POPULARITY
Andrew is the Owner and Managing Partner of the Salinas Defense Law Firm, PLLC where he specializes in Criminal Defense and Immigration law. Since recording this episode, he has also started his own firm in Houston, Texas! He has secured many dismissals and favorable plea deals for clients charged with serious crimes, many of whom were facing deportation if they plead guilty to certain convictions. Prior to starting his own firm, Andrew was an attorney at a prominent Criminal Defense and Immigration law firm in Austin, TX that specialized in "crimmigration". Andrew handled hundreds of cases, including misdemeanors like Driving While Intoxicated and Assault Family Violence and felonies like Aggravated Assault with a Deadly Weapon and Engaging in Organized Crime. He also has experience as an Assistant District Attorney at the Kings County District Attorney's Office and as a Managing Attorney in charge of a brand-new Immigration Department at a boutique law firm in Brooklyn. Andrew graduated from Baylor University from the Baylor Interdisciplinary Honors Program with a B.A. in History and a minor in Rhetoric & Argumentation. He graduated from the Washington and Lee University School of Law where he actively competed and coached in several national moot court competitions. He had the pleasure of serving as a law clerk for the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, a civil rights organization, in Washington, D.C., as a legal intern for the most respected non-profit immigration legal aid organization in the D.C.-Maryland-Virginia region, Ayuda, and as a Summer Fellow at the New York County District Attorney's Office in Manhattan. While in the Immigrant Rights Clinic in law school, Andrew and a fellow student attorney fought for their client to be granted asylum in an uphill battle case – and won. He also got a taste for federal appellate work when his team filed an appeal before the U.S. Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals for a Stateless client who had been fighting to remain in the U.S. for 20 years. In addition to being an editor for the Washington and Lee Journal for Civil Rights and Social Justice, he also proudly formed the leadership board of the Latin American Law Students' Association, serving as Moot Court Director and Vice President. https://salinasdefense.com/ https://www.instagram.com/abogadotejano https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61553453914861 #leducentertainment #SpaghettiOnTheWall #newpodcast #trailer #LegalJourney #AndrewSalinas #CrimeAndImmigration
David Nolan is associate vice chancellor of University Development and campaign director at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas.He graduated TCU and began his professional development career as an annual fund officer in University Advancement during The Next Frontier campaign. After serving two years in the Peace Corps as a non-governmental organization development advisor, David became the associate director of development for the College of Engineering at Virginia Tech. He then served as the director of development for the College of Engineering at North Carolina State, where he led a $250 million campaign as part of a $1 billion university-wide effort. David returned to his alma mater in 2005 to help design and implement The Campaign for TCU, which raised more than $434 million including more than $100 million for scholarships. He currently serves as the director of Lead On: A Campaign for TCU, which aims to raise $1 billion in support of TCU's people, programs, and endowment.He earned the Master of Arts in Philanthropic Studies from Indiana University's Lilly Family School of Philanthropy and served as a Summer Fellow of Vanderbilt University's Peabody College Institute for Vice Presidents of Institutional Advancement. David was recognized in the 2009 Fort Worth Business Press Forty Under Forty and successfully completed Leadership Fort Worth in 2007.
Anna Nagurney is the John F. Smith Memorial Professor at the Isenberg School of Management at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the Director of the Virtual Center for Supernetworks, which she founded in 2001. She holds ScB, AB, ScM and PhD degrees from Brown University in Providence, RI. She is the author/editor of 15 books, more than 200 refereed journal articles, and over 50 book chapters. She presently serves on the editorial boards of a dozen journals and two book series and is the editor of another book series. Professor Nagurney has been a Fulbrighter twice (in Austria and Italy), was a Visiting Professor at the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden and was a Distinguished Guest Visiting Professor at the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm. She was a Visiting Fellow at All Souls College at Oxford University during the 2016 Trinity Term and a Summer Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard in 2017 and 2018. Anna has held visiting appointments at MIT and at Brown University and was a Science Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University in 2005-2006. She has been recognized for her research on networks with the Kempe Prize from the University of Umea, the Faculty Award for Women from the US National Science Foundation, the University Medal from the University of Catania in Italy, and was elected a Fellow of the RSAI (Regional Science Association International). She is also an INFORMS (Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences) Fellow and a Network Science Society Fellow. In 2019, she became the first female recipient of the Constantin Caratheodory Prize from the International Society of Global Optimization. In 2020, she was awarded the Harold Larnder Prize from CORS (only the second female in the award's 35 year history). Anna has also been recognized with several awards for her mentorship of students and her female leadership with the WORMS Award, for example, and the Moving Spirit Award. Anna was one of 44 Women in STEM featured in the STEM Gems book as a role model for young women. Her research has garnered support from the AT&T Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation through its Bellagio Center programs, the Institute for International Education, and the National Science Foundation. She has given plenary/keynote talks and tutorials on 5 continents. She is an active member of several professional societies, including INFORMS, POMS, and RSAI and was the Omega Rho Distinguished Lecturer in 2018. Anna's research focuses on network systems from transportation and logistical ones, including supply chains, to financial, economic, social networks and their integration, along with the Internet. She studies and models complex behaviors on networks with a goal towards providing frameworks and tools for understanding their structure, performance, and resilience and has contributed also to the understanding of the Braess paradox in transportation networks and the Internet. She has also been researching sustainability and quality issues with applications ranging from pharmaceutical and blood supply chains to perishable food products and fast fashion to humanitarian logistics and disaster management. She has advanced methodological tools used in game theory, network theory, equilibrium analysis, and dynamical systems. She was a Co-PI on a multi-university NSF grant with UMass Amherst as the lead: Network Innovation Through Choice, which was part of the Future Internet Architecture (FIA) program and was recently a Co-PI on an NSF EAGER grant.
Jihad F. Saleh is a humanitarian, anti-poverty activist based in Washington, DC. His activism & organizing focuses on amplifying the voices and building political power of targeted, vulnerable populations in the U.S. who are subjected to poverty, hunger, and social marginalization. He also works to expand the advocacy and community organizing capacity with the Muslim American community, particularly amongh Black Muslim and Shia Muslim networks. In his professional capacity, Jihad is the Senior Advocacy & Government Affairs Advisor for Islamic Relief USA, the nation's largest Muslim humanitarian and advocacy organization. Jihad coordinates IRUSA's engagement and lobbying with Congress and various Executive Departments. His advocacy focuses on humanitarian issues such as alleviating poverty and hunger in the US, ending gender-based violence, and protecting the funding of social service programs within the annual Congressional budget & appropriations. Currently, Jihad is the Co-Chair of the Interreligious Working Group for Domestic Human Needs (DHN) and a Board member of the Coalition on Human Needs (CHN), two of the leading domestic focused advocacy coalitions in Washington, DC. Previously, Jihad worked in the U.S. House of Representatives as a Legislative Assistant focused on education and anti-poverty policies. During his time on Capitol Hill, he served as the Programs & Outreach Coordinator for the Congressional Muslim Staff Association (CMSA). Jihad has earned graduate degrees from the Stanford Graduate School of Education and Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. In 2005, Jihad was a Summer Fellow with the Muslim Public Service Network (MPSN) in Washington, DC, while he completed his graduate school required internship at the AARP's Office of Diversity & Inclusion. In 2008, he was a recipient of the inaugural American Muslim Civic Leadership Institute (AMCLI) Fellowship at the University of Southern California.
We czwartek 2 lipca od godziny 13.00 gościem Halo.Radia będzie Marcin Zieliński – ekonomista, absolwent Wydziału Prawa, Administracji i Ekonomii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego. W 2008 roku Summer Fellow w amerykańskim Ludwig von Mises Institute. W 2011 roku otrzymał Vernon Smith Prize za esej na temat konkurencji walutowej. Przetłumaczył na język polski książki m.in. Friedricha Augusta Hayeka, Ludwiga von Misesa, Davida Friedmana i Deirdre N. McCloskey. Autor artykułów i analiz na temat transformacji, prywatyzacji i bieżącej sytuacji gospodarczej w Polsce. Zajmuje się ekonomiczną analizą regulacji, transformacją gospodarczą w Polsce, prywatyzacją i sytuacją przedsiębiorstw państwowych. Prowadzący Jaroslaw J. Szczepanski będzie pytać o dzisiejszą sytuację gospodarczą w Polsce, przemiany zachodzące w gospodarce w ostatnich latach i perspektywy na przyszłość, a szczególnie będziemy rozmawiać o pieniądzach znajdujących się w naszych kieszeniach, skąd wpływają i jak to się dzieje, że rząd rozdaje je na lewo i prawo, mówiąc o tym, ze ma takie prawo. Inaczej mówiąc skąd rząd bierze kasę na swoje łaskawe dawanie.
We czwartek 4 czerwca od godziny 13.00 gościem w Halo.Radio będzie Marcin Zieliński - Ekonomista, absolwent Wydziału Prawa, Administracji i Ekonomii Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego. W 2008 roku Summer Fellow w amerykańskim Ludwig von Mises Institute. W 2011 roku otrzymał Vernon Smith Prize za esej na temat konkurencji walutowej. Przetłumaczył na język polski książki m.in. Friedricha Augusta Hayeka, Ludwiga von Misesa, Davida Friedmana i Deirdre N. McCloskey. Autor artykułów i analiz na temat transformacji, prywatyzacji i bieżącej sytuacji gospodarczej w Polsce. Zajmuje się ekonomiczną analizą regulacji, transformacją gospodarczą w Polsce, prywatyzacją i sytuacją przedsiębiorstw państwowych. Prowadzący Jaroslaw J. Szczepanski będzie pytać o dzisiejszą sytuacje gospodarczą w Polsce, przemiany zachodzące w gospodarce w ostatnich latach i perspektywy na przyszłość. Drugim gościem Państwa będzie red. Piotr Rachtan, z którym porozmawiamy o 4 czerwca, czyli o wyborach sprzed 31 lat, o wyborach, które będą za trzy tygodnie, wadze i znaczeniu jednych i drugich.
64 Minutes PG-13 Pete invited Chris Calton back to the show. Chris is a Summer Fellow at the Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama and has done extensive research into the history of 'grigs' in America for his Historical Controversies podcast. He looks at the C.I.A.'s hand in facilitating the drug trade all over the world. The Historical Controversies Podcast Pete's Patreon Pete's Bitbacker Pete's Books on Amazon Pete's Books Available for Crypto Pete on Facebook Pete on Twitter
Classroom 2.0 LIVE webinar, Featured Teacher-Tammie Pogue, August 15, 2015. We are so excited to have Tammie on Classroom 2.0 LIVE as our Featured Teacher for the month of August! This will be an excellent opportunity to learn about some of the great ways Tammie is effectively integrating technology into her HS English Language Arts classroom. She will be sharing her current and past experiences along her journey as a teacher focusing on "Tools Old and New for the ELA Classroom". Tammie Pogue teaches English I (all levels). Ms. Pogue has taught for 32 years in independent college preparatory schools in Texas as well as in her native Georgia. She is currently teaching Freshman English at St. John XXIII College Preparatory in Katy, TX. In addition to her secondary experience, she has served as an adjunct professor at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree from West Georgia College and a Master’s Degree from the University of Maine. She was a Summer Fellow at the prestigious Klingenstein Institute of Columbia University and has also been the recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Ms. Pogue was an early adopter of technology in the classroom, and she is currently on the planning board of Classroom 2.0, helping to produce weekly professional development webinars for teachers from around the world.
Classroom 2.0 LIVE webinar, Featured Teacher-Tammie Pogue, August 15, 2015. We are so excited to have Tammie on Classroom 2.0 LIVE as our Featured Teacher for the month of August! This will be an excellent opportunity to learn about some of the great ways Tammie is effectively integrating technology into her HS English Language Arts classroom. She will be sharing her current and past experiences along her journey as a teacher focusing on "Tools Old and New for the ELA Classroom". Tammie Pogue teaches English I (all levels). Ms. Pogue has taught for 32 years in independent college preparatory schools in Texas as well as in her native Georgia. She is currently teaching Freshman English at St. John XXIII College Preparatory in Katy, TX. In addition to her secondary experience, she has served as an adjunct professor at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree from West Georgia College and a Master’s Degree from the University of Maine. She was a Summer Fellow at the prestigious Klingenstein Institute of Columbia University and has also been the recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Ms. Pogue was an early adopter of technology in the classroom, and she is currently on the planning board of Classroom 2.0, helping to produce weekly professional development webinars for teachers from around the world.
Jane Zhao was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her poem at the conclusion of the 2013 program. Her poem was one of The Drum's four featured pieces from the 2013 YAWP collection.
Richard Njoroge was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Gabe Bamforth was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his essay at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Marquis Knight-Jacks was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Ashley Lee was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
John Glasfeld was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Emma LeBlanc Perez was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Arthur Galstian was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Gaelle Rigaud was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Christina Wiese was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her essay at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Charlotte Goddu was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program. Her story is one of The Drum's four featured pieces from the 2013 YAWP collection.
Quddos Rodrigues was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Noah Riley was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Amariah Condon was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Sabrina Priestley was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Catherine Cray was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program. The story was one of The Drum's four featured pieces from the 2013 YAWP collection.
Tara Rahman was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Emma Trujillo was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.
Ethan Aronson was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. He recorded his story at the conclusion of the 2013 program. The story is one of The Drum's four featured pieces from the 2013 YAWP collection.
Caroline Brink was a 2013 Summer Fellow at Grub Street's 2013 Young Adult Writers Program. She recorded her story at the conclusion of the 2013 program.