Podcasts about william t

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Best podcasts about william t

Latest podcast episodes about william t

Eskilstuna-Kurirens Sportpodcast
Episode 352: William Törnqvist

Eskilstuna-Kurirens Sportpodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 69:24


Hej hallå! Här kommer ännu ett kanonavsnitt med Ekuriens Sportpodd, denna gång med den fantastiskt trevlige, Eskilstunakillen och handbollstränare, samt vältalige, William Törnqvist. Vi får oss ett ruggigt bra surr med denna kanonkille som snart flyttar till Norge för att bli huvudtränare i Kristiansund I studion: J Kindmark Johan Englund William Törnqvist Tack för att ni lyssnar på oss

Understanding Healthcare with Sam Feudo
Conversation with Dr. Joshua Liao

Understanding Healthcare with Sam Feudo

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2024 17:12


In this episode, I spoke with Dr. Joshua Liao, Professor and Chief of the William T. and Gay F. Solomon Division of General Internal Medicine at UT Southwestern Medical Center and Founder of the Program on Policy Evaluation & Learning (PROPEL). With a focus on reducing health disparities and enhancing patient care through innovative payment models, Dr. Liao provided insights into care delivery and the role of policy in shaping equitable health outcomes. We explored his journey in medicine, the challenges and successes he's encountered, and his vision for the future of healthcare.

Let's Go To Court!
264: The Fager Family Murders

Let's Go To Court!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 112:01


Bill Butterworth claimed he had no idea what happened. He awoke in a haze, hundreds of miles from home. He'd driven from Kansas to Florida in a car that wasn't his. The vehicle belonged to a family whose house he'd been working on. But how had he come into possession of their car? Then, Bill says he heard a horrifying story on the radio. Phil Fager had been shot dead in his home. His daughters, Kelli and Sherri, had been killed as well. Their killer had not been found. And now for a note about our process. For this episode, Brandi copy and pasted from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases. In this episode, Brandi pulled from: “Kansas Trails: Sedgwick County” genealogytrails.com “Wichita murder suspect in custody” by AP, The Salina Journal “Suspect charged in family slayings” upi.com “Methods described by police” by Kaye Schultz, The Wichita Eagle “Prosecution rests case in Butterworth murder trial” by Jim Cross, The Wichita Eagle “Most self-professed amnesiacs fake it, psychologist testifies” by Kaye Schultz, The Wichita Eagle “Wichita triple-slaying case now up to jury” by Lynn Byczynski, The Kansas City Times “Jury weighs evidence in triple slaying” by AP, The Kansas City Star “Butterworth acquitted in deaths” by Bill Hirschman, The Wichita Eagle "Police report on Face case still in works” by Jim Cross, The Wichita Eagle “State of Kansas v. William T. Butterworth” “1988 murder trial still haunts jury foreman” by Roy Wenzl, The Wichita Eagle “The Fager Murders” episode, The Generation Why Podcast YOU'RE STILL READING? My, my, my, you skeezy scunch! You must be hungry for more! We'd offer you some sausage brunch, but that gets messy. So how about you head over to our Patreon instead? (patreon.com/lgtcpodcast). At the $5 level, you'll get 49+ full length bonus episodes, plus access to our 90's style chat room!  

Canary Cry News Talk
AUTOCRAT MESSIAH

Canary Cry News Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 130:39


Canary Cry News Talk #588- 02.08.2023 - Recorded Live to Tape AUTOCRAT MESSIAH | Andro Deus UK, Flippy Escape, Marjorie Messiah, Fungi Fears, Disney Trapp A Podcast that Deconstructs Mainstream Media News from a Biblical Worldview We Operate Value 4 Value: http://CanaryCry.Support  Learn More About Value 4 Value: https://value4value.info/ Resource: Index of MSM Ownership (Harvard.edu) Resource: Aliens Demons Doc (feat. Dr. Heiser, Unseen Realm)   This Episode was Produced By: Executive Producers The Underwoods***   Producers Sir LX Protocol V2 Knight of the Berrean Protocol, Derek P, Lygia G, Yackelin P, Sir Dylan Knight of the Wailing Avian, Mr Jason, Sir Morv Knight of the Burning Chariots, Sir Darrin Knight of the Hungry Panda's, William T, Dame Gail Canary Whisperer and Lady of X's and O's, Sir Casey the Shield Knight, Veronica D, DrWhoDunDat, Sir Scott Knight of Truth   Audio Production Arnie W Marty B   Visual Art Sir Dove Knight of Rusbeltia   Microfiction Runksmash - The runner takes the cylinder from the lady and slinks through the city unnoticed. Coming to an abandoned office building on the border of the 15 minute hive, he takes the stairs to the basement and enters to find a brave psychonaut and The Chaplain.   Stephen S - Coach Schwab's  pep talk, “We are for the people.  We will bring good to the people. Will they always appreciate it?  Of course not, they don't know what's good for them. Does a child appreciate the pair of socks for a Christmas present? No!”    CLIP PRODUCER Emsworth, FaeLivrin   TIMESTAPERS Jade Bouncerson, Christine C   SOCIAL MEDIA DOERS Dame MissG of the OV and Deep Rivers   LINKS HELP JAM   REMINDERS Clankoniphius   SHOW NOTES HELLO, RUN DOWN DAYS OF NOAH Gender-neutral God to be considered by Church of England (Telegraph UK) → Church of England to consider gender-neutral God: reports (Fox News)   Also UK: Treasury, Bank of England plans for CBDC ‘Britcoin' to replace cash (DailyMail)   DAY JINGLE/PERSONAL/EXEC.   FLIPPY (Chris M) Marty the robot escapes from Giant store, goes on brief googly-eyed adventure (Fox 43)   STATE OF THE UNION/HARRY LEGS Clip: *Biden's dramatic warning to China (CNN)   CHRISTIAN NATIONALISM Marjorie Taylor Greene - The Messiah (WAPO)    UKRAINE/RUSSIA US bombed Nord Stream gas pipelines, claims investigative journalist Seymour Hersh (Times UK)   PARTY TIME: http://CANARYCRY.PARTY BREAK 1: TREASURE: https://CanaryCryRadio.com/Support   FUNGI/PHARMEKEIA Clip: The fungal threat to human health is growing in a warmer, wetter, sicker world (CNN) → Fungi and bacteria are binging on burned soil (UC Riverside)   We Asked a Mycologist About The Last of Us and It Got Weird (Esquire)   BREAK 3: TALENT   ANTARCTICA Disney on Ice: How We Explored Antarctica with Adventures by Disney (MSN/L.A. Family Travel)    BREAK 4: TIME END  

Let Me Tell You About...
NOT FAKE Cryptids (real) @ Camp Tell You Boutee

Let Me Tell You About...

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2022 72:15


Welcome to camp 'Tell-You-Boutee!' Your parents paid an exorbitant amount of money for you to be out in these woods. I hope you enjoy the SPOOKY STORIES Counselor Tad, Joe and Kirsten prepared for your first week! (By the way all of them are definitely 100% real and WILL attack if you don't clean up your trash during lunch.)Cryptids in order of appearance: https://imgur.com/a/AjXg7uwTalking Points: man hand hook car door, good clean teen fun, snapchat squanch, fire walk with me in the sky, cockatoo waddles, necronomicon.wikia.insane, I say vore a little too much this episode, jakes blender, fishbowl cut, take my water witch please!, trailer park boys pirates, grows nest, webp sucks, unidentified sky beasts, mongolian deathworm, Mumbo Jumo but not the minecraft one, feuding family, watch JoJo, torquewise, four states of popelick, lizardman, jersey devil, ooomommy, the story of the hodag, ancient order of the reveeting society, blue mud hills, post-diluvian dinosaurs (Tessie?!?!?)Camp Tell You Boutee Theme @TristanAlricCamp Logo @SaltySnipWant to say something to my face (ears) pal?!Leave a voicemail at (413) 206-6545Send an email at letmetellyouabouttt@gmail.com (if you've got the gumption)Check out the website for links to our shows on iTunes, GooglePodcasts and Spotify► http://www.lmtya.com► https://spoti.fi/2Q55yfLPeep us on Twitter► @LetMeTellYouPDOfficial Discord► https://discord.gg/SqyXJ9R/////// SHILL CORNER ///////► https://www.patreon.com/LMTYALMTYA shirts!► https://represent.com/lmtya/////// SHILL CORNER ///////Sources:Virtual Campfire with Crackling Fire Sounds (HD) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iz7wtTO7roQN.C. Man Claims Bigfoot Sighting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2F-F1QyhRSkCox, William T.. Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods,: With a Few Desert and Mountain Beasts,. United States, Press of Judd & Detweiler, Incorporated, 1910.Shoemaker, H. W. (1913). Susquehanna Legends: Collected in Central Pennsylvania. United States: Bright Printing Company.https://wisconsinlife.org/story/the-legend-of-the-hodag/http://www.lib.lumberwoods.org/hodag/hodag.htmlhttps://remezcla.com/lists/culture/13-terrifing-spooky-and-awesome-latin-american-horror-monsters-legends/https://www.liveabout.com/lesser-known-us-monsters-and-cryptids-4863617"I made it up"

political and spiritual
Raymond Fauntroy, A Change is coming

political and spiritual

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2022 141:00


Elder Raymond Fauntroy former SCLC president, Civic right Actavis, singer & Dr Martin Luther King driver.We're looking at the pass to build for now and the future, Elder Raymond Fauntroy brother of Walter Raymond. Also,we're looking at The African American National United...William T. Fauntroy One of the original Tuskegee Airman had his 95th birthday celebrated Sunday with a motor parade in front of his home Sunday in Northeast Washington, At 3:00 every Sunday beat your drums for power of unity 

political and spiritual
Elder Raymond Fauntroy Dr. Martin Luther King Driver, Drum Beat

political and spiritual

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2022 150:00


Elder Raymond Fauntroy former SCLC president, Civic right Actavis, singer & Dr Martin Luther King driver.We're looking at the pass to build for now and the future, Elder Raymond Fauntroy brother of Walter Raymond. Also,we're looking at The African American National United...William T. Fauntroy One of the original Tuskegee Airman had his 95th birthday celebrated Sunday with a motor parade in front of his home Sunday in Northeast Washington, At 3:00 every Sunday beat your drums for power of unity https://www.gofundme.com/f/kim-weston

Ultrarunning History
99: Six-Day Race Part 7: Weston Invades England (1876)

Ultrarunning History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 28:08


By Davy Crockett You can read, listen, or watch The six-day challenge originally started in England during the late 1700s. Fifty years later, in the 1820s, a six-day frenzy occurred as many British athletes sought to reach 400 or more miles in six days (see episode 91). But then, six-day attempts were essentially lost for the next 50 years. Surprisingly, it was the Americans who resurrected these events in the early 1870s and brought them indoors for all to witness. The Brits believed they owned the running sport and surely their athletes were superior and could beat the upstart Americans, Edward Payson Weston and Daniel O'Leary. It was written, “They cannot be expected to be much better than those bred in England.” Both American and British runners/walkers wanted to prove that they were the best and challenges were sent back and forth across the Atlantic Ocean. The British did not realize that in 1875, there was no one truly skilled and trained in England to do heel-toe walking for the distances that Weston and O'Leary were doing in America.  Thus, Weston took the English bait and boarded a steamship to England. Please consider becoming a patron of ultrarunning history. Help to preserve this history by signing up to contribute a little each month through Patreon. Visit https://ultrarunninghistory.com/member British Pedestrian Talent The British attitude toward Americans in athletics at the time was characterized in one of their sporting newspapers. “Americans have long looked upon us as being far behind the times, while they have prided themselves on their ability to go ahead of all creation. This may be true, or it may not be so, but there can be no doubt that we have on all occasions shown ourselves fully equal to them in all branches of sport.” Another explained it this way, “We Englishmen only believe what we see of American prowess is the extreme untruthfulness of American sportsmen. We are not in the least degree jealous of their athletic prowess, we are only skeptical.” Lillie Bridge Grounds The current Pedestrian hero in England was William T. Perkins, “The Champion Walker in England.” On September 20, 1875, at the Lillie Bridge grounds in London, England, the home of the London Athletic Club, he covered eight miles in 59:05 in front of 5,000 people. In England “Pedestrianism” was not limited to walking, it included distance running and short-distance “sprint running.” But interest was low. During December 1875, a Sporting newspaper wrote, “Professional pedestrianism is at its lowest ebb in London.” The first long-distance running race, professional or amateur in more than a year was scheduled for December 26th that year, a ten mile-race held at Lillie Bridge. Reaction in England to Weston-O'Leary Race Weston and O'Leary British sports writers doubted the results of the December 1875 Weston-O'Leary six-day race in Chicago won by O'Leary (see episode 98). A respected British sportswriter, Easterling, wrote, “Either O'Leary is a wonder of endurance such as has never been before even dream of, or he isn't, and that can only be tested by his walking against some known man round a large ground or on a road. Not to mince matters, the reason we Englishmen only believe what we see of American prowess, is the extreme untruthfulness of American sportsmen.” A running/walking expert in London carefully looked over the statistics of the Weston-O'Leary six-day race. He was impressed with the amount of data collected but wondered about competing that distance in “a covered building.” Indoor running competitions were not yet taking place in England, and it was believed that there were many British professional athletes who could beat “the Yankee horses,” Weston or O'Leary, easily on roads outside, rather than in comfy looping indoor accommodations, events which they referred to as “dreary tramps.” William Curtis The Brits challenged O'Leary to come to England and walk a mid-dis...

The John Batchelor Show
#NewWorldReport: Guatemala spurned by the Democracy Summit . Senadora Maria Fernanda Cabal. @MariaFdaCabal (on leave). Joseph Humire @JMHumire @SecureFreeSoc

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2021 11:30


Photo:  Engraving from the book Guatemala, the land of quetzal, by William T. Brigham, published in 1887. Iglesia de Esquipulas in 1884. #NewWorldReport:   Guatemala spurned by the Democracy Summit . Senadora Maria Fernanda Cabal. @MariaFdaCabal (on leave). Joseph Humire @JMHumire @SecureFreeSoc     https://www.securefreesociety.org https://www.ft.com/content/7e22bc8c-31e4-4a4b-a0a1-e29000fdddc6

FedSoc Events
Private Power and Eminent Domain

FedSoc Events

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2021 86:37


The 2021 National Lawyers Convention took place November 11-13, 2021 at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, DC. The topic of the conference was "Public and Private Power: Preserving Freedom or Preventing Harm?". This panel discussed "Private Power and Eminent Domain."Since the Founding, the extent to which the public power of eminent domain may be used by, or for the benefit of, private parties, has been a subject of intense debate. Time and time again, the U.S. Supreme Court has considered cases testing the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee that "private property [shall not] be taken for public use, without just compensation." U.S. Const., amend. V. Over 15 years ago, in the landmark case of Kelo v. New London, the Court upheld the exercise of eminent domain to transfer private property from private individuals to other private entities. The decision – controversial from the outset – prompted deeper questions about the extent to which the Constitution allows for eminent domain for "public purposes" even where the action advances the economic interests of private parties over others. But how lasting is this precedent? In a recent dissent from the denial of certiorari in Eychaner v. Chicago, three justices voted to revisit Kelo, two of them expressly calling to overrule it. Since Kelo, the U.S. Supreme Court has continued to review eminent domain and other cases, raising significant property rights concerns – often involving complex questions at the intersection of private and public power.Most recently, in the 2020-2021 term, the U.S. Supreme Court heard three cases dealing with the intersection of private and public power in the eminent domain context: Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid, where the Court held that a state regulation allowing union organizers to enter private property constituted a taking requiring just compensation;PennEast Pipeline v. New Jersey, where the Court dealt with the legality of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC) delegation of eminent domain powers to a private pipeline company; andPakdel v. San Francisco, where the Court continued to reduce procedural hurdles for inverse condemnation claims (expanding upon a prior decision just two years ago in Knick v. Township of Scott). For this panel, a distinguished lineup of speakers will discuss the intersection between public and private power in the eminent domain context. The panel will focus on eminent domain’s history, the implications of originalism for understanding the extent and use of that power, recent Supreme Court rulings on these topics, and the likely subjects and issues for review in future cases, among other things. As part of this discussion, the panel will illuminate the constitutional, legal, economic, and philosophic principles and considerations that help to inform perspectives on this important topic of public versus private power in the realm of property rights.Featuring:Hon. Paul D. Clement, Partner, Kirkland & Ellis LLP; Former Solicitor General, U.S. Department of JusticeProf. Roderick Hills, William T. Comfort, III Professor of Law, New York University School of LawMr. Robert J. McNamara, Senior Attorney, Institute for JusticeMr. Joshua Thompson, Director of Legal Operations, Pacific Legal FoundationModerator: Hon. Jennifer Walker Elrod, U.S. Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit

The John Batchelor Show
#NewWorldReport: Guatemala offers remedies. Latin American Research Professor Evan Ellis, U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute. @revanellis

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 10:35


Photo:    Grabado del libro Guatemala, the land of quetzal, by William T. Brigham, published in 1887. Palacio de los Capitanes Generales in 1884. It should be noted that the reconstruction of the eastern wing had not been restarted, while the western wing withstood the impacts of the earthquake of September 3rd, 1874.  #NewWorldReport: Guatemala offers remedies. Latin American Research Professor Evan Ellis, U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute. @revanellis https://abcnews.go.com/International/thousands-migrants-remain-border-guatemala-waiting-asylum-cases/story?id=81542658

The Clarke County Democrat Podcast

William Thomas “Tommy” Golden, III, 78, of Dixons Mills died November 28, 2021 at Camden Nursing Facility. He was born June 11, 1943 in Childersburg to William Thomas Golden II and Gertrude Dison Golden. He was a retired paper mill worker with James River Corporation. He was a member of Shiloh Baptist Church. He is survived by his wife, Amie Golden; son, William Thomas “Bill” (Carey) Golden IV; brother, Paul Golden; four sisters, Jane Strickland, Martha Sherbert, Rebecca Squires, and Brenda Edmondson; three grandchildren, William T. Golden V, Blake D. Golden and Jacob L. Golden; and two greatgrandchildren. He was...Article Link

New Life Church Millbrook
Living between two Advents: The Candle of FAITH

New Life Church Millbrook

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2021 57:41


Rev. William T. “Bill” Hill continues the theme of Advent as he shares on the topic of FAITH in the promises of God.  As we live between the two Advents (Comings) of Jesus.  We see the proof of the first Advent, giving us a greater FAITH for the promises of the return of Jesus!  Join us as we walk through the Scriptures that describe this time of Living between two Advents: The Candle of FAITH.

Anesthesiology News presents The Etherist
Ep 4: The Next Chapter of Anesthesiology (The Etherist, Season 3)

Anesthesiology News presents The Etherist

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 31:42


In this episode, we turn our focus to the present to see how recent research could be used to shape the future of anesthesiology. In previous episodes, we reviewed how the pioneers of anesthesia were able to successfully use ether and chloroform without the full knowledge of those drugs that we have today. In that spirit, we explore whether there is untapped potential in our current scientific expertise that could help improve the delivery of modern-day anesthesia.This season of the podcast began with the retelling of the origin story of anesthesia use. We revisited the classic tale of Ether Day with the benefit of hindsight and almost two centuries of clinical advances. But the stories about William T.G. Morton, Simpson Young and John Snow are also just chapters in a much larger story of medical progress. It is our story, too. While this season of The Etherist is ending, the story of anesthesia continues, as does the push for clinical progress. In this episode, we try to answer the question: What will be the next chapter in the story of anesthesiology?This is the fourth and final episode of season 3 of “Anesthesiology News presents The Etherist.” Sponsored by Masimo and Medtronic.Suggested ReadingBrown EN, Lydic R, Schiff ND. General anesthesia, sleep, and coma. _N Engl J Med_. 2010;363:2638-2650. İnce R, Adanir SS, Sevmez F. The inventor of electroencephalography (EEG): Hans Berger (1873–1941). Childs Nerv Syst. 2021;37:2723–2724. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00381-020-04564-z Gibbs FA, Gibbs LE, Lennox WG. Effects on the electroencephalogram of certain drugs which influence nervous activity. Arch Intern Med. 1937;60:154-166. Glorfeld J. Hans Berger has a real brainstorm: accident inspires a career and the invention of EEG. Cosmos. November 20, 2020. Accessed November 16, 2021. https://cosmosmagazine.com/health/hans-berger-has-a-real-brainstorm/ Mets B. Waking Up Safer? An Anesthesiologist's Record. SilverWood Books; 2018. Purdon PL, Sampson A, Pavone KJ. Clinical electroencephalography for anesthesiologists part I: background and basic signatures. Anesthesiology. 2015;123(4):937-960. doi:10.1097/ALN.0000000000000841 Science News. Electric currents picked up from head show brain action. Science News Letter. 1935;719(27):35. Accessed November 16. https://www.sciencenews.org/archive/electric-currents-picked-head-show-brain-action Sanders L. How Hans Berger's quest for telepathy spurred modern brain science: instead of finding long-range signals, he invented EEG. Science News. July 6, 2021. Accessed November 16, 2021. https://www.sciencenews.org/article/hans-berger-telepathy-neuroscience-brain-eegFollow Us:Our WebsiteApple PodcastsSpotifyGoogle PodcastFind Us on Social:TwitterFacebookLinkedInInstagram

New Books in Military History
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in Military History

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/military-history

New Books in the American South
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in the American South

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-south

New Books Network
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in Literary Studies
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in Literary Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies

New Books in History
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history

New Books in Biography
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in Biography

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography

New Books in American Studies
Stephen Cushman, "The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today" (UNC Press, 2021)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 58:37


In the decades following the American Civil War, several of the generals who had laid down their swords picked up their pens and published accounts of their service in the conflict. In The Generals' Civil War: What Their Memoirs Can Teach Us Today (University of North Carolina Press, 2021), Stephen Cushman analyzes a half-dozen of these works to discern the perspectives they provided on the era and the insights they offered about their authors. The publication of the service memoirs proliferated during the Gilded Age, thanks to the increases in literacy and the market for books that this created. Beginning in the 1870s several generals took advantage of the opportunity created by this emergence to recount for profit their time in uniform and justify the decisions they made. As Cushman details, several of these books, such as those of the Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston and Union commander William T. Sherman, contained contrasting views of similar events that, when read together, reflect the process of postwar reconciliation between the former foes. For others, such as Richard Taylor and George McClellan, their accounts served as an opportunity to present themselves as wagers of a more gentlemanly and “humane” war than that subsequently conducted by Sherman and Ulysses Grant. Grant's own memoir proved the greatest successes of the genre, a testament both to his wartime stature and the skills as a writer he developed over the course of his life. The success of Grant's posthumously published book was such that it overshadowed the subsequent release of both McClellan's and Philip Sheridan's memoirs, both of which proved a disappointment for their publisher, Charles L. Webster and Company. Cushman shows how the firm's founder, Mark Twain, exerted an outsized influence on the genre, not only as a publisher but more famously as the editor of Grant's memoirs and as a writer about the war in his own right. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies

New Life Church Millbrook
The Charge of Love

New Life Church Millbrook

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2021 58:00


Rev. William T. “Bill” Hill challenges each on of us as believers to walk in love with your God, with your neighbor and even with your enemies.  As we continue to seek the heart of the Father, this week we focus on The Charge of Love.

Cinematic Sound Radio - Soundtracks, Film, TV and Video Game Music
The Flagship Show: 2021 Halloween Special - Re-Recording Horror

Cinematic Sound Radio - Soundtracks, Film, TV and Video Game Music

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 92:27


In today's episode of THE FLAGSHIP SHOW on the CINEMATIC SOUND RADIO PODCAST, we celebrate the Halloween season once again by highlighting horror score re-recordings including selections from THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS (Elfman), BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA (Kilar), CREATURE FROM THE BLACK LAGOON (Mancini), HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN (Salter), ED WOOD (Shore), WORLD WAR Z (Beltrami) and many more. Featured artists include Erich Kunzel, Dirk Brosse, Antoni Wit, John Morgan, William T. Stromberg, Joel McNeely, Lynda Kavina, and Nic Raine. Featured performing groups include The Cincinnati Pops, The London Philharmonic, The Polish National Radio Symphony, Cracow Philharmonic Chorus, The Mancini Pops, The Moscow Symphony Orchestra, The Brussels Philharmonic and The City of Prague Philharmonic. Enjoy! Special thanks to our Patreon supporters: Matt DeWater, David Ballantyne, Mindtrickzz, Joe Wiles, Rich Alves, Maxime, William Welch, Tim Burden, Alan Rogers, Dave Williams, Max Hamulyák, Jeffrey Graebner, Douglas Lacey, Don Mase, Victor Field, Jochen Stolz, Emily Mason, Eric Skroch, Alexander Schiebel, Alphonse Brown, John Link, Andreas Wennmyr, Matt Berretta, Kadya, Elizabeth & Claytemple Media. —— Cinematic Sound Radio is fully licensed to play music by SOCAN. Support us on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/cinematicsoundradio Check out our NEW Cinematic Sound Radio TeePublic Store! https://www.teepublic.com/stores/cinematic-sound-radio Cinematic Sound Radio Web: http://www.cinematicsound.net Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/cinsoundradio Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cinematicsound Cinematic Sound Radio Fanfare and Theme by David Coscina https://soundcloud.com/user-970634922 Bumper voice artist: Tim Burden http://www.timburden.com

BadGeek
Nanarologie n°16 du 29/10/21 - Nanarologie #16 - L'Ordre de l'aigle noir

BadGeek

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 79:31


La nanarologie, LE cours en ligne qui vous permet de voyager en toute sécurité dans le monde du cinéma bis et à terme de devenir de vrais spécialistes. Pour cet épisode, nous voulions faire comme ce film : profiter sans la moindre once de honte de la mise en avant de James Bond. Suivons ensemble les extraordinaires aventures du plus grand des espions de l'histoire du cinéma : le trou noir à charisme qu'est Duncan Jax. Année : 1987 Origine : États-Unis Réalisateur : Worth Keeter Casting : Ian Hunter, C.K. Bibby, William T. Hicks, Anna Rapagna, Jill Donnellan --------------------------- Introduction : La Guerre des étoiles, par René Joly (paroles d'Etienne Roda-Gil) Conclusion : Road Trip, par Joakim Karud Notre twitter : https://twitter.com/Nanarologie

Rare Avis
Las superpotencias

Rare Avis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2021 15:08


Libro del escritor William T.R. Fox escrito en 1952

Ellissinema Podcast
Episode 179: Death Screams - Arrow Video release

Ellissinema Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2021 31:39


I discuss Arrow Video's release of the 1982 slasher film Death Screams aka Night Screams aka House of Death. It stars Susan Kiger, Larry Sprinkle, Andria Savio, David Lenthall, Martin Tucker, William T. Hicks, John Kohler, Jody Kay, Kurt Rector, Josh Gamble, Hanns Manship, Helene Tyron, Mary Fran Lyman, Mike Brown, Monica Boston, Sharon Alley, and more. Music by Dee Barton. Cinematography by Darrell Cathcart. Written by Paul C. Elliott. Directed by David Nelson.

Atlanta Film Chat
Out On Film's Closing Night Film "Keep the Cameras Rolling: The Pedro Zamora Way"

Atlanta Film Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2021 44:19


“Keep the Cameras Rolling: The Pedro Zamora Way” directors Stacey Woelfel and William T. Horner discuss making the film and the impact of Pedro's life in advance of their world premiere at the 2021 Out On Film Festival!

Walk With Me - Devotionals
Something Beautiful

Walk With Me - Devotionals

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2021 1:54


Something Beautiful Reader: Jon Watson Date: 6th September 2021 Time: Passage: Ecclesiastes 3:11 ------------------- Suppose as an artist you have spent a long time painting one of your very favourite scenes and at last it is finished and looks good. Then disaster strikes — you spill paint all over it and it is ruined. It was beautiful. You can only grieve. Don't you think God must feel the same sadness when he looks at us? He created people to live in a perfect world, a world of beauty, peace, and contentment. But the picture was ruined by our sin, pride, and rebellion against the very God who so wanted the very best for us. What had started so beautiful became in many ways so ugly. But do you know what? God can take that ruined picture (you!) and change it into something beautiful — something restored! William T. Gaither, the author of many Gospel songs has written these words: 'The hope for life's best were the hopes that I harboured deep down in my heart; But my dreams turned to ashes, my castles all crumbled, my future turned to loss, so I wrapped it all up in the rags of my life and laid it at the cross. Something beautiful, something good; all my confusion He understood; All I had to offer Him was brokenness and strife. But He made something beautiful of my life.' Christ is the great restorer of ruined sinners. ## Prayer Dear Lord Jesus, please make my life into something beautiful for you. Amen.

Dark Poutine - True Crime and Dark History
She Told Me To: The Blackman Family Tragedy

Dark Poutine - True Crime and Dark History

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 65:15


Episode 185: RCMP officers arrived at the Blackman family residence on Spuraway Avenue in Coquitlam, B.C.'s Ranch Park subdivision in the early morning hours of January 18th, 1983. A neighbour had called 911after hearing screams and then witnessing what appeared to be a domestic argument next door that escalated into a shooting. Inside the eerily silent home as the cold winter rain fell, the responding officers found a horrific and bloody scene; six members of the Blackman family were dead. The deceased were Richard Blackman, 50, his wife, Irene Blackman, 49, their daughter, Roberta Lynn Davies, 28, Roberta's husband, John Iowerth Davies, 39, Karen Dale Rhodes, 25, another of the Blackman's daughters, and the youngest of the Blackman children, 16-year-old son, Rick Blackman. Just outside the home, police had detained a young man, 22-year-old, Bruce Alfred Blackman, another of Irene and Richard's sons. Bruce, who'd been picked up as police arrived, was acting bizarrely, telling the RCMP officers that he was the Antichrist and that the world was going to end on January 31. Sources: Blackman v. British Columbia (Review Board), 1995 CanLII 3437 (BC CA), < https://canlii.ca/t/1ddr0 > Blackman v. British Columbia (Attorney General), 1993 CanLII 2620 (BC CA), < https://canlii.ca/t/1dbks > British Columbia Review Board - Decision on Bruce Alfred Blackman https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/oic/arc_oic/0332_1983 https://www.bclaws.gov.bc.ca/civix/document/id/oic/arc_oic/1122_1991 Violence and Schizophrenia by Heidi J. Wehring and William T. Carpenter Correlates of Future Violence in People Being Treated for Schizophrenia | American Journal of Psychiatry Schizophrenia: Warning Signs of Violence | HealthLink BC A Voice out of Nowhere eBook : Booth, Janice Holly: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store Bruce Alfred Blackman | Amok Wiki | Fandom Police layed six charges of first-degree murder Tuesday against… - UPI Archives Author Janice Holly Booth — Book: A Voice out of Nowhere Little Known Details Behind Mass Murder Case Revealed in New Book, A Voice out of Nowhere Someone I love has been diagnosed with schizophrenia. How can I help? | Here to Help Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/darkpoutine See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Science Rehashed
A Fireside Chat with Anesthesiologist Emery Brown

Science Rehashed

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2021 43:10


In 1846, Dr. John Collins Warren and William T. G. Morton performed the first public demonstration of surgery under an anesthetic. Today, anesthesiologist and statistician Emery Brown combines his fields of expertise and applies a computational approach to answer questions about neuroscience and to research how anesthetics interact with the central nervous system. Brown is a faculty member at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard, and MIT, and in this episode, he highlights that, while anesthesia practices in the operating room have evolved over the 175 years since Warren and Morton's first anesthesia demonstration, medical understanding of how anesthetics work is still limited. His work pioneers a new approach to administering anesthetics to patients—by reading and using electrical activity in the brain to determine the appropriate dose of anesthetic. Brown's curiosity is inspiring, as his exploration of diverse interests expands beyond biomedicine to foreign languages—in this episode, he also speaks on his approach to language learning and how he utilizes language learning in a clinical context. Music by Kevin MacLeod licensed under CC BY 4.0.

AJP-Heart and Circulatory Podcasts
Maternal Vaping Impairs Vascular Function in the Offspring

AJP-Heart and Circulatory Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2021 20:19


Does maternal vaping cause brain blood vessels to behave abnormally in offspring? The short answer: yes. Consulting Editor Junie Paula Warrington (University of Mississippi Medical Center) interviews authors Mark Olfert and Paul Chantler (both at West Virginia University School of Medicine), along with expert Alex Carll (University of Louisville) about the latest groundbreaking study by Burrage et al. The authors set out to understand whether exposing pregnant female rats to a low daily dose of e-cigarette aerosol—with or without nicotine—would result in middle cerebral artery dysfunction in the offspring. In this unique study design, the offspring themselves were never directly exposed to e-cigarettes. Olfert, Chantler and co-authors then assessed vascular function in arteries from the brain in pups at multiple postnatal time-points, and found the offspring had significant reduction in the ability of the middle cerebral artery to relax (or vasodilate) when they needed to. The same levels of dysfunction were found in offspring whose mothers were exposed to vaping with nicotine added to the base e-liquid, as well as offspring of mothers who were exposed to vaping without nicotine in the base e-liquid. This data suggested that some component of the e-liquid other than nicotine (such as flavors or base solution) accounted for the dysfunction that was created. What's more, the authors discovered that the cerebrovascular dysfunction did not resolve over time. Adult rats, even 7 months after birth, displayed similar levels of impairment as the 1-month-old rat pups. This research has sweeping public health implications for those considering vaping as an alternative to smoking when pregnant. Listen now.   E.N. Burrage, Eiman Aboaziza, Lance Hare, Sarah Reppert, Joshua Moore, William T. Goldsmith, Eric E. Kelley, Amber Mills, Duaa Dakhlallah, Paul D. Chantler, I. Mark Olfert Long Term Cerebrovascular Dysfunction in the Offspring from Maternal Electronic Cigarette Use during Pregnancy Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, published June 25, 2021. DOI: doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00206.2021

Project Zion Podcast
391 | Cuppa Joe | Historic Sites Spring Lecture Series | William T. Blue: A Lonely Spokesman for Black Saints

Project Zion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2021 79:03


Project Zion Podcast is bringing you follow-up interviews with the presenters of the Historic Sites Foundation Spring 2021 Lecture Series. Today we have Gwendolyn Hawks-Blue and Bill Russell on to share about their lecture, "William T. Blue: A Lonely Spokesman for Black Saints."You can find a recording of their lecture here.William T. Blue's article, “A Negro Pastor's Look at Brotherhood.”Bill Russell's original article can be found on page 144: “William T. Blue: A Lonely Spokesman for Black Saints.” Host: Karin PeterGuests: Gwendolyn Hawks-Blue and Bill Russell

New Life Church Millbrook
Obeying the Voice

New Life Church Millbrook

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2021 65:47


Rev. William T. "Bill" Hill shares the importance of honoring the men and father-figures in our lives.  We take an overview look at Abraham and his obedience to the God who spoke to him.  Join us as we see how Abraham honored God by Obeying the Voice.

The Drawing Room
The botanical art of William T. Cooper

The Drawing Room

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 17:17


Wendy Cooper has discovered new species and written books describing the fruit and the plants of Australia. And she did most of it alongside her husband, William T. Cooper, who was one of the greatest scientific painters of nature in the world. In her new book, The Botanical Art of William T. Cooper, Wendy has collected Bill's botanical sketches and paintings, alongside her own stories of their time together.

RN Drive - Separate stories podcast
The botanical art of William T. Cooper

RN Drive - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2021 17:17


Wendy Cooper has discovered new species and written books describing the fruit and the plants of Australia. And she did most of it alongside her husband, William T. Cooper, who was one of the greatest scientific painters of nature in the world. In her new book, The Botanical Art of William T. Cooper, Wendy has collected Bill's botanical sketches and paintings, alongside her own stories of their time together.

The Legacy of John Williams Podcast
Legacy Conversations: Steven C. Smith and William Stromberg

The Legacy of John Williams Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 123:15


Distinguished author Steven C. Smith and composer & conductor William Stromberg discuss the lineage that connects John Williams and the great composers of the Golden Age of Hollywood, including Bernard Herrmann and Max Steiner John Williams is the film composer who, more than any other, was able to take the great tradition of the Golden Age of Hollywood's film music and revive it for modern audiences. Thanks to the impressive box office success of such films as Jaws, Star Wars, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Superman, the late 1970s saw a resurgence of the classic symphonic film score as intended by the great composers of the Golden Age: Max Steiner, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Alfred Newman, Dimitri Tiomkin, Miklós Rózsa, Franz Waxman, were the forefathers of what is commonly referred as "the Hollywood sound", i.e. the lush, romantic orchestral vernacular in vogue during the 1930s, '40s and '50s, mostly based on the great tradition of Late Romantic symphonic music from Europe, of which all the aforementioned composers were all natural descendants. This type of vibrant, colorful and emotional musical accompaniment defined Hollywood's film music until the dramatic turn of the tide known as the end of the studio era in the early 1960s. John Williams restored almost single-handedly that tradition with a sincere, heartfelt homage to those musical stylings and a new renaissance of film music began. This is the starting point of this new episode of the Legacy Conversations series on The Legacy of John Williams podcast, featuring two very esteemed and distinguished special guests who are among the most respected authorities on the subject of classic film music: author Steven C. Smith and composer/conductor William T. Stromberg. Steven is an Emmy-nominated documentary producer, author, and speaker who specializes in Hollywood history and profiles of contemporary filmmakers. He is the author of two acclaimed biographies: Music by Max Steiner: The Epic Life of Hollywood's Most Influential Composer (Oxford University Press), and A Heart at Fire's Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann (University of California Press). William T. Stromberg is a respected composer and conductor working in the film music business since the late 1980s. Together with his artistic partner John W. Morgan, he produced an impressive amount of brand-new recordings of classic film scores from the Golden Age of Hollywood by Max Steiner, Bernard Herrmann, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Franz Waxman, Dimitri Tiomkin and other illustrious composers, including premiere complete recordings of such iconic scores as King Kong, The Adventures of Robin Hood, Fahrenheit 451, The Egyptian. The profound expertise and knowledge of both Steven C. Smith and William Stromberg make them the ideal guests to talk about the lineage that connects John Williams to the great tradition of the Golden Age of Hollywood's film music, especially to composers like Max Steiner and Bernard Herrmann. For more information and the list of the musical excerpts featured in the episode, visit https://thelegacyofjohnwilliams.com/2021/06/10/steven-c-smith-william-stromberg-podcast

SchönerDenken
Folge 1106: #MichaelMannMai: THIEF – Einmal mit Profis arbeiten, feat. Max (Wiederaufführung)

SchönerDenken

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 82:46


Um eine Ausrede zu haben, über einen Michael-Mann-Film zu podcasten, hat sich Thomas den #MichaelMannMai ausgedacht. Und hat sich als Gast niemand geringeren eingeladen als Max, Godfather of Wiederaufführung, der Mann, der alte Film neu entdeckt und keine Angst vor steilen Thesen hat und vor allem der Michael-Mann-Mann Nummer 1. Ausgesucht hat sich Thomas den ersten Kinofilm THIEF, von dem er noch nie etwas gehört hatte. Die Geschichte eines Profi-Einbrechers, der zuviel Zeit im Gefängnis verloren hat und einem Traum nachjagt … Max und Thomas reden über Profis, Perfektionisten und zerbrechende Träume, über vorbestrafte technische Berater, über Tangerine Dreams treibende elektronische Musik, über die Struktur und den fantastischen Cast: Vom legendären James Caan über die unterschätzte Tuesday Weld, über den jungen William T. Peterson (vor MANHUNTER) und James Belushi in seiner ersten Kinorolle zu Dennis Farina und den beeindruckenden Mafiaboss Robert Prosky und natürlich dem Einbrecher John Santucci der den korrupten Polizisten Urizzi spielt. Eine gute Stunde über Lichter, Reflektionen, Farben und Signature Shots mit Max und Thomas – viel Vergnügen.

Carrier Calls Podcast
Kaiser Permanente® Mini Episode

Carrier Calls Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2021 4:38


Ever wonder how Kaiser's unique model works to ensure quality of care? Listen in with Kaiser Permanente® President of the Professional Staff at Southern California Permanente Medical Group - San Diego, Dr. William T. Tseng to learn more.

New Life Church Millbrook
Greatest Love Ever Shown

New Life Church Millbrook

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 58:05


Rev. William T. "Bill" Hill shares the little-known story of Rizpah, a mother determined to stand and turn a nation back to God.  And her New Testament counterpart, Mary.  Join us as we explore the Greatest Love Ever Shown, learning that a Mother's love is Strong, Stands in faith and Sees the destiny of their child.    

The Flipped Lifestyle Podcast
Best Of: Our Story (Chapter 1) – Love At First Sight

The Flipped Lifestyle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2021 34:05


Hey y'all! Welcome to a Best Of Edition of the Flipped Lifestyle Podcast. These Best Of Editions of the show feature amazing guests and episodes of the podcast you may have missed when they first aired. If you are new to the show, these are those can't miss episodes that we really want you to listen to. Or maybe you're a long-time listener. We want to bring these episodes around for you to hear them again. Our goal is to bring our best content every week so you have everything that you need to build a better future for your family. So wherever you are listening today, enjoy this week's episode of the Flipped Lifestyle Podcast. It all begins here when Shane Sams was a sophomore at the University of Kentucky and Jocelyn Sams came to campus as a freshman at just 17 years old!   It all begins here when Shane Sams was a sophomore at the University of Kentucky and Jocelyn Sams came to campus as a freshman at just 17 years old! Let's go back to 1997. Picture this: Jocelyn turns 17 years old on March 27th of her senior year of high school. Just months later she moved from her small coal-mining hometown in western Kentucky to move to the big city of Lexington. She could not wait to be there that August, cutting down every minute until she would officially be a Wildcat. Shane Sams had gotten on UK's campus just a before. He had dreamed of going to the University of Kentucky his entire life. After all, he too was from a small town. Which one? Corbin. Better known for their railroads, moonbow, and the birthplace of KFC, (of course). Now, Shane didn't exactly work hard in school to get the grades to grace UK's campus but nevertheless found himself walking by William T. Young every day. For both of them Lexington was an escape of small town life - an escape that would become the most fateful place they would ever find themselves. Now, Shane didn't start out at UK. His first year was actually spent as a BCTC student. He could live in the dorms, but his school was actually in the Kroger Field parking lot. He didn't magically mature into the model student. He hardly ever went to class and had a crazy roommate that ended up flunking out to boot. Shane found himself almost failing too during his first semester. That was until one after during Christmas break. Shane's dad offered to take him to his insurance office in Corbin. When Shane released they had hit the interstate going south he knew something was wrong - his dad saw his report card. Nearly 20 minutes later they found themselves in Williamsburg, Kentucky home of the University of the Cumberlands. The college that Shane had tried oh-so-hard to not attend. It was the exact opposite of everything She loved about living in Lexington. After his dad continuously drove past every door and window (and excess flower) on campus he finally opened his mouth and said, “pretty campus, huh? If your grades aren't better next semester you're going to be going to school here so get used to it.” (Can we just thank Shane's dad for not allowing him to screw this whole thing up)? Shane found a girl. Not THE girl, but a girl that could help him get through Algebra his second semester. It wasn't his best semester ever but it got him through his freshman year so we'll take it. Here it comes: the fall semester of 1997. Jocelyn was living in the dorm right beside Shane. But of course meeting them would have been too easy. If you know Shane Sams, it's par for the course. There was however a time when Shane visited his friend from high school that happened to be in the room right beside Jocelyn. One fateful day there was a knock on the door from the most beautiful girl Shane Sams had ever seen. Jocelyn was there asking to borrow the phone book - that's right. An actual phone book. Jocelyn walked away and ordered her pizza or whatever it was and went back next door. Nothing special happened yet not until Jocelyn's sophomore year and Shane's junior year.

New Life Church Millbrook
Recognizing Jesus

New Life Church Millbrook

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2021 61:11


Rev. William T. "Bill" Hill challenges us to be sure we Recognize Jesus when He crosses our path.  As Jesus came into Jerusalem, the people saw Him and knew His claim to be Messiah.  Each individual must decide for themselves who Jesus is.  We are all responsible for Recognizing Jesus for ourselves. 

Cloak & Dagger On the Air
Stays Home #13: The Lodger

Cloak & Dagger On the Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2021 27:19


Cloak & Dagger On the Air Stays Home returns for another round of Zoom-recorded episodes with "The Lodger," a 1947 radio adaptation by William T. Johnson of the classic story by Marie Belloc Lowndes. What happens when humble innkeepers take in a strange, yet courteous gentleman who may just be The Avenger, a serial killer holding London in his fearsome grasp? Starring The Wayward Saints: Robert Gaudio as Bunting, Odessa Hores as Daisy, Clare McDonald as Ellen, and David Gaudio as The Lodger, with additional voices by Pete Fernbaugh and Ralph Parissi. Bethany Fernbaugh serves as Your Announcer. Score composed and performed by Derek and Brandon Fiechter from their album, Steampunk World, which can be heard on Spotify and is available for purchase on Bandcamp, iTunes, and Amazon. You can also follow their YouTube channel, Fantasy and World Music by the Fiechters. Our atmospheric soundscapes were created by the YouTube channels Ambience of Yesteryear and The Vault of Ambience, and our live sound effects were by the Holy Foley Molies. Produced and directed by Pete Fernbaugh. A Future Past Production. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cloak-dagger-on-the-air/message

Talking Your Way to Change
#34 Values Act as an Internal Compass to Your Life's Purpose

Talking Your Way to Change

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 19:54


Knowing your values can lead to taking steps that will help you feel less stuck or trapped in what steps to take in your life's journey. https://www.valuescentre.com/ https://stevenchayes.com/category/values/ Niemiec, R. M. (2017). Character strengths interventions: A field-guide for practitioners. Cambridge, MA: Hogrefe. Affirmation of Personal Values Buffers Neuroendocrine and Psychological Stress Responses J. David Creswell,1 William T. Welch,1 Shelley E. Taylor,1 David K. Sherman,2 Tara L. Gruenewald,1 and Traci Mann1 1 University of California, Los Angeles, and 2 University of California, Santa Barbara --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/xan0/message

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick
CEO of All In Together Lauren Leader and Social Welfare Professor Dr Mark Rank

Stand Up! with Pete Dominick

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 93:59


Stand Up is a daily podcast. I book,host,edit, post and promote new episodes with brilliant guests every day. I have one sponsor which is an awesome nonprofit GiveWell.org/StandUp for more but Please subscribe now for as little as 5$ and gain access to a community of over 800 awesome, curious, kind, funny, brilliant, generous souls. Lauren Leader, is the co-founder and CEO of All In Together. She has dedicated her life and career to advancing women in business and politics and has been a tireless advocate for diversity and inclusion. In addition to her leadership of All In Together, Lauren was most recently senior advisor to Oliver Wyman, working with a wide range of global corporations on organizational and people challenges. Over the last decade, both in leading the global think tank Center for Talent Innovation where she was President and in her role at Deloitte, she focuses on helping large companies drive greater innovation and market growth given the implications of diversity, technology, geopolitics and demographic changes. Lauren’s first book, Crossing the Thinnest Line (Hachette Center Street, September 2016) debuted in the top 50 on Amazon in several categories and sparked an important conversation about the importance of diversity to the future of America. Her research and writing on a wide array of talent and business issues has helped shape people strategy and the public discourse for the last decade. Her writing and thought leadership has appeared in a wide range of publications including Forbes, Harvard Business Review, New York Times, Bustle, Fatherly, Refinery29 and Inc. Lauren is a frequent speaker, lecturer, and panel member at a wide array of conferences, conventions, academic meetings, investment forums, and other venues across North America and Europe including the Milken Global Conference, the World Economic Forum in Davos. She has been a regular commentator on MSNBC, HLN, Fox News and other outlets including CBS and Bloomberg TV where she addresses complex issues of women’s equality and diversity. She has been featured in Marie Claire, Cosmo, and Bustle. In 2015 Lauren was listed as one of Fortune’s 50 Most Influential Women on Twitter and was a 2018 Presidential Leadership Scholar. She is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a graduate of Barnard College. I spoke with Dr Mark Rank about his new book POORLY UNDERSTOOD: What Americans Get Wrong About Poverty Dr. Rank is widely recognized as one of the foremost experts and speakers in the country on issues of poverty, inequality, and social justice. His research and teaching have focused on poverty, social welfare, economic inequality, and social policy. Dr. Rank has published numerous scholarly articles. His first book, Living on the Edge: The Realities of Welfare in America, explored the conditions of surviving on public assistance and achieved widespread critical acclaim. His 2004 book, One Nation, Underprivileged: Why American Poverty Affects Us All, provided a new understanding of poverty in America. His life-course research has demonstrated for the first time that a majority of Americans will experience poverty and will use a social safety net program at some point during their lives. In 2014, extensive research with Dr. Rank's long-time collaborator, Thomas Hirschl of Cornell University culminated in the publications of Chasing the American Dream: Understanding the Dynamics that Shape Our Fortunes. This book explores the nature of the American Dream and the economic viability of achieving the Dream through both extensive data analysis and in-depth interviews with a wide spectrum of modern Americans. The book is designed to shed light on the tenuous nature of the American Dream in today’s society, and how to restore its relevance and vitality.  Dr. Rank is the recipient of many awards including the Founders Day Distinguished Faculty Award from the Washington University Alumni Board of Governors, the Faculty Award to Improve Learning from the William T. Kemper Foundation, the Outstanding Research Award from the Society for Social Work and Research, the Feldman Award from the Groves Conference on Marriage and the Family, and the Outstanding Faculty Award from the Brown School’s Alumni Association. Dr. Rank's research has been reported in a wide range of media outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Christian Science Monitor, The Chicago Tribune, USA Today, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and National Public Radio.  He has provided his research expertise to members of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, as well as to many national and state organizations involved in issues of economic and social justice. Pete on Twitter Pete On Instagram Pete Personal FB page Stand Up with Pete FB page Pete on YouTube

The ApeCast
Into the Burtonverse #2 - Colony (with Sam Stovold)

The ApeCast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 203:18


Jack and Geoff are joined again by Sam Stovold for a look at William T. Quick's second Tim Burton POTA prequel novel Colony! As gengineered super-chimp Semos sends his sons Thados and Zaius into unexplored territory, our human hosts marvel once again at Quick's delightful prose, elegant thematic tie-ins to the Apes franchise as a whole, the resonant characterization of Thados, and dinos riding dinos!

Carrier Calls Podcast
Kaiser Permanente® - What’s New and What’s Coming + COVID Updates

Carrier Calls Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2021 21:01


In this episode, we discuss COVID-19, the vaccine roll-out, and how Kaiser Permanente® has been uniquely equipped to respond to the pandemic. Featuring Kaiser Permanente® President of the Professional Staff at Southern California Permanente Medical Group - San Diego, Dr. William T. Tseng MD MPH, we talk about Kaiser Permanente®'s integrated model, involvement in COVID-19 treatment testing, and vaccine development, and how their approach has impacted medicine outside of their walls. Dr. Tseng covers vaccine safety and explains the distribution plan. "Kaiser Permanente launches first coronavirus vaccine trial": https://www.kpwashingtonresearch.org/news-and-events/recent-news/news-2020/kaiser-permanente-launches-coronavirus-vaccine-study-seattle "Kaiser Permanente joins late-stage COVID-19 vaccine study": https://spotlight.kaiserpermanente.org/covid-19-pfizer-vaccine-study/ "Biden picks 3 coordinators for Covid-19 response": https://www.politico.com/news/2020/12/29/biden-coronavirus-response-coordinators-451996

The ThinkND Podcast
Hitchcock in London, Part 3: Joseph Conrad's "The Secret Agent"

The ThinkND Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 43:17


Episode Topic: Joseph Conrad's "The Secret Agent"Joseph Conrad's novel "The Secret Agent" follows a group of anarchists in London near the end of the 19th century as they plot to destroy symbols of Victorian England. Conrad's depiction of the group was influenced by the political experiences of his youth and his years working on ships that traveled the world. The novel takes an ironic tone towards the anarchists' political views that was inspired by conversations Conrad had with their supporters and by newspaper accounts of anarchist activities in the 1890s. The sense of London we gain from the novel, especially as the characters walk through different areas of the city, is reinforced by photographs from the period.Featured Speakers:Susan Ohmer, The William T. and Helen Kuhn Carey Associate Professor of Modern Communication, University of Notre DameKieron Webb, Head of Conservation, British Film InstituteRev. Jim Lies C.S.C., Director for Academic Initiatives & Partnerships, University of Notre Dame, London, EnglandRead this episode's recap over on the University of Notre Dame's open online learning community platform, ThinkND:  go.nd.edu/1fe0a3.This podcast is a part of the  London Book Club Series titled “Hitchcock in London".

The ThinkND Podcast
Hitchcock in London, Part 2: The Film of "The Lodger"

The ThinkND Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 57:21


Episode Topic: The Film of "The Lodger" In week 2 of our book club, we will discuss Alfred Hitchcock's film adaptation of Marie Belloc Lowndes' novel "The Lodger." "The Lodger" was the first film Hitchcock directed in London after completing two films in Germany in 1925. It stars Ivor Novello, a matinee idol of his time, and is notable for its expressive use of lighting and shadow, qualities influenced by German films of the period. Changes in several characters from the novel, especially Daisy and the detective, create a more ambiguous moral universe for the film and challenge our assumptions about the lodger's guilt. In directing his first feature in the U.K., Hitchcock benefited from collaborating with experienced colleagues such as Ivor Montagu and screenwriter Eliot Stannard and we will talk about the influence of London's thriving film culture on his work.Featured Speakers:Susan Ohmer, The William T. and Helen Kuhn Carey Associate Professor of Modern Communication, University of Notre DameKieron Webb, Head of Conservation, British Film InstituteRev. Jim Lies C.S.C., Director for Academic Initiatives & Partnerships, University of Notre Dame, London, EnglandRead this episode's recap over on the University of Notre Dame's open online learning community platform, ThinkND: go.nd.edu/897205.This podcast is a part of the  London Book Club Series titled “Hitchcock in London".

The ThinkND Podcast
Hitchcock in London, Part 1: The Lodger

The ThinkND Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 43:26


Episode Topic: "The Lodger" We begin by reading Marie Belloc Lowndes' novel "The Lodger," which was published in 1913 and became an immediate, worldwide hit, selling more than one million copies in the next twenty years. The novel focuses on the Buntings, a married couple on the verge of desperation who are rescued by a mysterious man who rents a room in their house. The novel charts their growing suspicion towards him: Is he linked to the series of murders that are taking place in the neighborhood? What about his attraction for their daughter Daisy? The Lodger creates an atmosphere of doubt and mistrust that challenges us to decide for ourselves who is guilty.Featured Speakers:Susan Ohmer, The William T. and Helen Kuhn Carey Associate Professor of Modern Communication, University of Notre DameKieron Webb, Head of Conservation, British Film InstituteRev. Jim Lies C.S.C., Director for Academic Initiatives & Partnerships, University of Notre Dame, London, EnglandRead this episode's recap over on the University of Notre Dame's open online learning community platform, ThinkND: go.nd.edu/6aa7a9.This podcast is a part of the  London Book Club Series titled “Hitchcock in London".

The ThinkND Podcast
Hitchcock in London, Part 4: Alfred Hitchcock's "Sabotage"

The ThinkND Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2020 43:26


Episode Topic: Alfred Hitchcock's "Sabotage"In the last week of our Hitchcock in London book club, we examine "Sabotage," (1936) the film he adapted from Joseph Conrad's novel "The Secret Agent" (1907). The film makes some noticeable changes from the novel, in its setting, representation of the police, and in the role of Winnie. It also includes two famous sequences that illustrate Hitchcock's philosophy about the importance of editing and the differences between surprise and suspense.Featured Speakers:Susan Ohmer, The William T. and Helen Kuhn Carey Associate Professor of Modern Communication, University of Notre DameKieron Webb, Head of Conservation, British Film InstituteRev. Jim Lies C.S.C., Director for Academic Initiatives & Partnerships, University of Notre Dame, London, EnglandRead this episode's recap over on the University of Notre Dame's open online learning community platform, ThinkND:  go.nd.edu/d268c5.This podcast is a part of the  London Book Club Series titled “Hitchcock in London".