Feb 19th 2017 - Richmond Rod and Gun club USPSA match - Limited division
Had trouble hitting steel the last 2 matches. Yesterdays practice consisted of 470 rounds mainly focused on transitions with paper/steel involved. Seems to have helped :)
Kentucky Militia Training Pt 1
Secret video taken of marksmanship practice for a 'fringe' group known as the Kentucky Militia (taken during Thanksgiving 2008).
In this scene, a rogue militant who would identify himself only as Jerry, takes target practice against a series of clay pigeons that are dressed up like little British soldiers.
Resturant Carry in Northern Virginia on Fox 5 News at 10
John Snyder (vcdl.org) and Mike Stollenwerk (opencarry.org) on Fox News 5 at 10.
2011-05-5 - Building a Foundation for a new house
After demolishing the old house, excavating the lot to clear clay, and backfilling with 1' of recycled sand - we are ready to start our foundation for the new house... Here is how we do it!
Learn more at
Rare 1920s Footage: All-Black Towns Living the American Dream | National Geographic
By the 1920s, Oklahoma was home to some 50 African-American towns, in addition to a large and prosperous black community living in the city of Tulsa. These towns and their self-reliant middle class and affluent residents are documented by the home movies of Reverend S. S. Jones, an itinerant minister and businessman. Known and respected by the citizens of the towns whose lives he captured on film, Rev. Jones’s work offers revealing glimpses of these communities as a haven for African Americans who very often faced discrimination elsewhere in America. The subjects are everyday life: a family on the front porch of their bungalow, shop workers at a storefront, farmers plowing their fields, children playing on seesaws in a schoolyard. Much of the material documents the economic life of the towns, from business districts filled with prosperous merchants to the homes of successful professionals, with an abundant countryside beyond. As Rhea Combs, curator of film and photography for the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, points out in her commentary, here we even find a married couple who were oil barons, proof of the extraordinary progress made in the relatively short time since the end of slavery. The fashions and hairstyles, automobiles and horses, and even such details as a man manually pumping gasoline at a filling station make the films a fascinating record of the lives of Americans, and African Americans in particular, in the early 20th century.
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Read more about the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Black America’s Story, Told Like Never Before
Rev. S. S. Jones Home Movie Collection
2011.79.1-9
Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
Gift of Naomi Long Madgett
Interview with Rhea Combs
Curator of Film and Photography
Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
Rare 1920s Footage: All-Black Towns Living the American Dream | National Geographic
National Geographic
Talent Connect Day 1
Welcome to Talent Connect Live! We're kicking off #TC19Live by streaming Cynthia Marshall and Mariana Atencio from the #TalentConnect mainstage. Plus, Johnny Campbell is giving advice on how to make your job post stand out to top candidates. Watch now ????
Colon Hydrotherapy session - WARNING - VIEWER DISCRETION
2:19 - she explains what goes inside you (how the tube is inserted)
3:22 - she adds chlorophyll and electrolytes in the implant tank
4:15 - she discusses the importance of electrolytes and minerals, healthy bacteria and probiotics
6:35 - what happens during a break in a hydrotherapy session
7:25 - she fills me with chlorophyll and electrolytes
9:08 - she talks about how you could do this at home with an enema kit
13:44 - how much is the average amount a person can take?
This is part of my second colon hydrotherapy experience. There is a LOT of contents eliminated so this is NOT for the faint of heart (totally TMI for most people!). In the end of the video, I receive a chlorophyll and electrolyte fill at Refresh Natural Health in Burnaby, BC.
This video is not intended as medical advice and it is not recommending or advocating colon hydrotherapy. They were guests on my radio and I was curious to try colon hydrotherapy. I am merely sharing the experience I had. If you have questions about your health, please ask a medical doctor.
Marie Benard's show, Synchronicity, airs on CiTR 101.9 FM in Vancouver. Her website is happyshow.ca
Watch: House Judiciary Committee impeachment inquiry hearings - Day 1 (FULL LIVE STREAM)
Watch live analysis from The Washington Post as the House Judiciary Committee holds its first hearing on the Trump impeachment inquiry. Four legal scholars, three selected by Democrats and one chosen by Republicans, will testify beginning at 10 a.m. Eastern. The Post’s Libby Casey will be joined by reporters Amber Phillips, Shane Harris and Rhonda Colvin.
All four constitutional scholars testifying are law professors. Harvard Law School professor Noah Feldman, Stanford University professor Pamela S. Karlan and University of North Carolina law professor Michael Gerhardt were chosen by Democrats. George Washington University Professor Jonathan Turley, was selected by Republicans. Read more: Subscribe to The Washington Post on YouTube:
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Symposium of Architectural History The Whiteness of 19th Century American Architecture
This symposium examines the racial discourses that subtended American Architecture movements during the long nineteenth century. Explore this site to learn more about the specific themes, case studies and speakers that will be featured at this event. The Whiteness of American Architecture is organized by Charles Davis II, UB assistant professor of architecture.
About the symposium
“The Whiteness of 19th Century American Architecture” is a one-day symposium in architectural history organized by the School of Architecture and Planning at the University at Buffalo. This symposium is an outgrowth of the Race + Modern Architecture Project, an interdisciplinary workshop on the racial discourses of western architectural history from the Enlightenment to the present.
Participants
- Professor Mabel O. Wilson, Columbia GSAPP
- Dianne Harris, senior program officer at the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
- Joanna Merwood-Salisbury, architectural historian
- Kathryn ‘Kate’ Holliday, architectural historian
- Charles Davis, assistant professor of architectural history and criticism at the University at Buffalo
Race + Modern Architecture Project
Race + Modern Architecture logo
The “Whiteness & American Architecture” symposium continues the research that began with the Race + Modern Architecture Project, a workshop conducted at Columbia University in 2013. The forthcoming co-edited volume, Race and Modern Architecture presents a collection of seventeen groundbreaking essays by distinguished scholars writing on the critical role of racial theory in shaping architectural discourse, from the Enlightenment to the present. The book, which grows out of a collaborative, interdisciplinary, multi-year research project, redresses longstanding neglect of racial discourses among architectural scholars. With individual essays exploring topics ranging from the role of race in eighteenth-century, Anglo-American neoclassical architecture, to 1970s radical design, the book reveals how the racial has been deployed to organize and conceptualize the spaces of modernity, from the individual building to the city to the nation to the planet.
Sponsors
- Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture - Columbia University
- Darwin D. Martin House Complex - Buffalo, NY
- School of Architecture - Victoria University of Wellington
- UB Humanities Institute - University at Buffalo, SUNY
- School of Architecture and Planning - University at Buffalo, SUNY
Purpose and Themes
Our symposium will outline a critical history of the white cultural nationalisms that have proliferated under the rubric of American Architecture during the long nineteenth century. This theme will be explored chronologically from the late-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century and regionally from representative avant-garde movements on the East Coast to the regionalist architectural styles of the Midwest and West Coast. Such movements included the neoclassical revivals of the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893, the Chicago School of Architecture and the Prairie Style, the East Bay Style on the West Coast, the Arts & Crafts movement across the continent, and various interwar movements that claimed to find unique historical origins for an autochthonous American style of building.
The five architectural historians in attendance have been charged with providing some preliminary answers to the central question of these proceedings:
What definitions of American identity have historically influenced the most celebrated national architectural movements of the long nineteenth century, and how was this influence been manifested in the labor relations, ideological commitments and material dimensions of innovative architectural forms?
House Judiciary Committee holds first hearing in the Trump Impeachment Inquiry, live stream
The House Judiciary Committee is taking the reins of the impeachment inquiry as the panel holds its first hearing, focusing on the constitutional grounds for impeachment. Live updates here:
The committee, which will be responsible for drafting potential articles of impeachment, is hearing from four constitutional law experts: Noah Feldman, Pamela Karlan, Michael Gerhardt and Jonathan Turley, who is also a CBS News contributor.
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Southern Nightmare live at Virginia Commonwealth University
Live sneak preview event for true-crime podcast Southern Nightmare: The Hunt for the South Side Strangler, produced in partnership with Style Weekly magazine. Host Richard Foster interviews people connected to this historic Virginia case, including retired Richmond homicide detective Ray Williams, retired Virginia State Police Senior Special Agent Larry McCann and others.
Unfinished Business Session 1: Documenting and Remembering the Movement
Speakers: LeRoy Henderson, Stephen Shames, Sylviane Diouf
Chair: Shana Weinberg
This panel brings together photographers of the Civil Rights Movement to discuss their work as well as contemporary efforts to interpret these images to help viewers understand this past.
Find more information about this panel and the day's events on the CSSJ's website.
November 16, 2018
Brown University
The Equal Rights Amendment: Yesterday and Today
Written in 1921 bu suffragist Alice Paul, the Equal Rights Amendment was introduced into every session of Congress between 1923 and 1972, when it was sent to the states but failed to achieve the necessary three-fourths ratification. What are the pros and cons of the ERA, and could it become ratified? A distinguished panel explores the proposed amendment and its implications in today's world. Presented in Partnership with the Sewall-Belmont House.
Polarization Symposium at UMass Amherst: Panel discussing Hate in Historical Perspective
Hate in Historical Perspective was the topic for the first panel at the Polarization Symposium held on February 5, 2019 at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Featured speakers were Evelyn Simien from University of Connecticut; Franklin Odo from Amherst College; and Susannah Heschel from Dartmouth College.
UMass Amherst, the flagship campus of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, is the largest public research university in New England, distinguished by the excellence and breadth of its academic, research and community programs. Founded in 1863 and home to nearly 30,000 total undergraduate and graduate students, UMass ranks no. 26 in a field of more than 700 public, four-year colleges across the nation, according to the U.S. News & World Report's latest annual college guide.
UMass Amherst stretches across more than 1,400 acres of land in the historic Pioneer Valley of Western Massachusetts, providing a rich cultural environment in a rural setting close to major urban centers - campus sits 90 miles from Boston and 175 miles from New York City. The idyllic college town of Amherst is home to hiking, biking, museums, music, theater, history, food, farms and much more. UMass Amherst also joins a local consortium of five nationally recognized colleges, including Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke and Smith colleges.
For more information on UMass Amherst, visit:
Supreme Court and Capital Punishment | Race and the American Death Penalty
A panel on Race and the American Death Penalty was part of the Supreme Court and Capital Punishment conference at Harvard Law School on Nov. 18. Panelists included John Bessler, associate professor of law at the University of Baltimore; Michael Radelet professor and chair of the sociology department at the University of Colorado, Boulder; Christina Swarns, litigation director of the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc.; and Stephen Bright, president and senior counsel at the Southern Center for Human Rights. Harvard Law School Professor Randall Kennedy moderated the discussion. The multi-panel conference, sponsored by the Criminal Justice Policy Program, explored themes in Professors Carol Steiker and Jordan Steiker’s book, Courting Death: The Supreme Court and Capital Punishment, (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, recently released).
The Juneteenth Book Festival Symposium on Black Literature & Literacy
A day-long symposium on Juneteenth, one of the oldest observances marking the end of the enslavement of African descendants in the United States. The holiday has been celebrated in Galveston, Texas, since June 19, 1865, when news of the Emancipation Proclamation first was announced in Texas. Today, Juneteenth commemorates African American freedom with an emphasis on education and literacy. The opened with a history of Juneteenth. Three panels followed on The State of Black Literature, The Stakeholders of Black Literacy and Independent Artists: Our Journey as Storytellers of the African Diaspora.
Speaker Biography: Hari Jones is curator of the African American Civil War Museum in Washington, D.C.
Speaker Biography: Haki Madhubuti is founder of of Third World Press, the longest-running independent black-owned publishing company in the U.S.
Speaker Biography: E. Ethelbert Miller is a literary activist, poet and editor.
Speaker Biography: Nikki Woods is a social media consultant and senior producer of The Tom Joyner Morning Show.
Speaker Biography: Yanick Rice-Lam is a journalist, associate professor at Howard University and co-founder of FierceforBlackWomen.com, a digital health and fitness network.
Speaker Biography: Brenda Greene is director of the National Black Writers Conference and executive director of the Center for Black Literature at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York.
Speaker Biography: Bomani Armah is known as Mr. Read a Book and the Poet with a Hip-Hop Style.
Speaker Biography: Bahiyyah Muhammad is assistant professor of criminology at Howard University and founder of Project Iron Kids, which educates and empowers children of incarcerated parents.
Speaker Biography: Rahman Branch is former principal of Ballou High School in Washington, D.C., and the first executive director of the Office of African American Affairs in the Office of the Mayor of the District of Columbia.
Speaker Biography: Gabriel Asheru Benn is an international hip-hop artist and co-founder of Educational Lyrics, which sponsors H.E.L.P, the Hip Hop Educational Literacy Program.
Speaker Biography: Beverly East is an international forensic-document examiner and author.
Speaker Biography: Hafiz F. Shabazz is adjunct assistant professor and director of the World Music Percussion Ensemble at Dartmouth College, where he developed the Oral Tradition Musicianship course and produced more than 85 major concerts.
Speaker Biography: Haile Gerima is distinguished professor of film at Howard University and an independent Ethiopian filmmaker who produced and directed the 1993 film Sankofa.
For transcript and more information, visit
Impeachment Hearings Led By House Judiciary Committee | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
Livestream of the Judiciary Committee hearings in the next phase of the Trump impeachment effort following the hearings led by the Intelligence Committee.
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Impeachment Hearings Led By House Judiciary Committee | NBC News (Live Stream Recording)
City of Santa Rosa Council Meeting June 18, 2019
City meeting agendas, packets, archives, and live stream are always available at
The Eyes of the Movie by Harry Alan Potamkin - Film Criticism & Cinematography Audiobook
The Eyes of the Movie by Harry Alan Potamkin - Film Criticism & Cinematography Audiobook
▶ Do not forget to subscribe to my channel for the most beautiful audiobooks selected from literary classics.
(The best way to learn English is to listen to audio books.)
Librivox: The movie was born in the laboratory and reared in the counting-house. It is a benevolent monster of four I's: Inventor, Investor, Impresario, Imperialist. So begins Harry Alan Potamkin's The Eyes of the Movie, a posthumously published indictment of Hollywood. It is a savage socialist critique of the film industry, its practices, and products. Potamkin takes aim at the conservative element infiltrating Hollywood's dream factory, investigating mainstream cinema's double function as propaganda and passing amusement. (Summary by ChuckW)
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Title: The Eyes of the Movie
Author: Harry Alan Potamkin
Reader: Chuck Williamson
Genre: Art, Design & Architecture
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From Lab to Site: Innovation in Concrete