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Today on Power the Journey, a native of Waukegan, Illinois, and a former Volleyball Student-Athlete from Alabama State University. She led coaching staffs at the University of the District of Columbia and University of North Carolina Wilmington. She then left the coaching realm to pursue a career in sports administration at Coppin State University, before becoming the athletic director at Queens College. Her final stop in College Athletics was at Wyoming University as the Senior Women Administrator before moving into professional athletics. She is now the Vice President of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion leading the Denver Bronco's overall DEI strategy. She is a trendsetter in the sports business arena, and a Social Game Changer, Introducing Chian Jude. To Learn More Visit: https://wearegameplan.com/powerthejourney/
S1 E14 Set 1: History and Geography of Eastern Europe Katyi's upbringing as an ethnic Hungarian growing up in Romania Fall of communism Growing up as a skier, basketball player and a tennis player Set 2: Career Success Playing - college basketball, college tennis Injuries - from college basketball to college tennis Coaching - college tennis coach at University of Louisiana Lafayette, Wyoming University and Southern Methodist University Set 3 : Grillin Katyi G with Pop Culture Music Film Controversial Dinner Guests Special Guest: Kati Gyulai. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/atthenetpodcast/support
S1 E14 Set 1: History and Geography of Eastern Europe Katyi's upbringing as an ethnic Hungarian growing up in Romania Fall of communism Growing up as a skier, basketball player and a tennis player Set 2: Career Success Playing - college basketball, college tennis Injuries - from college basketball to college tennis Coaching - college tennis coach at University of Louisiana Lafayette, Wyoming University and Southern Methodist University Set 3 : Grillin Katyi G with Pop Culture Music Film Controversial Dinner Guests Special Guest: Kati Gyulai. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/atthenetpodcast/support
Welcome to Unsolved Mysteries of the World Season 6 Episode 2: The Abduction of Herbert SchirmerIt was a cold night on December 3rd, 1967 and it was especially cold at 2:20AM in Ashland Nebraska.Herbert Schirmer was a young, 22 year-old patrolman making the usual rounds. The streets were pretty much empty, the local businesses were all closed. Everyone was tucked in beds covered in blankets. He passed by the only open business this late at night, a gas station on highway 6. There were, as usual, no customers.He then noticed something odd in the distance. It looked like red lights flashing upon a large truck. Was it an ambulance? A tow truck? What had happened? He drove down highway 63 until he came upon the scene with his headlights now flicked on to high beam. It was definitely not a truck.The red lights he had seen flashing were coming from oval-shaped portholes cut into what appeared to be a metallic, oval-shaped object that was hovering about eight feet above the road's surface.Patrolman Schirmer noted that the object appeared to be made of aluminum, had a small walkway around it, and below, some sort of landing gear. Getting ready to call in the incident, the object rose up with flames shooting out the bottom end and then it suddenly swooshed right over his patrol car.He looked out his window and in his mirrors but noted that the object was so fast, he did not know where it went. Deciding not to call it in, but because of what he saw, he returned to the police station.He drove back and within minutes arrived at the station to make his report. He glanced at the station clock to note the time. It was 3AM and he was baffled that it took him, what he believed to be mere minutes to arrive back at the station, yet, all the clocks indicated time had passed.In his report, he indicated he saw what he believed to be a flying saucer. After his brief report was written up he noted that there was a red welt on his neck, he developed a severe headache and was feeling ill.He decided that he would not return back to duty until the next day.Months passed and word got to the US Airforce that a patrolman had seen a flying saucer and that his eye-witness testimony was valid. The Condon Commission at the University of Colorado, who was tasked at the time to investigate and mostly discredit UFO reports asked him to come to Boulder Colorado to retell his UFO encounter.On February 13, 1968, after being interrogated by several officials, the patrolman was asked to undergo hypnosis under the guidance of Wyoming University psychologist Leo Sprinkle.eo Sprinkle of the University of Wyoming. Under hypnosis, Schirmer recalled that, after he stopped his car near the object, the engine died and his radio went silent. A white object emerged from the craft and seemed to communicate mentally with him, preventing him from drawing his gun as he attempting to do.Please remember to visit our show sponsor www.experiencethis360.com for travel tips and advice! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Comedian Mo Welch stops by Studio 309 and discusses always embracing change, attending Wyoming University, and more! Info, photos, links, et cetera -- http://boxangeles.com/171
This month sees the end of NASA's MESSENGER mission to Mercury. It's been the first mission to the sun's closest planet since Mariner 10 flew by in the mid-1970s. Lucie Green speaks to geologist Professor Pete Schultz of Brown University about the orbiter's 4 year surveillance and how new observations of this under explored world are shedding light on the planet's mysterious dark cratered surface. Virtual experiences are coming closer and closer to reality as both sound and vision, and even smell, become convincing. But without the sense of touch you'll never have the full experience. A team at Bristol University has now managed to generate the feeling of pressure projected directly onto your bare, empty hands. Its system enables you to feel invisible interfaces, textures and virtual objects through the use of ultrasound. Roland Pease gets a hands on experience. One of the biggest challenges in artificial intelligence is conquering a computer's so-called "catastrophic forgetting": as soon as a new skill is learned others get crowded out, which makes artificial computer brains one trick ponies. Jeff Clune of Wyoming University directs the Evolving Artificial Intelligence Lab and has tested the idea that computer brains could evolve to work in the same way as human brains - in a modular fashion. He shows how by doing so, it's possible to learn more and forget less. And there's a visit to the Ion Beam Centre at University of Surrey where, in conjunction with a project to restore the Rosslyn chapel near Edinburgh, scientists have provided a new development in stained glass conservation - scrutinising the glass contents at the subatomic level using a narrow beam of accelerated charged particles, to literally decode the exquisite features lost to the naked eye. Lucie Green caught up with the Centre's director, Roger Webb. Producer Adrian Washbourne.