What is the best hotel in Mobile Al? Top 3 best Mobile hotels as voted by travelers
What is the best hotel in Mobile al ? check the ratings made by travelers themselves.
List of hotels in Mobile Alabama:
Americas Best Value Inn & Suites Mobile
Baymont Inn & Suites Tillman's Corne Mobile
Candlewood Suites Mobile-Downtown Hotel
Comfort Suites Mobile (AL)
Days Inn & Suites Mobile
Econo Lodge Mobile
Fairfield Inn & Suites By Marriott Mobile Spanish Fort
Fort Conde Inn Mobile
Hampton Inn & Suites Mobile Providence Park/Airport
Holiday Inn MOBILE - AIRPORT
Homewood Suites by Hilton Mobile
Mobile Marriott Hotel
Quality Inn Downtown Historic District Mobile
Red Roof Inn Mobile North
Residence Inn Mobile
Super 8 Motel Mobile
TownePlace Suites Mobile
Americas Best Value Inn Mobile
Berney fly Bed & Breakfast Inn Mobile
Comfort Inn Mobile (AL)
Courtyard By Marriott Mobile Spanish Fort Hotel
Days Inn Mobile Airport
Econo Lodge Tillmans Corner Mobile
Fairfield Inn & Suites Mobile
Hampton Inn & Suites Mobile- Downtown Historic District
Hampton Inn Mobile-I-10/Bellingrath Gardens
Holiday Inn Mobile Downtown Historic District
La Quinta Inn & Suites Mobile Tillman's Corner
Port City Inn Mobile
Quality Inn Mobile
Red Roof Inn Mobile South
Rodeway Inn & Suites Mobile
Super 8 Motel Mobile Tillmans Corner Area
Wingate by Wyndham Mobile
Baymont Inn & Suites Mobile
Best Western Moffett Road Inn Mobile
Comfort Suites Mobile
Courtyard Mobile
Drury Inn Mobile
Extended Stay America Mobile Spring Hill Hotel
Family Inns Of America Mobile
Hampton Inn & Suites Mobile I-65@ Airport Blvd
Hilton Garden Inn Mobile West I-65/Airport Boulevard
Holiday Inn Mobile West I-10
La Quinta Inn Mobile
Quality Inn & Suites Mobile
Radisson Admiral Semmes Hotel Mobile
Renaissance Mobile Riverview Plaza Hotel
Rodeway Inn Midtown Mobile
The Battle House Renaissance Mobile Hotel & Spa
Wingate By Wyndham Mobile I-10 Bellingrath Gardens Hotel
Things to do in Mobile AL
Battleship USS ALABAMA,
Mobile Carnival Museum,
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception,
Richards-DAR House Museum,
Crescent Theater,
History Museum of Mobile,
Historic Oakleigh House,
Church Street Historic District,
Gulf Coast Exploreum Science Center,
Fort Conde Museum and Welcome Center,
Mobile Museum of Art,
Bienville Books,
Dauphin Street
Mobile Botanical Gardens,
Bragg-Mitchell Mansion,
Mobile Bay,
A & M Peanut store,
Mobile Medical Museum,
Hank Aaron Stadium,
Firehouse Wine Bar and Shop,
Conde-Charlotte Museum House,
I-65 General W.K. Wilson Jr. Bridge,
Chickasabogue Park Alabama,
Environmental Studies Center,
Centre for the Living Arts,
Mobile Civic Center,
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Mobile, AL - Country Living
Want to get away from the hustle and bustle and enjoy the country life? Well bring your horses to Mobile County! I am Alesia Parker and I am an Associate real estate Broker with Roberts Brothers. Let me help you find the perfect home in the country.
Within a short drive to the city, Mobile County offers beautiful acreage and farmland. Even if you are not interested in raising livestock, enjoy the expanse between neighbors that this area has to offer. You can have plenty of room for a garden or harvest from your very own fruit trees.
Enjoy evenings on the porch while watching the wildlife in the fields nearby or take a Sunday drive down long country roads. Stop at a local diner for a tall cold glass of sweet tea.
This area offers plenty of room to stretch out, with numerous land parcels available for you to build you dream home! Whether it's a cottage tucked under the live oaks or a sprawling ranch home, Mobile County can accommodate them all.
If you have always longed to live in the country, then Mobile County has just the place for you.
Stories from the Apalachicola: An Endangered River
WFSU presents a production of the Florida State University College of Communication and Information. Stories from the Apalachicola is the result of an interdisciplinary effort called the Apalachicola River Project.
Students in Digital Media Production, Media and Communication Studies, English and Environmental Science and Policy partnered with Apalachicola Riverkeeper, a nonprofit group dedicated to preserving and restoring the Apalachicola River, its bay and watersheds. The group provided boats and kayaks so students could navigate the river to collect water and soil samples, record video and write stories about the effects of reduced water flow on the oyster industry, fishing and the delicate ecosystem.
Students interviewed oystermen, beekeepers, legislators, historians, biologists, and the Riverkeeper, each with their own perspective on this critical time for the Apalachicola. Freshwater flows on the Apalachicola have been altered for decades, as the Army Corps of Engineers has restricted flows during droughts and modified the river channel create a shipping lane for barges. This has caused a decline in tupelo and other trees in the floodplain forest. And in 2012, during the lowest flow period ever recorded for the river, the Apalachicola Bay oyster fishery crashed.
Communities along the river and bay look towards a future where the river might not provide for them as it did in generations past.
For more information on the Apalachicola River Project, visit their official website:
For ongoing coverage of the Apalachicola River and Bay system, visit the WFSU Ecology Blog:
Did you find Stories from the Apalachicola informative? Did it motivate you to want to help the river and bay? Let the filmmakers know in this short survey:
Steven Kwast | The Urgent Need for a U.S. Space Force
Steven L. Kwast is a retired Air Force general and former commander of the Air Education and Training Command at Joint Base San Antonio-Randolph. A graduate of the United States Air Force Academy with a degree in astronautical engineering, he holds a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. He is a past president of the Air Force’s Air University in Montgomery, Alabama, and a former fighter pilot with extensive combat and command experience. He is the author of the study, “Fast Space: Leveraging Ultra Low-Cost Space Access for 21st Century Challenges.”
Beginning in 2010, and coinciding with the opening of Hillsdale College’s Allan P. Kirby, Jr. Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship on Capitol Hill, the College has hosted an annual Constitution Day Celebration in Washington, D.C. to commemorate the signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787.
The program—which features speeches, debates, and roundtable discussions—explores the continuing relevance of the Founders’ Constitution for American politics today.
Hillsdale College is an independent institution of higher learning founded in 1844 by men and women “grateful to God for the inestimable blessings” resulting from civil and religious liberty and “believing that the diffusion of learning is essential to the perpetuity of these blessings.” It pursues the stated object of the founders: “to furnish all persons who wish, irrespective of nation, color, or sex, a literary, scientific, [and] theological education” outstanding among American colleges “and to combine with this such moral and social instruction as will best develop the minds and improve the hearts of its pupils.” As a nonsectarian Christian institution, Hillsdale College maintains “by precept and example” the immemorial teachings and practices of the Christian faith.
The College also considers itself a trustee of our Western philosophical and theological inheritance tracing to Athens and Jerusalem, a heritage finding its clearest expression in the American experiment of self-government under law.
By training the young in the liberal arts, Hillsdale College prepares students to become leaders worthy of that legacy. By encouraging the scholarship of its faculty, it contributes to the preservation of that legacy for future generations. By publicly defending that legacy, it enlists the aid of other friends of free civilization and thus secures the conditions of its own survival and independence.
The Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor: What Fusion Wanted To Be
Google Tech Talks
November 18, 2008
ABSTRACT
Electrical power is, and will increasingly become, the desired form of energy for its convenience, safety, flexibility and applicability. Even future transportation embraces electric cars, trains, and chemical fuel production (jet fuel, hydrogen, etc.) based upon an abundant electrical supply. Although existing energy sources can and should be expanded where practical, no one source has shown to be practical to rapidly fulfill the world's energy requirements effectively. Presently there is an existing source of energy ideally suited to electrical energy production that is not being exploited anywhere in the world today, although its existence and practicality has been know since the earliest days of nuclear science. Thorium is the third source of fission energy and the LFTR is the idealized mechanism to turn this resource into electrical energy. Enough safe, clean energy, globally sustainable for 1000's of years at US standards.
This talk is aimed at explaining this thorium energy resource from fundamental physics to today's practical applications. The presentation is sufficient for the non-scientist to grasp the whole subject, but will be intriguing to even classically trained nuclear engineers. By providing the historical context in which the technology was discovered and later developed into a power reactor, the story of thorium's disappearance as an energy source is revealed. But times have changed, and today, thorium energy can be safely exploited in a completely new form of nuclear reactor.
The LFTR is unique, having a hot liquid core thus eliminating fuel fabrication costs and the need for a large reactor. It cannot have a nuclear meltdown and is so safe that typical control rods are not required at all. This design topples all the conventional arguments against conventional energy sources in such areas as:
* Waste Production
* Safety
* Proliferation
* Capital Costs and Location
* Environmental Impact
* Social Acceptance
* Flexibility
* Grid Infrastructure
* Efficiency
Should America take this step toward a New Era in Nuclear Energy Production? Hear the case for The Electricity Rock and then decide.
Speaker: Dr. Joe Bonometti
Dr. Bonometti has extensive engineering experience in the government, within industry, and in academia over a 25-year career. Recently completing an assignment as the NASA Chair Professor at the Naval Post graduate School, he supported a ship design study that utilized advanced nuclear power derived from thorium. Working at NASA for ten years as a technology manager, lead systems engineer, nuclear specialist, and propulsion researcher, he lead several NASA tiger teams in evaluating the Nuclear System Initiatives fission demonstration vehicle and missions. He managed the Emerging Propulsion Technology Area for in-space systems, the Marshall Air Launch team, as well as a variety of other power and propulsion assignments and is now the Lead Systems Engineer for the Ares I-Y flight. After earning a Doctorate degree in Mechanical Engineering from University of Alabama in Huntsville, he spent several years as a Research Scientist & Senior Research Engineer at the UAH Propulsion Research Center where he served as a Principal Investigator and manager for the Solar Thermal Laboratory. He has worked as a Senior Mechanical Designer at Pratt & Whitney supporting aircraft engine manufacturing and at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory within the laser fusion program. A graduate from the United States Military Academy, at West Point, where he studied nuclear physics and engineering, Dr. Bonometti served as an officer in the United States Army Corps of Engineers; both in combat and district engineering management assignments. He is a Registered Professional Engineer in the State of Virginia, and has authored numerous aerospace technical publications, particularly propulsion and space systems technologies. His technical expertise includes nuclear engineering, specialized mechanical & materials research, space plasmas & propulsion, thermodynamics, heat transfer, and space systems engineering.
This Google Tech Talk was hosted by Boris Debic.
Impeachment Trial Day 8: Senators to pose questions as case enters new phase
Restless Senators will have their first chance to pose questions to House managers and President Trump's legal team as the impeachment trial enters a new stage. Follow Live Updates:
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2nd Annual Rochester Global Health Symposium
Innovative Solutions to Combat Global Health Disparities
April 21, 2016, 8:30am to 5:15pm (United Stated EDT, UTC/GMT -04:00)
This year’s symposium brings together leaders in global health research from Upstate New York and around the world to promote research collaboration, provide networking opportunities and help new researchers begin a career in global health. Students, trainees, junior faculty and senior faculty are all invited!
The one-day event includes timely presentations on global health issues, a poster session, a student poster competition, and breakout sessions. Multiple networking opportunities will give participants a chance to share ideas one-on-one and connect with experts in the field.
[All times below are in United States EDT (UTC/GMT -04:00)]
8:30 am: Welcome/Overview of the Global Network/Overview of UNYTE & Introduction of Speakers (Tim Dye, PhD and Nana Bennett, MD, MS; University of Rochester)
8:50am: Highlight Topic 1: Global Health Policy (Neal Palafox, MD, MPH; University of Hawai’i)
9:10am: Highlight Topic 2: Global Cancer Prevention and Control (Jennifer Smith, PhD; University of North Carolina)
9:30am: Highlight Topic 3: Zika Virus and Health Diplomacy (Mehran Massoudi, PhD, MPH; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
9:50am: Highlight Topic 4: Mobilizing food systems for Improved Health and Nutrition (Per Pinstrup-Andersen, PhD, MS; Cornell University)
10:10am: Highlight Topic 5: Global Health and Technology: New Solutions for Development (Saurabh Mehta, MBBS, ScD; Cornell University)
10:30am: Q&A for Highlight Topic Speakers
10:40am: Networking Break
11:15am: Rapid Fire Sessions
- Connections Between Prematurity and Toxic Substances in Puerto Rico: From Genomic Research to Community Engagement,
Carmen Vélez-Vega, University of Puerto Rico
- Health Care System in Costa Rica, Esteban Avendaño MD MPH, Universidad de Ciencias Médicas
- Mercury exposure from fish consumption: A global public health concern, Edwin VanWijngaarden PhD, University of Rochester
- Capacity Building in Zimbabwe: Linking Patient Support Groups with HIV Clinical Pharmacology Research Initiatives,
Samantha Sithole PharmD, University at Buffalo
- HIV, HPV, and Cervical Dysplasia in South Africa, David Adler MD, University of Rochester
12:15pm: Poster Session - join us for a stroll through the poster session to meet presenters and learn about their research.
Zika/Mosquito-Borne Illness Symposium – Moderator: Mehran Massoudi PhD
1:45pm: Zika in pregnancy/planned cohort studies - José Cordero , MD MPH
2:05pm: TBD
2:25pm: Mobile surveillance technology - Solomon Abiola/José Pérez-Ramos
2:45pm: Q&A
3:50pm: Policy, System, and Environmental Interventions in Global Cancer Control
– Angela Sy PhD, Neal Palafox MD, Karen Peters DrPH
4:00pm: Panel Discussion – Building partnerships in global health research/Careers in global health
– Tim Dye PhD, Mehran Massoudi PhD, Karen Peters DrPH, Haq Nawaz MD, Esteban Avendaño MD, Deborah Ossip PhD
5:00 pm: Announcement of poster session awards; closing – Tim Dye PhD
Watch Live | Impeachment Trial Day 10: Vote on witnesses expected today
Senators will hear closing arguments in President's impeachment trial Friday, the 10th day of the impeachment trial, and after that, the Senate will vote on whether to call witnesses. Questions remain about how long the trial could continue after that vote, even if senators vote not to hear testimony. Follow Live Updates:
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CBSN is the first digital streaming news network that will allow Internet-connected consumers to watch live, anchored news coverage on their connected TV and other devices. At launch, the network is available 24/7 and makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each weekday. CBSN. Always On.
Jocko Podcast 149 with Jim and James Webb: Fields Of Fire. US Marine Corps
Join the conversation on Twitter/Instagram:
@jockowillink @jimwebusa @echcharles
0:00:00 - Opening
0:08:12 - Jim Webb Sr.
2:58:26 - Jim Webb Jr.
3:18:59 - How to Stay on The Path.
3:49:31 - Closing Gratitude.
Coastal U.S. Health & Air Quality - NASA DEVELOP Summer 2016 @ NOAA NCEI
DEVELOP is a NASA Science Mission Directorate Applied Sciences training and development program. Interns work on Earth science research projects, mentored by science advisors from NASA and partner agencies and extend research results to local communities. The projects demonstrate to community leaders how NASA science measurements and predictions can be utilized to address local policy issues.
Mae Carol Jemison - First Black Women Astronaut In Space
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Mae Carol Jemison was born in Decatur, Alabama, on October 17, 1956. She is an American engineer, physician & NASA astronaut. She became the first African American women to travel space when she went into orbit aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour.
In Her childhood, Jemison learned to make connections to science by studying nature. Jemison’s parents were very supportive of her interest in science, while her teachers were not.
Jemison graduated from Chicago’s Morgan Park High School in 1973 and entered Stanford University at the age of 16. Jemison graduated from Stanford in 1977, receiving a B.S. degree in chemical engineering and fulfilling the requirements for a B.A degree in African and Afro-American Studies. She took initiative to get even further involved in the black community by serving as head of the Black Students Union In College. Jemison said it was difficult to go to Stanford at 16, but thinks her youthful arrogance may have helped her. Jemison faced lots of discrimination and stated that it was necessary for women and minorities to have some arrogance in order to be successful in a white male dominated society.
Jemison obtained her M.D degree in 1981 at Cornell Medical College. She interned at L.A. County-USC Medical Center, and in 1982 she worked as a general practitioner. During medical school, Jemison traveled to Cuba, Kenya, and Thailand, to provide primary medical care to people living there.
After Completing her medical training, Jemison joined the staff of the Peace Corps and served as a Peace Corps Medical Officer from 1983 to 1985. Responsible for the health of Peace Corps Volunteers serving in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
After The Flight Of Sally Ride in 1983, Jemison felt the astronaut program opened up, so she applied. Jemison’s involvement with NASA was delayed after the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in 1986, but reapplying in 1987, she received the news of her acceptance into the astronaut program.
He work with NASA before her shuttle launched included launch support activities at the Kennady Space Center in Florida and verification of shuttle computer software in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory.
Jemison flew her only space mission from September 12 to 20, 1992, as a Mission Specialist on STS-47, a cooperative mission between the United States and Japan.
Jemison loged 190 hours, 30 minutes, 23 seconds in space. Jemison resigned from NASA in March 1993. “I Left NASA because i’m very interested in how social sciences interact with technologies” Jemison said.
In 1993 Jemison founded her own company, the Jemison Group that researches, markets, and develops science and technology for daily life. Jemison founded the Dorothy Jemison Foundation for Excellence and named the foundation in honor of her mother. One of the projects of Jemison's foundation is The Earth We Share (TEWS), an international science camp where students, ages 12 to 16, work to solve current global problems, like How Many People Can the Earth Hold and Predict the Hot Public Stocks of The Year 2030. The four-week residential program helps students build critical thinking and problem solving skills through an experiential curriculum.
From 1995 to 2002 was a Professor at Cornell University and a Professor Of Environmental Studies at Dartmouth College. Jemison continues to advocate strongly in favor of science education and getting minority students interested in science. She sees science and technology as being very much a part of society, and African-Americans as having been deeply involved in U.S. science and technology from the beginning.
In 1999, Jemison founded BioSentient Corp and has been working to develop a portable device that allows mobile monitoring of the involuntary nervous system. BioSentient has obtained the license to commercialize NASA's space-age technology known as Autogenic Feedback Training Exercise (AFTE), a patented technique that uses biofeedback and autogenic therapy to allow patients to monitor and control their physiology as a possible treatment for anxiety and stress-related disorders. BioSentient is examining AFTE as a treatment for anxiety, nausea, migraine and tension headaches, chronic pain, hypertension and hypotension, and stress-related disorders.
In 2012, Jemison made the winning bid for the DARPA 100 Year Starship project through the Dorothy Jemison Foundation for Excellence. The Dorothy Jemison Foundation for Excellence was awarded a $500,000 grant for further work. The new organization maintained the organizational name 100 Year Starship. Jemison is the current principal of the 100 Year Starship.
NASA designing systems to take humans to Mars
(15 Jan 2016) US MISSION TO MARS
SOURCE: AP TECHNOLOGY / NASA
RESTRICTIONS: TECHNOLOGY CLIENTS ONLY
LENGTH: 4:32
NASA
Undated
1. Animation of Space Launch System showing rocket blasting off
AP Television
Huntsville, Alabama - 21 September 2015
2. Wide of engineers at Marshall Space Flight Center
3. Close of equipment
4. Mid of scientist
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Paul Gilbert, Manager, Science Programs office, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center:
We're in the very early stages of looking at how to go to Mars, what the next step into cislunar space is (space between the earth and the orbit of the moon). And, part of that is working with our partners from the International Space Station. We're working through that organisation, having discussions, what's their ideas, here are some of our ideas. And so, we're in the early sketchpad phases of trying to work that out and the partners have ideas and desires and things they want to do in cislunar space. And so, we've got to come together as a global family on what that next step is, and what kind of things do we want to explore together.
6. Various of Advanced Concepts Office presentation and sketches
7. Various of NASA equipment
8. UPSOUND (English) Tara Polsgrove, NASA Aerospace Engineer, giving presentation on Mars lander concept designs:
We're looking at lots of different options. Les mentioned the various technology traits that we do. A Mars lander is essentially two parts. The bottom half is the descent stage, it has the propulsion systems on it to enable that soft landing. And, on top, is the payload. So, we treat this kind of like a flatbed truck. So, any kind of payload would sit on top. And there, on the left-hand side, you see some of the examples of some of the other kind of payloads that we would need to land.
NASA
Undated
9. Fullscreen STILL graphic of Human Mars Lander Concept Design Studies
AP Television
Huntsville, Alabama - 21 September 2015
10. Wide of Environmental Control and Life Support System (ECLSS) test chamber, deep space habitat prototype
11. Wide pan of ECLSS facility
12. SOUNDBITE: (English) David Smitherman, technical manager of future space projects, NASA:
You have a utility room down on the lower level, exercise room, kind of like a basement, downstairs. Your main floor level has room for the four bedrooms for the crew.
13. Various of deep space habitat prototype department
14. Close of simulated Martian soil and model astronauts
NASA
Undated
15. Various of construction of Space Launch System (SLS)
AP Television
Huntsville, Alabama - 21 September 2015
16. Wide pan of Space Launch System construction
NASA
Bay St. Louis, Mississippi - 27 August 2015
17. Various of engine test on launch pad
AP Television
Huntsville, Alabama - 21 September 2015
18. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick Scheuermann, former Marshall Space Flight Center Director:
When the SLS and Orion and the ground support come together at Kennedy Space Center, I think the nation will be proud of what they've invested in NASA.
NASA
Undated
19. Animation of surface of Mars and atmosphere with spacecraft orbiting
LEADIN:
NASA is designing systems to take humans further into the solar system than we have ever been before - all the way to Mars.
The 2015 fictional movie The Martian depicted how it could look, but here on Earth, engineers and scientists are working out how to make it a reality.
STORYLINE:
The US space agency, NASA, says the Space Launch System will be the most powerful rocket in the world.
It will need to be to propel humans all the way to Mars.
Here at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, engineers and scientists are working out how to make the Mars mission a reality.
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Impeachment Trial Day 9: Last day of questioning comes ahead of pivotal vote on witnesses
The Senate will reconvene Thursday afternoon for the final day of written questions to House managers and President Trump's defense team in his impeachment trial, setting the stage for a crucial vote on witnesses on Friday. Follow Live Updates:
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Get new episodes of shows you love across devices the next day, stream CBSN and local news live, and watch full seasons of CBS fan favorites like Star Trek Discovery anytime, anywhere with CBS All Access. Try it free!
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CBSN is the first digital streaming news network that will allow Internet-connected consumers to watch live, anchored news coverage on their connected TV and other devices. At launch, the network is available 24/7 and makes all of the resources of CBS News available directly on digital platforms with live, anchored coverage 15 hours each weekday. CBSN. Always On.
Frontiers in One Health -- Disease Resurgence From Climactic and Ecological Change
May 16th, 2011
Dr. Jonathan Patz, M.D., M.P.H., from the Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment in Madison, Wisconsin, examines the health effects of global warming and environmental change. He provides an overview of how human activities have contributed to climate alterations and goes on to explore the ways in which climate change will impact the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems. He pays particular attention to the predicted rise in rise in vector borne diseases, and the resurgence of malaria in the Amazon.
University Health Care
A look at an effort from the University of Arizona and Arizona State University to withdraw from the state health care system and set up programs on their own. They say it would reduce costs and improve coverage for nearly 50,000 employees and dependents. Members of the universities’ transgender community are strong advocates because they aren’t covered in the state’s plan. The state says if the universities left it would raise premiums for remaining employees.
Forensic Files - Season 8, Episode 41: Visibility Zero
Click here to watch great FREE Movies & TV:
In 1993, the Amtrak Railroad experienced the deadliest train crash in United States history, when the Sunset Limited derailed while crossing Alabama's Big Bayou Canot bridge. Forty-seven passengers and crew were killed; scores more were injured. The clues to the cause of the crash lay etched in twisted steel and buried in the mud of the Big Bayou Canot. Originally aired as Season 8 Episode 41.
FULL DOCUMENTARY: Mississippi's War: Slavery and Secession | MPB
State’s Rights vs Slavery? What was the motivating factor that lead to the conflict? Examine the reasons behind Mississippi’s decision to secede from the United States, and the ramifications that action had on its citizens.
Learn more at
Jocko Podcast 180 w/ John Stryker Meyer: Covert Lessons from Across The Fence.
Join the conversation on Twitter/Instagram:
@jockowillink @echocharles
0:00:00 – Opening
0:05:05 – Green Beret, John Stryker Meyer: Life, Lessons, and Vietnam
2:11:28 – Final thoughts and take-aways.
2:16:42 – Support: How to stay on THE PATH.
2:43:48 – Closing Gratitude.
Biblical Series I: Introduction to the Idea of God
Lecture I in my Psychological Significance of the Biblical Stories series from May 16th at Isabel Bader Theatre in Toronto. In this lecture, I describe what I consider to be the idea of God, which is at least partly the notion of sovereignty and power, divorced from any concrete sovereign or particular, individual person of power. I also suggest that God, as Father, is something akin to the spirit or pattern inherent in the human hierarchy of authority, which is based in turn on the dominance hierarchies characterizing animals.
Q & A Starts: 1:57:25
Producer Credit and thanks to the following $200/month Patreon supporters. Without such support, this series would not have happened: Adam Clarke, Alexander Meckhai’el Beraeros, Andy Baker, Arden C. Armstrong, Badr Amari, BC, Ben Baker, Benjamin Cracknell, Brandon Yates, Chad Grills, Chris Martakis, Christopher Ballew, Craig Morrison, Daljeet Singh, Damian Fink, Dan Gaylinn, Daren Connel, David Johnson, David Tien, Donald Mitchell, Eleftheria Libertatem, Enrico Lejaru, George Diaz, GeorgeB, Holly Lindquist, Ian Trick, James Bradley, James N. Daniel, III, Jan Schanek, Jason R. Ferenc, Jesse Michalak, Joe Cairns, Joel Kurth, John Woolley, Johnny Vinje, Julie Byrne, Keith Jones, Kevin Fallon, Kevin Patrick McSurdy, Kevin Van Eekeren, Kristina Ripka, Louise Parberry, Matt Karamazov, Matt Sattler, Mayor Berkowitz , Michael Thiele, Nathan Claus, Nick Swenson , Patricia Newman, Robb Kelley, Robin Otto, Ryan Kane, Sabish Balan, Salman Alsabah, Scott Carter, Sean C., Sean Magin, Sebastian Thaci, Shiqi Hu, Soheil Daftarian, Srdan Pavlovic, Starting Ideas, Too Analytical, Trey McLemore, William Wilkinson, Yazz Troche, Zachary Vader
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