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In light of this week's Supreme Court hearing that could redefine birthright citizenship in the United States, we're revisiting one of our most insightful episodes from 2019. Historian and legal scholar Martha S. Jones joins The Electorette to discuss her groundbreaking book, Birthright Citizens: A History of Race and Rights in Antebellum America. In this conversation, Professor Jones traces the legal and political battles waged by free Black Americans in the decades before the Civil War—activists who challenged the idea that citizenship was the exclusive domain of white Americans. Their efforts laid the groundwork for the 14th Amendment and reshaped the meaning of belonging in a multiracial democracy. This episode explores the deep historical roots of birthright citizenship, its radical origins in Black freedom struggles, and the enduring threats it faces today. Whether you're new to the topic or returning to it with fresh urgency, this conversation offers critical context for understanding the legal, moral, and democratic stakes. (00:00) The History of Birthright Citizenship Professor Jones and I revisit the critical history of birthright citizenship in America, exploring the struggles of formerly enslaved Black Americans. (06:57) Interpreting the Constitution for Citizenship Free African Americans used military service and economic contributions to advocate for citizenship and equality, utilizing their legal literacy and the omission of race in early constitutional texts. (16:43) Debating Citizenship and Colonization William Yates, a white abolitionist, authored "The Rights of Colored Men" to align abolitionism with the founding ideals of the US. (28:44) Threats to Citizenship and Forced Removal Former slaves pursued citizenship in the US to avoid colonization, but faced fears and pressures, leading to self-deportation and parallels with modern immigration policies. (43:41) Global Implications of Citizenship Debate Political and humanitarian debates have global implications and contribute to ongoing crises, emphasizing the need for vigilance and awareness. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Gwendolyn Dolske and guest co-host Konstantin Hatcher welcome Historian and Legal Scholar Dr. Martha Jones to discuss her incredible book: The Trouble of Color An American Family Memoir. We learn how Professor Jones's research into her own family lineage tells a richer story of American society, culture, and complexities about color. What does Blackness mean in America? How does our emboddied experience reveal the story of our ancestors? Learn more about Martha's work and get her book: https://www.marthasjones.com/bio Get your copy of Philosophy Unplugged on Amazon. Join our Patreon (and you can get a printable version of Philosophy Unplugged here): https://www.patreon.com/c/GoodIsInTheDetails Thank you to our sponsor: http://www.avonmoreinc.com
In this episode of Occupied Thoughts, FMEP President Lara Friedman speaks with Dr. Assal Rad and Professor Marc Owen Jones -- two of the most prominent voices and most astute analysts of the role that media and disinformation have played post Oct 7, 2023 -- and continue to play through the present day, in manufacturing consent for Israel's war on Gaza as well as its wider military campaigns and territorial expansion in Lebanon and Syria. The conversation centered on Dr. Rad's article, "How Western Media Has Manufactured Consent for Atrocities", From Iraq to Gaza ( published by DAWN on 3/4/25); and Professor Jones's peer-reviewed analysis in Third World Quarterly, "Evidencing alethocide: Israel's war on truth in Gaza" (published 3/1/25).
The Catholic Herald Podcast: Merely Catholic with Gavin Ashenden
Professor David Albert Jones, the director of the Anscombe Bioethics Centre, Oxford, joins Dr Gavin Ashenden for this 88th episode of Merely Catholic, the podcast series for the Catholic Herald. They discuss the rush to assisted suicide ahead of a crucial vote to legalise the practice in the House of Commons on November 29 and the horrible realities of what a change of the law will mean. Professor Jones is the winner of the Paul Ramsey Award for Excellence in Bioethics, and in 2017 he co-edited Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide: Lessons from Belgium with Chris Gastmans and Calum MacKellar.
This Episode Originally Aired - August 25, 2020Today's throwback episode Rachel hosts Professor Martha S Jones, author and researcher at Johns Hopkins, to talk about the history of the 19th Amendment, and how the stories we tell ourselves about our families and our histories shape the way we move through the world. It's an important conversation to have - especially in this moment when we're remembering the 104th anniversary of the 19th amendment to the US Constitution. We hope you'll join Professor Jones and Rach as they dive into the legacy of Black suffragettes and the power each of us wield as guardians of our own stories.If you enjoyed this conversation you MUST go follow Professor Jones on Instagram: instagram.com/marthasjones/ AND order her book VANGUARD here -> https://bookshop.org/books/vanguard-how-black-women-broke-barriers-won-the-vote-and-insisted-on-equality-for-all/9781541618619Remember listeners: your voice matters because YOU matter. You can check if you're registered to vote by searching your state online, or by clicking here -> https://www.vote.org/am-i-registered-to-vote/ 00:00 Welcome and Introduction00:34 The 19th Amendment and Its Limitations01:24 Introducing Professor Martha Jones04:35 Professor Jones' Journey and Philosophy07:02 The Importance of Family History10:40 Challenges in Tracing Ancestry19:28 Historical Context of Racism and Women's Roles29:20 The Legacy of the 19th Amendment30:57 Harriet Tubman: A Hidden History32:32 The Power of Family History33:08 Genealogy and Personal Identity35:54 The 19th Amendment: A Complex Legacy38:25 Voter Suppression and Systemic Racism43:14 The Fight for Voting Rights45:28 The Importance of Voting Today52:11 Educating and Empowering Future Generations53:25 Conclusion and Call to Action Have a question you want Rach to answer? An idea for a podcast episode??Call the podcast hotline and leave a voicemail! Call (737) 400-4626Sign up for Rachel's weekly email: https://msrachelhollis.com/insider/Watch the podcast on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RachelHollisMotivation/videosFollow along on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/MsRachelHollis/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices.
Send us a Text Message.Hard times threaten resolve; when every ounce of energy is depleted, flatlining – of mind, body, and spirit - occurs. In this depleted state one often reverts to old, restrictive patterns of behavior – well worn habits that no longer serve, but reemerge in times of difficulty. During these times a spring cleaning is necessary, lightening our load for the long road ahead—decerning what to let go and what to hold close. Finding myself deep in the mire of this phenomena, the well-spring of knowledge imparted by this season's guests could not have been better timed. What stood out for me was a range of messages - from the value of settling into uncertainty to the fuel provided from dedication to a creative endeavor.Rails-To-Trails president Ryan Chao teaches us the power of distilling our skills and refining our purpose to discern the essential.Sports Psychology and Performance trailblazer, Dr. Jim Loehr illustrates the impact of character, cautioning of the limitations of results orientation, reminding us it's really who we become in the pursuit that matters. Accepting her calling as advocate for victims of abuse, human trafficking, and exploitation Haejin Shim Fujimura leverages her Shim and Associates law practice and Embers International foundation, turning her own brokenness into light shining through the fissures. Barbara and Lili Anel, twins who've taken divergent paths to follow their musical dreams, remind us of the alchemy of gratitude, and the gift of staying in the moment. Lynn R. Miller, painter, farmer, horseman, and founder of Small Farmer's Journal, illustrates the importance in the protection of early “thrills and enchantments.” Forty-eight years later Lynn continues to follow his passions - painting, animal powered agriculture, writing, and living a “human scale manual transmission” life on his remote Oregon ranch.With over 160 platinum albums, two Grammys, and over 40 years of mentoring some of the greatest recording artists of our time, Robert Cutarella finds joy along the long road to mastery. Robert warns of the trappings of the world, reminding us to redefine success, teaching us to exchange shortcuts, quick fixes, and materialism for honesty. Actress and Horticulturist Kathleen O' Grady, finds satisfaction in her cultivation of “sister passions”; acting and landscape design, teaching us valuable lessons from the gift of good work and the value of effort; things that no one can take away. Over the span of 43 years Dr. Maitland Jones, published 225 research papers, and fostered landmark discoveries while at “Jones Alley”, the Princeton lab affectionately bearing his name. One of his five books, Organic Chemistry (WW.Norton 2014),is the gold standard for chemistry studies around the globe. Professor Jones supplies the chalk for a blackboard instruction on his unwavering commitment to problem solving. I hope the stories, messages, and insights of this season's guests sharpen your tools, providing necessary provisions for your own journey.I look
Garett Jones is Associate Professor of Economics at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. He joins Bob to discuss his book, detailing the impact that immigrants' culture has on the institutions of their new home.Professor Jones' New Book, The Culture Transplant: Mises.org/HAP449aThe Mises Institute is giving away 100,000 copies of Murray Rothbard's, What Has Government Done to Our Money? Get your free copy at Mises.org/MoneyHuman Action Podcast listeners can get a free book: Mises.org/HAPodFree
Garett Jones is Associate Professor of Economics at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. He joins Bob to discuss his book, detailing the impact that immigrants' culture has on the institutions of their new home.Professor Jones' New Book, The Culture Transplant: Mises.org/HAP449aThe Mises Institute is giving away 100,000 copies of Murray Rothbard's, What Has Government Done to Our Money? Get your free copy at Mises.org/MoneyHuman Action Podcast listeners can get a free book: Mises.org/HAPodFree
Send me a text message. Suggestions? Subjects for future podcasts? Let me know--thanks!English is full of reductions. We write “going to” but we say “gonna” for example.The conjunction “and” is often reduced to an /n/ sound. So “hot and cold” becomes “hot 'n' cold” and so on. Here are ten sentences to practice with.These phrases are sometimes called “fixed” and phrases. Ask any American to finish these:“Rock and _____.”“Bright and ______.”“Pros and ______.”Yes, they are effectively collocations. 1. She often listens to rock and roll.2. My grandson like to eat bread and jam.3. “I now pronounce you man and wife.”4. They got up bright and early.5. She cared for her grandmother night and day.6. He wasn't interested in the ins and outs of local politics.7. Professor Jones studied the rise and fall of ancient empires.8. It was a matter of life and death. 9. I need to think about the pros and cons before I decide.10. There's too much hustle and bustle in a big city. I prefer living in the country. Intro & Outro Music: La Pompe Du Trompe by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com Support the Show.You can now support my podcasts and classes:Help Barry pay for podcast expenses--thank you!
Maitland Jones Jr. wanted to be tennis player. At thirteen he attempted to enlist his parents into chauffeuring him around the east coast junior tennis circuit, to which they replied, “get a job kid.” That summer Maitland's first job was bottle washer and gofer for chemistry giants Laurence H. Knox and William von Eggers Doering, at their Hickrill Chemical Research laboratory in Katonah New York. Complex chemistry equations that were once meaningless scribbles on the laboratory blackboard began to make sense over the next five to six years. Maitland enrolled at Yale to study chemistry, following his formative mentors Knox and Doering, where he journeyed deeper into his craft during a postdoctoral year with his famous teachers and followed with a second year at the University of Wisconsin under the guidance of Dr. Jerry Berson. Over the span of 43 years Maitland collaborated with undergraduates, graduate students, postdoctoral and visiting fellows to write 225 published papers and books while at “Jones Alley,” the Princeton Lab where they explored and discovered reactive intermediates including carbenes, quantum molecular reactions, carboranes, and heterocycles—with a focus on “how electrons talked to each other.” During his teaching career Maitland experimented with the elimination of large lecture “talking head” style teaching, breaking students into small groups, providing an environment of problem solving, and fostering scientific discovery through the exploration and distillation of disparate information. Professor Jones is the author of five books including, Organic Chemistry, (2014) published by W.W Norton, now in its fifth edition-- the prominent textbook taught to students across the globe. Today Maitland is following a parallel passion sparked during a performance by jazz innovator, the incomparable-- Thelonious Monk, at the NYC's Five Spot jazz club in 1957. Maitland is a regular in New York's jazz scene, and hosts Jazz Nights featuring evenings of great music at his home in New Jersey. He co-produced Monk's Dreams: The Complete Compositions of Thelonious Sphere Monk, available on both compact disc and digital download. It's our extreme pleasure to welcome Dr. Maitland “Mait” Jones Jr. to this episode of Intrinsic Drive®. Intrinsic Drive ® is produced by Ellen Strickler and Phil Wharton and Andrew Hollingworth is sound editor and engineer.Created for human beings by human beings. NO GENERATIVE AI USE ALLOWED.
Originally Recorded August 11th, 2023 About Professor Garett Jones: https://economics.gmu.edu/people/gjonesb Check out Professor Jones's new book The Culture Transplant: How Migrants Make the Economies They Move To a Lot Like the Ones They Left: https://www.amazon.com/Culture-Transplant-Migrants-Make-Economies/dp/1503632946 Get full access to Unlicensed Philosophy with Chuong Nguyen at musicallyspeaking.substack.com/subscribe
Today we are thrilled to be joined by Professor Bruce Jones, a senior fellow with the Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology in the Foreign Policy program at the Brookings Institution. His research expertise and policy experience are in international security, with his current research focusing on US strategy, international order, and great power relations. Professor Jones will help us explore what this expansion means for the future of international collaboration, governance, and the delicate balance of global power. We are very excited to have Professor Jones on the International Risk Podcast today.
Andrew M Jones PhD DSc is Professor of Applied Physiology in the Department of Sport and Health Sciences at the University of Exeter. He's internationally recognized for his research in the control of, and limitations to, skeletal muscle oxidative metabolism; causes of exercise intolerance in health and disease; respiratory physiology, particularly the kinetics of pulmonary gas exchange and ventilation during and following exercise; and sports performance physiology and nutrition, particularly in relation to endurance athletics. Prof Jones has authored more than 350 original research and review articles (>38K citations) and is co-Editor of three books. He is a Fellow of the American College of Sports Medicine, the British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences, the European College of Sport Science, and the Physiological Society. Jones is Editor-in-Chief of Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise and serves on the Editorial Board of six other international journals in sports medicine and exercise science. Prof Jones has acted as a consultant to a number of governing bodies of sport or commercial companies including UK Athletics, the English Institute of Sport, Gatorade Sports Science Institute and Nike Inc. He's been an advisor and consultant to the Breaking 2 and INEOS projects with Eluid Kipchoge and professional endurance athletes including Paula Radcliff. Professor Jones gives his understanding of the evidence of the performance effect of the so called “super shoes” and whether they explain the recent pro marathon runner excess performance and if so, by how much. Amateur marathon runners may find interesting our exchange about the Boston Marathon and how it is getting harder to get into, and what amateur marathoners must do to enhance performance in order to qualify and get into the Boston Marathon today. Professor Jones gives his perspective on the popularized notion that when it comes to marathon training “volume is king” and if not, what would be the alternative. We talk about distance runners that are getting older, and how Professor Jones recommends changing training, if at all, for those looking to remain competitive. Finally, we talk about science and evidence-based nutrition protocol throughout the training cycle and pre-race and race nutrition. About Andrew Jones https://sshs.exeter.ac.uk/staff/profile/index.php?web_id=Andrew_Jones Twitter/X https://twitter.com/AndyBeetroot Find Us:Facebook: https://Facebook.com/EventHorizon.TvTwitter: https://twitter.com/EventHorizonTvInstagram: https://instagram.com/eventhorizon.tvYouTube: https://youtube.com/c/EventHorizonTvSupport Us:https://Patreon.com/Endurancehttps://paypal.me/EnduranceExperience
In this episode, Jane meets Professor Henrietta Bowden Jones OBE, a medical doctor and neuroscience researcher working as consultant psychiatrist in addictions. Professor Jones is the current President of the Royal Society of Medicine (2022-2025) and was appointed as the UK's first National Clinical Advisor on Gambling Harms in 2022. Jane and Henrietta talk about Henrietta's childhood at boarding school in Italy and moving to the UK, her career at Chelsea and Westminster hospital and research fellowship at Imperial College and her advice for aspiring medical leaders. For more information and to access the transcript: www.ucl.ac.uk/medical-sciences/medical-women-talking-podcastDate of episode recording: 2023-04-20Duration: 00:43:34Language of episode: EnglishPresenter:Professor Dame Jane DacreGuests: Professor Henrietta Bowden-Jones OBEProducer: Matt Aucott
Doomsday scenarios are the currency of the day when it comes to artificial intelligence's impact on the jobs market. But technologists aren't always that great at economic forecasting. To help us sort through the hype, we're joined this episode by Mike Burt, Vice-President at the Conference Board of Canada and Benjamin F. Jones, Professor of Strategy at Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in Illinois. Mike and Ben share their assessments of how artificial intelligence is impacting jobs—drawing a key distinction between whole jobs and the various tasks that make up a job. You'll hear why the promise of this new technology represents a sea change in the way that economists have thought about the risks from job automation. You'll hear what fears they think are real and whether they are optimistic that new technologies will help to address persistent challenges like Canada's underperforming innovation sector or broader economic inequality.About our guests:Michael Burt is a Vice President at The Conference Board of Canada and leads our Education & Skills and Economic Forecasting knowledge areas. He is also the executive lead for the work CBoC does with the Future Skills Centre. In his role, Michael oversees the convening and research activities of these different areas. Michael has more than 20 years of experience conducting and leading research activities.An economist by training, Professor Benjamin F. Jones studies the sources of economic growth in advanced economies, with an emphasis on innovation, entrepreneurship, and scientific progress. He also studies global economic development, including the roles of education, climate, and national leadership in explaining the wealth and poverty of nations. His research has appeared in journals such as Science, the Quarterly Journal of Economics and the American Economic Review, and has been profiled in media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal, the Economist, and The New Yorker.A former Rhodes Scholar, Professor Jones has served as the senior economist for macroeconomics for the White House Council of Economic Advisers and in the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Professor Jones is a non-resident senior fellow of the Brookings Institution, a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he co-directs the Innovation Policy Working Group, a senior fellow of the Institute for Progress, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Additional information:www.conferenceboard.ca
For the past year and a half, the Independent Review of Children's Social Care Services has examined the challenges facing the delivery of children's services across Northern Ireland. On 21 June, Lead Reviewer, Professor Ray Jones published his findings and recommendations for change.Host, Andy McClenaghan is joined by Professor Jones, Josephine Dowell, a student social worker and care experienced young person who has been closely involved in the Review process via the organisation Voice of Young People in Care (VOYPIC), and Carolyn Ewart, National Director of the British Association of Social Workers Northern Ireland. They discuss the challenges facing users of children and family services and the social workers who provide them. They also examine Professor Jones's recommendations for reforming how services are organised, governed and delivered across the region.The Independent Review of Children's Social Care Services report can be accessed here.During the discussion, Carolyn makes reference to the document Voices of Social Work Through the Troubles, it can be accessed here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Professor Henry Jones sums up what the race in The Last Crusade is about in the end.The “Daily Dose of Disney with Ray Keating” podcast serves up a Disney or Disney-related quote each day, with DisneyBizJournal's Ray Keating offering brief, additional thoughts on how each dose ties in to life, career, business, entrepreneurship, creativity, storytelling, work, or just plain fun. Each week, the podcast focuses on a particular person, character or theme.Please check out www.DisneyBizJournal.com.Consider books by Ray Keating…• The Pastor Stephen Grant thrillers and mysteries. The newest book in the series is Under the Golden Dome. Get the signed books here, or paperbacks and Kindle editions right here.• Cathedral: An Alliance of Saint Michael Novel. Signed paperbacks and/or paperbacks, hardcovers and the Kindle edition at Amazon. • The Weekly Economist II: 52 More Quick Reads to Help You Think Like an Economist. Signed books here. And Kindle edition and paperbacks here.• The Weekly Economist: 52 Quick Reads to Help You Think Like an Economist. Signed paperbacks at RayKeatingOnline.com or paperbacks, hardcovers and Kindle editions at Amazon.com.• The Lutheran Planner: The TO DO List Solution combines a simple, powerful system for getting things done with encouragement, inspiration and consolation from the Christian faith.• Behind Enemy Lines: Conservative Communiques from Left-Wing New York – signed books or at Amazon.• Free Trade Rocks! 10 Points on International Trade Everyone Should Know is available at Amazon in paperback or for the Kindle edition, and signed books at www.raykeatingonline.com. Listen to Ray's other podcasts – the Free Enterprise in Three Minutes podcast and the PRESS CLUB C Podcast.Have Ray Keating speak your group, business, school, church, or organization. Email him at raykeating@keatingreports.com.
Welcome back to Chainsaw History's limited series, "No Time For Love Doctor Jones,” where Jamie Chambers guides his unconvinced sister Bambi through the thrilling and controversial life of Indiana Jones. This time they travel to Florence, Italy in The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles Episode 25: "Florence, May 1908."In this installment Indy's Mom steps out on her husband Professor Jones with legendary opera composer Giacomo Puccini. The podcasting siblings discuss the cringe-inducing story of opera, doomed romance, and a one-eyed old man hustling pool in a dive bar at noon. Watch the episode and follow along with the hosts and see the incredible shots of the Tuscan countryside and hear music from Madame Butterfly and La Boheme.Get ready for romance, tears, and laughter as we dive into the ups and downs of cinema's most iconic archaeologist and whip-cracking hero!
No one in the field of exercise science has contributed more to our understanding of marathon training and racing than Andy Jones. Professor Jones has worked closely with arguably the two greatest marathoners in world history: Paula Radcliffe and later, as a lead physiologist for the Breaking 2 Project, Eliud Kipchoge. He serves as Professor of Applied Physiology at the University of Exeter and has published 350+ original research and review articles. In this episode, Andy shares his laboratory and practical experiences to help us better understand marathon physiology. His lessons can make all of us stronger marathoners. We open with a background discussion of the science underpinning endurance performance before shifting to how we might apply these concepts for better training and the scalable examples from Radcliffe, Kipchoge, and other legends of the 26.2 mile distance. Resources referenced: Breaking2 Project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26Vhcxatsms Eliud Kipchoge's Sub 2 Hour Marathon @ Vienna: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-XgKRJUEgQ The maximal metabolic steady state: redefining the 'gold standard': https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.14814/phy2.14098 Physiological demands of running at 2-hour marathon race pace: https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/japplphysiol.00647.2020 Effects of Two Hours of Heavy-Intensity Exercise on the Power-Duration Relationship: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/323657654_Effects_of_Two_Hours_of_Heavy-Intensity_Exercise_on_the_Power-Duration_Relationship
In the wake of the horrifying police killing of Tyre Nichols, we spend the hour in conversation about the history of policing with Professor Nikki Jones. Nikki Jones is Professor of African American Studies at UC-Berkeley. Her work examines the experiences of Black women, men, and youth with the criminal legal system, policing, and violence. Her research is focused on the systematic analysis of video records that document routine encounters between police and civilians, with a focus on encounters that involve the police and Black youth in high-surveillance neighborhoods. Professor Jones is the author of Between Good and Ghetto: African American Girls and Inner-City Violence (2010) and The Chosen Ones: Black Men and the Politics of Redemption (2018). Follow Professor Nikki Jones on Twitter: https://twitter.com/socprofjones —- Subscribe to this podcast: https://plinkhq.com/i/1637968343?to=page Get in touch: lawanddisorder@kpfa.org Follow us on socials @LawAndDis: https://twitter.com/LawAndDis; https://www.instagram.com/lawanddis/ The post The history of American policing and its violence w/ Professor Nikki Jones appeared first on KPFA.
Associate Professor Damon Jones from the Harris School of Public Policy conducts research in economics on inequality, tax policy, and household finance, as well as the impact of government policy in those areas. In this episode, he talks about his journey to becoming a University of Chicago professor and how the support of his family and mentors made a difference in his trajectory. Professor Jones also highlights the pros and cons, joys and challenges of being a faculty member.
Glenn McConell chats with Professor Andy Jones from the University of Exeter in England about the incredible Eliud Kipchoge and what it took for him to break 2 hr for the marathon distance. Professor Jones, who has an exception research track record, conducted a study with 16 world class marathon runners to determine what factors are required to run a marathon in 2 hr. He then used this data and other information he had to choose which runners would attempt Breaking2 in Monza in 2017. We discuss this attempt and Eliud Kipchoge's eventual breaking of 2 hr in Vienna in 2019. Andy outlines the contributions to the record-breaking run of VO2 max, lactate threshold /the highest percentage of V02 max one can hold and running economy. We also discuss the other factors such as the use of pacemakers, drafting, the crowd, nutritional strategies and of course his shoes. Andy also shares some personal Kipchoge anecdotes. He also talks about his 15 years of experience testing the previous world record holder in the women's marathon, Paula Radcliffe, and estimates what time she could run for a marathon if she had run under the conditions that Eliud Kipchoge had. A really fascinating discussion. Twitter: @Inside_exercise @AndyBeetroot @GlennMcConell1
Dan Leach goes through the Mo-Town betting window. He is then joined by former New Jersey Superior Court Judge (retired 2017) and current law professor at Monmouth University Lawrence Jones. In his "Law and Society" course, 16 students put together an 82-page document to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred to change Armando Galarraga's near-perfect game to a perfect game in MLB's history. Professor Jones goes through how the project started, the importance of this, and the potential outcome. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dan Leach goes through the Mo-Town betting window. He is then joined by former New Jersey Superior Court Judge (retired 2017) and current law professor at Monmouth University Lawrence Jones. In his "Law and Society" course, 16 students put together an 82-page document to MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred to change Armando Galarraga's near-perfect game to a perfect game in MLB's history. Professor Jones goes through how the project started, the importance of this, and the potential outcome.
What is a Zawen? It is complicated. In this episode, we try to tackle what zawen are and what they meant to Lu Xun's career. Guiding us on our journey is Professor Andrew Jones of UC Berkeley, one of the most well-regarded scholars of Lu Xun in American academia. Professor Jones is the author of Developmental Fairy Tales, and is a contributing translator to the new collection of Lu Xun's zawen in a book titled Jottings Under Lamplight.
Chambers & Partners say of Professor Jones that "He is regarded by many as ‘the leading construction arbitrator in the world'". In this Podcast we discuss with Professor Jones his thoughts on different ways to more efficiently and effectively deal with expert evidence in international arbitration. In a candid exchange Professor Jones shares his thoughts on what works and addresses some of the myths surrounding expert evidence. Additional material and attachments can be found at klgates.com/Arbitration-World. More information about Doug Jones can be found at dougjones.info.
0:00 -Dan & Amy review Day 1 of the Brown-Jackson confirmation hearing 11:38 -Another budding Smollett 26:31 -Who's on your business list? - the good and the bad of the COVID experience 49:43 - Professor of Political Economy and International Relations at Queen Mary University of London and co-author of Fractured China: How State Transformation Is Shaping China's Rise New Edition, Lee Jones: Was Ukraine betrayed by its elites? You can follow Professor Jones on twitter @DrLeeJones 01:09:10 - A stunning miscalculation 01:26:22 - President at Wirepoints, Ted Dabrowski, weighs in on the Westfield PD which has been permanently disbanded. Check out Ted's latest - wirepoints.org 01:39:21 - Emma-Jo Morris, Politics Editor at Breitbart News, was also The New York Post reporter who broke the Hunter Biden Laptop story. Emma shares how she was smeared by the media as a Russian dupe or worse, a Russian operative. You can follow Emma on twitter @EmmaJoNYC 01:55:12 - Do Chicago Police still make traffic stops? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
I'm thankful to live in paradise. Each morning I awake to the sight of Rocky Creek gently winding its way, past my house and out to the sea. It reminds me of the cycle of life and the rhythm of nature. I am grateful that today the sky is blue and I can ride my bike to work as that is my time to listen to podcasts and learn about things I need to know without detracting from the things I need to do, since I need the exercise. I appreciate people who share their expertise online so that no matter what the issue; like yesterday not being able to access voice mail on a new iPhone, someone has put detailed instructions on how to do it. Did I mention how thankful I am for such a bright and capable husband? Professor Jones, I was a law review graduate from U of M law school in 1980 back in the Soia Mentshikoff days. I went on to Harvard Business School and never practiced law, although the law school education has been extremely useful in my career. For the last 13 years I have co-managed with my wife, the Founder, a nonprofit in Tampa devoted to rescuing and providing a home for abandoned and abused big cats (tigers, lions, bobcats etc.) and working to end their abuse by changing the laws and regulations. Florida has a very unique situation in terms of laws in this area because the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission was established by amendments to the Florida Constitution and separately has a statute granting certain powers. Without all the detail, the Commission takes the position that certain of their powers come from the Constitution, not from the Statute. I read through the cases they rely on and felt their self serving position was incorrect, i.e. that the cases cited did not support their argument and in fact the opposite was true. I took my analysis to a very good law firm here. They agreed with my analysis. My next step is to run this by one or more experts in Constitutional Law. I realize that Constitutional Law most commonly probably refers to the US Constitution, but I am thinking that the same principles would apply. If I were to come down to Miami at your convenience, would you be willing to do me the kindness of an hour of your time to lay out this situation, which if nothing else I think you will find intellectually interesting, and discuss whether you would have an interest in assisting me in this matter? The outcome could potentially stop the mistreatment of thousands of big cats in captivity in Florida. Thanks for any consideration you are able to give to this request. Howard Baskin Advisory Board Chairman Big Cat Rescue Hi, I'm Carole Baskin and I've been writing my story since I was able to write, but when the media goes to share it, they only choose the parts that fit their idea of what will generate views. If I'm going to share my story, it should be the whole story. The titles are the dates things happened. If you have any interest in who I really am please start at the beginning of this playlist: http://savethecats.org/ I know there will be people who take things out of context and try to use them to validate their own misconception, but you have access to the whole story. My hope is that others will recognize themselves in my words and have the strength to do what is right for themselves and our shared planet. You can help feed the cats at no cost to you using Amazon Smile! Visit BigCatRescue.org/Amazon-smile You can see photos, videos and more, updated daily at BigCatRescue.org Check out our main channel at YouTube.com/BigCatRescue Music (if any) from Epidemic Sound (http://www.epidemicsound.com) This video is for entertainment purposes only and is my opinion. Closing graphic with permission from https://youtu.be/F_AtgWMfwrk
Dirk Guidry, a Lafayette-based artist specializing in large-scale abstract art, live events, and mural paintings, joined Discover Lafayette to discuss his journey in becoming an artist who has evolved into a business entrepreneur. A native of Galliano, Louisiana, Dirk graduated in 2012 from UL – Lafayette in Fine Arts with a concentration in painting. As a child who always enjoyed art, he was encouraged by family and teachers to cultivate his creativity in the talented and gifted program. He remembered fondly his first commissioned piece: he was hired to draw a portrait of his teacher's daughter for $5.00. Dirk entered UL-Lafayette thinking he wanted to be a computer animator or storyboard artist. But the process of rendering the art was all about the final product and that didn't sit well, so he says he "fell into painting." "The late Allen Jones served as a beloved professor and mentor of Dirk, and he "still hears him every day" as he works in the studio. Professor Jones had a nurturing and subtle style as he delivered his critiques, and he would let the students figure out for themselves how to improve upon their work. Dirk says, "He used to touch my paintings sometimes. One time before the critique I made sure the paint was still wet because I knew he was going to touch it. And sure enough, he hit the wet part with his pinky and he was taken aback because he never wanted to mess up anyone's painting. Needless to say, he never touched my paintings again!" Upon graduation, Dirk didn't really know how to get started as a professional artist. So, he worked multiple jobs in the service industry, and of course, at Painting With A Twist, while he showed his art at a few shows. He had a lucky break early on when his cousin was getting married and asked him if he knew about the "live wedding paintings" being done in New Orleans. He didn't know anything about it but agreed to do the job. This gig led to another, and after a few years, Dirk became well-known for his live event paintings and is in high demand these days. He says, "Even though it's about 8 to 9 hours of straight painting, it still feels like 10 minutes. I blink and it's over." Dirk Guidry has become a popular live events artist who paints with a fish-eye (wide angle) lens effect. He'll arrive a few hours before an event to paint the background of the venue and allow the paint to dry somewhat. Then, he paints as the event unfolds, capturing the people and fun happenings. "People, especially kids, love to watch me paint 'Bob Ross' style. It's highly entertaining and I love interacting with others." (Pictured work by Dirk Guidry is the Greater Southwest Mardi Gras Association's 2018 Queen and Maids celebrating at brunch.) Dirk now averages about 35 live events per year. "That's basically my day job." The live event work affords him the opportunity to earn enough to do what he calls his 'studio work,' the opportunity to craft large abstract pieces of art, as well as to have the opportunity to take time off. He has been hired to travel for an event as far away as Cabo San Lucas and gets a good deal of work in Florida and Texas. The tough part about being an artist is having to have tough skin and learn to handle rejection. Dirk has always wanted to be selected as the Festival International Visual Artist and has applied every year for several years. He jokes that along with those rejections he also filed many others in his "We regret to inform you" email folder. Yet Dirk persisted, and in this 36th year Festival is to be celebrated, he was named the 2022 Official Visual Artist and will produce the collectible festival poster and pin. His official work will be revealed on February 20, 2022, from 3 to 5 pm, at Warehouse 535, at the Festival's Official Kickoff Party. Tickets are only $10 and include live music by Bucks and a Louisiana Fish Fry. The piece submitted by Dirk Guidry to the Festival judges was a 4 by 5-foot self-portrai...
Geoffrey Jones is the Isidor Straus Professor of Business History at the Harvard Business School. Professor Jones earned his B.A. and Ph.D degrees at Cambridge University, and holds an honorary Doctorate in Economics and Business Administration from Copenhagen Business School and an honorary Ph.D degree from the University of Helsinki. He has taught in Britain, the Netherlands and the United States, and has held Visiting Professorships in Colombia and Japan. Professor Jones is a Fellow of the Academy of International Business, a Fellow of the Japan Academy of International Business Studies, and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy. Professor Jones researches the history of globalization and global business, the ecological and social responsibility of business, and the business history of emerging markets. Among his books on these themes are British Multinational Banking 1830-1990 (1993), Merchants to Multinationals (2000), Renewing Unilever (2005), Multinationals and Global Capitalism (2005), Beauty Imagined. A History of the Global Beauty Industry (2010), and Profits and Sustainability. A History of Green Entrepreneurship (2017). He has published extensively in both history journals, including Business History Review and Economic History Review, and management journals, including Journal of International Business Studies and Strategic Management Journal. Professor Jones established and co-directs the Creating Emerging Markets oral history project at Harvard Business School. This project conducts lengthy interviews with the most impactful business leaders in Africa, Asia and Latin America over the last four decades. The transcripts and video materials are fully accessible online for research and teaching purposes. Visit https://www.aib.world/frontline-ib/geoffrey-jones/ for the original video interview.
Professor Adrienne Jones holds the honor of being the first Black woman to achieve tenured professor status at Pratt Institute. Jones has taught in the Fashion Design department at Pratt for over 25 years. In 2014, Professor Jones conceived and co-curated the landmark exhibition Black Dress, which honors Black designers and addresses the lack of diversity in the fashion industry. The exhibition was an unprecedented endeavor to coalesce a diverse array of contemporary design styles that inform and educate the New York fashion community, as well as new audiences, on the commemorative work of Black designers. The exhibition was highly publicized and featured in Elle, W, Huffington Post, and many other news outlets. Listen to her story. Follow us on IG: @blackfashionhistorypodcast @taniquarudell And if you haven't done so already, please take a moment to rate and review the show. We love hearing your feedback! Guest Social Media Info Black Dress Exhibit: http://www.blackdressexhibit.com/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/blackdresstheexhibit/ #BlackFashionHistory
Solo tribute to hash master, hash guru, Frenchy Cannoli with the second (more history focused) conversation with Professor Jones and Magic Trichs. Join us on Discord https://discord.gg/yVQKUsxBvw
Magic Trichs & his friend Professor Jones send their Zoom signal up to Halmstead to discuss, greenhouses, cannabis seed banks, genetics, terpenes, Dunning Kruger, philosophy and road rage. Disclaimer. I couldn't stop talking which is better than silence but only just. I hope I didn't ruin it & that the word ‘fascinating' isn't one that you find annoying when repeated 15 or so times in an hour. I would normally be medicated. See if you can see why. Join us on Discord. https://discord.gg/yVQKUsxBvw
“If they don't give you a seat at the table, bring a folding chair.”—Shirley Chisholm What does it mean to invite all to the table for a conversation about Black womanhood? What if the space is shared and the invitation and is an open one? What might we discuss and what might we learn? For our sixth episode, host KC Trommer spoke with sociologist and Gallatin faculty member Shatima Jones and her former student Cheyenne Porcher about A Seat at Our Table, a collaboration between Professor Jones' courses, "Detangling the Business of Black Women's Hair" and "Black Experiences in Literature, Movies, and Television," and Gallatin's online platform for student reading, writing, and research, Confluence.
Thank you for Listening Please Share This week on the Freedom Train Podcast Series, Joe and Pat are joined by guest host Professor Carl Tone Jones. The gentlemen discussed Professor Jones' new book 2020 Through The Eyes of a Social Media Revolutionary, his upcoming podcast, and his documentary The Independence Day Project. This past week was filed with all types of drama across the social media world. Social Media "relationship guru" Derrick Jaxn's alleged infidelity has caught up [...]
Craig Jones is one of the world's best grapplers and swim suit models. Born and raised in Adelaide, Australia. Craig is a member of the Danaher Death Squad and is currently training Puerto Rico with the squad. Craig is an extremely technical athlete and his record speaks for itself. He is a submission specialist; known for both his leglocks and pinkeye. In this episode we discuss his journey from a purple belt to his current level, training methods, outlook on jiu jitsu and more. It was an honor to speak with Professor Jones. *He is also seeking out a Teva sponsorship*
Metaphors- S1E5 by Professor Jones
For years we've been hearing people say go to school to get an education, but did you know that education doesn't start nor stop with learning in a school setting? We got the chance to sit down with Professor Belinda Jones of the illustrious North Carolina Central University. While interviewing her we got the opportunity to hear some of the life lessons she has learned over her 30 year career as a health educator, college instructor and trainer. We've all heard those horror stories about going to college and teachers not caring about students but we were honored to have Professor Jones shed some light on such situations. This is our Part 2 of the Bull City Series so go grab your pencil & paper as she schools us on life, college and what it means to be black in America!Don't Forget to Follow Us Online:Facebook & Youtube: Black 2 the Basics PodcastInstagram & Twitter: B2B_PodcastFor all booking inquires email: black2thebasicspodcast@gmail.com~The People's Podcast
I'm so honored to host Professor Martha S Jones, author and researcher at Johns Hopkins, to talk about the history of the 19th Amendment, and how the stories we tell ourselves about our families and our histories shape the way we move through the world. It's an important conversation to have - especially in this moment when we're remembering the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment to the US Constitution. If you're anything like me, you grew up believing that this amendment gave women the right to vote, but the truth is much more complicated. I hope you'll join Professor Jones and I as we dive into the legacy of Black suffragettes and the power each of us wield as guardians of our own stories.If you enjoyed this conversation as much as I did then you MUST go follow Professor Jones on Instagram: instagram.com/marthasjones/ AND pre-order her latest book VANGUARD here -> https://bookshop.org/books/vanguard-how-black-women-broke-barriers-won-the-vote-and-insisted-on-equality-for-all/9781541618619Remember listeners: your voice matters because YOU matter. You can check if you're registered to vote by searching your state online, or by clicking here -> https://www.vote.org/am-i-registered-to-vote/--Look: we've all either been through it, are currently going through it, or will go through it. That's just how life is: once you think you've got it all figured out, it hits you with something you never saw coming. Grief? Check. Divorce? Check. Global pandemic? Uh, CHECK! That's why I wrote a new book all about conquering hard things and coming out the other side a better, stronger you. It's called Didn't See That Coming, and it's available for pre-order here: https://bit.ly/dstcriseThe RISE App is finally HERE y'all and it's got everything you could ever want in a health and wellness app. Fully customizable workouts? Check? Nature hikes? Check. Gratitude practice? Check. Meditation with a healthy dose of humor? Check! We designed this app to be for EVERY BODY on every type of wellness journey, and it would mean so much to us if you gave it a shot. Search "The RISE App by Rachel Hollis" in your app store or follow this link for iPhone users to get started today! -> https://bit.ly/riseapprhTwo of my very best friends are launching a podcast with us! It's called Everyday Lesbians, and it's like sitting down with a couple of your best friends to chat about all the things: funny things, hard things, movie things, things we don't totally understand (like TikTok???). Join Beans and Sami every week for a bit of fun, and listen to the trailer here: https://bit.ly/EvLpodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
I'm so honored to host Professor Martha S Jones, author and researcher at Johns Hopkins, to talk about the history of the 19th Amendment, and how the stories we tell ourselves about our families and our histories shape the way we move through the world. It's an important conversation to have - especially in this moment when we're remembering the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment to the US Constitution. If you're anything like me, you grew up believing that this amendment gave women the right to vote, but the truth is much more complicated. I hope you'll join Professor Jones and I as we dive into the legacy of Black suffragettes and the power each of us wield as guardians of our own stories. If you enjoyed this conversation as much as I did then you MUST go follow Professor Jones on Instagram: instagram.com/marthasjones/ AND pre-order her latest book VANGUARD here -> https://bookshop.org/books/vanguard-how-black-women-broke-barriers-won-the-vote-and-insisted-on-equality-for-all/9781541618619 Remember listeners: your voice matters because YOU matter. You can check if you're registered to vote by searching your state online, or by clicking here -> https://www.vote.org/am-i-registered-to-vote/ -- Look: we've all either been through it, are currently going through it, or will go through it. That's just how life is: once you think you've got it all figured out, it hits you with something you never saw coming. Grief? Check. Divorce? Check. Global pandemic? Uh, CHECK! That's why I wrote a new book all about conquering hard things and coming out the other side a better, stronger you. It's called Didn't See That Coming, and it's available for pre-order here: https://bit.ly/dstcrise The RISE App is finally HERE y'all and it's got everything you could ever want in a health and wellness app. Fully customizable workouts? Check? Nature hikes? Check. Gratitude practice? Check. Meditation with a healthy dose of humor? Check! We designed this app to be for EVERY BODY on every type of wellness journey, and it would mean so much to us if you gave it a shot. Search "The RISE App by Rachel Hollis" in your app store or follow this link for iPhone users to get started today! -> https://bit.ly/riseapprh Two of my very best friends are launching a podcast with us! It's called Everyday Lesbians, and it's like sitting down with a couple of your best friends to chat about all the things: funny things, hard things, movie things, things we don't totally understand (like TikTok???). Join Beans and Sami every week for a bit of fun, and listen to the trailer here: https://bit.ly/EvLpodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today, women lead voter turnout in the United States. They have voted at higher rates than men in every presidential election since 1989 — and in midterm elections too. Women have had the right to vote for less than half of American history. August 2020 marks the 100th anniversary of the adoption of the Nineteenth Amendment. And racist policies kept too many women of color from the polls for decades beyond that. As we mark this anniversary and weigh that history, MPR News with Kerri Miller is asking: What does it mean to be a woman in America today? During the month of August, we’ll explore this question and look at how women have shaped American culture, politics and power in the last century. Kerri Miller kicked off the series by talking with historian Martha S. Jones about how Black women shaped the country and had to fight their own battle for the right to vote. Guest: Martha S. Jones is a historian and writer. Her forthcoming book is “Vanguard: How Black Women Overcame Barriers, Won the Vote, and Insisted on Equality for All.” A portion of this conversation has been transcribed and lightly edited for clarity. Listen to the full conversation with the audio player above. Kerri Miller: I know Americans have a pretty ambivalent relationship with the idea of power and women. Pew research finds 92 percent of the time ‘power’ is used in a negative way when it describes a woman. We have a long way to go. I feel like, 100 years later, we're still figuring out what it means to use that power and be seen as people who should be able to use that power. I'd love you to reflect on that. I think you're absolutely right. And as we see American women entering into new spheres of power, don't we also see then, if you will, the backlash, the criticism, the commentary. Tuesday in The Washington Post, Michele Norris had a piece about the kind of critiques that have come to women like Kamala Harris as they're being vetted for a spot on the Democratic ticket for the November election — pointing out the ways in which, still, when women make themselves visible in public life, when they put themselves out front, they can expect critiques that probably would not come to men in the same position. Women in public life, particularly in political life, I think have to still anticipate that kind of criticism. Norris notes that this idea of ambition, of aspiring to an exalted political position, is still seen essentially as suspect in women when it is never questioned in men. I mean, there, you've seen the writing about how women who are aspiring to this vice presidential position, how it is seen as unseemly that many of these women are openly saying, ‘Yes, I'd love to have the job and I think I could be successful and bring a lot of value to a Biden presidency.’ I'm hearing the voice of Stacey Abrams in your, in your remarks, right?, Abrams, who's been very forthright and what that really brings up for me is the important degree to which this is an old critique of African American women in particular that goes back to the 1820s, when in a period during which slavery is ending, particularly in the northern United States, African American women are becoming free people aspiring to be citizens and occupying the public space in a city like Philadelphia. They will be caricatured and critiqued, 200 years ago, precisely for aspiring too much. Professor Jones, we did a show about some of the new statistics on who the pandemic is falling most weightily on , (and women are) still doing much of the child care, still doing much of the work that needs done around the home, still juggling the professional jobs, and still trying to make our case in a social construct where there remains a lot of skepticism about this. One of the things that came out in one of the surveys I relied on was that men believe they are doing equal housework and child care. That is one of the things that I find most infuriating. One of the things I think American women struggle against are the myths, right? About who does what, and who carries which burdens. When we aspire to professional, professional accomplishment and more, there is this erasure, isn't there, of the ways in which women continue to carry responsibilities, not only in their immediate families, but in their communities, but also the ways in which women are part of a whole range of civic enterprises, their religious communities, their charitable organizations, their benevolent organizations and more. But we get somehow mythologized either as women, people who cannot, or people who are somehow super and can do it all and it’s very difficult to bring that conversation back down. But I'd add that I think that is one of the reasons that this ongoing struggle for American women's political power includes a question about how to use it. And the question is how to put these questions not simply on the agenda in an exchange with a colleague or friend, right, but how do you put that question on the agenda in a state legislature in Congress for policy makers. That is where women's political power and the kind of risk-taking and the kind of barrier-breaking that women do is essential to moving beyond myth and getting us to some very concrete questions about the ways in which American women fit into the many facets of life, including political life. I note your use of the word ‘risk’ when you talk about how to put these questions into the policy agenda in our political institutions. Risks of what, would you say? Well, I think that there is the risk of being dismissed, right? as somehow inventing concerns out of whole cloth. There is the risk of being accused of somehow, as the women I write about in the 19th century, were accused of unsexing themselves somehow — betraying or abandoning the perceived privileges of womanhood. So these kinds of critiques are, of course, part of the story. But we know, for example, that American women still face a series of scourges. Whether it's for African American women, it’s health disparities or economic disparities. Whether it's the #MeToo question and the prospect of sexual harassment and violence. These continue to be dangerous waters for American women. Even as these are old questions, I can tell you have their origins in the 19th century. It turns out that those concerns and those risks for American women continue even into the 21st century. Listener question: My biggest concern is that returning to school in the fall affects teachers, a group that is still largely comprised of women, and the administrators and politicians, a largely male group, are the ones making the decisions about returning to class and safety and what that will look like. I think this is a feminist fight as well. I'll add another word that is very much of our moment and that is the word “essential.” This rethinking, this new understanding, this illumination, of the ways in which many workers like teachers turn out to be essential workers in a complex and multifaceted American economy. Part of the focus and the urgency around the question of reopening schools is precisely because so many American women need to return fully to the workplace, and school is one facet of that. I'm interested in the ways in which perhaps we have a new opportunity to, if you will, reset the equation and to talk about women as having done the work and continuing to do the work, but more to the point, how essential that work is. Of course, that doesn't mean that we shouldn't talk about women as leaders, women as policy makers, women who are at the helm of these institutions. But I do think this focus on essential work gives us an opportunity to also talk about broad swaths of American women, many of them who have been unsung, unappreciated, unrecognized for the indispensability of the sort of labor that they perform every day. Listener question: I'm very involved in startups and venture capital and after the wake of the killing of George Floyd ... there's been a huge movement, which is necessary, to bring more capital to people of color. However, I see infighting and tension created within the startup and funding community between white women and people of color and women of color specifically. Yes, it's a comment that really does invite us to take history as a set of lessons or at least as a cautionary tale. Because you're right to point out that for much and throughout most of the movement, the women's suffrage movement, the movement that gives us the 19th Amendment, racism becomes an instrument. Racism runs through the politics of women's votes in ways that very much prevent Black and white women from finding common ground, consolidating women's power as Women's Power, and instead you have the kind of fracturing that I think the caller is concerned about. One of my great issues sheroes from the 19th century was a poet, anti slavery lecturer, novelist, and political commentator, Francis Ellen Watkins Harper. Watkins Harper was born in Baltimore, but became a activist of great reputation in part for her speaking style. And as a Black woman when she came into these fraught scenes, white men, Black men, white women, all speaking in narrow terms about their interests. Her wonderful line is “we are all bound up together in one great bundle of humanity.” And this value really comes to be at the core of African American women's quest for the vote. But as I suggested, when they confront racism, when they discover white suffragists using racism as part of their tactic to win the 19th Amendment, African American women pull back and continue to work in their own organizations, but do not find a hospitable, if you will, home for their political ambitions, in collaboration with white women. So it is a fraught history. That brings us to 2020. And the ongoing necessity for American women to struggle to find their own common ground, to discover how they are bound up together as humanity. And so I'm deeply sympathetic and appreciative in fact of the caller's work as she's described it, right, that this requires conversation, it requires listening, it requires some time ceding authority where one might enjoy it. But in my view, if we're going to talk about American women, as women in the 21st century, there's no way to do that without moving through as difficult and fraught, as it is the legacies of, among other things, anti Black racism in order to get there. I just think there's no shortcut around those conversations. In some ways, it seems like the white suffragists felt that this was a zero-sum game as in, if people of color — specifically men of color — get the vote first, we will again have to wait. Could you describe how they saw the political landscape? So we're going back to a critical moment in U.S. history, the years after the Civil War. The Constitution is being rewritten. The nation is going through a Reconstruction that incorporates four million formerly enslaved people into the body politic as citizens. This is a revolution in the United States and it is also an opportunity for rethinking the fundamental terms of who is in and who is out when it comes to political rights. You're right to point to the opportunities of this period, which appear to many as coming out of Congress to be some protection for African-American men's votes, by way of the 14th and then the 15th Amendments to the Constitution. But within certainly radical political coalitions, there’s no companion proposals coming out of Congress for women's votes. So how to think about that? Well, there's not one way to think about that, of course, and notoriously, Elizabeth Cady Stanton will take the position that no one should win the vote in this era before educated white women. This is her position, right? Educated women should come first. Frederick Douglass sees the question of voting rights as a matter of life and death for African American men who are facing violence in the public square in the wake of slavery abolition. But I mentioned Francis Ellen Watkins Harper. Importantly, because oftentimes when we look back on that history, she and other Black women like Sojourner Truth who are part of the scene also get erased or overlooked. And yet I think that it's Francis Ellen Watkins Harper who sets the bar high, who says, in essence, no racism, no sexism, politics should not concede to either of those prejudices. And as a coalition, as a nation, we should be speaking about political rights in terms of humanity and all of humanity. This is a legacy that African American women leave to us. In fact, it turns out, the reason I call women like Watkins Harper “the vanguard” is that she articulates a political vision, a set of values that today in the 21st century, I don't think we would argue with right? Racism and sexism should have no place in arbitrating political rights in the United States, but she has that vision going all the way back to the 1860s. And of course, she's not successful, and there will be splinters and factions, and women's voting politics will proceed. Oftentimes, it’s by way of a dirty bargain with racism, particularly when that movement looks to bring white Southern women and their husbands and fathers sympathetically into the movement. African American women will be set to the side. They will be marginalized. And that is, frankly, one of the legacies as well of the 19th Amendment and it is a legacy that we still are grappling with even today. Listener question: The 14th Amendment, under the equal protection clause, women's rights are still not explicitly guaranteed even in 2020. I wanted to get your thoughts on how this impacts women today. Is it symbolic? Is it creating barriers? Or does it have no effect? The 14th amendment, it turns out, has no teeth of its own. We have, for a very long time, looked to Congress to give teeth to that amendment, to the 15th Amendment, to the 19th Amendment. And so it takes, for example, until the Civil Rights Act for the equality principle, in the 14th Amendment, to actually become something that both lawmakers and citizens can use. I think an even bigger point is that constitutional amendments on their own don't do the kind of work that we might hope they would do or that we need them to do. It requires, then, Congress to act on those and give teeth to those amendments. And it requires, of course, us citizens to be vigilant and to breathe meaning into something like the 14th Amendment. No American becomes equal by virtue of the 14th amendment. It's only when that amendment is put into practice, that we begin to see its potential. Today, American women are facing a gnarly fight over the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment, still a live question many, many, many decades, almost a century after Alice Paul first put forward the Equal Rights Amendment. We are going to live in real time, both through the struggle for that amendment as ratification, and then, what does it mean to give teeth to the promise of equality to American women? That is something we will have to be vigilant about if we want that amendment to have meaning in our lives. Do you think the ERA is worth the investment of time and energy? Or should we turn our limited time and energy to other causes? I think we've come this far with the ERA and it's time to see it through. … We are as close as we're ever going to be and so I'm one who would like to see us see that amendment through to the Constitution.
During this uncertain age, we have decided to share the voices of the strong real women we love and know. At BeachCandy Swimwear, we believe all women deserve to shine their brightest in a swimsuit. Our passion for women and the world is why we started the brand in the first place. Listen to women who are dedicated leaders in their space, whether it be motherhood or building an empire, the BeachCandy Babe shines the brightest of all.Featuring Professor Adrienne Jones, who life is led with courageous creativity & a zest for making lemonade with life at all times. Adrienne has been teaching technical fashion design & pattern making at Pratt Institute in NYC for over 25 years. And is the first black woman to achieve tenured professor status at Pratt. In 2014, Professor Jones conceived and co-curated the landmark exhibition Black Dress, which honors Black designers & addresses the lack of diversity in the fashion industry. This exhibition was highly publicized by Elle, W, Huffington Post & more!We are so proud to honor Adrienne on this podcast for she is an unsung hero to so many throughout the years. So pour yourself a glass of sparkling & enjoy this discussion with such an iconic real woman.To Learn More About Adrienne & The Black Dress http://www.blackdressexhibit.com/staff REAL WOMEN SHINE PODCAST PRESENTED BY BEACHCANDYSWIMWEAR.COM
Benjamin F. Jones is the Gordon and Llura Gund Family Professor of Entrepreneurship, a Professor of Strategy, and the faculty director of the Kellogg Innovation and Entrepreneurship Initiative. An economist by training, Professor Jones studies the sources of economic growth in advanced economies, with an emphasis innovation, entrepreneurship, and scientific progress. He also studies global economic development, including the roles of education, climate, and national leadership in explaining the wealth and poverty of nations. His research has appeared in journals such as Science, the Quarterly Journal of Economics and the American Economic Review, and has been profiled in media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal, the Economist, and The New Yorker.A former Rhodes Scholar, Professor Jones served in 2010-2011 as the senior economist for macroeconomics for the White House Council of Economic Advisers and earlier served in the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Professor Jones is a non-resident senior fellow of the Brookings Institution, a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, and a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
As we continue reading Chris Columbus’ Indy script, we wrap up the Scooby Doo portion (which appears to have no bearing on anything to come), we get some bizarre Professor Jones hijinks before our quest is finally established, and yes, there is a fair amount of attempted suicide, as all Indiana Jones movies must have…?If you watched Temple of Doom one time, on an airplane, drunk, with a crying baby next to you and headphones that kept cutting out and that was all you ever knew about Indiana Jones and then 10 years later, you tried to write a script based on what you remembered, you might write this exact script! Let us know what you think by dropping us a line on Twitter @theTableReads. You can also follow us on Instagram @theTableReads or Facebook at www.facebook.com/tablereads. You can also find us wherever fine podcasts are downloaded! Find us on your favorite platform by visiting http://www.tablereadspodcast.com/listen
IFE Grand Challenge Lecture, recorded 12 April 2019 at QUT Today, we live longer and more prosperous lives than ever before. As a species, we have made huge advances to create conditions for better health for billions of people, however this progress is taking a heavy toll on the planet's natural systems. In this lecture, Professor Jones explores the links and interdependencies between our health and the health of our planet, with particular reference to understanding how rapid global environmental change impacts the emergence and spread of high-impact infectious diseases like Ebola or SARS. She also outlines how recent advances in the resolution and coverage of remote-sensing satellite data and cutting-edge machine-learning algorithms open up the possibilities of developing global early warning systems to prevent and manage future epidemics.
IFE Grand Challenge Lecture, recorded 12 April 2019 at QUTToday, we live longer and more prosperous lives than ever before. As a species, we have made huge advances to create conditions for better health for billions of people, however this progress is taking a heavy toll on the planet's natural systems. In this lecture, Professor Jones explores the links and interdependencies between our health and the health of our planet, with particular reference to understanding how rapid global environmental change impacts the emergence and spread of high-impact infectious diseases like Ebola or SARS. She also outlines how recent advances in the resolution and coverage of remote-sensing satellite data and cutting-edge machine-learning algorithms open up the possibilities of developing global early warning systems to prevent and manage future epidemics.
Scholars have widely discussed colorism – the differential treatment of same-race individuals based on skin color – with regard to the African-American community. They have less frequently examined colorism’s worldwide dimensions. Yet, the manufacture of products offering the prospect of lighter, brighter, whiter skin is a multi-billion dollar global industry, with Asia being a key market. Importantly, the salience accorded skin color varies depending upon geographical location and social context. In this seminar, Professor Jones will discuss: (1) the ways in which skin color operates within different racialized communities, with a specific focus on African Americans, Asians, and Asian Americans; and (2) how skin tone differences influence perceptions of individual and group identity and complicate coalition building within and across racial groups. Trina Jones, Jerome M. Culp Professor of Law, Duke University School of Law
In celebrating 500 years since the birth of Sir Thomas Gresham, Professor Jones will examine how changes since the sixteenth century have affected the evolution of human beings and that of the animals and plants around us. Professor Jones will deal with the accelerating shifts in plants, animals and humans as they cope with human activities, from gold-mining to global warming, and will speculate about where life might be on Gresham's six- hundredth anniversary.A lecture by Steve Jones, Visiting Professor of Genetics 29 January 2019The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: https://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/evolution-gresham-five-centuriesGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 2,000 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk Twitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollege Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollege Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/greshamcollege
Donald Marvin Jones, Professor of Law, is a Baltimore native and a graduate of the New York University School of Law. He is an author and commentator who has earned an international reputation by thinking critically about important issues concerning the civil and political rights of all Americans.Professor Jones is the author of Four books which weaves together law, history, and human narratives to explore the gulf between formal equality and the social disadvantage people of color still experience in their lives. Professor Jones has appeared on PBS' Frontline, CNN's Burden of Proof; The O'Reilly Factor among other media appearances.We'll discuss his new book “Dangerous Spaces: Beyond the Racial Profile” today on Thirty Four-50
Donald Marvin Jones, Professor of Law, is a Baltimore native and a graduate of the New York University School of Law. He is an author and commentator who has earned an international reputation by thinking critically about important issues concerning the civil and political rights of all Americans. Professor Jones is the author of Four books which weaves together law, history, and human narratives to explore the gulf between formal equality and the social disadvantage people of color still experience in their lives. Professor Jones has appeared on PBS' Frontline, CNN's Burden of Proof; The O'Reilly Factor among other media appearances. We’ll discuss his new book “Dangerous Spaces: Beyond the Racial Profile” today on Thirty Four-50
In this episode we hear from Martha Jones, professor of history and of Afroamerican and African studies at the university of Michigan, as well as director of the Michigan Law Program in Race, Law, and History. Professor Jones discusses a book she recently co-edited, Toward an Intellectual History of Black Women. We also explore the significance of that work in light of the current political situation in America, especially given the recent election of Donald Trump to the presidency. This interview was recorded in October, 2016.
Do you consider the first 10 seconds of a consultation to be important? Have you looked at your clinic space and how that might affect your patients? In this podcast Steve Aspinall (BASRaT) speaks to Richmond Stace @painphysio about the importance of compassion and active listening in the treatment of pain. Richmond is presenting at the BASRaT symposium on the 18th of November in London. Our Symposium this year will focus on pain; with unmissable keynote speeches from experts in the field and presentations and workshops that will enrich your knowledge. Focussing exclusively on pain and all its forms and manifestations it will be vital for practitioners to help manage and manipulate pain and help people from all walks of life. Our unmissable range of speakers includes Richmond Stace who is leading advances in understanding and treating pain and has created the pain coach programme. Richmond will look into the importance of the first point of contact, how we can gain information from the first few words. We have a range of workshops including "Gold from Rio"- BASRaT Sport Rehabilitator, Hannah Crowley helped Ed Clancy on his road to recovery from a back injury and to his gold medal win at Rio. Our closing keynote "Pain, the Brain and a little bit of Magic" will be presented by Professor Anthony Jones. Professor Jones is an MSK pain specialist and leads the Human Pain Research Group. This one day event on Friday 18th November will be packed full of essential speeches, presentations and seminars, enriching your knowledge and aiding your work. BOOK NOW. Visit basrat.eventbrite.co.uk. Timeline: 1:03 How big is the problem of pain? 2:39 What does good communication mean? 8:00 What are the key points in an interview about pain? 12:11 How to pain the patients journey? 16:44 Is neuroscience education important? 18:59 Key messages for the clinician Links: http://basrat.org/ http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/o/british-association-of-sport-rehabilitators-and-trainers-6930299875
Tis the season and Professor Fat Liver Jones is giving gifts. This week on #OccupyABarStool, Professor Jones rambles about celebrities giving back during the holidays, expensive gifts, and what he would do if his kids tried to kill him, but failed! Fat Liver Jones gets on the line with the CEO of The WEM Agency, William E Murphy IV and his business partner Love Allah. Listen up as the duo is dropping gems for you future CEOs and entrepreneurs to pick up. They talk about what it takes to be a CEO, what exactly marketing is, and their TOP 5 CEOs of all time.
An afternoon strolling through a selection of majors ends up being a little more than Isaac and Ash bargained for when a professor is killed. Luckily, professor Truman is on the case. Can he find the murder before Isaac and Ash get a untimely look at the after life themselves? ---------- Starting: Robert Blake as Professor Truman, Yannik Encarnacao as Professor Jones, Alysaa Cokinis as Professor Stabstien, August Magee as Professor Nessbit, and Chris Walbert as Professor Stiff and Professor Von Vict, you also Ash Pierce and Isaac Hamlet. Music done by Chloe Cable. Episode was written by Isaac Hamlet and Directed by Patrick Lussenhop. Students, Gods, and Other Codependents was created by Ash Pierce and Isaac Hamlet.
This week Fat Liver Jones speaks on the vice principal who appeared in a Trey Songz video and got in some heat, a drunk guy falls in a hole and has a road built over him, and a woman in Texas who asked her Facebook friends to shoot her dog. PETA might wanna sit this one out! Also, Professor Jones gets on the line with Tennessee rapper JAE Flip to talk about his latest project "Bentley Dreamz" and the blurred guidelines in Hip Hop. -CHEERS!
Laurence Colletti interviews panelists Professor Donald Jones and Emily Patricia Graham about their seminar “Counseling the Provocative Client” at The Florida Bar 2015 Annual Convention. A provocative client produces art or content that may be offensive to members of the public and needs legal advice or legal representation in court to defend his or her First Amendment rights. Professor Jones shares his view on how hip hop music artists are often set up to fail in a society of structural racism. Emily Patricia Graham talks about being a transactional attorney who advises clients in film, fashion, and music about the practical issues of marketplace value.
Eminent geneticist and scientist, Steve Jones, asks whether humans will evolve in the future: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/is-human-evolution-overHumans have evolved from ape-like ancestors over millions of years, of course; but also over thousands, for there are several cases in which we can identify natural selection - genetic changes in response to an environmental shift - over just a few millennia. Professor Jones has been criticised for saying that at least in the developed world, and at least for the time being, this process is over. But natural selection depends on differences in survival and reproduction and they have, more or less, gone away. Processes quite different from those of the past will shape our genetic future. The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/is-human-evolution-overGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,700 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollege
The 1980s of Harrison's career (maybe the strongest decade of any actor ever) end with Indy being called "Junior" by Sean Connery in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Pretty damn good movie for Harrison and the world and we break it down. We get it all in the one, River Phoenix works in a Harrison movie again, this time playing a young version of Indy instead of his son. Brody and Sallah return, Professor Jones is back, the hottest Indy Girl ever, Indy meets Hitler, more Germans, and that dude the drove a AT-AT on Hoth and told Darth Vader it was cool to come down to the planet now. Once we get done with Last Crusade (sorry, it takes a while) we get through some recent Ford news including the Age Of Adoline trailer and some teaser trailer thingy with a R2-D2 Beach Ball and THE FREAKING MILLENNIUM FALCON!! Choose wisely and listen! ------------------------------------------- Music by Night Stop, song called “Harrison Ford” Thanks for listening! Show is hosted by Mike and Trent. Contact us: harrisonfordpodcast@gmail.com.GOMP is part of the Dorktown Network of podcasts.
We rejoin Harrison Ford's career as he lands the part of "Bob Falfa" in American Graffiti and joins up with George Lucas for the first time. It's his first "cool-guy" and give us signs of what's to come.We also break down all his parts that lead up to Han Solo including The Conversation where he has a confrontation with Gene Hackman...well, Gene's character anyway. There is also a little know part that is eerily similar to "Professor Jones". And we talk a little Star Wars pre-game.Thanks for listening. Contact us at harrisonfordpodcast@gmail.comHOSTS: Mike and Trent.
Raise your hand if you didn't want to become an archaeologist after seeing Raiders of the Lost Ark. Jim and Megan discuss the fine movie (and other movies) about our favorite Professor Jones. Next week on Nerd Novice: the rest of the Indiana Jones movies (that matter)
Professor Yvonne Jones tells us how structural biology was brought into the field of immunology in Oxford, at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics. Professor Jones also explains the developments of her current research on cell surface receptors as mediators of nerve cells guidance.
How closely are we related to each other, and how recently do we all share an ancestor? The answer to those questions is: closer and more recently than you might think.Professor Jones discusses patterns of relatedness in ancient and modern populations and how they can be...
More than any other issue, the current election hinges on the state of the economy and the government's role in it. Since the Great Depression, the public has grown accustomed to the government taking an active role in combating recessions through its spending and taxing powers. Professor Jones explores how current economic thought and research evaluate the effectiveness of such fiscal policy.
Tonight is a replay of the show from Wednesday, January 18th at 12PM, featuring Southern Oregon University Professor Gregory V. Jones. Professor Jones is a research climatologist in the Department of Environmental Studies at Southern Oregon University who specializes in the study of climate structure and suitability for viticulture, and how climate variability and change influence grapevine growth, wine production and quality. This is a replay/Best of... The show was featured on Blog Talk Radio. We were on at a special time to accomodate our guest. Show host, Ron, will be on LIVE before/after the show.
Today, we have a special All About Wine show featuring Southern Oregon University Professor Gregory V. Jones. Professor Jones is a research climatologist in the Department of Environmental Studies at Southern Oregon University who specializes in the study of climate structure and suitability for viticulture, and how climate variability and change influence grapevine growth, wine production and quality. Read his extensive bio and accomplishments on the Southern Oregon University's website HERE Call-in during this program and speak with our special guest LIVE on-air. Or Email your questions early - send questions to allaboutwine101@gmail.com
Professor Yvonne Jones talks about cell-cell communication and how this can help us develop new drugs. Cells communicate through receptors on their surface; however, when these finely tuned systems don't work correctly, diseases can be triggered. Professor Yvonne Jones has been working to identify the structural biology of cell surface recognition and signalling complexes. Receptors embedded in the surface are potential targets for therapeutic intervention in many diseases including cancer. Professor Jones is director of the Cancer Research UK Receptor Structure Research Group.
Professor Yvonne Jones talks about cell-cell communication and how this can help us develop new drugs. Cells communicate through receptors on their surface; however, when these finely tuned systems don't work correctly, diseases can be triggered. Professor Yvonne Jones has been working to identify the structural biology of cell surface recognition and signalling complexes. Receptors embedded in the surface are potential targets for therapeutic intervention in many diseases including cancer. Professor Jones is director of the Cancer Research UK Receptor Structure Research Group.
Planet of the Spiders is a in the series , which was first broadcast in six weekly parts from May 4 to June 8, 1974. It was 's last serial as and marks the first, uncredited appearance of in the role. It also marks the last appearance of . Contents [] [] Synopsis Mysterious goings-on at a meditation retreat run by monks are linked to the blue planet , and a colony of monstrous, evolved spiders. The Doctor must reflect on his past and reconcile with his present to defeat a deadly and possibly fatal challenge... [] Plot Following the events of , was discharged from and is now attending a Tibetan meditation centre in rural . He is visited by and they witness some curious happenings at the centre, seemingly organised by a resident called Lupton, a middle aged former salesman, and his cronies. Mike and Sarah stumble across Lupton performing an incantation, which conjures up a giant spider into the middle of the basement room. It jumps on Lupton's back and then disappears. The spider manifests itself in Lupton's head, telling him to seek out and locate a certain blue crystal. The has developed an interest in psychic ability, but his testing of a clairvoyant called Professor Clegg backfires when his subject has a heart attack. It is triggered when Clegg comes into contact with a blue crystal from Metebelis Three (sent back from the Amazon by ), which caused him to see the image of deadly spiders. Sarah returns from the retreat, having left Mike to watch things there, and she and the Doctor swap spider tales. Meanwhile Lupton has also arrived at UNIT HQ and steals the crystal from the Doctor's laboratory. A multi-vehicle chase ensues which Lupton escapes by teleporting himself back to the monastery. Once there, the spider reveals that it is plotting against some of its sisters back on Metebelis Three. The spiders and the crystal originate from the same blue planet in the Acteon Galaxy, which was none too hospitable to the Doctor the last time he visited (during ). The Doctor and Sarah now make for the monastery and tell the deputy abbot, Cho-Je, that something is very amiss. The crystal now strays again when it is taken by Tommy, the simple-minded handyman of the retreat, whose mind is opened and improved by the power of the crystal. Lupton is teleported to Metebelis Three, unconsciously allowing Sarah to follow him. She soon meets the human slave inhabitants of the planet, a generally dispirited bunch, other than the rebellious Arak, who flees to the mountains. The planet is ruled by the Eight-Legs or giant spiders, and their Queen is the supreme ruler. They govern using guards chosen from among the planet's Two-Leg (human) population and their own phenomenal mental powers, amplified by the blue stones of the planet. The Doctor arrives on the planet and he makes contact with Arak, who explains that the Metebelians are the descendants of the crew of an earth space ship, which crashed hundreds of years before. A spider on board found its way to the Blue Mountains where, through the effect of the crystals, its progeny grew larger and larger and cleverer and cleverer. The Doctor works out that a “negative” stone can absorb and reject the power of the blue crystals and starts a revolt among the humans, but this is defeated and the Doctor ventures to the Blue Mountains. There he encounters the Great One, a giant spider which controls the world of Metebelis and desires power over other domains too. She knows the crystal is still on Earth and sends the Doctor there to get it for her. He flees back to Earth with Sarah – not knowing the Queen spider has now implanted itself in his companion's mind. Tommy has given the crystal to the abbot, K'anpo Rinpoche, who is an elderly and the one-time hermit mentor of the Doctor. He now lives in peaceful exile on Earth. He tells the Doctor of Sarah's control and they work together to expel the Queen Spider. A fight breaks in the monastery between Lupton's cronies and the Abbot's men. The Abbot advises the Doctor to take the crystal to the Great One: the Doctor started this chain of events by removing the crystal in the first place, and it is up to him to put it back. He departs in the TARDIS with the crystal. On Metebelis Three, Lupton has been killed by the spiders after falling out with the Spider Queen. When the TARDIS lands, the Doctor heads to the cave of the Great One and gives her the crystal, which she uses to complete a lattice that begins to magnify her mental powers. However, the forces unleashed are too strong for the Great One and the positive feedback kills her and the other spiders. A vast wave of deadly radiation floods the cave. The Doctor, now very weak, staggers back to the TARDIS and teleports away. Three weeks later, and Sarah are in the Doctor's laboratory when the Doctor returns and promptly collapses, and the Doctor dies. The abbot K'anpo arrives in his new body, having regenerated into the form of Cho-Je, who was a sort of forward projection of his soul. He tells them that the Doctor will change too and before their eyes the Doctor starts to regenerate into the . [] Cast notes This story marks the final appearance of Richard Franklin as Captain Mike Yates. Franklin would reprise his role in (1983) and (1993), although on both occasions they were illusory versions of Yates. After his departure from the series, Franklin would go on to become a stage and television director. Kismet Delgado, the widow of , who had played the during the Third Doctor's era, was one of the voices for the Spiders. Gareth Hunt, who would go on to play Mike Gambit in , appears here as a human rebel on Metebelis III. would later play Nimrod in . [] Production Serial details by episode EpisodeBroadcast dateRun timeViewership (in millions)Archive "Part One" 4 May 1974 (1974-05-04) 24'40" 10.1 PAL 2" colour videotape "Part Two" 11 May 1974 (1974-05-11) 25'02" 8.9 PAL 2" colour videotape "Part Three" 18 May 1974 (1974-05-18) 24'58" 8.8 PAL 2" colour videotape "Part Four" 25 May 1974 (1974-05-25) 23'53" 8.2 PAL 2" colour videotape "Part Five" 1 Jun 1974 24'01" 9.2 PAL 2" colour videotape "Part Six" 8 Jun 1974 24'43" 8.9 PAL 2" colour videotape The final story of Season 11 (to have been titled The Final Game) was originally intended to write out the character of , with the villainous sacrificing his life to save the Doctor's. Due to the death of actor , abandoned the project in favour of a new story, which eventually evolved into Planet of the Spiders. Coincidentally, Kismet Delgado, Roger's widow provided her voice to one of the spiders. The train station Sarah Jane arrives at in Part One is , near . [] Continuity This story was the second and last appearance of the "". The character of Surgeon-Lieutenant , the UNIT medical officer, is referred to by the Brigadier who calls for him when the Doctor falls into a daze after staring into the crystal. Sullivan would not actually appear on screen until , where he was played by . The Spiders of Metebelis Three make further appearances in the short story "Return of the Spiders" by (in the collection ) and a brief appearance in the by . They also have a full encounter with the Eighth Doctor in the audios and by . The novels and by has the time-travelling voodoo cult changing history so that the events of this story never happen and instead having the Third Doctor regenerating on a planet named Dust after being shot. A later novel in the series, by and , resolves this paradox and restores the Doctor's timeline to its previous state. The of the novels is unclear. It is unclear how long it takes the Doctor to return to Earth in the TARDIS from Metebelis Three, although three weeks have passed for Sarah and the Brigadier. in the novel established that the TARDIS was lost in the time vortex for the equivalent of ten years. This is revealed during a sequence in cyberspace where agents of the alien race called the Hoothi are attempting to trap the in a virtual recreation of the worst moments of his life, of which this regeneration is the most painful for the Doctor to re-live. This story includes the character of K'anpo Rimpoche, the previously unnamed hermit from the Doctor's childhood, first mentioned in . K'anpo has the power to travel through time without the use of a TARDIS, to make a corporeal projection of a potential future incarnation (Cho-Je) of himself, and to stimulate the regeneration process of another Time Lord. K'anpo was referenced again in the serial as the man who told the Doctor about the legends of the Great Vampires. The Doctor regenerates due to radiation poisoning a second time when the allows himself to absorb a lethal dose of radiation to save his current companion in . [] In print book Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders Series Release number 48 Writer Publisher Cover artist ISBN Release date 16 October 1975 A novelisation of this serial, written by , was published by in October 1975 as Doctor Who and the Planet of the Spiders. The novel's prologue shows and her husband Professor Jones in the Amazon jungle following the events of . is referred to as Doctor Sweatman. [] Broadcast, VHS release & DVD Release This story was repeated on BBC One as a 105-minute omnibus on 27 December 1974 at 14:46. The serial was released on in April 1991 as a double pack. It will be released on DVD in the UK on DVD on 18 April 2011. It will be released in the USA and Canada on 10 May 2011. [] References Shaun Lyon et al. (2007-03-31). . Outpost Gallifrey. . Retrieved 2008-08-30. [] . Doctor Who Reference Guide. . Retrieved 2008-08-30. Sullivan, Shannon (2007-08-07). . A Brief History of Time Travel. . Retrieved 2008-08-30. ; (1996). "Planet of the Spiders (ZZZ)". Doctor Who The Handbook - The Third Doctor. London: . p. 162. . . Doctor Who Online - Release Guide. 17 February 2011. . Retrieved 18 February 2011. Lambert, David (26 January 2011). . TVShowsOnDVD.com. para. 3. . Retrieved 27 January 2011.
Pack up your twinkies and start working on your cardio! Professor Jones is here to law down the law and present to you the sweet science of Zombie Apocalpytic Survival. Peter and A.Ron have his back as the gang discusses the finer points of safe houses, anti-dead weaponry, minimalist transportation, and more.
This podcast is a continuation from last week exploring the PowerPoint presentation by physics professor Steven E. Jones. Professor Jones asks the burning question "Why Indeed Did the World Trade Center Buildings Collapse?" and hypothesizes that pre-planted explosive charges, possibly Thermite, were used to bring down the WTC towers and building 7.