The Inauguration of Tim Walz, Peggy Flanagan, Keith Ellison, Steve Simon, and Julie Blaha
Tim Walz took the oath of office to become Minnesota's 41st governor Monday, Jan. 7, calling for a united state where everyone --; regardless of zip code -- has access to affordable health care and quality education. The inauguration was held at the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Check out full coverage here:
Haunted Places in Minnesota 2
Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Duluth, and more! Check out our second list of the most haunted places in Minnesota! We took a lot of your suggestions on this one... from creepy schools to scary haunted manor houses... enjoy.
Photos:
Greyhound Bus Museum by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
Greyhound Bus Museum vehicles” by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“2009-0522-Concordia-OldMain” by Bobak Ha’Eri ( is licensed under CC BY 3.0 (
“Brown Hall Concordia College Moorhead MN” by Bjorn G. Altenburg ( is licensed under CC0 1.0 (
“Soul Reach” by Collapse The Light ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Flag Sunset” by Collapse The Light ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Calumet Hotel 2012” by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Calumet Hotel” by Jet Lowe ( is in the public domain (
“Anderson House Wabasha 1” by AlexiusHoratius ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Anderson House Wabasha 2” by AlexiusHoratius ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
“Fitzgerald Theater” by Ross Griff ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Fitzgerald Theater” by Matt ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Warden’s House Museum” by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“Warden’s House Museum rear” by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
“glensheen” by Brendan Riley ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Glensheen Mansion” by Jon & Robin ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Saint Mary’s Hall, Saint Mary’s University of Minnesota (3)” by Susan WD ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
“Saint Mary's University Main Campus 2” by Randy Stern ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
“Clock Tower and the Bluffs” by Susan WD ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
Schmidt Artist Lofts by McGhiever ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
Historic Schmidt Brewery by Mac H (media601) ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 (
Glensheen Mansion Photo Meet, Duluth 10/7/17 #glensheen #fall #window #lamp by Sharon Mollerus ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
Chapter 6: Imagined Effects of Guerilla War
About Jay Winik, author of April 1865: The Month that Saved America
Biography: New York Times best-selling author Jay Winik has written the internationally revered history April 1865: The Month That Saved America. Though many historians utilize a broad gamut to retell the history of the American Civil War, Winiks superb storytelling recounts specific details that lead to Lees surrender at Appomattox and to the final dissolution of the Confederate Army. He takes his reader through vivid pursuits, battles and retreats between Confederate and Union soldiers.
This is why JFK is dead!
Share this information and may we learn from the past. RIP JFK, the last true President of the United States.
A Literary Guide to Washington, D.C.: Walking in the Footsteps of American Writers
Kim Roberts discusses her book, A Literary Guide to Washington, D.C.: Walking in the Footsteps of American Writers from Francis Scott Key to Zora Neale Hurston.
For transcript and more information, visit
Metric Help I'm Alive John Paul Jones Arena Charlottesville VA October 27 2010
Metric Help I'm Alive John Paul Jones Arena Charlottesville VA October 27 2010 JPJ UVA
Russian Lullaby.mov
RUSSIAN LULLABY -- one of Irving Berliin's loveliest melodies.
C.A.J. Parmentier, Doctor of Music and a flawless artist at the organ console, played these selections in 1933 during his Sunday morning radio programs for Columbia Broadcasting System.
First recorded on aluminum records by a friend and theater organ enthusiast, they were later presented to Dr. Parmentier as an invaluable addition to a collection of theater organ music of the Thirties. They could be played only by the use of wooden or cactus phonograph needles.
Urged by theater organ aficionados, Dr. Parmentier agreed to select, edit and release the best of these recordings in a new Long Playing album, improved with today's electronic recording techniques.
Here, permeated with the nostalgia of the Thirties, are familiar and forgotten melodies destined to take you on a heartplucking journey into the pleasant past of movie theater organ music.
C.A.J. Parmentier in this year of 1972 celebrates his Golden Jubilee as an organist of note in the United States, dating from his Broadway debut in 1922 at the Capitol Theater, the foremost movie theater of the early Twenties.
Small wonder he is a musician of such stature. He was born in Belgium into a musically endowed family. His father served for over fifty years as Church Organist. His eldest brother, Aimé, was an organist and clarinetist of distinction. C.A.J. had as his principal teacher one of Belgium's most famous organists, a Laureate of the Royal Flemish Conservatory of Music in Antwerp, and Professor at the Lemmens lnstitute of Religious Music in Malines. This talented taskmaster of a teacher was Parmentier's own elder brother, Firmin. Another brother, Jules, and two sisters, Helene and Judith, also exhibited marked musical gifts. lt was in the heart of such a family that his abiding love of music and his strivihg for musical excetlence were nurtured. Parmentier's own son, Victor, continued this musical tradition in his work as Director of Music in High Schools in the New York Metropolitan area.
C.A.J. Parmentier received his Doctorate in Music at the Université Philotechnique in Brussels, and concertized in Belgium, Holland and England.
ln 1916 Parmentier came to the United States and found himself in demand as theater organist for the silent films at the Loew, Fox, and B.S. Moss theater circuits. After his Broadway stint at the famous Capitol Theater, he moved to the new and glittering Roxy theater, the world's largest and most beautiful movie palace at the time of its glamorous opening on March 11, 1927 .
During the twinkling Twenties Dr. Parmentier played in company with such musical greats as Dr. Melchiore Mauro-Cottone, Paul Whiteman, Eugene Ormandy (later famous as conductor of Minneapolis and Philadelphia Symphony 0rchestras) and Dr. Frank Black, who later became Musical Director of the National Broadcasting Company.
Concert organ recitals at the Welte-Mignon studios, at Town Hall, Carnegie Hall, Wanamaker Auditorium, St. Patrick's Cathedral, and the Waldorf-Astoria in New York City, and at the Greenbrier Hotel in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, also occupied Dr. Parmentier. In 1932 he began a series of organ recitals carried by Columbia Broadcasting System.
December 28, 1932 saw the opening of Radio City Music Hall, largest theater in the world, with C.A.J. Parmentier and Dick Leibert presiding at the twin consoles. Parmentier was organist at the Music Hall and at the Center Theater, also part of the Radio City Complex, for ten years and was staff Organist for the National Broadcasting Company.
During his long and varied career C.A.J. Parmentier has played for presidents and kings, heads of state and churches, foreign dignitaries and world leaders. He has played for and represenled major organ manufacturers, and has found time to teach, to arrange, and to compose. Some of Parmentier's published compositions include Adoration, Sunset in Damascus, Pastorale, Desert Caravan, and Supplication.
Dr. Parmentier continues as Organist at the world-famous Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, and also appears frequently at important functions at the Americana Hotel, N.Y. Hilton and Plaza Hotels.
To Anthony Baglivi, and to Rollin Smith . . many thanks for their invaluable assistance.
Biography and Program Notes by Mary and Alvin Stone.
Civil War Homecoming
The year 1865 saw inauguration, abolition, armistice, assassination, grief, celebration, and reunion. The brand new state of Minnesota mourned and commemorated along with the rest of the nation.
A live stage show featuring Dan Chouinard, Beth Gilleland, Dane Stauffer, Kevin Kling, Maria Jette, T. Mychael Rambo, Prudence Johnson, members of the Roe Family Singers, and the Brass Messengers as well as Eric Jacobson, Annette Atkins, Gwen Westerman, Mark Ritchie, Dean Urdahl, Patricia Bauer, and David Geister.
ACT I
0:00:00 Opening sequence: Randal Dietrich & Stephen Smith
0:01:20 Music: The Vacant Chair
0:04:00 Welcome: Dan Chouinard
0:05:30 Lincoln’s 2nd Inaugural (part 1 of 2): Dean Urdahl
0:07:30 Music: Weeping Sad & Lonely
0:10:00 Civil War literature: Dan Chouinard
0:10:30 Bowlers: Beth Gilleland & Dane Stauffer
0:13:25 Christie Brothers: Mark Ritchie & Kevin Kling
0:16:00 1861-1864: Eric Jacobson
0:23:00 Gettysburg: Kevin Kling
0:27:30 Music: Brother Green
0:29:30 Civil War Music: Dan Chouinard
0:31:30 Music: Battle Cry of Freedom
0:32:20 1865: Dan Chouinard
0:32:50 Music: Home for Me
0:35:50 13th Amendment: Dan Chouinard
0:38:40 Lincoln’s 2nd Inaugural (part 2 of 2): Dean Urdahl
0:40:20 Frederick Douglass: T. Mychael Rambo
0:42:00 Music: True Lover’s Fairwell
0:42:45 Bowlers: Beth Gilleland & Dane Stauffer
0:46:20 Lee’s Surrender/Fall of Richmond: Pat Bauer
0:47:15 Music: Dixie
0:48:00 Lincoln’s assassination: Dan Chouinard
0:51:50 LeDuc: Pat Bauer & David Geister
0:53:17 Funeral Train: Dan Chouinard
0:56:00 Grand Review: Dan Chouinard
0:56:50 Christie Brothers: Mark Ritchie & Kevin Kling
0:58:50 Music: Down by the Riverside
1:00:55 Intermission: Stephen Smith, Shari Lamke, Randal Dietrich
ACT II
1:02:00 Shall We Gather At the River
1:03:40 Homecomings: Mark Ritchie & Kevin Kling & Dan Chouinard
1:07:05 Music: Home Sweet Home
1:08:30 Music: Maiden in the Garden
1:10:45 Civil War Veterans: Dan Chouinard
1:12:30 Bowlers: Beth Gilleland & Dane Stauffer
1:14:45 MN & the Civil War: Annette Atkins
1:19:30 Blacks in MN: Dan Chouinard & T. Mychael Rambo
1:22:00 Music: I’ll Overcome Someday
1:25:00 Native People: Gwen Westerman
1:31:45 War’s Legacy: Eric Jacobson
1:38:50 Litany of stories
1:44:50 Angel Band
1:47:20 Civil War in our Midst
1:52:20 Music: Jacob’s Ladder
1:55:40 Closing Comments & Credits
Communities at Risk: End Mountaintop Removal Now
Mountaintop removal coal mining wrecks the land, poisons the water, and kills people. But it's still happening. Appalachians are determined to revive their economy and create a healthy future. Join us today.
A. Scott Berg in Conversation with Gary Giddins
Gary Giddins interviews the biographer A. Scott Berg, author of Max Perkins: Editor of Genius (winner of the National Book Award), Goldwyn: A Biography, Lindbergh (winner of the Pulitzer Prize), Kate Remembered, and, most recently, Wilson.
Mary Surratt
Mary Elizabeth Jenkins Surratt (1820 or May 1823 – July 7, 1865) was an American boarding house owner who was convicted of taking part in the conspiracy to assassinate President Abraham Lincoln. Sentenced to death, she was hanged, becoming the first white woman executed by the United States federal government. Surratt was the mother of John H. Surratt, Jr., who was later tried but was not convicted of involvement in the assassination.
This video is targeted to blind users.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
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T. S. Eliot Murder in the Cathedral (part 10)
This is a vinyl rip of the two-disc recording on Caedmon Records [TRS-330; LC R68-3173]
PAUL SCOFIELD . . . . . Archbishop Thomas Becket
CYRIL CUSAK . . . . . . First Priest
JULIAN GLOVER . . . . . Second Priest
MICHAEL GWYNN . . . . . Third Priest
ALEC McCOWEN . . . . . First Tempter
GEOFFREY DUNN . . . . . Second Tempter
ANTHONY NICHOLLS . . . Third Tempter
PATRICK MAGEE . . . . . Fourth Tempter
HARRY ANDREWS . . . . . First Knight
DOUGLAS WILMER . . . . . Second Knight
JAMES HAYTER . . . . . .Third Knight
MICHAEL ALDRIDGE . . . . Fourth Knight
Chorus of Women
CATHLEEN NESBITT
GLENDA JACKSON
WENDY HILLER
JUNE JAGO
Messenger
STEPHEN MOORE
Directed by HOWARD SACKLER
The Art and Literature of the Great War
David Gariff, senior lecturer, National Gallery of Art.
The First World War, known as the Great War, was also the first modern war, claiming millions of lives, in part, by newly invented weapons such as the machine gun, tank, aircraft, and poison gas. The arts of the period present a portrait of the terrible price paid by humanity—the carnage and suffering caused by the war were documented in paintings, sculptures, novels, memoirs, and poems produced both during, and immediately after, the struggle. In this presentation on March 27, 2019, senior lecturer David Gariff explores the responses of artists and writers to the trauma of the First World War, which transcended national boundaries. Paintings, sculptures, and prints by Otto Dix, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Käthe Kollwitz, Fernand Léger, John Singer Sargent, and Natalija Goncharova; poems by Siegfried Sassoon, Wilfred Owen, and Anna Akhmatova; and memoirs and novels by Ernest Hemingway, Erich Maria Remarque, and Robert Graves are discussed against the backdrop of “the war to end all wars.”
High School Quiz Show | Interstate Invitational Semifinal #2 | Maine vs. New Hampshire
Welcome to the second semifinal match of the High School Quiz Show Interstate Invitational! The winner of High School Quiz Show: Maine (Greely High School) takes on the winner of New Hampshire PBS' Granite State Challenge (Plymouth Regional High School) in a battle for the last spot in the Invitational Finals!
Who will move on for a chance at being crowned Interstate Champion? Tune in and find out!
The Interstate Invitational Finale airs May 25th at 6:00pm on WGBH 2!
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Toss-up Round: 2:30
Meet the Teams: 9:41
Head-to-Head: 11:32
Category Round: 13:51
Lightning Round: 22:59
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Rambo: Last Blood (2019 Movie) Teaser Trailer— Sylvester Stallone
Rambo: Last Blood— In theaters September 20, 2019. Sylvester Stallone, Paz Vega, Sergio Peris-Mencheta, Adriana Barraza, Yvette Monreal, Genie Kim aka Yenah Han, Joaquin Cosio, and Oscar Jaenada.
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#Rambo
Almost four decades after he drew first blood, Sylvester Stallone is back as one of the greatest action heroes of all time, John Rambo. Now, Rambo must confront his past and unearth his ruthless combat skills to exact revenge in a final mission. A deadly journey of vengeance, RAMBO: LAST BLOOD marks the last chapter of the legendary series.
Lionsgate in association with Millennium Media presents, a Millennium Media Balboa Productions and Templeton Media production, in association with Campbell Grobman Films, and in association with Dadi Film (HK) Limited.
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
Clark Terry Interview by Joe Williams - 5/19/1995 - Clinton, NY
Joe Williams joins Clark Terry in a conversation that includes stories about the segregated military, being assaulted after a performance with a southern carnival, leaving Basie for Duke Ellington and the three ations.
Use of these materials by other parties is subject to the fair use doctrine in United States copyright law (Title 17, Chapter 1, para. 107) which allows use for commentary, criticism, news reporting, research, teaching or scholarship without requiring permission from the rights holder. Any use that does not fall within fair use must be cleared with the rights holder. For assistance, please contact the Fillius Jazz Archive, Hamilton College, 198 College Hill Road, Clinton, NY 13323.
Visit the Fillius Jazz Archive Website
FAMOUS GRAVE TOUR - Calvary #1 (John Barrymore, Lou Costello, etc.)
Welcome to Hollywood Graveyard, where we set out to remember and celebrate the lives of those who lived to entertain us, by visiting their final resting places. Today we're exploring Calvary Cemetery, where we'll find the Barrymores, Lou Costello, Mabel Normand, and many more.
Full list of stars visited today: Lionel Barrymore, Irene Fenwick, John Barrymore, Lou Costello, Mary Philbin, Jimmy McHugh, Vivian Edwards, Bryan Foy, Sol Polito, Ethel Barrymore, Pola Negri, Eddie Gribbon, Irene Dunne, Mabel Normand, John Hodiak, Peggy O'Neill.
Special thanks to our Patreon supporters, who make these videos possible: Janet Elliott, MJS82195, Jae Etchell, Ren, Christy, Sean Leeds, Michele Kotick, Paul Hunn.
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Map of this tour:
Arthur's Book ZOMBIE JUNIOR:
Written & Produced by Arthur Dark
Music by Giuseppe Vasapolli
Jingle Bells arranged by Arthur Dark & Giuseppe Vasapolli.
Special thanks to Jessica Keaton of Silence is Platinum
Disclaimer: Tour videos are independently produced, and are not endorsed by the respective cemetery. When visiting a cemetery, do so only during regular visiting hours, take only pictures, and leave only approved grave offerings. Be courteous and respectful of both the living and the dead. In deference to families of those profiled herein, any requests to remove profiles by family members of the individual will be honored.
Profile images courtesy of: DoctorMacro.com, Wikimedia Commons, public domain searches, and fair use promotional material.
Copyright: Short excerpts of media featured in this video are copyright of their respective owners, and are used herein for commentary and reference under fair use. Please contact us with any copyright concerns if you feel the use of your property does not meet the conditions of fair use, we'll be happy to comply. Famous Grave Tour videos copyright Hollywood Graveyard. Music copyright Giuseppe Vasapolli.
91st Academy Awards (2019 Oscars) FULL SHOW
#oscars2019 #fullshow #nohost
Hearing: Federal Government Must Study Health Impact of Mountaintop Removal Mining
A Congressional hearing this morning focused in part on efforts by Congressman John Yarmuth (KY-3) and others to study the health consequences of mountaintop removal coal mining.
Displaying a bottle of contaminated water from the well of the Urias family in Eastern Kentucky, Yarmuth questioned Dr. Matthew Wasson, director of programs for Appalachian Voices, about the need for such a study. The hearing took place in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce's Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy.
They don't need a website in their community to know there's a health problem associated with that water, Yarmuth said of those who live near mountaintop removal mining sites. If that were the drinking water here in Congress, we not only wouldn't drink it -- we would not stand for it.
Despite more than 20 peer-reviewed studies showing correlations between increased health risks and mountaintop removal mining, the federal government has yet to conduct a single study on the health consequences of the practice, in which coal operators use heavy machinery and explosives to remove upper levels of mountains and access coal seams beneath. These operations often result in contamination of surrounding land and water supplies.
This Congress, Yarmuth introduced H.R. 526, the Appalachian Community Health Emergency (ACHE) Act, which would halt permits for mountaintop removal mining operations until the federal government can study its health impacts on nearby communities and declare the practice safe.
According to recent peer-reviewed research, people living near mountaintop removal coal mining sites have increased rates of cancer, birth defects, and mortality. Additionally, an analysis in the journal Science found communities near mountaintop removal coal mining sites experience higher rates of chronic heart, lung, and kidney disease, as well as higher levels of adult hospitalizations for chronic pulmonary disorders and hypertension.