Podcasts about salmon p

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Best podcasts about salmon p

Latest podcast episodes about salmon p

Aerial View
Amendment? Defendant!

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 60:01


With special guest Ken Katkin, Professor of Constitutional Law at Salmon P. Chase School of Law and Chief Custodian of Trash Flow Radio (WAIF-FM). Ken will help us gauge how far we are from a full-blown Constitutional Crisis due to Trump 2.0's norm-breaking, lawlessness and defiance of the courts. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aerial View
Here We Go Again

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2024 60:00


Ken Katkin, Professor of Constitutional Law at Salmon P. Chase School of Law and Chief Custodian of Trash Flow Radio (WAIF-FM) discusses the election and what it means to the rule of law and the Supreme Court. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Ashley and Brad Show
Ashley and Brad Show - ABS 2024-8-08

Ashley and Brad Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2024 37:52


News; birthdays/events; have you ever heard of carjitsu?; word of the day. News; game: is ashley as smart as a 5th grader; have you ever looked something up online or watched a video then got tons of product info in your feed?; besides winning the lottery...a list of things that would make us happier. News; game: classic commercial jingles; have you ever been to a concert where the band was booed?; fake ramen prank. News; game: general trivia; besides ketchup...a list of what people prefer to dip their fries in; goodbye/fun facts....National Dollar Day commemorates the day Congress established the U.S. monetary system in 1786. It was on that day that they set the value of various coins, how they would be made, e.t.c. Paper money dollars are currently known as Federal Reserve Notes and their designs were based on the Spanish dollar...and those didn't come about until 1862, when the United States printed its first dollar bill. but it wasn't George Washington. The first dollar bill featured Salmon P. Chase, President Lincoln's Secretary of Treasury. It costs about a nickel per note to produce the $1 bill making it one of the cheapest. Investigate your dollar bill. Where has it been? If you have a dollar in your wallet now, you can track where it has been. Visit the website Where's George. Enter the serial number. After you spend it, track where your dollar travels next.

Aerial View
Supreme Ream Job

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2024 62:38


Ken Katkin, Professor of Constitutional Law at Salmon P. Chase School of Law and Chief Custodian of Trash Flow Radio (WAIF-FM) discusses the Supreme Court's most recent session. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aerial View
Ken Katkin Objects!

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 60:00


Ken Katkin, Professor of Constitutional Law at Salmon P. Chase School of Law and Chief Custodian of Trash Flow Radio (WAIF-FM) discusses the Supreme Court's foot-dragging and Trump's trial. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Building Ideas
Episode 77_Karl Kadon - Season Four Premiere

Building Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2024 56:19


Karl Kadon, a lifelong resident of Cincinnati, is an alumnus of Walnut Hills High School, Miami University, and the Salmon P. Chase College of Law. Since 2006, he has served as a Criminal Chief, a federal prosecutor, stationed at the Cincinnati branch office of the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Ohio.In his role, Kadon dedicated a significant portion of his federal career to the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, focusing on pursuing major drug dealers and drug cartels. In 2019, he was appointed as the Deputy Criminal Chief overseeing the Task Force. Shortly thereafter, he assumed the position of Chief of the Criminal Division of the U.S. Attorney's Office, where he took charge of all investigations and criminal cases. Over the past two decades, Kadon has either personally litigated or supervised some of the most notable federal prosecutions in the Southern District of Ohio, earning several awards and recognitions for his contributions.Before becoming a federal prosecutor, Kadon served as the Chief Assistant Prosecuting Attorney for the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office. Prior to that, he held the position of Deputy City Solicitor for the City of Cincinnati, where he was responsible for managing all civil litigation and criminal prosecution matters. In 1987, he was commissioned as an officer in the United States Army Reserve, serving as a Judge Advocate ("JAG") in the Judge Advocate Generals Corps until his retirement in 2015 as a Lieutenant Colonel. His military service included mobilization for Operation DESERT STORM, deployment as Deputy Staff Judge Advocate for the Special Operations Component of U.S. Central Command during Operations ENDURING FREEDOM and IRAQI FREEDOM, with assignments in the Gulf, Afghanistan, and other regions.Beyond his professional and military commitments, Kadon has actively participated in youth soccer and the Boy Scouts. He previously served on the Board of Directors for the Dan Beard Council of the BSA and currently holds positions on the Board of Directors of the FC Cincinnati Foundation and the Miami University Alumni Association Advisory Board.

Aerial View
Ken Katkin Courts Disaster Again

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2024 64:57


Special Guest Ken Katkin​ – Constitutional Law Professor at Salmon P. Chase School of Law, Northern Kentucky University & Main Custodian at Trash Flow Radio​ – joins once again to dissect the latest SCOTUS news. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Daily Kos Radio - Kagro in the Morning
Kagro in the Morning - February 5, 2024

Daily Kos Radio - Kagro in the Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2024 116:52


Yes, for maybe a decade now we at KITM have been kind of obsessed. Our entire focus is, it would seem, one name, over and over. You'd think that name was the only one we know... but not today.  Last night, Tracy Chapman made the ‘80's great again. And Céline Dion. And, OK, we should mention Taylor Swift once more. David Waldman and Greg Dworkin try to make it feel like a normal Monday. Oh, and another guy we talk about, Donald Trump, is ahead in the polls… But what does that really mean anyway? Quality polls have Donald in the lead by only a little bit…  Then there's Joe Biden's blowout win! …against Dean Phillips and… Marianne Williamson. Sure, turnout was a bit low, but that's not the point! The point is, a lot of women hate Trump. And union members. Trump's going to be convicted, and doesn't that matter? And, the Mooch says he'll be low on money! And twenty-five historians agree that if Salmon P. Chase were still Chief Justice, things would be a lot different for TFFG, you bet! Even E. J. Dionne, Jr. believes Trump should be off the ballot… not ahead in the polls… As we whistle through this graveyard, let the Keith Number, or even the Armando Number help cheer our tune.  J.D. Vance hustled the Overton window down the field quite a way before being tackled by George Stephanopoulos on Sunday. Democrats are having trouble even taking George Santos' seat, because of Great Neck, New York's fear of Mexican caravans. That is why House Gops would never accept a border deal, no matter how good it was, how much they got out of it, or who wrote it. At least a couple of Republicans have been inconvenienced lately.  Nancy Mace is an awful representative, but a terrible manager. Ted Cruz needs a security detail to keep the hoi polloi away from him when he vacations in Cancun.

The Academic Minute
Tan Boston, Northern Kentucky University – The NIL Glass Ceiling

The Academic Minute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2024 2:30


On Northern Kentucky University Week: There's a glass ceiling in college athletics. Tan Boston, assistant professor at the Salmon P. Chase College of Law, discusses. Tan Boston is an assistant professor at Northern Kentucky University Salmon P. Chase College of Law, where she teaches Sports Law, Property and Sales & Secured Transactions. In addition to […]

Aerial View
The Door to 2024

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2024 60:00


Aerial View returns LIVE for the first time since July 2023! It's "The Door to 2024" show with special guest Ken Katkin, Professor of Constitutional Law at Salmon P. Chase School Of Law and proprietor of Trash Flow Radio. We'll talk Trump Crimes, SCOTUS and so much more. I'll also update you on all that's happened since last we met. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Bonus Babies
Glenda Wright: I Don't Match A Stereotype

Bonus Babies

Play Episode Play 59 sec Highlight Listen Later Dec 8, 2023 59:49


Jayne Amelia speaks with former foster youth, advocate and attorney Glenda Wright. Glenda recently graduated from the Salmon P. Chase College of Law, where she received her Juris Doctorate in May 2022. Glenda has also earned her Bachelor of Science in Business with a minor in legal studies from Murray State University. While attending law school, Glenda participated in several extracurricular activities, including serving as senior editor of the Northern Kentucky Law Review and president of the Phi Alpha Delta: Hoffman Chapter. In August 2020, Glenda and her business partner, Tyler Hunter, launched Wright & Hunter Consulting, a firm focused on working with and strengthening all partners in the child welfare continuum. Glenda's passion for child welfare reform comes from her experiences living in the Kentucky foster care system. That passion has led to numerous policy and legislative changes, including two critical pieces of legislation that helped change the way foster care works for youth in Kentucky. For the past 10 years, Glenda has dedicated herself to improving the child welfare system so that other youth and families like hers don't have to experience what she and so many others do. In her "free time," Glenda loves giving back to her community in various ways and being surrounded by those who love her! TAY AmeriCorps MemberiFosterWright and Hunter ConsultingLinkedIn: glenda-wright-j-d-7781b4141/See bonusbabies.org to learn more about what we are doing and please donate to support us by making a 100% tax-deductible contribution. EVERY PENNY OF YOUR CONTRIBUTION GOES TO RECORDING AND PLATFORMING THESE STORIES. Yeah!IG@bonusbabiespodcastTW@BonusBabiesPodFB@BonusBabiesPodcast

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed
Heritage Events: Events | Tenth Annual Salmon P. Chase Distinguished Lecture: What History and the Historians Have Gotten Wrong About Salmon Chase

The Ricochet Audio Network Superfeed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023


The Heritage Foundation is delighted to partner with the Georgetown Center for the Constitution to co-host its Tenth Annual Salmon P. Chase Distinguished Lecture. The Chase Lecture is designed to commemorate important anniversaries and neglected figures in our constitutional history. In this, the final year of the series and the 150th anniversary of his death, the Chase […]

Heritage Events Podcast
Events | Tenth Annual Salmon P. Chase Distinguished Lecture: What History and the Historians Have Gotten Wrong About Salmon Chase

Heritage Events Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 59:42


The Heritage Foundation is delighted to partner with the Georgetown Center for the Constitution to co-host its Tenth Annual Salmon P. Chase Distinguished Lecture. The Chase Lecture is designed to commemorate important anniversaries and neglected figures in our constitutional history. In this, the final year of the series and the 150th anniversary of his death, the Chase Lecture will focus on its namesake. We are honored to have bestselling author and historian, Walter Stahr, deliver the lecture on "What History and Historians Have Gotten Wrong About Salmon Chase." The Georgetown Center for the Constitution awarded its sixth annual Thomas M. Cooley Book Prize to Walter Stahr for his book, Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival.Walter Stahr is the New York Times bestselling author of Seward: Lincoln's Indispensable Man, Stanton: Lincoln's War Secretary, John Jay: Founding Father, and most recently, Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival. A two-time winner of the Seward Award for Excellence in Civil War Biography, Stahr practiced law in Washington and Asia for more than two decades. He is an honors graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Law School. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aerial View
Indictment & Incitement!

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2023 59:37


Ken Katkin​ – Constitutional Law Professor at Salmon P. Chase School of Law, Northern Kentucky University & Main Custodian at Trash Flow Radio​ on WAIF-FM in Cincinatti, OH – returns to discuss the first presidential indictment! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aerial View
Dancing On The (Debt Limit) Ceiling

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2023 60:18


Ken Katkin – Constitutional Law Professor at Salmon P. Chase School of Law, Northern Kentucky University ¶ & Main Custodian at Trash Flow Radio on WAIF-FM in Cincinatti, OH – returns to discuss the Debt Ceiling Crisis and how it relates to the 14th Amendment. We'll also get a follow-up the recent Police-directed theft of his beloved vintage Toyota Camry! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Aerial View
Small Claims, Big Pain

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2023 59:11


TONIGHT at 6 PM ET, only on thehoundnyc.com, a LIVE and NEW Aerial View: SMALL CLAIMS, BIG PAIN! I tell the story of my recent trip to Maryland to recoup $1,000 of mine. Ken Katkin – Constitutional Law Professor at Salmon P. Chase School of Law, Northern Kentucky University – joins to dissect this case and report one of his own! We're also go over the 14th Amendment and its relation to the debt ceiling crisis. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Instant Trivia
Episode 692 - Tv Title Pairs - Tv Violence - Chief Justices Of The U.s. - Fairly Recent News - "Toasts"

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2023 7:15


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 692, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Tv Title Pairs 1: Best friends Eric McCormack and Debra Messing. Will and Grace. 2: 2 adolescents, both voiced by Mike Judge. Beavis and Butthead. 3: Cop Billy Gardell and teacher Melissa McCarthy. Mike and Molly. 4: Streetwise cops Paul Michael Glaser and David Soul. Starsky and Hutch. 5: Lawyers Breckin Meyer and Mark-Paul Gosselaar. Franklin and Bash. Round 2. Category: Tv Violence 1: Titus Welliver's finger being detached was featured on this show, the CW's most "super". Supernatural. 2: "Random Acts of Violence", a 2003 episode of this William Petersen show, could have been the title of several. CSI. 3: On "NYPD Blue" Detective Andy Sipowicz, played by this actor, was not above getting physical to get a confession. Dennis Franz. 4: Tara is drowned and forked to death by her mother-in-law on the Season 6 finale of this motorcycle club drama. Sons of Anarchy. 5: This P.I. show was violent for its time--1967-1975--with Mike Connors, by one count, being knocked cold 55 times. Mannix. Round 3. Category: Chief Justices Of The U.s. 1: This Chief Justice once wrote, "I don't remember that I ever was President". (William Howard) Taft. 2: In 2005 he became Chief Justice without ever being an associate justice. (John) Roberts. 3: Before becoming Chief Justice in 1953, he was the only California governor elected to 3 consecutive terms. (Earl) Warren. 4: In 1986 he replaced Warren Burger as Chief Justice. Rehnquist. 5: Portland was the middle name of this Chief Justice who sought the presidency in 1868 and 1872 while serving on the court. (Salmon P.) Chase. Round 4. Category: Fairly Recent News 1: After this leader's death in 2013, Citgo facilities across the U.S. flew their flags at half-staff. Hugo Chávez. 2: Here's the official portrait of the christening of this little fella. (Prince) George. 3: In 2014 he returned for a second stint heading the NYPD; he headed the LAPD in between. William Bratton. 4: When not saving constituents from burning buildings (literally!), this ex-Newark mayor found time to win a Senate seat. Cory Booker. 5: In offstage drama, a member of this Russian cultural institution was convicted for an acid attack on the artistic director. Bolshoi. Round 5. Category: "Toasts" 1: Sauteed egg-dipped bread. French toast. 2: Campfire confection. toasted marshmallows. 3: Original name of "The Ed Sullivan Show". Toast of the Town. 4: "Rank" of George Jessel. Toastmaster General. 5: Named for an Australian soprano, it's thin, crisp bread. Melba toast. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia! Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/

2 Crickets In A Thorn Tree
Rounding out two big weeks

2 Crickets In A Thorn Tree

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022 121:25


Nick and Gabriel discuss the latest threats to property rights in SA, the abortion debate, their thoughts on the upcoming U.S. midterms and the passing of Queen Elizabeth II. Recommendations: Nick: "The weakness of Xi Jinping" https://www.foreignaffairs.com/china/xi-jinping-china-weakness-hubris-paranoia-threaten-future Gabriel:The Antislavery Activist That Time Forgot: Historian Walter Stahr on Salmon P. Chase https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yJAJarVmU0&ab_channel=HooverInstitution

2 Crickets In A Thorn Tree
Rounding out two big weeks

2 Crickets In A Thorn Tree

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2022 121:25


Nick and Gabriel discuss the latest threats to property rights in SA, the abortion debate, their thoughts on the upcoming U.S. midterms and the passing of Queen Elizabeth II. Recommendations: Nick: "The weakness of Xi Jinping" https://www.foreignaffairs.com/china/xi-jinping-china-weakness-hubris-paranoia-threaten-future Gabriel:The Antislavery Activist That Time Forgot: Historian Walter Stahr on Salmon P. Chase https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yJAJarVmU0&ab_channel=HooverInstitution

Uncommon Knowledge
The Antislavery Activist That Time Forgot: Historian Walter Stahr On Salmon P. Chase

Uncommon Knowledge

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2022 58:53


Historical biographer Walter Stahr has given us definitive biographies of William H. Seward and Edwin Stanton, two of the ablest and most influential members of President Abraham Lincoln's cabinet. Earlier this year, Stahr followed those books with the definitive biography of Salmon P. Chase, Treasury secretary under Lincoln and one of the country's most important antislavery lawyers, one of the few who defended fugitive slaves against state and federal prosecutors. After his stint as a lawyer, Chase was elected to represent Ohio in the US Senate, where he was instrumental in helping to settle the slavery question in the United States. Chase also served as governor of Ohio and then as Treasury secretary, where he standardized the dozens of currencies then being issued by local banks and gave us a national currency and a system of national banks. Spend an hour learning about this man, who contributed greatly to the country but whom almost no one today remembers. Recorded on April 15, 2022, at Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.

Raising Kellan
Episode 70. Ashley Barlow of the Special Education Advocacy Podcast

Raising Kellan

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2022 31:35


Ashley Barlow graduated Magna Cum Laude from Miami University with a BS in German Education (K-12) and received her JD from Salmon P. Chase College of Law in 2006. In a former life, she was a German teacher in Jefferson County Public Schools and Cincinnati Public Schools, having taught nearly every grade from K to 12. She also taught Real Estate and Business Law at Miami University. Her areas of practice now include special education, family law, estate planning, and probate. Ashley practices statewide in Kentucky and Ohio and also operates a business to empower and inspire parents and advocates in special education, which can be found at www.ashleybarlowco.com. When not working, she is normally at the pool with her husband and two sons, one of whom has Down syndrome. Timeline 2:00 Who is Ashley Barlow and the origins of Ashley Barlow Company? 4:45 Parental emotion vs the I.E.P 8:07 Ashley's recommended advocacy resources including Wrights Law 10:35 Ashley's parental tips and strategies: communication and compartmentalization. 15:00 Transition planning and the continuum of care (your child's employment preferences vs profiles, 5 areas of life that parents need to consider when planning their child's future, supported decision making) 26:00 Closing remarks and contact information. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/marsh-naidoo/message

Professor Buzzkill History Podcast
Piece of Sh*t Saturday: Salmon P. Chase

Professor Buzzkill History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2022 13:10


Professor Heather Cox Richardson gives us the low-down on one of history's pieces of sh*t, Salmon P. Chase (the man on the $10,000 bill). Hear about his machinations during the Lincoln administration, his colossal ego, and how he helped saddle the United States with President Andrew Johnson. Ugh! Episode 463.

Ohio V. The World
Lincoln's Rival: The Amazing Life of Salmon P. Chase

Ohio V. The World

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2022 60:13


An episode we've been waiting to do for a long while, Alex examines the consequential life of Cincinnati's own, Salmon P. Chase. Chase, the namesake for Chase Bank, served as a Senator and Governor from Ohio, the Secretary of the Treasury during the Lincoln Administration and the 6th Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. We sit down with award-winning historian and biographer Walter Stahr to discuss the impact of Salmon P. Chase's important life, Chase's passionate leadership of the country that helped bring an end to slavery and Walter's new book Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival (Simon & Schuster, 2021). Click the link below to purchase this great new book. https://walterstahr.com/books/salmon-p-chase/ We follow Chase's story from his arrival as a child to the new State of Ohio, his early career in DC to his successful legal career in Cincinnati. Chase's unorthodox path to power does not follow the normal two-party system, from his leaving the Whig Party in 1840 to the joining of little known Liberty and Free Soil parties. We experience pre-war racial strife in the border metropolis of Cincinnati as the Queen City's straddling of the Mason-Dixon Line molds Chase into a leading anti-slavery political figure in the North. Walter takes us through the tumultuous 1850s in the Senate, Governor Chase's two terms in Columbus (1856-1860) and the historic 1860 Election campaign in which Lincoln won the nomination of the new Republican Party over Chase. Walter shares with our audience Secretary Chase's deft stewardship of the nation's economy during the Civil War, his multiple failed attempts to win the presidency and his important 9 years as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court during Reconstruction. We're proud to be part of the Evergreen Podcast Network. Go to www.evergreenpodcasts.com for our show and dozens of other great podcasts. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter. Don't hesitate to reach out to Alex by email at ohiovtheworld@gmail.com with a future show idea or to buy one of our great Ohio v. the World t-shirts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Aerial View
Abort! Abort! Abort!

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 60:54


Constitutional Scholar & Professor of Law Ken Katkin of Salmon P. Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky University, joined to review the current Supreme Court news. Ken also hosts radio show Trash Flow Radio, which can be heard on WAIF 88.3 FM in the Cincinnati area Saturdays from 3 - 5 pm and online at waifradio.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Barks Remarks - a Carl Barks Podcast
Ten-Page Podcast: the Big Bin on Killmotor Hill (1951) / the Round Money Bin (1953)

Barks Remarks - a Carl Barks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2022 59:13


It's our big Money Bin episode! We've got a double feature of two of Barks classic stories featuring one of his greatest non-character creations, Scrooge McDuck's Money Bin! "Big Bin" is the showcase this episode, as it really set the template for Scrooge's relationship with the building that secures his money and all its sundry defenses. "Round Money Bin" is a fun story as well, and includes the first allusion to Scrooge's #1 dime. We'll also talk about Salmon P. Chase, the guy whose face graces the $10,000 bill and briefly discuss other great stories featuring the money bin, including by other creators!

Talks from the Hoover Institution
Ways and Means: Lincoln and his Cabinet, and the Financing of the Civil War

Talks from the Hoover Institution

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2022 15:40


Friday, March 18, 2022 Hoover Institution, Stanford University   In his latest book, Roger Lowenstein investigates not only how Lincoln and his secretary of Treasury, Salmon P. Chase, funded the Civil War. He also explores how Lincoln's financial strategy catalyzed a long-lasting political and economic transformation of the United States. ABOUT THE SPEAKER Roger Lowenstein is a financial historian, the author of NYT bestsellers such as Buffett, When Genius Failed, and The End of Wall Street, and the critically acclaimed Origins of the Crash, While America Aged, and America's Bank. He previously reported for The Wall Street Journal for more than a decade, and his work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, The New York Times, the Washington Post, Fortune, Atlantic, the New York Review of Books, and other publications. ABOUT THE PROGRAM This talk is part of the History Working Group Seminar Series. A central piece of the History Working Group is the seminar series, which is hosted in partnership with the Hoover Library & Archives. The seminar series was launched in the fall of 2019, and thus far has included six talks from Hoover research fellows, visiting scholars, and Stanford faculty. The seminars provide outside experts with an opportunity to present their research and receive feedback on their work. While the lunch seminars have grown in reputation, they have been purposefully kept small in order to ensure that the discussion retains a good seminar atmosphere.

Connections with Evan Dawson
Author Walter Stahr on his new book, "Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival"

Connections with Evan Dawson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 51:33


In the first hour of "Connections with Evan Dawson" on Thursday, March 17, 2022, we talk with the author of an extensive new biography on Salmon P. Chase, a Lincoln-appointed Chief Justice that represented fugitive enslaved people in his Ohio law practice during the 1860s.

Connections with Evan Dawson
Author Walter Stahr on his new book, "Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival"

Connections with Evan Dawson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 51:33


In the first hour of "Connections with Evan Dawson" on Thursday, March 17, 2022, we talk with the author of an extensive new biography on Salmon P. Chase, a Lincoln-appointed Chief Justice that represented fugitive enslaved people in his Ohio law practice during the 1860s.

Aerial View
Beware the Ides of March, eh?

Aerial View

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2022 60:00


Beware the Ides of March, eh? – with special guest Constitutional Scholar & Professor of Law Ken Katkin of Salmon P. Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky University and Trash Flow Radio. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

History in Five
Five Things You Didn't Know About Salmon P. Chase

History in Five

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 1:30


salmon salmon p five things you didn
The Bridgeton Beacon
Oberlin Smith

The Bridgeton Beacon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2022 8:53


Oberlin Smith was born in Cincinnati, Ohio on March. 22, 1840 to George R. and Salome (Kemp) Smith. Both his parents were natives of England, and his father was a leader in the early anti-slavery works of Salmon P. Chase and operated a link in the Pre-Civil War "underground railroad". Oberlin Smith's unusual first name likely reflected his parent's abolitionist sentiments, and to honor a friend of his father's who had founded Oberlin College. Oberlin was the older of four siblings, having a brother Frederick, and two sisters Emily and Mary. His first cousin was Robert Longsdon, partner of Sir Henry Bessemer, and co inventor of the Bessemer process of steel manufacture. Young Oberlin displayed an early mechanical aptitude, and built a working steam engine at the age of fifteen, most likely while learning metalworking at one of the city's riverboat engine yard, while being educated in the public and technical schools of Cleveland. By 1873, Webb amicably left the partnership to pursue his career in academia, starting as a professor of mathematics at the University of Michigan, and later an engineering professor at Indiana, Cornell, and Stevens Institute. Smith and Webb crossed professional paths several times until Webb's death in 1912. Smith brought in his younger brother Frederick as a replacement partner, and committed his facilities to the manufacture of foot-driven presses for canning enterprises, and began advertising in industrial periodicals. Within three years, he designed a version for belt-power hookup; seventy-two machines of both varieties and in four models sold during 1874-76, three of which went to international customers in Canada, Australia, and Sweden. Oberlin Smith met Miss Charlotte E. Hill while she was teaching at the Ivy Hall School for Girls in Bridgeton. They were married on Christmas Day, 1876 in Bernardston Mass. Two children were born to Oberlin and Charlotte Smith; Winifred Hill in 1878 and Percival Hill in 1880. David Sheppard House In 1877, the small business was incorporated as the Ferracute Machine Company and moved to an old brick factory site on the eastern shore of East Lake in Bridgeton. The company engaged in the manufacture of various forms of machinery, including many of his Smith's own inventions. Ferracute Machine Co. specialized in the manufacture presses for working metals. Over the sixty-three years of Oberlin Smith's tenure as chief engineer and president of Ferracute, he designed over five hundred kinds and sizes, and obtained over fifty patents on these designs alone. While most of Mr. Smith's inventions related to presswork, there were several in entirely outside fields. Among them were such widely divergent lines as improved looms, dump carts, keyless locks, automatic garage door openers and egg boiling. In 1883 he achieved considerable publicity through the invention of a magneto-electric phonograph. Citizens of Bridgeton bear witness to Mr. Smith's having frequently driven through the streets of town in a motor propelled vehicle long before the days of automobiles. Oberlin Smith was a prolific writer and lecturer, his works covering science, fiction and even theology. He published two books, "Press Working of Metals" still considered to be an authoritative work on the subject, and a metaphysics work, "Tho Material, Why Not Immortal?" Other interests that Oberlin Smith enjoyed were rowing, motoring, dancing, and golf, most of which he was active in well in the later years of his life. Join local conversations with the "beacons' of Bridgeton, New Jersey at https://bridgetonbeacon.com YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8VBp2FMg5KKl5irPJc02YzacOkzURgnK Podcast clips on Instagram: https://tinyurl.com/NichePodcastClipstagram Podcast

The Not Old - Better Show
#590 Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival - Walter Stahr

The Not Old - Better Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2021 27:01


Welcome to The Not Old Better Show, Smithsonian Associates interview series.  I'm Paul Vogelzang and we have an excellent show today, very timely and important, with our guest today,   Walter Stahr.  Walter Stahr will be presenting at Smithsonian Associates Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival,  via Zoom on December 13, and you'll find ticket details on our website, but we have Walter Stahr today Join me and New York Times bestselling biographer Walter Stahr for a timely reassessment of Salmon P. Chase, Abraham Lincoln's indispensable secretary of the treasury and a leading proponent for Black rights before and during his years in the cabinet and as chief justice of the United States. Salmon P Chase may not be a household name, but he should be and is best remembered as a rival of Lincoln's for the Republican nomination in 1860—but there would not have been a national Republican Party, and Lincoln could not have won the presidency, were it not for the vital groundwork Chase laid over the previous two decades.  Starting in the early 1840s, long before Lincoln was speaking out against slavery, Chase was forming and leading antislavery parties. He represented fugitive slaves so often in his law practice that he was known as the “attorney general for runaway Negroes,” and he furthered his reputation as an outspoken federal senator and progressive governor of Ohio. Listen as Zion Church's role, and  5000+ formerly enslaved persons felt on May 12, 1865,  after the Union Army finally arrived in town. That, of course, is our guest today, author and NYT best-selling author Walther Stahr, author of the new book, Salmon P. Chase: Lincoln's Vital Rival.   Salmon P Chase was tapped by Lincoln to become secretary of the treasury. Our guest today, NYT best-selling author Walther Stahr will tell us about how Salmon P Chase would prove essential to the Civil War effort, raising the billions of dollars that allowed the Union to win the war, while also pressing the president to emancipate the country's slaves and recognize Black rights. Walther Stahr tells us that when Lincoln had the chance to appoint a chief justice in 1864, he chose his faithful rival because he was sure Chase would make the right decisions on the difficult racial, political, and economic issues the Supreme Court would confront during Reconstruction. Drawing on previously overlooked sources, Stahr sheds new light on a complex and fascinating political figure as well as on the pivotal events of the Civil War and its aftermath.   Please join me in welcoming to The Not Old Better Show Smithsonian Associate Walter Stahr. My thanks to Walter Stahr for his generous time and preparation today.  Walter Stahr will be presenting at Smithsonian Associates via Zoom on December 13, and you'll find ticket details on our web site.  My thanks to you, my wonderful Not Old Better Show audience…please be safe, get your flu shots and your booster shot for COVID, recommend others do the same and Let's Talk About Better.  The Not Old Better Show Smithsonian Associates interview series Thanks, everybody.   Please click HERE on Smithsonian Associates for more information:  https://smithsonianassociates.org/ticketing/tickets/salmon-p-chase-lincolns-vital-rival

In Legal Terms
In Legal Terms: SCOTUS

In Legal Terms

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 49:52


A new term of the US Supreme Court started last month. What have they discussed, what will they discuss, and who's on the bench doing the discussing? Our guest for the show today is attorney Max Meyers from the Mississippi Center for Justice.https://mscenterforjustice.org/https://www.supremecourt.gov/https://constitutioncenter.org/blog/10-fascinating-facts-on-the-supreme-courts-birthdayDid you know there were Justices on our US money? John Marshall was on the $500 bill, while Salmon P. Chase was on the $10,000 bill. Neither bill is in circulation today. We are in the area of the Robert's Court. It is the 17th. Supreme Court historians categorize eras in court history by the name of the chief justice presiding over the court and its sessions. There have been 17 chief justices and hence, 17 “Courts.” Did you know there was a Grandfather / grandson justice duo? John Marshall Harlan II served from 1955 to 1971. His grandfather was the legendary John Marshall Harlan, who served on the Court from 1877 to 1911. The elder Harlan was known as the Great Dissenter for his opposition to rulings that promoted Jim Crow laws in the South.Creation of Supreme Court, powers, members.Now many members, Stare Decisis.Supreme Court Oral Arguments Live https://www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/live.aspx See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Great Trials Podcast
Ronald Johnson & Jay Vaughn | Alton G. Godwin, et al. v. Eaton Asphalt Paving Co., Inc. | $70 million verdict

The Great Trials Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 100:36


This week, your hosts Steve Lowry and Yvonne Godfrey interview Ronald Johnson and Jay Vaughn of Hendy Johnson Vaughn Emery (https://justicestartshere.com/).   Remember to rate and review GTP in iTunes: Click Here To Rate and Review   New! Watch the video recording: https://youtu.be/vJAe3s1SkPo   Episode Details: Kentucky trial lawyers Ronald Johnson and Jay Vaughn of Hendy Johnson Vaughn Emery explain how they held an asphalt paving company responsible for causing a car crash that killed Amy Skiba. On the morning of January 9, 2019, Amy was driving her 12-year-old twins to school on a two-lane road when a 2013 Chevrolet truck's front tire went off the side of the road. When the truck returned to the roadway, it hit Amy's Honda Accord, and she died on impact. In this episode, learn how Ronald Johnson and Jay Vaughn explained to the jury that Amy's death was not the fault of either driver, instead demonstrating that Eaton Asphalt Paving Co., Inc. was ultimately responsible due to the fact that the company incorrectly re-paved the road two months prior to the accident and created hazardous conditions by removing safety wedges and rumble strips. In spite of Eaton Asphalt Paving Co., Inc.'s attempts to assert they had the permission of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet to not mill the road and to cast blame on the driver of the Chevrolet truck, the Boone County, Kentucky jury found in favor of the plaintiff. On July 12, 2021, the jury awarded Amy's surviving children $24 million in damages as well as $50 million in punitive damages against the defendant.   Click Here to Read/Download the Complete Trial Documents   Guest Bios: Ronald Johnson Ronald Johnson is a veteran trial lawyer who has spent his career representing families and persons who have been injured or killed by defective drugs and medical devices, chemicals, dangerous conditions on a property, semi-truck collisions, automobile wrecks, medical malpractice, and other product liability claims. Ron's experience and success in this field have been recognized by his peers and by federal courts across the country. Ron is a former president of the Kentucky Justice Association and has been designated as “AV” rated (pre-eminent) by the peer-reviewed publication Martindale, as well as designated a “Super Lawyer” by his fellow attorneys. Ron has also been appointed to numerous leadership positions in nationwide litigation by federal judges. In fact, Ron is the only lawyer currently practicing in Kentucky who has been appointed as lead or co-lead counsel of multiple Multi-District Litigations (MDL's) in Federal Courts. Ron has tried numerous complex cases, including a medical device case that resulted in a verdict over 7 million dollars. He has also negotiated settlements up to 230 million dollars. Read Full Bio   Jay Vaughn Jay Vaughn is one of the first attorneys to be Board Certified in Truck Accident Law by the National Board of Trial Advocacy. Jay was born in Louisville, Kentucky. He received his undergraduate degree from Murray State University in Murray, Kentucky in 1999. Jay graduated from Salmon P. Chase College of Law at Northern Kentucky University in 2002. He is licensed to practice in both Kentucky and Ohio. Jay has received Martindale-Hubbell's esteemed “AV” rating, which recognizes lawyers with the highest ethical standards and professional ability. Since 2013, he has been named to the Kentucky Super Lawyers, which recognizes no more than 5% of attorneys in Kentucky. Jay has tried numerous cases ranging from automobile collision cases to multi-week nursing home neglect cases. He is asked to speak both locally and nationally to other lawyers on a variety of legal topics as he is very active in Kentucky Justice Association and American Association for Justice, serving on the Board for both trial organizations. Jay focuses his practice on personal injury, car wreck, trucking crash, traumatic brain injury, and wrongful death cases. He understands that his clients have had their lives turned upside down due to the fault of someone else which is the reason for him working tirelessly to achieve justice for his clients, help make up for what was taken from them and giving them hope for the future. Read Full Bio   Show Sponsors: Legal Technology Services - LegalTechService.com Digital Law Marketing - DigitalLawMarketing.com Harris Lowry Manton LLP - hlmlawfirm.com   Free Resources: Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 1 Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 2

The Great Trials Podcast
Jennifer L. Lawrence | Longbottom et al. v. Gary S. Huber, D.O. and Qualified Emergency Specialists, Inc. | $2.41 Million Verdict

The Great Trials Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 73:11


This week, your hosts Steve Lowry and Yvonne Godfrey interview Jennifer L. Lawrence of The Lawrence Firm (https://www.lawrencefirm.com/).    Remember to rate and review GTP in iTunes: Click Here To Rate and Review   Episode Details: Top 25 Women Kentucky Super Lawyers honoree Jennifer L. Lawrence of The Lawrence Firm, PSC, shares how she secured justice for the parents of Kyle Smith, a young boy who suffered head trauma that was not thoroughly assessed by a physician and resulted in permanent injuries. In March 2002, 9-year-old Kyle Smith hit his head on a coffee table and later began vomiting, prompting Kyle's parents, Kristi Longbottom and Jesse Smith, to take him to the hospital, where Dr. Gary S. Huber of Qualified Emergency Specialists, Inc. sutured Kyle's laceration and discharged him, stating that the boy just needed to "sleep it off." Kyle was unresponsive the next morning, and an emergency CT scan revealed a large epidural hematoma in the brain that required immediate surgery. Kyle spent over three weeks in the Rehabilitation Care Unit re-learning how to swallow, eat, communicate and walk. A permanent brain injury has affected his mobility. Despite the defense's claims that Dr. Huber advised Kyle's parents to follow the hospital's head injury pamphlet, which stated that patients should be awakened every two hours, a Clermont County, Ohio jury found Dr. Huber negligent. In September 2010, Kyle was awarded $2,112,899 in damages as part of a $2.41 million verdict.  Click Here to Read/Download the Complete Trial Documents   Guest Bio: Jennifer L. Lawrence Jennifer L. Lawrence is a partner of The Lawrence Firm, PSC, in Covington, Kentucky. Ms. Lawrence practices law with a particular focus on product liability, mass torts and medical malpractice. She represents a wide variety of clients throughout the United States including the State of Ohio and the Commonwealth of Kentucky.  Ms. Lawrence has concentrated her practice representing clients and their families injured as a result of defective medical devices, dangerous drugs and medical and hospital negligence.   It is part of Ms. Lawrence's mission to help families gain closure through the discovery of not only an explanation of what happened but why it happened.  Ms. Lawrence hopes that through helping families one at a time that ultimately the quality of production of medical devices and drugs and the quality of care within the healthcare system will improve within our country.  Ms. Lawrence graduated with a B.A. from The Ohio State University and earned her law degree from Salmon P. Chase College of Law. She graduated within the top of her class and earned the highest grades in several classes.  While in law school, she was an active participant of Moot Court. She is admitted to practice in Kentucky and Ohio, as well as before the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio and the U.S. District Court for the Eastern and Western Districts of Kentucky.  Ms. Lawrence is a member of the Cincinnati Bar Association, the Northern Kentucky Bar Association, the Kentucky Justice Association, serving as a District Vice President and a member of the Ohio Association for Justice. She is also a member of the American Association for Justice and has served as a Co-Chair of the da Vinci Robotic Surgical Litigation Group and previously as a board member of the Birth Trauma Litigation Group.  Ms. Lawrence has been a member of the Salmon P. Chase American Inn of Court. Ms. Lawrence previously served by appointment on the Ohio CLE Commission and on the Kentucky Supreme Court Committee on the Admission To The Bar.  She has also served as a board member for the Children's Law Center, the Kenton County Library Foundation Board and has served on boards for various other organizations. Ms. Lawrence has successfully concluded to verdict trials in both the State of Ohio and the Commonwealth of Kentucky. She has successfully argued before the Ohio Supreme Court, and Appellate courts in Ohio and Kentucky. Ms. Lawrence has been recognized for her accomplishments as an attorney by Super Lawyers and has been named as one of the Top 25 Super Lawyers and Top 50 Super Lawyers in Kentucky for 2021.  She has previously spoken on products liability and medical malpractice for a variety of professional organizations including The Ohio Association of Justice, Kentucky Justice Association, American Association of Justice and the Northern Kentucky Bar Association and has co-authored an article on medical malpractice published in the Northern Kentucky Law Review.  With her law practice Ms. Lawrence is involved in a wide variety of professional and volunteer activities. She has served as an adjunct professor at Chase College of Law and serves as a volunteer at moot court competitions, local non-profit organizations and serves as a volunteer for her children's activities and school.  Ms. Lawrence practices law with her husband and law partner, Rob Lewis.   Read Full Bio   Show Sponsors: Legal Technology Services -LegalTechService.com Digital Law Marketing - DigitalLawMarketing.com Harris, Lowry, and Manton - hlmlawfirm.com   Free Resources: Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 1 Stages Of A Jury Trial - Part 2

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed
2019-09-28 • Saturday Matinée

The Next Reel Film Podcast Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2019 45:49


Spidey makes peace between Sony and Marvel. Go learn something about Salmon P. Chase. K.Feig is going to make a Star Wars movie. More Joker controversy. The Irishman is looking to be gold. Andy's Trailer: Noelle Steve's Trailer: Uncut Gems THE LIST!Stolen Identities!Pete's List Lucky Number Slevin Life of Brian Zelig Andy's List The Imposter The Great Dictator Face/Off 00:00 - 2019-09-28 - Saturday Matinée 01:17 - Spidey makes peace 08:08 - More Joker controversy 11:32 - The Irishman is epic 12:43 - Let's Do Trailers 23:57 - Flickchart Re-ranking 28:35 - The List: Stolen identities 38:55 - Coming Attractions

Saturday Matinée by The Next Reel Film Podcasts
2019-09-28 • Saturday Matinée

Saturday Matinée by The Next Reel Film Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2019 45:49


Spidey makes peace between Sony and Marvel. Go learn something about Salmon P. Chase. K.Feig is going to make a Star Wars movie. More Joker controversy. The Irishman is looking to be gold. Andy's Trailer: Noelle Steve's Trailer: Uncut Gems THE LIST!Stolen Identities!Pete's List Lucky Number Slevin Life of Brian Zelig Andy's List The Imposter The Great Dictator Face/Off 00:00 - 2019-09-28 - Saturday Matinée 01:17 - Spidey makes peace 08:08 - More Joker controversy 11:32 - The Irishman is epic 12:43 - Let's Do Trailers 23:57 - Flickchart Re-ranking 28:35 - The List: Stolen identities 38:55 - Coming Attractions

The Perry Pod: A Companion to the TV Classic Perry Mason
S01 E15 Perry Mason TCOT Fan Dancer's Horse

The Perry Pod: A Companion to the TV Classic Perry Mason

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2019 17:08


In Episode 15 of The Perry Pod, I look at TCOT Fan Dancer's Horse. This episode includes: Law Library: Perry outside the courtroom Plot: TV and novel plots Trivia: Holcomb, Kilby, and Legrand The Theme: doubles The Perry Proverb: “Too skeptical…” The water cooler: Salmon P. Chase  Contact me at theperrypod.libysn.com or theperrypod@gmail.com Keep on walking that Park Avenue Beat!

On the Road with Legal Talk Network
ABA Annual Meeting 2016: Zika Virus

On the Road with Legal Talk Network

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2016 15:28


We’ve all been hearing a lot about the Zika virus in the news. Miami recently reported over 10 cases, and the virus could potentially spread throughout the United States. But why are we so intimidated by a disease that isn’t life threatening? In this report from On the Road, Thinking Like A Lawyer’s Joe Patrice interviews two Zika experts, Medical Epidemiologist Captain Ken Dominguez and Professor of Public Health Law and Ethics James Hodge. Together, they discuss why funding is the major hangup in American preparation for dealing with this virus. Captain Kenneth L. Dominguez MD, MPH (USPHS) is an epidemiologist for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and Captain in the U.S. Public Health Service. He completed a bachelor’s degree from Harvard University, both a Medical degree and Masters in Public Health degree at Columbia University. He completed residency training in both Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, California and at the CDC in Atlanta and trained as an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer through CDC at the Puerto Rico Department of Health. James G. Hodge, Jr., JD, LLM, is professor of Public Health Law and Ethics and director of the nationally-ranked Public Health Law and Policy Program at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, Arizona State University. Through scholarship, teaching, and applied projects, Professor Hodge delves into multiple areas of health law, public health law, global health law, ethics, and human rights. Professor Hodge has a B.S. from College of Charleston, a J.D. from Salmon P. Chase College of Law, and a LL.M. from Georgetown University Law Center.

The Unbelievable Podcast
Episode 151: The Secret Life Of Plants

The Unbelievable Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2016 71:00


It seems like plants are pretty stupid, just silent idiots waiting to be put into some hippie's endive salad. But is it possible that plants can think, feel and even sing? Today we explore The Secret Life of Plants and take all those smug vegans off their high horses.Answer this week's poll:http://www.unbelievablepodcast.com/post/140259985006/answer-this-weeks-poll-do-plants-haveContribute to the Wikia:unbelievable.wikia.com---------The Unbelievable Podcast hosts today were Phoebe Tyers and Sebastian Conelli I'm Brian Frange. Our Web Producer who runs the Facebook page is Dan Gascon, our Production Coordinator is Nikolas Eristavi and our Wiki Moderator is Michelle Durham. Special thanks to StarFoxMulder, SecularBaron, Anarchemist for killing it on the Wikia. And this week's episode of the program was brought to you by The Supreme Court Justice Murder Squad or SCJMS, murdering your supreme court justices for political gains since 1873 when they killed Salmon P. Chase. SCJMS - When you need Justice to be overruled.