35 Burst results for "Nineteen Twenty Three"

Adolf Hitler's Rise to Power

Conspiracy Theories

01:56 min | 2 years ago

Adolf Hitler's Rise to Power

"The situation in one thousand nine hundred ninety s germany was dire. the country had lost world war one. Their economy was tatters. German rule over its global colonies was no longer and many of their citizens had lost loved ones in the war. The desperate conditions pave the way for young and hungry political figure named adolf hitler in nineteen twenty one. He became the leader of a fringe group. Known as the nationalist socialist german workers party better known as the nazis. They wanted to rebuild germany and make it the superpower at once was regardless of the cost on november eighth nineteen twenty. Three hitler organized a rally of thousands of people outside. Munich's largest beer hall. He gave a rousing speech about his plans to save their fatherland. He urged his followers to start a revolution invade a political rally. Going on inside the hall then. He ordered them to take over political buildings around the city. The crowd was so moved by his message that they followed his instructions immediately. People began marching through the streets of munich. They tried breaking into various government buildings but were stopped by the police. Sixteen of hitler's early followers were killed during the riots. Hitler was later tried for high treason and eventually jailed for the uprising. The event made national headlines and it was coined the beer hall putsch. It gave hitler the attention he needed to spread his ideas to a wider audience. In when he was released less than nine months later he leveraged this new following. Maybe he couldn't sees political office but his followers could certainly vote him.

German Workers Party Germany Adolf Hitler Munich Hitler
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Everything Everywhere Daily

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:57 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Everything Everywhere Daily

"If amelia earhart heddon so famously disappeared. She would still have been remembered as one of the pioneers of aviation and one of the most significant figures of the nineteen twenties and nineteen thirties. She grew up in abilene. Kansas and later moved to their parents to saint paul minnesota and then to chicago. She picked your high school in chicago. Based on their science labs she worked as a nurse in one thousand nine seventeen in toronto coming down at the spanish flu and then in nineteen nineteen enrolled in columbia university for a year. She initially intended to study medicine however her life changed forever on december twenty eighth nineteen twenty one in long beach california. She flew in an airplane for the first time with noted air racer. Frank hawks that ten minute ten dollar flight center on a course that would change history. She immediately knew that flying was what she wanted to do and she set out to learn how to fly. She took a series of odd jobs to save up for the one thousand dollars needed for her to take flying lessons. She arrived at the kenner airfield near long beach and was taught by another female aviation pioneer. Mary neta snook. Erhard began setting records almost immediately and nineteen twenty one. She purchased a used by plane in nineteen twenty two. She used it to fly to fourteen thousand feet setting a women's altitude record in nineteen twenty-three she became only the sixteenth woman in the united states to receive a pilot's license in nineteen twenty four. She briefly returned to columbia and then it was going to attend. Mit when her family's financial problems prevented her from further study. She moved to boston with her mother where she remained. Active in local aviation in one thousand nine hundred ninety seven however charles lindbergh captured the world's attention by becoming the first person to fly across the atlantic solo. The next year a team wanted to have a first woman fly across the atlantic they selected erhard as the right woman who can handle the media attention and had the necessary skills she accompanied pilot wilmer stoltz and co-pilot slash mechanic. Louis gordon on the flight in june nineteen twenty eight

amelia earhart heddon Frank hawks kenner airfield Mary neta snook erhard chicago abilene wilmer stoltz Erhard Louis gordon columbia university long beach Stoltze Kansas flu minnesota charles lindbergh
What Ever Happened to Amelia Earhart?

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:57 min | 2 years ago

What Ever Happened to Amelia Earhart?

"If amelia earhart heddon so famously disappeared. She would still have been remembered as one of the pioneers of aviation and one of the most significant figures of the nineteen twenties and nineteen thirties. She grew up in abilene. Kansas and later moved to their parents to saint paul minnesota and then to chicago. She picked your high school in chicago. Based on their science labs she worked as a nurse in one thousand nine seventeen in toronto coming down at the spanish flu and then in nineteen nineteen enrolled in columbia university for a year. She initially intended to study medicine however her life changed forever on december twenty eighth nineteen twenty one in long beach california. She flew in an airplane for the first time with noted air racer. Frank hawks that ten minute ten dollar flight center on a course that would change history. She immediately knew that flying was what she wanted to do and she set out to learn how to fly. She took a series of odd jobs to save up for the one thousand dollars needed for her to take flying lessons. She arrived at the kenner airfield near long beach and was taught by another female aviation pioneer. Mary neta snook. Erhard began setting records almost immediately and nineteen twenty one. She purchased a used by plane in nineteen twenty two. She used it to fly to fourteen thousand feet setting a women's altitude record in nineteen twenty-three she became only the sixteenth woman in the united states to receive a pilot's license in nineteen twenty four. She briefly returned to columbia and then it was going to attend. Mit when her family's financial problems prevented her from further study. She moved to boston with her mother where she remained. Active in local aviation in one thousand nine hundred ninety seven however charles lindbergh captured the world's attention by becoming the first person to fly across the atlantic solo. The next year a team wanted to have a first woman fly across the atlantic they selected erhard as the right woman who can handle the media attention and had the necessary skills she accompanied pilot wilmer stoltz and co-pilot slash mechanic. Louis gordon on the flight in june nineteen twenty eight

Amelia Earhart Heddon Frank Hawks Chicago Kenner Airfield Mary Neta Snook Abilene Columbia University Kansas Minnesota Long Beach FLU Erhard Toronto California Charles Lindbergh Columbia
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on No Agenda

No Agenda

06:05 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on No Agenda

"I think also tries his best C. span bringing you that brought to you by cable since nineteen twenty three beautiful all right. We've got great show mixes we've got bill mounteney with a full-on song. Classic brand new. The is really talented. Billy bones matt lasari and steve that going gonna try and get all these guys in show grumpy old. Ben's coming up next no agenda stream dot com and we return on thursday with another thrill episode then deconstruction. Just for you. If you're in komo nation coming to you from the capital of the drone star states austin texas opportunity. Thirty three and that's in fema region number six if you're looking up one of the governmental maps in the morning everybody. I'm adam curry from northern silicon valley. Where i remain unjustly divorce act and we return on thursday. Right here are no agenda. Remember us at divorce dot org slash in a until then.

matt lasari thursday adam curry bill mounteney steve northern silicon valley fema region austin texas divorce act Billy bones komo C. span Ben dot com Thirty three twenty three one dot org nineteen number
How Did WarnerMedia Get Its Start?

TechStuff

02:09 min | 2 years ago

How Did WarnerMedia Get Its Start?

"Today i thought we'd start down the road to talk about the various companies that make up warnermedia kind of unravel it all and this is going to be a heck of a story because it includes several influential media companies that had their own distinct histories before coalescing into warnermedia includes companies that are not media companies at all like funeral homes for real now when i say complicated. I'm not kidding. Our story includes a window washing company. A parking company an online service provider company Few magazine publishers. And more there are mergers and acquisitions are spin offs. There's family betrayal and lots of other stuff. So where the heck do i get started. Why suppose. I should talk about the core components and then work to the point where they all come together and i could start pretty much anywhere because there so many different pieces to the story. But i'm going to begin with time because it's on my side. Yes it is henry. Loose and briton hadden. Had a lot in common. They both attended yale. University they both worked as reporters for the baltimore news and both of them were in their early twenties back in nineteen twenty two and they also wanted to try something. That was a new idea. Newspapers were thing obviously but loosen. Hatton had the idea for a news magazine. They decided to try and create one because no one had really done it before. And they raised more than eighty thousand dollars which was a princely sum in nineteen twenty two and they quit their jobs to found a company called time inc and a magazine called time it would publish weekly starting in march of nineteen twenty-three loose served as the business manager for the young publishing company and hadn't was editor in chief and together. They found success with this weekly magazine. Format

Warnermedia Few Magazine Briton Hadden Henry Baltimore Hatton Time Inc
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Discerning Hearts - Catholic Podcasts

Discerning Hearts - Catholic Podcasts

02:15 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Discerning Hearts - Catholic Podcasts

"So she says rest assured despite your worries which. I'm sure she would have shared with pauline. About how pearly. I'm doing and so on your soul sees its wings. Grow bigger every day or rather. It can't see this but it doesn't mean it's any less true we can. You don't see it but we see and the day will come in the not so distant future when those wings will be ready to unfold again looking forward to her passage from this life to eternity. Then jesus will give a sign and the little dove francois's today's will fly to heaven without further. Ado little sister. Don't worry about sister. Marie of the angels pictures. You didn't hurt anyone on the contrary everyone loves you. And has the fondest memories of you and leonie would always marvel at this She would just marvel at the way she was loved she. She never expected it. She didn't know was there and when it was shown to her of course it made her really happy but it was always marveled to her mother. Subprime orissa condition hasn't changed. Keep praying for her and for me because it hurts me terribly to see her suffer. Sometimes or other often are recalled. The lovely conversations we had on the garden steps and i immediately feel a pain in my heart as before the more you get to know pauline the more you really learn to to to really appreciate her to i immediately feel a pain in my heart because those sweet moments of joy are now over. Then something inside me says soon. You'll be reunited forever and i feel comforted of you so much little sister with an exclamation point if you don't die before the beatification so they have no idea when the beatification will happen. Sometimes in the church you decades This is one thousand nine hundred fifteen in fact it would happen eight years later in nineteen twenty-three if you don't die before the beatification i'm still hoping as i said that will have permission to see you again and that you'll be able to come and venerate tarez reliquary point of fact That didn't take place. This was the last time that they would.

jesus leonie today pauline dove francois eight years later one thousand Marie tarez nineteen twenty-three hundred fifteen nine
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck

History That Doesn't Suck

03:55 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on History That Doesn't Suck

"Dictators. Podcast speak for itself. Here's their episode. On one of the most infamous of the mall. Adolf hitler runs for his life through the back streets of munich. Germany behind him. A gunbattle is still raging. He's lucky to be alive. As the police opened fire he fell to the floor. A bullet barely missed. His head is dislocated his shoulder but he still manages to make it to a waiting vehicle. Clambers in in it speeds away. It's november ninth nineteen twenty-three and this man has just committed treason. He knows that if he's caught your face at best a lengthy jail sentence more likely. The hangman's noose. He's just attempted to lead a violent insurrection. In the city of munich late last night he abducted the state prime minister at gunpoint and dispatched paramilitaries to seize government buildings and strategic positions. It was the city. His aim was to grab power in the state. A barrier then marched north with his supporters to berlin the german capital but his attempted coup has ended in abject defeat the police and the army did not the 'cause instead they opened fire on the plotters fourteen. Nazis vo policemen have lost their lives. The leaders of the revolt are all either on the run in custody. The munich putsch failed now. I don't fit her. The ringleader is on the run with a districted shoulder. An extraordinary game of cat and mouse will unfold as the authorities pursue him through the south german countryside. At this point it virtually impossible to grasp that in just ten years. Hitler will be elected and sworn in as the german chancellor not only that but he loves to go on to become the nation's dictator the fuhrer he will commit crimes are so heinous. He'll be remembered quite simply. As one of the most evil twisted human beings ever to walk the earth my name is paul mcgann and welcome to real dictatorships the series that explores the hidden. Lives of tyrants. You'll be right there in their meeting. Rooms and private courses on the battlefields and in their bunkers. Up close and personal with some of history's most evil leaders. We'll take you behind the curtain beyond the propaganda and the myth making to hear the real stories of their totalitarian regimes in season. Two we'll be bringing you. The stories of dictators including francisco franco and moammar gadhafi. But we start with a series of episodes on adolf hitler's early years. We'll trace the story. From his birth in eighteen thousand nine two attempted coup in nineteen twenty-three traveling back in time to follow one man's journey from total obscurity to treason some dictators. You might never have heard of. But hitler is different. We've all heard adolf hitler argue. Not he holds a unique place in our collective memory and in the popular. Imagination is one of the most recognizable historical figures ever. But while you may know. Something of. The hitler story does a decent chance. You don't know the half of it. How did hitler begin his journey to terrible power and why no one able or willing to stand in his way.

Hitler paul mcgann moammar gadhafi Adolf hitler berlin hitler adolf hitler francisco franco nineteen ten years Two twenty-three one man south german prime minister fourteen november ninth nineteen twenty late last night munich Dictators
The 'Hollyweed' Sign

Ghost Town

02:24 min | 2 years ago

The 'Hollyweed' Sign

"Hollywood sign is as we know. It means a lot of things to a lot of people. The sign itself has gone through a bit of an identity crisis over the years. The hollywood sign was unveiled in nineteen twenty-three as hollywood land changing to the hollywood sign. We all know and love in nineteen forty nine. Yeah yeah it's The real estate company who actually owns the land is still a real estate company in the beechwood area. The people of la woke up to the hollywood sign on new year's day. Nineteen seventy six. The hollywood sign got a little facelift. It didn't say. Hollywood it said holly weed and it was a little prank. The people of l. a. Waking up nineteen seventy six going. Oh am i dead. I imagine hollywood was pretty wild place. Then they're probably emma seeing things in my bed. No you're seeing holly weed and it was a you say it was a prank but it was a little more of a college assignment. Yes that's right. Cal state northridge student. Danny fine good took to the sign with fifty dollars worth of curtains to mark the day. A more relaxed marijuana law came into effect. It was his his class was a study on scale and he got an a. I'm glad for that because it's not as good of a story. If he gets like a b- minus for craftsmanship they took off some points. The f- the first of the kind of changing the signs. Yeah it's a fine tradition. Little very as someone who has been up to the hollywood sign. It's really hard to change the sign. You have to do it at night and it is because it was. It's all like would you say nineteen twenty one. I think one thousand nine hundred twenty three twenty three hundred forty nine. it was and it's been renovated. Yeah in real bed where i think some tours and of course it was a focal point. Where in the seventies. I think shortly before this happened. One of the os roll down so you can imagine what kind of disrepair was in. But people don't know this doesn't light up. It's still just kind of baseboards and metal. There's not an illuminated part of its. You have to go up there at night with your sheets and your shit and all that and make this thing and hope for the best in the

Hollywood Cal State Northridge Holly Danny Fine Emma LA
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

05:20 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"Throwing that out there good and they're not just upgrading. The dining for adults the board. So i love family dinnertime on ship. The restaurants are always phenomenal beaming. I mean disney does not go little on teaming and these three dining experiences are going to be. Awesome on my. I can't which one i'm more excited about. I think i know which one you're more excited about. I think you're just being nice. I mean okay. I know which one i think i'm most excited about. And then i i guess i probably do. Well no actually. I think it's a tie between two. And i'll tell you why and i bet you i know it's too it is i'm just saying okay. All right we'll start with aaron del frozen dining experience this will feature everyone's favorite frozen characters also on ana kristoff and olaf for a theatrical dining like extravaganza. It kind of reminds me of tiana's place which is on board the disney. Wonder i love by the way food here will be infused with some nordic influences yummy. Let's say i think i'll save the one for last. We'll go to the next one. Nine thousand nine hundred twenty three gets its name from the year. The walt disney company was founded. It's going to celebrate the legacy of walt disney the company and the golden age of animation. The menu is going to be inspired. By disney's the company disney's california heritage and we'll be inspired by many of the cultures infusions that occur within the state and then finally worlds of marvel which period right there marvel as soon as marvel. You should all be like. Yeah that's the one It's going to be the first ever marvel cinematic dining adventure which is going to have avengers on active mission. During dinner guests gets a play along the menu is going to be inspired by the mcu and as if you needed a reminder we love harmful so if you need us we'll be here so i will say that beaming wise that one for sure hands down is the one i'm most excited about. Yes thought because. I don't know what the food is. Not that i expect the food to not be good at any of them but i'm actually really excited about the food seeming at the nineteen twenty-three classic hollywood elegance s. I mean literally at sort. I knew i knew what you said you had to. I knew nineteen twenty-three year second. yeah. I'm that cuisine. Sounds fantastic and the kind of stuff that like. We love to eat. So i'm very excited about that. But obviously for the entertainment slash beaming. It's marvel hands. Obviously.

disney olaf two three california ana kristoff first aaron del nineteen twenty-three year sec nineteen twenty-three Nine thousand nine hundred walt disney tiana frozen one twenty three marvel
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Detour To Neverland

Detour To Neverland

04:53 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Detour To Neverland

"Which will take you back in time to old. Hollywood and twenty three is the year that the walt disney company was created. So that is an honor of walt and in the last thing is worlds of marvel where this is the cool that the adults can take part in. But it's going to be the first ever marvel cinematic dining adventure where you step into marvel story and you get to be part of it while you dinner so i am so excited about literally all of this i was gonna say i don't even know if i can pick like a favor like one that i'm the most excited for. Yeah brendan can what the marvel dining now you were saying nineteen twenty three yeah nineteen twenty-three yeah nineteen twenty-three just dislikes awesome. What are your guesses on what the other two shows would be. Ooh i'm honestly not sure because they said their brand new so i can't really go off of things of the other ships i'm done but so do you think it will be like a broadway adaptation or something completely. Now i think probably one of them will be be a broadway adaptation and then the other one will be some sort of like cute mickey and characters french show. So we'll see yeah. I don't know if they could do it. And how long are those shows. Normally that they do on the ships think they're like thirty to forty five minutes so hamilton would not work. Oh my gosh no. That'd be incredible. A ham wistful thinking. Oh my gosh. That would be just over the top for me. But i would. I would be interested in like mickey character. Show like a became the magical map or something like that that we see in some of the other parks for some reason. Disneyworld just doesn't get anything like that.

thirty two shows first forty five minutes one disney brendan Hollywood twenty three walt hamilton french Disneyworld mickey twenty twenty-three nineteen three - marvel
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

04:36 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

"Hello everyone and welcome to nineteen twenty-three main street at the daddy daughter. Disney travel podcast. We're your host..

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on The Ladies of Strange

The Ladies of Strange

02:17 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on The Ladies of Strange

"Gra is typically somebody very close to you and it's only one maybe two so the original case study was done in nineteen twenty-three on madame m but madame in does it have what we typically associate with congress now because she believed that most of the society around her had been replaced with impostors. Typically kafka's one. I guess maybe two who were really close to you. So the definition of copper has evolved over time as do most presences steak. You syndromes prognosis be a diagnosis. Yeah but you know. I was trying for. I reached for big word and reached for the wrong one. But hey i tried so let me tell you about a couple of cases real quick. There was one gentleman who his parents were imposters in his mind and when he would talk to them on the phone with us they were all suss. I there's an impostor among us. It's all of them. Yes whenever he would talk to them on the phone though he knew it was them. So the disconnect for him was between seeing them and having that emotional connection. Like whenever i see ashley. I'm like oh this is the girl that i love dearly who i played barbies with until far too late in life and you know we would make homemade cigarettes and sit on her roof and tea leaves out of notebook paper and it was terrible. That's a lot of thoughts to go through your head when you see me. I'm sorry it's true but with this disorder or this delusion. I would see you and i'd be like okay. That is what ashley looks like. But i'm feeling none of those feelings. That i normally feel and i'm not getting that that. Like emotional connection so has to be an impostor euphoric root out such so some believe that the disconnect for this syndrome is a visual like the visual. Is there but the emotional is not another case. Mother believed her daughter had been removed by child protective services and replaced with the impostor while she was not physical against her daughter..

two congress one nineteen twenty-three one gentleman Gra couple of cases ashley
Why Theres A Cross on San Franciscos Highest Peak

Bay Curious

02:04 min | 2 years ago

Why Theres A Cross on San Franciscos Highest Peak

"Mount davidson crossed. We sent bay curious producer susie rancho to find out just west of twin peaks above a quiet residential neighborhood is mount davidson park. It's not well known or well marked but once you start. Walking one of the parks trails. You're surrounded by eucalyptus trees and you start to forget that you're in the middle of a major city coming up trail breath mason amazing view when you get to the top. You see two things of you that stretches all the way to the east bay and one very big cross. The cross is an imposing sight. It stands at one hundred three feet tall and ten feet wide at the base made of concrete it stands in stark contrast to blue sky and the eucalyptus grove that surrounds it to learn more about how it got here. I went to mount davidson historian. I- jackie proctor. Jackie says the crosses origin story goes back almost a hundred years to nineteen twenty-three two time when the area was a forest a guy named james decatur who is a employee of the western union telegraph company and with the ymca hikes through that forest and comes to the top and he sees this incredible view of downtown and he is just overwhelmed. Inspire knee writes this long essay about the experience. Peace and quiet were so profound that it seemed almost unbelievable that the noise and roar of a great city was only a few minutes behind them the solitude of the forest conveyed a sense of fastness quite as real as one would experience among the age. Old monarchs of the high sierras

Mount Davidson Susie Rancho Mount Davidson Park Twin Peaks Jackie Proctor James Decatur East Bay Mason Jackie Western Union Ymca
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Holding The High Line with Rabbi and Red

Holding The High Line with Rabbi and Red

04:23 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Holding The High Line with Rabbi and Red

"And style of play wise It was it was good Very very calm physical Big guys big strong fast Order guys When you look at like the the smaller clubs that's when you come across the really big and strong and just competitive grown men really. And then you look at like the hamburg's in the vertebrae the wolves fares and then you have younger guys. So they're more developing and in the thing brought out from like nineteen twenty three so you look at those teams and you see smaller guys but is who are really been technically technically and tactically and and things like that. They're not always the biggest strong the fastest but they're their quality players We're we're going up against grown men who are really big strong and fast and then the smaller in the smaller clubs when you face so smaller clubs in oregon elitist stuff last question here for you mike. What are your goals for the season. What does success look like for you in two thousand twenty one My goals are to learn as much as i can Not only from the guys in my position but Guys all on the team in every position Hopefully make my debut super excited for that moment Give minutes under my belt. And just like i said a absorb as much as i can and learn as much as i can from the guys around me. Because he doesn't believe for a long time a lot of them so learning continuing to develop Debut and and just working hard and seeing what can happen mike. Thank you very much for your time. Good luck with the rest of the preseason a look forward to watching you make your rapids debut this year thing grabbing a a rapids fans. I want to thank you for listening all the way to the end of this episode. I wanna give you a couple of little tidbits before we close out. This week's show first of all. I want to acknowledged Sponsors acres have see produce unique and completely custom kits for your youth. Sunday league squad or adult team on they can help you. Create the kid of your dreams at an affordable price with a motto. Any design you want seriously let acres fc designing your next custom kit today at idris f c dot com and then our other sponsor is neck scarves. Roughnecks scarves aren't officials scarf supplier. Mls us nil and you a soccer. They also do non-medical cloth masks that loop around your ears. And they're also making net gators on they just recently started producing the thinner warmer weather scarves as well so obviously we all have those. You know nick thicker wool. Like or even wool made scarves. But when you have those in the middle of summer For like fourth of july game at dc that wrapped around your neck produces a lot of sweat and a super icky so now. They've got the lighter think it's acrylic on style scarf. The you can also get get customized as well so get your custom all of that for your group team or office at roughneck scarves We will not be going away next week at this point. We're looking remark are probably going to start doing. Weekly episodes leading up to the start of season. I have a couple of interviews Still in the works so get will harris The other new assistant coach for the colorado rapids. And then we do want to have a proper colorado springs switch-backs preview episode format cleveland. And all the trail heads out there So hopefully getting brennan. Bruce sometime in the next week and so one of those episodes on in the next couple of weeks will be dedicated to a rapids perspective on the uso affiliate. The switch backs what their season looks like. Hopefully by the end will start to get some news in terms of players who could be loaned down to colorado springs. So look out for that. Thank you again to ali the ross and michael edwards for their time. This week talking to me. That's all i've got folks listeners expert..

michael edwards next week Bruce This week two thousand ali the ross this year today acres fc colorado rapids idris f c dot com harris mike colorado twenty one nineteen twenty three one cleveland fourth of july game next couple of weeks
4 New Stocks for the S&P 500

MarketFoolery

02:00 min | 2 years ago

4 New Stocks for the S&P 500

"Are going to be joining the s. and p. five hundred and x p. Semiconductors penn national gaming general holdings and caesar's entertainment. So if you if you have a basket of casino stocks happy birthday to you. With the penn penn national and caesar's. You know this is one of those things jason. I feel like the conventional wisdom is wrong because the conventional wisdom that i hear about stocks being added to the s. and p. five hundred is at doesn't really matter and i get that it doesn't affect the underlying business but i think it actually does matter. I think i think it goes in the plus column if all of a sudden companies that you own shares of are added to this massive index that all of these index funds based on. I couldn't agree more. I mean i. I know that yeah. I think in the long in the long run. Probably say it's not that big of a deal or many would say it's not that big of a deal but generally speaking. I think it is a big deal to. I think it's it's for a number of reasons but but among others i mean. You're you're part of this. I mean we could call it a quasi-exclusive they're not pudding laggards in the snp Now there are laggards indian p. and and so that's why they rebalance quarterly. But but yeah. I think it's a sign that your business is is of a certain quality of that they feel comfortable and in putting you in in that sort of exclusive club and so i mean if you look at the snp. I mean the origin of the s. And five hundred. It goes back all the way back to nineteen twenty-three i mean this this thing has has been a around for a while. The s&p five hundred in some form the s. and p. Five hundred is we know. It now was introduced in nineteen seven But ultimately as i mentioned there

National Gaming General Holdin Caesar Jason
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

Problematic Premium Feed

05:27 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

"With few exceptions. They gladly allied wallace. Reprint them without charge. The first issue setting a pattern which has changed very little consider sixty pages exclusively the covers and offer thirty one articles. A legend on the cover of an early issue announced an article a day from leading each article of enduring value and interest in condensed permanent booklet form true to its factitious character. The digest presented itself not as a commercial enterprise but as an association the issue of august nineteen twenty-three explained the reader's digest is not a magazine in the usual sense but rather a cooperative means of rendering time-saving service. Our association is serving you. It should be serving your friends. The there was indeed a reader's digest association dewitt wallace on fifty two percent of the stock while atchison wallace own forty eight percent subscribers automatically became members. But we're not encumbered with any ownership or control the essence of the idea do it. Whilst basic discovery as the official history of the magazine explains. was that this magazine would by mira. Magic actually expressed himself. This is why it was called a reader's digest magazine articles could be written to the reader to give him the nub of the matter in a new fast moving world of the nineteen twenty s instead of being written at length and with literary embellishments to please the author or editor for about ten years digest followed whilst is simple original Procedure searching the magazines articles and stories to be adapted for its readers then by the next Lawsuit events three just digest began to support other pseudo events whilst himself later described this innovation as an inevitable development perhaps the most important in the digest history like all great inventors. The idea was beautifully simple. It was merely to plant a full length. Article prepared under reader's digest direction. In some other magazine so it could often be digested in the reader's digest the editors of the digest with conceive a two page piece for their own magazine inserted directly writing the two page article themselves do commission authored a pair on this topic of full length article..

sixty pages fifty two percent thirty one articles two page forty eight percent first issue about ten years each article august nineteen twenty-three a day mira. Magic nineteen twenty s wallace atchison wallace three
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Kannaboomers | Cannabis for Wellness

Kannaboomers | Cannabis for Wellness

03:33 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Kannaboomers | Cannabis for Wellness

"To improve the lives of the average working people that voted for them and that's looney tunes and so The good news is that enjoying cannabis is not a class issue. It's not a race issue. It's not a cultural issue. Everybody can enjoy it and enjoy it together. So hopefully as this continues to not hopefully as this continues to spread as our movement continues to grow We're gonna see more people waking up to the fact that their own self interest is not served by voting republican. You might talk up and then go you know what maybe health care for. Everyone is not such a bad idea. Exactly exactly you know. Maybe you know maybe it's not right to just like keep black people trapped in poor neighborhoods and not you know and just fill it with police. That beat the crap out of them or shoot them for no reason How about that. Imagine that or like maybe people who wanna come to this country and work really hard should be allowed to do that even if their skin is a different color than mine or they don't speak english you know Maybe it's okay for multibillionaires to pay a fraction of a penny on the dollar more which they don't need them won't miss at all so that children can have food to eat right like it's just so obvious especially if you're christian by the way like the generosity And love that underpins jesus's message and i was raised a very very conservative serious christian The love and kindness and cooperation that are at the core of jesus's message are completely incompatible completely incompatible with the entire republican platform basically except for things that allow people religious freedom which i think is a good idea and now there is no platform except for whatever trump thinks mentoring there's no platform Yeah like you said. There's no bottom there. Is you know an insurrection is is not even close to the bottom. That's very true and people. Forget that there's a you know. We fought a civil war for god's sake And other countries show including germany in the nineteen thirties show. What can happen If you don't take these things seriously. I mean hitler attempted a coup putsch right in like nineteen twenty three or something the beer hall putsch and it failed and he was arrested and imprisoned and while he was in prison he wrote mein kampf and then he got out of prison and the rest is literally history so even if trump is convicted. Whether it's in the senate or the new york attorney general gets him or something There are many other people many other people that are willing to take up the mantle and charge forward and trump is trump est. He's not a republican. he's not a neo nazi. I mean he may but his main thing is that he's for trump but in the wings waiting in the wings are really bad people active enthusiastic neo nazis and other horrible people that will be very glad to step in into his shoes and make things even worse and so yeah arresting the f- the slide into craziness pulling as many people out of it as possible now so that. There's always going to be crazy. People like that but isolate re isolating them and getting them back out of the spotlight to show just how terrible their views are..

jesus hitler trump republican english christian senate neo nazis neo nazi germany putsch mein kampf thirties nineteen twenty three new york a penny attorney general beer hall putsch nineteen
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Champagne Sharks

Champagne Sharks

05:58 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Champagne Sharks

"Black psychology trying to use this as black psychologist an example this one versus how so the first black person to get the end. Psychology is francis summit so francis. I'm sure he had to go through hale to be a back in the early. Nineteen twenty third thing twenties older. He he. He went to hell. But he's the father of black psychologists in that he's the first bypass person they get a phd. But they wouldn't argue that he's the father of black psychology because the father of night psychology means that he's he's he's looking at particular concepts and trying to relate that to black people's experiences notches. I had a degree in psychology. And what baba colby camp on we sought body we love francis number said that francis sumner would be an example of but he's running thank right whereas when you start talking on breaking away from apa when you start talking we need a. We need to form our own. Who owns thought dan. Now that's how did they can nasa liberation. Yeah i mean the most how to think book. I've started reading and mentioned earlier. Is you ruge. Like the time she takes just to give list of definitions and concepts like takes this meticulous amount of time to give ideas and concepts two words that aren't eurocentric. It's that that was one about sex bullets at effluent. Anl in so lucky. We had koby cambon to kind of like joe through it with light in east person had to present on a particular chapter but it still so much data. Every time i go through it. I see something else in his always interesting. When you talk to your Is ready red and almost like it's not like you just picked up like some pamphlet. You gotta go through this any all year. It's time and go through it. So i think you're so right. And she is so she shows you live at this sisters scholar warrior. How how high how you go about. That process now was interested in where her is that she comes with. Some of the conferences at florida am in. She says this piece which is interesting how she says that she. She felt as if she didn't even write that book like at the time sheets. She was trained by gothic far to go to go to harlem and she's teaching at hunter dot the clock at hunter in he started by getting a. How did they instead of what the thing because she's saying she wins. A new schools with the university of chicago got degrees major league schools and he said she said that he was part of that process and teaching her how to date but within that. She said that she felt like she didn't even the right. Like something just came over her esoteric. But that's that was our word by spirit wrote and just talk. I gathered all those things together in use. Her is like the vehicle for that. Now i say that to say that counts not counting. But we had the conversation using all of the big words and not being relate so she says that she had now..

harlem twenties Nineteen twenty third first two words first bypass one warrior francis florida baba colby camp sumner league black chicago
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

03:14 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

"Galaxy's <Speech_Female> edge. I <Speech_Female> don't enjoy the food <Speech_Female> i <SpeakerChange> feel. It's not <Speech_Female> marketed towards <Speech_Male> kids. Who were the <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> roasters. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> My favorite <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> yes. Well i <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> disagree. I don't <Speech_Music_Female> like it and <Speech_Music_Female> the best one. <Speech_Music_Female> Blue milk <Speech_Music_Female> is not a meal. <Speech_Female> But i like it. I think <Speech_Female> it's the best thing you <Speech_Female> can eat at hollywood <Speech_Female> studios so you know what i'm <Speech_Female> putting that at the top <Speech_Female> of my list and <Speech_Female> coming in at number <Speech_Female> three. I enjoy <Speech_Female> tusker house. <Speech_Female> It's a character meet-and-greet. <Speech_Female> And i know <Speech_Female> i know <Speech_Female> i know. I'm going get flagged for <Speech_Female> this but i really enjoy <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> any no. <Speech_Female> I don't dislike anything. <Speech_Female> An animal kingdom. <Speech_Music_Female> I think everything <Laughter> there is <Speech_Female> it decent <Speech_Female> and this is going <Speech_Female> to get some disagreement <Speech_Female> coming in at number two <Speech_Female> which this <Speech_Female> is in a different <Speech_Female> league from three and four <Speech_Female> epcot. <Speech_Female> Yes this <Speech_Female> is right. It is not number <Speech_Female> one but number <Speech_Female> two and <Speech_Female> avoid <Speech_Female> i. You <Speech_Female> know what my least favorite <Speech_Female> one is right. The norwegian <Speech_Female> one that i still can't <Speech_Female> pronounce rocker. <Speech_Female> She's yes accurate. <Speech_Music_Female> I <Speech_Female> can't pronounce it <Speech_Music_Female> and you know. <Speech_Music_Female> Quick service <Speech_Music_Female> service <SpeakerChange> i. <Speech_Female> I really liked the <Speech_Female> germany pavilion. <Speech_Female> The caramel <Speech_Female> is really really <Speech_Female> good. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> That's fair good. <Speech_Female> Count that and <Speech_Female> you know. Monsieur <Speech_Female> paul multiple <Speech_Female> however you say it is <Speech_Female> a good restaurant <Speech_Female> i enjoy it. <Speech_Female> I would eat there again <Speech_Female> now. This actually <Speech_Female> surprised me <Speech_Female> but coming in at <Speech_Female> number one <Speech_Female> we have <Speech_Female> magic kingdom <Speech_Female> because it's <Speech_Female> really really <Speech_Female> good and of course <Speech_Female> cinderella's <Speech_Female> royal table <Speech_Female> is it <Speech_Music_Female> it's exceptional <Speech_Female> it's quite good <Speech_Female> and you know dole <Speech_Female> whip his. <Speech_Female> It's gotta <Speech_Female> be it's quick <Speech_Female> service for me. I really <Speech_Female> i really enjoy it. <Speech_Female> And you know honorable mention <Speech_Female> ice <Speech_Female> cream now as <Speech_Female> always <SpeakerChange> pico <Speech_Female> spills. Please <Speech_Male> fix it. <Speech_Male> Used to be so good <Speech_Male> and just as an example. <Speech_Male> I didn't talk about tony's <Speech_Male> the italian restaurant <Speech_Male> and magic kingdom. <Speech_Male> The i i've <Speech_Male> i love italian <Speech_Male> food anyway. But <Speech_Male> i find tony's <Speech_Male> for example to better <Speech_Male> the mom melrose <Speech_Male> is just <SpeakerChange> put it in <Speech_Female> some perspective. Yeah <Speech_Female> i like. Tony <Speech_Female> is <SpeakerChange> my <Speech_Male> favorite. But i <Speech_Male> like it. It's okay <Speech_Male> there's a lot of okay <Speech_Male> in magic kingdom <Speech_Male> and speaking of okay. <Speech_Male> We have reached <Speech_Male> the end <Speech_Male> of this world. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> Wind foodi <Speech_Male> guide quick tour <Speech_Male> of <Speech_Male> dining in the park <Speech_Male> so the <Speech_Male> bottom line is in any <Speech_Male> park. There's something <Speech_Male> good worth <Speech_Male> dining at. So do your <Speech_Male> research. <Speech_Male> I probably won't <Speech_Male> agree with me on all <Speech_Male> these but <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> yeah you don't but <Speech_Male> that's what makes the world go round <Speech_Male> you know. Read a lotta <Speech_Male> reviews and you can really <Speech_Male> find out <SpeakerChange> in the end if <Speech_Male> you think you're gonna like <Speech_Music_Female> it or not and if there's <Speech_Female> mixed hatred <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> it nothing's really <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> bad ever try <Speech_Male> any won't some <Speech_Male> are but we've highlighted <Speech_Male> one. That <Speech_Male> really are bad <Speech_Male> and some reviews <Speech_Male> that for you as well <Speech_Male> so we hope <Speech_Male> you're not too <Speech_Male> hungry now and if <Speech_Male> you're going to go have a snack <Speech_Male> then that's okay. <Speech_Male> We thank <Speech_Male> you for coming on this. <Speech_Male> Gastronomic journey <Speech_Male> of walt disney world <Speech_Male> parks with us. Today <Speech_Male> we hope you enjoyed the show. <Speech_Male> Check us out on. <Speech_Male> Nineteen twenty three <Speech_Male> main street on social <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> media everywhere. That's <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> our handle <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and we hope <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to see you again next <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> week. So have a <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> magical <SpeakerChange> day everyone <Speech_Music_Female> thou. <Music>

Today Tony cinderella germany Monsieur Nineteen twenty three disney tony four italian three hollywood one two
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

04:27 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on 1923 Main Street: A Daddy Daughter Disney Travel Podcast

"Low everyone and welcome to nineteen twenty-three mainstream. Oh the daddy daughter. Disney traveled podcast house. Mike bello brenick. And i'm a million baddeck and today it's the food guy to walt disney world as we ranked the parks based on their food options. How good they are and where you should go and you know what food in the parks. Big part of a disney vacation. Is that what you were thinking when you came up with this topic idea..

Disney Mike bello brenick today nineteen twenty-three disney world baddeck disney
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Boring Books for Bedtime

Boring Books for Bedtime

03:10 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Boring Books for Bedtime

"Adjust your volume. Take a nice deep breath in let it out slowly and off waco tonight where relaxing with a journey back to new york city and the early nineteen hundreds with selections from the color of a great city by the adore dry sir with illustrations by cb falls first published in nineteen twenty three by bony and liberate new york. Let's begin forward. My only excuse for offering these very brief pictures of the city of new york as it was between nineteen hundred and nineteen fourteen or fifteen or they're about is that they are of the very substance of the city. I knew in my early adventuring in it. Also and more particularly they represent in at least certain faces which at that time arrested and appeal to me and which now are fast vanishing or are no more i refer more particularly to such studies as the brent nine the pushcart man the toiler so the tenements christmas in the tenements whence song and the love affairs of little italy for to begin with the city as i see it was more varied and arresting and after its fashion poetic and even idealistic then than it is now. It offered if i may venture the opinion greater social and financial contracts than it does now the splendor of the purely social fifth avenue of the last decade of the last century and the first decade of this for instance as opposed to the purely commercial area that now bears that name. The spark linley personality dotted wall street of eighteen ninety to nineteen ten s contrasted with the commonplace and almost bread and butter world that it is today the astounding areas of poverty and of beggary. Even i refer to the east side and the bowery of that period unrelieved as they were by civic betterment and social service ventures of all kinds as contrasted with schooled. And i e side of today who recalls. Steve brody's mcgurk.

new york Steve brody first italy early nineteen hundreds tonight today cb christmas last decade of nineteen ten s fifth avenue street last century nineteen hundred dry first decade eighteen ninety nineteen twenty three brent nine
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

Good Seats Still Available

05:10 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Good Seats Still Available

"So i'm guessing bolden then is is starting to recognize that you know we got to be more control of our own destiny so to speak and if we can't sort of sort of get over the current process then perhaps maybe we should. We should perhaps take our marbles and go elsewhere with them right. So i i guess. How would you describe the team in the negro national league in those early years. And then the i guess what. It was the buildup to a more dedicated eastern league that they jumped to or help create and nineteen. Twenty-three i mean i'm guessing that bolden saw that foster had put something together. I mean ear. National inc was flawed. Don't get me wrong But the early years of the ingraham. We're probably some of the best run. Negro leagues ever as far as the number of games played the attention to the schedule and statistics and things like bad and they did relatively well. I mean the twenties fairly strong twenties fairly strong period financially for negro league baseball so i think bowling probably saw that. There's there is more money to be made and something else was happening to which we can touch on. His semi professional baseball was slowly starting to fade as far as it being able to pay Hildale had made its money as we talked earlier by playing all white teams during the week. He's white semi pro teams and they could make a decent amount of money doing that but by the early twenties they're starting to die off. There's many complex reasons for why it was having people say radio was part of the reason why these local teams start stayed So i think bolden probably said okay. We can't totally survive on the way we were before with with the reliance on these wight semi pros have to replace that with more games played against professional teams in league situation. So i think that's what pushed him to form the eastern colored league at the end of nineteen twenty to nineteen twenty three season and some your listeners might find it interesting the the choice of words you know you have the negro national league and the eastern colored league..

Hildale eastern colored league negro national league nineteen Twenty-three early twenties bolden negro league baseball nineteen twenty nineteen twenty three twenties national league National inc negro colored Negro
"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

Problematic Premium Feed

04:50 min | 2 years ago

"nineteen twenty three" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

"Randolph's near racist rhetoric reflected his assertion that garvey was an alien west indian and not a true american negro national speaking toes. The end of lacey pe- for garvey must go campaign failed in telling move randolph. The supposed socialist and his allies turned to the us empire for help. They openly encouraged repression of the un. I in early january nineteen twenty-three this grouping became alarmed when the chief government witness against gavi and his coming mail fraud. Trial was killed this trader. Ervin j w east of new orleans had been formerly a leader in the way but had been ousted for embezzlement the dying eastern had allegedly identified his assailants as to workers along showman and a painter. Who were you an aa security qadri. The anti gov grouping was seized with fair for themselves will be corrected for their treasonous. Collaboration with the state on january fifteenth nineteen twenty-three constituted themselves as a committee of eight. They wrote to. Us attorney general daugherty begging him to strike down to african nationalists without any delay. This horse this historic. Linda is informative. Dare sir as the chief law enforcement officer of the nation. We wish to call your attention. Heretofore unconsidered menace to harmonious race relations. There are in our midst certain negro criminals and potential murderers both foreign and american born who moved and actuated by intense hatred of the white race. These undesirables continually procreate proclaimed that all white people enemies to the negro. They have become so fanatical that the threatened and attempted to death of their opponents. The movement known as the universal negro improvement association has done much to stimulate the violent temper of this dangerous movement as president and moving. Spirit is one marcus. Garvey an unscrupulous demagogue who has ceaselessly assiduously sought to spread among negroes distrust and hatred of all white people during a is chiefly composed of the most primitive and ignorant element of west indian and american negroes for the above reasons. We advocate the attorney. General uses full influence completely to disband extirpate this vicious movement and that he vigorously and speedily pushed the government's case against marcus. Garvey for using the mails to defraud is future. Meetings should be carefully watch by officers that law and fractures promptly and severely punished the eight who sadly slavish appeal randolph. This honestly professional. Nothing about it were chandler..

garvey Ervin j gavi Randolph lacey randolph daugherty universal negro improvement as un new orleans us Linda Garvey marcus chandler
The Population Control Movement

Behind the Bastards

04:35 min | 2 years ago

The Population Control Movement

"The negro project was very popular with black community leaders at the time and it would be unfair to frame it as an act of genocide. Sanger wrote repeatedly of the importance of bringing in black doctor stating at one point. I do not believe that this project should be directed a run by white medical men which is good. If you're going to do a healthcare project like focused on the black community like that. That shows like she. She was like she was capable of understanding what was necessary in order to actually reach people in nineteen thirty nine now so that i guess yeah. Yeah in one thousand nine hundred nine. She argued in a letter. That black ministers needed to be heavily involved in the project in order to gain the trust of their communities. We do not want to go out that we want to exterminate the negro population in the minister is the man who could straighten out that idea if it ever occurs to any of their more rebellious members again sue problematic language there but also there's no evidence she was actually going for genocide because she was again doing the same thing with white people. She was a birth control across the board advocate right. She wanted everyone to have more access to contraceptives. There are people on the right. Like denise souza who will spread wildly untrue claims about sanger like that. She called black people human weeds in a minister civilization. And there is no evidence of this sanger's own legacy contains enough problematic facts without making up lies. She was a eugenicist and she wrote in nineteen twenty-three that birth control does not mean contraception indiscriminately practiced. It means the release in cultivation of the better elements in our society and the gradual suppression elimination and eventual extinction of defective stocks. Those human weeds who threaten the blooming of the finest flowers of american civilization. So she did call people human weeds. But she wasn't referring to black people. She was referring more to mentally challenged people more to people with like who are prone to diseases. And that's bad that's really bad. But she was not like a four exterminating everything but white people. She was four exterminating people. She considered unhealthy or at least exterminating them from the gene pool. Which is again bad. But let's be accurate about the kind of bad it is. You know we don't need to make it anymore. Yeah criminal. I don't say because it's not flowery. It's already bad. Didn't wanna make better by wiping out black people. She wanted to make black people and white people better by wiping out folks who had what she considered to be like bad qualities through selective breeding and. That's really terrible for herself. What does back. Yeah these are yes. Yes thanks at up. Yeah that is bad but like it's not the kind of bad luck again because they tried to. I like the progressives always been trying to wipe out black like. That's not what she was doing. We don't need to add information. She was just a she was a. Here's plenty that's bad about her. Yeah let's let's be intellectually honest when we can dennis someone. She also stated during another speech. I believe now immediately. There should be national sterilization for certain this genetic types of our population who are being encouraged to breed and would die out where the government not feeding them. You know that's bad but again it's the kind of like part of why they like to try to frame her. Badness is something different is because if you're accurate about it you can find a fuck load of republicans who say the. The poor should starve right. Like the people who can't work on their own by jordan peterson. Talking about like how terrifying it is that. Some people aren't intelligent enough to be in the military and like say like because. What do we do with those people like. That's a really. Like what margaret sanger was. Saying back then is still common today. Apple dress it up a little bit more. I mean kind of relate to the copay things like that's fine. They're already they're already probably die. So it's the run productive. Yeah they're in productive there on the government dole. Exactly yeah she just. She was bad she just was not the kind of bad people. Like desouza liked painter. As and in fact a lot of progressive black leaders at the time like margaret sanger. And what she was trying to do in one thousand nine hundred eighty nine letter to dr. cj gamble of proctor and gamble fame. She urged him to get over his resistance to hiring a fulltime negro physician. Ask quote the colored. Negroes can get closer to their own members and more or less lay their cards on the table which means they're ignorant superstitions in doubt again. She's also she's number one saying that black people are ignorant and superstitious which is bad but also saying that like no you get educated black people to talk to them about birth control so again. She's a problematic person but not painters

Sanger Denise Souza Jordan Peterson Margaret Sanger Dennis Desouza Cj Gamble Apple
Jim's Recovery Story

Big Book Podcast

06:02 min | 2 years ago

Jim's Recovery Story

"I was born in a little town in virginia in an average religious home. My father a negro was a country physician. I remember in my early youth. My mother dress me just as she did. My two sisters. And i wore curls. Until i was six years of age at that time i started school. And that's how i got rid of the curls. I found that. Even then i had fears and inhibitions we live just a few doors from the first baptist church and when they had funerals i remember very often asking my mother whether the person was good or bad and whether they were going to heaven or hell i was about six then. My mother had been recently converted and actually had become a religious fanatic. That was her main neurotic manifestation. She was very possessive with us. Children another thing. That mother drilled me was a very puritanical point of view as to sex relations and as to motherhood and womanhood. I'm sure my ideas as to what life should be like. We're quite different from that. Of the average person with whom i associated later on in life that took its toll. I realized that now about this time an incident took place in grade school that i have never forgotten because it made me realize that i was actually a physical coward during recess. We were playing basketball. And i had accidentally trip to fellow just little larger than i was. He took the basketball and smashed me in the face with it. That was enough provocation to fight. But i didn't fight and i realized after recess. Why didn't it was fear that hurt and disturbed me a great deal. Mother was of the old school and figure that anyone. I associated with should be of the proper type of course in my day. Times had changed. She just hadn't changed with them. I don't know whether it was right or wrong but at least i know that people weren't thinking the same. We weren't even permitted to play cards in our home. But father would give us just a little tidy with whiskey and sugar and warm water now and then. We had no whiskey in the house. Other than my father's private stock. I've never seen him drunk in my life although he'd take a shot in the morning and usually one in the evening and so did i but for the most part. He kept his whiskey in his office. The only time. I have ever seen my mother take anything. Alcoholic was around christmas time when she would drink some eggnog or light wine. I remember my first year in high school. That mother suggested that. I do not join the cadet unit. She got a medical certificate. So that i should not have to join it. I don't know whether she was a pacifist. Or whether she just thought that in the event of another war it would have some bearing on my joining up about then too. I realized that my point of view on the opposite sex wasn't entirely like that of most to the boys. I knew for that reason. I believe i married at a much younger age than i would have had not been for my home training. My wife and i have been married for some thirty years. Now was the first girl that i ever took out. I had quite a heartache about her then because she wasn't the type of girl that my mother wanted me to marry in the first place she had been married before. I was her second husband. My mother resented it so that the first christmas after our marriage which was in may of nineteen twenty-three. She didn't even invite us to dinner. After our first child came my parents both became allies. But in later days after i became an alcoholic they both turned against me. My father had come out of the south and had suffered a great deal down there. He wanted to give me the very best and he thought that nothing but being a doctor would suffice on the other hand. I believe that. I've always been medically inclined though i have never been able to see medicine quite as the average person sees it. I do surgery because that's something that you can see. It's more tangible. But i can remember and postgraduate days and during internship that very often i'd go to the patient's bed and start a process of elimination and then very often i'd wind up guessing. That wasn't the way it was with my father. I think with him. It possibly was a gift. Intuitive diagnosis father through the years had built up a very good mail order business. Because at that time there wasn't too much money in medicine. I don't think. I suffered too much as far as the racial situation was concerned because i was born into it and knew nothing other than that. A man wasn't actually mistreated. Though if he was he could only resent it. He could do nothing about it on the other hand. I got quite a different picture. Farther south economic conditions had a great deal to do with it. Because i've often heard my father say that his mother would take one of the old time flour sacks and cut a hole through the bottom and two corners of it and they're you'd have a gown of course when father finally came to virginia to work his way through school. He resented the southern cracker as he often called them so much that he didn't even go back to his mother's funeral. He said he never wanted to set foot in the deep south again and he didn't i went to elementary and high school in washington. Dc and then to howard university. My internship was in washington. I never had too much trouble in school. i was able to get my workout. All my troubles arose. When i was thrown socially among groups of people as far as school was concerned i made fair grades throughout. This was around. Nineteen thirty five and it was about this time that i actually started drinking during the years. Nineteen thirty to nineteen thirty five due to the depression and its aftermath. Business went from bad to worse. I had my own medical practice in washington at that time but the practice slackened and the mail order business started to fall off

Basketball Virginia Washington Howard University Depression
Legendary pilot Chuck Yeager, first to break sound barrier, dies at 97

World News This Week

01:23 min | 3 years ago

Legendary pilot Chuck Yeager, first to break sound barrier, dies at 97

"Just pilot chuck yeager passed away this week. At the age of ninety seven yeager made history as the first to fly faster than the speed of sound. Abc's maggie rulli has more on his life and his daredevil spirit. And i'll start at in the small town of elmira west virginia where he was born february thirteenth nineteen twenty-three yeager enlisted in the army air corps right after highschool in nineteen forty one instantly noticed for his ace flying skills. Yeager joined combat operations in world. War two returning stateside for years later after flying more than sixty area wartime missions and he's credited with downing five german planes in a single day. It was two years later in october. Nineteen forty seven that yeager launched into history becoming the first person to break the sound barrier flying seven hundred miles per hour in level flight on the bell x one rocket nicknamed the glamorous glenis after his wife the daring feat thrusting the test pilot into military superstardom feature prominently in the nineteen eighty. Three film. the right stuff three amazingly. He wasn't done replicating the feat again at age. Eighty nine to mark the sixty fifth anniversary of his historic flight. Cemented yeager in history is an american icon and one of the greatest military pilots of all

Yeager Maggie Rulli Chuck Yeager Elmira Army Air Corps ABC West Virginia Cemented Yeager
Who Was Vlad the Impaler

Your Brain on Facts

04:00 min | 3 years ago

Who Was Vlad the Impaler

"A time when I didn't know that Vlad. The Impaler was thought to be the inspiration for Bram Stoker's genre-defining vampire Dracula hop in your home school bus police box or phone booth with aerial antenna and let's go back to 15th century will lakia a region of modern-day Romania. That was then the southern Edge over to the province of Transylvania. Our flad was flat the third glad the second his father was given the nickname dracul by his fellow Crusade nights in the order of the Dragon. They were tasked with defeating the Ottoman Empire will lakia was sandwiched between the Ottomans and Christian Europe and so became the sight of constant bloody conflict without looking it up. I'm going to guess that the order of the Dragon failed since the Ottoman Empire was still standing in nineteen twenty-three. Dracul translated to dragon in Old Romanian. But the modern meeting is more like Devil add an a to the end to denote son of and you've got flat Dracula at age eleven flat and his seven-year-old brother Raju went with their father on a diplomatic Mission into the Ottoman Empire. How'd it go? Not too good. The three were taken hostage their captors told Vlad the second that he could be released if his two sons remained behind home since it was really their only option. He agreed the boys would be held prisoner for five years one account holds that they were tutored in The Art of War science and philosophy. Other accounts say that they were subjected to torture and brutal abuse by the time Vlad the second return to Allah Kiya. He was overthrown in a coup and he and his eldest son murdered shortly. Thereafter Vlad. The third was released with a taste for violence and a vendetta against the Ottomans to regain his family's power and make a name for himself. He threw a banquet for hundreds of members of rival families on the menu was wine meet sweetbreads and gruesome vicious murder off. The guests were stabbed not quite to death then impaled on large spikes. This would become vlad's signature move leading to his moniker Vlad the Impaler, but it wasn't the only arrow in his quiver. Facing an army three times the size of his he ordered his men to infiltrate their territory poison the wells and burn the crops. He also hired disease dead-end to go in and infect the enemy defeated combatants were often treated to disemboweling flaying Alive boiling and of course impalement. Basically, you turn your enemy into a kabob and let them die slowly and just as importantly conspicuously vlad's reputation spread leading to a mixing of Legend in fact like that. He wants took dinner in a veritable Forest of spikes. We do know that in June of 1462. He ordered 20,000 defeated Ottomans to be impaled. It's a scale that's hard to even imagine when the Ott's in Sultan mehmed II Came Upon the Carnage he and his men turned on their heels and fled back to Constantinople. You would think flawed was on the road to Victory but shortly thereafter. He was forced into Exile and imprisoned in Hungary. He took a stab no pun intended on regaining will lakia fifteen years later, but he and his troops were ambushed and killed according to a contemporary

Vlad Dracul Bram Stoker Transylvania Romania Raju Europe Sultan Mehmed Ii OTT Constantinople Hungary
A Long and Winding Journey For Some Drinking Water

Bay Curious

04:47 min | 3 years ago

A Long and Winding Journey For Some Drinking Water

"Thousands of years before Checchi was a reservoir, the valley was home to several native American tribes. The name Hetch hetchy probably derived from the me. Walk Word Hatch, Hatschi, which means edible grasses, the valley floor would have been full of them, and they were important food source, but in nineteen twenty-three those grasses were buried under billions of gallons of water when the reservoir was finished to find the answers to the rest of Alex and heath questions, reporter Sara Craig, found herself someplace unexpected in the hills of San Bruno. We've arrived just in time to catch some action at the Harry Tracy Water Treatment Plant. Really, high. Spillover! VERICOSE OH, wow! Drinking water from all over is getting filtered here to move large and small particles, but water from hetch Hetchy is so pure. It doesn't need to get filtered although it does get disinfected with chlorine, an ultra violet light. Let's start at the very very beginning where the water starts, that's. And she's joined by Suzanne, Goatee. They work for San Francisco's Public Utilities Commission and a ton about Hetch hetchy water. They tell us it all starts high in the SIERRAS so high. The water isn't water. It's snow. The snow that we're talking about. Is this know that falls on the Twala me. River watershed, which is four hundred ninety two square miles. That's about the size of this city of La all the snow in that watershed Melton to the TWALA me river and three smaller creeks which empty into the Hetch hetchy reservoir. On average per year at San Franciscans consume would be equal to a foot of snow covering that Ptolemy River watershed. To put this into perspective, it takes five feet of snow to fill the hole reservoir once-melted that water leaves the reservoir from o'shaughnessy Dam. And then so look at this map. It travels through a whole series of tunnel so here we're moving through the mountain tunnel. In along the way it goes through hydroelectric dams that generous about seventeen percent of San Francisco's electricity. Did you know that the power from Hetch hetchy from water. That's what actually powers your school. Yeah, I. I go to Jefferson Yeah, it probably yeah. Yeah not even the the Muny Light Rail that you've seen San Francisco Yup. I ride on those sometimes. The water travels downhill the whole. Rushing through tunnels drilled through solid granite. PIPELINES LINED WITH CONCRETE Picture a giant underground waterslide, twisting around mountains and under rivers, and then it takes about three days for the water to get over here all the way into San Francisco. Is. Kinda long, isn't it but yeah, okay only three days sure. It would take a long that do like four or five as maybe a week will need. It's not a bad guests. How do you know that it takes three days? Did you send like some kind of a probe in the water to to time it? We have flow meters throughout the system. and. Yes yes, it'll tell you how much water is moving through what pipeline so we do a little bit of math and you say one hundred sixty seven miles. At three feet per second equals about eighty three hours, but those eighty three hours are rough estimate because operators are always releasing different amounts of water, depending on how much people use. Okay any takes us outside to where some of our drinking water is stored. We're standing on a hill, looking down at a huge tank that holds eleven million gallons. So this is one of those places where we regulate shifts in demand on a daily basis. It's white. Sheen reflects the bright sunlight making it hard to look at so maybe for the water bottle to huge giant water bottle for the whole bay area. Alex suggests we stand on top of that water bottle. Over there now, okay, don't look down. And coaches himself over a narrow meadow footbridge, fifty feet above the ground

Hetch Hetchy Reservoir Hetch Hetchy San Francisco Harry Tracy Water Treatment Pl Alex San Bruno San Franciscans Sara Craig Checchi Hatschi Reporter Mountain Tunnel Public Utilities Commission Muny Light Rail Ptolemy River Sierras LA Suzanne Sheen
Hidden Histories - Rosewood, Tulsa, Chicago

Your Brain on Facts

04:22 min | 3 years ago

Hidden Histories - Rosewood, Tulsa, Chicago

"Halfway between Tampa and Tallahassee, a hundred yards off state route, twenty four and ten miles from the next town stands a handsome Pale Yellow House with decorative white trim on the two story porch. The house was the only survivor of an episode of such extraordinary violence that it boggles the mind how quickly and completely it was swept under the rug. An entire community was burned to the ground in an incident of racist asymmetrical warfare. And most people have never even heard of it. My Name's Moxy and this is your brain on facts. The community had been or technically still is Rosewood, Florida. It was settled by both black and white people twenty years before the civil war, but the Jim. Crow segregation in the Post Bellum decades put a clear divide into the community. The town was incorporated in eighteen seventy after it got a post office on a train stop and was named Rosewood for the Pink Cedars that were also the base of its economy. Residents worked in lumber, yards, mills, and even a pencil factory. Until the cedars had been overharvested, and the factories began to close. Most of the white residents moved to nearby sumner. But one couple John and Mary right who ran the general store? They were kind to their neighbors, and were known to Slip Candy to the black kids who hung out at the store, possibly because their own children had died young. The white flight continued into the nineteen twenties when Rose Woods population of about two hundred was entirely black plus the rights. The little hamlet got by just fine. Until New Year's Day nineteen twenty-three. Over in Sumner, a woman named Fanny Taylor woke her neighbors, saying a black man had broken into her house and attacked her. Rather than alert sheriff, her husband immediately gathered a group of men. Including clansmen who were in the area for a rally and a tracking dog. the, dog, lead them to the railroad tracks, which led to Rosewood. The mob, which would grow to be three hundred strong got it in their head that they were looking for a black man named Jesse Hunter who had escaped from a chain gang. The dog ran through the open door of a house and back out with that of wagon tracks. When the homeowner swore that no one else had been in his house, the mob tied him to the back of a car and dragged him down a dirt road. Then they tracked down the owner of the wagon whose tracks the dog sniffed. When he also claimed ignorance and innocence, the mob mutilated and killed him. The mob came to the House of Sarah carrier the Taylor's laundries. Two dozen people most of them. Children were hiding inside having heard what was going on already driven out of their homes by fear. For whatever reason the mob was sure that carrier was hiding Jesse Hunter. They fired on the House and carrier. Sons returned fire. When it was over both Sarah and her son Sylvester carrier had been fatally shot, though Sylvester had managed to kill two of their assailants. Had, anyone bothered to talk to Sarah carrier about Fannie, Taylor. She would have been able to tell them about Taylor's lover. Her white lover who she had been with before the attack. As, the mob kicked in the front door of the carrier house, the people hiding inside fled out the back door to the relative safety of the nearby. Swampy Woods. Not. All were able to get away though. Carriers, other son James was found by the mob who reportedly made him dig his own grave before killing him. The newspapers of the nearby towns caught wind of what was happening. They ran exaggerated. Retailing's of the siege of the carrier House and blatantly false reports of roving bands of armed black citizens. Seeing that even more white men poured into Rosewood believing that a race war had broken out. Apparently it's only a race war when the race you're targeting fights back. The manhunt and terror campaign wasn't confined to that single night, but stretched on for nearly a week.

Pale Yellow House Rosewood Sarah Carrier Fanny Taylor Jesse Hunter Sylvester Carrier Sumner Pink Cedars Rose Woods Tampa Florida Swampy Woods James Tallahassee JIM
Hidden Histories

Your Brain on Facts

04:55 min | 3 years ago

Hidden Histories

"Four and ten miles from the next town stands a handsome Pale Yellow House with decorative white trim on the two story porch. The house was the only survivor of an episode of such extraordinary violence that it boggles the mind how quickly and completely it was swept under the rug. An entire community was burned to the ground in an incident of racist asymmetrical warfare. And most people have never even heard of it. My Name's Moxy and this is your brain on facts. The community had been or technically still is Rosewood, Florida. It was settled by both black and white people twenty years before the civil war, but the Jim. Crow segregation in the Post Bellum decades put a clear divide into the community. The town was incorporated in eighteen seventy after it got a post office on a train stop and was named Rosewood for the Pink Cedars that were also the base of its economy. Residents worked in lumber, yards, mills, and even a pencil factory. Until the cedars had been overharvested, and the factories began to close. Most of the white residents moved to nearby sumner. But one couple John and Mary right who ran the general store? They were kind to their neighbors, and were known to Slip Candy to the black kids who hung out at the store, possibly because their own children had died young. The white flight continued into the nineteen twenties when Rose Woods population of about two hundred was entirely black plus the rights. The little hamlet got by just fine. Until New Year's Day nineteen twenty-three. Over in Sumner, a woman named Fanny Taylor woke her neighbors, saying a black man had broken into her house and attacked her. Rather than alert sheriff, her husband immediately gathered a group of men. Including clansmen who were in the area for a rally and a tracking dog.

Pale Yellow House Rosewood Pink Cedars Sumner Fanny Taylor Rose Woods Florida JIM John Mary
Feminists: Huda Sha'arawi

Encyclopedia Womannica

04:07 min | 3 years ago

Feminists: Huda Sha'arawi

"Let's talk about who Shar rally. Who was born in eighteen seventy nine in Upper Egypt? She came from an affluent family. Her father was a wealthy Egypt. Noble who spent her childhood in an Egyptian Harem which kept women secluded and veiled the Harem system required women to live in their own private quarters separate an isolated for men. Many women within the HAREM system were denied access to education but who was educated early in life alongside her brothers. She learned Turkish Arabic and literature from private tutors. Who grew older? Her resentment increased. She wrote years later about the bitterness. She felt as a young girl. I became depressed and began to neglect my studies hating being girl because it kept me from the education I saw later being a female became a barrier between me and the freedom for which I earned at the onset of puberty who does no longer allowed to be seen by the sons of her family friends which she described as a painful experience. She noticed great attention that was paid to her brother which resulted in jealousy despite her envy. Who and her brother had a loving relationship and he later stood by her side while she fought against gender injustice at the age of Thirteen. Huda MARRIED HER COUSIN. A man forty years her senior. Who Does father pressure her into marriage insisting that her refusal would bring shame to the family. File Huta reluctantly agreed. Soon after she separated from her husband for seven years during this time Huda prioritized her independence diving back into her studies and venturing into activism. Huda wrote in her memoir. I intend to vocalise my pain and start a revolution for the silent women who faced centuries of oppression in her early adulthood who to begin organizing lectures bringing many women into public places for the first time in nineteen. Oh eight who founded the first Philanthropic Society run by Egyptian women which offered medical services for poor women and children who believed women run service? Projects challenged the view that women needed protection as a wealthy woman who to believe that the rich could solve the problems of the poor through charitable activities in nineteen. Ten Huda opened a school for Young Women. She focused on academics rather than the domestic skills that were typically taught to women at the time during the early twentieth century. The fight for women's rights gained momentum around the world in nineteen nineteen after World War. One many Egyptian women protested against British rule in Egypt and sought to use the national struggle to Harem practices. Who to let the masses in an effort that ultimately became known as the Egyptian Revolution of Nineteen Nineteen in nineteen twenty following the protests who was elected as the first president of the Waft Women's Central Committee a political body founded by Egyptian women three years later in nineteen twenty-three after returning to Egypt from a conference in Europe Huda threw off her veil outside the Cairo train station. She encouraged other women to follow suit and this became one of the first public rejection of the veil in Egypt soon thereafter who founded the Egyptian Feminist Union which sought to reform laws that restricted women for personal freedoms who to remain president of the Egyptian Feminist Union until her death in nineteen forty seven organizing and leading the fight for women's rights. In the new Egypt she died at the age of Sixty Huda reflected on her. Life's mission in her memoir. She said I believe that history repeats itself and for that reason. I am indebted to my namesake Huda Al-Shaarawi Egyptian feminist and the first woman in the Middle East who called for female

Huda Young Women Egypt Egyptian Feminist Union Sixty Huda Upper Egypt Europe Huda Middle East President Trump Noble Philanthropic Society Cairo Central Committee
Alice Paul: Feminist, Suffragist, Political Strategist

Encyclopedia Womannica

04:03 min | 3 years ago

Alice Paul: Feminist, Suffragist, Political Strategist

"Are feminists. Today was a suffrage. Est Women's rights activist and political strategist. She brought a more militant fight for the vote to the. Us and steered the Movement for an equal rights amendment. Let's talk about the One and only Alice Paul Alice. Paul was born on January eleventh. Eighteen eighty five in Mount Laurel. New Jersey to William and tasty Paul. Alice was the eldest of four children and was raised in very comfortable surroundings. The Paul Family practiced the quaker faith. Alice leader cited the quaker belief in gender equity as formative in her strong drive towards promoting women's equality. Her mother tasty also had a major impact analysis later work tasty was a suffragette and a member of the National American woman. Suffrage Association herself. Alice attended swarthmore college and graduated with a degree in biology. While there she participated in a variety of extracurricular activities she was a member of student government and she played field hockey tennis and basketball. She was also a celebrated poet classes. Commencement Speaker in one thousand nine hundred seven. Alice traveled to England to work at the would brook settlement while there. She met Christabel Pankhurst. We talked about last week. Christabel introduced Alice to England suffrage movement. It was more militant than what Alice seen in the US. The British women fought under the motto. Deeds not words and took the words to heart. They smashed windows and went on hunger strikes among other tactics. Alice joined the 'cause later saying she broke more than forty eight windows and was imprisoned. Multiple Times Alice returned to the US in nineteen ten and got to work pushing the more radical suffrage agenda. She brought back from across the Atlantic in nineteen thirteen. Alice organized a suffrage parade. Woodrow Wilson had just been elected. Alice plant her march for the day before his inauguration purposefully stealing attention away from the President Xi succeeded in making the suffrage movement front page news but she also made the very problematic decision to ask black women to March at the back of the parade. She failed to appreciate the importance of the diverse movement instead focusing primarily on white women. This is a mistake. She would go onto her. Pete throughout her life in one thousand nine fourteen. Alice founded the National Woman's Party. She was incredibly good at rousing attention for her. 'cause members of the National Woman's Party were the first people to ever pick it in front of the White House during nineteen seventeen. They picketed six days a week after women won the right to vote with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in nineteen twenty. The National Woman's Party had to decide what to focus on next? Alice was lobbied to work on. Expanding VOTING RIGHTS. More broadly instead. She turned her attention to expand women's rights. Outside of the electoral sphere in Nineteen twenty-three Alice wrote the equal rights amendment to the US Constitution to guarantee equal rights. To All American women. She actually went to law school. In order to be qualified to write its language the was introduced in Congress continually until it finally passed in Nineteen seventy-two still the amendment hasn't officially been added to the US Constitution. Because until recently it lacks ratification from the required number of states. Today it's actually the closest it's ever been the ER as tale is a long and wild story that warrants. Its own whole podcast in fact. We've made one. It's called ordinary equality and it's available wherever you listen. Alice passed away on July ninth. Nineteen seventy seven. She was ninety two years old Alice. Paul fought tirelessly for women's legal progress and equity in the US. She's not a perfect hero rather she's a leader who changed the course of our country's history while also having her fair share of flaws

Alice Paul Alice Alice Leader Alice United States National Woman's Party Suffrage Association Christabel Pankhurst Paul Family New Jersey Us Constitution Woodrow Wilson Swarthmore College Mount Laurel England Basketball Atlantic Congress Pete
Feminists: Ella Fitzgerald

Encyclopedia Womannica

05:36 min | 3 years ago

Feminists: Ella Fitzgerald

"Shining. Oh hello from wonder media network. I'm Jenny Kaplan. And this is encyclopedia. Manica deemed the first lady of Song. Today's Dreamer was the most popular female jazz singer in the United States. For more than half a century. She went thirteen grammy awards and sold over forty million albums. Her voice was flexible. Wide-ranging accurate and ageless. Let's talk about Ella Fitzgerald Ella. Jane Fitzgerald was born on April twenty fifth nineteen seventeen in Newport News. Virginia to William Fitzgerald and Tempe Henry Ellis parents separated shortly after Ella's birth and she and her mother moved to Yonkers New York where they eventually moved in with Tempe longtime boyfriend. Joseph Dasilva three soon became four LS half-sister Francis was born in Nineteen twenty-three. The family struggled to make ends meet. Both parents worked multiple jobs. L. Occasionally took on work to their apartment was a mixed neighborhood. Where Ella made friends easily? She considered herself more of a Tomboy and often join neighborhood baseball games. Sports Aside Ella enjoy dancing and singing with friends and would perform at lunch and on her way to school in Nineteen. Thirty two ELLAS. Mom Tempe died from serious injury. She received in a car accident. Ella was devastated. She eventually moved in with her aunt Virginia and when her stepfather Joe died shortly thereafter. Ala stepsister. Francis came to live with them. To Ella was in a dark place. She started skipping school and her grades dropped. She got in trouble with the police and was sent to a reform school where she was subject to beatings by her caretakers. Eventually Ella escaped from the reformatory. She was fifteen years old broke and alone during the Great Depression. In nineteen thirty four Islas name was pulled in a weekly drawing the Apollo Theater for a chance to perform and compete an amateur night. Two sisters who the dance in the sisters in the world call the edgewood sisters and they closed the show about I when I saw those ladies. Dan I says no way. I'm going out there and try to dance. Because they stop the show. She was planning to dance but when the Edwards sisters closed the main show. She changed her mind fearing she couldn't compete with their moves. And when I got out there somebody follow up nobody else. What is she going to do? She made a last minute decision to sing and ask the band to play. Hoagy Carmichael Judy. Heavens hurt to me. By the end of the song the crowd demanded an encore and Ella had found her calling one of the people in the band. That night with saxophonist and Arranger Benny Carter wowed by her natural talent. Benny introduced a lot of people. Who could help launch your career? The era of big swing bands was coming to a close in favor of bebop. Ls successfully made the transition using her voice to sound like another horn in the band. She began to experiment with scat singing. Eventually turning it into an art in nineteen thirty eight Ella recorded a version of the nursery. Rhyme a-tisket a task it. A million copies of the album were sold it. Hit number one on the charts and it stayed on the pop charts for seventeen weeks. Ella was suddenly famous her wife. Changed Professionally and personally while on tour with Dizzy Gillespie's band in nineteen forty. Six Ella fell in love with bassist. Ray Brown the two got married and adopted a son Ray. Junior through the two later got divorced. They remained lifelong friends L. O. Worked with all the jazz greats including Frank Sinatra Duke Ellington Nat King Cole Dizzy. Gillespie and Benny Goodman from nineteen fifty six to nineteen sixty. Four Ella recorded eight songbooks in which she covered other musicians songs. Including those by Cole Porter Duke. Ellington the Gershwin's Johnny Mercer Irving Berlin and Rodgers and Hart Ella continued to work throughout her life by the nineteen nineties. She had recorded more than two hundred albums she received the Kennedy Center honors the US National Medal of Arts and Francis Commander of Arts and letters award. Thank you and I'm so proud to be in class with all these younger ones coming up. Ain't gonNA leave me behind. I'm learning out a wrap in her later. Life Ella suffer from diabetes. She was hospitalized. Congestive heart failure in nineteen eighty six and for exhaustion in nineteen ninety. Nine hundred ninety three. She had to have both of her legs amputated below the knee due to complications from diabetes. She never fully recovered from the surgery. And on June fifteenth. Nineteen Ninety six at the age of seventy-nine Ella Fitzgerald died at her Beverly Hills. Home fans all over. The world mourned her death. A wreath of white flowers was placed next to her star on the Hollywood walk of fame and the Marquee outside the Hollywood bowl read. Lmu will miss you

Ella Fitzgerald Ella Ella Fitzgerald Ella Hart Ella Dizzy Gillespie Virginia Grammy United States Carmichael Judy Frank Sinatra Duke Ellington Francis Jane Fitzgerald Jenny Kaplan Benny Carter Mom Tempe Manica Diabetes Benny Baseball Cole Porter Duke
How the Berenstain Bears Came to Be

Bedtime History: Inspirational Stories for Kids

04:56 min | 4 years ago

How the Berenstain Bears Came to Be

"Three little bears one with the light. One with the stick and one with the rope. A spooky old tree three do they dare go into that spooky old tree. Yes they dare. These are the opening lines from one of my favorite children's books of all time called the spooky old tree by Stan and Jan Bernstein. You may have heard of the Bernstein bear books but growing up. They were some of my all time favorites. I have many good memories in my mom reading these books to me and my siblings when we were little tonight. We're going to learn about Stan and Jan the authors and illustrators of these fun and Imaginative Adjective Stories Janice this grant and Stanley Barron stain. Were born in the same year in the same town nineteen twenty-three and Philadelphia Pennsylvania. They they were born during the Great Depression which was a very hard time for most people. Living in the United States there was very little work and most families were very poor four Shannon. Stan didn't know each other when they were little but they had similar interests and both wanted to go to art school at age eighteen. They ended up going going to the same school and many other on the first day in a drawing class taught by a teacher named Miss Sweetie Stan and Jan instantly liked each each other and spent the rest of the year working on art projects together when World War Two started Stan was able to use. This is art skills and became an illustrator in the army and illustrator is someone who draws or does illustrate which is another word for drawings however rejane joined a large group of American women who helped build things for the war effort. She was a riveter. Riveter is someone who uses bolts to attach pieces of metal together during the war. Stan and Jan were separated but when the war was over they met again and were married in nineteen forty six. At first Stan and Jan where teachers but they really wanted to be cartoonists and soon found jobs illustrating for different magazines and newspapers. Most most of their illustrations were funny in nineteen sixty. They wrote their first children's book together. They had lots of ideas about who the subject of their books should be but but eventually they decided on bears because they could stand on two feet much like humans they call them. The Baron stained bear family after their own last name. By this time they also had their first Leo and wanted to include some of the funny moments and ups and downs of raising a child in the books. Papa bear were overalls overalls and a plaid shirt in Mama. Bear were a Polka dot dress and like their own child. They had one lively bear cub. Their first stories ended up being read by Dr seuss. One of the most famous children's story authors of all time. You can find our other episode about Dr Seuss. Dr Seuss love the stories and gave Stan and Jan lots of ideas about how to improve them. Their first big story was called the big honey hunt after through their bare story. They thought that switch to a different animal like a penguin but the first book did so well. They decided to keep writing more. Dr Seuss made sure the name. The Barron stained bears was added to the top of every book and shortened their names from Stanley and Janice to Stan and Jan without even asking them over the next several years standing Jan work from their home in Philadelphia and created hundreds more Bernstein bear books included topics like going to the dentist making new new friends. Bullying messy rooms honesty and healthy eating together. The Bear family lived in a big tree house down a sunny dirt road deep in bear country leader sister joined the family and finally honeybear. The baby bear came together. They worked and played and learned lessons about life. And that was the point of so many of these stories by standing Jan to teach the listener about family life and making good decisions also called moral stories over the years the Barron stains wrote over three hundred books and sold over two hundred and sixty million copies of their books. Many have also been made into TV movies and television series a few computer games. I mentioned the spooky old tree. You'll have to check that one out. A few other favorites were bears in the night. Right and the bears vacation. If you're interested your library should have them or you can find them online. Stand Jan have now since passed away but their sons is Leo and Michael have carried on the business. Lee is also an artist and has illustrated many of the new baron stained bear books with his mother Jan before she passed away.

Miss Sweetie Stan Jan Bernstein Dr Seuss Stanley Barron Riveter Bear Philadelphia LEO Bears United States Pennsylvania Barron Rejane LEE Michael Janice
Amy Aronson, Author of the New Book "Crystal Eastman: A Revolutionary Life"

The Electorette Podcast

09:51 min | 4 years ago

Amy Aronson, Author of the New Book "Crystal Eastman: A Revolutionary Life"

"I'm Jim Taylor skinner. And this is the electorate on this episode. I have a conversation with amy. aaronson author of the New Book Crystal Eastman. A revolutionary revolutionary life. And if you haven't heard of Crystal Eastman you're probably not alone. She was one of the Most Progressive Communists of early twentieth century and she was also branded. The most dangerous woman. In America Crystal Eastman was an uncompromising feminist. She was also an early advocate for workers rights and a self branded socialist and anti militarist militarist. The two other important facts about crystal Eastman's life. She helped to write the equal rights amendment crystal Eastman was also the CO founder of the ACLU. So one of my very first questions about crystal Eastman's life is why she faded from history. Why there's so little information about her? So here is author Amy Eareckson explaining why she thinks that is. I think the main reason that crystal Eastman has kind of disappeared from or is obscure in historical record is because of what really was kind of intersectional mindset an intersectional outlook in her activism. What I mean by that is that Eastman Smith involved herself in multiple movements in many of the major social movements of the twentieth century and believed that they were all all linked together and worked throughout her career to try to link them together all under one kind of vast emancipatory rubric? She she believed saved and she she recognized that there you know there were. There were commonalities. Among various forms of oppression and she she tried tried to kind of straddle multiple movements and bring them together in order to combat. You know all of those common sources of oppression and inequality At once so she spent a lot of time talking about socialism anti imperialism and also you know maternity and maternal ism with feminists earnest's. She spent a lot of time talking about feminism and pacifism with Socialists and with revolutionaries and one of the outcomes outcomes of this was that Eastman always seemed to be kind of straddling so many different movements at once that her voice often it seemed insurgent or challenging from within each individual movement. Many of her colleagues felt that they weren't sure where she stood because she was trying to straddle so many different movements at once because when she talked to save feminists about socialism. It seemed like a challenge from within. Yes in and so. This cut complicated her status and her stature within the the movements that she was affiliated with within the movements that that she she built her life on at the same time as her radicalism and her activism challenged her standing in the more mainstream same political and social environments where she was radical so she was already challenging to more mainstream views but because of that she you know she needed needed stronger a stronger sense of belonging I think clearer sense of standing within the protest movements the leftist movements that she collectively saw as her political home. And so what happened was she. You know kind of fell through the planks of history. She fell to the planks of historical. Memory she we didn't have clear consistent connections with organizations With a single organization right or a single 'cause she didn't have clear and consistent alliances this is or relationships to various mentors. who were recognized the things that that signal stature and make someone intelligible and make someone visible double in historical memory? She kind of challenged complicated at every turn and precisely because she you know tried to connect them All to a larger vision of change that they all shared and so in some ways it was kind of I think a tragic irony that her her inclusive vision seem to divide people and seem to divide people's loyalties but in other ways it's also kind of a fascinating story of how we tell stories as how and why we remember people that I think has a lot to tell us about our current intersectional environment for forming coalitions to pursue the same social change that she and others have been pursuing for a century. You know in counting so is it over simplistic to say that. She was possibly a victim of her own own prolificacy like she was so prolific involved in so many movements that she wasn't known for single thing or was it that and making some hostility because she was seen as kind kind of an insurgent and lots of these movements. I wouldn't say hostility but I would say that you know. She challenged people. She challenged. Organizational hierarchies and in leadership at you know in various organizations and so there were some leaders She had quite a run in with Alice. Paul for example Particularly after the vote was one John when the militant wing of the women's movement the National Women's Party was starting to figure out. Okay what comes next. It was in that period before the rise of the Equal Rights Amendment Amendment nineteen twenty-three that they were you know searching for okay. What's our next approach and Eastman wanted a very intersectional kind of transnational feminist movement and Paul wanted a much more focused targeted women's campaign? Just much like the you know. The suffrage movement that they had just successfully completed pleaded so for some leaders. There was that you know that sense that they were being challenged from a colleague For others it was the fact that you're kind of intersectional perspective active As well as her movement to the left after the Russian revolution seemed to radical and seemed to push the organizations that she was associated with in more radical directions than many of the progressive leaders in those organizations were comfortable. That's unfortunate you know. She reminds me of reading her story. And you know kind of the motion all day of it. And the Ark of her life. She reminds me of not Elizabeth Rankin but there. I can't believe I can't remember a name. The very first woman who ran for president. who was ooh Toria woodhall awesome? She's scared the crap out of people what it's just something about her demeanor. It's hard to tell from a book you know but just something about it. Just kind of reminds me of that similar kind of radical woman radical feminist. Get around that time. And you know crystal was just unafraid. she was so bold and she. She asserted her freedom. She really you know she. She claimed a freedom and claimed a world that even while she was trying to create it so she was an in kind of a kind of a real sense woman ahead of herself or ahead of her time. You know I know. That's kind of a cliche as historians. You know we're we're not really supposed to say that What struck me about her early on? You know what would I I think stuck with me From my graduate school days till almost twenty years later when I finally you know sat down to to try to write the book was the sense of a woman who was just calling ahead of herself and you know and in envisioning and reaching four And you know and actively demanding and trying to live live in a world that was much closer to mine than it was to hers. And you know I found that's just so compelling it's visionary I think she was a gripping person go find her story gripping because of that right she had some really really progressive stances and you know you mentioned a few feminism and she was also I think a socialist. She called herself a socialist right. Yes and she was four reproductive rights. Yes very much. So why was she branded. I WanNa go through the historical arch- of her life a bit later. But why does she branded the most dangerous woman in America. Well I need most of those claims about who came in her. Most radical or revolutionary period after the Russian revolution revolution in nineteen seventeen. She and her brother Maxi sman much better known than she is a radical writer and editor of the Masses magazine. The two of them together published the Liberator magazine which started in Nineteen Eighteen Shortly after the Russian revolution and it was called the Journal of Revolutionary Progress and it became very quickly the kind of center of reporting and information about revolutionary movements worldwide in connection with that period in her politics. Um which I can explain to you a little bit how. She kinda volved into that radicalism from her more progressive earlier activism in connection with that. She took very forthright arthritis very bold. Very outspoken stances in favor of the Bolsheviks and herself traveled to communist Hungary and she was the first the American reporter to do that and reported very enthusiastically at least initially about her hopes that the a similar revolution would come to the United States and would indeed sweep the world would become a global revolutionary movement. And of course this you know this kind of radicalism. She was not alone in it particularly on the left after the Russian revolution many colleagues from a number of different movements also celebrated revolution however You know it still was. That was not a mainstream extreme view. You know even on the left it was not a mainstream view was a radical view and It was very threatening to people especially in the the body of a woman and the voice voice of someone who was so afraid to speak about it. And the voice of someone who had such stature in more mainstream political political movements and more mainstream political

Crystal Eastman Eastman Smith Jim Taylor Skinner Amy. Aaronson Amy Eareckson Journal Of Revolutionary Progr Writer And Editor Aclu Paul Hungary Liberator Magazine Elizabeth Rankin United States Co Founder America President. National Women's Party Reporter Maxi