Modern Dream Home in Oceano, California
Presented by Wilson & Co. Sotheby's International Realty
For more information go to:
Gorgeous Ocean Front property just steps from the Beach. Completely remodeled and renovated with Top Quality custom amenities featured throughout. Ipe entry and exterior decks, French oak floors, American walnut cabinets contrasting with concrete, stone and glass contributing to a classic Warm/Cool theme. Entry level Master Suite with hurricane rated glass panels opening up to covered deck with spa and ocean views. Second level two bedrooms and a bath, gourmet Kitchen with Wolf Range/Hood, Subzero fridge and wine fridge, Reverse Osmosis, stainless steel counters and Mick de Guilio designed sink. Living room with floor to ceiling glass doors opening to view deck. Fabulous Roof Deck offers approx 1500 sq ft of additional outdoor living space with spectacular views, complete outdoor kitchen with concrete fire pit, subzero fridge, built in BBQ, concrete bar with seating. Backs up to nature preserve for added privacy. Quintessential Beach living at it's finest. Simply Incredible!
Property ID: 89J2JE
More info:
$5,300,000 dollar home in Vancouver West // Traditional design
$5,300,000 dollar home in Vancouver West // Traditional design
4,300 sq.ft. of luxurious living area sits on beautiful landscaped level 6,222 sq.ft. lot.
6 bed / 6 bath
Photo and video by inframerealestate.com
U.S. House: Debate & Vote on Articles of Impeachment
The House Rules Committee debates and votes on two articles of impeachment against President Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
U.S. Senate: Impeachment Trial (Day 7)
The Senate impeachment trial of President Trump continues with opening arguments by the President’s defense team.
EARFQUAKE
IGOR IS NOW AVAILABLE:
Impeachment Trial Day 6: Bolton revelations fuel fresh calls for testimony as Trump mounts defense
As President Trump's attorneys prepare to resume defense arguments in the Senate impeachment trial Monday afternoon, new revelations about the president's attempts to pressure Ukraine could throw a wrench in Republicans' plans to vote on acquittal as early as this week. Follow Live Updates:
#impeachmenttrial #impeachment #trial #trump #CBSN #CBSNews
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Prince's Band Mississippi Days on Columbia A5869 (1916)
Prince's Band plays Mississippi Days on Columbia A5869, recorded on August 19, 1916.
Sound file was done by John Murphy.
Charles Adams Prince was born in 1869 in San Francisco. His father hailed from New England, but at the time of Charles' birth he headed a successful fruit canning company on the West Coast. Charles' mother was a New York native.
It has been said that he was a descendant of President John Adams, but Hugh Brogan and Charles Mosley's American Presidential Families (Macmillan, 1993) does not include Charles Adams Prince among the hundreds of descendants. He was possibly a distant relative.
Prince's interest in music began in his youth when his mother took him to local theatrical productions. As a young man he took to the road, traveling for several years with circuses, minstrel shows and legitimate comedies.
Prince recorded for the New York Phonograph Company as early as 1891. At first he worked mostly as a piano accompanist, and he continued to provide piano accompaniment for artists a decade later, notably for the historically significant Columbia Grand Opera series of ten-inch discs recorded in late 1902 and issued in 1903. These were the first discs made in the United States with big-name opera stars, preceding Victor's Red Seal series by a few months.
Jim Walsh reports in the January 1953 issue of Hobbies that Prince succeeded Fred Hager as director of Columbia's band and orchestral recordings, a succession that Hager himself reported to Walsh. Prince was responsible for providing orchestral accompaniment for vocalists when piano accompaniment ceased to be standard.
Records of Columbia's house ensemble, called the Columbia Orchestra and Columbia Band, were issued regularly from the mid-1890s onwards (an 1897 catalog states, Every musician in this great orchestra has been selected by Mr. [Victor] Emerson with special reference to the creation of an organization representing the highest achievement in our art). But its conductors, which included cornetist Tom Clark (advertising in the July 1898 issue of The Phonoscope states that he was director of the Columbia Orchestra) and then Fred Hager, remained unidentified on records until 1905 or so, around the time that the Sousa march The Diplomat (3053) was credited to Prince's Military Band. Thereafter many Prince's Orchestra discs were issued. They featured overtures, snippets from operas and symphonies, arrangements of well-known concert songs and popular tunes, descriptive specialties, trombone smears, and ragtime.
Few musicians who made records in the acoustic era were as versatile as Prince.
Though the names Prince's Military Band and Prince's Orchestra were used on records by 1905--Prince's Symphony Orchestra was on some records of classical works (Columbia Symphony Orchestra was more common)--his productions were issued under other names in the United States and abroad. Many firms used Columbia masters in the early years of the century--Aretino, Busy Bee, Climax, Consolidated, Cort, D & R, Diamond, Harvard, Harmony, Kalamazoo, Lakeside, Manhattan, Oxford, Remick Perfection, Royal, Thomas, Sir Henri, Square Deal, Star, Standard, United. On most of these labels the performing ensemble is listed merely as Band or Orchestra. Sometimes a company name is added, such as the Cort Band or Harmony Orchestra.
In February 1918, Columbia released a double-sided twelve-inch disc featuring Wagner's Rienzi Overture (A6006), performed by the Columbia Symphony Orchestra comprising 90 instruments and directed by Prince. He never again recorded with so large an ensemble.
By early 1914, many labels for Prince's dance band records stated, Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson. Wilson was a noted dance instructor, Columbia's counterpart to Victor's dance expert Vernon Castle.
In the early 1920s he led the Columbia Dance Orchestra, and labels cite him as director. Some labels give the name Prince's Dance Orchestra. In this period Columbia identified on labels artists who were exclusive to the company, at least at pressing, and Columbia A3681 featuring Prince's Dance Orchestra identified the orchestra as exclusive.
After going into receivership in February 1922, Columbia underwent dramatic reorganization. Prince left the company by the summer of 1923 or at least was no longer musical director.
He eventually returned to California where he taught music. After an illness of three months, he died on October 10, 1937, near San Francisco in the home of his sister, Hazel Prince Tuggle.
Most Violent Jail Inmates | A Hidden America: Inside Rikers Island PART 1/2
Diane Sawyer went inside the unit called punitive segregation, where inmates are locked up for up to 23 hours a day.
WATCH THE FULL EPISODE OF NIGHTLINE:
5/20/16 - A Hidden America: Inside Rikers Island
Woodrow Wilson | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Woodrow Wilson
00:03:58 1 Early life
00:06:17 2 Education
00:09:04 3 Marriage and family
00:10:11 4 Personal interests
00:10:57 5 Academic career
00:13:08 6 Political science author
00:13:18 6.1 U.S. and British system contrast
00:17:53 6.2 Public administration
00:20:15 7 President of Princeton University
00:25:55 8 Governor of New Jersey
00:30:05 9 Presidential election of 1912
00:30:16 9.1 Democratic nomination
00:34:20 9.2 General election
00:37:43 10 Presidency (1913–1921)
00:37:54 10.1 First term (1913–1917)
00:43:22 10.1.1 Tariff legislation and income tax
00:44:19 10.1.2 Federal Reserve System
00:46:46 10.1.3 Antitrust and other measures
00:48:51 10.1.4 Mexican Revolution
00:49:55 10.1.4.1 Pancho Villa
00:51:32 10.1.5 Miners strike, wife's death and remarriage
00:54:29 10.1.6 Events leading to U.S. entry into World War I (1914–16)
01:00:59 10.2 Presidential election of 1916
01:05:46 10.3 Second term (1917–1921)
01:05:58 10.3.1 Entry into World War I
01:11:08 10.3.2 Home front
01:14:15 10.3.3 The Fourteen Points
01:15:22 10.3.4 Peace Conference 1919
01:19:10 10.3.5 Treaty fight, 1919
01:21:49 10.3.6 Post war: 1919–1920
01:23:22 10.3.7 Other foreign affairs
01:26:34 10.3.8 Incapacity
01:28:28 10.3.9 Prohibition
01:30:12 10.3.10 Women's suffrage
01:32:02 10.3.11 Post war economic depression
01:32:27 10.4 Administration and Cabinet
01:33:05 10.5 Judicial appointments
01:33:14 10.5.1 Supreme Court
01:33:58 10.5.2 Other courts
01:34:16 11 Final years and death
01:36:59 12 Race relations
01:43:12 13 Memorials
01:45:22 14 Works
01:46:21 15 Media
01:46:29 16 See also
01:47:02 17 Notes
01:47:11 18 Bibliography
01:47:20 18.1 Biographical
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
You can find other Wikipedia audio articles too at:
You can upload your own Wikipedia articles through:
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Thomas Woodrow Wilson (December 28, 1856 – February 3, 1924) was an American statesman and academic who served as the 28th President of the United States from 1913 to 1921. A member of the Democratic Party, Wilson served as the President of Princeton University from 1902 to 1910, and as Governor of New Jersey from 1911 to 1913, before winning the 1912 presidential election. As president, he oversaw the passage of progressive legislative policies unparalleled until the New Deal in 1933. He also led the United States during World War I, establishing an activist foreign policy known as Wilsonianism. He was one of the three key leaders at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, where he championed a new League of Nations, but he was unable to win Senate approval for U.S. participation in the League.
Born in Staunton, Virginia, to a slaveholding family, Wilson spent his early years in Augusta, Georgia, and Columbia, South Carolina. His father was a leading Southern Presbyterian and helped to found the Presbyterian Church in the Confederate States of America. After earning a Ph.D. in political science from Johns Hopkins University, Wilson taught at various schools before taking a position at Princeton. In 1910, Democratic leaders recruited him to run for Governor of New Jersey. Serving from 1911 to 1913, Wilson broke with party bosses and won the passage of several progressive reforms. Wilson's success in New Jersey gave him a national reputation as a progressive reformer, and his Southern roots helped him win favor in that region. After several ballots, the 1912 Democratic National Convention selected Wilson as the party's presidential nominee. Theodore Roosevelt's third-party candidacy split the Republican Party, which re-nominated incumbent President William Howard Taft. Wilson won the 1912 election with a plurality of the popular vote and a large majority in the Electoral College.
Upon taking office, Wilson called a special session of Congress, whose work culminated in the Revenue Act of 1913, introducing a federal income tax which provided revenue lost when tariffs were sharply lowered. He also presided over the passage of the Federal Reserve Act, which created a central banking system in the form of the Federal Reserve System. Other ma ...
Plan To Dig Up U.S. President's Body Deemed Mortifying By Family
President James K. Polk did big things for America, dramatically expanding its borders by annexing Texas and seizing California and the Southwest in a war with Mexico. In a proposal that has riled some folks in Tennessee, state lawmakers want to move Polk’s body to what would be its fourth resting place in the nearly 170 years since he died of cholera. The plan is to exhume Polk’s remains and those of his wife, Sarah, from their white-columned tomb on the grounds of the state Capitol in Nashville and take them about 50 miles to his father’s home, now known as the James K. Polk Home and Museum, in Columbia. Teresa Elam, who says she is a seventh-generation great-niece of the childless Polk, called the whole idea “mortifying.”
This video was produced by YT Wochit News using
Ballin' The Jack classic ragtime on Columbia A5595 (1914) G.Hepburn Wilson = Prince's Band
Prince's Band (conducted by G.Hepburn Wilson) plays Ballin' The Jack on Columbia A5595, recorded on July 31, 1914.
Thanks to John Murphy for the sound file/sound restoration.
Charles Adams Prince was born in 1869 in San Francisco. His father hailed from New England, but at the time of Charles' birth he headed a successful fruit canning company on the West Coast. Charles' mother was a New York native.
It has been said that he was a descendant of President John Adams, but Hugh Brogan and Charles Mosley's American Presidential Families (Macmillan, 1993) does not include Charles Adams Prince among the hundreds of descendants. He was possibly a distant relative.
Prince's interest in music began in his youth when his mother took him to local theatrical productions. As a young man he took to the road, traveling for several years with circuses, minstrel shows and legitimate comedies.
Prince recorded for the New York Phonograph Company as early as 1891. At first he worked mostly as a piano accompanist, and he continued to provide piano accompaniment for artists a decade later, notably for the historically significant Columbia Grand Opera series of ten-inch discs recorded in late 1902 and issued in 1903. These were the first discs made in the United States with big-name opera stars, preceding Victor's Red Seal series by a few months.
Jim Walsh reports in the January 1953 issue of Hobbies that Prince succeeded Fred Hager as director of Columbia's band and orchestral recordings, a succession that Hager himself reported to Walsh. Prince was responsible for providing orchestral accompaniment for vocalists when piano accompaniment ceased to be standard.
Records of Columbia's house ensemble, called the Columbia Orchestra and Columbia Band, were issued regularly from the mid-1890s onwards (an 1897 catalog states, Every musician in this great orchestra has been selected by Mr. [Victor] Emerson with special reference to the creation of an organization representing the highest achievement in our art). But its conductors, which included cornetist Tom Clark (advertising in the July 1898 issue of The Phonoscope states that he was director of the Columbia Orchestra) and then Fred Hager, remained unidentified on records until 1905 or so, around the time that the Sousa march The Diplomat (3053) was credited to Prince's Military Band. Thereafter many Prince's Orchestra discs were issued. They featured overtures, snippets from operas and symphonies, arrangements of well-known concert songs and popular tunes, descriptive specialties, trombone smears, and ragtime.
Few musicians who made records in the acoustic era were as versatile as Prince.
Though the names Prince's Military Band and Prince's Orchestra were used on records by 1905--Prince's Symphony Orchestra was on some records of classical works (Columbia Symphony Orchestra was more common)--his productions were issued under other names in the United States and abroad. Many firms used Columbia masters in the early years of the century--Aretino, Busy Bee, Climax, Consolidated, Cort, D & R, Diamond, Harvard, Harmony, Kalamazoo, Lakeside, Manhattan, Oxford, Remick Perfection, Royal, Thomas, Sir Henri, Square Deal, Star, Standard, United. On most of these labels the performing ensemble is listed merely as Band or Orchestra. Sometimes a company name is added, such as the Cort Band or Harmony Orchestra.
In February 1918, Columbia released a double-sided twelve-inch disc featuring Wagner's Rienzi Overture (A6006), performed by the Columbia Symphony Orchestra comprising 90 instruments and directed by Prince. He never again recorded with so large an ensemble.
By early 1914, many labels for Prince's dance band records stated, Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson. Wilson was a noted dance instructor, Columbia's counterpart to Victor's dance expert Vernon Castle.
In the early 1920s he led the Columbia Dance Orchestra, and labels cite him as director. Some labels give the name Prince's Dance Orchestra. In this period Columbia identified on labels artists who were exclusive to the company, at least at pressing, and Columbia A3681 featuring Prince's Dance Orchestra identified the orchestra as exclusive.
After going into receivership in February 1922, Columbia underwent dramatic reorganization. Prince left the company by the summer of 1923 or at least was no longer musical director.
He eventually returned to California where he taught music. After an illness of three months, he died on October 10, 1937, near San Francisco in the home of his sister, Hazel Prince Tuggle.
Ballin' The Jack classic ragtime on Columbia A5595 (1914) G.Hepburn Wilson = Prince's Band
Thomas W Wilson with Edith Bolling Galt Wilson present graduation degrees and rev...HD Stock Footage
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Thomas W Wilson with Edith Bolling Galt Wilson present graduation degrees and review troops in West Point
President of United States Thomas Woodrow Wilson visits the United States Military Academy at West Point in New York. Vehicles parked. Troops march. Thomas Woodrow Wilson with First Lady of the United States Edith Bolling Galt Wilson arrive. The President is greeted by officers. Thomas Woodrow Wilson presents graduation degrees to the cadets. Thomas Woodrow Wilson walks past the troops standing in formation. The troops march. Thomas Woodrow Wilson and Edith Bolling Galt Wilson with officers stand on the stage reviewing the troops. Location: West Point New York. Date: June 12, 1916.
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Episode 10: On The Columbia
The Wilson Family's Green Family Summer tour arrives at the James Family Ranch on the Columbia River in Washington State. This episode features a visit to the Nature Conservancy's Yellow Island Preserve in the San Juan Islands of the Puget Sound. Phil Green, the Yellow Island Preserve Steward, and Robin Stanton, in Media Relations for the Nature Conservancy of Washington, tell about Yellow Island's importance in the larger landscape.
Prince's Band Ballin' The Jack on Columbia A5595 (1914) G.Hepburn Wilson
Prince's Band (conducted by G.Hepburn Wilson) plays Ballin' The Jack on Columbia A5595, recorded on July 31, 1914.
Thanks to John Murphy for the sound file/sound restoration.
Charles Adams Prince was born in 1869 in San Francisco. His father hailed from New England, but at the time of Charles' birth he headed a successful fruit canning company on the West Coast. Charles' mother was a New York native.
It has been said that he was a descendant of President John Adams, but Hugh Brogan and Charles Mosley's American Presidential Families (Macmillan, 1993) does not include Charles Adams Prince among the hundreds of descendants. He was possibly a distant relative.
Prince's interest in music began in his youth when his mother took him to local theatrical productions. As a young man he took to the road, traveling for several years with circuses, minstrel shows and legitimate comedies.
Prince recorded for the New York Phonograph Company as early as 1891. At first he worked mostly as a piano accompanist, and he continued to provide piano accompaniment for artists a decade later, notably for the historically significant Columbia Grand Opera series of ten-inch discs recorded in late 1902 and issued in 1903. These were the first discs made in the United States with big-name opera stars, preceding Victor's Red Seal series by a few months.
Jim Walsh reports in the January 1953 issue of Hobbies that Prince succeeded Fred Hager as director of Columbia's band and orchestral recordings, a succession that Hager himself reported to Walsh. Prince was responsible for providing orchestral accompaniment for vocalists when piano accompaniment ceased to be standard.
Records of Columbia's house ensemble, called the Columbia Orchestra and Columbia Band, were issued regularly from the mid-1890s onwards (an 1897 catalog states, Every musician in this great orchestra has been selected by Mr. [Victor] Emerson with special reference to the creation of an organization representing the highest achievement in our art). But its conductors, which included cornetist Tom Clark (advertising in the July 1898 issue of The Phonoscope states that he was director of the Columbia Orchestra) and then Fred Hager, remained unidentified on records until 1905 or so, around the time that the Sousa march The Diplomat (3053) was credited to Prince's Military Band. Thereafter many Prince's Orchestra discs were issued. They featured overtures, snippets from operas and symphonies, arrangements of well-known concert songs and popular tunes, descriptive specialties, trombone smears, and ragtime.
Few musicians who made records in the acoustic era were as versatile as Prince.
Though the names Prince's Military Band and Prince's Orchestra were used on records by 1905--Prince's Symphony Orchestra was on some records of classical works (Columbia Symphony Orchestra was more common)--his productions were issued under other names in the United States and abroad. Many firms used Columbia masters in the early years of the century--Aretino, Busy Bee, Climax, Consolidated, Cort, D & R, Diamond, Harvard, Harmony, Kalamazoo, Lakeside, Manhattan, Oxford, Remick Perfection, Royal, Thomas, Sir Henri, Square Deal, Star, Standard, United. On most of these labels the performing ensemble is listed merely as Band or Orchestra. Sometimes a company name is added, such as the Cort Band or Harmony Orchestra.
In February 1918, Columbia released a double-sided twelve-inch disc featuring Wagner's Rienzi Overture (A6006), performed by the Columbia Symphony Orchestra comprising 90 instruments and directed by Prince. He never again recorded with so large an ensemble.
By early 1914, many labels for Prince's dance band records stated, Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson. Wilson was a noted dance instructor, Columbia's counterpart to Victor's dance expert Vernon Castle.
In the early 1920s he led the Columbia Dance Orchestra, and labels cite him as director. Some labels give the name Prince's Dance Orchestra. In this period Columbia identified on labels artists who were exclusive to the company, at least at pressing, and Columbia A3681 featuring Prince's Dance Orchestra identified the orchestra as exclusive.
After going into receivership in February 1922, Columbia underwent dramatic reorganization. Prince left the company by the summer of 1923 or at least was no longer musical director.
He eventually returned to California where he taught music. After an illness of three months, he died on October 10, 1937, near San Francisco in the home of his sister, Hazel Prince Tuggle.
Prince's Band Ballin' The Jack on Columbia A5595 (1914) G.Hepburn Wilson
Meadowbrook Prince's Band (Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson) on Columbia A5595 (1914)
Meadowbrook is played by Prince's Band (Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson) on Columbia A5595, recorded on July 31, 1914.
Song by Arthur M. Kraus.
Sound file was provided by John Murphy.
Charles Adams Prince was born in 1869 in San Francisco. His father hailed from New England, but at the time of Charles' birth he headed a successful fruit canning company on the West Coast. Charles' mother was a New York native.
It has been said that he was a descendant of President John Adams, but Hugh Brogan and Charles Mosley's American Presidential Families (Macmillan, 1993) does not include Charles Adams Prince among the hundreds of descendants. He was possibly a distant relative.
Prince's interest in music began in his youth when his mother took him to local theatrical productions. As a young man he took to the road, traveling for several years with circuses, minstrel shows and legitimate comedies.
Prince recorded for the New York Phonograph Company as early as 1891. At first he worked mostly as a piano accompanist, and he continued to provide piano accompaniment for artists a decade later, notably for the historically significant Columbia Grand Opera series of ten-inch discs recorded in late 1902 and issued in 1903. These were the first discs made in the United States with big-name opera stars, preceding Victor's Red Seal series by a few months.
Jim Walsh reports in the January 1953 issue of Hobbies that Prince succeeded Fred Hager as director of Columbia's band and orchestral recordings, a succession that Hager himself reported to Walsh. Prince was responsible for providing orchestral accompaniment for vocalists when piano accompaniment ceased to be standard.
Records of Columbia's house ensemble, called the Columbia Orchestra and Columbia Band, were issued regularly from the mid-1890s onwards (an 1897 catalog states, Every musician in this great orchestra has been selected by Mr. [Victor] Emerson with special reference to the creation of an organization representing the highest achievement in our art). But its conductors, which included cornetist Tom Clark (advertising in the July 1898 issue of The Phonoscope states that he was director of the Columbia Orchestra) and then Fred Hager, remained unidentified on records until 1905 or so, around the time that the Sousa march The Diplomat (3053) was credited to Prince's Military Band. Thereafter many Prince's Orchestra discs were issued. They featured overtures, snippets from operas and symphonies, arrangements of well-known concert songs and popular tunes, descriptive specialties, trombone smears, and ragtime.
Few musicians who made records in the acoustic era were as versatile as Prince.
Though the names Prince's Military Band and Prince's Orchestra were used on records by 1905--Prince's Symphony Orchestra was on some records of classical works (Columbia Symphony Orchestra was more common)--his productions were issued under other names in the United States and abroad. Many firms used Columbia masters in the early years of the century--Aretino, Busy Bee, Climax, Consolidated, Cort, D & R, Diamond, Harvard, Harmony, Kalamazoo, Lakeside, Manhattan, Oxford, Remick Perfection, Royal, Thomas, Sir Henri, Square Deal, Star, Standard, United. On most of these labels the performing ensemble is listed merely as Band or Orchestra. Sometimes a company name is added, such as the Cort Band or Harmony Orchestra.
In February 1918, Columbia released a double-sided twelve-inch disc featuring Wagner's Rienzi Overture (A6006), performed by the Columbia Symphony Orchestra comprising 90 instruments and directed by Prince. He never again recorded with so large an ensemble.
By early 1914, many labels for Prince's dance band records stated, Under the supervision of G. Hepburn Wilson. Wilson was a noted dance instructor, Columbia's counterpart to Victor's dance expert Vernon Castle.
In the early 1920s he led the Columbia Dance Orchestra, and labels cite him as director. Some labels give the name Prince's Dance Orchestra. In this period Columbia identified on labels artists who were exclusive to the company, at least at pressing, and Columbia A3681 featuring Prince's Dance Orchestra identified the orchestra as exclusive.
After going into receivership in February 1922, Columbia underwent dramatic reorganization. Prince left the company by the summer of 1923 or at least was no longer musical director.
He eventually returned to California where he taught music. After an illness of three months, he died on October 10, 1937, near San Francisco in the home of his sister, Hazel Prince Tuggle.
Riots In San Francisco, California, 1991
San Francisco, California, October 30, 1991
Infuriated by Gov. Pete Wilson's veto of a major gay rights bill, California's gay activists launched a wave of protest Monday that branded the governor a liar who had betrayed a cause he had pledged to support.
Scores of Los Angeles demonstrators waged raucous, disruptive rallies at the Westwood Federal Building in the morning and the Ronald Reagan State Office Building downtown in the afternoon. Protesters splattered red liquid on the state building and broke a heavy glass door before disbanding after a standoff with police. State Police arrested two demonstrators.
Monday evening, about 2,000 whistle-blowing, chanting demonstrators gathered in West Hollywood, where they torched a California state flag and burned Wilson in effigy.
The protesters then marched from West Hollywood to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on Wilshire Boulevard, where Wilson was attending the opening of a landmark exhibition of Mexican art.
When the demonstrators arrived at the museum, where Mexican President Carlos Salinas de Gortari inaugurated the exhibit, their numbers had dwindled to about 1,300. They were joined by about 50 people protesting Salinas' appearance.
Civil rights or civil war! the crowd shouted. Police closed Wilshire in front of the museum, rerouting traffic through residential areas.
Later, about 150 demonstrators gathered at the Century Plaza Hotel in Century City, where Wilson was a guest. A man and a woman were arrested on suspicion of assault after protesters rushed the hotel's front entrance and struck a helmeted police officer. The officer was knocked down and suffered a back injury, police said.
Thousands protested in San Francisco, where a small group of demonstrators entered the State Building in the evening and set a small fire that was quickly extinguished, fire officials said. No arrests were reported.
Across the state, gay activists vowed to press their fight for AB 101, a bill that would give homosexuals civil rights protection against job discrimination. Their tactics, they said, will include a major demonstration at the state Capitol on Oct. 11, an initiative drive to place a gay rights proposition on the ballot, and threats to publicly disclose the supposed homosexuality of certain closeted state officials.
Wilson, in explaining his decision, argued that existing laws afford homosexuals ample protection against discrimination. He said he had been tempted to approve the bill because of a tiny minority of mean-spirited, gay-bashing bigots who vehemently opposed the legislation. But gay activists said Wilson's decision was nothing less than a betrayal.
We were blatantly lied to, and we are angry, said John J. Duran, co-chair of the Lobby for Individual Freedom and Equality, which helped write AB 101. Duran said Wilson promised to support anti-discrimination legislation in meetings with gay activists during his gubernatorial campaign against former San Francisco Mayor Dianne Feinstein.
Duran was among several gay activists who angrily condemned Wilson during a news conference at the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Community Services Center.
There is a time for outrage and for hitting the streets, said Torie Osborne, executive director of the center.
Simply, we are going to take over the Capitol. . . . Wilson, your political career is over, said Rob Roberts, a member of the radical group Queer Nation.
Asked whether gays would follow through on threats to out homosexuals within Wilson's Administration, Osborne predicted that such tactics will be employed by radicals. This is war, and anything goes, she said.
A closet is a dangerous place to be, Duran said.
Wilson's veto raises the broader question of whether he can be relied on to support other issues, Duran said.
Wilson absolutely caved in to the far right of his own party and to the fundamentalists on gay rights, Duran said. What else, then? Abortion rights? The teaching of evolution? Sex education and AIDS education in public schools? What else will the right hold him hostage to?
Meanwhile, fundamentalists who had passionately opposed the measure had only the faintest praise for the governor. They thanked him for rebuffing the bill, but attacked his overall record on tax and family issues.
The Rev. Louis P. Sheldon, whose Traditional Values Coalition opposed the bill, said he was happy Wilson vetoed the measure because it would have stifled job creation in California. But he withheld support for the governor.
While we appreciate the veto and thank the governor, it must be said that the governor is not anti-tax and is not family friendly and has not been rehabilitated to warrant reelection, Sheldon said at a news conference in Anaheim.
Times staff writer Catherine Gewertz contributed to this story.
Candlewood Suites Columbia-Ft. Jackson - Columbia, South Carolina
Hotel and Resort photography & video by PhotoWeb (photowebusa.com)
Consider yourself at home at the Candlewood Suites, Columbia/Ft. Jackson. This Columbia hotel is located in the heart of the city's metropolitan area, near the intersection of I-77 and Garners Ferry. Our hotel is close to the Columbia Metropolitan Airport, Ft. Jackson, McEntire Air Base, the Koger Center for the Arts, the State Farmers Market, the downtown/ USC Campus, and local business parks.
Our location couldn't be better, but what will really impress you is our spacious all-suite accommodations. Prepare and enjoy a home-cooked meal whenever you like in your fully-equipped kitchen. Choose a movie from our free library, and kick back in your over-stuffed recliner. Work comfortably at your spacious executive desk. Take advantage of free high-speed Internet access and two phone lines to accomplish everything on your list. Visit our business center for all of your printing, copying, and faxing needs.
During your stay at our Ft. Jackson hotel, enjoy the convenience of on site laundry services. Stop at the fitness center regularly to keep up with your exercise regimen. Take a refreshing dip in the outdoor pool to cool off. Enjoy a sweet treat or pick up a light meal to go at the Candlewood Cupboard. Whether you plan to visit the Columbia area for a single night or a few weeks, let us be the first to welcome you home.
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Hotel and Resort still photography, video and YouTube videos by PhotoWeb (photowebusa.com). PhotoWeb's Virtual Tours, videos, YouTube videos, Digital Stills & Worldwide Distribution allow clients to put their most powerful media where the booking decisions are made. Photo Web has been providing cutting edge imaging services since 1996. With offices in the US, UK, Australia, Japan, India, and Colombia, PhotoWeb provides services worldwide. For further information, please contact sales@photowebusa.com or telephone: +1-614-882-3499.
Video © 2011, Photoweb Pure Digital Photography Inc.
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Bernie Sanders Intro by Phillip Agnew in East LA [11/16/19]
Bernie Sanders comes to Woodrow Wilson High School for a rally before 5,200 supporters. He's introduced by National Surrogate Phillip Agnew.
Transcript:
My name is Phillip Agnew, I am an organizer, I am an artist, I am oldest of four sons born to a preacher and a teacher, I am an uncle, I am a deep-down believer in the power of people, and I am proud to stand before you today as a National Surrogate in this movement to elect Senator Bernie Sanders as the next President of the United States of America.
I want everyone to take a deep breath with me.
Look to your neighbor and tell them “ I LOVE THE SMELL, OF MOVEMENT IN THE MORNING”
Look to your other neighbor and ask them “DON’T YOU??”
We are gathered today in an almost unprecedented moment. On one side there are those that feed on hate, those that have decided that division will be the story of our lives on this earth. On the other are those that tell us that our vision is too ambitious, that the crumbs of incrementalism, the leftovers of little reforms will be the story of our generation.
But we are here today because we believe that a different world is possible and a different America is necessary for it to be born. We are here today because we have been here for generations, fighting to do more than just survive. We we are here today because we believe in another way, not because we imagine it, but because we’ve seen it.
We’ve seen shackles loosed on the arms and legs of Africans in revolt.
We’ve seen stone walls come crumbling down in the quaking of Lesbian, Gay, Queer, and Transgender comrades.
We’ve seen domestic workers and trash men, day laborers and farmhands, we’ve seen Students and Combahee River Collectives, American Indian and Chicano Moratorium Movements rise up and declare that OUR LIVES HAVE MEANING, THAT FREEDOM AND JUSTICE AND SUFFRAGE MUST BE OURS and WE WILL FIGHT FOR IT!
We are here because we are an unstoppable force against a seemingly immovable object.
As I look out today I see sisters and brothers. I see the past and present stewards of this land. I see the great grandchildren of the builders of this country. I can feel the spirit of Ruben Salazar with us today.
We are here ready to take on the fight of our lives.
Our oceans and temperatures are rising. Gun violence is rising. Unemployment Rises. Healthcare prices rise. The number of our people dead, deported or in jail rises. Homelessness rises. Overdoses rise. Our blood pressure rises. Rent rises.
And, today, 2020 excitedly knocks at our collective door. She carries with her a new decade - already born - but yet to be seen. As she knocks, she wonders if the horrors of the past will greet her. She wonders if she will be okay. She wonders if she will be turned away. She knocks and she wonders who will answer the door?
2020 waits and listens. She places her ear to our door. She expects to hear hateful words, mindless chatter, and arguing, and lies, and dog whistles, and empty promises, and excuses...
But imagine if you can with me that - instead of any of that - she hears us. Imagine her peeking through the blinds and seeing...us. Imagine the joy on her face as the sound of our great movement cuddles her ear, marches along her arms and moves to her feet. Imagine with me that 2020 smiles as we open that door and she collapses in our embrace.
Because There’s universal healthcare in this house. Free college is in this house. Freedom from brutality and prison is in this house. Love is in this house. Reunited families are in this house. Rehabilitation is in this house. If you look closely you can see Mother Earth sitting happy in this house. Reconciliation is in this house. Housing is in this house. Justice is in this house. Community is in this house. Abundance is in this house. Power is in this house!! There is a political revolution is in this house.
WE DON’T WANT MEDICARE FOR SOME. WE WANT MEDICARE FOR ALL!
WE DON’T WANT HOUSING FOR SOME. WE WANT HOUSING FOR ALL!
WE DON’T WANT JUSTICE FOR SOME. WE WANT JUSTICE FOR ALL!
WE DON’T WANT COLLEGE FOR SOME. WE WANT COLLEGE FOR ALL!
WE DON’T WANT A GREEN NEW DEAL FOR SOME. WE WANT A GREEN NEW DEAL FOR ALL!
NONE OF US ARE FREE, UNTIL ALL OF US ARE FREE!
There is only one candidate and movement that is prepared to take on the challenges of our time with bold, consistent vision. There is only one candidate and movement that has stood with every day people for decades. There is only one candidate and movement ready to defeat Donald Trump in less than a year. That movement is ours and that candidate is Bernie Sanders.
So please join me in welcoming to the stage, the 46th President of OUR United States, Senator Bernie Sanders!
Abandon ship MIRACLE 150nm from sailing circumnavigation, SV Kelaerin, lost & found
A USCG helicopter rescued Joy and Jim Carey 150 miles from crossing their outbound track on a 17-year sailing circumnavigation on June 18, 2018. They abandoned their 46-foot sailing vessel Kelaerin 180 miles west of Grays Harbor, Washington, after their boat was flooded with water and lost its electronics in a gale. They set off their EPIRB because they had no life raft, dinghy, or communications. They did not want their children to not know what happened to them a day from completing their 17-year around the world trip in Bellingham, Washington.
This story had a happy ending when the USCG towed the yacht Kelaerin into Ft. Bragg, California a month later. Hear their amazing story in an exclusive interview with Jim and Joy Carey by Slow Boat Sailing.
WA, UNITED STATES
06.16.2018
Video by Petty Officer 1st Class Levi Read
U.S. Coast Guard District 13
An MH-60 Jayhawk aircrew, from Sector Columbia River, arrives on scene with the 46-foot sailing vessel Kelaerin 180 miles west of Grays Harbor, Wash., June 16, 2018.
The aircrew followed an electronic position indicating radio beacon signal registered to the sailing vessel and rescued the vessels two passengers.
U.S. Coast Guard video courtesy of Sector Columbia River.
This work, Sector Columbia River aircrew arrives on scene, by PO1 Levi Read
FORT BRAGG, CA, UNITED STATES
07.23.2018
Video by Petty Officer 3rd Class Sarah Wilson
U.S. Coast Guard District 11
This work, Coast Guard finds adrift sailboat 1 month after rescuing owners, by PO3 Sarah Wilson
FORT BRAGG, CA, UNITED STATES
07.23.2018
Video by Petty Officer 3rd Class Sarah Wilson
U.S. Coast Guard District 11
Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Sarah Wilson
U.S. Coast Guard District 11
Coast Guard Cutter Barracuda crew members prepare to tow the unmanned 46-foot sailing vessel after finding it near Fort Bragg, Calif., July 22, 2018. The Coast Guard Cutter Barracuda crew found the vessel more than 440 miles south-southeast of its last known position near Grays Harbor, Washington, on June 18, when it was abandoned after a search-and-rescue case. (U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo/released).
FORT BRAGG, CA, UNITED STATES
07.23.2018
Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Sarah Wilson
U.S. Coast Guard District 11
A Coast Guard boat crew from Station Noyo River in Fort Bragg, Calif., tows an unmanned sailing vessel to the B Dock in Fort Bragg, July 23, 2018. The crew relieved the tow from the Coast Guard Cutter Barracuda crew, who found the vessel adrift off the coast of Fort Bragg on July 22. (U.S. Coast Guard courtesy video/released).
OCRACOKE, NC, UNITED STATES
08.07.2017
U.S. Coast Guard District 5
A Coast Guard HC-130 Hercules airplane crew from Air Station Elizabeth City, North Carolina, finds a distressed man aboard a sailboat waving his arms for help about five miles west of Portsmouth Island, North Carolina, Aug. 7, 2017. An MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crew from the air station deployed a rescue swimmer, hoisted the man from the sailboat and brought him to The Outer Banks Hospital in Nags Head, North Carolina. (U.S. Coast Guard video by Air Station Elizabeth City/Released)
KITTY HAWK, NC, UNITED STATES
05.08.2013
Video by Petty Officer 3rd Class David Weydert
U.S. Coast Guard District 5
An MH-60 Jayhawk Helicopter aircrew from Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City rescues man from sailboat 70 miles east of Kitty Hawk, NC.
The eBook of AROUND THE WORLD SINGLE-HANDED: The Cruise of the Islander is at
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On the Slow Boat Sailing Podcast Linus Wilson has interviewed the crew of Sailing SV Delos, WhiteSpotPirates (Untie the Lines), Chase the Story Sailing, Gone with the Wynns, MJ Sailing, Sailing Doodles, SV Prism, Sailing Miss Lone Star, and many others.
Get Linus Wilson's bestselling sailing books:
Slow Boat to the Bahamas
Slow Boat to Cuba
and How to Sail Around the World-Part Time
have been #1 sailing bestseller on Amazon.
Associate Producers Anders Colbenson, Larry Wilson, Ted Royer, Kevin Yager, and Rick Moore (SSL).
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Copyright Linus Wilson, Vermilion Advisory Services, LLC, 2018