35 Burst results for "Eighteen Eighties"

Alfred Wegner Takes Continental Drift to the Next Level

Everything Everywhere Daily

02:19 min | 2 years ago

Alfred Wegner Takes Continental Drift to the Next Level

"It was a really interesting guy. Born in eighteen eighty in germany got his degree in astronomy but became meteorologist which was still a rather new field at the time. His primary interest was in the northern polar regions. And how air circulated. He participated in four expeditions to greenland and was one of the first meteorologist to adopt the use of weather balloons. However meteorology and expeditions to greenland aren't what alfred wegener is best known for its for his contributions to geology and geophysics. The idea that he is remembered for began innocently enough on christmas day nineteen ten. He was at his friend's house when he began looking at his brand new world. Atlas he made the observation that south america and africa seemed like they fit together like pieces in a puzzle. I should that he was far from the first person to notice this once. Decent maps began being published. In the last part of the sixteenth century people. i observed the same thing. The first person we know of who made the observation was dutch. Cartographer abraham or telling us or telling us created the first modern atlas in fifteen seventy which means he was probably the first person to have the idea because no one before that really had a good grasp of the geography of the continent's william colby wrote in his book on geologic history. Quote abraham are telling us in his work to doris geographic suggested that the americas were torn away from europe and africa by earthquakes and floods and went on to say the vestiges of the rupture. Reveal themselves if someone brings forward a map of the world and considers carefully the coasts of the three continents and quote. Ortelius was far from alone after him. The idea that the continents fit together somehow kept popping up theater. Christoph lilienthal alexander von humboldt antonio snider pellegrini and alfred russel wallace all made the same observation one or two hundred years before moreover there were several other scientists just a decade before who came to a similar conclusion. In fact. there's a good chance that you probably made the same observation. One of the first times that you saw a world map they took the idea to another level however he began by cutting up maps and piecing the landmasses together like a puzzle. He was able to put the continents together into one giant continent that he named panja from the greek words for all and land.

Greenland Cartographer Abraham Alfred Wegener William Colby Doris Geographic Africa Germany Ortelius South America Christoph Lilienthal Alexander Abraham Americas Alfred Russel Wallace Europe Panja
Supervolcano Eruptions Aren't Single Events

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary

01:57 min | 2 years ago

Supervolcano Eruptions Aren't Single Events

"You study ones that civil kano eruptions on singular events but can continue with follow up last for thousands of years after the first eruption super volcanic eruptions are among the most catastrophic event in any planet's history then includes the earth they vet tremendous amounts of magma almost instantaneously they impact global climate here on earth that means triggering volcanic winter with abnormally cold temperatures causing widespread feminine population disruptions and e findings reported in the journal nature based on a study of volcanic debris from the turbo eruption indonesia. Seventy five thousand years ago. There's no other way to say it. Tober was the largest volcanic eruption in human history. It had a volcanic explosively index of eight the highest possible score on the chart. The volcanic explosively index is a lot of rhythmic scale for an eruption depend on how much welcoming materials thrown out to what hide it's thrown and how long the eruption lasts. Well people these days talk about events. Such as the famous eighteen eighty three eruption of krakatoa in the sunda strait between the islands of java and sumatra or more recently mount saint helens eruption in washington. State these with thousands of times smaller than tober. Thankfully super volcanoes like turbo. A few and far between the last was new. Zealand's taboo volcano. Some twenty eight thousand five hundred years ago. Should volcanoes often erupt several times with evils of tens of thousands of vs between bigger options. But it's not known what happens. During the dormant periods one of the study's authors associate professor martin denny shake from curtin. University says gani understanding of these lengthy dormant periods hope scientists workout. What to look for an young active sipa volcanoes and help. Scientists prick future eruptions

Tober Sunda Strait Mount Saint Helens Indonesia Sumatra Java Martin Denny Washington Zealand Gani Curtin
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on My First Million

My First Million

04:36 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on My First Million

"And starts work power plant facility on pearl street. He also establishes new company. He wanted to manufacture all of his own machinery by his board opposed getting into manufacturing. So he starts. Edison machine works as a separate company which turned out to be a pretty good call as that little company would go on to become what we know as general electric which was a pretty big deal. For quite a long time. Edison was juggling all these different constraints inventing and patenting the technology building in manufacturing all the different components necessary for all this to finally happen but delay after delay piled up and then finally on monday september fourth eighteen eighty two edison turned the lights on on new york city. He actually has them turned on at three pm so that no one would notice if they didn't work but by seven. Pm people start becoming aware. Whoa wait the electric lights are on all over the city. It was a total transformation moment in the history of the world but it was also a little anti-climactic there were few news reports about it. No parties no celebrations to steady practical warm light but it was enough radisson who said quote. I have accomplished all that. I promise now. Edison has a really really packed life. He invented a lot and did a lot over a long period of time. None of it probably matches the heights of inventing the phonograph and the electric light so do sort of a quick overview of the rest of his life before going back and diving deep on a few stories. Things started to go really well for edison's electric business but then in eighteen eighty four. He had the worst year of his life. A giant financial crisis hits the us and sinks him into debt and around the same time. His wife dies at the time. No one could or no one would say what exactly it was that she died from. But in retrospect it's pretty clear that she sadly died of a morphine overdose over the next couple years. Edison managed to pull himself out a financial crisis and by eighteen eighty six. He's in really good situation. With more than three hundred thousand lamps in his circuit and booming revenue and profits. He also remarried in eighteen. Eighty six to a woman by the name of meena miller and it's a great year for him businesses. Doing well he's in love. He's teaming with invented energy and even.

Edison machine Edison general electric new york city us meena miller
How Reformer Charlotte Mason Changed Homeschooling

Encyclopedia Womannica

02:23 min | 2 years ago

How Reformer Charlotte Mason Changed Homeschooling

"Was born charlotte. Maria shah mason in a town called garth on the northwest tip of wales. She was born on january first eighteen. Forty two she was an only child and was educated at home by her parents and she left home. She moved to worthing in west sussex there. She spent ten years teaching at a girls secondary school during that time charlotte began to develop her own original teaching methods at the time and even today many schools used classical education system. This system offers student. Three main categories of study grammar dialectic and rhetoric it places emphasis on writing and systemic grades and often leaves the fine arts outside of the main curriculum. Charlotte disagreed with the system. She believed didn't offer the full scope of education to children and was especially interested in making the liberal arts more accessible as a result she started to pen her own books. She began with the popular series on geography eighteen eighty seven. She co founded the parents educational union or p helped provide resources for parents. Home schooling their children 1891 charlotte moved to amble side england. Where she wrote her most well-known works. She published a series of books that explained her educational philosophies at the beginning of each. She summarized her fundamental ideas. I she wrote. Education is an atmosphere. A discipline wife. Secondly education is the science of relations. Charlotte believed children were innately born as people and thinkers whose own ideas should be respected regardless of their age. She thought children were drawn to honest desires and that the role of adults was to help rid them of bad habits. In order to reach their potential charlotte's curriculum revolved around providing children with what she called living books or books written by people with great passion for the subject. they're writing

Maria Shah Mason Charlotte Garth Worthing Parents Educational Union West Sussex Wales England
The Unexpected Story of a Man and His Bear, Winnipeg

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

02:13 min | 2 years ago

The Unexpected Story of a Man and His Bear, Winnipeg

"The toys from our childhood. Stay with us long after we stop playing with them as adults we may lose track of a beloved stuffed animal or a fun action figure but we keep the memories. We remember how safe they made us feel and darkened bedroom or how much fun we had zooming them around the house as if they were flying and yet no matter what we all grow up and leave childish things behind but thanks to one man's impulsive decision. we learned. We don't have to let the past slip away. Not only can we hold onto it but we can share it with the people we love and keep that joy alive for generations to come harry. Colbourn was born in birmingham england in eighteen eighty seven. When he was eighteen years old he moved to ontario canada where he studied to become a veterinarian surgeon upon receiving his degree he settled in winnipeg in manitoba but duty would eventually call. Harry joined the military when world war one became too great to ignore and he hopped a train to quebec for basic training. It was on his way to the camp when he encountered an odd sight. A hunter had killed a black bear and taken. It's cub to sell at a local trading post. Harry gave them twenty dollars and in exchange he took possession of the bear cub which he named winnipeg after the town where he'd been living. His plan was to raise winnipeg for a little while before releasing her back into the forest. Unfortunately harry's plans change very quickly. Winnipeg became a hit among other troops. They played with her and let her stay in the bunks where. She slept under harry's kat that she grew however winnipeg got too big to live indoors and was relegated to outside like a kind of watch bear for the soldiers. The more time they spend together the harder it became for harry to let go. He in winnipeg had grown close. So close that. When he was ordered to go back to england to fight on the western front he refused to release the bear back into the wild he instead snuck her into the ship with the other troops together. They traveled to the second canadian. Infantry brigade camp near stonehenge in england. Harry let her roam free for a while they were there. She enjoyed playing on the large stones but he soon understood that he would have to give her up. There was just no way for winnipeg to go all the way with him to the front

Winnipeg Colbourn Harry England Manitoba Birmingham Ontario Quebec Canada Infantry Brigade Camp
Brewers' Burnes, Hader Combine for MLB Record 9th No-Hitter

AP News Radio

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

Brewers' Burnes, Hader Combine for MLB Record 9th No-Hitter

"The brewers have offered the ninth no hitter of the major league season our record since pictures began to throw overhand in eighteen eighty four Corbin Burnes combined with reliever Josh Hader to lead a three nothing shutout of the Indians burns struck out fourteen with one hundred fifteen pitches over eight innings burns fan eleven of his first fourteen hitters and retired the first eighteen in order before Myles straw walked leading off the seventh it's the third time the Indians have been no hit this season not including the seven inning no no thrown against them by Tampa Bay I'm the ferry

Corbin Burnes Josh Hader Brewers Indians Myles Straw Burns Tampa Bay
Creating the Oxford English Dictionary

Everything Everywhere Daily

02:04 min | 2 years ago

Creating the Oxford English Dictionary

"London physiological logical. Society is the oldest organisation in great britain dedicated to the study of language formed in eighteen. Forty two one of their first objectives was to create a list of the deficiencies of the english language by eighteen. Eighty four they had hatched the idea of creating a new dictionary. That would solve the problems. They saw in current dictionaries. The process of whoever was incredibly slow. It took until eighteen fifty seven to establish a committee to create a list of unregistered words. These are words that weren't in current dictionaries or were poorly defined. If this had been the extent of what the illogical society had done. I wouldn't be doing an episode about this. The man who headed up. The committee was richard chenevix-trench. Trench was an interested in just coming up with a list of unregistered words. His ambition was much greater the report he produced with something else entirely. His report was titled on some deficiencies in our english dictionaries. It detailed all of the problems with current english language dictionaries in the nineteenth century. He noted problems. With the lack of coverage of obsolete words histories of words synonyms of words in poor examples and illustrations of words. What trench propose wasn't just a dictionary like the society had considered in the past. Trench was proposing writing the dictionary the most comprehensive dictionary of the english language. It wouldn't just be a list of words but of all of the words no longer in use and the history of all the words and where they came from. This would be a massive massive undertaking in eighteen fifty-eight the illogical society formerly called for the creation of a new dictionary which they called a new english dictionary on historical principles. First order of business was hiring someone to be the editor. Trench wasn't able to take on the assignment. As he was appointed the dean of westminster abbey. The job fell to herbert coleridge. Coleridge was only twenty nine. When he was appointed in eighteen sixty he created the outline in strategy for the entire project. He began the system to categorize the hundreds of thousands of quotes which would be required.

Richard Chenevix Great Britain London Herbert Coleridge Trench Westminster Abbey Coleridge
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Tipsy Tales

Tipsy Tales

03:48 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Tipsy Tales

"All righty okay. So the my stories about the curse of julia brown lou and this is kind of the turn of the century says anyways. Just want to put this out there. The story that i'm gonna talk about. I just want you guys to take your with a grain of salt because like so many stories through the ages of women that were also known as healers or witches. The chew stories often blurred through the perceptions of the day and colored through the lens steak the lens of ideologies religion politics fear. It's still that way it's still that way. It's still that way. But i am a healer well and so was she. So julia bernard born around eighteen. Forty five became julia brown when she married. Self esteem. Brown in eighteen eighty. They lived in the town of for near on the banks of the manchester swamp. I'm sorry your dog was biting me. He grabbed my hand. He's like what what year eighteen eighty to get a buggy on your. I think that's not my nose. Eight hundred eighty okay. That's i thought you said so. They lived in the town of for near on the banks of the man checks while in louisiana on a forty acre homestead plot that had been granted to self esteem by the government..

julia brown lou julia bernard julia brown Brown louisiana
D-Backs' Gilbert Throws No-Hitter in First Career Start

AP News

00:41 sec | 2 years ago

D-Backs' Gilbert Throws No-Hitter in First Career Start

"He just his first major league start Tyler Gilbert tossed a record tying eighth no hitter this season leading the dina backs to a seven nothing win over the Padres just incredible I mean it was just one of those days I just I don't know who it is like a I know balls we're gonna head around but they're gonna hit you guys and I was making good pitches I mean it was it was just kind of a a rush the whole time he's the third major league pitcher to throw a no hitter in his first start and the first is bobo Holloman of the Browns in nineteen fifty three it's the first time since eighteen eighty four the eight no hitters have been thrown in the season drew Ellis belted a three run Homer to cap Arizona's five run first Josh VanMeter provided three of the Diamondbacks fifteen hits I'm Dave very

Tyler Gilbert Dina Padres Bobo Holloman Drew Ellis Browns Josh Vanmeter Homer Arizona Diamondbacks Dave Very
The History of the Electric Car

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:55 min | 2 years ago

The History of the Electric Car

"It or not. The electric automobile is almost two hundred years old in eighteen. Twenty eight hungarian priest by the name of unused djedovic created a simple electric motor and may have created a device that converted it into motion in eighteen. Thirty two scottish inventor robert anderson created a very simple vehicle which is basically a carriage a non rechargeable electric battery into crude electric motor. It didn't go very far and it didn't go very fast. But it was a self-propelled electric vehicle. Electric vehicles were mostly novelties. And weren't something that could find practical use. There was no centralized electrical generation at the time. And there were. No wires transmitting electricity. And moreover every time you use the car you had to get a brand new battery. It isn't believed that any of these very early vehicles actually ever carried a passenger. Many people in the mid nineteenth century created electric devices which moved including prototype electric trains however the fundamental problem that electric vehicles run into for poor batteries and very inefficient motors. The first big development came in eighteen fifty nine by french physicist guest on plenty who invented the acid lead battery. This was a breakthrough in that. The battery can be recharged over and over. Even though there had been improvements over the years this is still basically the same type of battery found in most cars today in eighteen. Eighty one french inventor gustav trevi created the first thing that we would probably recognize as an automobile. It was an electrically driven vehicle. That could carry a pasture down a public street trevi. Interestingly enough also applied electric motor to a boat thus creating the world's first outboard motor in eighteen eighty two englishman. Thomas parker produced a commercial electric vehicle. It wasn't until eighteen. Five that german engineer karl benz invented the first internal combustion engine automobile and the name benz should ring a bell to anyone who's remotely familiar with cars.

Djedovic Robert Anderson Gustav Trevi Thomas Parker Karl Benz Benz
A History of Women and the Olympics

Stuff Mom Never Told You

02:34 min | 2 years ago

A History of Women and the Olympics

"So a lot of the story has to do with french. Feminist alice milia and her women's world games which took place from nineteen twenty two to nineteen thirty four and led the olympics leading women compete in events on a much wider scale. Yeah there's a lot of acronyms in this one so bear with us. The women's world games were yaas response to the international olympic committee's or the international association of athletics. Ias disdain and vera. I wave feminists gaining ground and a lot of women wanting to compete in certain events. Like the eight hundred batur track event events that did not recognize women or have been deemed unfit for women. Yes this eight hundred meter track of it. We're going to get into it. But it caused a lot of controversy when it came to women competing so at this time people and particularly in this context europeans or already talking about gender equality the term. Feminism is thought to have been coined in the eighteen eighties by a french activist by the name of coubertin claire around the same time. Baron pierre do cooper thanh who was also. French founded the modern iteration of the olympics. And the i o dagobert on outright opposed women's participation in sports and this bled over into what events he believed women could and should compete in when it came to the olympics. Day cooper ten allegedly said that the olympics were created for quote the solemn and periodic exaltation of male athleticism with quote female applause as reward. Wow he went on to say quote it is. Indecent spectators should be exposed to the risk of seeing the body of a woman being smashed before there is besides no matter how tough sportswoman may be. Her organism is not cut out to sustain certain shocks her nerves rule. Her muscles nature wanted it that way again day. Cooperstown reason that grow as no women participated in the ancient games. There obviously was to be no place for them in the modern ones. Which just as a brief aside isn't the whole truth sat really the point. But he's wrong. In general yes so the nineteen hundred games or the first allowed women to compete though not officially sanctioned twenty two out of nine hundred ninety seven of the competitors or women and they competed in tennis golf sailing. Equestrian and croquet only golf and tennis. Had all women

Alice Milia Olympics International Association Of A Batur Coubertin Claire Baron Pierre Cooper Thanh International Olympic Committe Vera Cooper Cooperstown Golf Sailing Tennis Golf
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on This Week in Travel

This Week in Travel

07:05 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on This Week in Travel

"Out the other two. Come on gary remember. I'm guessing. Yeah well they got the bears caribou. And then there's another one gray wolves while the goal the wolves. The wolf serve very rarely spotted. Yeah i guess you could count them. There's actually a big seven so but these these are just roaming. I mean you will see a herd of caribou. you'll see a mother bear and her cubs walking along the side of the road and they're they're totally on plus by the human presence. There used to these limited number of buses that go through. I swear they pose for photos. Sometimes oh my gosh all right. Let's change subject a little bit. With the time we have left friend you also cover the cruise industry and we were talking about this a little bit before. We started recording. What is happening with the cruise industry right now. Something we haven't talked about on the show for a while sure well. Everything is in somewhat of a state of flux but if things go according to plan cruises will resume in the us later this month with celebrity cruises has the ship that they are planning to sail from fort lauderdale on june twenty six and after that all the major lines are planning in the next few months to bring out chips from the us there are nuances in things slightly holding it up. The us centers for disease control and prevention has been very carefully and Working with cruise lines on the restart. Some some would say overstepping their bounds. Others say totally within their bounds. There's the state of. Florida is trying to sue the cdc right now to get all in tools thrown out personally. I think that's unlikely to happen. The cdc is still calling cruises a level for very risky activity. So if you're considering taking a cruise you should probably keep that in mind and read what they have to say about that but cruises will restart in florida. There's an additional nuance. There's politics at play in florida. And the governor there has banned use of the vaccine passport or really beyond any businesses from asking you. You've had a vaccine. So i'm somebody who covers cruises. I'm tr- still trying to figure out how the cruise lines are going to work around that on cruises to florida but carnival is starting cruises from galveston and july. They've already got approval for those and they'll be going to mexico and believes in roett ad and there will be an alaska season I dunno gary. Have you followed the whole business about you know you have to. There's a rule that says if you're operating a foreign flag ship you have to leave the country and council right and And congress said it's okay to temporarily have that on hold so can be in alaska season and i will say that I was very happy to see that. Because the alaska towns absolutely suffered The towns in the in southeast alaska Everybody's dependent in one way or another are a lot of people are on a cruiser income. And if you think about it we've talked about how it's a short season. So they miss their income in twenty twenty. They were facing missing their income again this year. And the way it works in alaska's people take that money and live off of it all winter so if you can imagine you know facing nine only one year of lost income but too so i was very happy for the people in the south east passage to see that there will be an alaska cruces. This year it's going to be a short one. Yeah the jones amendment really should just be repealed to be honest. I think it causes far more harm than good. And the intended benefits have never materialized domestic cruise industry. I mean well yeah. It was protecting us. Shipbuilding and it was in the eighteen eighties. I think and and and then you know the us. Shipbuilding industry subset. It was just doesn't exist anymore in in that sort of passenger ship realm. So it's an obsolete law but we can get into that another shock. What do you. How do you think this season's gonna end up being for the cruise industry. I mean are the what are their sales like. they're being. What are their itineraries. Liker their prices. I mean are the are the or excited. It's hard to tell there's a lot of people that have In lieu of refunds on canceled cruises having been in the us cruises since march twenty twenty. There's a lot of people that took credits instead of refunds because the cruise line sweeten the pot and said if you take a credit. We'll give you an extra twenty five percent towards your next cruise or whatever amount so there's a lot of people with cruise credits to us. So how many bookings are new and how many are using credits is something we just don't know at this point I will say that the cruise lines have put some pretty heavy prices on the initial cruises Partly because they'll operate at reduced capacity so the earn enough money you know. I guess they're trying to get higher prices. I've already seen some reductions in those prices which would indicate to me. They're not selling like hotcakes. But but i don't know yet. I guess if your expectation is you're only going to sell say sixty percent or seventy five percent of the ship You might be pretty confident you could get to that threshold. And that's required by the cdc. They're basically suggesting are reduced capacity. All right then let's move on to the next segment of the show. We always have a destination. Everyone recommends every week. And i'm sure years. We'll be alaska themed and i'll start off with a an alaska themed one. You had mentioned that. There's only one road in denali and then you have to be on a bus and that is true except for one particular time of the year when they have the denali road lottery and what this is is on. The road were usually cannot drive. You actually can drive. I think it's just for like one weekend. But there's a lottery to determine who gets to do it. And i actually know to people who have won the the lottery so i don't think this isn't like powerball lodge or anything but it's something if you ever wanted to do it with your own car whether it's a rental or something to apply for the denali road lottery.

florida sixty percent march twenty twenty fort lauderdale powerball lodge twenty five percent nine mexico twenty twenty one year two congress This year this year seventy five percent eighteen eighties later this month one road june twenty six Florida
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck

History That Doesn't Suck

02:57 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck

"Became convinced that the reform-minded half breed president would be the death of the gop. Then he had an idea. What if james garfield died instead the quirky theologian soon convinced himself. That this was god's will and he was god's instrument by killing the president. Charles guitar believed he would save the stalwarts and thus the nation you turned full on stocker at the station this morning. Ready and waiting. He is sure that in time a grateful nation will see him as a hero. But that won't happen. The quite likely mentally ill assassin will find no reprieve in an insanity plea. He'll die at the gallows a year from now. On june thirtieth eighteen eighty two. But let's not get ahead of ourselves through the summer of eighteen eighty one. James garfield clings to life as neither the prodding german fingers of medical doctors nor alexander. Graham bell's new metal detector can locate the bowl inside the humble log. Cabin born brilliant president which is in pain and poss for eighty miserable days and finally succumbs to his moral wound. James expires on the night of september. Nineteen eighty one in uncertain. Nation is left wondering what might have been in the wake of their second. Ever presidential facination americans are also left wondering what they can expect from the spoils. System benefiting fired customhouse. Agent will.

James garfield Charles james garfield James second june thirtieth eighteen eighty this morning german eighty miserable days Nineteen eighty one Graham bell of eighteen eighty one americans september a year of
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Stuff You Missed in History Class

Stuff You Missed in History Class

05:02 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Stuff You Missed in History Class

"Before the break we talked about activism that had been ongoing for decades before this national strike started on may first eighteen eighty six but we didn't get into how those same decades often very violent in general business owners political leaders in the public saw striking workers as a threat so police militia pinkerton detectives and sometimes even the national guard frequently tried to disperse striking and demonstrating workers with force or to intimidate and terrify them into backing down on their demands. Leading up to the haymarket incident in may of eighteen eighty-five illinois militia had to striking workers in lamont. Today that's a suburb of chicago. Three months later bystanders. Were beaten during a strike at the west division railway company. Any time there was a labor demonstration of any size law enforcement tended to be on edge regardless of who was there and whether the demonstration itself was peaceful parts of this movement were also employing violent rhetoric and violence dynamite had been invented in eighteen sixty seven and had made it a lot easier for people to make and transport bombs anarchist publications in particular. Did everything from waxing rhapsodic about the potential political power of dynamite to actually printing instructions on how to make bombs august speeds who was editor of the german language. Anarchist newspaper are biter. Xitong kept a pipe on his desk. That he said was a bomb in april of eighteen. Eighty five the radical newspaper. The alarm printed a piece that read in part quote. Dynamite is a peacemaker because it makes it unsafe to harm our fellows although they were happening in this incredibly tense atmosphere if i the events in chicago around the may first eighteen eighty six national strike preceded me without incident. May i was a saturday in about thirty. Five thousand workers walked off the job that day about eighty thousand. People participated in a march down michigan avenue. This march was organized largely by husband and wife team. Albert and lucy parsons. Lucy had been born in virginia. And enslave from birth and her enslavers had moved his enslaved workforce to texas shortly before the end of the civil war albert had fought for the confederacy before becoming a radical republican after the war was over albert and lucy had married in eighteen. Seventy two and they moved to chicago together in eighteen. Seventy three albert had become a typesetter and had joined chicago. Socialist movement later becoming editor of the periodical the alarm so marches and demonstrations continued on may second which was a sunday monday..

Albert albert lucy Lucy virginia lucy parsons lamont Xitong texas Today chicago Five thousand workers michigan avenue eighteen sixty seven april of eighteen may first eighteen eighty six saturday about eighty thousand Three months later german
MAPS with Rick Doblin

The Drug Science Podcast

02:20 min | 2 years ago

MAPS with Rick Doblin

"Today i have a guest who i guess most of you have heard of prolonged very long time because he one of the few people who's actually made a whole field. Psychiatry and medicine is ironman. and that's rick dublin. Who you all know is the founder of maps around who was pushed. Dna right to the edge of being a medicine. So welcome back could evidence pleasure here. We are at at the edge. It's it's very close. You will come to that in a minute. Yes but i think people will be interested to know when it will start into widodo stunting suit. Can you remember back that far. I cannot remember very well back that far. Well when it all started. Let me just start by saying that. I was raised by very politically progressive parents. And i was born in fifty three and we have loads of relatives in israel and distant relatives killed in the holocaust. It heads though. It was a big part of my education as a young boy was learning about the holocaust and just trying to understand how people could do those things to other people and how the national is actually a lot stronger than the rational or sadly. We've seen that in american politics recently to and so it just was. My family was well off. My dad was a doctor in my mom was a teacher. My grandparents on one side were very poor renna bookstore but my other grandparents were successful business people and and so. I had the sense that i shouldn't be paying attention to when i like to call a deeper threats now then just food and shelter and so that was just part of my very early upbringing. And then i was a young boy during the cuban missile crisis and we would be taught to duck and cover case. The bombs went off. And you know that wasn't very reassuring so you come to the us biden. Oh yeah. Oh yeah i was born in chicago. Yeah again my grandparents on Ones i came over from poland around nineteen twenty but but my other graham great grandparents actually came in from russia in eighteen eighty and chicago. So i was sort of a tried and born in america and i look back at it too. I was born at the height of American power

Rick Dublin Israel Biden Chicago Poland United States Graham Russia
Interview With Brad Stoppenhagen, Remodeler

The Fine Homebuilding Podcast

01:40 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Brad Stoppenhagen, Remodeler

"Now you. I'm trying to remind myself either busy days hectic times where we initially crossed paths. I believe it was a either a fine homebuilding agreed building adviser. Virtual event is that correct. It was a final building perfect room. Yeah think you mentioned in one of my her while the chats that I joined the trades at late my career. So some interesting yes. Yeah absolutely. And i'm looking forward to diving into that That pretty significantly today Just really quick for myself included but for the people who are listening. Can you just give us a little bit of a background of what you do for work now and Where your base and that sort of thing but a bass in cincinnati ohio. The work i do is mostly small to midsize remodeling jobs. So lots bathrooms. Kitchens porches Structural repairs sir even devlin. Some small additions outbuildings Really kind of get get off on Challenging projects so And i live in is work within a mile or so my house and it's the price of homes built from the eighteen eighties up until nineteen sixty s. Some later but lots of both homes said that need love

Cincinnati Devlin Ohio
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

06:04 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

"Also known as mutual dreams are when two people or more a dream experience at the same time the degree to which the dream is shared could vary from having common elements or events. That happened in each person's dream to the entire dream being identical. Imagine a shared dream. Where the dreamers. Don't know each other but both go to the same counselor. The dream environment for each was the same solely populated with the other dreamer. The counselor and the observer never revealing that the person occupying the dream was not a figment of the imagination but another client one male one female in the man's dream. he is pursuing the female. In the woman's dream. She is being pursued by the male. This was a strange case at oregon. College counselor was confronted with a nineteen sixty seven during each visit by the man. It was confessed that in his dream he was more bold in his pursuit of a woman. Who woman confessed that. She feared the outcome. If the man in her dream should catch her with scary after questioning each dreamer about the environment. It was determined that neither new location but from where the descriptions provided by each the counselor was able to pinpoint london from the description of the streets buildings pollution and the roads. She was estimating about the mid early eighteen eighties. The counselor was concerned that the activity in the two dreams was becoming more interwoven yet to pass. The dreamers waking lives never crossed when the activities in the dreams became so intense that it was affecting daily activities of both dreamers. The counselor believed it was time for an intervention. still why london. Why early or mid eighteen eighties. She requested detailed family histories from each client. The man's family ancestry ended abruptly with the adoption of his great grandfather whose occupation was as a physician in london during the eighteen eighties. The woman's family line ended equally abruptly one. Her grandmother was murdered in white chapel region of london side. The counselor was shot at the seemingly coincidental location and year of family tree of each dreamer. And how they were twined crossing campus. She picked up. A newspaper was sad to see that. A series of brutal murders had taken place in a nearby town and a gun unsolved. She didn't approve of the woman or the victims occupation they will prostitutes but no one deserved to be murdered in such a horrible manner eviscerated and gutted she read the article is she. Approached and walked toward the trash can but stopped short of dropping the newspaper into the garbage when she got to the part that compared the murders to those committed by jack the ripper and the white chapel district of london in eighteen eighty eight she decided after reading about local murders based on how disturbed her clients were by their dreams that an intervention would be past life regression. She was convinced that by standing the rationale for the dreams she would be able to resolve the stress associated by them. The man was scheduled to see her two days before the woman she placed him in a hypnotic transit allowed her to regress him when she questioned him about his environment is verbal response was rude in his accent. Difficult to understand. I when she questioned him about the young woman. He became so agitated with descriptions of action violence he would dispatch her with the counselor immediately. Brought him out of the trance. She made no mention of what he had revealed to her for. Fear of upsetting him over the next two days. She read several accounts of the ripper murders. They were so close to the description. Of what the man describe while experiencing past life regression that she decided that no matter what was revealed when she hypnotized she would hold back nothing. Maybe even warn her. The young woman was easily hypnotized and under pointed question. In revealed her name is catherine. Does the counselor noted the name during the session. She was surprised when the young woman rolled bucked on the couch thinking. She was having some kind of seizure. She sat down notebook with the intent of bringing her out of the hypnotic state but stopped when it became apparent that the young woman as catherine eddoes was having sex when the gyration stopped. She quickly brought her out of the trans before leaving the office and after considerable questioning the counselor learn that her client was the great granddaughter of the fourth victim of jack. The ripper and yes. Her great grandmother had been a prostitute so shocked was the counselor that she led the woman lever office without a warning. When the school year came to an end both clients graduated and left the area. She had no idea where the young woman was headed. But the man was headed to a cupertino california. Small town in san francisco south bay. He was going to be a teacher. She took the summer off and travel returning to a position as a counselor at the oregon university early in the first semester. She was crossing campus and purchase a newspaper from the stand outside. The bookstores was custom folding. And talking under her arm she proceeded to her office where she would read it while waiting for client on the third page that picture of the young woman she had counseled a year before was described as a latest victim of a series of brutal murders. Were the share dreams of the counselors to clients and almond of some kind had past life. Regression revealed the spirits of jack. The ripper and his fourth victim were destined to meet against seventy nine years after the first meeting and could the council have stopped a series of murders by revealing. The man's past will never know. The counselor passed away at the age of seventy three and two thousand ten. The story i just related was found among the letters by our daughter research by ryland anderson and written by his team. Urban legend.

ryland anderson two people third page london both mid early eighteen eighties eighteen eighties mid eighteen eighties jack the ripper cupertino california oregon university each person both dreamers two dreams fourth victim one nineteen sixty seven both clients each client san francisco south bay
Fanny Durack: The First Female Olympian To Take Home Gold

Encyclopedia Womannica

01:59 min | 2 years ago

Fanny Durack: The First Female Olympian To Take Home Gold

"Francis durack better known as fanny was born on october. Twenty seventh eighteen eighty nine in sydney australia. She was the third daughter and sixth child in a big irish family. Her father thomas drac managed pub in town while her mother. Mary took care of fanny and her siblings. Fanny was not a natural swimmer. Her when she was nine years old fannies family went on vacation in the beachside town of coochie australia. While in the ocean. Fanny found herself fighting against the waves and struggling to get comfortable in the water instead of retreating and fear or discomfort vani made it her mission to teach yourself how to swim and she did that. Fannie trained in and mastered the breaststroke at the time that was the only style of swimming that had a championship for women when she was seventeen years old. She won her first state title as her abilities progressed. Fanny learned the trojan stroke and the australian crawl with these three styles. In her skill set she dominated the australian swimming seen her main. Competition was me no wiley. Nina beat fanny a few different events including the one hundred yard breaststroke at the australian swimming championships at rose. Bay as the nineteen twelve. Stockholm olympic games approached. There was discussion. About whether fanny and meena should attend the new south wales ladies amateur. Swimming association had a rule that forbade women to compete in arenas where men were present. The association believed it was immodest for a woman to be so scantily clad and the presence of men but fanny and meena's widespread success created enough public pressure. The association overturned the rule. Getting to the games was another hurdle. These were the first olympic games where women were allowed to compete in swimming.

Fanny Francis Durack Thomas Drac Coochie Australia Swimming Vani Sydney Fannie Australia Mary Swimming Association Meena Wiley Nina Olympic Games Stockholm South Wales
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Jewish History Matters

Jewish History Matters

04:53 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Jewish History Matters

"Yes like what's like a like a really powerful example there that of some of the ways in which like you said people find religious. Meaning outside of the walls of the synagogue. Yeah so right on. The cover of my book is stained glass. Window of the museum at eldridge street which is a synagogue on the lower east side and the narrative of religion. That i'm looking at is the ways that people connect to the story of immigration of central and eastern europeans to the united states. And really the way that they feel about that. Part of american jewish history in the way that they're taught to feel about that part of american jewish history so i look at institutions that shape that feeling when category of institutions that i look at our historic synagogues that are used as museums that. Tell the story. One of those is the museum at elgin street on the lower east side. And i think that they shape the way. Visitors and staff members and philanthropists. Use this space to feel a certain way about a particular moment in american history. So the that i begin the book with is is one of my favorite moments from my research. Ever really powerful moment. I think in the tours of this grand and beautiful fall synagogue that had fallen into disrepair and was restored from one thousand nine hundred eighty s to the present. When people went on tours at the museum at altered street they would listen to a story of the history of this congregation. It's the first synagogue building built from the ground up on the lower east side by eastern european jews from the eighteen eighties and they would listen to this history of the synagogue of original congregation of the way it fell into disrepair over the course of the of the mid twentieth century and then was gradually reclaimed and renovated bright preservationists for the nineteen eighty to the president. And after listening to this story tourists will be shown out of the sanctuary and walk back out of the sanctuary to be led somewhere else on the tour and the do sense at the museum at l. church street paws right at the back of the sanctuary..

mid twentieth century eighteen eighties elgin street eldridge street nineteen eighty united states one l. church street paws first synagogue one thousand nine hundred eighty s central One jewish favorite moments american eastern europeans eastern european jews
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

06:04 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

"Also known as mutual dreams are when two people or more a dream experience at the same time the degree to which the dream is shared could vary from having common elements or events. That happened in each person's dream to the entire dream being identical. Imagine a shared dream. Where the dreamers. Don't know each other but both go to the same counselor. The dream environment for each was the same solely populated with the other dreamer. The counselor and the observer never revealing that the person occupying the dream was not a figment of the imagination but another client one male one female in the man's dream. he is pursuing the female. In the woman's dream. She is being pursued by the male. This was a strange case at oregon. College counselor was confronted with a nineteen sixty seven during each visit by the man. It was confessed that in his dream he was more bold in his pursuit of a woman. Who woman confessed that. She feared the outcome. If the man in her dream should catch her was scary after questioning each dreamer about the environment. It was determined that neither new location but from where the descriptions provided by each the counselor was able to pinpoint london from the description of the streets buildings pollution and the roads. She was estimating about the mid early eighteen eighties. The counselor was concerned that the activity in the two dreams was becoming more interwoven yet to pass. The dreamers waking lives never crossed when the activities in the dreams became so intense that it was affecting daily activities of both dreamers. The counselor believed it was time for an intervention. still why london. Why early or mid eighteen eighties. She requested detailed family histories from each client. The man's family ancestry ended abruptly with the adoption of his great grandfather whose occupation was as a physician in london during the eighteen eighties. The woman's family line ended equally abruptly one. Her grandmother was murdered in white chapel region of london side. The counselor was shot at the seemingly coincidental location and year of family tree of each dreamer. And how they were twined crossing campus. She picked up. A newspaper was sad to see that. A series of brutal murders had taken place in a nearby town and a gun unsolved. She didn't approve of the woman or the victims occupation they will prostitutes but no one deserved to be murdered in such a horrible manner eviscerated and gutted she read the article is she. Approached and walked toward the trash can but stopped short of dropping the newspaper into the garbage when she got to the part that compared the murders to those committed by jack the ripper and the white chapel district of london in eighteen eighty eight she decided after reading about local murders based on how disturbed her clients were by their dreams that an intervention would be past life regression. She was convinced that by adding the rationale for the dreams she would be able to resolve the stress associated by them. The man was scheduled to see her two days before the woman she placed him in a hypnotic transit allowed her to regress him when she questioned him about his environment is verbal response was rude in his accent. Difficult to understand. I when she questioned him about the young woman. He became so agitated with descriptions of action violence he would dispatch her with the counselor immediately. Brought him out of the trance. She made no mention of what he had revealed to her for. Fear of upsetting him over the next two days. She read several accounts of the ripper murders. They were so close to the description. Of what the man describe while experiencing past life regression that she decided that no matter what was revealed when she hypnotized she would hold back nothing. Maybe even warn her. The young woman was easily hypnotized and under pointed question. In revealed her name is catherine. Does the counselor noted the name during the session. She was surprised when the young woman rolled bucked on the couch thinking. She was having some kind of seizure. She sat down notebook with the intent of bringing her out of the hypnotic state but stopped when it became apparent that the young woman as catherine eddoes was having sex when the gyration stopped. She quickly brought her out of the trans before leaving the office and after considerable questioning the counselor learn that her client was the great granddaughter of the fourth victim of jack. The ripper and yes. Her great grandmother had been a prostitute so shocked was the counselor that she led the woman lever office without a warning. When the school year came to an end both clients graduated and left the area. She had no idea where the young woman was headed. But the man was headed to a cupertino california. Small town in san francisco south bay. He was going to be a teacher. She took the summer off and travel returning to a position as a counselor at the oregon university early in the first semester. She was crossing campus and purchase a newspaper from the stand outside. The bookstores was custom folding. And talking under her arm she proceeded to her office where she would read it while waiting for client on the third page that picture of the young woman she had counseled a year before was described as a latest victim of a series of brutal murders. Were the share dreams of the counselors to clients and almond of some kind had past life. Regression revealed the spirits of jack. The ripper and his fourth victim were destined to meet against seventy nine years after the first meeting and could the council have stopped a series of murders by revealing. The man's past will never know. The counselor passed away at the age of seventy three and two thousand ten. The story i just related was found among the letters by our daughter research by ryland anderson and written by his team. Urban legend.

ryland anderson two people third page london both mid early eighteen eighties eighteen eighties mid eighteen eighties jack the ripper cupertino california oregon university each person both dreamers two dreams fourth victim one nineteen sixty seven both clients each client san francisco south bay
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

06:04 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

"Also known as mutual dreams are when two people or more a dream experience at the same time the degree to which the dream is shared could vary from having common elements or events. That happened in each person's dream to the entire dream being identical. Imagine a shared dream. Where the dreamers. Don't know each other but both go to the same counselor. The dream environment for each was the same solely populated with the other dreamer. The counselor and the observer never revealing that the person occupying the dream was not a figment of the imagination but another client one male one female in the man's dream. he is pursuing the female. In the woman's dream. She is being pursued by the male. This was a strange case at oregon. College counselor was confronted with a nineteen sixty seven during each visit by the man. It was confessed that in his dream he was more bold in his pursuit of a woman. Who woman confessed that. She feared the outcome. If the man in her dream should catch her was scary after questioning each dreamer about the environment. It was determined that neither new location but from where the descriptions provided by each the counselor was able to pinpoint london from the description of the streets buildings pollution and the roads. She was estimating about the mid early eighteen eighties. The counselor was concerned that the activity in the two dreams was becoming more interwoven yet to pass. The dreamers waking lives never crossed when the activities in the dreams became so intense that it was affecting daily activities of both dreamers. The counselor believed it was time for an intervention. still why london. Why early or mid eighteen eighties. She requested detailed family histories from each client. The man's family ancestry ended abruptly with the adoption of his great grandfather whose occupation was as a physician in london during the eighteen eighties. The woman's family line ended equally abruptly one. Her grandmother was murdered in white chapel region of london side. The counselor was shot at the seemingly coincidental location and year of family tree of each dreamer. And how they were twined crossing campus. She picked up. A newspaper was sad to see that. A series of brutal murders had taken place in a nearby town and a gun unsolved. She didn't approve of the woman or the victims occupation they will prostitutes but no one deserved to be murdered in such a horrible manner eviscerated and gutted she read the article is she. Approached and walked toward the trash can but stopped short of dropping the newspaper into the garbage when she got to the part that compared the murders to those committed by jack the ripper and the white chapel district of london in eighteen eighty eight she decided after reading about local murders based on how disturbed her clients were by their dreams that an intervention would be past life regression. She was convinced that by standing the rationale for the dreams she would be able to resolve the stress associated by them. The man was scheduled to see her two days before the woman she placed him in a hypnotic transit allowed her to regress him when she questioned him about his environment is verbal response was rude and his accent difficult to understand i when she questioned him about the young woman he became so agitated with descriptions of action violence he would dispatch her with the counselor immediately brought him out of the trance. She made no mention of what he had revealed to her for. Fear of upsetting him over the next two days she read several accounts of the ripper murders they were so close to the description of what the man describe while experiencing past life regression that she decided that no matter what was revealed when she hypnotized hold back. Nothing maybe even warn her. The young woman was easily hypnotized and under pointed question. In revealed her name is catherine. Does the counselor noted the name during the session. She was surprised when the young woman rolled bucked on the couch thinking. She was having some kind of seizure. She sat down notebook with the intent of bringing her out of the hypnotic state but stopped when it became apparent that the young woman as catherine eddoes was having sex when the gyration stopped. She quickly brought her out of the trans before leaving the office and after considerable questioning the counselor learn that her client was the great granddaughter of the fourth victim of jack. The ripper and yes. Her great grandmother had been a prostitute so shocked was the counselor that she led the woman lever office without a warning. When the school year came to an end both clients graduated and left the area. She had no idea where the young woman was headed. But the man was headed to a cupertino california. Small town in san francisco south bay. He was going to be a teacher. She took the summer off and travel returning to a position as a counselor at the oregon university early in the first semester. She was crossing campus and purchase a newspaper from the stand outside. The bookstores was custom folding. And talking under her arm she proceeded to her office where she would read it while waiting for client on the third page that picture of the young woman she had counseled a year before was described as a latest victim of a series of brutal murders. Were the share dreams of the counselors to clients and almond of some kind had past life. Regression revealed the spirits of jack. The ripper and his fourth victim were destined to meet against seventy nine years after the first meeting and could the council have stopped a series of murders by revealing. The man's past will never know. The counselor passed away at the age of seventy three and two thousand ten. The story i just related was found among the letters by our daughter research by ryland anderson and written by his team. Urban legend.

ryland anderson two people third page london both mid early eighteen eighties cupertino california eighteen eighties first semester mid eighteen eighties jack the ripper oregon university each person both dreamers two dreams fourth victim one nineteen sixty seven both clients each client
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on The Catholic Culture Podcast

The Catholic Culture Podcast

03:33 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on The Catholic Culture Podcast

"Western kingdoms including bavaria and baden and virtual berg and hanover sided with the french unfortunately auto fund. Bismarck was king william's commander in chief of the army of the mocked and smashed napoleon the third and then the what was called the second empire was created in eighteen. Seventy one after the victory at sedan. Then you suddenly have one single germany with its capital in berlin and under william the first prussia was a lutheran kingdom and the lutheran church came to dominate all of germany. The catholic church fell very hard during that time. Hopefully the third became extremely popular among german. Catholics in the united states because he undertook very extraordinary measures to rescue the catholic church in germany. Now you have to remember something about blow the thirteenth. He was the very first pope in a thousand years who was not also the king of the papal states. Pope pious the ninth his immediate predecessor. Who will the longest serving pope in the history of the catholic. Church was the last pope was also the king of the papal states or the attorney and was and when garibaldi defeated the papal states army literally the paternity and petrie ceased to exist and there was no today. We have this The vatican city is a sovereign state and is a member of the united nations for fairly long period of time. The papal states simply ceased to exist and the pope was not even a sovereign leader. So pope leo. The thirteenth had quite a lot on his plate. First of all he had to reestablish the papacy as a sovereign entity and to have other nations recognize him. The german empire didn't recognize him for a very long time but he dealt successfully to reenergize the catholic church both in hungary and in the german empire became extremely popular with german americans particularly here in new york annually in The united states throughout the world. You have a collection. That's called the peter's pence. I believe you're probably familiar with that. It was just maybe a month ago. We had the collection and oliver parishes in the archdiocese of new york. Peter polka hensley and group of other people started that concept and raised a purse of fifty thousand dollars in the middle of the eighteen eighties. Which doesn't sound like a lot of money today. But if you multiply that by roughly.

new york Bismarck berlin fifty thousand dollars hungary a month ago thirteenth william first third eighteen eighties baden napoleon today Catholics Pope ninth first pope pope bavaria
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

03:09 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"And this play comes to new york and it's a sensation and it introduces the concept that a human being can in fact be mascot a human being can be lucky silver dollar. A human being can be a horseshoe or rabbit's foot and so teams instantly instantly. Start adopting taking these old traditions of you need something to break the jinx and there's something magical or special about really little people and by eighteen eighty nine. Almost every team. That i read has either a child who was boy in chicago named joy. Madero joe madero. Three feet tall was a mascot for the two teams. Then i guess the american association of the national league There's a little boy. Willie han with the white stockings. Who goes to detroit When they're in battle for pendant in the eighteen eighties leading the marching leading the marchers from the station in detroit to play the wolverines but chicago loses costa wolverines have a mascot who was a boy was born with a full set of teeth supposedly. And so what we would consider. Now detestable era of circus freaks of dog face boys and alligator women anyone with any kind of especial deformity. Being considered as magic arisen attraction somehow three things more together the comic opera the designates the possibility that human being can be lucky mascot the difficulty of hitting a ball around ball with around bat and the magic of little people or the perceived magic of little people which was universal. And they all come together. And people like luis fans than huey mcluhan and eddie bennett of the yankees was with them. All through babe. Ruth's career the first man whose hand ruth shook after most of his home runs was a hunchback. Eddie minute Its role norton of the phillies hunchback helping them. Independent nineteen fifteen. It is a long long long list of little people who were seen as having some sort of magical propensity who us in a phrase i would use in the book through the crucible of their own suffering rendered them somehow a guardian against ill fortune and this and this was generally accepted for who would who would have argued not to accept members. Most american cities then had ugly laws. If you had lost a leg and arm or been blinded or burned in the spanish american war in many cities you were banned by law from begging on the streets reading hanging out on the streets and you look at the history of ugly laws. People like van cells in many places who had an extreme deformity.

eddie bennett new york chicago two teams Three feet huey mcluhan Madero joe madero Willie han Ruth eighteen eighties first man luis costa three things american war nineteen fifteen team Eddie minute norton spanish
Life Is Not a Game: The Story of Ossip Bernstein

Aaron Mahnke's Cabinet of Curiosities

02:01 min | 2 years ago

Life Is Not a Game: The Story of Ossip Bernstein

"Life is not a game sure there are winners and losers but the stakes are far higher than we might realize. Just ask us at bernstein. Bernstein was born in the ukraine in eighteen. Eighty two back when his hometown was part of the russian empire in nineteen o six. He received his doctorate in law from heidelberg university and became a practicing financial lawyer shortly after that bernstein saw great success in his legal career. Earning a comfortable living for himself and his family unfortunately as he would come to learn several times in his life considerable gains were often followed by immense losses. But it wasn't his fault. He wasn't the gambler and he didn't play the stock market. Although he did enjoy the final game chess to be specific he picked it up in law school and found that he had a talent for it one year after he started playing. He was entering competitions all over europe june of nineteen ninety-two his win at the general chess federation of berlin earned him a master title kicking off a spree of tournaments with varying results. Sometimes he placed first or second other times he tied for third or fourth yet. The more he played the more of a reputation he built for himself and he was also outspoken against certain players. Such as jose coppa blanca. Who beat him several times over the years but there was something fascinating about this up and coming wonderkid chess champions and enthusiasts alike spoke highly of him and his name appeared on high profile lists although not always in a good way the bolshevik revolution of nineteen seventeen brought a lot of turmoil to russia with lenin's red army overthrowing the government and setting up its own capitalists and their enablers were rounded up for contributing to the plight of the workers and among them was awesome bernstein. Us wasn't a banker but as a financial lawyer certainly helped them get richer oftentimes on the backs of the most vulnerable. He was practicing in odessa ukraine when he was arrested by the bolshevik secret police in nineteen eighteen.

Bernstein Heidelberg University General Chess Federation Of Be Ukraine Chess Jose Coppa Blanca Europe Red Army Lenin Russia Odessa United States Bolshevik Secret Police
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Harvard Classics

Harvard Classics

02:49 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Harvard Classics

"Win acceptance of socialism in fantasy echo. Great britain morris was born in walthamstow essex to a wealthy middle class family. He came under the strong influence of medieval ism. While studying classics at oxford university. There joining the birmingham set after university. Mary jane burden and developed close friendships with pre raphaelite artists edward burne jones and dante gabriel rossetti and with neo gothic architect philip webb weapon morris designed red house in kent where morris lived from eighteen fifty nine to eighteen sixty five before moving to bloomsbury central london in eighteen sixty one. Morris founded the morris marshall faulkner and co decorative arts firm with burne jones rosetti web and others which became highly fashionable and much in demand. The firm profoundly influenced interior decoration throughout the victorian period with morris designing tapestries wallpaper fabrics furniture and stained glass windows in eighteen. seventy five. He assumed total control of the company. Which was renamed morris enco morris rented the rural retreat of kansas scott manor oxfordshire from eighteen. Seventy one while also retaining a main home in london. He was greatly influenced by visits to iceland with eric magnusson and he produced a series of english language translations of icelandic sagas. He also achieved success with the publication of his epic poems and novels namely the earthly paradise. Eighteen sixty eight to eighteen seventy a dream of john ball. Eighteen eighty eight the utopian news from nowhere eighteen ninety and the fantasy romance the well at the world's end eighteen ninety six in eighteen seventy seven. He founded the society for the protection of ancient buildings to campaign against the damage caused by architectural restoration. He embraced marxism and was influenced by anarchism in the eighteen eighties and became a committed. Revolutionary socialist activist. He founded the socialist league in eighteen. Eighty four after an involvement in the social democratic federation. But he broke with that organization in eighteen ninety in eighteen ninety one. He founded the count. Scott press to publish limited edition eliminated style print books a cause to which he devoted his final years. Morris has recognized as one of the most significant cultural figures of victorian britain. He was best known in his lifetime as poet although he posthumously became better known for his designs. The william morris society founded in nineteen fifty five is devoted to his legacy while multiple biographies and studies of his work have been published. Many of the buildings associated with his life are open to visitors. Much of his work can be found in art galleries and museums and his designs are still in production..

eric magnusson london eighteen Morris dante gabriel rossetti eighteen eighties eighteen sixty one Mary jane eighteen fifty nine philip webb eighteen sixty five iceland english seventy five morris Eighty four kansas scott manor oxfordshire eighteen seventy victorian period kent
The Hinterkaifeck Slaughter

Unexplained Mysteries

04:48 min | 2 years ago

The Hinterkaifeck Slaughter

"In the eighteen sixties. Hinder kaifaqu was built on vast farmland in the state of bavaria germany. One large l shaped building consisted of the machine house the barn and the living quarters a second smaller building served as a tool shed while the rest of the property was framed by dense forest. The nearest town known as grow burn was less than a mile down the road from the farm. A slightly larger settlement called catholic lay south of the far which is where the farms name came from hinder meaning behind so behind. Caifa in one thousand nine hundred five. The unknown owner of enter kaifeng died and left the farm to his wife. A woman named to there are no known records of when or how chilean at twenty-six-year-old. Andreas gruber a wiry hardworking local. Perhaps she saw andreas as the perfect man to help manage the farm or maybe andreas saw opportunity in the property owning older widow. And of course maybe it was love regardless to chilean married. Andreas one year after her husband's death making him co owner of inter hyphen check and in eighteen. Eighty seven to chillier gave birth to their first daughter victoria. The family made more than enough to support a newborn but they were also froogle. Records are unclear over what their farm actually produced and sold but their wealth drew plenty of unwanted attention. The surrounding villages kayak and grow burn stayed and connected via gossip in since. The gruber's were fairly private people. They bore the brunt of the rumors. They were polite and helpful but no one considered them warmer friendly. They never hosted neighbors or joined community celebrations southern isolation as hostile but most just found it. Strange andreas was the target of most of the hearsay. His stinginess rudeness and temper drew plenty of criticism along with his abusive nature. There were whispers that he beat chillier throughout their marriage and win. Victoria was old enough. The abuse landed on her as well. One of the families biggest scandals happened in the early eighteen ninety s. The couple had a second daughter sophia but around her second birthday. The young girl mysteriously died. Andreas was rumored to lock his children in the farm seller for days as punishment. So those who knew. The family suspected that. If sophia wasn't killed by one of andrea says violent outbursts. She likely died of neglect. Plenty of villagers considered these stories tall tales. The gruber's might not have been the friendliest people made up for it elsewhere. They treated their employees well. They lent their neighbors food as long as it could be paid back and they hired those who desperately needed work. If the rumors affected victoria didn't show as she grew up she mingled with the neighbors more than her parents did. She was hard working. Pretty and approachable her. Normalcy seemed to calm people's suspicions of the family in nineteen. Fourteen twenty-seven-year-old victoria married carl. Gabriel a man from the nearby town of law. Little is known about karl or the arrangement of this marriage whether it was for love or more practical matters the latter seems likely since this union led to changes in hendrick affects management for unknown reasons. Andreas enchiladas senior had passed down. Ownership of hinder kaifeng. Back to victoria curl was also made owner of the farm. Thanks to their marriage contract whether it was. Victoria's union the presence of carl in the house or the new ownership. The first year of their marriage was a disaster. Especially for carl testimonies suggested that. Andreas mistreated carl in. Refused to step down as patriarch based on andrea says history of abuse. People whispered about screaming matches and violent fights. Carl bitterly complained to neighbors about how unhappy he was. At the gruber's he told his friend. Laurenz schlitt and bauer that the family was greedy. They even made him skip meals to save money.

Andreas Andreas Gruber Gruber Bavaria Victoria Sophia Germany Carl Andrea Andreas Enchiladas Gabriel Hendrick Karl Laurenz Schlitt Bauer
The Introduction of Football to Spain

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:07 min | 2 years ago

The Introduction of Football to Spain

"Which i shall hereby refer to as football for the rest of the episode to appease my european listeners didn't originate in spain but it did arrive there rather quickly. In the late nineteenth century. Spanish workers and students who lived in england brought back with them. The game of football the first football club formed in spain was recreativo de huallaga which was founded in eighteen eighty nine by british workers for the rio tinto company the club's still exists today and currently plays in the second division in spain's professional league football clubs spread quickly through spain in the late nineteenth and early twentieth. Centuries nineteen to the idea was floated to have a single elimination knockout tournament. In honor of the coronation of king alfonso the thirteenth. It was called the copa de la coronation. And it was won by a team from bilbao. Which was the precursor to athletic. Bilbao the current team. Which represents the city of bilbao the next year. Nineteen thousand three. The tournament was brought back. This time being called the copa del rey. Or the king's cup. The first two copa. Del rey's athletic. Bilbao today. Barcelona has won the cup. Thirty times with alec. Bilbao winning twenty three times and real madrid winning nineteen

Spain Football King Alfonso Rio Tinto Bilbao England Del Rey Barcelona Alec Madrid
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Your Own Pay

Your Own Pay

03:35 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Your Own Pay

"We're such that she could go and get a job teaching music right out of the school for the blind. Another thing that is. I think very interesting to talk about nebraska and their idea. Excuse me of the music program. Is that clear. Owens was taught piano tuning now piano tuning by and large was considered a man's job because women were too frail couldn't carry the piano tuning box. It was too hard for their finger. Lots and lots of reasons perkins began teaching piano tuning courses to women. When i was there. We're talking now though. We're talking in the eighteen eighties. That oh i know it's coming but yeah so that i just want to point that we've got more progressive. This is true. So claire went on to teach music and she taught vote voice and so on in no time. She was leading orchestras. She was handling all the music for the drama departments and so on She went on to be the district music coordinator so not only. Was she teaching me as but she was telling all the schools in her district. What the music curriculum was going to be She was having trouble with her voice and decided after about eighteen. Twenty years of teaching music that it was time for her to make a change so she went on to become a chiropractor. She went to des moines and got her certificate to become a chiropractor. She was the founding member and vice president of the international association of blind osteopaths This organization formed at the international association of osteopaths. Where a bunch of blind osteopaths were at that convention they got together and said you know what we need to form an organization that focuses on blind osteopaths and so she and another blind osteopath. Where part of the founding members of this group was some from canada Mostly from the us but several from canada. As well. I was wondering if you could clarify for our listeners. What is an osteoporosis. S an osteopath is like a chiropractor however they could prescribe medications They did see people for general health concerns like you could go to her for your annual physical like i said they. They could prescribe medications. Where most chiropractors do not have did not have that option. The it's more than just manipulating the body. It's just a curiosity so they might have to. What do they call. These nurses who fill in his doctors osteopath right narrow view quite differently than they were back then or am i missing. Something no pass. Are i think very different now than what they were. A chiropractor is very viewed very differently now than what it was back then as well okay. Yeah you have to take the things in in the time period. Yeah that's true..

Twenty years Owens claire canada nebraska eighteen eighties des moines perkins about eighteen osteopaths international association
The U.S. Has A History Of Linking Disease With Race And Ethnicity

Short Wave

08:44 min | 2 years ago

The U.S. Has A History Of Linking Disease With Race And Ethnicity

"Okay. So today we're talking about the suspicion and harassment of asians and asian americans as the krona virus spreads and this kind of fear actually has a long history in the united states right gene a very long history and actually what we learned from. Eric lee is that the seeds of this discourse of china and asia being unsanitary and crowded those seeds were planted long before chinese immigration to the us the teeming hordes of millions living in health and then as americans who travel to china and then came back to the united states. They spread those ideas. Unfortunate the own brand for the us low so right in the mid eighteen hundreds you have the first waves of chinese immigrants coming over to find fortune in the california gold rush and they also become a source of cheap labor working as farmhands building railroads etc and eventually this becomes a source of tension. Exactly so when the domestic economy takes a downturn different immigrant groups start competing for these previously undesirable jobs and you start seeing harassment even massacres of chinese workers but erica says that the idea of chinese immigrants being dirty and disease. That's still with us. We know from the very beginning As americans in general are starting to debate the so-called problem of chinese immigration. They are explicitly tying china chinese people chinese spaces with disease and contagion. Historians have shown that the rhetoric is about chinatown as plague spots as pools of laboratories of infection. Erica says that way back. In the late nineteenth century we really started to see specific policies that reflect this thinking around chinese as a threat to public. Oh okay give me an example of that. So erica told us about quarantine that happened in one thousand nine hundred in san francisco when the discovery bluebonnets plague in chinatown Bannock plague that's a potential deadly bacterial. Disease the black death right. People believe rats. Broad across the pacific steamship was unlikely. Source of the disease. Erica says san francisco officials at the time. Saw the chinese immigrants as vermin infested. So all of chinatown was placed under quarantine. And there were these periodic. Campaigns to quote disinfect chinatown flooding basements in that district with acid washing the walls with lie tearing down old buildings that rhetoric by the way erica says has been applied to a lot of immigrant groups throughout history but there is a particular way in which it has been racialized with chinese chinese as dog eaters as eaters of weird and strange animals including rats and mice and that they if they are eating and consuming rats that are known to spread disease than chinese people as a race are also carriers of disease so what happened then was. San francisco's quarantine. So the plague became racialized blamed on a group of people. The city ordered an immediate quarantine of chinatown with orders to remove all whites from the affected area so so white. Residents of san francisco were ordered to leave chinatown but chinese people could not. It's such an intense thing to know and accept this history and realize it's been with us for a really long time. It's been with us. And we haven't really grappled with all of this of course is happening against the backdrop of the chinese exclusion act which was passed in eighteen. Eighty two and it prevented chinese laborers from entering the united states. Which this time of heightened anti-chinese rhetoric and sentiment that law would actually mark the first time the u. has banned the immigration of an entire ethnic group. So when you and your co hosts shreen. Marcel marashi spoke to eric harley. Eric told you a very personal story about her grandfather. And what happened to him when he immigrated to the us and it's really relevant to what we're talking about today so erica's grandfather came to the us through angel island right angel island. It's the ellis island of the west coast. It was in san francisco bay and there was this whole special system of scrutiny for chinese immigrants in particular so erica's grandfather like so. Many chinese immigrants angel island was pulled aside and inspected separately from other asian immigrants because people believe that chinese immigrants were carriers of disease. What a way to come into a country and she said that her grandfather never told her that story directly but she was interested in it and because she's historian she actually took the records of her grandparents interogations and specifically. She found her grandfather's medical exam from angel. It was it was nothing like anything. I've read before. Immigration officials ordered my grandfather to be subjected to the most invasive medical exam that i've seen in hundreds of these records so they had the medical doctor at angel island examined him for for diseases but also to measure every aspect of his body. His teeth his his genitals his. You know it's a his height to determine what age he was to determine weather his claim of being seventeen when he was immigrating was actually true and they included just all of these detailed notes in a record and it was. It was quite shocking to read. That's really just I mean i hear the story. And i think it's important at a time like this to hear stories like this so We've been talking specifically about chinese immigration but as you mentioned earlier this history of public health and hygiene efforts and how it gets mixed up with race and ethnicity. It's also happened to other immigrant. Groups right i mean. This is something that erica talks about a lot in her book which is of course about xenophobia in the united states but it wasn't just chinese immigrants who were being targeted in this way. I mean if you look at what was happening around the same time on the southern border mexican immigrants. The us were being treated very similarly. This is one of the ways in which to phobia works. It's it uses an already existing playbook certain immigrants are are threats there there threats because they bring crime also because they take away jobs but also because they they are starting genetically carriers of disease. And surprise american policymakers setup immigration procedures for mexicans. That looked a lot like what was happening to the chinese. On the west coast and when mexican immigrants arrived across the border they were routinely subjected to invasive humiliating and harmful disinfecting baths using pesticides to route out laos but also to cleanse mexican people's their clothing and their baggage before entering the united states. I mean just the fact that mexicans were seen as carrying disease in the same way that chinese were and that this pattern is repeated. Is really interesting. This is much harsher. Then what happened at ellis island where european immigrants certainly faced scrutiny. But the the medical exams were known as six second physicals and chinese people in particular. Still carry around that stigma. And we're seeing that procession playoff when it comes to corona virus. Absolutely i you know. We're exile eighty and fear out there right now about getting sick. That is getting tangled up in this legacy and you know. I'm picturing who are listening to this and they're thinking yes. This history is real. I know this sounds really bad. But i'm just worried about eating at a chinese restaurant gene and emily just buried and i i just. I'm worried about sitting next to someone who is asian. what do i do. That's not how disease works. We actually put this question to erica and she said With each headline with each new case with each new bizarre choice of photo for a new story lines the flames of anxiety right now in the us but racist scapegoating and outright discrimination does not have to accompany the things. It is an unfortunate echo of the past. But it doesn't have to be

Erica United States China San Francisco Eric Lee Marcel Marashi Eric Harley Angel Island Angel Island Right Angel Islan Ellis Island Of The West Coast Asia Plague California San Francisco Bay Eric Laos West Coast Ellis Island
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Mango Kush Podcast

Mango Kush Podcast

02:34 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Mango Kush Podcast

"River mark next week being now we got zacks just as we accident is as he thinks on. What would they come out. I think you're the sixteenth of the eighteen eighties. That's i'm gonna watch apparently just from the pre. They're saying that they took out so much for us. Take out so much shit calming friends. Somebody knows when she was there wrong. Pick something that movie and you hope but again just early days. Even with his ass. Fire cut even develop they. They didn't think they would have spent more time. They'll you you made the life you you made it worse. Just like like say. The bat batman wonder woman and yourself wonder five members and now they have personal ali. Plan the new blade earth la on the offer me you will see the one cage. He played cotton mouth. I just to be player but now martial arts abilities. But i mean. I see him playing demeanor. I could see that but that that's a good choice. Esters older person that they got me and blade as michelle on our ali The one that play cotton mouth in indicate he's playing he's playing a baffling advancing that work. I'm ready to take training again. Be crazy decision. I play with that was they had. He wanted more time. A big warned there apparently released it. But they're aligned to and all the toughest nothing they were trying to kick the shit in a rush. Did all this realistically remind painted is again. You'll being.

michelle next week sixteenth five members one cage eighteen eighties earth woman batman
Is This Ancient Biblical Forgery Actually Real?

Kottke Ride Home

05:48 min | 2 years ago

Is This Ancient Biblical Forgery Actually Real?

"So close to a century and a half ago. A man named moses wilhelm shapira found fifteen manuscript fragments in a cave near the dead sea. They were written in an ancient hebrew script and contained. What shapiro claimed was the original book of deuteronomy blitz despite interest from the british museum to the tune of a million pounds. The manuscripts were found to be forged. Shapiro was disgraced and the documents disappeared but now a scholar named don dershowitz is questioning. If those documents might have been real all along so while the british museum was examining the manuscript fragments for authenticity themselves. Back in the nineteen th century. A few of the fragments were also on display to the public already attracting tons of visitors. The news of the possibly oldest ever discovered biblical manuscript had made headlines around the world. While awaiting the museum's official decree of authenticity. Someone else decided to take matters into their own hands. Charles simone clermont. Is you know who the times describes as a swashbuckling french archaeologist and longtime nemesis of shapiro's end quote examined the fragments for a few minutes and immediately went to the press to say that they were fake. The risk he played on his cursory examination paid off when the british museum experts agreed. Shapiro was humiliated by this and ended up. Tragically dying by suicide a few months later. The documents were sold at auction for a fraction of what they were originally expected to sell for. And most people soon forgot about the whole thing now. Dershowitz from the university of potsdam germany has published a new paper and companion book making the case that the manuscript was real all along quoting the new york times but dershowitz makes an even more dramatic claim the text which he is reconstructed from nineteenth century transcriptions and drawings is not a reworking of deuteronomy. He argues but a precursor to its dating to the period of the first temple before the babylonian exile that would make it the oldest biblical manuscript by far and an unprecedented window into the origins and evolution of the bible and biblical religion dershowitz. His research closely guarded until now has yet to get broad. Scrutiny scholars previewed his findings at a closed-door seminar at harvard in two thousand nineteen are divided. A taste of fierce debates likely to come but of dershowitz is correct. Some experts say it will be the most consequential bible related discovery since the dead sea scrolls in nineteen forty seven and quotes the times. Sagely points out that it's much tougher to prove something authentic than it is to prove. It's fake but there's an additional hurdle to be jumped. In this case the physical fragments themselves may no longer exist so back in eighteen eighty three there was a mad rush at the time to find biblical artifacts that would prove or disprove various points of contention emerging in biblical scholarship moseley around the documentary hypothesis. The idea that the first five books of the bible or the pentateuch were actually written by various authors. Not just one traditionally thought to be moses. It was in this climate of aggressive archaeology that shapiro. I established himself as an antiquities dealer in jerusalem and during which time he and clermont no became enemies. After camacho correctly denounced a collection of pottery. That shapira had sold to the german government. It's also important to note that shapiro was a convert to christianity having been raised jewish in russia so he was viewed with some skepticism from the other biblical scholars and archaeologists and also faced intense antisemitism after the deuteronomy manuscript was denounced. Fast forward to now. Dershowitz says one of the main reasons he thinks the fragments could have been real is because their contents differs quite a bit from the deuteronomy in the bible and many of those differences lineup with discoveries that were only made when the dead sea scrolls were found in nineteen forty seven sixty four years. After chapitoulas discovery of the fragments dershowitz also investigated. Some of shapiro's personal notes archived at the berlin state library and found three. Handwritten pages of shapiro trying to decipher the fragments. Filled with question marks and transcription errors. Dershowitz said quote if he forged them or was part of a conspiracy. It makes no sense that he'd be sitting there trying to guess what the text is and making mistakes while he did it end quote while some scholars of the evolution of biblical text or undershoots side cautiously believing the deuteronomy fragments may be genuine. Most pig refers people who study inscriptions are the ones that usually authenticate documents. Most of them aren't convinced they say the original fragments bear the hallmarks of modern forgery. That they agree with the notes made by the experts who examined them at the time and since no one has the fragments to examine physically now. It's a closed case and as for the content being impressions christopher rolston leading pig refer at george washington university said quote. Forgers are pretty clever with regard to content and they've been very clever for twenty five hundred years and quotes despite dershowitz his published paper and companion book. The jury is still out and who knows if it will ever truly be born ounce. It would have some pretty huge complications. If it does due to some of its key differences for example. It's missing all of the laws of the deuteronomy were familiar with in the bible. Ones upon which traditions and entire libraries have been founded. It would also bolster the theory that are tons more stories and traditions out there than just the ones that have been preserved in the hebrew bible.

Shapiro Dershowitz Moses Wilhelm Shapira Don Dershowitz Charles Simone Clermont University Of Potsdam British Museum German Government Sagely Chapitoulas The New York Times Berlin State Library Moseley Shapira Camacho Germany Harvard Clermont
The History Of The Cola Wars

Conspiracy Theories

04:49 min | 2 years ago

The History Of The Cola Wars

"In the late eighteen eighties. Pharmacist named john doc. Pemberton decided to get rich selling homemade cures and elixirs. We should note in spite of his nickname. Doc wasn't a traditional doctor. He hadn't trained in mainstream medical practice instead advocating for alternative treatments and remedies and he wasn't alone in his passions late nineteenth century doctors and patients. We're wild about drugs. And even pharmacists could get rich quick selling inert or sometimes dangerous products as cure all remedies before pemberton's time even something as benign as ketchup was marketed. As a treatment for diarrhea jaundice and rheumatism bayer pharmaceuticals pedaled heroin as a cough suppressant and a safer alternative to morphine and literal snake. Oil salesman claimed that rattlesnakes fluids could cure their gullible customers. It's no wonder that. Pemberton figured he could brew his own dubious remedy in make a fortune. His first hit product was called. French wine coca. It contains several ingredients that would raise eyebrows today but they were considered healthy at the time. Things like wine and coca leaves which contain cocaine. Pemberton claimed that french wine coca was an energy drink and a remedy for morphine addiction and the people loved it. Unsurprisingly the beverage sold well but it wasn't long before pemberton ran into an obstacle just months after french. Wine coca hit. The shelves at the end of eighteen eighty five fulton county georgia outlawed alcohol atlanta based dot. Pemberton had a new problem realizing he probably never strike it big with his mental tonic. Pemberton went back to the drawing board. He wanted to replicate french wine. Coca success but with a non alcoholic beverage. Luckily he had a new product in. Mind it too featured coca leaves but he added the kola nut a west african fruit pit. That's high in caffeine. The mixture of coca and cola gave customers a mild buzz and inspired the drinks name. Coca-cola the beverage sold modestly in its first year unfortunately. Pemberton wasn't particularly skilled with marketing. and distribution. so shortly before his death he sold the business to a fellow druggist with more business. Sense acer candler from their candler built a beverage empire through soda fountains in the nineteenth century. Chola manufacturers generally sold syrup to local businesses. This was more efficient because soda. Bottling technology was fairly new and not widespread yet. They're carbonated water was added to the syrup. So the coke was fresh and fizzy when it was served. Gamblers forward thinking mindset. Didn't stop there. He knew he could reach more customers if he didn't limit his avenues of distribution so in eighteen eighty nine. He sold bottling rights to a plant in chattanooga tennessee. Now customers didn't need to visit the nearest soda fountain for a glass of coca cola. They could buy it the corner shop and drink it at home then. Candler made another even bigger shakeup. He altered the coca cola recipe. We don't know all the changes candler made to the recipe. But we know one of his goals. He didn't want to sell cocaine to his customers and he had two reasons why first candler was very religious second and more importantly he was racist. Most soda fountains were segregated. So only white people could drink coca cola on tap but once he started selling bottled coke. Southern newspapers began printing rumors of quote negro cocaine fiends. In quote white supremacists suggested that the soda drove people of color to commit violent crimes including sexual assault hypocritically. Nobody expressed any concern. That cocaine might drive a white people to commit crimes and to be realistic. There probably wasn't enough cocaine in the beverage to spur consumers to violence although it's hard to say because it doesn't seem like anyone was tracking how much they were using in the recipe. Regardless candler was committed to eliminating the coke from coke.

Pemberton Coca John Doc Diarrhea Jaundice Cough Suppressant Cola DOC Fulton County Candler Coca Cola Atlanta Georgia Acer Chattanooga Tennessee Coke
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on thebuzzr pod

thebuzzr pod

05:54 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on thebuzzr pod

"Yeah i'd say king touch was always. We'd always try to make it special play touch just because it's a big name so people when they go to to. They're always excited for big night and they're expecting some standard aspects and also. There's always people in the room that don't know you king sorts of war. Yeah and i remember like and i think like it was always like. When we're we rehearsing for like for for a gig especially king. Tut's i think it was. There was always like this question about like. How can we improve on the on the last show and i think he had a set list was always like you. An important part of it like how to make it more exciting than previous one. So that's one of the reasons. We introduced new songs. Do you said this was shared by some air idols. The band's idols. What idols names. As low we disagree. Adrian probably probably gone. Well actually the listeners. Who don't know about this was discovered in kingston. That's what makes it. What it is today is because back. In ninety two. I think ninety three oasis plaguing turkey. And that's where they got signed on then. The rest is history. So i i take too long lineage from oasis to anyone in the rock seen in the last eight years like the killers. Franz ferdinand arctic monkeys into pro. What are your us as belle and sebastian. There did they play the be surprised if they didn't. Yeah because bound sebastian off from glasgow. Franz ferdinand played as well. I think in the classroom yes. Your influences are diverse from british guitar bands like balanced fashion which i mentioned and also french music Say gains a comes out near your views. it Is there any other employees masters. One talk about These influences how they affect your writing style are how you put your create. I think well actually what you've mentioned is probably summarizes it quite well. He's also almost something. That's difficult to talk about because influences kind of just happen. Sometimes i struggle to knowledge some influence because especially in this day and age. You listen to so much. Think so many things so much stuff on the internet and you'll have an idea comes from somewhere. You're not really sure where one thing on my auto to that. Is music like religious music in a way. Personally i at least from a personal point of view Maybe we'll see later on in recreation. Cats wide is. But just from a yeah. I saw that i see that. Yeah at that. Influences are probably well to me. They were Mostly important to get me into play music but as far as Making music. I'd say like as victor mentioned like nowadays you listen to so many different artists and songs that an idea can literally hop out of a when you're listening to anything really so To me that were mainly important to reason. I wanted to play music play guitar. Actually music evokes imagery in thought dazzlingly and one Comes to mind is one of the songs that are gonna spin today All these songs on the self recorded written produce during the early pandemic lockdown And i have to confess something to you. I am a literary key. I made your ding us. So that's i find the lyrics outstanding and the referenced wild In a song which we're gonna listen to the coming up artist gap which was inspired by the wild poem written in the eighteen eighties. And it's one of his finest works was about his sister passing away and Celebrating in a poem as an elegy for her she was just nine years old. Lucia died. I it's deeply poetic response to her death. And that's how i feel about your song that you wrote victor It's a standing so so we're going to listen to attract now and we'll come back.

Adrian Lucia victor kingston today eighteen eighties one Franz ferdinand oasis last eight years sebastian turkey nine years old british ninety two one of one thing french one of the songs belle
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on The Friends of Israel Today

The Friends of Israel Today

05:01 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on The Friends of Israel Today

"It's over the past. Four weeks we've been talking about the various ethnicities of the jewish people who have lived in the aspect that means jewish people who lived outside the land as the jewish people scattered throughout the world. Over the past two thousand years. They grew into different ethnicities and cultures. But as the jewish people were scattered all throughout the world is vital to remember that there has always been a jewish presence in the land of israel in the eighteen eighties. Jewish people are immigrating back to the holy land. A group of religious pioneers sought to set up a unique jewish village. They wanted to call it. Pet tat. Tica which means the opening of hope for the door of hope and the name was chosen from the prophecy. Of hosea in hosea to fifteen in the province hosea rights and there i will give her vineyards and make the valley of acre a door of hope that that's where these of religious pioneers got the name patik the door of hope and the settlers of this new jewish village actually intended to establish the new settlement the new settlement in the valley of acre near jericho as the prophecy predicted so they purchased some land there but the turkish sultan end to the purchase forbidding jewish people to settle in that area so the founders transition they retained that name of the village pathetic for them it became a symbol of their desire to build a unique jewish village in an eighteen seventy eight the founders learned of the availability of land northeast of jaffa. Which is today tel aviv. And this property was large. It was thirty five hundred dunams which is about eight hundred sixty five acres of land. And here's the catch though. The land sat next to the swamp of the york own valley and the founders of patik purchased land on july thirtieth eighteen seventy eight. Another two thousand acres was bought when another group of settlers came to the area a year. Later this the ottoman sultan approved the purchase of this land because of the poor quality of it sat right next to that swampland. Sadly a malaria epidemic broke out in the eighteen eighties forcing the abandonment of the settlement. Only a few years later though was reoccupied by immigrants in eighteen eighty three from russia called the balu be me. Lou is a hebrew acronym based on a verse from the book of isaiah in chapter. Two verse five. Which says house of jacob. Let's go up so be founders. That moved into. Peta believed that the time had come for jewish people to not just return to the land of israel to live in it but also to make their living there as well. So the balu eam were strongly influenced. This is interesting by the bible. And karl marx. That's right they were socialists. And socialism drove them and they establish these farming cooperatives throughout israel which became known as kibbutzes. Yes boot's maybe you've heard of kibbutz. These were incredibly instrumental in the establishment of the state of israel. Fourteen x university students made up the first group of balu and for them. Farming was completely different change of lifestyle because actually as jews were forbidden to own land in russia the country was devoid of jewish farmers. But when the balu em arrived from russia into israel they had plenty of energy and optimism but very little money and experience and they found life very difficult as they were farming. Eventually some of the original families that started pet depot before that malaria outbreak. They came back because they found funding to drain the swamp from baron. Edmond rothschild The and so. The village eventually became more stable. Many settlers from the first and second waves of immigration found their way to pet tika where they would come to establish the foundations of the israeli labor movement. It's so interesting when you travel through petite but today you can still see remnants of the old village and the agricultural roots however the city is actually in its modern era one of israel's largest industrial centres. This all happened. Because a group of ashkenazi jews from eastern europe and russia believed god was calling them home to the land that god promised them from the now apples of gold. A dramatic.

Edmond rothschild karl marx israel jericho two thousand acres july thirtieth eighteen sevent jewish eastern europe thirty five hundred dunams eighteen eighties Jewish russia fifteen about eight hundred sixty five first second Four weeks today hebrew turkish
"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Brewsing Banter

Brewsing Banter

03:10 min | 2 years ago

"eighteen eighties" Discussed on Brewsing Banter

"I'm not going to do the vaccine now. Like sam vaccine do grabble a hill. I'm still popovich to love and rollouts yesterday by them was supposed to rename Operation warp speed that. Anybody catch that in his press conference that i had to leave would actually name. What would it be asking name. So he said he was changing. Works fees shit because people were really skeptical by copying call warp speed because because people were seen i people call it works but they seem to understand the science because sars in kobe or do the same thing so they've been working on this kind of understand that spike protein qu- last seventeen years so he will deteriorate. Yeah yeah. I'm just saying it's not. It's not just so it's not just like they just came up with the they had the same similar profile so they kind of look for seventeen years. I will say. I'm not sure. I think i need to take it sooner than later. Because i don't know if. I want that johnson johnson joined because they actually give you the virus yet after thompson. Who and new school right. So they're more more like the flu shot. You're the johnson johnson. Now that's the one it's only supposed to be only one shot and you could be keeping your frigerator so that one. That's probably going to be a if it works. If it has the same efficacy as madonna and because because if you give me something that says eighty percents or seventy percents. I'm not going to give me that shit. I need that madonna advisors. Don't give me that. So they have to come in. Pretty quick are trying or testing to dose in one dose system. So i think if it's one dose and then you'll be ninety seven. I might think about it. But still i want that women are even because they don't change it. They co where people say. Change your dna. Kobe not like rob earlier. I said i don't wanna be sitting a old. They're going to be sitting there watching tv. And they papa if you took the covert nineteen vaccine in two thousand and twenty. I three cents one billion dollars. What Up here you have a shoulder. Shoulder crack is because at this brings it to a point. How come how come the side effects would never like a superpower if you could superstar some bad for eighteen eighties. Long people that take this medicine may be subject to herpes or substance. Works tackle become suicide. Who have a heart attack which could lead to death.

two thousand yesterday one billion dollars thompson one dose Kobe seventy percents ninety seven seventeen years eighty percents one shot nineteen vaccine johnson johnson three cents rob last seventeen years twenty popovich eighteen eighties one