Containment Breach at Museum of Intrigue in Destiny USA Syracuse NY
This one of a kind Museum of Intrigue is a real gem at Destiny USA. With so many amazing adventures to go on, coupled with an enthusiastic staff. Not to mention the awesome props most of which are custom made. Well worth a visit or several visits.
Riding the Wall of Death
Kerri Cameron is a motorcycle stuntwoman from the United Kingdom who rides on Luke Fox's original Wall of Death. What is the Wall of Death? It’s a nearly vertical, circle-shaped track that most riders would consider insane. Before she was a Wall of Death rider, Cameron rode horses for a living. Today, she performs dangerous stunts with grace and keeps an adrenalin-pumping tradition alive.
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Great Big Story is a video network dedicated to the untold, overlooked & flat-out amazing. Humans are capable of incredible things & we're here to tell their stories. When a rocket lands in your backyard, you get in.
Several arrested in undercover raid at adult bookstore
Eleven men were arrested and charged with indecent exposure in an undercover bust at a Cocoa Beach sex shop. Subscribe to WESH on YouTube now for more:
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United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
United States Presidents and The Illuminati Masonic Power Structure
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David Kwong: The Enigmatist Builds a Puzzle | Talks at Google
David Kwong constructed the NY Times crossword puzzle for Sunday, 17 February. In this talk, David reflects on how he constructed the puzzle, and discusses some of his favorite NY Times puzzles. He also provides a glimpse into the world he describes in his compelling show, The Enigmatist, now playing at the High Line Hotel. The show is an immersive theatrical event where theatergoers experience a mysterious world that blends illusion with custom-made riddles and puzzles.
David Kwong is a magician and cruciverbalist (crossword constructor) who mixes puzzles and prestidigitation. Kwong was the head magic consultant on the worldwide hit film Now You See Me and is the secret code consultant for NBC’s Blindspot. A TED Talk favorite, Kwong recently published Spellbound: Seven Principles of Illusion (HarperCollins), which breaks down the neuroscience of how your brain is fooled.
Moderated by Tom Smith.
WHDH-TV Bozo the Clown 1966
Boston's original Channel 5, WHDH-TV, produced a local, weekday version of the Bozo the Clown children's program between 1959 and 1970. Booth announcer Frank Avruch played the title role. These excerpts are from a 1966 broadcast.
Episodes videotaped at WHDH between 1965 and '67 were syndicated to markets that did not produce a local version of the show.
All rights are acknowledged.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
* Recollections from former WHDH-TV employee Ron Hopkins via tvdvdreviews:
I worked in the Music Dept. of WHDH-TV/Channel 5 in the 1960s. Ed Carroll Spinney was Grandma Nellie, Mr. Lion and Kookie Kangaroo, along with a few others. Del Grosso was Clank the Robot. The reason for each playing more than one character was that it gave the show more variety and allowed them to work several days a week.
During the Holiday Season, those of us in the Music Dept. would wear the costumes of the characters so that they could appear all on the same show. Ed Spinney would do the voice of each character off camera.
When Frank Avruch was sick or injured - he broke his hip playing handball - Romper Room's Miss Jean's husband Bill Harrington would play Bozo's brother Nozo.
Ed Spinney went on to become Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch on Sesame Street.
Biggest Corporate Scandals in History Documentary
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In the age of big business, it seems that everyone is looking for ways to make more money, acquire more power, and be more successful. However, from start-up companies to corporate empires that stretch back centuries, the temptations of greed and power often lead to #corruption, fraud, unfair business practices, loophole-hunting, and even murder.
Tales Out of School: What Six Years in Congress Taught me About Political Representation
Richard Hanna | Former U.S. Representative (R-NY22) | April 6, 2017
Former Congressman Richard Hanna reflects on his time in Congress and the nature of American representative democracy. Hanna often bucked his party in the House, and has some interesting reflections on his experiences.
Unsolved Mysteries with Robert Stack - Season 5, Episode 11 - Full Episode
This episode includes: Polio & UD, Missing Gringo, UD: Lucky Lost Love, Poison Shake & UD and UD: Goldie's Girl.
63rd Economic Conference (Part 1)
8:30 am
Welcome and Opening Remarks
Eric S. Rosengren
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Morning Moderator
Jeffrey P. Thompson
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor
Director, New England Public Policy Center
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
9:00 am
Recent Employment Growth in Cities, Suburbs, and Rural Communities
Economists have long studied persistent differences in labor market conditions across locations: urban versus rural, center-city versus suburbs, and large versus small cities. Have these labor market patterns changed during the past two decades? If so, what factors drove these changes: industrial shifts, differences in transportation infrastructure and lifestyle amenities, growing production externalities, or something else? Which level of geographic granularity is most relevant for policymakers who evaluate employment patterns: the state, city, or neighborhood level? And how do recent differences in employment growth relate to the regional rise in income inequality over time?
Authors
Benjamin K. Couillard
Senior Research Assistant
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Christopher L. Foote
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Discussant
Edward L. Glaeser
Fred and Eleanor Glimp Professor of Economics
Harvard University
10:15 am
Break
10:45 am
Rethinking Regional Responses to Economic Shocks
Economists have traditionally downplayed the importance of regional economic shocks. The lasting consequences of these shocks were thought to be small, as economists have assumed that residents living in adversely affected areas are free to migrate to places with better economic prospects. Recently, however, this sanguine view of regional shocks has been called into question. Why do some recent shocks—particularly those induced by trade—appear to have long-lasting effects on some communities? And should we expect future economic shocks to result in similar outcomes?
Authors
Katheryn N. Russ
Associate Professor of Economics
University of California, Davis
Jay C. Shambaugh
Director, The Hamilton Project & Senior Fellow, Economic Studies
Brookings Institution
Professor of Economics, Elliott School of International Affairs
George Washington University
Discussant
David H. Autor
Ford Professor of Economics
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
12:00 pm
Luncheon
Yelawolf - Till It’s Gone (Official Music Video)
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Heidegger’s Black Notebooks: A Conference – Film Screening & Discussion
The two-day conference Heidegger’s Black Notebooks (September 11 & 12, 2014) focused on the philosopher’s late and unambiguously pro-Nazi writings, which may very well represent a point of no return for Heidegger scholarship. Here is the panel discussion following a screening of Only a God Can Save Us—a documentary on Heidegger’s philosophy and his relationship to Nazism. Panelists included Richard Wolin of the Graduate Center; Jeffrey Van Davis, director of the film; Emmanuel Faye, University of Rouen; Karsten Harries, Yale University; and Thomas Sheehan, Stanford University.
Twelve Years a Slave by Solomon Northup | Full Audiobook with subtitles
Twelve Years a Slave
Solomon NORTHUP
Twelve Years a Slave is the memoir of a freeborn African American from New York who is kidnapped and sold into slavery. After being held for twelve years on a Louisiana plantation, he is eventually freed and reunited with his family. (Summary by RobBoard)
Genre(s): Memoirs Audio Book Audiobooks All Rights Reserved. This is a Librivox recording. All Librivox recordings are in the public domain. For more information or to volunteer visit librivox.org.
Cambridge Talks X | Bound and Unbound: The Sites of Utopia Keynote Lecture
4/15/16
In the five hundred years since the publication of Thomas More’s Of A Republic’s Best State and of the New Island of Utopia (1516), the project of imagining an ideal society has emerged as simultaneously regenerative and devastating on multiple fronts: for the concept of the polity, for the composition of social fabrics, and, most relevant from the vantage of the design disciplines, for the formation of buildings, cities, and territories. This year’s Cambridge Talks, now in its tenth edition, aims to provide a spectrum of exemplary instances of utopia’s modern guise.
In the main conference panels, we bring together speakers to address the rivalry between those utopian endeavors that organize space mainly through social relations and production, and those whose expansive impulse searches out some form of technical mastery over spatial configuration. In other words, utopia can be understood as either embodied or totalizing, bound or unbound. By taking examples from the 19th and 20th centuries, the case studies presented here—from communes and plantations to infrastructural projects and global ecologies—exhibit various attempts to imagine social conditions alongside spatial ones. A concluding discussion will touch upon the philosophical and theoretical ramifications of utopia today.
April 14, 3 PM – 6 PM
PhD Colloquium
Respondents:
Ana Miljački, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Sonja Dümpelmann, Harvard University
April 15, 9 AM – 5 PM
Panel 1: Embodied Utopia
Luis Casteñeda, Syracuse University
Joyce Chaplin, Harvard University
Erika Naginski, Harvard University
Respondent: Catherine Ingraham, Pratt Institute
Panel 2: Total Utopia
Daniel Barber, University of Pennsylvania
Sara Pritchard, Cornell Univesity
Abby Spinak, Charles Warren Center, Harvard University
Respondent: John May, Harvard University
Keynote Lecture
Damian White, Rhode Island School of Design
Discussants: K. Michael Hays and Neil Brenner, Harvard University
Beta-Real Symposium
March 23, 2018 in Slocum Hall at Syracuse University.
Harry der Boghosian Symposium
A diverse group of seven thinkers and makers explores the philosophical turn away from singular, knowable, stable, and metaphysical absolutes, towards a multitude of experiential, ambivalent, shared realities. Such ambivalent and unstable states have come increasingly to characterize our shared reality—from sites of contested memory and amnesia, to economic and identity politics in a globalized age of displacement, to scientific and technological revolutions.
The Beta-Real names a search for alternative frameworks of understanding that might allow us to confront the contradictions of our contemporary reality. How we deal with these contradictions has social, cultural, and political implications—not only for architecture, humanities, science, society, and culture at large, but also for everyday life.
Participants discuss how architecture might address and negotiate these states of contradiction. Participants present their own designs and research and discuss in round-table format how they each confront and navigate the Beta-Real.
Participants:
Linda Zhang, Boghosian Fellow
Ani Liu, Artist and speculative technologist, New York, NY
Biko Mandela Gray, Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Syracuse University
Natalie Koerner, Ph.D. candidate, Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, Copenhagen, Denmark
Bryan E. Norwood, Ph.D. candidate in the history and theory of architecture, Harvard University; Visiting Assistant Professor, Mississippi State University School of Architecture
Irene Chin, Curatorial Coordinator, Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal, Canada
William Stewart, Ph.D. candidate, Princeton University Department of German
Yolandé Gouws, Artist, Berlin
100 Greatest American Stamps, Janet Klug and Donald Sundman, Maynard Sundman Lecture 2008
100 Greatest American Stamps presented by Janet Klug and Donald Sundman, The Sixth Annual Maynard Sundman Lecture, February 9, 2008, Smithsonian National Postal Museum. The museum's Maynard Sundman Lecture Series was established in 2002 through a donation by his sons, David and Donald. The Sundman lectures feature talks by authors and expert philatelists on stamps and stamp collecting.
View past Sundman lectures here:
An Evening with Joyce Carol Oates at Cornell University
Joyce Carol Oates read and discussed her newest fiction at Cornell University. Her latest work deals with issues of identity, alternate lives, and the evolution of personality.
Presented by Cornell's School of Continuing Education and Summer Sessions.
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Playwright and Director (Working In The Theatre #304)
Director and lyricist Martin Charnin (Annie); director and choreographer Graciela Daniele (Annie Get Your Gun); lyricist and book writers Rupert Holmes (Say Goodnight, Gracie) and Michael Kunze (Dance of the Vampires); and directors Marion McClinton (King Hedley II) and Lawrence Sacharow (Director of Fordham University Theatre Program) talk about the evolution of both play and musical writing in the United States today and the changes in directorial style and direction over the years.
Taped - September, 2002
An acclaimed fixture on New York television and in the theatre community for 30 years, the American Theatre Wing's Working in the Theatre offers an unprecedented forum for the meeting of theatrical minds.
American Theatre Wing’s Working in the Theatre documentary series features the most fascinating people on the stage, behind the scenes, and in the audience. From Tony Awards® and Obie Awards® winning artists to the next generation of theatre makers, we capture theatre’s inner-workings, industry luminaries, and unique stories that surround important work.
American Theatre Wing, founder of the Tony Awards® and home of and the Obie Awards®: for more information visit
Board of Regents Meeting November 13, 2019
Meeting at the University of Northern Iowa
27:30 - Property and Facilities Committee
59:05 - Campus and Student Affairs Committee
2:34:14 - Academic Affairs Committee
3:39:43 - Investment and Finance Committee
4:31:00 - Call to Order
4:31:46 - Audit and Compliance Committee
4:40:43 - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics Committee
5:30:27 - Public Comment
5:49:40 - Adjourn
Symposium: The U.S. Immigration Regime and the Politics of Belonging
On April 7, 2017, CSREA presented a symposium entitled, The U.S. Immigration Regime and the Politics of Belonging. How have immigration laws developed over the past century and how do these policies continue to affect the country today? For example, what are the legacies of IRCA and IRRIRA and how are these policies being amended and applied today?
Further, and in light of the Trump administration’s current positions on immigration, recent executive orders as well as public demonstrations and protests, what will define the future of immigration in the U.S.? This symposium featured a keynote lecture followed by a panel of speakers and a discussion among speakers and the audience. Together, the speaker and panelists offered a rich, informed and interdisciplinary take on the past, present and possible futures of the U.S. immigration regime, race, ethnicity and the politics of belonging.
Keynote:
0:14:40 – Bill Ong Hing, Professor, Director of the Immigration and Deportation Defense Clinic, and Dean's Circle Scholar, University of San Francisco, School of Law
Panel Discussion:
1:29:50 – Lilia Fernandez, Associate Professor, Latino and Caribbean Studies and History, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
1:54:00 – Laura Barraclough, Assistant Professor, American Studies and Ethnicity, Race, and Migration, Yale University
2:13:35 – Leah Perry, Assistant Professor, Cultural Studies, SUNY Empire State
Moderator:
Yalidy Matos, Presidential Postdoctoral Fellow, CSREA & Watson Institute