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Le golf suisse a obtenu de gros résultats ces dernières semaines avec le doublé Morgane Mettraux – Chiara Tamborlini à Evian et le top-3 de Joel Girrbach en Chine. De quoi ravir la présidente de Swiss Golf, Barbara Albisetti-Heath, et inspirer les jeunes romands Tiffany Arafi et Robert Foley que Sport Première a rencontré début mai lors du Team Day de la fédération de Sempach.
On episode six hundred and twenty-two, the story of Joseph R Kerrey is told and episodes for all of March, April, May, and most of June, will be living recipients (mostly from the Vietnam War). Happy 82nd birthday to Robert Foley! For his story: https://www.talesofhonorpodcast.com/stories/robert-f-foley Read today's story: https://www.talesofhonorpodcast.com/stories/joseph-r-kerrey Be sure to visit our website for more information as the show goes on at: www.talesofhonorpodcast.com. Thanks for listening and be sure to share with friends and family!
Michaela Quinlan, certified sommelier, and Robert Tas explore the wine list at The Federal where white table elegance and an innovative “new American” cuisine with Italian and French influences ensure an enjoyable and memorable dining experience, but let's not forget the wine. The extensive wine list features half bottles, magnums, stand-out value wines, and excellent dessert wines, and fortunately, Michaela is here to help point out the bottles that will pique your palate and tickle your taste buds. Wines reviewed include: 2021 Castello di Neive, Montebertotto, Arneis, Italy 2017 Robert Foley, The Griffin, Red Blend, Napa 2019 Domaine Christian Moreau 1er Cru Chablis Vaillons, Burgundy For more information on today's episode, and the wines you love to love, visit www.corkrules.com.
In recognition of veterans day, I sat down to speak with Robert Foley, a former Navy SEAL with Native American ethnicity who has lived with severe trauma all of his life stemming from his rough upbringing to his time in combat. Robert's inspiring story is one of overcoming immense pain and finding solace by bringing healing work to others using equestrian therapy, Japanese forest bathing, and the mystical powers of nature.
Robert Foley has been a rockstar in this industry for 40+ years making incredible wines. links to a couple of his wines in the bio. https://www.edsfinewines.com/wine-store/wine/red-wine/charbono/robert-foley-charbono/ https://www.edsfinewines.com/wine-store/wine/red-wine/merlot/robert-foley-vineyards-merlot/
This is a special episode and interview with Robert Foley, a trained Lawyer, addiction coach and advocate for recovery. We talk about his early family life, his legal career, addiction, sobriety, and his eventual life of service to the recovery community. https://www.linkedin.com/in/robert-foley-j-d-98839a119?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BEH94dACHTIyv3Oq9Tc9b6w%3D%3D
We talked with 5 winemakers/vintners out of Napa and Sonoma to get a true taste of the 2020 Harvest. Fires wrecked havoc on the vineyards and winemakers await patiently to see if their grapes are smoke tainted or not. In this episode, we get a first hand view from David Ramey, Tom Meadowcroft, Michael Keenan, Robert Foley and Tor Kenward. This episode is one not to be missed.
On this episode, I sit down with Robert Foley. Robert is a world renowned wine maker and owner of Robert Foley vineyards in Napa Valley. Dubbed as the “God of Cabernet” by acclaimed wine critics and publications he is known as one of the iconic winemaker that helped make Napa what it is today. Bob is best known for his unique style of creating very expressive wines that finish gracefully. graduated from UC Davis with degrees in both Viticulture and Enology and spent the beginning of his career working for wineries such as Heitz Cellars, Markham and Pride before moving on to create his very own wine under his name Robert Foley. To support this podcast, please visit: https://www.patreon.com/everydayfoodandwine?fan_landing=true For more information on our incredible guest, please visit: https://www.robertfoleyvineyards.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sarah-faherty8/support
05NOV1966: Commanding Alpha Company, 2-27IN, CPT Robert Foley and his men were tasked with moving to the aid of a surrounded American unit to pull them to safety. The unit was involved in Operation Attleboro, a search and destroy mission that came under heavy contact all across their positions early in the mission. With the company commander killed and taking heavy casualties, Foley and his men were called upon to reinforce. Moving through friendly lines to reach the cut off unit, Foley and his men were barely 40m into the patrol when they came under intense enemy fire. With the incredibly dense jungle canopy, it was hard to see very far in any direction which gave the dug in enemy an advantage. Quickly, both of Foley's radio operators were wounded. He moved both through the hail of gunfire back to a covered area to have their wounds treated. Moving back forward to assess the situation, Foley watched as one of his machine gunners was hit and fell. Now angered that his men were being killed and he was at risk of being pinned down, the company commander grabbed the machine gun and assaulted forward. Having linked as much ammunition as he could together, Foley rushed towards multiple enemy positions and fired inside at point blank range. Continuing the assault until three bunkers were cleared, Foley looked back to see his men pressing forward with the attack. Shortly, Foley and his men would break through the enemy lines and reach the stranded Americans. Due in large part to his assaulting through the enemy ambush, Foley's unit was able to rescue the Americans and bring them back to base. For his brave and selfless act, CPT Robert Foley was awarded the Medal of Honor. He would continue to serve a total of 37 years, reaching the rank of Lieutenant General and retiring in 2000.
In this week's espressode, Jaclyn tells the crazy story of Kentucky serial killer, Robert Foley. This is an episode you won't want to miss!Instagram: @caffeinatedcrimespodEmail: caffeinatedcrimespod@gmail.com Promo: Check out our podcast friends at It Takes 3 Network!Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/caffeinatedcrimes)
In this episode we talk with well-renowned winemaker Bob Foley as we discuss his love of wine and music. We talk the Beatles and Charbono along with everything else in between. You will sure enjoy to say the least!Check out our patreon site for some bonus content on Robert and other past guests!https://www.patreon.com/corkandtaylor
Michael Rosen asks what the earliest language was and how it evolved. Michael joins linguist Dr Laura Wright on a journey to meet our meat-scavenging, fire-harnessing ancestors to discover the primal sources of language. There are thousands of languages today - is it possible to trace them back to a single ancestor? With anthropologist Robert Foley and linguist Maggie Tallerman. Producer: Melvin Rickarby
"Censorship is saying: 'I'm the one who says the last sentence. Whatever you say, the conclusion is mine.' But the internet is like a tree that is growing. The people will always have the last word - even if someone has a very weak, quiet voice. Such power will collapse because of a whisper." -Ai Weiwei RA and Ruthie ping pong Hot Trending Now Topics which include the NYC Blackout, Google manipulating search Engines, The Service of Surveillance, Is Facebook listening, Updates on Epstein, Media Programming, Boundaries, and the importance of protecting your free time. As always we wrap up with our Cafecito Cup of Wisdom Holistic Health Recommendations. Love Shouts: Rick Perry: Now that Ross Perot is gone, I can tell this story· Sources: https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2019/07/07/google-tracks-all-gmail-account-purchases-even-if-emails-deleted/1669249001/?utm_source=feedblitz&utm_medium=FeedBlitzRss&utm_campaign=usatoday-techtopstories https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/talkingtech/2019/06/27/does-facebook-listen-to-your-conversations/1478468001/ https://onezero.medium.com/amazon-is-watching-d51b20f1668a https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/j5w9yb/if-climate-change-makes-you-feel-hopeless-maybe-religion-can-help https://lifehacker.com/how-to-protect-your-free-time-from-other-people-1836223035 Did Google's Manipulation Sway Vaccine Legislation?· Google Manipulating Search Suggestions to Hide Roundup’s Cancer Connection, Lawsuits· Google Contractors Listen to Recordings of People Using Virtual Assistant · Stop Calling Epstein's Victim's 'Underage Women.' They're Children. · Senator Robert Foley on the Death of his Daughter Following the Pertussi: https://youtu.be/XvQEEkhs5b8 via @YouTube· · Based on VAERS reports from 1997-2013, 79.4% of children that died from SIDS had received >1 vaccine within the preceding 24 hours. https://twitter.com/salliekp75/status/1149031552782934016?s=12o Original Source: https://t.co/bvKxAaTbmO AOC’s Chief-Of-Staff Admits Green New Deal About Implementing Socialism· Bombshell Claim: Scientists Find "Man-made Climate Change Doesn't Exist In Practice"
On this special 50th episode of Rock'N Vino we sit down with acclaimed Sonoma County Winemaker Jesse Katz. Even being a young winemaker, Jesse has an expansive background at Lancaster, Robert Foley, Screaming Eagle, and has studied wine across the world. His current labels include Aperture Cellars and Devil Proof Vineyards. Jesse has the distinction of being the youngest (and only) winemaker ever to make the Forbes 30 Under 30, his wine set the world record for highest selling price at auction, and even made the wine for Justin Timberlake and wife Jessica Biel's wedding.
"We have now seen the unseeable" according to scientists who are part of the Event Horizon Telescope group. The international team has released a picture of the first black hole. Data gathered from an array of over 8 radio telescopes has been crunched to create a picture of the super-hot plasma surrounding the black hole M87. It shows extremely excited photons on the brink of being swallowed up by the supermassive black hole, 500 million trillion km away. Marnie Chesterton, asks UCL cosmologist Andrew Pontzen what the glowing doughnut-shaped image can tell us about the laws of gravity and relativity. A new species of hominin has been discovered in caves at the northernmost tip of the Philippines, on the island of Luzon. The discoverers have called this creature Homo luzonensis, and it's thought to be 50,000 years or older. The teeth, hand and foot bones suggest it could have been a mixture of early modern humans - Homo sapiens- and older ancestors like the Australopithecines. Cambridge University's Leverhulme Professor of Human Evolution, Robert Foley suggests some caution with calling this a new species, and explains how populations of hominins isolated on islands could evolve to be different by a mechanism called genetic drift. The world is facing an antimicrobial crisis. The global fight against infections is looking worrying as more and more strains of bacteria emerge which are resistant to our stocks of antibiotics. Marnie visits to Tblisi, in Georgia to meet scientists who are looking at a different way to fight infections, collecting and using the microscopic phage viruses which infect the bacteria which infect us. Another way to try and beat antibiotic resistance was the focus for Susan Rosenberg at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston Texas, when she thought it might be clever to try and stop microbes evolving resistance to antibiotics . She discovered that when microbial cells are stressed, a number of them actually start to mutate at a greater rate. This means they stand a greater chance of mutating into a form that has some resistance to our drugs. But by learning about the finer details of this mechanism, and finding a drug that can halt it. She and her team hope to skew the evolutionary arms race between microbes and antibiotics and our immune systems in our favour. Producer: Fiona Roberts
Today is a very special day because I have the privilege of sitting down with one of the most legendary winemaker's of our time, Bob Foley, Owner, Proprietor, and Winemaker for Robert Foley Vineyards out of the Howell Mountain AVA of the Napa Valley. In this episode Bob shares so much with us, one thing in particular being his biggest strength in his ability to know when to be patient as a winemaker, and also knowing when to make the right decisions that will count for him the most. Bob talks about the 2018 Vintage, crediting so much of its success to its ripining season during the summer, no real heat spikes, and a fairly dry, cool climate overall. Bob suggests that this vintage is very comparable to the 2001 vintage or even better. Bob of course talks about Robert Foley Vineyards and its 20 years of success, and also his Merlot's, and his ability to craft some of the finest Merlot's out of the Napa Valley. Bob talks about Jim Pride, the privilege it was to have known Jim and all of the ways that Jim not only influenced him personally, but has made an impact on him over the course of his career. Bob also talks about what it's like to be a musician in his own band, The Robert Foley Band, and how music has played such a big part in his life and really transformed him into the kind of person that he is today. Bob Foley is truly an icon in the wine industry, but at the same time he's so much more than that. Bob has dedicated so much of his time and energy into doing everything he can to make an impact on so many people, which truly defines the kind of man he is. I know for a fact you're going to get so much out of this episode and even more so sit back, relax, and get ready, because you are going to love this episode! Cheers To follow Bob on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, go to: https://www.instagram.com/robertfoleyvineyards/ https://www.facebook.com/RobertFoleyVineyards/ https://twitter.com/RobertFoleyWine To purchase wine from Robert Foley Vineyards directly, head over to: http://www.robertfoleyvineyards.com/ To learn more about Bob Foley's band, head over to: http://www.robertfoleyband.com/ To help contribute to the USVI and Puerto Rico hurricane relief, and Boots on the Ground, click the link below to learn more about this stunning 2016 Hawksbill Rose. Orders MUST be placed over the phone at 707-965-2669. Shipping rates will vary depending on state. http://www.robertfoleyvineyards.com/hawksbill.html To follow Mr. Wine Guy on Instagram and Facebook go to: www.instagram.com/themrwineguy www.facebook.com/themrwineguy Also, make a statement in your very own Mr. Wine Guy Swag which can be found at https://mrwineguy.com/collections/mr-wine-guy-swag-1
A talk by Robert Foley (University of Cambridge) for Possible Futures, an event held at the Oxford University Natural History Museum on 3 November 2016 that celebrated the relaunch of Biological Anthropology at the University of Oxford.
Simon Schaffer is interested in the human species in general and one member of it in particular. Carl Linnaeus was a Swedish botanist and zoologist who set out the basic structure of how we name and understand life on earth. In doing so he broached the thorny question of where humans should sit among the species of the earth. A hundred years before Darwin he correctly placed us among the apes. Simon examines that relationship to see the things that mark our similarities and our differences. Simon comes face to face with 'Jock', an adult Gorilla at Bristol Zoo and talks to Prof. Robert Foley about human evolution. He also sees how Linnaeus' ideas were used to support racial science. After all if humans were more like apes perhaps some humans were more like apes than others.
Premio Paulo Coelho: 1. Los homosexuales católicos por ser católicos. (Noticia aquí) 2. El Obispo de Aguascalientes (MX) José María de la Torre por decir que el paso siguiente a las bodas del mismo sexo serán las bodas con animales. (Noticia aquí) 3. Grace Ann, por reescribir los libros de Harry Potter para cambiar la brujería por el cristianismo. (Noticia aquí) 4. Mike Huckabee (R) por querer despedir a todos los ateos trabajando en el gobierno. (Noticia aquí) 5. La alcaldesa de Zamora Rosa Valdeón (PP) por decir que cualquier menstruación es un aborto. (Noticia aquí) Noticias: http://www.ateorizar.com/2014/10/detenido-el-ex-parroco-de-beniparrell.html http://www.ateorizar.com/2014/10/la-religion-no-aumenta-la-moral-de-la.html Al Carajo: http://www.ateorizar.com/2014/09/iran-ejecuta-por-herejia-un-hombre.html http://www.buzzfeed.com/tasneemnashrulla/muslim-pilgrims-are-taking-hajj-selfies-and-clerics-are-not#15bjmmy http://www.ateorizar.com/2014/09/un-indio-sacrifica-un-nino-en-un-ritual.html http://www.elnuevodia.com/hombredecapitaacompaneradetrabajoenoklahoma-1862418.html http://www.publico.es/actualidad/546785/la-policia-halla-la-coleccion-de-fotos-pedofilas-de-un-exarzobispo-en-su-portatil Cita de Cierre: "Sólo a partir de Darwin se ha comprendido que no somos la especie elegida, sino como dice Robert Foley, una especie única entre muchas especies únicas, aunque eso sí, maravillosamente inteligente. Y no deja de ser paradójico que tantos años de ciencia nos hayan llevado a saber algo que cualquier bosquimano del Kalahari, cualquier aborigen australiano, o cualquiera de nuestros antepasados que pintaron la cueva de Altamira conocía de sobra: Que la Tierra no pertenece al hombre, sino que el hombre pertenece a la Tierra". - Juan Luis Arsuaga, paleo-antropólogo español Participan en la discusión: @bandarrita, @angelarnal @ateismo_ws y @ManoloMatos. Puedes bajar el podcast o subscribirte en iVoox, iTunes y RSS. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ateorizar/message
Is technology changing at too fast a pace for our genetic material? Has human evolution halted? We find out! Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Asif Ghazanfar, Brechtje Post, Matt Davis, William Marslen-Wilson, Robert Foley, Q&A and panel discussion
We find out why, if the gene that codes for men having hairy chests and backs provides an evolutionary advantage in response to an environmental pressure, don't women have beards and hairy chests too? Plus we ask why feet smell cheesy....... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Robert Foley is currently the Acting Executive Director of the National Native American AIDS Prevention Center in Denver, CO. He has worked in varying aspects of the prevention field for the past 10 years, including community-based research and assessment, public information campaigns, coalition-building, and intervention planning for efforts around intimate partner violence, methamphetamine abuse, alcohol and other drug abuse issues, and most recently STD/HIV. We will be discussing World AIDS, which is on 12/1, the impact of HIV/AIDS in the Native American community, and the work of the National Native American AIDS Prevention Center. Contact information: http://nnaapc.org or (720) 382-2244. This show originally aired on 11/30/09.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the evolution of the human species. Where did we come from - we being Homo Sapiens? Let's not go back to the Big Bang or in search of Genesis, but sift through the evidence from biology, palaeontology, climatology and anthropology.The story of human evolution is one that stretches back over five million years, and during that time there are reckoned to have been between fifteen and twenty species of hominid to have walked this planet. From the earliest (Genus) Australopithecus (Species) Anamensis through times when there have been several divergent pre-human species existing at once, we have now arrived at a period unique in the history of the earth when a sole human species, Homo Sapiens, is in evidence right across the globe.With Leslie Aiello, Professor of Biological Anthropology, University College, London; Robert Foley, evolutionary ecologist, writer and lecturer in biological anthropology at Cambridge University; Mark Roberts, Field Archaeologist, Project Leader of Boxgrove excavation and the discoverer of ‘Boxgrove Man'.
Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the evolution of the human species. Where did we come from - we being Homo Sapiens? Let’s not go back to the Big Bang or in search of Genesis, but sift through the evidence from biology, palaeontology, climatology and anthropology.The story of human evolution is one that stretches back over five million years, and during that time there are reckoned to have been between fifteen and twenty species of hominid to have walked this planet. From the earliest (Genus) Australopithecus (Species) Anamensis through times when there have been several divergent pre-human species existing at once, we have now arrived at a period unique in the history of the earth when a sole human species, Homo Sapiens, is in evidence right across the globe.With Leslie Aiello, Professor of Biological Anthropology, University College, London; Robert Foley, evolutionary ecologist, writer and lecturer in biological anthropology at Cambridge University; Mark Roberts, Field Archaeologist, Project Leader of Boxgrove excavation and the discoverer of ‘Boxgrove Man’.