#Chris Drexel
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
ulkaralakbarova · 7 months ago
Text
Thirty years after serving together in the Vietnam War, Larry, Sal and Richard, reunite for a different type of mission: to bury Doc’s son, a young Marine killed in Iraq. Forgoing the burial, the trio take the casket on a bittersweet trip up the coast to New Hampshire – along the way, reminiscing and coming to terms with the shared memories of a war that continues to shape their lives. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Larry ‘Doc’ Shepherd: Steve Carell Sal Nealon: Bryan Cranston Reverend Richard Mueller: Laurence Fishburne Charlie Washington: J. Quinton Johnson Ruth Mueller: Deanna Reed-Foster Lieutenant Colonel Wilits: Yul Vazquez John Redman: Graham Wolfe O’Toole: Jeff Monahan DAFB Guard: Dontez James Mother (Irene): Tammy Tsai Angry Father: Richard Barlow Grieving Mother: Cathy O’Dell Rental Truck Employee: Jane Mowder Anorak: Richard Robichaux Raincoat: Jerry Lee Tucker Hyped-up Employee: Marc Moore Phone Shop Clerk: Kate Easton Mrs. Hightower: Cicely Tyson Front Desk Motel Employee: Sarah Silk Leland: Ted Watts Jr. Jamie: Lee Harrington Larry Jr. (voice): Samuel Davis Church Member (uncredited): Brian “Wolfman Black” Bowman Bar Patron (uncredited): Kelli Culbertson Train Passenger (uncredited): Chris Dettone Bar Patron (uncredited): Chris Drexel Bar Patron Guy in Booth (uncredited): Eric Frank Airmen / Morales (uncredited): Jason Gerrard Marine (uncredited): Adam Hicks J Tinsley Amtrak Baggage Handler (uncredited): John W. Iwanonkiw Cellphone Store Patron (uncredited): Daniel James Train Passenger Toting Gifts (uncredited): William Kania Train Passenger (uncredited): Trudi Kennedy Bar Patron (uncredited): Daniel Lamont Bar Patron (uncredited): James Lloyd Bar Patron (uncredited): Tiffany Sander McKenzie Angry Train Passenger (uncredited): Kelly L. Moran Train Passenger (uncredited): Christopher Nardizzi Bus Passenger (uncredited): Phil Nardozzi Mourner (uncredited): Rebecca Phipps Train Passenger (uncredited): Dwayne Pintoff Church Member (uncredited): Sofia Plass Driver (uncredited): Eric Rasmussen Senior Airman Morris (uncredited): Mario Ruiz Amtrak Passenger (uncredited): Brian E. Stead Train Passenger (uncredited): Gary Lee Vincent Train Passenger (uncredited): Jeremy Waltman Funeral Attendee (uncredited): Zoe Xandra Film Crew: Producer: Richard Linklater Editor: Sandra Adair Producer: John Sloss Producer: Ginger Sledge Makeup Artist: Sharyn Cordice Executive Producer: Harry Gittes Music: Graham Reynolds Director of Photography: Shane F. Kelly Production Design: Bruce Curtis Costume Design: Kari Perkins Set Decoration: Beauchamp Fontaine Novel: Darryl Ponicsan Executive Producer: Thomas Lee Wright Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Tom Hammond Sound Designer: Justin Hennard Art Direction: Gregory A. Weimerskirch Visual Effects Producer: Brice Liesveld Visual Effects Supervisor: James Pastorius Makeup Department Head: Darylin Nagy Executive Producer: Karen Ruth Getchell Makeup Artist: Patty Bell Makeup Artist: Christopher Patrick Movie Reviews: tmdb15435519: One of the funniest films I have watched in some time. Great writing and acting. Fishburne, Carell, and Cranston make up an unlikely trio that embarks on an epic journey of forgiveness. At once critical and respectful of the US, a reminder that what makes a country is those that choose to live and die for it.
1 note · View note
tocitynews · 9 months ago
Text
Basketball Legend And San Diego Native Bill Walton Dies At 71 After Cancer Fight – San Diego California reporting
Walton was a two-time national champion at UCLA where he was named national player of the year in each of his three seasons at UCLA. Playing for legendary coach John Wooden, Walton powered the Bruins to consecutive 30-0 seasons in 1972 and 1973.
He was the number one overall pick in the 1974 NBA Draft by the Portland Trailblazers and was a member of their championship team in 1977. He then won the title again with the Boston Celtics in 1986.
Walton was inducted in the Hall of Fame as part of the class of 1993.
The La Mesa-born Walton was first introduced to the game of basketball in the 4th grade at what is now St. Katharine Drexel Academy in the College Area. He then attended Mount Helix High School where his basketball reign continued before enrolling at UCLA.
Despite his time around the globe, Walton considered himself a lifelong San Diegan and had lived in a home near Balboa Park for more than 40 years.
"I love San Diego — this is the greatest place on Earth. It’s a welcoming city with dizzying possibilities and anything and everything that you could want," he told the California Now blog in 2020.
Walton was surrounded by his family. He is survived by his wife Lori and his four sons: Adam, Nathan, Luke and Chris.
[Bill Walton was a noted Grateful Dead freak]
0 notes
myarchitectphil · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Roofscapes of the City: We spend most of our time on the ground in the city, looking up. The roofs of the city are another world that, quite literally, give us a whole new perspective on things! The tops of buildings are a frequently underutilized - and frequently underdesigned - resource that we have successfully utilized for years, energizing the lives of tenants and of the city at large. A recent Drexel grad, Chris Hytha (www.hythacg.com), has been in the news for his photographs of the crowns of city buildings, most often Art Deco buildings, built when the urge for beauty had not yet been so overwhelmed by economics. The Drake, behind the Kimmel Center, originally a hotel designed by Philadelphia's premier Art Deco architects, Ritter and Shay (another story), was one of his subjects. At Symphony House we consciously sought to create a roofscape that echoed the Drake in a less fanciful but equally romantic way. Modernist buildings can do the same. At 3737 Chestnut, our glass tower was articulated to create a sheltered terrace with spectacular views of the skyline and the horizon. This roofscape of the city, once the hallmark of modernity, is, we believe, an important resource. Where else could Superman find Lois Lane?
0 notes
philaretey · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Roofscapes of the City: We spend most of our time on the ground in the city, looking up. The roofs of the city are another world that, quite literally, give us a whole new perspective on things! The tops of buildings are a frequently underutilized - and frequently underdesigned - resource that we have successfully utilized for years, energizing the lives of tenants and of the city at large. A recent Drexel grad, Chris Hytha (www.hythacg.com), has been in the news for his photographs of the crowns of city buildings, most often Art Deco buildings, built when the urge for beauty had not yet been so overwhelmed by economics. The Drake, behind the Kimmel Center, originally a hotel designed by Philadelphia's premier Art Deco architects, Ritter and Shay (another story), was one of his subjects. At Symphony House we consciously sought to create a roofscape that echoed the Drake in a less fanciful but equally romantic way. Modernist buildings can do the same. At 3737 Chestnut, our glass tower was articulated to create a sheltered terrace with spectacular views of the skyline and the horizon. This roofscape of the city, once the hallmark of modernity, is, we believe, an important resource. Where else could Superman find Lois Lane?
1 note · View note
mantaypeli · 4 years ago
Text
Judas y el mesías negro
Judas y el mesías negro
★★★☆☆ Apoyada en una estructura clásica y con un ritmo de narración vigoroso, el realizador Shaka King nos cuenta una poderosa historia real acerca del racismo y los crímenes de Estado. La relación entre Fred Hampton, líder de los Panteras Negras en Chicago, y Bill O’Neal, un don nadie que llegó a jefe de seguridad de la organización paramilitar, enmarca un relato racial que ejerce de…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
2 notes · View notes
Text
In the Field: Following the Work of a Paleontologist
Introduction by Jessica Sperdute
Edited by Matt Lamanna
With 22 million specimens housed at Carnegie Museum of Natural History (CMNH) and nearly 10,000 on display at any given time, chances are you’ve seen a dinosaur or two during your museum visits. But have you ever wondered how those dinosaurs get to the museum after they’re found? Or how we know where to dig for them in the first place?
What is a Fossil?
Fossils are the remains of animals, plants, and other ancient life that have been preserved in rock layers, or sediment. Fossils can include things such as leaves, skin, feathers, hair, footprints, and, most commonly, hard material such as wood, shells, teeth, and bones. Even poop can be fossilized! Many kinds of fossils are rare, and studying them can help us understand how the world looked tens of thousands or even millions of years before our time. Scientists who study fossils are known as paleontologists.
Looking at the Layers
Paleontologists use many tools to help them find fossils, but the key to knowing where fossils may be hidden underground lies with rocks—massive layers of rocks, called strata, are piled onto one another over time. These layers of different rocks can tell us not only what type of rock the layer is made of, but also approximately how old the layer is. The study of rock layers is called stratigraphy, and paleontologists use it to find potential fossil beds. For instance, if a paleontologist is looking specifically for fossils of dinosaurs, they would use stratigraphy to locate exposed layers of sedimentary rocks that formed at the time when dinosaurs lived and died—the Mesozoic Era. Once rocks from the Mesozoic Era are found in a location, the paleontologist goes to that location to hunt for fossils.
Big Prospects
Finding the right type of strata is only half the work of finding fossils; once paleontologists arrive at the field site, they need to physically walk around and search for clues that fossils may be around or underneath them. This is called prospecting, and the best place to prospect is usually at the base of a hill. Wind and rain will erode or gradually wear away rocks, allowing some fossils to break loose from higher sediments and roll downhill. If a fossil fragment is found, the team can then search the area to see if there may be other, more complete fossils—oftentimes higher up the hill and still embedded in rock.
Once prospecting has yielded an area where a fossil is likely to buried, the team can begin to block out the site and start digging. They use a wide variety of tools—even household items like paintbrushes, shovels, and hammers—to uncover fossils without damaging them. Records are taken of this step-by-step process to ensure all the data, from the precise location of the dig site, to the type of fossils found and their spatial relationships to one another, and even the measurements of the quarry, is kept for further study.
Safety First
The team has found a fossil, dug it up, and recorded the data. Now what? Once a fossil has been carefully excavated, it needs to be protected. Most fossils are delicate, so to transport them, especially larger ones, paleontologists use a method called plaster jacketing to protect them. First, they wrap the fossil in soft material such as paper towels, toilet paper, or aluminum foil to cover it. Then they wrap the covered fossil in strips of burlap that have been soaked in liquid plaster. This method is like using a cast on broken bones. After the plaster hardens, it acts as a shield. When the fossil has been safely transported and is ready to be studied or put on display at a place like Carnegie Museum, the paleontologist can gently cut away the plaster without damaging the fossil inside.
Paleontologist Photos
Dr. Matt Lamanna, Mary R. Dawson Associate Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology here at CMNH, has shared some of his favorite photos of his work at previous fossil dig sites. Look at the photos—do you recognize some of the locations, the tools that Dr. Lamanna is using, or the fossils that he’s digging up?
Tumblr media
Here, Carnegie Museum of Natural History Mary R. Dawson Associate Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology Dr. Matt Lamanna is pointing at two ribs of a small—possibly baby—sauropod (long-necked plant-eating dinosaur) projecting from a rock face in the Bahariya Oasis of Egypt in 2001. He’d found this small sauropod only minutes before this photo was taken. Sometimes prospecting yields great finds! Credit: Mandi Lyon.
Tumblr media
Dr. Matt Lamanna (right) on an expedition that found dozens of roughly 120-million-year-old fossil bird skeletons, mostly belonging to the species Gansus yumenensis, in the Changma Basin of Gansu Province, China in 2004. Lamanna is with collaborator Hailu You. Credit: Ken Lacovara.
Tumblr media
In this photo, also taken in 2004 in Gansu Province, China, Dr. Lamanna poses next to the ribs of a giant sauropod—these ribs were just part of the massive skeleton that was discovered. Credit: Hailu You.
Tumblr media
Dr. Lamanna on the expedition that found the new and gigantic titanosaur (a type of sauropod, again, a long-necked plant-eating dinosaur) Dreadnoughtus schrani in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina in 2005. Lamanna is shoveling loose rock out of the Dreadnoughtus quarry. Credit: Ken Lacovara.
Tumblr media
Members of the expedition from Drexel University, the Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia San Juan Bosco, and CMNH that found the giant titanosaur Dreadnoughtus in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina in 2005 (left to right: Lucio Ibiricu, Chris Coughenour, Ken Lacovara, Matt Lamanna, Marcelo Luna, and Gabriel Casal). The huge femur (thigh bone) and tibia (shin bone) of Dreadnoughtus are visible in the foreground. Credit: Matt Lamanna.
Tumblr media
Dr. Lamanna on the expedition that found the titanosaur Dreadnoughtus in Santa Cruz Province, Argentina in 2005. He’s sitting behind the 1.91 m (6 ft 3 in) femur, or thigh bone, of Dreadnoughtus not long after its discovery. Credit: Chris Coughenour.
Tumblr media
Here, Dr. Lamanna is using a rock drill (one of his very favorite field tools!) to help collect the skeleton of a new armored dinosaur in Queensland, Australia in 2008. Credit: Steve Salisbury.
Tumblr media
Dr. Lamanna (right) with collaborator Gabriel Casal making a plaster-and-burlap jacket to protect bones of the titanosaur Sarmientosaurus musacchioi in Chubut Province, Argentina in 2008. Credit: Mandi Lyon.
Tumblr media
Lamanna on the day he found the only known fossil of the new, ~90-million-year-old crab Hadrocarcinus tectilacus on James Ross Island, Antarctica in 2009. Credit: Patrick O’Connor.
Tumblr media
Here’s another photo of Lamanna on James Ross Island of Antarctica, this time in 2011. The team found tooth and bone fragments of the theropod—meat-eating dinosaur—Imperobator antarcticus at this site. Credit: Meng Jin.
Tumblr media
During the 2011 Antarctic expedition, Lamanna and his fellow paleontologists also found lots of fossils on nearby Vega Island, especially those of approximately 70-million-year-old birds. Credit: Meng Jin.
Tumblr media
In this photo from 2015, Lamanna is shown collecting fossils in a New Jersey quarry with a research team from Drexel University, who were uncovering marine creatures from the very end of the Mesozoic Era. Credit: Ken Lacovara.
Jessica Sperdute is a Gallery Presenter II Floor Captain and Lead Animal Husbandry Specialist in CMNH’s Lifelong Learning Department. Museum staff, volunteers, and interns are encouraged to blog about their unique experiences and knowledge gained from working at the museum.
87 notes · View notes
page58-blog1 · 7 years ago
Text
Watch Steve Carell, Bryan Cranston & Laurence Fishburne on a Road Trip in Richard Linklater's Poignant & Funny 'Last Flag Flying' (Trailer)
Watch Steve Carell, Bryan Cranston & Laurence Fishburne on a Road Trip in Richard Linklater’s Poignant & Funny ‘Last Flag Flying’ (Trailer)
      “You know what amazes me about you?” “Could be anything I’m a pretty amazing guy.” “You turned the keys to your bar to the guy who used to sleep on your pool table and then you jump in your car you drive me to hell and gone and you don’t even know where we’re going.” In the comedy-drama ‘Last Flag Flying’ thirty years after they served together in Vietnam, a former Navy Corps medic Larry…
View On WordPress
0 notes
selfdefensegearco · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Check Out This Fantastic Post Just Published on https://selfdefensegearco.com/personal-protection/new-info-in-disappearance-of-brittanee-drexel-part-1-crime-watch-daily-with-chris-hansen/
New Info in Disappearance of Brittanee Drexel (Part 1) - Crime Watch Daily with Chris Hansen
Tumblr media
0 notes
djbcadventures · 6 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Networking in the Capital City: January/February 2019
It’s a NEW Year!  It is time to start fresh with ideas in the new year to grow your business, expand your contacts, or simply to look for a better opportunity.  January and February are prime with events around town to get you started on the right foot.
Included here are events from networking groups, and the Bexley, Franklinton, Tri-Village, Gahanna, Westerville, Worthington, Hilliard, and Dublin Chambers of Commerce.
JANUARY
January 8 - DANG Meetup (6PM; Dublin Entrepreneurial Center: 565 Metro Place South, Dublin; https://www.meetup.com/Dublin-Area-Networking-Group/) (Bus - # 33 to Dublin Metro)
January 9 - Canal Winchester State of the City Networking Lunch (11:30AM; Oakview Dermatology: 22 S. Trine St., Canal Winchester; http://www.canalwinchester.com)  - Whitehall Area Luncheon - “Networking in the New Year” with Frank Agin (11:30AM; Priority Designs: 100 S. Hamilton Rd., Whitehall; http://www.whitehallareachamber.org) (Bus - # 10 or 24)
January 10 - Tri-Village Luncheon (11:30AM; HighBank Distillery: 1051 Goodale Blvd., Grandview Heights; http://www.chamberpartnership.org) (Closest Buses - # 3, 22, or 31) - GETDOT Alumni Networking Night (5PM; Yabo’s Tacos: 5242 Cemetery Rd., Hilliard; http://www.getdotnetworking.org) (Bus - # 21 or 32)
January 11 - Coffee With a Cause (7:30AM; Rev1 Ventures: 1275 Kinnear Rd., Northwest Columbus; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 31)
January 12 - Livingston Avenue Area Commission (LAVA-C) Annual Meeting (10AM; Ann Isaly Wolfe Education Center: Rooms ED 137 & 138: 575 S. 18th St., South Side; http://www.livingstonave.com)  (Closest Bus - # 1) - Free Press Second Saturday Salon (6:30PM; Columbus Free Press: 1021 E. Broad St., Olde Towne East; http://www.columbusfreepress.com) (Bus - # 10)
January 15 - What’s NEW on LinkedIn? (6:30PM; Improving Enterprises: 1 Easton Oval, Suite 175, Easton; http://www.columbusama.org) (Closest Bus - # 7, 23, or 32)
January 16 - Dublin Women in Business Luncheon (11:30AM; LaScala: 4199 W. Dublin-Granville Rd., Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org)  - Bexley Area Networking Lunch (12:30PM; JCC Columbus: 1125 College Ave., Berwick; http://www.bexleyareachamber.org) (Bus - # 1) - NextGen Dublin Winter Social (5:30PM; The Rail: 5839 Frantz Rd., Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org) (Bus - # 21) - Entrepreneurs and Innovators (6PM; North High Brewing: 1288 N. High St., Short North; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 1 or 2)
January 17 - Franklinton Luncheon (11:30AM; Jubilee Museum: 57 S. Grubb St., Franklinton; http://www.franklintonboardoftrade.org) (Bus - # 10 or 12) - Gahanna Chamber Annual Meeting (11:30AM; LaNavona: 154 N. Hamilton Rd., Gahanna; http://www.gahannaareachamber.com) (Bus - # 24) - Westerville Business After Hours (5:30PM; The Middlefield Banking Company: 17 N. State St., Westerville; http://www.westervillechamber.com) 
January 18 - Creative Mornings Columbus: Surreal (8:30AM; Columbus Museum of Art: 480 E. Broad St., Discovery District; https://creativemornings.com/cities/clb) (Bus - # 10) - Hilliard Chamber Networking Lunch with Special Guest Chris Borja (11:30AM; Heritage Golf Club: 3525 Heritage Club Drive, Hilliard; http://www.hilliardchamber.org) (Closest Bus - # 32)
January 22 - CYP Conversations and Coffee (7:30AM; Crimson Cup Innovation Lab: 700 Alum Creek Drive, Near East Side; http://www.cypclub.com) (Closest Bus - # 2 or 11) - Network Dublin Business Breakfast (7:30AM; Alten-Cresttek: 565 Metro Place South, Suite 420, Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org) (Bus - # 33 to Metro Place) - Bexley Women in Business (6PM; Piccadilly: 2501 E. Main St., Bexley; http://www.bexleyareachamber.org) (Bus - # 2)
January 23 - Diversity Chamber (6:30PM; Pat & Gracie’s: 340 E. Gay St., Discovery District; https://diversitycolumbus.org) (Bus - # 7, 10, or 11)
January 24 - CYP Leadership Luncheon: Making Connections In The New Year (11:30AM; Alumni Hall, Ross Auditorium at Franklin University: 301 E. Rich St., Discovery District; http://www.cypclub.com) (Closest Bus - # 2, 7, or 11) - Networking Cocktail Hour (5:30PM; DogTap Museum: 96 Gender Rd., Canal Winchester; http://www.canalwinchester.com)  - Westerville YP Speed Networking (5:30PM; The Pointe at Polaris: 8900 Lyra Drive, Polaris; http://www.westervillechamber.com) (Closest Bus - # 2L) - Worthington Business After Hours (5:30PM; Peggy R. McConnell Arts Center: 777 Evening St., Worthington; http://www.worthington.org) (Closest Bus - # 2L) 
January 25 - Breakfast with Columbus Business First (7AM; Columbus School for Girls: 65 S. Drexel Ave., Bexley; http://www.columbusbusinessfirst.com) (Bus - # 10) - Stonewall Columbus LGBTQ Career Fair (10AM; Stonewall Columbus: 1160 N. High St., Short North; http://www.stonewallcolumbus.org) (Bus - # 1 or 2) 
January 26 - Stonewall Columbus LGBTQ Career Fair (10AM; Stonewall Columbus: 1160 N. High St., Short North; http://www.stonewallcolumbus.org) (Bus - # 1 or 2)
January 28 - Combined Chambers Expo (4:30PM; Embassy Suites Dublin: 5100 Upper Metro Place, Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org, http://www.hilliardchamber.org, or http://www.westervillechamber.com) (Bus - # 33 to Metro Place) - Upper Arlington State of the Community (6:30PM; Upper Arlington Municipal Services Building: 3600 Tremont Rd., Upper Arlington; http://www.upperarlingtonoh.gov) (Bus - # 1 Kenny/Livingston) 
January 30 - Tri-Village Women in Business (5:30PM; Lupo: 2124 Arlington Ave., Upper Arlington; http://www.chamberpartnership.org) 
January 31 - Dublin YP Lunch Bunch (11:30AM; The Chiller: 7001 Dublin Park Drive, Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org)  - State of the City - Columbus (5:30PM; Columbus East High School: 1500 E. Broad St., Woodland Park; http://www.columbus.gov) (Bus - # 10) 
FEBRUARY
February 1 - Gahanna Economic Forecast Breakfast (7AM; Creekside Plaza: 101 Mill St., Suite 300, Gahanna; http://www.gahanna.gov) (Closest Bus - # 24 & 25) (RSVP - January 25) - Coffee With a Cause - Hunger Panel (7:30AM; Rev1 Local Ventures: 1275 Kinnear Rd., Columbus; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 31) CANCELLED DUE TO WEATHER - Whitehall Career Fair (3:30PM; Whitehall-Yearling High School: 675 S. Yearling Rd., Whitehall; http://www.whitehallareachamber.org) CANCELLED DUE TO WEATHER
February 5 - Bexley Business Breakfast - Lynda.com 101 (8AM; Market District Kitchen and Bar: 2250 E. Main St., Bexley; http://www.bexleyareachamber.org) (Bus - # 2) - Dublin Young Professionals Common Grounds (9AM; Barry’s Bagels: 5760 Frantz Rd., Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org) (Bus - # 21) - DANG Meetup (6PM; Dublin Entrepreneurial Center: 565 Metro Place South, Dublin; https://www.meetup.com/Dublin-Area-Networking-Group/) (Bus - # 33 to Dublin Metro)
February 6 - CYP Networking Night (6-8PM; HPE Polaris: 1500 Polaris Parkway, Upper Level, Polaris; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 2L)
February 7 - GETDOT Networking (5PM; The Golf Club of Dublin: 5805 Eiterman Rd., Dublin; http://www.getdotnetworking.org)  - News and Brews (5PM; BrewDog: 1175 N. High St., Short North; http://www.columbusbusinessfirst.com (Bus - # 1 or 2) - AMA First Thursdays (5:30PM; Juniper: 580 N. 4th St., Short North; http://www.columbusama.org) 
February 9 - Free Press Second Saturday Salon (6:30PM; The Columbus Free Press: 1021 E. Broad St., Olde Towne East; http://www.columbusfreepress.com) (Bus - # 10)
February 12 - Dublin Business After-Hours (5:30PM; Columbus Marriott Northwest: 5605 Paul G. Blazer Parkway, Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org) (Closest Bus - # 21) 
February 13 - Diversity Columbus (6:30PM; Alzheimer’s Association - Central Ohio Chapter: 1379 Dublin Rd., Grandview; https://diversitycolumbus.org)
February 14 - The Big Game Ad Review: Innovators, Winners, and Losers (11:30AM; Franklin University Alumni Hall: 301 E. Rich St., Discovery District; http://www.columbusama.org) (Bus - # 2, 7, or 11)  - Tri-Village Luncheon (11:30AM; Old Bag of Nails Upper Arlington: 2102 Tremont Center, Upper Arlington; http://www.chamberpartnership.org) 
February 15 - Creative Mornings Columbus: Symmetry (8:30AM; Land-Grant Brewing Company: 424 W. Town St., Franklinton; https://creativemornings.com/cities/clb) (Closest Bus - # 10, due to construction re-routes on Rich Street)
February 19 - CYP Conversations and Coffee (7:30AM; Crimson Cup Innovation Lab: 700 Alum Creek Drive, Near East Side; http://www.cypclub.com) (Closest Bus - # 2 or 11) - Parsons Area Merchants Happy Hour (5PM; Jimmy Luka’s Bar and Deli: 701 Parsons Ave., South Side; http://www.parsonsarea.com) (Bus - # 4 or 8P) - WANG (Westerville Area Networking Group) Social (6PM; Renaissance Columbus Westerville/Polaris: 409 Altair Parkway, Westerville; Website Not Given) (Bus - CMAX)  
February 20 - Dublin Women in Business Luncheon (11:30AM; LaScala: 4199 W. Dublin-Granville Rd., Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org)  (Bus - # 33) - Bexley Networking Lunch (12:30PM; Block’s Bagels: 3012 E. Broad St., Eastmoor; http://www.bexleyareachamber.org) (Bus - # 10) - Entrepreneurs and Innovators (6PM; North High Brewing: 1288 N. High St., Short North; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 1 or 2)
February 21 - Gahanna Women in Business Breakfast (7:30AM; Mount Carmel East, Siegel Center, Building 3: 5975 E. Broad St., Far East Columbus; http://www.gahannaareachamber.com) (Bus - # 10) - TedX Columbus Salon (6:30PM; The Idea Foundry: 421 W. State St., Franklinton; http://www.tedxcolumbus.com) (Closest Bus - # 10 or 12) 
February 22 - Breakfast with Columbus Business First (7AM; Navigator Management Partners: 1400 Goodale Boulevard, Grandview Heights; http://www.columbusbusinessfirst.com) 
February 26 - City of Dublin Economic Forecast Breakfast (7:30AM; OhioHealth Dublin Methodist Hospital: 7500 Hospital Drive, Dublin; http://www.dublinchamber.org)  - St. John Professional Development Day (12PM; St.John Learning Center: 640 S. Ohio Ave., Old Oaks; https://stjohnlearning.wordpress.com/) (Bus - # 1 or 22) - Experience Columbus “Make It Columbus” Expo (3PM; COSI: 333 W. Broad St., Franklinton; http://www.experiencecolumbus.com) (Bus - # 3, 6, 9, 10, or 12)
February 27 - Westerville YP Breakfast (7:30AM; Ohio Health - Westerville Medical Campus: 300 Polaris Parkway, Westerville; http://www.westervillechamber.com) (Bus - CMAX or 2L)
February 28 - Tri-Village Lunch with Us and Learn About Podcasting (11:30AM; Tri-Village Chamber: 2011 Riverside Drive - Lower Level, Upper Arlington; http://chamberpartnership.org) (NOTE - Attendance is LIMITED to 12) - Celebrate Clintonville (6PM; Clintonville Woman’s Club: 3951 N. High St., Clintonville; http://www.clintonvillechamber.com) (Bus - # 2 or 2L)
March 1 - Coffee With a Cause (7:30AM; Rev1 Local Ventures: 1275 Kinnear Rd., Columbus; http://www.cypclub.com) (Bus - # 31)
1 note · View note
ulkaralakbarova · 7 months ago
Text
When architect-turned-recluse Bernadette Fox goes missing prior to a family trip to Antarctica, her 15-year-old daughter Bee goes on a quest with Bernadette’s husband to find her. Credits: TheMovieDb. Film Cast: Bernadette: Cate Blanchett Elgie: Billy Crudup Audrey: Kristen Wiig Dr. Kurtz: Judy Greer Paul Jellinek: Laurence Fishburne Bee: Emma Nelson Soo-Lin: Zoë Chao Agent Marcus Strang: James Urbaniak Becky: Troian Bellisario Floyd the Pharmacist: Richard Robichaux Ellen Idelson: Kate Burton David Walker: Steve Zahn Judy Toll: Megan Mullally Jay Ross: David Paymer Tom the Blackberry Guy: Patrick Sebes USC Student: Lee Harrington Game Show Host: Patrick Jordan Pablo: Shaun Cameron Hall Tamara the Pharmacy Employee: Kathryn Feeney Lisa Prospective Parent: Amy Rayko Lori Prospective Parent: Nancy McNulty Julie Prospective Parent: Daina Griffith Tammy Prospective Parent: Kate Easton Mr. Hayes: Stephen Donnelly Kennedy: Thalia Torio Architectural Expert: Mark Philip Stevenson News Reporter: Cherie McClain Crew Member Allegra: Maureen d’Armand Captain J. Rouverol: Jóhannes Haukur Jóhannesson Iris: Claudia Doumit Vivian: Katelyn Statton Snappy Tourist Lady: Jennifer Tober Mike the State Senator: Joe Coyle Construction Worker (uncredited): Alan Lee Baker Stu Reardon (Microsoft Executive) (uncredited): Richard Barlow Airport Traveler / Taxi Passenger (uncredited): Heidi Barrientes Pharmacy Patron (uncredited): Tom Bonello Parent (uncredited): Brian “Wolfman Black” Bowman Audience Member (uncredited): Chris Breen Caterer (uncredited): Gregory Bromfield Kyle’s Friend (uncredited): Zachary Davis Brown Kyle (uncredited): Owen Buckenmaier Passenger (uncredited): Isaac J. Conner Baggage Handler (uncredited): Erik J. Cornelius Restaurant Patron (uncredited): Kelli Culbertson Nigel Mills-Murray (uncredited): Bruce Curtis Passenger (uncredited): Kelley Davis Restaurant Patron (uncredited): Chris Drexel Restaurant Patron (uncredited): Grant Eastey Flight Attendant (uncredited): Amy Lyn Elliott Gary Oppenheimer (uncredited): Russell Bradley Fenton Galer Street School Parent (uncredited): Joe Fishel Restaurant Patron (uncredited): Simone Bruyère Fraser Pedestrian (uncredited): Emir García Tech Enthusiast / Party Goer (uncredited): Peter Georgo School Child (uncredited): Elijah Goulet TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): Ben Guenther Airport Traveler (uncredited): Juliane Hagn Traveler (uncredited): Rene Hamlet Jellinek’s Student (uncredited): Joely Haregsin Coffee Shop Patron (uncredited): Mike D Harris Tourist in Boat (uncredited): Andrew Harvey Parent (uncredited): Adam Hicks Student (uncredited): Jagger Hicks Traveler (uncredited): Liz Higgins Beeber Construction Worker (uncredited): Anthony Holland Airport Patron (uncredited): Tara O. Horvath Pedestrian (uncredited): Wesley Jansen Restaurant Patron / TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): Nagy Jay Space Needle Restaurant Patron (uncredited): Morgen Johnson TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): William Kania Naturalist (uncredited): Brett Kennedy TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): Trudi Kennedy Airline Passenger (uncredited): Micah Knapp Airline Passenger (uncredited): Tiahna Kovarik TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): Mike Kuse Construction Worker (uncredited): Daniel Lamont Cruise Ship Passenger (uncredited): Susan Lang Crossing Guard (uncredited): James Lloyd Cruise Passenger (uncredited): Scott Lockhart Parent (uncredited): Chelsea Long Game Show Contestant (uncredited): Theresa Mangus Airport Traveler (uncredited): Tiffany Sander McKenzie Airplane Passenger (uncredited): F. Robert McMurray Joann Airline Stewardess (uncredited): Kelly L. Moran TED Talk Attendee (uncredited): Sue Danna Myer Microsoft Worker (uncredited): Adam Nakanishi T-Shirt Mom (uncredited): Amy Nelson Airline Passenger (uncredited): Vanessa N. Nelson TED Talk Attendee / Party Patron (uncredited): Ted Opalinski Parent (uncredited): Martin A. Palma Construction Worker (uncredited): Michael Paradise Bus Passenger (uncredited): Edward Pfeifer Airline Employee (uncredited): Jacob Phelps Port Lockroy Tourist (uncredited)...
0 notes
tvguidancecounselor · 3 years ago
Text
TV Guidance Counselor Episode 523: Michael C. Maronna
June 13-19, 1992
This week Ken welcomes the "Mike" of the Adventures of Danny and Mike and the "Big" of The Adventures of Pete and Pete himself, Michael C. Maronna.
Ken and Mike discuss Italian foods, mutual love of seltzer, Galco's Soda Pop Stop, Yelp Reviews,  adult businesses, assimilation, movies with popular soundtracks and eh movies, Judgement Night, The Bodyguard, The Bill Chill, SFW, SLC Punk, Frankenguitars, a love of solder, Nebraska, Los Punks: The Documentary, the music on Pete and Pete, Boston, MTV, Nickelodeon, Katherine Dieckmann, Kate Peirson, LL Cool J, Iggy Pop, King Kongs made of Legos, Hawaiian Punch, toilet paper commercials, being IN the TV Guide you picked, Bob Saget, single Dads, divorced Dads, Wayne's World, Repo Man, our punk rock awakening, What Reba watches, the name "Narvel", creepy LA Gear commercials, British Knights, Space Camp, Double Dare, how John Madden would be the pitch man for just about anything, Dream On, Lorenzo Lamas hosting Evening at the Improv, Quantum Leap, reality TV, Morton Downey Jr, The A-Team, the Gilmore Girls spin off that never happened, the Pete and Pete finale, Mickey Rooney, The Hollywood Museum, correcting people on the name of the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, Ed O'Neil, The French Connection, To Live and Die in LA, The Choice Hotels International Special Presentation of Batman Returns: The Bat, The Cat and the Penguin hosted by Robert Urich, Jason Priestly, "Teen Priest", the weirdest episode ever of Drexel's Class, The Driver, how weird Bruce Dern can be, The Home Alone reunion, the secret origins of Snow Day, Chris Koch, the Sony Watchman, Swamp Thing, roller skating parties, not ever roller blading despite your character being fingered for a murder due to roller blading, the helmet panic, what to show your kids, moving from in front of the camera to behind it and vice versa, and paying Thundercats forward.
Check out this episode!
0 notes
untg · 3 years ago
Text
STOCKHOME now available for free, TODAY, HERE and NOW!
See Unreliable Narrator's satire of hipster supercapitalism that lit audiences on fire at the Minnesota Fringe last August! 40 minutes, all free!
youtube
Featuring Cari Keebaugh! Juliet Bowler! Kitty Drexel! Tim Hoover! Liz Salazar! Julia Lunetta! Chris Chiampa! Emilie Nims!
Written & Directed by Carl Danielson
1 note · View note
cruger2984 · 7 years ago
Text
Persona Characters and its Saints PT.5 (Last Part)
Here it is. The final part of my series of some Persona characters shared with feast days of some Catholic saints. The final part of the series will be in the first Persona game, Megami Ibunroku Persona (Revelations: Persona). I will exclude the protagonist here. Some of the characters here has some nicknames of it so I will include it.
1/1: Hidehiko 'Brad' Uesugi
Perhaps Brad's birthday is shared with a solemnity to start the New Year - the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, the Octave of Christmas and it is considered a holy day of obligation in some countries including the Philippines, where I live, and we also celebrate the World Day of Peace in-conjunction with the solemnity feast. It is a feast day of the Blessed Virgin Mary under the aspect of her motherhood of Jesus Christ, whom Christians see as the Lord, Son of God. It also shares with the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ. According to the Gospel of Luke (ch. 2 v. 21), Christ was circumcised eight days after he was born. This is in keeping with the Jewish law which holds that males should be circumcised eight days after birth during a Brit milah ceremony, at which they are also given their name.
3/3: Yuka 'Alana' Ayase
Yes, we all know that she shares a Japanese holiday for girls (Hinamatsuri). Alana, aka the kogal of the group shares her birthday with St. Katharine Drexel. She is an heiress, religious sister, educator, philanthropist and the foundress of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament. Drexel is the second canonized saint to have been born in America, and the first to have been born a U.S. citizen, because she was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
4/9: Yukino 'Yuki' Mayuzumi
Her birthday is shared with St. Waltrude, who is the patron saint of Mons, Belgium, where she is known in French as Sainte Waudru, and of Herentals, Belgium, where she is known in Dutch as Sint-Waldetrudis or -Waltrudis. Both cities boast a large medieval church that bears her name.
6/4: Maki 'Mary' Sonomura
Her birthday is co-incide with St. Francis Caracciolo, a Italian priest and confessor who co-founded the Clerics Regular Minor (aka the Adorno Fathers) together with Fabrizio Caracciolo and Ven. Augustine Adorno. Francis is the patron saint of Italian cooks.
7/11: Masao 'Mark' Inaba
Perhaps Mark's birthday is shared with one of the greatest saints in Europe and my patron - St. Benedict of Nursia. He is an abbot and one of the patron saints of Europe. He founded twelve communities for monks at Subiaco, Lazio, before moving to Monte Cassino in the mountains of southern Italy. The Order of Saint Benedict (aka the Benedictines) is of later origin and, moreover, not an "order" as commonly understood but merely a confederation of autonomous congregations. His main achievement is his 'Rule of Saint Benedict', contains the precepts for his monks. His Rule became one of the most influential religious rules in Western Christendom. Benedict had a sister named Scholastica, and he is known as the 'Father of Western Monasticism.'
8/18: Reiji 'Chris' Kido
His birthday is shared with St. Helena of Constantinople, who is a empress and the mother of St. Constantine the Great, who is the first Christian Roman emperor. She is ranked as an important figure in the history of Christianity and of the world due to her influence on her son. In her final years, she made a religious tour of Syria Palaestina and Jerusalem, during which she allegedly discovered the True Cross.
9/21: Eriko 'Ellen' Kirishima
Ellen's birthday is shared with one of Christ's apostles and is one of the Four Evangelists - St. Matthew. Before joining Jesus, he is a tax collector worked for the Romans. Then as Jesus sees him and he said, 'Follow me. (ch. 9 v. 9)' The Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church each hold the tradition that Matthew died as a martyr.
10/2: Kei 'Nate Trinity' Nanjo
His birthday is a very special one for him because he shares it with the Memorial of the Holy Guardian Angels. In October 1795, Pope Pius VI granted a partial indulgence for making the Devotions to our Guardian Angels and Patron Saints, as well as a plenary indulgence on the actual feast day to those who make the devotion twice a day for an entire year. And since 1976, it has been ranked an obligatory memorial.
3 notes · View notes
semclass · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
All CEOs need to begin someplace. Chris Finnin, scientific teacher of basic organization research studies at Drexel’s LeBow College of Organization, breaks down how the online BS in Service Administration from Drexel University prepares you for profession success. https://www.online.drexel.edu/bsba #Drexel #BSBA #Business 0: 00 Introduction0: 17 Find Out to Speak the Language of Organization0: 58…
0 notes
saandrale · 4 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
All CEOs need to begin someplace. Chris Finnin, scientific teacher of basic company research studies at Drexel’s LeBow College of Company, breaks down how the online BS in Company Administration from Drexel University prepares you for profession success. https://www.online.drexel.edu/bsba #Drexel #BSBA #Business 0: 00 Introduction0: 17 Discover to Speak the Language of Company0: 58 Pick…
0 notes
selfdefensegearco · 8 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
Check Out This Fantastic Post Just Published on https://selfdefensegearco.com/personal-protection/new-info-in-disappearance-of-brittanee-drexel-part-2-crime-watch-daily-with-chris-hansen/
New Info in Disappearance of Brittanee Drexel (Part 2) - Crime Watch Daily with Chris Hansen
Tumblr media
0 notes