Jocko Podcast 149 with Jim and James Webb: Fields Of Fire. US Marine Corps
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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.
Contemporary African Immigrants in the United States
An afternoon conference on the role of contemporary African immigrants in the United States.
Speaker Biography: Abdul Karim Bangura is researcher-in-residence of Abrahamic connections and Islamic peace studies at the Center for Global Peace in the School of International Service at American University and the director of the African Institution, both in Washington, D.C.
Speaker Biography: Nemata Blyden is associate Professor of history and international affairs and interim director of the Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program at George Washington University.
Speaker Biography: Kenneth Harrow is distinguished professor of English, African literature and cinema at Michigan State University.
Speaker Biography: Moses Ochonu is a professor of history at Vanderbilt University.
For transcript and more information, visit
Lowell City Council City Auditor Interviews - 8/12/2019
Watch Live: Brett Kavanaugh, Christine Blasey Ford Testify At Senate Hearing | NBC News
Watch live as Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault while they were teenagers, testify separately before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
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Watch Live: Brett Kavanaugh, Christine Blasey Ford Testify At Senate Hearing | NBC News
Help on the Homefront - Tornado Relief Telethon
WTVP hosted a TORNADO RELIEF TELETHON on Wednesday, Nov. 20th, 2013 from 7-10:30pm. All monies raised go directly to the American Red Cross - Central Illinois Chapter for disaster relief here in our affected communities. The broadcast originated from the WTVP Studio, and all our fellow local TV stations aired and participated in this special event: WEEK, WHOI, WMBD, WYZZ and WAOE.
To donate to the Red Cross Illinois Tornado Relief Effort call:
Central Illinois Chapter of the Red Cross phone number:
(309) 677-7272
The Red Cross regrets to say that web and text donations are not an option if you want your money to stay local.
EKU Fall Convocation 2015
President Michael T. Benson welcomes back faculty and staff for the beginning of the 2015-16 academic year.
Vision & Justice | Friday | Part I || Radcliffe Institute
FRIDAY, APRIL 26
“Vision & Justice: A Convening” considered the role of the arts in understanding the nexus of art, race, and justice. Wynton Marsalis opened the morning session on Friday, April 26, with a musical performance. Later that morning, discussions covered a range of topics: representation in civic spaces, the “adultification” of black girls, the Flint water crisis, and more.
MORNING SESSION: Sanders Theatre
Welcome Remarks: Alan M. Garber (0:01)
Darren Walker (6:53)
Sarah Lewis (13:29)
Video by Lance Oppenheim (19:40)
Musical Opening
Wynton Marsalis, Dan Nimmer, Taurien (TJ) Reddick, and Phillip Norris (30:30)
Cultural Citizenship
Wynton Marsalis, Diane Paulus, and President Emerita Drew Gilpin Faust (41:44)
Race, Culture, and Civic Space
Introduction: Mohsen Mostafavi (1:15:20)
David Adjaye, Theaster Gates, and Sarah Lewis (1:23:44)
Tribute to LaToya Ruby Frazier
Teju Cole (1:49:02)
Video by LaToya Ruby Frazier (1:56:53)
Race, Justice, and the Environment
Focus: Discovering the Flint crisis
Introduction: Sarah Lewis (2:00:59)
Chelsea Clinton and Mona Hanna-Attisha (2:03:50)
Race, Childhood, and Inequality in the Political Realm
Introduction: Claudine Gay (2:29:13)
Robin Bernstein, Yara Shahidi, and Naomi Wadler (2:36:18)
For detailed biographical information on the participants, visit
For information about the Radcliffe Institute and its many public programs, visit
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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
Live English Lesson - Sunday 2nd July 2017 - Learn English with Mr Duncan in England
Learn English Live - Live English Lesson - 2nd July 2017. I have terrible hay fever today. It is the peak of the hay fever season. Still let's look on the bright side...the weather is gorgeous! We will talk about holidays today. Are you going to take a holiday somewhere? Another question - how much sleep do you get? The mystery idioms and some flash words will also be on today. Plus your live chat and the super chat for your donations.
Misterduncan's PLAYLISTS - on youtube.com/duncaninchina
Ask Misterduncan -
Lessons 1 to 91-
Full English -
English Topic -
WORD STOP -
May days -
Dunctober -
December drop in -
Xmas lessons -
LIVE STREAMS -
My life in China and England -
Other English lessons -
Session 1: Religion and Politics, 1920-1970
For more on this event, visit:
For more on the Berkley Center, visit:
November 22, 2019 | Religion remains central to life in Mexico and Mexican America. Religious understandings and goals inform and energize politics, community lives, gender relations, migration, and more. Yet there is no singular Mexican religion; rather, a universe of visions and understandings shape the changing communities of Mexico and Mexican America. The powerful and the populace, rural peoples and the growing numbers streaming into cities across greater North America live in worlds defined and at times contested by religious commitments.
This event engaged with diverse analysts to discuss religion in Mexico and Mexican America during decades of change—from the debates of the 1920s to the challenges of our times.
This event was co-sponsored by the Mexican Cultural Institute of Washington DC, Catholic University of America, and Georgetown University's Americas Initiative, Center for Latin American Studies, and its Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs.