Long Beach Step Show 2018
On Saturday April 14, 2017 the National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) of California State University Long Beach will host the 25th Annual Long Beach Step Show in the Walter Pyramid. Fraternity and sorority members from throughout California, Nevada, Arizona,
Washington, and as far as New York come to Long Beach to attend what has been one of the largest student produced step shows in the Western United States. This event has been able to attract over 4,000 spectators. Associated Student, Incorporated has funded
the step show to help celebrate the 25th anniversary.
FIVB World Grand Prix USA vs Japan: Sights and Sounds
A behind the scenes look, including an interview with USA women's volleyball coach Karch Kiraly, after USA's 25-16, 25-23, 25-21 sweep of Japan at the Walter Pyramid in Long Beach.
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RCC Men’s Basketball vs. Long Beach City
Riverside City College athletics is located in the heart of Riverside, CA. RCC supports 19 intercollegiate athletic sports that consistently rank among the best in California and the nation. Follow RCC Athletics on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook! (@rcc_athletics).
USA Men's Volleyball World League vs. Puerto Rico, Game One
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CSULB Golden Grad Event
California State University, Long Beach has begun a new tradition for a very special group of our alumni… our golden graduates! These alumni graduated 50 or more years ago and helped build the foundation of what our university has become today. We hope you enjoy perusing this site as we honor our golden graduates and celebrate the history of Long Beach State College.
US Sumo Open 2016 - Womens Heavyweight - Beth (USA) vs Natalie (USA)
Round: Womens Heavyweight Tournament
Gender: Womens
Division: Heavyweight Divison (Over 80kg / 176lbs+)
Results
1st: Natalie Burns (USA)
2nd: Kaitlyn Mascher (USA)
3rd: Beth Martin (USA)
[US Sumo INFO]
US Sumo Open 2016 (16th Annual)
Date: SATURDAY, MAY 21, 2016
Location: Walter Pyramid @ Cal State Long Beach
Nearly 60 competitors from all over the world will square off in 150+ matches!
Dozens of past and current national and world champions from USA, Norway, German, Belgium, Poland, Russia, Egypt, Uzbekistan, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, and Japan are signed up to compete.
Last year's heroes are returning. From 2007-2014, Byamba / Ulambayar Byambajav (the 4-time World Sumo Champion) won US Sumo Open gold — for 8 years in a row!
Egyptian behemoth Ramy Elgazar grabbed the heavyweight gold, with a shocking victory over Byamba. Can he do it again?
The openweight class showcases real sumo skill, with 150-pounders facing 500-pound opponents. You’ll see that it takes more than size alone to win!
The US Sumo Open will be held for the 3rd year in a row at the Walter Pyramid, a dynamic venue with great views from all angles, and the largest big screen in ALL of college sports, nationwide, so you’ll catch instant replays and sumo videos throughout the tournament!
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Hydro: Power to Make the American Dream Come True (1939)
This was the first film created by BPA's Motion Picture Information Division. In the style of the dramatic, poetic and symphonic Depression-era documentaries (e.g., The River, The Plow that Broke the Plains), Hydro was made to educate the people of the Pacific Northwest about the benefits of the Columbia River system. It was written and produced by Stephen Kahn, BPA information officer, narrated by Phil Irwin and scored by William Lava, who later composed many cartoons and television shows. The musical score was performed by the Los Angeles Symphony, which was formed out of the Work Progress Administration's Federal Music Project. Learn about other BPA films at: bpa.gov/goto/Films.
Richard Nixon And The Rise Of The Environment
April 22, 2010: A discussion of how the Nixon Administration met the goals of the original Earth Day demonstrations of 1970. Participants included Christopher DeMuth, former Staff Assistant to the President working on environmental issues; William Ruckelshaus, first Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency; and John Whitaker, Associate Director of the White House Domestic Council for Energy, Environment, and Natural Resources.
The Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum
Situated on nine rolling acres in Yorba Linda, California, the Richard Nixon Presidential Library & Museum offers visitors an insider’s glimpse into the events, people and world that shaped, and were shaped by, the 37th President.
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Poverty: What did Jesus Preach? What does the Church Teach?
Poverty: What did Jesus Preach?
What does the Church Teach?
LECTURE
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Living Faith in Our Social Context -
A Church of and for the Poor -
September 23, 2014
Presenter: Kenneth Himes, O.F.M.
From the first century through today, the Christian community has wrestled with the realities of the poor among us. Be it material or spiritual, voluntary or involuntary, relative or absolute poverty, many have argued that to be human is to be poor. This lecture explores how compassion for the poor reflects an acceptance of our own humanity and that of others, and is ultimately a key element of our journey to know Christ.
Cosponsored by The Church in the 21st Century Center, the School of Theology and Ministry,
and the Boston College Theology Department
Kenneth Himes, O.F.M., is associate professor of theology in the Boston College Theology Department. A Franciscan priest and moral theologian, he is the author of Christianity and the Political Order: Conflict, Cooptation, and Cooperation (Orbis Books, 2013), and Responses to 101 Questions on Catholic Social Teaching (Paulist Press, 2013).
2014 CSULB Legacy Lecture - Don Para
Donald J. Para’s childhood passion for music composition led him to the once humble doorsteps of the music department at CSULB nearly 26 years ago. On Thursday, Oct. 9, Para returned to campus to deliver the prestigious Legacy Lecture at The Pointe in the Walter Pyramid.
Before retiring from the university in July 2014, Para had composed not only musical notes on a page, but he also orchestrated an extraordinary legacy for the entire university through the expansion of the College of the Arts, the creation of the Bob Cole Conservatory of Music and his passionate promotion of student artists. His dedication to serving others personifies the true meaning of a servant leader.
“It is an honor to be asked to give a Legacy Lecture,” said Para. “Delivering this particular lecture is especially meaningful to me because its part of program that recognizes all faculty who have recently retired from the university.”
While at CSULB, Para’s ascended from serving as chair of the Music Department, to dean of the College of the Arts, to provost and ultimately as interim president until he retired. He raised more than $30 million for the university and developed a joint MBA/MFA in theater management degree. Para provided academic leadership for the university and promoted excellence in all aspects of the campus’ academic mission, including undergraduate and graduate education, research and creative activity, international education, service learning, community engagement, service to the profession and faculty and staff development.
Established in 1992, the Legacy Lecture is an opportunity for university professors to address the campus as if it were their last lecture. Legacy lecturers are known to share their reflections and core values as educators.
Illuminati The Rothschild Bloodline Financial Wizzards & Wealthy Cults
Illuminati - The Rothschild Bloodline Financial Wizzards & Wealthy Cults
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Preserving Public Broadcasting at 50 Years
The Library of Congress and Boston's WGBH celebrated the 50th anniversary of the passage of the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 with a series of panels featuring pioneers and experts in public broadcasting. The symposium included discussions on news and public affairs talk shows, documentaries and educational uses of public broadcasting. Speakers included Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden, Letitia King, Jon Abbott, Newton Minow, Cokie Roberts, Nicholas Johnson, Bill Siemering, Henry Becton, Judy Woodruff, Jim Lehrer, Sharon Percy Rockefeller, Dick Cavett, Hugo Morales, Patricia Aufderheide, Clayborne Carson, David Fanning, Margaret Drain, Stephen Gong, Jennifer Lawson, Paula Apsell, Lloyd Morrisett and Kathryn Ostrofsky.
For transcript and more information, visit
Alex Jones: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO)
Alex Jones is known for pushing conspiracy theories, but he also spends a lot of time promoting his own products. John Oliver and a “doctor” “from” M.I.T. test out his marketing strategy.
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The Wolf of Wall Street Official Trailer
From Academy Award winning director Martin Scorsese comes The Wolf of Wall Street, starring Leonardo DiCaprio.
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PBS NewsHour Weekend full episode August 10, 2019
On this edition for Saturday, August 10, the latest on the death of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Also, LGBTQ asylum seekers are often lost in the immigration debate, and a look at whether employers in Mississippi’s ICE raids will be prosecuted. Hari Sreenivasan anchors from New York.
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President Obama Delivers Address at 2014 West Point Commencement
President Barack Obama delivers remarks at the 2014 West Point Commencement in West Point, NY on May 28, 2014. A transcript is available at
Jeffrey Kluger: Apollo 8 | Talks at Google
Jeffrey Kluger is the author of several books including Apollo 13 originally published as Lost Moon, co-authored with Jim Lovell, and The Sibling Effect. He has been a science editor and senior writer for Time, for more than two decades, and he has written more than forty cover stories for the magazine. He lives in New York City.
In August 1968, NASA made a bold decision: in just sixteen weeks, the United States would launch humankind’s first flight to the moon. Only the year before, three astronauts had burned to death in their spacecraft, and since then the Apollo program had suffered one setback after another. That Christmas Eve, a nation that had suffered a horrendous year of assassinations and war was heartened by an inspiring message from the trio of astronauts in lunar orbit. After the first view of the far side of the moon, the first earth-rise, and the first re-entry through the earth’s atmosphere following a flight to deep space—the impossible dream of walking on the moon suddenly seemed within reach.
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Monuments at Gettysburg - Context and Beyond (Lecture)
Ranger Troy Harman takes the blinders off, explaining the layered meanings behind the monuments of Gettysburg National Military Park in his winter lecture. Monuments discussed include the Pennsylvania Memorial, the 26th North Carolina monument on Cemetery Ridge, and the Eternal Light Peace Memorial.
Bolch Prize 2019 | Anthony M. Kennedy
Retired United States Supreme Court Justice Anthony M. Kennedy received the inaugural Bolch Prize for the Rule of Law on April 11, 2019, during a ceremony with Duke Law alumni and leaders from the North Carolina judiciary and legal community. Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel A. Alito, Judge Allyson K. Duncan of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and Bolch Judicial Institute Director David F. Levi were among the speakers.
The Bolch Prize, given annually by the Bolch Judicial Institute, honors individuals or entities who have distinguished themselves in the preservation or advancement of the rule of law. It is a central component of the Institute’s mission to support and further the rule of law in the United States and around the world. By honoring those who do this work, the Bolch Prize draws attention to the ideals of justice and judicial independence and to the constitutional structures and safeguards that undergird a free society. The recipient is selected by the Advisory Board of the Bolch Judicial Institute.
Originally recorded on April 11, 2019 at Duke Law School.
This Week in South Florida: Dec. 9 (Full Episode)
On This is Week in South Florida, host Michael Putney sits down with Miami Herald investigative reporter Julie K. Brown, criminal defense attorney David Markus and former U.S. Attorney Kendall Coffey to discuss the case of Jeffrey Epstein.