19th and 20th-century American women's rights activist
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Voltamos com mais um episódio do Escuta Essa, podcast semanal em que Denis e Danilo trocam histórias de cair o queixo e de explodir os miolos. Todas as quartas-feiras, no seu agregador de podcasts favorito, é a vez de um contar um causo para o outro. Neste episódio Danilo nos conta sobre sua primeira grande aventura em cima de uma bicicleta - e sobre como a bicicleta foi importante para o movimento sufragista. Não deixe de enviar os episódios do Escuta Essa para aquela pessoa com quem você também gosta de compartilhar histórias e aproveite para mandar seus comentários e perguntas no Spotify, nas redes sociais @escutaessapod, ou no e-mail escutaessa@aded.studio. A gente sempre lê mensagens no final de cada episódio! ... NESTE EPISÓDIO - A Bike Anjo é uma rede de pessoas dispostas a ensinar outras pessoas a aprender a andar de bicicleta ou a realizar de bicicleta os trajetos mais importantes do seu cotidiano. No site é possível procurar eventos de ensino de bicicleta, solicitar a ajuda de um guia ou inscrever-se para prestar esse tipo de auxílio a outras pessoas. - A bicicleta dobrável da história era uma Caloi Urbe, aro 20", com 7 marchas. - Segundo o código de trânsito brasileiro, automóveis precisam respeitar a distância de 1,5m para ultrapassar bicicletas, o que na prática significa mudar de faixa de rolamento. - Márcia Regina de Andrade Prado faleceu em 2009 atropelada na Avenida Paulista enquanto fazia seu deslocamento de bicicleta. Era uma cicloativista importante e a Rota Márcia Prado, que atravessa as cidades de São Paulo, São Bernardo, Cubatão e Santos, agora leva seu nome. A rota foi oficializada em 2018 pela Lei Estadual nº 16.748. - É possível ver ilustrações que mostram mulheres pedalando no começo do século XX aqui. - Susan Anthony foi uma importante ativista feminista e abolicionista dos Estados Unidos e notória pela importância que deu à bicicleta. - A ativista Elizabeth Smith Miller ficou conhecida por inaugurar o uso de calças bufantes acima do tornozelo nos Estados Unidos, mas foi a divulgação da vestimenta no jornal "The Lilly", criado por Amelia Bloomer, que acabou popularizando a peça e rendendo o nome "bloomer" para as calças. - O casaco "spencer" era originalmente masculino, mas foi amplamente adotado pelas mulheres por não ter uma "cauda" e favorecer o uso da bicicleta. - É possível ler todas as edições do Jornal do Brasil de 1900 online. ... AD&D STUDIO A AD&D produz podcasts e vídeos que divertem e respeitam sua inteligência! Acompanhe todos os episódios em aded.studio para não perder nenhuma novidade.
Jill Nicolini Interviews Susan Anthony Luxury Interior Designer -- www.susananthonyinteriors.comhttps://onlineradiobox.com/search?cs=us.pbnnetwork1&q=podcast%20business%20news%20network&c=ushttps://mytuner-radio.com/search/?q=business+news+networkhttps://streema.com/radios/search/?q=podcast+business+news+network
Jill Nicolini Interviews Susan Anthony Luxury Interior Designer -- www.susananthonyinteriors.comhttps://onlineradiobox.com/search?cs=us.pbnnetwork1&q=podcast%20business%20news%20network&c=ushttps://mytuner-radio.com/search/?q=business+news+networkhttps://streema.com/radios/search/?q=podcast+business+news+network
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Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
“A Hope Worth Fighting For” Sunday, October 2, 10:50 am, Worship Service Livestream Exploring hope and despair in the context of the work the Dallas UU community has done for reproductive dignity and what you might ponder as you consider your callings to make a difference. Rev. Dr. Daniel Kanter, Guest Minister; Rev. John Buehrens; Susan Anthony, Worship Associate; Reiko Oda Lane, Organist; UUSF Choir; Mark Sumner, Music Director; Jon Silk, Drummer; Wm. Garcia Ganz, Pianist; Adam Luftman, Shofar Jackson Munn, Camera; Eric Shackelford, Camera; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Sam King, Live Chat Moderator; Thomas Brown, Sexton; Kelvin Jones, Sexton; Amy Kelly, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher; Ralph Fenn, Les James, Tom Brookshire, Zoom Coffee Hour
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
“A Hope Worth Fighting For” Sunday, October 2, 10:50 am, Worship Service Livestream Exploring hope and despair in the context of the work the Dallas UU community has done for reproductive dignity and what you might ponder as you consider your callings to make a difference. Rev. Dr. Daniel Kanter, Guest Minister; Rev. John Buehrens; Susan Anthony, Worship Associate; Reiko Oda Lane, Organist; UUSF Choir; Mark Sumner, Music Director; Jon Silk, Drummer; Wm. Garcia Ganz, Pianist; Adam Luftman, Shofar Jackson Munn, Camera; Eric Shackelford, Camera; Jonathan Silk, Communications Director; Sam King, Live Chat Moderator; Thomas Brown, Sexton; Kelvin Jones, Sexton; Amy Kelly, Flowers; Linda Messner, Head Usher; Ralph Fenn, Les James, Tom Brookshire, Zoom Coffee Hour
7 years and 150 episodes later, Nat is joined by Sophia Maymudes and Susan Anthony to create a tier list of Sounders jerseys and to discuss the worst MLS jerseys in the leagues history. Keep your Scarves Up!
Episode: 2651 American Women's Suffrage and Alice Paul. Today, we march.
Cuando la mujer aún no podía votar en Estados Unidos, un grupo de sufragistas participó en unas elecciones presidenciales. Una de ellas fue Susan Anthony, que fue condenada el 18 de junio de 1873 por votación ilegal
Episode 42:This week we're continuing our reading of Women, Race & Class by Angela Y. Davis.The full book is available online here:https://archive.org/details/WomenRaceClassAngelaDavis[Part 1 - 2]1. THE LEGACY OF SLAVERY: STANDARDS FOR A NEW WOMANHOOD[Part 3]2. THE ANTI-SLAVERY MOVEMENT AND THE BIRTH OF WOMEN'S RIGHTS[Part 4 - 5]3. CLASS AND RACE IN THE EARLY WOMEN'S RIGHTS CAMPAIGN (first half)[Part 6 - This Week]4. RACISM IN THE WOMAN SUFFRAGE MOVEMENTReading - 00:38Discussion - 33:00[Part 7]5. THE MEANING OF EMANCIPATION ACCORDING TO BLACK WOMEN[Part 8]6. EDUCATION AND LIBERATION: BLACK WOMEN'S PERSPECTIVE[Part 9]7. WOMAN SUFFRAGE AT THE TURN OF THE CENTURY: THE RISING INFLUENCE OF RACISM[Part 10]8. BLACK WOMEN AND THE CLUB MOVEMENT[Part 11]9. WORKING WOMEN, BLACK WOMEN AND THE HISTORY OF THE SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT[Part 12 - 13]10. COMMUNIST WOMEN[Part 14 - 15]11. RAPE, RACISM AND THE MYTH OF THE BLACK RAPIST[Part 16 - 17]12. RACISM, BIRTH CONTROL AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS[Part 18-19]13. THE APPROACHING OBSOLESCENCE OF HOUSEWORK: A WORKING-CLASS PERSPECTIVEFootnotes:1) – 02:30Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage, editors, History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2 (1861–1876) (Rochester, N. Y.: Charles Mann, 1887), pp. 94–95 (note).2) – 04:02Ibid., p. 172.3) – 05:36Ibid, p. 159.4) – 06:34Ibid., p. 188.5) – 07:34Ibid., p. 216.6) – 08:05Stanton, Eighty Years and More, p. 240.7) – 08:29Ibid., pp. 240–241.8) – 08:45Ibid., p. 241.9) – 11:00Gurko, op. cit., p. 213.10) – 11:08Ibid.11) – 11:59Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 214.12) – 13:50Flexner, op. cit., p. 144.13) – 15:20Allen, op. cit., p. 143.14) – 16:10Foner, The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, Vol. 4, p. 167. This passage comes from a speech entitled “The Need for Continuing Anti-Slavery Work” delivered by Douglass at the Thirty-second Annual Meeting of the American Anti-Slavery Society, May 9, 1865. Originally published in the Liberator, May 26, 1865.15) – 17:25Ibid., p. 17.16) – 18:04Ibid., p. 41.17) – 18:52Aptheker, A Documentary History, Vol. 2, pp. 553–554. “Memphis Riots and Massacres.” Report No. 101, House of Representatives, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. (Serial #1274), pp. 160–161, 222–223.18) – 19:25Foster, op. cit., p. 261.19) – 20:35W. E. B. DuBois, Black Reconstruction in America (Cleveland and New York: Meridian Books,1964), p. 670.20) – 20:48Ibid., p. 671.21) – 21:09Ibid., p. 672.22) – 22:24According to Philip Foner, “Douglass objected to Susan Anthony's praise of James Brooks' championship of woman suffrage in Congress, pointing out that it was simply ‘the trick of the enemy to assail and endanger the right of black men.' Brooks, former editor of the New York Express, a viciously anti-Negro, pro-slavery paper, was playing up to the leaders of the women's movement in order to secure their support in opposing Negro suffrage. Douglass warned that if the women did not see through these devices of the former slave owners and their northern allies, ‘there would be trouble in our family.' ” (Foner, The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, Vol. 4, pp. 41–42)23) – 23:20Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 245.24) – 23:50Stanton, Eighty Years and More, p. 256.25) – 23:59Gurko, op. cit., p. 223.26) – 24:16Ibid., pp. 223–224.27) – 24:51Ibid., p. 221. Also Stanton, Eighty Years and More, p. 256.28) – 26:06Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 382.29) – 26:50Foner, The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, Vol. 4, p. 44.30) – 26:58Ibid.31) – 27:08Ibid.32) – 27:42Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 222. See also Lerner, Black Women in White America, p. 569.33) – 28:03Foner, The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass, Vol. 4, p. 212 (letter to Josephine Sophie White Griffin, Rochester, September 27, 1968).34) – 28:12Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 928. Sojourner Truth was criticizing Henry Ward Beecher's approach to the suffrage question. See Allen's analysis, op. cit., p. 148.35) – 28:4235) - 28:42Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 391. Frances E. W. Harper warned the gathering of the dangers of racism by describing a situation in Boston where sixty white women walked off the job to protest the hiring of one Black woman. (p. 392)36) – 29:58Allen, op. cit., p. 145.37) – 30:36Stanton et al., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2, p. 214. See also Allen, op. cit., p. 146.
Buying a house for the first time can be a scary experience. There are so many different things to know, and different parts of the process that you want to make sure you get right. Well, The 101 is here to help! Mortgage broker Susan Anthony explains the first step: getting your mortgage.
Bienvenidos Easy Spanish. Tú mejor experiencia hablando español… Hoy en tu espacio escúchanos. Les hablaremos de ¿Quién fue Susan B. Anthony? Este es otro tema que les gustará y les ayudará a tener más vocabulario del idioma español, así como también aprenderán de otro tema de una manera entretenida, diferente y dinámica. ¡Bienvenidos una vez más a otro episodio de Easy Spanish! Marzo, Simboliza un mes femenino, ya que contiene una día especial para todas las mujeres a nivel mundial, y es que el pasado 8 de marzo, celebramos el Día Internacional de la Mujer. Esta fecha dignifica, reivindica y especialmente recuerda con admiración y gratitud, a todas aquellas mujeres que lucharon, demandaron, exigieron y transformaron el mundo. Arriesgando su propia vida por la lucha de la igualdad de género en todas las facetas. Social, político, legal, económico, familiar, entre otros, en un pasado muy difícil y resistente al que vivimos hoy en día. Y en este nuevo episodio queremos, honrar la memoria de otra mujer que luchó incansablemente por la igualdad. Su nombre Susan B. Anthony. Otra mujer que dejó huella. Nacida en una familia donde la igualdad estaba a la orden del día, Susan B. Anthony se dedicó a luchar en pro de las causas sociales. Hoy, es una de las activistas más reconocidas de Estados Unidos. Pero… ¿Qué hacía? ¿Qué logró Susan Anthony? ¿Les gustaría conocer más de esta otra maravillosa mujer? ¿Sí? Los invitamos a disfrutar de nuestro nuevo episodio # 121 ¿Quién fue Susan B. Anthony? Si te ha gustado este episodio, marca te gusta. Recuerda, seguirnos para que puedas escuchar nuestros episodios de cada semana y escríbenos tus comentarios. También te invitamos a compartir nuestros podcasts con tus amigos que quieran aprender de una manera diferente, entretenida y actualizada el idioma español. Te invitamos también a disfrutar de nuestro Blog, donde podrán encontrar temas interesantes para practicar la lectura y la comprensión. Adicional estos temas también son discutidos en nuestros Conversatorios, Únete a nuestro Club y disfruta de todas las Alternativas para aprender y practicar el español de una manera diferente. Recuerda visitarnos en nuestra página web. www.easyspanishphilliduq.com Y escríbenos a easyspanish.philli@gmail.com Unete a nuestras redes sociales para que nos cuentes qué otro cuento quieres escuchar o cuál otro tema quieres conversar. Tus deseos son órdenes escríbenos y solicita la transcripción de este y otros episodios para que puedas leer y escuchar al mismo tiempo. https://www.instagram.com/easyspanishphilli/?hl=es https://twitter.com/EasySpanish4 https://www.facebook.com/easyspanishphilli/ https://t.me/easyspanishbyduq Nuestros Podcast estarán disponible cada semana con un nuevo tema. Y recuerda que pueden escucharnos en Anchor, Spotify, Stitcher, Google Podcast, Apple Podcast, Tune In, Pandora, nuestra Web y en cualquier otra de tu plataforma de Podcast favorita. Esto fue escúchanos… de Easy Spanish. Tu mejor experiencia hablando español ...
On this episode the past chairs of GradCast gather together to discuss their history on the podcast, their experiences and where they are now. This light hearted conversation with Alexander Moszczynski, Tristan Johnson, Susan Anthony and Ariel Frame is facilitated by longstanding committee member, Yimin Chen. Listen in to find out how it all started, how we've grown and what makes this production a special experience for Western University graduate students. Full Video on YouTube Recorded on Feb 5, 2021 Produced by Ariel Frame Intro theme song produced by Mathew Becker Outro theme song provided by https://freebeats.io/ Produced by White Hot
This week we speak with Dan Perdic, a media studies scholar looking at the misogynist Red Pill online community. Hosts: Yimin Chen & Tristan Johnson Recorded on Nov 29, 2016 Produced by Susan Anthony
Andrew Hanna and Yimin Chen speak with Mary Blake Bonn about the role of voices in musical understanding, as well as her work as the president of SOGS. Recorded on June 20, 2017 Produced by Susan Anthony
Översiktsserien fortsätter. Det kommer att handla om nykterhetsrörelsen, förbudet, Volstead act, kvinnlig rösträtt, Susan Anthony, Elisabeth Cody Stanton, den progressiva erans slut, presidentvalet 1920, Warren Harding och Strong Ale. Glöm inte att prenumerera på podcasten! Ge den gärna betyg på iTunes! Följ podden på Facebook (facebook.com/stjarnbaneret), twitter (@stjarnbaneret) eller Instagram (@stjarnbaneret) Kontakta oss på: stjarnbaneret@gmail.com
On this special episode of gradcast, listen as our host Chantal Lemire sits down to chat with Taniya Nagpal and Susan Anthony about pregnancy. As a phd student studying exercise during pregnancy, Taniya comes equipped with knowledge about how to lead a healthy lifestyle when expecting. Complimenting this, Susan brings her own personal experience as a pregnant student. It makes for cool opportunity to hear the research and the people who use it come together! You can read more about Taniya's work at: https://www.uwo.ca/fhs/EPL/ Host: Chantal Lemire Produced by Connor Chato and Greg Robinson
How do arachnids handle freezing temperatures? Susan Anthony, a PhD candidate in the biology department and past chair of GradCast, tells Gavin Tolometti and Ariel Frame the answer to this elusive question. Susan discusses the difficulty researchers have studying in the field during winter and about some of her favourite animals, including red velvet spider mites, pseudoscorpions, tarantulas and sharks. If you'd like to read more about Susan and her research you can contact her on twitter @suzanthony, by email at santho2@uwo.ca. Hosts: Ariel Frame & Gavin Tolometti Produced by Ariel Frame & Chantal Lemire
Susan Anthony, a keynote speaker, points out the power of presenting a strong case. Cast: Guy - Guy Madjar Michelle - Michelle Aldridge Brandon - Brandon Stockwell Susan Anthony - Julia Johnston
Hosts Chantal Lemire and Susan Anthony interview the newest member of GradCast, Nicholas Handfield-Jones about his research on Parkinsons. Hosted by: Susan Anthony & Chantal Lemire Produced by: Viki Tellios
In this week's episode of GradCast, we present Part 1 of our 2 part series from the Western Research Forum, Western University's largest interdisciplinary showcase of research. Every year, the Society of Graduate Students presents a day-long conference filled with talks from faculties around campus, all associated with the theme of the year. WRF 2018 is all about Controversy. Navaneeth and Yimin chat with WRF 2018 organizer Emily Carlisle, about Controversy and how it is to organize such a big event. We also chat with keynote speaker Dr. Shelley McKellar from History of Medicine at Western. Dr. McKellar gave an engaging talk about the controversy-laden and boundary-breaking invention, the artificial heart, a topic of her new book "Artificial Hearts: The Allure and Ambivalence of a Controversial Medical technology". Hosts: Yimin Chen & Navaneeth Mohan Produced by: Susan Anthony
Last week, the snow in our backyard thawed, and out of the ground came a host of pesky bugs. For Jacqueline Lebenzon, that is research fodder! She studies a species of beetle - the Colorado potato beetle - because their extraordinary winter survival tactic could hold the cellular key to battling aging. Tune in with Roger and Nav. You can follow Jackie's science and art at jackielebenzon.com and on Twitter @JackieLebz Hosts: Rogen Hudson and Navneeth Mohen Produced by Susan Anthony
You might think it's laughing gas or a race car fuel, but NO! Nitric Oxide is a crucial compound vital for healthy brain function. Viki Tellios is a neuroscience PhD student working to find out just how NO affects cerebellum development and maintenance. On this episode, Ariel and Yimin learn about an unexpected connection between Bill Nye and "drunk" mice. If you would like to know more about Viki's research, you can email her at vtellios@uwo.ca Hosts: Yimin Chen and Ariel Frame Produced by Susan Anthony
Continuing our coverage of the Western University Graduate Symposium on Music, Yimin and Roger speak with Elizabeth Mitchell about her work on inclusive arts for children with disabilites and with Martha Schulenburg about what "Vamp" songs reveal about the role of women in the early 20th century. Hosts: Yimin Chen and Roger Hudson Produced by Susan Anthony
We heard that Gavin Tolometti works with lava, and we thought you should hear about that too. He's smashed solid lava with a hammer. Has melted it in a furnace. Sliced it into hair-thin discs. Because somewhere in there is the key to understanding our moon and many extraterrestrial planets. Join Susan and Navaneeth as they discover how to research on the rocks. Look for more info on Gavin's work on his blog at http://gavintolometti.wixsite.com/gdtcpsx And on Twitter @GavinOnTheMoon Hosts: Susan Anthony and Navaneeth Mohan Produced by Susan Anthony
Roger and Chantal talk to SOGS Accessibility Commissioner, Martin Ross, and accessibility advocate Ashton Forrest about resources for graduate students with disabilities. Hosts: Roger Hudson and Chantal Lemire Produced by Susan Anthony
From disco to techo, Musicology PhD student M. Gillian Carrabré takes us through a musical (and personal) history of rave culture. Join hosts Navaneeth and Yimin as we learn about the principles of PLUR (Peace, Love, Unity, and Respect) and about conducting field research as a participant-observer. You can find Gillian on Radio Western (CHRW 94.9) Tuesday nights from 8:30 - 10pm, or streaming online at radiowestern.ca/stream. You can also follow Gillian's music choices on Soundcloud at mixcloud.com/elektribe And here we have a link for Gillian's Autobiographical Mixtape: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6e3R-aA2LA&list=PLLXLRf3CzrHShdY6H1I2NCA7-7qQNeXm9 Hosts: Yimin Chen and Navaneeth Mohan Produced by Susan Anthony
In this episode, hosts Roger and Yimin are introduced to the WUGSOM organizers and researchers studying how music reflects and enriches our lives. Hosts: Yimin Chen and Roger Hudson Produced by Susan Anthony
The Lego Grad Student visited Western as the special guest for the 2017 SOGS Graduate Wellness Forum and GradCast was fortunate enough to get him into the recording booth! Join Yimin and Chantal in conversation with Dr. Lego Grad Student as he reflects on his life in plastic. Follow his exploits on social media at: https://twitter.com/legogradstudent https://www.facebook.com/legogradstudent https://www.instagram.com/legogradstudent https://legogradstudent.tumblr.com Hosts: Yimin Chen and Chantal Lemire Produced by Susan Anthony
Last year, at the SOGS Western Research Forum, we spoke with Brandon Baer. His work on antibiotic-resistant bacteria caught the interest of many of you so we invited him again! Passionate as before about his work, he has been on the path to develop a new therapy for treating a whole range of bacterial lung infections. Curious? So join Navaneeth and Roger on today's episode. Hosts: Navaneeth Mohan and Roger Hudson Produced by Susan Anthony
Yimin and Ariel spoke with Ryley Yost about his work looking into the social behaviour of the fruit fly Drosophila, and what techniques are needed to experiment on this interesting little model organism. Hosts: Yimin Chen and Ariel Frame Produced by Susan Anthony
Navaneeth and Ariel talk with Niki Kamkar about her work studying how stressful events in children affect response to reinforcement. Hosts: Ariel Frame and Navaneeth Mohan Produced by Susan Anthony
What happens when animals hibernate? Kate Mathers is working to find out! Catch her conversation with Susan and Yimin about Doritos, arousal, and adorable 13-lined ground squirrels. Hosts: Susan Anthony and Yimin Chen Produced by Susan Anthony
Have you reached for a cigarette and been advised to take a walk instead? Well, Matthew Fagan is speaking to you. While rolling up for his PhD at Western's Kinesiology dept he investigates the effect of nicotine on cognitive functioning. In today's episode, he chats with Tanya and Navaneeth about how nicotine fares against a brisk walk on cognitive tests. What he found was unexpected. Hosts: Navaneeth Mohan and Tanya Nagpal Produced by Susan Anthony
A little bird told us that Chlöe Carter was studying stress and memory in birds. Chlöe tells Ariel and Charlotte about her work testing whether stressful smells, sights and sounds can illicit fear and alter memory. Hosts: Ariel Frame and Charlotte Panneton Produced by Susan Anthony
Yimin and Taniya chat with "baby Master student" Charlotte Panneton about navigating graduate studies, her interest in the online video streaming platform 'Twitch' and her love for community radio. Hosts: Yimin Chen and Taniya Nagpal Produced by Susan Anthony
Ariel and Chantal chirp with Brendon Samuels about beat perception in birds and humans. Hosts: Ariel Frame and Chantal Lemire Produced by Susan Anthony
Roger and Taniya chat with PhD Candidate Erin Shellington about the potential of 'Square Stepping Exercise' on improving cognition, mobility and mood in older adults. We also get insight on what the end of a PhD degree is like! Hosts: Roger Hudson and Taniya Nagpal Produced by Susan Anthony
Navaneeth and Roger speak with Danny Bednar, Patrick Hill, and Zack Morse about the upcoming international observe the moon night occurring on October 28th 2017. Hosts: Roger Hudson and Navaneeth Mohan Produced by Susan Anthony
Sabrina and Ariel pick Simon Benoit's brain about Parkinson's and his unique approach to studying this neurodegenerative disease. Hosts: Ariel Frame and Sabrina Hope Produced by Susan Anthony
Roger and Ariel speak with Niveen Fulcher about sensory motor gating, and it's relation to autism spectrum disorder and schizophrenia. Hosts: Ariel Frame and Roger Hudson Produced by Susan Anthony
Yimin Chen and Susan Anthony speak with Mitch Mann about his work on TUT1, a protein that prevents DNA and RNA damage - and cancer! Hosts: Yimin Chen and Susan Anthony
Hosts Taniya and Susan talk to fellow Gradcast committee member Emma Bridgwater about how the human brain interpret sounds, and how you can measure it in sleeping subjects. Hosts: Taniya Nagpal and Susan Anthony
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
What Do A Billion Muslims Have To Teach Us About Unitarian Universalism? Islam, the second largest religion in the world, could be thought of as a Unitarian heresy. Like American Unitarians 1200 years later, Muhammad and his followers regarded Jesus as a prophet, but not a God. They believed that the kingdom of God belonged to all people, not just a chosen few. In many ways Islam and Unitarianism share a certain kinship, particularly in relation to the Judeo-Christian tradition. At the same time, there are vast differences. Islam arose in the 7th century on the Arabian Peninsula among Bedouins. American Unitarianism arose in the 19th century among the "Boston Brahmins". Islam asserted itself in the language of poetry. Unitarianism asserted itself in the language of reason. Today, Unitarians are among the most vocal allies of Muslims in the United States and Rumi is one of our favorite poets. And yet, we know so little about the textual tradition of Islam. Let's explore a bit of that tradition and see what it can tell us about our own faith. Alessandro Gagliard, Guest Preacher Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, piano Radim Zenkl, mandolin, mandola, ukulele, didgeridoo Asher Davison, song leader Gayle Reynolds, Welcome Jonathan Silk, OOS,Sound and Podcasting
Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
What Do A Billion Muslims Have To Teach Us About Unitarian Universalism? Islam, the second largest religion in the world, could be thought of as a Unitarian heresy. Like American Unitarians 1200 years later, Muhammad and his followers regarded Jesus as a prophet, but not a God. They believed that the kingdom of God belonged to all people, not just a chosen few. In many ways Islam and Unitarianism share a certain kinship, particularly in relation to the Judeo-Christian tradition. At the same time, there are vast differences. Islam arose in the 7th century on the Arabian Peninsula among Bedouins. American Unitarianism arose in the 19th century among the "Boston Brahmins". Islam asserted itself in the language of poetry. Unitarianism asserted itself in the language of reason. Today, Unitarians are among the most vocal allies of Muslims in the United States and Rumi is one of our favorite poets. And yet, we know so little about the textual tradition of Islam. Let's explore a bit of that tradition and see what it can tell us about our own faith. Alessandro Gagliard, Guest Preacher Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, piano Radim Zenkl, mandolin, mandola, ukulele, didgeridoo Asher Davison, song leader Gayle Reynolds, Welcome Jonathan Silk, OOS,Sound and Podcasting
U.S. Senate gives women the vote. It was in 1848 that American suffragists Susan B. Anthony and Lucretia Mott first proposed that women be able to vote. Little did they know it would take seven decades of lobbying, protests and arm-twisting to make the dream come true. Amending the American constitution (like amending any country’s constitution) is a difficult process; it requires agreement from two-thirds of both the House of Representatives and the Senate, and then three-quarters of the states. In January of 1919, the House of Representatives passed the Women’s Suffrage Bill, also known as the Susan Anthony amendment. Five months later, on June 4, 1919, the Senate gave its approval. Then began the state-by-state campaign, which succeeded the day Tennessee passed the amendment by just one vote. The secretary of state certified the ratification on August 26, 1920, finally granting most American women the vote. Two years later, the Supreme Court protected the new amendment by ruling against a legal challenge to it. The 19th amendment now reads: “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation.” See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Heartwood Our beautiful sanctuary is, among other things, adorned with redwood beams and ceilings, oak plank floors, and carved chancel furniture that goes back to the ministry of Thomas Starr King. John has long felt that under the surface of every liberal church there lies a framework of covenantal heartwood, left to us as a gift and a present guide in challenging times. Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, organ Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Howard Oringer, Welcome Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Podcasting
Heartwood Our beautiful sanctuary is, among other things, adorned with redwood beams and ceilings, oak plank floors, and carved chancel furniture that goes back to the ministry of Thomas Starr King. John has long felt that under the surface of every liberal church there lies a framework of covenantal heartwood, left to us as a gift and a present guide in challenging times. Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, organ Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Howard Oringer, Welcome Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Podcasting
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Intransitive Hope Hope is dangerous. We can become attached to particular outcomes. The best sort of hope is not a bet on outcomes, but an intransitive “orientation of the spirit,” as humanist Vaclav Havel put it. To operate in the realm between faith and love is also to learn to practice non-attachment to the fruits of right action. We’ll sing, with the help of the choir, a hymn that speaks of “hope, all other hopes above.” We’ll also hear the haunting song, “An Only Hope,” from the film, "A Walk to Remember", and an anthem by poet Elizabeth Alexander that speaks of sustaining hope “while pulling every weed.” Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Alex Darr, Message for All Ages Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, organ Wm. Garcia Ganz, piano & conductor Elliott Etzkorn, piano Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Intransitive Hope Hope is dangerous. We can become attached to particular outcomes. The best sort of hope is not a bet on outcomes, but an intransitive “orientation of the spirit,” as humanist Vaclav Havel put it. To operate in the realm between faith and love is also to learn to practice non-attachment to the fruits of right action. We’ll sing, with the help of the choir, a hymn that speaks of “hope, all other hopes above.” We’ll also hear the haunting song, “An Only Hope,” from the film, "A Walk to Remember", and an anthem by poet Elizabeth Alexander that speaks of sustaining hope “while pulling every weed.” Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Alex Darr, Message for All Ages Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Reiko Oda Lane, organ Wm. Garcia Ganz, piano & conductor Elliott Etzkorn, piano Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Wonders Still The World Shall Witness The world does not lack for wonders, said poet Muriel Rukeyser, only for a sense of wonder. John’s spiritual mentor, Dr. Jacob Trapp, wrote a hymn with the same title as his sermon. In the face of life’s inevitable changes, disappointments, and losses, how do we revive a sense of wonder? His text will come from a question the disciples of John posed to Jesus: Are you the one who is to come, or shall we wait for another? wondering, In what sense must each of us answer that question? Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Rev. JD Benson, Assistant Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Kathleen Quenneville, Moderator Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, Organist Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Wonders Still The World Shall Witness The world does not lack for wonders, said poet Muriel Rukeyser, only for a sense of wonder. John’s spiritual mentor, Dr. Jacob Trapp, wrote a hymn with the same title as his sermon. In the face of life’s inevitable changes, disappointments, and losses, how do we revive a sense of wonder? His text will come from a question the disciples of John posed to Jesus: Are you the one who is to come, or shall we wait for another? wondering, In what sense must each of us answer that question? Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Rev. JD Benson, Assistant Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Kathleen Quenneville, Moderator Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, Organist Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Talking Manpower continues its conversation with Ms. Susan Anthony, Director of Manpower and Force Analysis at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.
Talking Manpower speaks with Ms. Susan Anthony, Director of Manpower and Force Analysis at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.
Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Power, Authority, and Spirituality When I was UUA President, I co-led a couple of retreats for Unitarian Universalist CEOs under this title. To use what power we have (which is often greater than we care to acknowledge) for the common good; to exercise authority with moral responsibility; these are signs of authentic spirituality – at work, at home, and in our common life. Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, Organ and Bell Choir Director Kathleen Quenneville, Moderator Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
Power, Authority, and Spirituality When I was UUA President, I co-led a couple of retreats for Unitarian Universalist CEOs under this title. To use what power we have (which is often greater than we care to acknowledge) for the common good; to exercise authority with moral responsibility; these are signs of authentic spirituality – at work, at home, and in our common life. Rev. John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, Organ and Bell Choir Director Kathleen Quenneville, Moderator Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound, Worship Archives/Podcast
Talking Manpower continues its conversation with Ms. Susan Anthony, Director of Manpower and Force Analysis at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.
Talking Manpower speaks with Ms. Susan Anthony, Director of Manpower and Force Analysis at U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command.
This week we talk to medical doctor and Health Promotion Master's student Dalia Hasan about her work to have better medical school training to combat childhood obesity. Hosts: Jina Kum and Susan Anthony
This week we are rejoined by Cayley Bower. Last time she came on to talk about her work as the PSAC Social Science chief steward, but today we sit down to talk about her research. Cayley studies a graveyard in Kingston, and what it says about the changing cultural approaches to death in the 19th century. Hosts: Tristan Johnson and Susan Anthony
Worship is constantly changing. The root of the word goes back to the Anglo-Saxon “worth -shaep.” The constant purpose being to help give shape to what is of true worth, to shape our inner lives that way. Taking off from an essay on religion in an age of science, John will discuss how rock concerts, intimate groups, and even astronomy offer aspects of what we seek – but not the whole. Rev. John Buehrens,Senior Minister Alyson Jacks, Associate Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, organist Wm. García Ganz, piano Judy Payne, trustee Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound & Worship Archives/Podcast
Worship is constantly changing. The root of the word goes back to the Anglo-Saxon “worth -shaep.” The constant purpose being to help give shape to what is of true worth, to shape our inner lives that way. Taking off from an essay on religion in an age of science, John will discuss how rock concerts, intimate groups, and even astronomy offer aspects of what we seek – but not the whole. Rev. John Buehrens,Senior Minister Alyson Jacks, Associate Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, organist Wm. García Ganz, piano Judy Payne, trustee Jonathan Silk, OOS, Sound & Worship Archives/Podcast
This week we meet with new GradCast host and our guest Susan Anthony. She's been and goes from time to time to the arctic to find and study how spiders up there handle the cold. Host and Producer: Tristan Johnson
Sermons-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
The title is taken from the American poet, Theodore Roethke. The sermon will be a Christmas season response to the underlying tone of despair in so many lives and so much of our culture. Sue Anthony will be the Worship Associate. Trumpet, soloist, carols, and candlelight will welcome all. The Reverend John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, organ, Bell Choir Director Tom Dambly, trumpet Laurel Sprigg, soprano Kate Offer, soprano Mark Johnson, piano Jonathan Silk, Sound, Order of Service & Worship Archives/Podcast
Complete Service-First Unitarian Universalist Society of San Francisco
The title is taken from the American poet, Theodore Roethke. The sermon will be a Christmas season response to the underlying tone of despair in so many lives and so much of our culture. Sue Anthony will be the Worship Associate. Trumpet, soloist, carols, and candlelight will welcome all. The Reverend John Buehrens, Senior Minister Susan Anthony, Worship Associate Dr. Mark Sumner, Music Director Reiko Oda Lane, organ, Bell Choir Director Tom Dambly, trumpet Laurel Sprigg, soprano Kate Offer, soprano Mark Johnson, piano Jonathan Silk, Sound, Order of Service & Worship Archives/Podcast