really simple terms that way people can understand it. So it's not maybe always going to be applicable to everyday life. I think it's absolutely going to get there where we are able to measure epigenetics, see our exact plan, have everything served us on a silver platter. But we're a little bit far away from that now. And I think that's can be really frustrating to some people, but I think it's also as equally as exciting. And you have to keep in mind that this came out after the iPhone, after the first iPhone. So it only came out about, or I would say only became popularized about 10 years ago, which is very new. So we just have to be a little bit patient. [00:25:51] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, that's fair. Well, thank you for helping translate some of these crazy things into more digestible pieces of information for those of us who maybe don't have that same background. So I do appreciate that. [00:26:05] Hannah Went: Yeah, of course. It's really fun to just continue the conversation and start to break these complex ideas down. [00:26:12] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. So, within your journey you know, as a scientist and researcher and entrepreneur and everything else, are there any moments that stand out to you that, that really affirm to you that you were in the right place at the right time in the right industry? [00:26:34] Hannah Went: Ooh, that's a good question. I, I think yeah, I think probably a couple months ago, three months ago. So, we've actually joined with some other clinics on really pushing forward epigenetics. And I think we're starting to see everything coming together. So I think it is hopefully becoming mainstream. And that is just huge, because the vision for epigenetic testing is to be able to use one blood spot card, so really simple, easy collection method at a really cheap cost and getting every single biomarker back that you could possibly imagine: clinical lab values, hormones, inflammatory markers, vitamin levels, minerals, proteins, metabolites. And I think, I remember just a couple months ago, when we really started to get an increased volume and testing, more healthcare providers just saying yes and super open to this idea. So I usually spend my day to day on calls with healthcare providers or our partnerships that we have with, whether it be wholesale or like resellers of these kits. And people are just starting to get it more. Like I remember at the beginning of TruDiagnostic, we always had to set up a call with every single account. It was, Hey, start from the top. What is epigenetics? Even before epigenetics, what is aging? How do you measure this? This is a really weird idea. And now we're starting to see where people set up accounts with us and they don't even set up a call and they just start ordering, right? Or they set up a call and they're like, "Hey, I know what aging is. I know what epigenetics is. Help me market this to my patients. How do I sell this?" So, so we're starting to see that change and that's definitely not been overnight. To answer your question, right time, right room with the right people. But I think probably at the beginning of this year is when we started to really see that change, which has been super exciting. [00:28:35] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, that is. It is because it's hard to-- it's great to educate-- but it is hard when that is your entire job day in and day out. And eventually maybe the science will catch up or the understanding of the science will catch up so that you finally get to this, you know, "we're getting there" stage. [00:28:54] Hannah Went: I think it's hard, yeah, because you know, with us we speak with the healthcare providers. We speak with the academics, but we may not actually be seeing the end user, the end patient. So sometimes it can be hard. It's like, "Hey, what difference are we actually making?" And that can be a little bit of a pain point or a struggle. I think not so much anymore because our providers will come back and give us case studies or, you know, talk to us about some of their findings, which is really exciting. And that, continues to expand as we do these clinical trials and dive deeper into the research. But I think we're TruDiagnostics sits right now is just an awesome opportunity because we are in between collaborators in terms of universities and academics and healthcare providers and patients. So we really bridge that gap as new algorithms, as new research is happening. We really do feel like we're at the centerfold and it's our responsibility to push that out to healthcare providers because there's no one really there to merge the two. So we'll start to see our type of healthcare providers we work with are willing to try anything, and willing to want the newest, latest, and greatest information as well to test on their patients. So they make for a really great group. [00:30:04] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, that's incredible. And it's so great to hear about the ability to bridge the gap between an individual being able to take ownership of their own health versus-- doctors are amazing. I'm so thankful for every medical person-- but also it's nice to be able to feel a little bit empowered to take ownership as well. So I appreciate that you're able to start bridging the gap and, and help them make be more accessible. So that's great. [00:30:30] Hannah Went: Yeah. Yeah. Definitely. [00:30:32] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah, so, pivoting the conversation just for fun, imagine that you were to be offered a million dollars to teach your masterclass on anything you want. It can be in your industry, but it doesn't have to be. What would you choose to teach and why? [00:30:47] Hannah Went: Ooh. What would I choose to teach and why? I think the ,there's a book that's really good that I think everyone should read and it's called "The 15 Commitments of Conscious Leadership." And have you ever heard of it before, Lindsey? [00:31:00] Lindsey Dinneen: Nope, but I'm writing it down. [00:31:02] Hannah Went: Yeah. It's awesome. So there, there are a couple of authors on the book, but yeah, Jim Dethmer, he would previously go to all of these companies and understand how their leadership worked. And it's a super readable book, super short, breaks it down in all of these chunks, depending on what you want to really focus on. He actually came and spoke to our company and it was really cool to learn from him about this. He doesn't do it much anymore. So, we felt very special to, to be able to have him. And It can act in all areas of your life. So it's not necessarily just leadership . It really extrapolates out to relationships, whether it be a romantic one, or not, or kind of a family one. It is really I think changed my outlook on a lot of things in life. So I think I would want to teach something that has to do with that, that book. Jim's wife actually does a lot of the Enneagram work too. So the Enneagram test and understanding really your, kind of, why you're wired the way you are almost. Everyone has this conception of life. And you get to learn more about the way people think and how they work and why they do the things they do. So everyone did that test, the Enneagram test, in our company, and you can start to see these patterns and things. And it's just very useful information and it just makes everyone, I think, work together and flow together a little bit better too, which is awesome. [00:32:25] Lindsey Dinneen: Yeah. It sounds like a great masterclass and I have it written down. I'm going to, I'm going to look it up right after so I can secure my copy. Yeah. So, and then how do you wish to be remembered after you leave this world? . [00:32:39] Hannah Went: Oh, how do I wish to be remembered? Hopefully as someone who is loving and fun and taught the world something. Doesn't necessarily have to be epigenetics related, but I think people probably see me right now as someone who is like very busy running around all of the time, going from place to place, and I don't think I like that. That's just what I think my interpretation of me maybe would be from the outside. But it doesn't feel like I'm busy, right? It feels like I'm doing the things that I want to do right now and I don't think I necessarily even like the word busy, right? What does that mean? Everyone's busy. Everyone's doing something to a degree. So, yeah, I just want to be remembered as fun, loving you know, I think would also be remembered, though, just as hardworking, determined and yeah, willing to work hard to reach specific goals. [00:33:32] Lindsey Dinneen: I love that. Yeah. And then final question. What is one thing that makes you smile every time you see or think about it? [00:33:41] Hannah Went: Just my family, my husband, my sisters, my mom, my stepdad, everyone. So I get to hang out with them next weekend. I'm super, super excited. We'll be with them at their lake house. So I'm excited to be with the family. [00:33:55] Lindsey Dinneen: Nice. Oh yeah. That's going to be wonderful. Well, Hannah, this has been such a great conversation and I so appreciate your spending some time with me today and sharing about your incredible journey and everything that's coming up too. And I'm so excited for you and for this mission and to see the company continue to grow and expand, so I do really appreciate you. being here. And we are so honored to be making a donation on your behalf as a thank you for your time today to the Equal Justice Initiative, which provides legal representation to prisoners who may have been wrongly convicted of crimes, poor prisoners without effective representation, and others who may have been denied a fair trial. So thank you for choosing that organization to support and we just wish you the most continued success as you work to change lives for a better world. [00:34:49] Hannah Went: Awesome. Thank you, Lindsey. I appreciate your time. [00:34:51] Lindsey Dinneen: Absolutely, you too. And thank you also to our listeners for tuning in and if you're feeling as inspired as I am right now, I would love it if you would share this episode with a colleague or two and we will catch you next time. [00:35:06] Ben Trombold: The Leading Difference is brought to you by Velentium. Velentium is a full-service CDMO with 100% in-house capability to design, develop, and manufacture medical devices from class two wearables to class three active implantable medical devices. Velentium specializes in active implantables, leads, programmers, and accessories across a wide range of indications, such as neuromodulation, deep brain stimulation, cardiac management, and diabetes management. Velentium's core competencies include electrical, firmware, and mechanical design, mobile apps, embedded cybersecurity, human factors and usability, automated test systems, systems engineering, and contract manufacturing. Velentium works with clients worldwide, from startups seeking funding to established Fortune 100 companies. Visit velentium.com to explore your next step in medical device development.
In the early to mid 80's the Piqua, OH high school football team needed a manager. Phil Voorhis realizing that he may be a bit small and slow to be playing big time HS football in Ohio thought it would be a good opportunity to be associated with the FB team. This lead to a suggestion from a football coach that he might be interested in attending at Cramer Student Athletic Trainer Workshop at near by Miami University to learn some taping skills and a few nuggets of athletic training knowledge, from unknown to him at the time, Hall of Fame athletic trainers. His time at Miami left an impression. He decided to go there for his undergraduate studies. Working in their internship AT education program he set his sights on med school until organic chemistry derailed his plans. Deciding on charting his career path as an athletic trainer he got a call on a dugout phone while working summer league baseball that set the course of 34 year career as an ATC and all of them at Northern Illinois University. GA to Assistant AT to Head AT and finally to his current position as Associate Athletic Director for Sports Medicine and Athletic Training, Phil has seen it all. He is the Dean of Athletic Trainers in the MidAmerican Conference, as the longest tenure employed AT in the conference. He has also served the profession of athletic training as the President of the Illinois Athletic Trainers Association, IATA Board of Directors, Great Lakes Athletic Trainers Association Annual Meeting Planning Committee. In 2007 he was inducted into the Illinois Athletic Trainers Association Hall of Fame. In 2008 he received the National Athletic Trainers Association Service Award. For the past 39 years he has organized and administered the Northern Illinois University High School Student Athletic Training Workshop. He has also been a advocate in his local community for the placement of AED's in pubic venues and business. Phil resides in DeKalb, Illinois with his his wife Jana and their three daughters.
The Pest Geek Podcast Worlds #1 Pest Control Training Podcast
If you live in Troy, Piqua, tipp city or Huber heights, you know that thistles can be a problem. Thistles are difficult to manage and control for several reasons: Aggressive Growth: Thistles, such as the Canada thistle, are perennial weeds that can spread rapidly through both seeds and root systems. Their extensive root networks can produce new shoots, making them hard to eradicate. Seed Production: Thistles produce a large number of seeds that can be dispersed by wind, water, animals, and human activity. These seeds can remain viable in the soil for several years, ensuring the persistence of the plant. Resilience: Thistles are highly adaptable and can thrive in various soil types and environmental conditions. They are drought-tolerant and can outcompete native vegetation, especially in disturbed areas. Physical Defenses: Thistles have spiny leaves and stems that deter herbivores and make manual removal challenging and painful. These physical defenses protect them from being eaten and reduce the likelihood of damage from grazing. Herbicide Resistance: Some thistle species have developed resistance to common herbicides, making chemical control less effective. This resistance necessitates the use of multiple methods for effective management. Regenerative Ability: Thistles can regenerate from root fragments, meaning that incomplete removal can result in new growth. Even small pieces of root left in the soil can develop into new plants. Competition: Thistles compete aggressively with crops and native plants for resources such as light, water, and nutrients. Their presence can reduce crop yields and hinder the growth of desired vegetation. Effective thistle management typically requires an integrated approach, combining mechanical, chemical, and biological methods to reduce their spread and impact. For more information or help in Greenville Ohio or the Miami Valley Area visit: https://miamivalleygreenguard.com Miami Valley GreenGuard Solutions LLC(937) 476-1992https://g.co/kgs/HB9amCV we are looking to add to our routes in the Miami valley area in Troy, Piqua, Huber heights, tipp city so contact us TODAY before our schedule fills up. https://miamivalleygreenguard.com Serviceshttps://g.co/kgs/r2Z3Qxb Reviewshttps://g.co/kgs/YmU7Y2x https://youtube.com/shorts/ESf0NFY4Zlo?si=XIlxbUErQCQUkWgv
In today's episode, Jeff and Susan are delighted to get to speak with Josh Rodriguez. Josh is from Indiana, he's a graduate of Indiana Wesleyan University and Princeton Theological Seminary, and he is the pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church in Piqua, Ohio. Josh is also from an immigrant family that came to the U.S. illegally from Mexico. These two sides of Josh's story are quite different, and he is gracious enough in this interview to share openly about identity, immigration, pain, joy, and Jesus. Enjoy the episode!
When Alex Smith swapped his baseball mitt for a pickleball paddle, little did we know that the very same competitive fire that drove him on the diamond would ignite our local courts. With tales as rich as his craftsmanship, Alex's journey from the dream of professional baseball to the business and sport arenas of Texas is nothing short of inspiring. Our latest conversation weaves through his life story, highlighting an impressive leap from college athletics to the front office of the Texas Rangers, and how those experiences have shaped his approach to pickleball and business with the same strategic finesse as a perfectly executed backhand.We wrap up our session with heartfelt anecdotes and a nod to the entrepreneurial spirit that thrives within our ranks. From real estate ventures to the handcrafted rocking chairs that have become a staple at the Texas Rangers' stadium, it's clear that our passions extend far beyond the pickleball court. Alex's thoughtful gestures, like the handwritten note that lifted my spirits, underscore the camaraderie that's become the hallmark of our group. Join us as we celebrate the triumphs, tackle the challenges, and support each other's dreams—both in business and in the game we love.#Rockerman@southlakepaddleclub@dink.pro@rangersSpecial thanks to Crown Pickleball for their support and sponsorship! Don't waste money on balls that break, Crown pickleballs rarely crack, are more visible and have a higher spin rate than the competitors.Use our link to receive a discount on your next purchase! https://crownpickleball.store/blazingpaddles Have a suggestion for a guest or topic you'd like to see us address?Hit me up at john@dink.pro or shout out on social:InstagramTwitter
In part 2 featuring Karen's mother, Rose Mary, we talk about the narrative of the family relocating to a farm in Piqua, Kansas. The conversation unfolds around the challenges and joys of raising four children amidst the rural backdrop, the subsequent move to Iola, Kansas and Rose Mary's journey from a teacher to a librarian.Support the showCheck us out at: https://www.pendletons.comFollow us on Facebook at Pendleton's Country Market for updates about our farmWe can also be found on Instagram at pendletonscountrymktEmail us with questions, comments and requests for future show topics at info@pendletons.com
Karen and John are so fortunate to have Karen's 92 year old mother, Rose Mary Riley, living in Lawrence. For this weeks podcast, they sit down with her to reminisce about her life and growing up in a household with 9 children.Support the showCheck us out at: https://www.pendletons.comFollow us on Facebook at Pendleton's Country Market for updates about our farmWe can also be found on Instagram at pendletonscountrymktEmail us with questions, comments and requests for future show topics at info@pendletons.com
The Mills Brothers were the first African-American artists to have their own show on national network radio. They became a worldwide sensation for their ability to mimic musical instruments. Donald, Herbert, Harry, and John Jr, were born into a family of nine in Piqua, Ohio. They started singing in church, and were so talented they began appearing on Cincinnati radio stations. The jazz vocal quartet went on to make more than 2,000 recordings, which sold more than 50 million copies, with 3 dozen going gold. Their first number one hit was Paper doll in 1943. The Mills Brothers also appeared in films, and later on television. They were inducted into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame in 1998. you will hear their pioneering CBS Radio show from 1930, and their appearances on The Andrews Sisters Show in 1945, the Spike Jones Spotlight Revue in 1948, and Guest Time in the 1950s. For more podcasts visit KRobCollection.com
Up next we are joined by Ryan Barr of Piqua, Ohio. Driver of the #21B - Ryan Barr Racing non-wing sprint car! Discussed: A regular at Lawrenceburg, some highlights, peaks & valleys of the season so far. Eldora for Lets Race Two and a missing wheel cover. Eldora for Ohio Speedweek as well He hits on some of the family tree of racing and where it all began for his family and how he got into it. Victory lane @ Bloomington, and a few other stories. He's a big BBQ rib fan. Who has the best ribs over in Ohio? What else is cooking at his house? (ends around 1:13:00 mark) Stoking the Fire ASCS Sprint Car series gets a title sponsor AND streaming partner. Buddy Kofoid back in a familiar car Another driver jumps in the Vermeer #55 Tim Kaeding (TK) and Brad Sweet exchange under red flag @ Husets T-Mez & Cannon McIntosh spicy interview @ Macon Some big upcoming racing events! Dirt Draft results from the guys. (ends around 1:35:00 mark) Feature Finish Late Model Summer Nationals / Hell Tour week 2 World of Outlaws sprint cars @ Husets for the High Bank Nationals USAC National sprint cars @ Wilmot USAC/CRA @ Bakersfield NARC 410 Super Dirt Cup @ Skagit Speedway Pennsylvania Speed Week WoO Late models @ 81 Speedway, Off-Road Speedway POWERi midgets - Illinois SPEEDweek ASCS Sprints Indiana weekly shows IRA sprints Ocean Speedway Taco Bravo Sprints (ends around 1:51:00 mark) The Smoke Charlie's trip to and from Florida. Food he had there. Jowl bacon sammiches...again Manzanita Speedway green chili burrito recipe Pork steaks! Lombardi's Pizza, Carriage Inn Fast food rant
3pm - Rescuers are racing the clock in search for a manned submersible lost while touring Titanic wreckage // Protests erupt after court ruling on Lynnwood spa that banned entry to trans woman // Power naps can slow down your brain's aging process—so is it time employers embrace snoozing on the clock? // ‘Let me have my werewolf;' Statue outside of Piqua home causes debate among neighborsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
6pm - GUEST: Listener Shaun on waiting months for the city to respond about a derelict property across the street from his house. He explains why he feels he's going to need to leave Tacoma // Norway proposes 40% gender quota for large and mid-size unlisted firms // Power naps can slow down your brain's aging process—so is it time employers embrace snoozing on the clock? // ‘Let me have my werewolf;' Statue outside of Piqua home causes debate among neighborsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Horror in Color to host 3rd annual Pride or Die event this weekend; "The Last of Us" house is coming to Halloween Horror Nights Orlando & Halloween Horror Nights Hollywood; Halloween on the High Seas will return to the Disney Cruise Line in 2024; The Arboretum of South Barrington and IWG Productions will bring "Terror Roulette" to the Chicago area this Halloween season; Learn how to Build Props and Sets Like Haunted Overload in this month's Haunters Toolbox Master Class on Tuesday, June 20th; Disguise Inc. announces partnership with Mob Entertainment to produce Poppy Playtime costumes & accessories; a Piqua, Ohio woman fights to keep her year-round 10-foot tall werewolf on display after anonymous complaints to the city.
Friday Night Singalong; Hot Hat Friday; Decoration Controversy in Piqua; Cars into Buildings; Florida Woman and NERF gun robbery; Poultry Days; Bigfoot News; A.I. Lies.
Matt Atkins spent 7 years in the penitentiary and many more years dealing with drug and alcohol addiction. NOW he's changed it all around living a productive live and preaching the Gospel at Free Will Baptist Church in Piqua, Ohio. This is his story of redemtion. #God #Jesus #TrumansTownHall
This is episode 39 of the Small Nation Podcast! This podcast is created for anyone interested in entrepreneurship, investing in real estate, and economic development. Anyone that has attempted to run a business with their significant other can attest that it is not always easy. Listen as Chad and Brandi Lawson share about the development work they are doing in Piqua, Ohio. What is the significance of a 24/7 fitness facility in a downtown? What kind of housing should developers be pursuing in the current market? Where can you look to find capital to get started? These questions and more all part of this week's episode. Guest Links:Brandi Lawson Keller Williams Home Town Realty FacebookCrossFit Piqua Facebook Chad Lawson Facebook Brandi Lawson Facebook Small Nation: Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Twitter TikTok The Small Nation Podcast Website YouTube Friday Small Talk Newsletter Join the Conversation | Making Small Successful Facebook Group Follow Your Hosts: Jason Duff LinkedIn Facebook Ethan DeLeon LinkedIn Facebook
We are taking the Book Nook on the road for an event at Edison State Community College in Piqua, Ohio on Wednesday, April 19.
Description: Otosan Uchi, le 13ème jour du mois du coq de l'an 1123, le silence nocturne est troublé par un bruit, une rumeur, un vrombrissement.
Join us for service every Sunday at 9:15 am, or 11:00 am (EST) Bible App: https://www.youversion.com/the-bible-... We would love to hear how Jesus is changing your life! Text "DECIDED" to 937-783-7827. Connect with us: text “NEW” to 937-783-7827. If you need prayer, text “PRAY” to 937-783-7827. You can download our app by texting tvcapp to 77977 or search for The Valley Church in the Apple Store or the Google Store. If you would like to support The Valley Church financially, you can give through the TVC app, or online through our website by clicking here The valley.church/give Stay Connected! Website: https://thevalley.church/ TVC Piqua Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wearethevalley/ TVC Piqua Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tvcpiqua/
Virginians under George Rogers Clark cross the Ohio River in late 1780 to destroy the Indian communities at Chillicothe and Piqua. Blog https://blog.AmRevPodcast.com includes a complete transcript, as well as pictures, and links related to this week's episode. Book Recommendation of the Week: The American Revolution in Indian Country: Crisis and Diversity in Native American Communities, by Colin G. Calloway. Online Recommendation of the Week: George Rogers Clark and the Shawnee Expedition of 1780 http://npshistory.com/series/symposia/george_rogers_clark/1991-1992/sec1.htm Join the Facebook group, American Revolution Podcast: https://www.facebook.com/groups/132651894048271 Follow the podcast on Twitter @AmRevPodcast Join the podcast mail list: https://mailchi.mp/d3445a9cd244/american-revolution-podcast-by-michael-troy ARP T-shirts and other merch: http://tee.pub/lic/AmRevPodcast Support this podcast on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/AmRevPodcast or via PayPal http://paypal.me/AmRevPodcast
AEOR 384 - *https://www.yahoo.com/news/trying-power-1-man-accused-232912940.html *https://www.newsweek.com/neo-nazis-say-attack-leaving-40000-americans-dark-only-beginning-1765179 *https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/new-york-woman-tased-robbed-uber-driver-after-ride/ar-AA1598zs?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=0baf25af2149428480c04b2d50a614ec -------- Support the podcast! Help the show grow! *Paypal - https://paypal.me/AEOR05?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US *By Me A Coffee - https://www.buymeacoffee.com/AEOR -------- Affiliates and tools that help me make the show possible - Canva - All things graphic design https://fxo.co/FDfS - Streamyard - Your one stop online recording studio https://streamyard.com/?fpr=aeor - TubeBuddy - Grow your channel without the guesswork https://www.tubebuddy.com/AEOR --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/aeor/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aeor/support
Book Vs. Movie: The Adeventures of Captain Underpants The First Children's Book by Dav Pilkey Vs. the 2017 Movie The Margos end their Banned Book Month with a children's media empire, the Captain Underpants series, that has helped millions of kids who were not big fans of reading learn to love books. For some reason, this book and many of its sequels have been banned from libraries in America. In this episode, we try to dig into the popularity, the story behind Dav Pikley's creations, and why people across America are storming school library meetings to ban books. Dav Pilkey of Cleveland, Ohio, went to elementary school in the 1970s and was diagnosed with hyperactive disorder and dyslexia, making him want to avoid the constrictions of regular school life. He drew comic books, wrote stories, and was usually punished for not being able to sit still. Sitting at a desk alone in the school hallways, he created ‘Captain Underpants,” -a superhero who wore underwear and a cape because that is what most superheroes wear in action. In college, he wrote his first book World War Won, about the U.S./USSR arms scare, and won a national competition for student authors. In addition to Captain Underpants, the “Dragon Gets By” series, Dumb Bunnies, and Dog Man are among his many creations. The original Captain Underpants YA novel is about fourth graders George Beard and Harold Hutchins of Piqua, Ohio. They are best friends who write stories and pull lots of pranks at Jerome Horowitz Elementary School. Their teachers and principal are the main antagonists in their daily life, and their adventures are a naughty delight. We are talking fart, poop jokes galore, and using a hypnotizing ring to make their Principal Benny Krupp turn into Captain Underpants. The movie produced by DreamWorks is directed by Nicholas Stoller and has an incredible cast of comedic actors to bring the story to life. It's a delight and was such a hit that Netflix has plenty of Captain Underpants content. So between the book and the film, which did we like better?In this ep, the Margos discuss:Dav Pilkey and how he created so many children's books that click with “tough readers.”Why is this book on the “banned” list so often?The themes of the book The cast: Kevin Hart (George Beard,) Thomas Middleditch (Harold Hutchins,) Ed Helms (Principal Krupp/Captain Underpants,) Nick Kroll (Professor Poopypants,) Jordan Peale (Melvin Sneedly,) Kristen Schaal (Edith,) Brian Posehn (Morty Fyde,) and Dee Dee Rescher as Ms. Tara Ribble.Clips used:The boys in the principal's officeCaptain Underpants: The First Epic Movie 2017 trailerMeet teacher PoopypantsThe principal gets hypnotizedThe boys try to figure out the teacher's name using Captain UnderpantsWeird Al Yankovic theme song Captain UnderpantsMusic: “Think” by Adam LambertBook Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
Book Vs. Movie: The Adeventures of Captain Underpants The First Children's Book by Dav Pilkey Vs. the 2017 Movie The Margos end their Banned Book Month with a children's media empire, the Captain Underpants series, that has helped millions of kids who were not big fans of reading learn to love books. For some reason, this book and many of its sequels have been banned from libraries in America. In this episode, we try to dig into the popularity, the story behind Dav Pikley's creations, and why people across America are storming school library meetings to ban books. Dav Pilkey of Cleveland, Ohio, went to elementary school in the 1970s and was diagnosed with hyperactive disorder and dyslexia, making him want to avoid the constrictions of regular school life. He drew comic books, wrote stories, and was usually punished for not being able to sit still. Sitting at a desk alone in the school hallways, he created ‘Captain Underpants,” -a superhero who wore underwear and a cape because that is what most superheroes wear in action. In college, he wrote his first book World War Won, about the U.S./USSR arms scare, and won a national competition for student authors. In addition to Captain Underpants, the “Dragon Gets By” series, Dumb Bunnies, and Dog Man are among his many creations. The original Captain Underpants YA novel is about fourth graders George Beard and Harold Hutchins of Piqua, Ohio. They are best friends who write stories and pull lots of pranks at Jerome Horowitz Elementary School. Their teachers and principal are the main antagonists in their daily life, and their adventures are a naughty delight. We are talking fart, poop jokes galore, and using a hypnotizing ring to make their Principal Benny Krupp turn into Captain Underpants. The movie produced by DreamWorks is directed by Nicholas Stoller and has an incredible cast of comedic actors to bring the story to life. It's a delight and was such a hit that Netflix has plenty of Captain Underpants content. So between the book and the film, which did we like better?In this ep, the Margos discuss:Dav Pilkey and how he created so many children's books that click with “tough readers.”Why is this book on the “banned” list so often?The themes of the book The cast: Kevin Hart (George Beard,) Thomas Middleditch (Harold Hutchins,) Ed Helms (Principal Krupp/Captain Underpants,) Nick Kroll (Professor Poopypants,) Jordan Peale (Melvin Sneedly,) Kristen Schaal (Edith,) Brian Posehn (Morty Fyde,) and Dee Dee Rescher as Ms. Tara Ribble.Clips used:The boys in the principal's officeCaptain Underpants: The First Epic Movie 2017 trailerMeet teacher PoopypantsThe principal gets hypnotizedThe boys try to figure out the teacher's name using Captain UnderpantsWeird Al Yankovic theme song Captain UnderpantsMusic: “Think” by Adam LambertBook Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
Listen in on our conversation with Christian Starrett - a longtime friend of ours from Piqua, OH. He is a guitarist currently living in Nashville, playing for acts such as Cole Ritter & the Night Owls, Gloria Anderson, Joshua Quimby, and Aidan Madden. He has also been attending Belmont University for the last few years, studying music there. We also touch on Piqua & the unique music community at the school, Christian playing in his dads band while growing up, and what's coming next.
Official Website: In this episode, I'm joined by Lurch and we discuss the recent installation of a Boss Audio BHD3F audio system in a 2017 Harley Street Glide. This package fits 1998+ Electra, Road Glide, and Street Glide Motorcycles. It has a 4 Channel 600W High Output Amplifier with 6.5 Inch Full Range 300W Speakers 300 Watt Max full range weatherproof 6.5” speakers 600 Watt compact weatherproof 4 channel/class D amplifier with model-specific amplifier mounting plate Speaker Grille Options – (2) 1998-2013 Electra, (2) 2014+ Street Glide, (2) 2015+ Road Glide Impedance: 4 Ohms, Frequency: 100 Hz to 18 kHz, Sensitivity: 90 dB 1” (25mm) dome tweeter Loud and crisp speakers feature a rubber surround, poly injection cone, and a stamped steel basket Professional re-flash of your factory radio is necessary after speaker installation in order to avoid speaker damage and obtain the correct/optimal sound quality and performance Current price of $569.00 SUPPORT US AND SHOP IN THE OFFICIAL LAW ABIDING BIKER STORE Boss Audio sent us this kit to review. We were impressed with the build quality and the multiple mounting options of the kit. Installation is a breeze using our complete installation video. We show you everything you need to know, including how to flash your Boom Box unit. CHECK OUT OUR HUNDREDS OF FREE HELPFUL VIDEOS ON OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL AND SUBSCRIBE! In the end, we were highly impressed with the Boss Audio BHD3F system. We were so impressed that we decided to sell the system right in the Law Abiding Biker Store. The BHD3F is a clean and loud system for a budget-friendly price. It's almost half the cost of some of the more expensive systems. NEW FREE VIDEO RELEASED: How To Install A Boss Audio Front Speakers & Amplifier on a Harley-Davidson Sponsor-Ciro 3D CLICK HERE! Innovative products for Harley-Davidson & Goldwing Affordable chrome, lighting, and comfort products Ciro 3D has a passion for design and innovation Sponsor-RickRak CLICK HERE The Ultimate Motorcycle Luggage Rack Solution Forget those messy straps and bungee cords Go strapless with a RickRak quick attach luggage system & quality bag Sponsor-Butt Buffer CLICK HERE Want to ride longer? Tired of a sore and achy ass? Then fix it with a high-quality Butt Buffer seat cushion? New Patrons: David Dulley of London, UK Scott Nelson of Annandale, New Jersey Karsten Jørgensen of Glostrup, Denmark Jon Yant of Piqua, Ohio Doug Partridge of Saranac Lake, New York Greg Stenzel of Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin Kal Kingra of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Crystal Haller of Kalispell, Montana Goran Vas of Croatia If you appreciate the content we put out and want to make sure it keeps on coming your way then become a Patron too! There are benefits and there is no risk. Thanks to the following bikers for supporting us via a flat donation: Douglas Emerson Tommy Glen Baker Sr. of Lindale, Texas Joe Lasater ________________________________________________________ FURTHER INFORMATION: Official Website: http://www.LawAbidingBiker.com Email & Voicemail: http://www.LawAbidingBiker.com/Contact Podcast Hotline Phone: 509-731-3548 HELP SUPPORT US! JOIN THE BIKER REVOLUTION! #BikerRevolution #LawAbidingBiker
Join us for week 3 of Cracking the Code as we decipher the Book of Leviticus with Pastor Andy Monnin from our Piqua location. How does blood, guts, baking, old rituals, animal sacrifice, and lots of weird regulations apply to your life today? In this series learn how you can crack the holiness code and unlock an abundance of God's love and grace to experience life to the fullest. Discover how God's call to holiness can be lived out in YOUR life! Come sit with us as we start our new Leviticus series where we Crack the Code. Join us for service every Sunday at 9:15am or 11:00am (EST). Stay connected by downloading our app by texting tvcapp to 77977 or search for The Valley Church in the Apple Store or the Google Store. If you received Christ through this message, text TODAY to 937-358-6565. We would love to hear how Jesus is changing your life! Tell us your story by emailing mystory@thevalley.church! If you need prayer, text PRAYER to 937-358-6565 If you would like to support The Valley Church financially you can give through the TVC app, or online through our website.
Sunday, June 26th, 2022, Adam spent the day at the Fandomonious booth attending Piqua Comic Con, hosted by Paul Lee of Are U Game and Group Therapy TV Podcast! The first half of this Bonus episode you will get to hear Jared Sunderland of the Alter Ego Comics Presents podcast talking with Michael Boruff of the Underground Video Network podcast.The Second half is Jessica aka Dayton's Damsel In Disguise! She is a charity cosplayer from Dayton Ohio who does a lot of good with amazing costumes!Create your own podcast today with Buzzsprout!Follow us on all of our social media platforms, and join us on Discord!Join us on Twitch#nerdtoyourmother
In this episode of the Hungarian Living podcast I visit with Cindy Dobo of Dobo's Delights, a bakery based in Piqua, Ohio but that ships around the U.S. Check out their website here: www.dobosdelights.com Follow them on Facebook: facebook.com/dobosdelights For more episodes of the podcast, check out our website: https://hungarianliving.com/podcast/ To shop The Hungarian Store, visit our website: https://thehungarianstore.com/ Check out Hungarian Living: https://hungarianliving.com/
In this episode comedian Brian Swinehart brings the funny to the Piqua Fish and game. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/brian-swinehart/support
In 1994, 18-year-old Shaylene Farrell told her sister she was running to a corner store near their Piqua, Ohio home. When her family went looking for her later, they found her car, but Shaylene was gone. In never-before published details, we reveal what detectives on the case think might have happened. www.ohiomysteries.com feedback@ohiomysteries.com www.patreon.com/ohiomysteries www.twitter.com/mysteriesohio www.facebook.com/ohiomysteries
Today's guest has been working in the natural gas industry since 1995. He worked his way from the bottom of the industry to being a foreman on sites, which is where he discovered his passion for helping people and interacting with them. Now, Brent Shoemaker is the Applications Process Improvement/Training as a Consultant at Williams. He sits down with host Justin Lake to talk about some of the biggest challenges that frontline workers face today. Takeaways The biggest challenge facing the frontline workforce today is the rapid change in technology and all different kinds of regulations to follow. Your company trusts you but you need to make sure that the trust is also earned and verified by your hard work. Documenting work is important so that if there is a mistake then people go back and see where it was made and know how to fix it. It's the frontline employees who make the natural gas industry what it is. Those working on the frontline have to deal with the public, their own departments at work and maybe even public safety departments so you can use technology to make their lives easier. Work can be like a massive puzzle, and you need to know where you stand in that puzzle, where the end user stands and how it all fits together. The more you pile into a frontline employee, the more they will feel overworked and will be more likely to have worse production and a negative outlook on work. Quote of the show: 22:17 “We had this massive puzzle and everybody's a piece of that puzzle. You need to know where you're at within that puzzle and how you understand and make sure that the end user knows where they are, how they fit with all these other pieces that creates this one puzzle. Because the work that they would do on, in their role affects somebody either positive or negative downstream, or vice versa. So it was teaching people, here's Maximo, or here's Piqua, or here's a locus or here's GIS. Here's these applications and here's how to use it. But here's why you're asking, being asked to use them. And this is how you use it within your role.” Links LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brent-shoemaker-7330361a0/ Company Website: https://www.williams.com Ways to Tune In: Amazon Music - https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/2f4ecd92-6468-4769-b0bf-254e236510b7/FRONTLINE-INNOVATORS Apple Podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/frontline-innovators/id1572329402 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/29m3wnK8pbFjdSvJ9wjmyS Stitcher - https://www.stitcher.com/show/frontline-innovators Google Play - https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZnJvbnRsaW5laW5ub3ZhdG9ycy5jb20vZmVlZC54bWw YouTube - https://youtu.be/f43FieVShD0
Frank Farmer is the CEO of American Metal Roof. American Metal Roofs [AMR] is involved in a wonderful promotion called Roofs of Love - We're working with our main product manufacturer, Isaiah Industries out of Piqua, OH - Isaiah launched Roofs of Love this year and they plan to give away 5 of their metal roofs to deserving families across the country -
Ian was off with the kid while his wife was camping, so we got another visit from Paul Lee! He is the owner of Are U Game in Piqua, Ohio, as well as The Group Therapy Podcast.We really tried to keep him on topics pertaining to comics this episode. But SQUIRREL!Let us know what you liked from this episode!Stay safe and healthy!#nerdtoyourmotherCreate your own podcast today with Buzzsprout!
Kramer is off on his Honey Moon, and Ben is on vacation, so Ian and I took the time to hang out with our great friend Paul Lee! He is the owner of Are U Game in Piqua, Ohio, as well as The Group Therapy Podcast.He has been an avid comic collector his entire life, and now sells comics, collectibles, video games, table top games, and more!Let us know what you liked from this episode!Stay safe and healthy!#nerdtoyourmotherCreate your own podcast today with Buzzsprout!
Scott Bloom is the Director of Secondary Curriculum and Instruction for the Piqua City School District. He has served as a high school principal and was a biology and Anatomy/Physiology teacher in a variety of school districts. The City of Piqua is a community of 21,000 located north of Dayton, Ohio. The district, organized in 1853 and incorporated in 1908, serves an area of approximately 55 square miles in Miami County. Intro and Outro music "Viscious Pen" courtesy of
Jeff Marconette Jr, “the international Make Every Second Count speaker” is a transformational speaker, author, coach, a youth mentor and the host of Make Every Second Count Live on Facebook and YouTube, all from the sleepy town of Piqua, Ohio. His life nearly ended at the young age of 17 while waiting to turn at a green light. After 18 years of recovery, which he still continues today, he now sees why it is so important to Make Every Second Count, he stresses that point to everyone he works with because very few people ever get a second chance at life and he doesn't want anyone to waste the one they get. It's time for you to stop wasting time and learn how to Make Every Second Count. Jeff is the author of the book "Make Every Second Count", which can be found here: amazon.com/make-every-second-count You can access the first 7 days of his 1500 hour journal on his website here: jeffmarconettejr.com/journal --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/stickaround/support
The WCPO High School Insider discusses the four teams remaining in the Ohio High School Athletic Association playoffs this week. You will hear from each of the four coaches on this week's episode. St. Xavier travels to the Columbus area to play Pickerington Central in the Division I state final at 7 p.m. Friday at Fortress Obetz. In Division II, La Salle plays Massillon Washington Friday night at Marysville. In Division IV, Wyoming plays Van Wert Saturday night at Piqua. In Division V, Roger Bacon plays Ironton Saturday night at London High School's Bowlus Field.Listen to this episode in the player above. More at http://wcpo.com/highschoolinsider See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jeff Marconette Jr., “the international Make Every Second Count Speaker” is a Transformational Speaker, Author, Coach, a Youth Mentor and the Host of Make Every Second Count Live on Facebook and YouTube, all from the sleepy town of Piqua, Ohio. His life was nearly ended at the young age of 17 while waiting to turn at a green light. After 18 years of recovery, which he still continues today, he now sees why it is so important to Make Every Second Count, he stresses that point to everyone he works with because very few people ever get a second chance at life and he doesn't want anyone to waste the one they get. It's time for you to stop wasting time and learn how to Make Every Second Count, now stand to your feet and put your hands together for the International Make Every Second Count Speaker Jeff Marconette Jr. Website, www.jeffmarconettejr.com Free gift, www.jeffmarconettejr.com/journal YouTube, www.youtube.com/c/jeffmarconettejr Facebook Group: Make Every Second Count movement Show: Make Every Second Count live on every Tuesday at 7pm edt
Jeff Marconette Jr., “the international Make Every Second Count Speaker” is a Transformational Speaker, Author, Coach, a Youth Mentor and the Host of Make Every Second Count Live on Facebook and YouTube, all from the sleepy town of Piqua, Ohio. His life was nearly ended at the young age of 17 while waiting to turn at a green light. After 18 years of recovery, which he still continues today, he now sees why it is so important to Make Every Second Count, he stresses that point to everyone he works with because very few people ever get a second chance at life and he doesn't want anyone to waste the one they get. It's time for you to stop wasting time and learn how to Make Every Second Count, now stand to your feet and put your hands together for the International Make Every Second Count Speaker Jeff Marconette Jr. Website, www.jeffmarconettejr.com Free gift, www.jeffmarconettejr.com/journal YouTube, www.youtube.com/c/jeffmarconettejr Facebook Group: Make Every Second Count movement Show: Make Every Second Count live on every Tuesday at 7pm edt
Jeff Marconette Jr., “the international Make Every Second Count Speaker” is a Transformational Speaker, Author, Coach, a Youth Mentor and the Host of Make Every Second Count Live on Facebook and YouTube, all from the sleepy town of Piqua, Ohio. His life was nearly ended at the young age of 17 while waiting to turn at a green light. After 18 years of recovery, which he still continues today, he now sees why it is so important to Make Every Second Count, he stresses that point to everyone he works with because very few people ever get a second chance at life and he doesn't want anyone to waste the one they get. It's time for you to stop wasting time and learn how to Make Every Second Count, now stand to your feet and put your hands together for the International Make Every Second Count Speaker Jeff Marconette Jr. Website, www.jeffmarconettejr.com Free gift, www.jeffmarconettejr.com/journal YouTube, www.youtube.com/c/jeffmarconettejr Facebook Group: Make Every Second Count movement Show: Make Every Second Count live on every Tuesday at 7pm edt
Jeff Marconette Jr., “the international Make Every Second Count Speaker” is a Transformational Speaker, Author, Coach, a Youth Mentor and the Host of Make Every Second Count Live on Facebook and YouTube, all from the sleepy town of Piqua, Ohio. His life was nearly ended at the young age of 17 while waiting to turn at a green light. After 18 years of recovery, which he still continues today, he now sees why it is so important to Make Every Second Count, he stresses that point to everyone he works with because very few people ever get a second chance at life and he doesn’t want anyone to waste the one they get. It's time for you to stop wasting time and learn how to Make Every Second Count, now stand to your feet and put your hands together for the International Make Every Second Count Speaker Jeff Marconette Jr. Website, www.jeffmarconettejr.com Free gift, www.jeffmarconettejr.com/journal YouTube, www.youtube.com/c/jeffmarconettejr Facebook Group: Make Every Second Count movement Show: Make Every Second Count live on every Tuesday at 7pm edt
A conversation on all things health, fitness, and personal development with Master Trainer, Manager, and Certified Brain Trainer of Anytime Fitness Piqua, Ohio.... Adam Ortman Here's what we talk about: A piece of his story: who he is and how he got started on his own health and fitness journey Why he does what he does His journey to Anytime Fitness Motivation "Mastermind" - what it is and why create it Work life balance Personal development and why it's important Morning routine The importance of recharging Top game changing personal development tools and books Oura Ring: what it is and how it helps Importance of sleep vs sacrificing sleep for workouts Building better brain health He also mentions: A Vision Board As a Man Thinketh by James Allen The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho Oura Ring Connect with Adam: Facebook: Anytime Fitness of Piqua, Ohio Connect with me: Instagram: sophia_dawn41 Instagram: flowwiththegrowpodcast Facebook: Sophia Dawn Nehlich-Arobba
Welcome to Situational Social Security, where we review situations that are unique to clients, and learn about how advisors are using Social Security knowledge in their practice. Whether you specialize in Social Security already, or are interested in learning more, Situational Social Security is THE PLACE FOR YOU!! For more details about our certificate program, or if you would like to be a guest on our show, please visit our website premierNSSA.com and leave us a message on the contact page.On today’s show, Marc and Jim introduce themselves, how they got into Social Security education, and their plans for the show.As Marc was developing his accounting practice over time, he began to get questions about Social Security, so in 2008 he decided to offer Social Security consulting services. After reading a number of books, he realized that he couldn’t do it alone. He started looking for someone to help, when an attorney he knew mentioned he had an uncle who was about to retire from the Social Security Administration. His uncle ended up being Marc’s partner Jim Blair.In January 2010, Jim and Marc set up Premier Social Security Consulting to help clients understand and maximize their benefits. In 2013 they evolved into an education company, when they created the National Social Security Advisor Certificate Program. The course is 8 hours long, has received accreditation by the Institute for Credentialing Excellence, and offers the gold standard of support.Jim had worked with the Social Security Administration for 35 years. He started as a service representative, before becoming a claims representative for 10 years. Then he moved into the management side of things for a number of years, finishing his final 9 years as the district manager at the Piqua, Ohio office.We coined the phrase “Situational Social Security”, which is what we will explore on this show. We will talk about situations for single folks, married individuals, divorcees, individuals with deceased spouses, retirees with young children, and many others….In addition to reviewing situations, we will be interviewing advisors about how they are using their Social Security knowledge to help their clients and add value to their business. We will also have guests on to talk about related topics like Medicare, reverse mortgages, long term care, etc…
Wouldn't earth be better off with a lot more of Heaven in it? Too bad we have to wait for Heaven. Or do we? In the first message of the Bringing Heaven Down series, we'll look at a prayer Jesus teaches His disciples and we'll discover that God wants us and our world to experience Heaven here and now. We could definitely use it! Join us for service every Sunday at 9:15 am, or 11:00 am (EST) Bible App: https://www.youversion.com/the-bible-... We would love to hear how Jesus is changing your life! Text "DECIDED" to 937-783-7827. Connect with us: text “NEW” to 937-783-7827. If you need prayer, text “PRAY” to 937-783-7827. You can download our app by texting tvcapp to 77977 or search for The Valley Church in the Apple Store or the Google Store. If you would like to support The Valley Church financially, you can give through the TVC app, or online through our website by clicking here The valley.church/give Stay Connected! Website: https://thevalley.church/ TVC Piqua Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wearethevalley/ TVC Piqua Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tvcpiqua/ YouTube: The Valley Church Piqua
Profile: We return to the archive for David Lewis’ fascinating commentary about the lives and careers of Piqua, Ohio’s popular jazz and pop quartet, The Mills Brothers .
Sure, retiring at 65 is the norm, but that doesn’t mean you have to! At a McDonald’s in Piqua, Ohio, an 89-year-old man was awarded McDonald’s Employee of the Year. He’s only worked there for a little over a year and is absolutely killin’ it. For employee Hugh Ruppert, the award practically came as an early birthday present. He was given the award last Monday, and last Wednesday marked his 89th birthday, WHIO-TV reported. Every morning, he wakes up at 3 a.m.
Wright State University students and alumni are welcome to attend the fourth Suit-Up event at two area JCPenney stores on Feb. 23. The Fairfield Commons Mall and the Miami Valley Mall in Piqua will welcome Wright State students looking for deals on professional attire. The event is designed to help students and alumni prepare for job and graduate school interviews, career networking events and both the Lake Campus Career, Internship and Networking Expo on March 16 and the Wright State Career Fair on March 17. This will be the first time that the Piqua location has participated. “This is great not only for Lake Campus students but for Wright State students that might live north of Dayton,” said Lisa Duke, assistant director of Career Services. The Suit-Up event is closed to the public but is open to any Wright State student and alumni in need of professional career apparel. Last spring, more than 155 students participated in the event. The event runs from 6 to 8 P.M. Each student who attends will receive a 30% off coupon for career-related clothing, such as suits, dresses, sport coats, dress pants, shoes and accessories. Both locations will have Wright State and JCPenney associates on hand to assist shoppers. “This is a great partnership between Wright State’s Career Services, Student Involvement and Leadership and the JCPenney Corporation,” said Duke.
August 1994, Piqua Ohio. 18 year old Shaylene Farrell invites her siblings to come to the store with her for a quick errand. They decline so she heads out on her own, a trip from which she will never return. While there are a pair of suspects in her disappearance and presumed murder, no one was ever named publicly. In 25 years of searching and investigation, police have yet to make an arrest in her case. If you have information on the disappearance of Shaylene Farrell, please contact Piqua police. 937-778-2027 In this week's episode we feature the work of Private Investigations for the Missing. An organization founded by Bruce Maitland, his daughter, Brianna, vanished in 2004. Support the show.
We got our first freeze of the season last night so growing outdoors is completely done for this year! In today's episode I talk more about how a local networking event sparked more belief in myself and my super small business. It's easy to downplay things that you're doing and it was so refreshing to see how many people had a genuine interest in my Veggie Boxes and my mission to colonize Piqua with gardens and greenhouses. I also talk more about the reason behind me growing and wanting to spread the power that fresh veggies give your mind & body
Scénario 2 - Tonneaux de Troie Épisode 5 - La guêpe qui piqua notre curiosité A Galdom, la vie n'a jamais été aussi douce... Depuis l'exécution du terrible prince des voleurs, il y a un an, les bons citoyens de cette cité fluviale acclament la sage administration du bourgmestre Merkhol : les coffres sont bien remplis, les rues bien éclairées, les moutons bien gardés. Alors, pourquoi diable nos héros (deux marchands rangés et deux voleurs repentis) reprendraient-ils du service ? Peut-être les réjouissances célébrant la mort du "Prince des voleurs" risquent-elles de réveiller de vieux démons... En tout cas, chercher la petite bête n'aura jamais été aussi dangereux. Un scénario extrait du recueil Scenarii de JdR Editions http://www.jdreditions.com joué avec le système de jeu Tranchons et Traquons édité par Les Livres de L'ours http://livresdelours.blogspot.com. Retrouvez également la Rôlisterie sur : le site web https://larolisterie.fr Facebook https://www.facebook.com/rolisterie Twitter https://twitter.com/rolisterie Instagram https://www.instagram.com/rolisterie
Last night me & Kyla attended an event called Pints & Preneurs at 311 Drafthouse in Piqua. I was hesitant about attending because my business is so small, but thankfully Kyla dragged me out of the house and we made a ton of quality connections with local entrepreneurs! This event was exactly what we needed though - it's great to connect with people but it's also HUGE when you get validation of your idea or interest in your products and services. Thank you to Piqua Chamber of Commerce, Piqua Development office, and Launch Dayton for such an awesome mixer! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gardening4gains/support
Seriously, who is looking after these kids in Piqua, Ohio?
Adam Ortman is a manager and trainer at Anytime Fitness in Piqua, Ohio. Hear about his journey losing weight, becoming a trainer, and helping others achieve their goals! Find him on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/adam.ortman Video of success story, Roy Davis: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rX--8xHtv44
Audio journal of behind the scenes with the crew, Day #6 of the trip! It's Mother's Day and the crew woke up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, did an interview and some Holy Yoga in Piqua, Ohio, and are off to Simpsonville, Kentucky for a series of other interviews and an unexpected surprise! http://5ed.8db.myftpupload.com/
The guys are joined by Pastor John Scott from True Vine Church in Piqua today. They talk about God's calling on John's life and the road that led him into full time ministry. You can learn more about Pastor Jon and True Vine Church at truevinechurch.us Also mentioned in this podcast are the Auxano Bootcamps. You can learn more about those at: http://auxano.com/bootcamp/
Alex and his guest, Jim Dicke, tell the story of the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the role of Ohio congressman, William McCulloch of Piqua, Ohio. Alex and Jim discuss the turbulent years in America as African Americans struggle towards equality in the awful world of Jim Crow. We look at the roles of JFK, LBJ, MLK, SNCC and the unknown Rep. McCulloch on the difficult road to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Freedom Summer of '64 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
American Army Women Serving On All Fronts [Etc.] National Archives and Records Administration - ARC 39012, LI 208-UN-105 - AMERICAN ARMY WOMEN SERVING ON ALL FRONTS [ETC.] - DVD Copied by Thomas Gideon. Series: Motion Picture Films from "United News" Newsreels, compiled 1942 - 1945. Part 1, WAC mechanics service airplanes in Arizona. Part 2, the Boeing aircraft plant in Seattle celebrates the completion of its 5,000th Flying Fortress. Part 3, shows poses of military cameramen who will cover the invasion of Europe. Part 4, shows Air Force heroes in Washington, D.C., and one at his home in Piqua, Ohio. Part 5, allied planes bomb Italy. British troops advance toward Cassino and Americans toward Anzio. Shows German prisoners of war and aid to Italian citizens. source link https://archive.org/details/gov.archives.arc.39012 copyright link https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
http://wright.edu/news If it could speak, it would tell of being attached to the butt of a British rifle fired by a Shawnee Indian at American troops during the largest Revolutionary War battle in Ohio. The partial brass plate – hand-engraved with a bow, arrow and quiver – was unearthed in June by a Wright State University anthropology student doing battlefield excavation work at the site of the Battle of Piqua. “I was actually stunned,” recalled archaeologist Lance Greene, the assistant professor overseeing the dig. “As soon as I saw it, I knew it was Revolutionary War period. And once we started cleaning it off and looking at the engraving, I was really just flabbergasted. …when you find this specific, really interesting sort of artifact that is unusual and tied to the Shawnee occupation, it really is exciting.” Greene, who has bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Tennessee and a doctorate from the University of North Carolina, joined the faculty at Wright State in 2015. He focuses on U.S. historical archaeology, mostly on Native American groups in the Southeast and Great Lakes regions.
This week the guys welcome the Mayor of our town Piqua, Ohio Kazy Hinds! Kazy is a Pastor, Wife, Daughter, Mom, and awesome lady! She has a pretty amazing story of how God really got into her life and led her into Ministry and into her role now as a Mayor. If you expecting hard hitting questions about street paving and politics this one is not for you, it's all about her faith and the role it has played in her life.
Next to the Hawker Hurricane is the Eagle Squadrons exhibit. In front is a glass case that contains information on another Ohio aviator. Piqua native Dominic “Don” Gentile learned to fly in high school. He tried to enlist in the Air Corps after graduation but was refused because he lacked the required two years of college. Desperate to fly, he turned to the Royal Air Force in England and by December 1941 became a pilot officer, flying with various Royal Air Force squadrons. He was assigned to combat in 1942 as a member of Number 133 Eagle Squadron and on August 1, 1942, during the Dieppe raid, he destroyed his first German planes, an Fw 190 and a Ju 88, within 10 minutes of each other. In September 1942, when the three Eagle Squadrons were transferred to the U.S. Army Air Forces, or AAF, as the 4th Fighter Group, Gentile was commissioned as a second lieutenant and began a remarkable combat career flying Spitfires, P-47s and P-51s. By April 1944, he was the Army Air Force’s leading ace with 27.8* enemy planes destroyed in the air and on the ground. Because of Lt. Gentile’s daring spirit, he was ordered back to the United States the following month as the risk he might be lost in battle was exceptionally high. Gentile agreed to take a one month rest from the rigors of combat with the understanding that he would be permitted to return to his unit. Instead, he was permanently assigned to Wright Field as a test pilot until after the war. In 1951 this great combat pilot who had survived all the enemy could muster against him was killed in the crash of a T-33 jet trainer near Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland. He was posthumously promoted to major. Several medals that were presented to him during his career as a fighter pilot are on display in this exhibit.
Walk past the Bob Hope exhibit and through the connecting link. Turn left and go to the Combat Search and Rescue exhibit in the Southeast Asia War Gallery. Pararescueman William H. Pitsenbarger, who was born in Piqua wanted to quit high school to join the U.S. Army Special Forces’ Green Berets. His parents convinced him to stay in school, and after graduating in 1962, Pitsenbarger joined the Air Force. Arriving in Vietnam in August 1965, Pitsenbarger completed more than 250 missions, including one in which he hung from an HH-43’s cable to rescue a wounded South Vietnamese soldier from a burning minefield. This action earned him the Airman’s Medal and the Republic of Vietnam’s Medal of Military Merit and Gallantry Cross with Bronze Palm. William H. Pitsenbarger was only 21 years old when he was killed in action. But in his short life and heroic Air Force career, Pitsenbarger was an example of dedication, compassion and tenacity for all those with whom he served. In his work, and especially on his final mission, Airman 1st Class Pitsenbarger embodied the pararescueman’s motto: “That Others May Live.” For coordinating the successful rescues, caring for the wounded and sacrificing his life while aggressively defending his comrades, Pitsenbarger earned the Air Force Cross on June 30, 1966. After review, the original award was upgraded, and on December 8, 2000, the Medal of Honor was presented to his family in a ceremony here at the museum. Pitsenbarger is the 59th Medal of Honor recipient, and sixth enlisted recipient, from the Air Force and its predecessor organizations.
The joy of discovering love is celebrated officially in the hearts of individuals committed to each other. As a sign of their love Tim Moore & Emily Hile invited family, friends and guest to the St James Episcopal Church in Piqua, Ohio. Listening to this broadcast hear their vows to each other and celebrate their love for each other too.
The joy of discovering love is celebrated officially in the hearts of individuals committed to each other. As a sign of their love Tim Moore & Emily Hile invited family, friends and guest to the St James Episcopal Church in Piqua, Ohio. Listening to this broadcast hear their vows to each other and celebrate their love for each other too.
PODCAST: 24 Feb 2013 Sig - Doon Reel - Frankie Lane 01 - Le 2 Step de Port Arthur - Beausoleil02 - Tom Dooley - Sweeney's Men03 - Last Time on the Road - Tom McConville Band04 - Needle of Death - Bert Jansch05 - Dear Abby - John Prine06 - Piqua la Baleine - The Young Uns07 - Raglan Road - Luke Kelly08 - Close the Coalhouse Door - Alex Glasgow09 - Let the Mystery Be - Iris DeMent10 - Oldham's Burning Sands - The Oldham Tinkers11 - Jenny Lind - Scan Tester12 - The Hedgehog Song - The Incredible String Band13 - The Garden of Jane Delawney - Trees14 - Lakes of Cold Fen - Mary Humphreys and Anahata15 - Billy Miller - Hobo Jones and the Junkyard Dogs16 - Ae Fond Kiss - Five Hand Reel17 - Rich Folks Hoax - Ruarri Joseph18 - Country Girl - Carolina Chocolate Drops19 - Inisvaddy Annie - The Outside Track Sig - Doon Reel - Frankie Lane