22 Burst results for "Western Atlantic"

"western atlantic" Discussed on Veterans Chronicles

Veterans Chronicles

05:30 min | 8 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Veterans Chronicles

"Welcome to veterans chronicles. I'm Greg Columbus. Our guest in this edition is John Wyatt. He is a U.S. Marine Corps veteran, as well as a veteran of the army National Guard in both Illinois and Texas, and he's a veteran of the Vietnam War. And sir, thank you very much for being with us. Thank you. Privilege. Where were you born and raised here? I was born just outside of Chicago, Oak Park, Illinois, and spent most of my childhood in the Chicago area. Had there been a history of military service in your family? One reason I went into the military, my father had been an army or core pilot. Was he a World War II veteran? It was a World War II veteran. Also, I have a great uncle that served in the Marine Corps in World War I as well. Where did your father serve? He was a B-24 pilot primarily in mostly in the eastern or the western Atlantic area. Did that develop an early love of flying for you? I heard all the stories and I had to compete a little bit with him and so yes it did. Did you get up in the air a lot before you joined the service? I did not. I had some limited experience, but just enough to know that that's what I wanted to continue to pursue. When did you join the service? And why did you pick the marines? I picked the marines almost by accident. It was 1965, I would say the start of my junior year in college. I was not particularly happy with going to college. I wanted to do some other things. The Marine Corps offered a program at the time it was called a mark head, marine cadet program. Which enabled you to, with two years of college, you could go to flight school. And so I applied for that, and during the application process, they dropped the Mark head program. And they introduced me then to the platoon leaders class, which in a Marine Corps, you could go to Oscar candidate school in my case, it would be between my junior and senior year in college.

Greg Columbus John Wyatt Illinois western Atlantic U.S. Marine Corps Chicago army National Guard Marine Corps Oak Park Vietnam marines Texas army Mark Oscar
"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:25 min | 10 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Is ambitious to say the least Then our check engine light came on We pulled into O'Reilly auto parts and they tested it Turned out it was a faulty sensor They referred us to a great mechanic just down the street and we were back on the road in no time Our old parts I just tripped the Saudi Arabia and Israel was being delayed until next month The White House declined to comment on the change in plans Biden's trip to Saudi Arabia is reportedly aimed at increasing the flow of oil to the market but the plan quickly drew criticism given the kingdom's human rights record Lawsuits are being filed in the Texas mass school shooting the father of a ten year old killed his going after the company that made the gun used in the attack lawyers for Alfred Garza are asking gun maker Daniel defense to provide information about its marketing to teens and children Cars daughter was one of 19 children killed when a teenage gunman opened fire with a semi-automatic rifle last week at an elementary school The storm dumping heavy rain on South Florida is moving east to the coast as it heads into the western Atlantic if it becomes a tropical storm the national hurricane center says it would be named Alex and the NBA Finals resume Sunday with game two the Celtics erased a 15 point second half deficit and took game one on the road over the warriors on Thursday I'm Chris coraggio And now this Bloomberg sports update Matcher in front of the Dodgers 6 four home runs from Francisco Lindor Pete Alonso and Eduardo Escobar as well David Peterson and walker buehler have each been chased in the early innings This is now a bullpen game Meanwhile Jacob de grand through 19 pitches his first bullpen session since his shoulder injury as he continues to work his way back Yankees blank the tigers three nothing as we severino continue the bombers dominant pitching they've been great all year but the last turn through the starting 5 of severino Garrett Cole Jameson tyone Nestor Cortes junior and of course Jordan Montgomery combined for 36 innings and they allowed a grand total of two runs They've been man they've been so good now for a while and just you know we talk about passing the baton in the lineup while they're doing it from a starting staff and every day we're getting that kind of outing and trying not to take that for granted Aaron Boone also had to send down Miguel and do our back to the miners after the activated Giancarlo Stanton from the injured list and dohar is now asked for a trade Rangers and lightning game three this afternoon as a scene shifts to Tampa Bay ranges up two games to none looking for a stranglehold on the series Western Conference Finals Colorado is one game away from the Stanley Cup finals after they doubled up Edmonton four to two Gough Kevin na announced his resignation from the PGA Tour naz of 5 time PJ event winner 33rd ranked player in the world but wanted to be a free agent and have no restrictions as he prepares to play for the new IV golf invitational series At the memorial three rounds in the books Billy horschel a 5 shot lead at 13 under women's championship at the French Open went to eager Fiona She ousted American coco Goff in straight sets pushes her match winning streak to 35 straight longest since Venus Williams had the same in 2000 and Rafa Nadal looking for his 14th French Open title today is he battles Casper rude Nadal 21 time Grand Slam winner the most all time along with 13 wins at Roland Garros And that's your Bloomberg sports update I'm Mark Bennett This is Bloomberg intelligence with Alex Steele and Paul Sweeney on Bloomberg radio We'll be here each and every week at this time Tapping into our Bloomberg intelligence analyst covering some 2000 companies and 130 industries worldwide All right coming up on the show let's talk about eBay It's the online shopping site and has a rising take rate I'm gonna talk about what that means Plus some new features to the all that could lead to more revenue for more we're joined by Bloomberg senior analyst for U.S. retailing punam goyle Put him all right school me a little bit here What's a take rate Is the percentage of revenue that a marketplace makes when you saw a product there So if you're a selling a $100 watch on eBay eBay will take as of right now $12 on that sale That is their current take rate 12% All right how was that take rate That sounds like a nice deal by the way See that's pretty good Yeah that's pretty good for eBay How has that been trending historically and kind of why do you see some upside potentially to that number Yeah so EBT grade historically has been closer to 9% So under 10% for a long time you know quite honestly even since it's inception it's an under 10% In the past few years you've seen take rate rise from 9 to 12% And the primary driver of that is the payment integration that they have just completed If you shopped on eBay two or three years ago you probably only were able to shop using PayPal Today you can shop on eBay using Visa Mastercard AmEx any payment type that you would like And that's added a few hundred basis points Can that continue in that I thought that everyone stopped using eBay and Etsy and stuff Now that the pandemic is quote unquote over No you know I don't think people have stopped using these platforms because they do still offer value and treasure hunt fines right So you can just get anywhere So these are all places that you go to like Amazon where you're looking for an iPhone charger or you're looking for a bag of chips That's not what these platforms are for They're really for unique things.

Texas mass school Alfred Garza Saudi Arabia western Atlantic Chris coraggio Pete Alonso Eduardo Escobar walker buehler Jacob de severino severino Garrett Cole Jameson Nestor Cortes Jordan Montgomery Giancarlo Stanton dohar Gough Kevin na Reilly national hurricane center David Peterson eBay
"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

07:35 min | 10 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Over the western Atlantic I'm Chris coraggio You're listening to Bloomberg opinion I'm Bonnie Quinn The January 6th the committee is due to finally start public hearings this Thursday 6 of them Two prime time hearings four morning hearings It took 18 months to put these hearings together and in comparison with hearings past the effort seems well a little slim I spoke with Jonathan Bernstein on how these hearings compare with successful hearings of era's past such as the Watergate hearings So Jonathan next week we see the start of the public hearings on the January 6th events It seems insane that it's taken the song for public hearings to happen but give us a little bit of context How do public hearings end up coming to the table Well you know it depends on the event They're all different One of the things about Congress is that they can do whatever they want in terms of format and so you know it's been different over the years Generally Congress has moved away from public hearings overall There's way fewer public hearings of every type of committee than there was 2030 40 years ago But in particular on the January 6th committee they've been very very slow to move towards this And you can compare it to Watergate and the Senate Watergate committee hearings went on There were 51 hearings that went on for 6 months And they really did capture the imagination of the nation It's questionable how much effect they had in terms of president Nixon's approval ratings but it was an important thing in people's lives We're going to get here 6 years over two weeks And it's just not sufficient After whatever it is 18 months after the event And in a very different media environment in which these are also competing against things like the Johnny Depp Amber Heard trial You know the thing about Watergate and the Watergate hearings is that occurred at the peak really of centralized television Most people in the country had at most 5 TV channels They had three networks ABC NBC and CBS they had a PBS channel and they had one independent station And medium size and small towns didn't necessarily have even an independent station Some sounds only had two of the three networks So an enormous number of people watched them No at this point we've already had a lot of digestion of what the January 6th committee has been doing We've had a lot of the members of January 6th committee come on and do interviews I mean constantly in fact what's different about a public hearing than private hearings Well one of the things that's happened unfortunately because of the way that this is developed is that most of the publicity has been on the fights between the committee and the witnesses And so we've had a series of subpoenas and then people fighting subpoenas and the committee deciding whether to issue subpoenas and court cases about the ancillary stuff almost although extremely important of course Yeah and the thing is that people don't care about the fight over evidence People care about they might care about an attempt to overthrow the government of the United States And so yes a lot of the details are out But proper hearings would lay them out in a way that was compelling that would be interesting You would see the people involved and we're going to get some of that We just don't know how much we can get in only 6 hearings See some of these people who have pled guilty to criminal acts who were involved in leadership roles in organizing this event People from some of these fringe groups that Trump was encouraging to come to the capitol The committee wants to spend a lot of time and rightly so connecting the dots of these groups the Proud Boys or whoever it is We've single sent by the Trump administration and we don't know to some extent whether we're going to get not just connecting dots but some very serious lines between them And some of that has been reported in some of it we just don't know yet and we don't know what's going to be coming out in the hearings But I think that one of the things that it's hard to do over only 6 hearings is to sort of develop the storylines and get people to sort of get involved in the unfolding story of it And the characters One of the things that happened with Watergate is you had some just wacky characters who would come in and give testimony for a day and people paid attention People knew who these characters were and they were talked about on the Johnny Carson show back then and they would be quoted on the evening news and all that kind of stuff I hesitate to compare this to a trial because we obviously don't want to be judged and executioner before any of this happens that's not really the point of this anyway but at the same time it does feel like the private hearings were to prepare the public 6 days Is that what happens Yeah and some of that back in Watergate and I keep going back to that because those were generally recognized as an extremely successful set of hearings The Senate Watergate committee that was set up basically a couple of weeks after the original cover up collapse The cover up held back in 1972 73 for about 6 months Then it collapsed then the Senate authorized the committee two months later they started holding hearings not 18 months later But what the Senate Watergate committee group did is they would pre interview everybody They would take that position and then the witnesses that they thought would be compelling They would put on the same as you say It's not a trial But it has it was the kind of compelling thing And one of the things that I wonder about you know people say well these days we don't have attention span But the truth is people love trials Absolutely And there's something about the sense that you don't know what people are and it's live and it's real you know in the same way the reality television is real So even if the Watergate committee had a pretty good idea of what where the testimony was going or in some cases where it wasn't because some of the witnesses were hostile from the administration famously the former attorney general John Mitchell didn't remember anything that happened in the year of 1972 And that was good TV too And that was good for the committee because it showed the depths that people were going to not cooperate And so it seems to me that this particular committee rather than thinking of the public side of things as one of their major things to do They seem very focused on the report they're writing and I don't quite understand why because it could be important to turn over evidence to the Justice Department It does seem that there are crimes that were committed by people who have not yet been indicted and they've collected information that will be relevant to that But people don't read government reports for the most part Yeah So who will we hear from most It's going to be up to the committee They've talked a lot about having a multimedia presentations about having a lot of videotape and they seem to be afraid of dry question and answer hearings One of the huge advantages that this committee has is that because of the way it was put together because Republicans boycotted it after speaker Nancy Pelosi vetoed two of the Republican suggestions to be on the committee It's a small committee with two Republicans who are dedicated to take their job seriously So there are no people here whose job is going to be to disrupt things So the committee is pretty united in taking seriously what happened on January 6th and what I wonder though is whether they're going to present something that's too polished and two basic as the kids say to really have the kind of effect that it should have especially with it only being over a short period of time I mean there's also the question of timing so it seemed like there was a lot of delays And as you said 18 months it seems a little crazy And at the same time we're in the middle of primary season now We're also going into summer and it's sort of a pandemic summer You have to wonder is there anything that we should read into the timing of this You know I'm not worried as much about that A.

Senate Watergate committee western Atlantic Chris coraggio Bonnie Quinn Jonathan Bernstein Johnny Depp Amber PBS channel Congress Trump administration Nixon Jonathan NBC CBS ABC Watergate committee Johnny Carson Trump United States John Mitchell Senate
"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:04 min | 10 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Over the western Atlantic I'm Chris coraggio And I'm susannah Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom With the country's growing calls for gun reform grassroots political organization voter Latino held a rally in San Antonio Texas today to remember and stand in solidarity with the victims of the eval de Texas mass shooting that left 21 dead They also wanted to rally voters to consider gun reform when heading to the ballot box later this year Speakers at the event included San Antonio spurs head coach Greg Popovich who made a speech to criticize lawmakers for their inaction Thoughts and prayers and condolences and on and on and on and the same statements after every massacre The New York State assembly wrapped up business today putting an end to the state legislative session Lawmakers worked Friday night and early this morning to take up remaining bills Assembly speaker Carl heastie announced the chamber passed Alyssa's law Alyssa's law is named in honor of Alyssa Al hato who was shot and killed in the Parkland shooting in 2018 The law would require a school district wide safety teams to consider the installation of a panic alarm system to silently alert law enforcement in the event of a life threatening or emergency situation Citigroup chief executive officer Jane Fraser says the U.S. will have a difficult time avoiding a recession although a severe downturn is not the bank's base case scenario We get more about that from Bloomberg's Charlie poet Fraser is just back from a trip to Europe and Asia and she told an investor conference Europe definitely felt more likely to be heading into a recession than you see in the U.S. Her comments add to a flurry of pessimism among banking executives in recent days Jamie Dimon her counterpart at JPMorgan Chase said Wednesday he sees an economic hurricane approaching Bloomberg's Charlie pellet Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quicktake powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I'm Suzanne Palmer This is Bloomberg.

western Atlantic Chris coraggio susannah Palmer Greg Popovich San Antonio Bloomberg Carl heastie Alyssa Texas Alyssa Al hato New York State assembly Jane Fraser spurs Charlie poet Fraser Citigroup U.S. Europe JPMorgan Chase Jamie Dimon Asia
"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:37 min | 10 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Friday it had identified two additional cases of the virus which brings the total number of confirmed cases in the city to 7 There are currently at least 25 confirmed cases of monkeypox in 12 states CDC officials stress it is a rare disease that is difficult to spread Those infected will develop a rash and lesions and early symptoms include fever headache muscle aches backache swollen lymph nodes chills and exhaustion David folk Thomas reporting the storm dumping heavy rain on South Florida is now in the Atlantic in its latest update the national hurricane center in Miami says the center of the storm is now moving east of the Florida coast as it heads into the western Atlantic a tropical storm warning has been discontinued for the east coast of Florida storm warnings and watches are in effect for The Bahamas I'm Chris karaji Jeff Bezos Blue Origin is celebrating its 5th human space flight the new shepherd vehicle lifted off from launch site one in West Texas shortly before 9 a.m. this morning carrying 6 stores on a ten minute ride into space the flight had been scheduled for May 20th but was delayed by technical glitch in one of the spacecraft's backup systems the capsule reached an altitude of about 60 miles above the earth before parachuting to safety landing in the desert A rare planet alignment will be visible all month long starting this weekend mercury Venus Mars Jupiter and Saturn will all be lined up on the eastern horizon according to the American astronomical society this alignment hasn't occurred since 2004 Sky watchers can catch the rare phenomenon by heading outside around 30 minutes before sunrise Check for clear skies and an unobstructed view for your best chances A 100 foot mural of prince is now complete in downtown Minneapolis a block party and dedication for the mural featuring three different images of the Minnesota musician was held on Thursday night a stretch of first street where the mural can be seen is being named in prince's honor next week The country music awards are banning confederate flag imagery of any kind at this year's event CMA released a statement saying event policy prohibits any behavior that could cause an attendee to fear for their personal safety While the organization has always had rules trying to ban discrimination at their award show 2022 is the first time confederate imagery is explicitly banned The CMAs are taking place in Nashville Tennessee this year from June 9th to the 12th KFC and rapper Jack Harlow are announcing the Jack Harlow meal the Kentucky native went on Twitter to announce the.

monkeypox fever headache muscle aches ba David folk Thomas western Atlantic Chris karaji national hurricane center Florida chills CDC Jeff Bezos South Florida West Texas The Bahamas Atlantic American astronomical society Miami Minneapolis Minnesota
"western atlantic" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

WABE 90.1 FM

01:36 min | 10 months ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

"Didn't come up the parents left angry vowing to come back in greater numbers for the next school board meeting Martin costi and PR news you valdi Some streets in Miami are underwater As heavy rain moves in and NPR's John Stepan reports forecasters are warning of considerable flooding across South Florida Specialist Philippe pappen of the national hurricane center says the storm will cross Florida from west to east We have it crossing the Florida coast and actually emerging back over the Atlantic in the western Atlantic basin after 7 p.m. We're expecting between 6 to ten inches of rainfall than the Miami metro area And for a large chunk of the southern Florida Peninsula including also the Florida keys Miami dade county mayor daniella Levine cava The storm ready have a plan make sure your family knows whether you live in an evacuation area know where the shelters are stay informed which shelters are going to be opening The system began life is hurricane Agatha in the Pacific basin John Stepan NPR news It's NPR news Thousands of firefighters continue to battle blazes in several southwestern states the biggest in New Mexico is now two thirds contained the governor there says fire management must account for climate change as rising temperatures and less precipitation increase fire risk President Biden is headed to New Mexico next week to discuss it A pilot was killed in a navy fighter jet crash in San Bernardino county California the navy hasn't said why.

John Stepan Martin costi Philippe pappen Miami NPR western Atlantic basin Florida Florida Peninsula daniella Levine national hurricane center South Florida hurricane Agatha Pacific basin dade county Atlantic New Mexico President Biden navy San Bernardino county
"western atlantic" Discussed on Real Dictators

Real Dictators

05:34 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Real Dictators

"It's the early 1780s nearly 20 years before John Adams steps into The White House. A ship cuts through the choppy waves of the western Atlantic. The passengers are mostly Irish laborers, fleeing poverty, and seeking work in the newly created United States. Not everyone has survived the grueling 12 week journey across the Atlantic, and the faces of those who have are haggard and drawn. But suddenly someone cries out, look. There, in the distance, still just a blue gray smudge on the horizon, is America. The celebrations on deck are muted. Any sense of relief is fleeting. They all know that their difficulties are only just beginning, and the sight of land is mostly greeted with a stony acknowledgment of the hard times to come. Among those on board is a man in his late 20s, named James Hogan. The son of a tenant farmer from county kilkenny, hohen moved to Dublin as a teenager to study architecture. Endowed with a raw ability, hope and quickly made a name for himself in Dublin's architectural circles. But he recognized that his fortunes lay further afield. After disembarking the ship that took him to this new country, it only takes a few years for hoping to establish himself as one of the most sought after architect in the United States. It's while living and designing buildings in Charleston, South Carolina, that home comes to the attention of president George Washington. During his tour of the south in 1791, Washington admires Charleston's elegant courthouse, so he inquires after the name of the architect. The president has been looking for somebody to design an executive mansion in the new capital, something suitably grand, but not ostentatious. James hoban might be just the man he needs. Later, that same year, Washington invites hoban to the president's House in Philadelphia. He informs him of the scale of the project and asks hoban if he's up to the task. The plucky Irish man assures him that yes he is. But the president isn't going to adjust hand hoping the job. Washington holds a competition, inviting a number of architects to submit proposals for The White House, whichever design he prefers, wins. The young architect from kilkenny has come too far to fall at the final hurdle. He gets to work immediately, spending long nights sketching his blueprints by candlelight. After countless tweaks and revisions, he is happy, but by no means confident. At least 6 other architects also submit proposals. Among them is a design by somebody called Abraham falls. But in fact, this is a pseudonym, chosen by Secretary of State and architecture enthusiast Thomas Jefferson. Featuring a White House with a large domed roof, reminiscent of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, Jefferson's designs are rejected. Others submitted proposals include ornate renaissance style facades and decorative spiral staircases. But Washington chooses a simpler design, neoclassical, with four floors and four pillars in the center balcony. James hoban has bested the competition. The site from the new presidential palace has been included in the plans for the city,.

western Atlantic James Hogan hohen United States White House Dublin John Adams hoban James hoban Charleston haggard Washington Atlantic George Washington South Carolina Abraham falls kilkenny Philadelphia St. Peter's Basilica Thomas Jefferson
"western atlantic" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

WABE 90.1 FM

01:43 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

"Comes as the Delta variant continues to fuel a surge in cases across the U. S. Tropical depression. Mindy made landfall last night on the Florida Panhandle. It weakened quickly, and National Hurricane Center specialist Richard Pash says Mindy is now swirling over southeastern Georgia. We expect the center to move across southeastern Georgia this morning and over Into the Western Atlantic later on this morning or early this afternoon, but it will be spreading some Heavy rainfall still over portions of Georgia and coastal South Carolina through this morning, he says 2 to 4 inches of rain will fall in the region, although some isolated areas could get up to six inches of rain. You're listening to NPR. With W. ABC News in Atlanta. Good morning. I'm Lisa Ray. Um, the former prosecutor charged with misconduct for her handling of the Ahmad Arboretum case has been booked and released from a Georgia jail. Former Brunswick District attorney Jackie Johnson turned herself in yesterday morning at the Glenn County Jail and Coastal Brunswick. Records show she was released without having to pay bond. Johnson is accused of violating her oath of office and obstructing police by trying to shield one of the men who shot Aubrey from prosecution. The Atlanta City Council voted late last night to approve leasing forest land for a controversial plan to build a training center for police and fire departments, Lisa Hagen reports. The 10 4 vote in favor of the proposal followed an outpouring of opposition and a note of support from Georgia Governor Brian Camp. The City Council took two full days to listen to more than 16 hours of public comments, the majority of which disapproved based on environmental or social justice concerns. Council member Jennifer IEDs voted against.

Lisa Ray Richard Pash Lisa Hagen Georgia Aubrey 2 Atlanta Jennifer Johnson yesterday morning Western Atlantic Mindy NPR Florida Panhandle 4 inches Atlanta City Council U. S. Tropical last night more than 16 hours Jackie Johnson
"western atlantic" Discussed on NPR News Now

NPR News Now

02:32 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on NPR News Now

"Speech comes <Speech_Female> as the delta variant <Speech_Female> continues to fuel <Speech_Female> a surge in cases <Silence> across the us. <Speech_Female> Tropical <Speech_Female> depression mindy <Speech_Female> made landfall last <Speech_Female> night on the florida <Speech_Female> panhandle. <Speech_Female> It weakened quickly <Speech_Female> a national <Speech_Female> hurricane center specialist. <Speech_Female> Richard pasch <Speech_Female> says mindy <Speech_Female> is now swirling over <Speech_Male> at southeastern <SpeakerChange> georgia <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> senator to move across <Speech_Telephony_Male> southeastern georgia <Speech_Telephony_Male> this morning and <Speech_Telephony_Male> over <Speech_Telephony_Male> into the western atlantic <Speech_Telephony_Male> later on this <Speech_Telephony_Male> morning or early <Speech_Telephony_Male> afternoon but <Speech_Telephony_Male> it will be spreading some <Speech_Telephony_Male> heavy <Speech_Telephony_Male> rainfall still <Speech_Telephony_Male> over portions <Speech_Telephony_Male> of georgia coastal <Speech_Telephony_Male> south <SpeakerChange> carolina. <Speech_Female> Through this morning he <Speech_Female> says two to four <Speech_Male> inches of rain will <Speech_Female> fall in the region. <Speech_Female> Although some isolated <Speech_Female> areas could <Speech_Female> get up to six <Silence> inches of rain. <Speech_Female> <Silence> You're listening <SpeakerChange> to npr. <Silence> <Speech_Female> The labor department <Speech_Female> has released. Its <Speech_Female> latest report on. <Speech_Female> Weekly jobless claims <Speech_Female> these drop <Speech_Female> to three hundred ten thousand <Speech_Female> last week <Speech_Female> the lowest weekly <Speech_Female> reports since the pandemic <Speech_Female> started <Speech_Female> a new study says <Speech_Female> most of earth's oil <Speech_Female> gas and <Speech_Female> coal needs to <Speech_Female> stay underground <Speech_Female> and pierce <Speech_Female> lauren. Summer reports <Speech_Female> researchers say. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> That's the only <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> way to avoid extreme. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Climate <Speech_Female> change extreme <Speech_Female> rain and heat <Speech_Female> have hit the us <Speech_Female> hard this summer <Speech_Female> and scientists warned <Speech_Female> that those events will <Speech_Female> get more common <Speech_Female> with every degree. <Speech_Female> The planet warms <Speech_Female> in a study <Speech_Female> in the journal nature <Speech_Female> researchers <Speech_Female> from the university college <Speech_Female> london. Say <Speech_Female> avoiding that <Speech_Female> will mean. Rapidly reducing <Speech_Female> the use of <Speech_Female> fossil fuels <Speech_Female> sixty <Speech_Female> percent of oil and <Speech_Female> gas and ninety <Speech_Female> percent of coal <Speech_Female> would need to stay <Speech_Female> underground by twenty <Speech_Female> fifty <Speech_Female> in order to have a chance <Speech_Female> of stopping warming <Speech_Female> beyond three degrees <Speech_Female> fahrenheit. <Speech_Female> Globally <Speech_Female> fossil fuel use <Speech_Female> is not declining <Speech_Female> and is projected <Speech_Female> to rise almost ten <Speech_Female> percent by twenty <Speech_Female> thirty <Speech_Female> lauren summer. <SpeakerChange> Npr <Speech_Female> news french <Speech_Female> health officials say <Speech_Female> the government will provide <Speech_Female> free access <Speech_Female> to birth control <Speech_Female> for women who are <Speech_Female> twenty five years <Speech_Female> old and younger. <Speech_Female> Currently france <Speech_Female> provides free <Speech_Female> contraception for girls <Speech_Female> up to the age <Speech_Female> say <Speech_Female> the government will provide <Speech_Female> free access <Speech_Female> to birth control <Speech_Female> for women who are <Speech_Female> twenty five years <Speech_Female> old and younger. <Speech_Female> Currently france <Speech_Female> provides free <Speech_Female> contraception for girls <Speech_Female> up to the age <Speech_Female> of eighteen <Speech_Female> francis. Health minister <Speech_Female> says there's been <Speech_Female> a decline in the use <Speech_Female> of contraception <Speech_Female> among young women. <Speech_Female> And he says it's due <Silence> to its cost <Speech_Female> a group <Speech_Female> of african leaders <Speech_Female> he is going to the capital <Speech_Female> of the west african <Speech_Female> nation of guinea. <Speech_Female> Today they <Speech_Female> are tried to meet with <Speech_Female> the military leaders <Speech_Female> who staged a coup <Speech_Female> on sunday. <Speech_Female> They're urging the military <Speech_Female> officers <Speech_Female> to return the <Speech_Female> west african nation <Speech_Female> two guineas <Speech_Male> constitutional <Silence> rule. <Speech_Male> I'm <Speech_Female> korva coleman. Npr news from washington.

Richard pasch georgia mindy depression npr florida us carolina france london francis guinea korva coleman Npr news washington
"western atlantic" Discussed on AP News

AP News

03:29 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on AP News

"Rain across the Florida Panhandle in parts of southern Georgia and South Carolina through the morning. The National Hurricane Center's Daniel Brown looks like Mindy will move across portions of southern and southeastern Georgia through this morning. And then move out over the Western Atlantic and away from land as we get toward the afternoon and evening today among those inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, former Yankee shortstop and captain Derek Jeter Colorado star Larry Walker, Ted Simmons of the Cardinals and Brewers and the late Labor executive Marvin Miller. This is a P news. Now to the economy, and it won't be any surprise to you. The Covid appears to be continuing to affect the economy. The Federal Reserve's latest survey of business conditions finds US economic activity downshifted in July in August, the Fed's beige book cites rising concerns about Covid's Delta variant as well as supply chain problems in labor shortages for the slowdown. Americans held back on dining out travel and tourism and the report also notes particular weakness in auto sales that's attributed to low infant Stories due to a shortage of computer chips. There had been expectations The Fed could soon announce plans to start reducing its monthly bond purchases, which are being made to help lower long term interest rates. However, analysts say that's less likely given the disappointing August jobs. Report. And Thomas Washington stocks were down yesterday, The Dow dropped 68 points the S and P was down five. The NASDAQ Down 87. I'm Rita Foley. I'm Rita Foley. AP News The summer of Hope against the coronavirus is ending in gloom. More than 26,000 deaths were reported last month, more than four million infections. It's the fourth highest total since the start of the pandemic. Overall, more than 650,000 people have died in a major forecast. Model projects 750,000 deaths by December 1st. Hopes were high. But the Delta variant along with resistance to vaccinations dash those hopes This outbreak is still well below the all time peaks over the winter. Cases in most states appear to be plateau owing and are likely to decline in the fall, buying more time to vaccinate adults and teenagers before flu season. Ed Donahue Washington officials in New York are announcing they've identified the remains of two more victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center. Just days before the 20th anniversary of the devastating attacks that killed nearly 3000 people and jolted the nation. The medical examiner's office says technicians using DNA were able to identify the remains of Dorothy Morgan of Hempstead, New York, She was a broker for Marsh and McLennan officials also determined the identity of a man whose remains were recovered in separate finds in 2000 and 1, 2000 and two and 2000 and six his family is asking the name be withheld. It's the first time in two years new identification has been made. 1100 remains are still unidentified. Even though teams are still working to match DNA to fragments found, Chief Medical examiner of New York Barbara Sampson says they pledged to do everything they can to make sure all those lost that day can be reunited with their families. I'm Jackie Quinn. Thank you for listening to the AP Radio Network. Hey, did you know that The Associated Press produces news related books? Here's what's new and upcoming first pet.

Ted Simmons Jackie Quinn Larry Walker New York Marvin Miller Western Atlantic Rita Foley July Derek Jeter AP Radio Network Dorothy Morgan December 1st Florida Panhandle Barbara Sampson Daniel Brown two years South Carolina World Trade Center six yesterday
"western atlantic" Discussed on AP News

AP News

03:30 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on AP News

"Rain across the Florida Panhandle in parts of southern Georgia and South Carolina through the morning. The National Hurricane Center's Daniel Brown looks like Mindy will move across portions of southern and southeastern Georgia through this morning. And then move out over the Western Atlantic and away from land as we get toward the afternoon and evening today among those inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, former Yankee shortstop and captain Derek Jeter Colorado star Larry Walker, Ted Simmons of the Cardinals and Brewers and the late Labor executive Marvin Miller. This is a P news. Now to the economy, and it won't be any surprise to you. The Covid appears to be continuing to affect the economy. The Federal Reserve's latest survey of business conditions finds US economic activity downshifted in July in August, the Fed's beige book cites rising concerns about Covid's Delta variant as well as supply chain problems in labor shortages for the slowdown. Americans held back on dining out travel and tourism and the report also notes particular weakness in auto sales that's attributed to low infant Stories due to a shortage of computer chips. There had been expectations The Fed could soon announced plans to start reducing its monthly bond purchases, which are being made to help lower long term interest rates. However, analysts say that's less likely given the disappointing August jobs. Report. And Thomas Washington stocks were down yesterday, The Dow dropped 68 points. The S and P was down. Five, the NASDAQ Down 87 I'm Rita Foley. AP News The summer of hope against the coronavirus is ending in gloom. More than 26,000 deaths were reported last month, more than four million infections. It's the fourth highest total since the start of the pandemic. Overall, more than 650,000 people have died. And a major forecast model projects 750,000 deaths by December, 1st hopes were high. But the Delta variant along with resistance to vaccinations dash those hopes. This outbreak is still well below the all time peaks over the winter cases in most states appear to be plateau owing and are likely to decline in the fall, buying more time to vaccinate adults and teenagers before flu season. Ed Donahue Washington officials in New York are announcing they've identified the remains of two more victims of the September 11th terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center. Just days before the 20th anniversary of the devastating attacks that killed nearly 3000 people and jolted the nation. The medical examiner's office says technicians using DNA were able to identify the remains of Dorothy Morgan of Hempstead, New York, She was a broker for Marsh and McLennan officials also determined the identity of a man whose remains were recovered in separate finds in 2000 and 1, 2000 and two and 2000 and six his family is asking the name be withheld. It's the first time in two years new identification has been made. 1100 remains are still unidentified. Even though teams are still working to match DNA to fragments found, Chief Medical examiner of New York Barbara Sampson says they pledged to do everything they can to make sure all those lost that day can be reunited with their families. I'm Jackie Quinn. This Labor day. Home depot dot com Is your one stop shop for all things to core with up to 30% off furniture, mattresses, home decor and kitchenware online..

Ted Simmons Larry Walker Marvin Miller Dorothy Morgan New York Jackie Quinn Western Atlantic July Derek Jeter Florida Panhandle Barbara Sampson 68 points Daniel Brown December Rita Foley six two years South Carolina More than 26,000 deaths World Trade Center
"western atlantic" Discussed on 990 The Answer

990 The Answer

01:57 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on 990 The Answer

"I'm Keith Peters. Tropical Storm Mindy has formed in the Gulf of Mexico near the Florida Panhandle correspondent Mike Rossi a report forecasters have issued a tropical storm warning for part of the Florida Panhandle for Tropical Storm Mindy Mindy developed into a tropical storm Wednesday in the northeast Gulf of Mexico. National Hurricane Center says Mindy could cause as much as six inches of rainfall across the Florida Panhandle and portions of southern Georgia and South Carolina through Thursday morning. Scattered flash urban and small stream floods are possible. I Mike Rossio Mindy was expected across the coastline of the Florida Panhandle this evening and then move off the coast of the southeastern United States into the Western Atlantic Ocean by Thursday. Former Senate majority leader Harry Reid is the latest prominent Democrat to call for an end to the filibuster. Reed used a column in the Las Vegas Sun to blast the filibuster, saying it's time to in his words get the Senate working again. Ending the filibuster would allow Democrats to sidestep all Republican opposition passing bills with a simple majority vote. The filibuster is a time honored tradition in the Senate. It was used unceasingly by Democrats while they were in the minority to delay nearly all legislation and nominations made by former President Trump. Calls to end it come as Democrats face likely prospect of losing their House and Senate majorities in next year's midterm election. Bob Knight. Your reporting, New York City's medical examiner's office is continuing the difficult task of identifying remains recovered from the rubble of the World Trade Center. Just days before the 20th anniversary of the 9 11 terrorist attacks, officials say they've identified the remains of two more people in all, 2700 and 53 people were reported missing at the twin towers. The remains of only 1647 victims have been positively identified. Officials are hopeful that recent advances will help identify more remains on Wall Street. The Dow down by 68 points more on these stories at town hall dot com. Philadelphia's AM.

Bob Knight Mike Rossi Keith Peters Wednesday Thursday morning Reed Gulf of Mexico Thursday Harry Reid 68 points Florida Panhandle South Carolina Democrat Western Atlantic Ocean 53 people southeastern United States northeast Gulf of Mexico Democrats World Trade Center Senate
"western atlantic" Discussed on Adams on Agriculture

Adams on Agriculture

02:36 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Adams on Agriculture

"It still dry in south america. It's not actually the last last week We saw some showers across argentina and the southern parts of brazil gonna continue with another couple of systems in the next week You know central brazil areas have the distinct wet and dry season and that typically starts at the end of september. Now the line nino pattern we've had you typically means a later start to bet what season across the higher production states of central brazil But model they're actually thinking. It might come right on time this year. So that's That would be something very unusual. Something we'll watch and But it's possible that They may lock out this year where they did last year last year Wet season started about three or four weeks late and if bottles are right then They'll come on time this year. We just had hurricane ida. It's and seems like this has become a very active storm season. Yeah the in the tropics that has been so we've already gone through. I Here across the united states. We had j k and l a after that as well so we got larry cooking up in the in the central atlantic. Good thing is that it won't be hitting any land at least here in north america. So that's good news but we do still have another couple of features. We're watching here. You know we're right at the the pico hurricane season in the atlantic right now so the next couple of weeks here. We're going to be continuing to watch some disturbances move off of off of africa. Move up through the gulf of mexico and see whether or not we can develop them systems. This year's been pretty good. We've had some really good Temperatures across the golf mexico across the western atlantic really fuel those storms so whatever we can get them up and running they they. They tend to take off our i john again. It was good to see you last week at farm progress. Thanks for joining us right. Thanks mike thanks for having you bet take care. Dt n. meteorologist. john brenick. We'll up next. We're going to get the latest numbers from the produce. Cme group egg economy barometer. Purdue aggie economists michael lang meyer. Join us as we see. The headline egg producers sentiment improved slightly in august compared to july. We'll see how much of an improvement and kind of break the numbers down.

brazil hurricane ida central atlantic south america argentina western atlantic larry north america gulf of mexico united states atlantic john brenick africa mexico michael lang meyer Cme group john mike Purdue
"western atlantic" Discussed on The Daily Beans

The Daily Beans

08:47 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on The Daily Beans

"We have no way to change that situation. I mean we literally throwing trillions of dollars at the problem we have lost thousands of brave soldiers in stabilization and other operations way we have we have tried every type of development a humanitarian aid. All these. I'm not saying that. We should just walk away and let the placing. But i think we have to recognize that the attempt to create a liberal democracy based on western values is not going to succeed. Maybe it might happen in fifty hundred years identity. But he's not gonna six eight now and we have to recognize that an if i think back just to sort of finish here i think i was in afghanistan roughly ten years after nine eleven. So twenty. Ten twenty eleven. We were still talking about how securing afghanistan was about securing london. New york washington d. c. And that was actually notre securing. The big cities of the west was something that happened in two thousand one in in a very limited on very successful series of special operations. The years that followed was Was a series of displacement activities. That ultimately have not produced an outcome that you know that is that is useful to western countries. Hopefully we learned the lesson but we never seem to learn seem to learn very well. Because you know whilst iraq funded afghanistan but the thing that to me is is very striking in in twenty eleven at a point when surely these lessons could have been learned You know we piled into libya and now liberia's in a state of kale effectively split into two kind of statelets all of the things. That should have been obvious from that. The situation in iraq and the situation. I've kinda stoned a play. I'm not saying they're identical but same lessons appear to be relevant from situation in libya and yet the same mistakes stakes remained. I've been thinking a lot lately about the first gulf war. Because at that time i was a i was a senior in high school and i just turned eighteen and everyone was like. Oh we're going to get drafted. And i mean that obviously didn't happen but so i wasn't really equipped. I think to look at it from a geopolitical sense. But now i think especially now looking at at the situation in iraq and afghanistan and these wars that never seemed to end and also with putin in the crimea. Go to rain. What happened in the first gulf war was that saddam hussein invaded a foreign country in kuwait. Mostly to because he didn't want to pay them the money hero them and nato who was the allied coalition that george h w bush form together. Said you're not allowed to do that. We went in sent him back to iraq and that was it and then that ended his territorial ambitions. He was still there. Which was sucked if you lived in iraq. I'm sure but on the other hand when you get rid of the guy. We see now what what happened. So it's it's it's really a damned if you do damned if you don't i mean none of the options are pretty agree. We had no business going to iraq. Anyway i think i think that bush's guys just wanted to do it and for some reason. Take him out but there was a lot of talk at the time because the borders in the middle east anywhere drawn up after the first world war. They're not really Whatever like mozell has more in common with damascus than it does with iraq. There's there there was some talk of. Let's that iraq really should be three different countries. Stand at the north. And this and that do you think that was. I didn't do it because i think because turkey. Mostly what do you think is the solution. They're ultimately does that. Make any sense things can happen. Well i think. I think you've touched on on a range of very important points and you know. I spent a lot of my career in in the kind of middle east region. I'm actually an arabic speaker. So i sort of that helped me integrate myself. With with that part of the world there is an issue about Kind of. I don't wanna say fake borders because you know that real to the people that live that but but but countries that maybe lack of certain level of kind of integrity in the minds of the people that live there but having said that something that struck me particularly of my time working raw. Is how nationalist a lot of iraqis. They they feel very strongly. But you know it may only be a country that's existed for society is roughly but people feel quite strongly that this is a real country. I'm we feel about it. So i think i think they. You know you're mentioning that the first gulf war the ninety one gulf for is very important. Because i think that was literally the high point of the kind of the western atlantic alliance when it won the code wall. It then proves that it could. It could destroy what was supposedly a sierras army. Maybe not russia but it was his army at it destroyed them in about three hours. It was a cakewalk. And it's almost as if that was the problem that the ease of that victory allowed a kind of level of hubris misunderstanding. And i'm not just talking about america across western countries And i think it led to two things one was that the western countries became increasingly distracted by substate challenges so obviously one of those terrorism and and it is not iced identity this in any way to suggest that the problem with terrorism was was trivial because by definition what happened at the nine eleven attacks was was nothing bad. You know nothing but epic. It was an incredible and all full attack on on america's soil. It bugs in times of loss of life but in terms of the you know the violation of american survey but i think the countries in the western alliance and america particularly failed to keep an eye on why issues that mattered and so during the period that america britain to some extent you know australia from a range of kind of nato western allies. Were getting stuck with these kind of endless counterinsurgency struggles and ultimately not winning. We were not winning those fights probably because we didn't know what the end state was. We didn't know what we wanted to win. But while that was going on. Russia and china in particular were learning lessons. They're looking at how we failed. They were looking at the weaknesses of their own. their military's let's not forget that the iraqi military was very very close to russia. It had a kind of soviet Kind of concession conception of operations and the china also had various links to the sort of the old players in the middle east so you a lot of them were that was going on in russia and china looking at the west struggles and thinking what we learned from this. You know what are the weaknesses. What are the kind of strategic gains. That might come out of this and so while we were kind of battling these sort of ankle level problems which ally you know again. I'm not trivializing. But they were issues. There are not strategic existentialist threat to our country's you had to global pows slowly building up and russia. You could argue. Twenty four team. Was that moment when they struck you know they took crimea and they took it in a way that was was that was basically a brilliant special forces operation people one sure is this an invasion or is it some kind of weird political demonstration but at the end of the day. Crimea is not controlled by russia. They built a bridge onto mainland russia. You know who knows how that ends but right now. Ukraine has no serious means of regaining that territory. At the same time. China china recognizes weaknesses in terms of its navy and has created a blue water navy so fast time basically.

iraq afghanistan libya george h w bush mozell nato middle east crimea liberia western atlantic alliance sierras army putin saddam hussein america kuwait russia damascus washington london New york
"western atlantic" Discussed on Little Atoms

Little Atoms

08:07 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on Little Atoms

"But we can still do this so we talked about. The great cheats version. It's it's epic journey yet. Only part of which is is. I have a water. Most of it is over land in the book you travel. You talked about being in south carolina just as weak but you go just a little bit further bubbly allowed to coast to the to the outer banks in the book and she's a great place for studying seagoing buds per logic. Birds spend most of their life. Say not just birds. There are so moebius time. So t share. Waterbeds are absolute stars of the migration charts. Tell us something about what you were doing. Hey on on the answer. banks right. So the outer banks because the coast of north carolina sticks so far out the gulfstream sweep so close to shore there. It's the easiest place. Certainly along. The atlantic coast north america to get out into deep water among birds. That spend very very little of their time within even a rumor of dry land in petro's ensure waters and storm petrels. And and the like so i was i was out there with a felony bryant. Patterson who's been running a charter boat. Charter boat fishing captain. But he's also an avid burder and has been running polemic birdwatching trip out of hatteras silent on the outer banks for many many years and has really kind of written the book on what we know about the logic. Burgeon that court of the gulf stream in western atlantic. And you know we're still making with. We don't even know what you don't even know how many species are out there. For example i was. I had contacted brian and said hey look you know working on this book in the last frontier for migration researches kaljic burning. What's the best time to come on one of your trips to see something dramatic and unexpected. These late may is the time to do that while unfortunately late may early. June is one. I'm into nali. Usually working on our field work up there. So i was not able to go in as may trip which figures because they saw a Hiti petrol which is like not even in the right ocean. They breed into haiti. For god's sake you know. They've been seen a few times off like you know theoretically off the coast of costa rica on the pacific side. But the thing is we don't even know what quote unquote the right. Ocean is for a lot of these birds in. We find new breeding colonies on these remote islands in the middle of nowhere way out in the atlantic or the pacific that we didn't know were there in two years ago on one o'brien strips they and more recently saw the same bird a second time or perhaps a second individual saw a bird at a petrol. That doesn't fit anything in any of the fuel guys so they don't know if this is a undescribed plumage for unknown species or a they call it the wto federal because that was the reaction it. What if what the bleep is that. The whiskey tango foxtrot petrol. We don't know what's out there. Which i just find. I take great joy in that in the fact that the world is still big enough that you know we. We haven't mapped everything. We haven't plotted everything that that sense of discovery is still is still fresh and in these pelagic seabirds. They cover such such remarkable distances. I i spent a lot of time on the gulf of maine where there are breeding arctic. Terns and when i wrote living on the wind twenty seven years ago. The assumption was that arctic terns migrate twenty two thousand to twenty five thousand miles a year and that was just based on drawing the renault. They breed them highest latitudes in the northern hemisphere. We know the winner in the southern ocean draws lines in the math. That's to come up with. But they were too small to actually put any kind of tracking device on well. The few years ago my friend. Ian the guy that got charged by the baron. Denali was part of the team that gio locators on arctic turns in greenland and iceland and discovered that they were flying. Forty seven thousand miles a year and then somebody in denmark did the same thing and found they were going fifty one thousand miles a year from that population and arctic terns read in the gulf of maine have been tracked now fifty seven thousand mile i for mater wintering in the indian ocean for heaven's sakes and it's just the the distances are just staggering mind-blowing and humbling. I mean the fact that a semi-populated sandpiper to take off from the northeastern coast of canada flight. Thirty three hundred miles nonstop across the western atlantic ocean to the northeastern coast of south america. Journey that will take it. Four or five days of continuous nonstop flight in is the equivalent of a human being running one hundred twenty six consecutive marathons and for a short for waiter. That's that's like middling. It's not even epic. Every time i hear somebody talk about birds as natural athletes. Anytime you compare bird to a human athlete. You're insulting the bird. You know the human runner that broke the four hour record for running. A marathon was described as superhuman which is true but it's distinctly soviet s. Finish off then talking about how they do it and the some very up today. Research ideas in the book. The based around the ideas of quantum entanglement. What's the latest on how bats navigate. So we've known for many many years. Birds have a whole. They're alive to a whole series of senses that were blind deaf and done to that. They if they use the night sky the celestial orientation not looking at the pattern of the stars in the night sky away old mariners did but the the fact that part of the night sky does not appear to move that caution around. Polaris that does not appear to rotate. We know that they can. They can navigate using extremely low frequency. Sound waves that some. Seabirds can smell their way home across thousands of miles of ocean that they birds that like swallows and rafters. That migrate during the day. Use the physician and apparent movement of the sun across the sky in the band of polarized light at the moves across the sky in the dick. They've all these Navigational tools but they also have a magnetic sense and that's always been the biggest mystery because we couldn't quite figure out how it works. We've known since. At least the nineteen fifties or sixties that it was somehow tied into vision but again it didn't it made no sense it. Actually it was a german born scientists in cloud Who was at the university of illinois. Champaign urbana who came up with what turned out to be the explanation in the nineteen seventies. Where as you say. He thought this was involved with quantum entanglement which is the form of quantum physics that made even einstein. Queasy it was you know was the result of his equations. But he didn't like it. You know what. He called spooky action at a distance. Where essentially what's happening at quantum level within the eye of a migratory bird is flying in cuban night sky as flies through the earth's magnetic field pigment molecules in the bird's eye that have been activated by photons of light emitted from stars tens of millions of light years away create this essentially waves of pigment. It's how were visualizing this that allows the bird to see the earth's magnetic field as its flying through it. You'll do what i would give to see the earth mates enough. It must be. It must be remarkable and any wood warbler or you know or or chaff chaffenge. That's flying through the night sky. Migrating is going to see that so we keep peeling back the layers of the onion on how birds do what they do. How physiologically how. They're able to fly these extraordinary distances. How they're able to navigate and orient which really two different two different feats and within every within every one of these mysteries is another is another mystery. And it's like we it looks like they're using quantum entanglement but they also they also have a magnetic map sense that we don't quite understand which may be connected to the trigeminal nerve in that runs through their their upper beak and but we don't really quite know how that works so i mean it's like nesting russian dolls. Every time we saw one mystery. There's another one waiting force inside. So i took it to scott widened. So if it took it about his book a weld on the wing the global or the migratory birds which is the year. k from pickett'll scott. Thank you so much for taking the time to share it with me that an absolute delight. Neil thank you so much. This episode of little atoms whose produced and presented by me nail denny edited by sky redman and was first broadcast on resonance one. I four point four. Fm let latham's is supported by eighty nine up in hosted by cast. If you enjoyed the show please do subscribe rates on i tunes and even tell a friend. Thanks for listening..

Burgeon western atlantic arctic western atlantic ocean atlantic coast gulf stream Patterson gulf of maine south carolina bryant north carolina north america haiti rica
"western atlantic" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

New Jersey 101.5

01:39 min | 1 year ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

"And 31 Oh 1.5 of Steve Genalice, his New Jersey one of 1.5 fast traffic Better news on the parkway traveling southbound, this report sponsored by the U. S Food and Drug Administration. Mhm Parkway coming down towards X That 1 48 in Bloomfield. That crash has been cleared and delays that cleared out right along with it. Brunson volume 1 43 up towards 1 45 to 80. 2 80 westbound, slow coming across the surgical drawbridge than it does get better. Both Spurs of the turnpike in good shape, Now top to bottom. All of a sudden, it's gotten heavy on 4 40 north down from the turnpike up towards the parkway. I'll definitely keep an eye on that. 10 eastbound in Livingston, right by Hillside Avenue. It's an accident being cleared 73 north down between the Atlantic City Expressway and flooding Pike. That's all closed down because of an accident and the western Atlantic City Expressway off ramp exit 31 for route 73 North. That is closed because of that accident. Crossing the Hudson Lincoln Tunnel down to less than a five minute. Wait, leaving New Jersey. 15 to 20 minutes, leaving New Jersey for the G W Bridge. Upper level by the 10. Minutes downstairs, No delays at the Holland Unused prescription opioids can spell harm have taken by someone they weren't prescribed for find safe drug Take back options at FDA dot gov slash drug Disposal A message from the U. S Food and Drug Administration. Traffic every 15 minutes. Your next report at 803. I'm Mike Barker on New Jersey. You want to 1.5? New Jersey water 1.5 instant weather will hold onto dry comfortable whether tonight patchy clouds low of 53 to 58 changes are coming are the cloudy tomorrow morning could be a little drizzle to shore points? Mix of clouds and sun tomorrow.

Mike Barker 15 U. S Food and Drug Administrat Hillside Avenue Steve Genalice Hudson Lincoln Tunnel tomorrow morning New Jersey Atlantic City Expressway G W Bridge Livingston 803 Bloomfield 53 20 minutes tonight western Atlantic City Expressw less than a five minute Pike Brunson
"western atlantic" Discussed on The Dictionary

The Dictionary

04:40 min | 2 years ago

"western atlantic" Discussed on The Dictionary

"Mentioned belts series of other stuff. Next is serious. C. e. r. e. Us noun from seventeen thirty. Any of various cacti of the western us and tropical america and the genus is serious Oh and it's from the latin that means a wax candle And there's more at the word serum in so You know probably produces some sort of wax okay. Next is sick or civic c. e. r. I c. adjective from eighteen sixty nine of relating to or containing cerium especially with a valence of four. There's four valances next is series series c. e. r. i s. e. sirris noun from eighteen forty four. It is a moderate red and This is a a french. it's a french word. Sirri so lease and it literally means cherry. And there's more at the word cherry. Probably cherry red next is cerium now. N- from eighteen o four a malleable ductile metallic element that is the most abundant of the rare earth group. So it's rare but it's there's a lot of it compared to the rare ones and then it says to see the element table and this is from series which is the asteroid so maybe series has a lot of it on there or something like that. It's related somehow to that. Next is sermet sermet c. r. e. t. noun from nineteen forty eight a composite structural material of a heat resistant compound as titanium titanium carbide and a metal as nickel used especially for turbine blades. It's from combining ceramic and metal. Sermet next is sern caps. E r an abbreviation for Well where's the first part. Oh okay i gotcha okay. So i it's an abbreviation for the european or asian for nurk nuclear research. But the actual abbreviation is for the french. Which is conseil european poor. Leo russia rush. Nuclear cer n conseil european bub-bubba. You've got it but yeah they do read. They're doing nuclear research in europe. Next is cerro c. e. r. o. It's like zero with a c. Cerro noun from eighteen eighty four a large spotted food and sport fish of the warmer parts of the western atlantic. And the scientific name is scumbag. Romaris regulus this is modified of these spanish word. Sierra s. i. e. r. r. a. which means saw or cerro. So maybe it's jaws saw. Maybe i don't know we gotta find a picture of this guy may be Okay next we have serious. C. e. r. o. u. s. adjective from eighteen sixty nine of relating to or containing. Cerium especially with a valence three. Oh what where was the other. One that we had ciric has a valence of four and cirrus has a valence of three. Is there another word. That has a valence of two. Okay next word is cert. Cert abbreviation for certificate certification certified or certified or certify. Yeah there we go. Next is certain. I form adjective. From the thirteenth century one synonyms are fixed and settled as in a certain percentage of the prophet. I just think it's fun my my. My cat is over there hiding in the pillows. She found a nice little place to to go. Chill under an. It's very funny and cute to me. Okay next is number two of a specific but an unspecified character quantity org degree as in. The house has a certain charm. yes it does. Three a synonyms are dependable and reliable..

thirteenth century europe western atlantic first part one synonyms eighteen two spanish sixty nine One four latin tropical america us Three a eighteen eighty european asian eighteen sixty nine nineteen forty eight
Andrea, Bermuda And Official discussed on Atlanta's Morning News

Atlanta's Morning News

00:18 sec | 4 years ago

Andrea, Bermuda And Official discussed on Atlanta's Morning News

"June marks the official start of the Atlantic hurricane season. But the first named system this season develops in the. Western Atlantic subtropical storm Andrea is hundreds of miles southwest, Bermuda and poses. No threat to the coastal US Andrea's top sustained winds about forty miles per hour. It's expected to dissipate mid

Andrea Bermuda Official
Ocean Heat Waves Are Threatening Marine Life

The World

00:40 sec | 4 years ago

Ocean Heat Waves Are Threatening Marine Life

"Loves it researches studying ocean temperatures have revealed that the frequency of marine heatwaves has risen by more than fifty percent since the early twentieth century his Richard howls. Scientists say that sudden rises in water temperature are a threat to fish stocks. Coral reefs and other marine life the heat spikes caused by blazing sunshine and changes in water currents. The study warns that extreme localized see temperatures could become one of the biggest stresses on ocean life. This growing evidence that human activity is contributing to the phenomenon a heat wave in the western Atlantic seven years ago, trove lobster stocks northwards into cooler

Richard Fifty Percent Seven Years
Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

The Big Biz Radio Show

00:29 sec | 4 years ago

Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

"In other news. The hurricane is about fifteen hundred miles west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida hurricane Oscar forming in the Atlantic. USA radio's Wendy king reports the National Hurricane Center said land isn't threatened at this time and no coastal watches or warnings are in effect. Forecasters state the storm should turn north then head away from the United States by Wednesday. The hurricane could even become a category. Two before turning out to see later on this

Hurricane National Hurricane Center Fort Lauderdale Wendy King Atlantic United States Usa Radio Florida
Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

The Big Biz Radio Show

00:33 sec | 4 years ago

Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

"Tropical storm Oscar is now hurricane Oscar making it the eighth hurricane of the two thousand eighteen season. The hurricane is about fifteen hundred miles west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the National Hurricane Center said land isn't threatened at this time and no coastal watches or warnings are in effect. Forecasters say the storm it should turn north on Monday. Then had away from the United States by Wednesday. Forecasters say the hurricane could even become a category. Two before turning out to see later

National Hurricane Center Oscar Fort Lauderdale United States Florida
Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

The Big Biz Radio Show

00:33 sec | 4 years ago

Hurricane Oscar swirls over western Atlantic

"Tropical storm Oscar is now hurricane Oscar making it the eighth hurricane of the two thousand eighteen season. The hurricane is about fifteen hundred miles west of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the National Hurricane Center said land isn't threatened at this time and no coastal watches or warnings are in effect. Forecasters say the storm it should turn north on Monday. Then had away from the United States by Wednesday. Forecasters say the hurricane could even become a category. Two before turning out to see later

National Hurricane Center Oscar Fort Lauderdale United States Florida