C-SPAN Schedule for Sunday, February 2

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

C-SPAN Schedule for Sunday, February 2 Page 1/5 C-SPAN Schedule Sunday, February 2 All times and durations are subject to change C-SPAN 1 C-SPAN 2 C-SPAN 3 7:00 am ET 6:28 am ET 6:55 am ET Approx. 47 min. Approx. 1 hr. 18 min. Approx. 1 hr. 4 min. C-SPAN | Washington Journal U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum Wake Forest University LIVE Open Phones [FDR and the Jews] Race, History, and Teaching the Civil ; War 7:50 am ET 8:00 am ET Approx. 1 hr. 5 min. 7:46 am ET Approx. 29 min. C-SPAN | Washington Journal Approx. 1 hr. 17 min. C-SPAN | American History TV LIVE Presidential Use of Executive Palm Beach County Library | Hagen Confederate Winter Quarters Powers Ranch Road Branch ; ; [America's First Crisis] 8:58 am ET 9:35 am ET Approx. 33 min. Approx. 1 hr. 9 min. C-SPAN | Washington Journal 9:05 am ET College of the Ozarks LIVE Youth Voter Issues in 2014 Approx. 37 min. Surviving the Vietnam War ; ; C-SPAN [Days of Fire] Book Party 9:33 am ET Approx. 26 min. 10:45 am ET C-SPAN | Washington Journal Approx. 13 min. LIVE Open Phones 9:44 am ET C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Approx. 1 min. Olympia Oysters and the Shellfish C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Industry Book TV in Olympia, Washington ; 10:00 am ET Approx. 33 min. 9:46 am ET 11:00 am ET C-SPAN | Newsmakers Approx. 5 min. Approx. 50 min. Newsmakers with Senator Debbie C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Civil War Forum of Metropolitan Stabenow [Tall Ships on Puget Sound] New York [Civil War Lover's Guide to New York 10:34 am ET City] Approx. 1 hr. 16 min. U.S. Senate,White House,U.S. House 9:52 am ET of Representatives Approx. 10 min. 2014 State of the Union Address 11:52 am ET C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Approx. 29 min. [Rare Bird] American Historical Association James Percoco and Rob Firmin on 11:51 am ET Memorial Controversies ; ; Approx. 10 min. 10:02 am ET U.S. Senate,Republican Party,White Approx. 9 min. House,U.S. House of Representatives 12:22 pm ET Republican Response to State of the C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Approx. 6 min. Washington State Library Special Union Address C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Collections Bigelow House 12:02 pm ET Approx. 2 hr. 29 min. 10:12 am ET 12:30 pm ET Approx. 19 min. Politico.com Approx. 29 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle State of the Union Reactions American Historical Association [On the Move] Harvey Cohen and Mark Wheeler on 2:46 pm ET Hollywood in the 1930s Approx. 1 hr. 43 min. ; ; Senate Energy and Natural 10:32 am ET Resources Committee 1:00 pm ET Approx. 9 min. Crude Oil Export Ban Approx. 49 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Iowa State University 4:30 pm ET [The Collector] John F. Kennedy's Foreign Policy Approx. 5 min. C-SPAN Adriel Bettelheim on Congressional Agenda 10:42 am ET 1:49 pm ET Approx. 12 min. Approx. 9 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle [An Election for the Ages] [The Collector] 4:39 pm ET ; Approx. 1 hr. 18 min. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation State Health Insurance Exchanges Page 2/5 C-SPAN Schedule Sunday, February 2 All times and durations are subject to change C-SPAN 1 C-SPAN 2 C-SPAN 3 6:00 pm ET 11:28 am ET 2:00 pm ET Approx. 33 min. Approx. 31 min. Approx. 54 min. C-SPAN | Newsmakers C-SPAN | Book TV Flagler College Newsmakers with Senator Debbie After Words with Felipe Edith Wharton and the New Woman Stabenow Fernandez-Armesto ; ; 6:33 pm ET 3:00 pm ET Approx. 11 min. 3:00 pm ET Approx. 54 min. U.S. House of Representatives Approx. 57 min. Johnson (Lyndon Baines) Presidential House Farm Bill Debate Accuracy in Academia Library and Museum [The War on Football] James Symington Interview 6:45 pm ET Approx. 5 min. C-SPAN Adriel Bettelheim on Congressional 3:59 pm ET 3:55 pm ET Agenda Approx. 37 min. Approx. 5 min. Heritage Foundation C-SPAN | American History TV Teddy Roosevelt and American Football Confederate Winter Quarters ; 6:53 pm ET Approx. 1 hr. 5 min. 4:39 pm ET C-SPAN | Washington Journal Approx. 5 min. 4:01 pm ET Presidential Use of Executive Powers C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Approx. 11 min. ; ; [Tall Ships on Puget Sound] C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Washington State Capitol Building 8:00 pm ET Approx. 59 min. C-SPAN | Q&A 4:46 pm ET Q&A with Robert Dallek Approx. 1 hr. 22 min. 4:15 pm ET ; World Affairs Council Approx. 42 min. [By All Means Necessary] University of Maryland, Baltimore 9:01 pm ET ; County Approx. 34 min. Civil War Memory British House of Commons 6:09 pm ET Question Time Approx. 9 min. ; C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Washington State Library Special 5:01 pm ET 9:36 pm ET Collections Approx. 1 hr. 29 min. Approx. 1 hr. 14 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle British Parliament | Joint Committee American History TV in Olympia, on the National Security Strategy Washington British National Security Strategy 6:19 pm ET Approx. 29 min. 5:01 pm ET 10:51 pm ET Books and Company Approx. 13 min. Approx. 5 min. [A Patriot's History of the Modern C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle C-SPAN World, Volume 2] Olympia Oysters and the Shellfish Adriel Bettelheim on Congressional Industry Agenda 6:49 pm ET ; Approx. 51 min. Strand Bookstore 5:15 pm ET [Dog Whistle Politics] Approx. 11 min. 11:00 pm ET C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Approx. 59 min. Washington State Capitol Building C-SPAN | Q&A Q&A with Robert Dallek 7:41 pm ET ; Approx. 1 hr. 22 min. Cato Institute 5:26 pm ET 12:01 am ET [The Undercover Economist Strikes Approx. 5 min. Approx. 34 min. Back] C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle British House of Commons ; Washington Governor Jay Inslee Question Time ; 9:33 pm ET Approx. 29 min. 12:36 am ET C-SPAN | Book TV 5:33 pm ET Approx. 1 hr. 14 min. After Words with Angela Stent Approx. 14 min. ; British Parliament | Joint Committee C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle on the National Security Strategy Grand Coulee to Grunge Exhibit British National Security Strategy 10:02 pm ET Approx. 1 hr. 19 min. 1:52 am ET Committee for the Republic Approx. 31 min. James Bamford on NSA Spying and C-SPAN | Washington Journal Edward Snowden Youth Voter Issues in 2014 ; ; Page 3/5 C-SPAN Schedule Sunday, February 2 All times and durations are subject to change C-SPAN 1 C-SPAN 2 C-SPAN 3 2:27 am ET 11:24 pm ET 5:48 pm ET Approx. 1 hr. 41 min. Approx. 33 min. Approx. 9 min. Department of Defense | Response Nixon Presidential Library and C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Systems to Adult Sexual Assault Crimes Museum [The Collector] Panel [Pat and Dick] Military Sexual Assault Crimes Response, Part 1 5:58 pm ET 4:08 am ET 11:59 pm ET Approx. 6 min. Approx. 1 hr. 46 min. Approx. 2 hr. 59 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Department of Defense | Response C-SPAN | Book TV Bigelow House Systems to Adult Sexual Assault Crimes In Depth with Bonnie Morris Panel ; Military Sexual Assault Crimes Response, Part 2 3:28 am ET 6:06 pm ET 5:58 am ET Approx. 29 min. Approx. 12 min. Approx. 59 min. C-SPAN | Book TV C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle After Words with Angela Stent Murrow Brothers Exhibit C-SPAN | Q&A ; Q&A with Robert Dallek ; 4:00 am ET Approx. 50 min. 6:19 pm ET Hiller Aviation Museum Approx. 10 min. [Hap Arnold] ; C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Boldt Decision and Native American Treaty Rights 4:50 am ET ; Approx. 9 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle 6:30 pm ET [The Collector] Approx. 29 min. American Historical Association James Percoco and Rob Firmin on Memorial Controversies 5:01 am ET ; ; Approx. 39 min. Corner Bookshop 7:00 pm ET [A Curious Madness] Approx. 29 min. C-SPAN | American History TV Confederate Winter Quarters 5:42 am ET Approx. 2 min. C-SPAN | Book TV 8:32 pm ET After Words with Peter Gottschalk Approx. 1 min. ; C-SPAN | American History TV Birmingham Civil Rights Institute 5:46 am ET Approx. 51 min. Southern Festival of Books [Milliken's Bend] 8:35 pm ET ; Approx. 1 hr. 8 min. College of the Ozarks 6:40 am ET Surviving the Vietnam War Approx. 1 hr. 18 min. Committee for the Republic James Bamford on NSA Spying and Edward Snowden 9:44 pm ET Approx. 12 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Murrow Brothers Exhibit 10:00 pm ET Approx. 29 min. C-SPAN | American History TV Confederate Winter Quarters Page 4/5 C-SPAN Schedule Sunday, February 2 All times and durations are subject to change C-SPAN 1 C-SPAN 2 C-SPAN 3 11:32 pm ET Approx. 1 min. C-SPAN | C3 History Emancipation Memorial 11:35 pm ET Approx. 1 hr. 8 min. College of the Ozarks Surviving the Vietnam War 12:45 am ET Approx. 12 min. C-SPAN | Local Content Vehicle Murrow Brothers Exhibit 1:00 am ET Approx. 52 min. Politics and Prose Bookstore [My Father at 100: A Memoir] 1:53 am ET Approx.
Recommended publications
  • Draft National Mall Plan / Environmental Impact Statement the National Mall
    THE AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT DRAFT NATIONAL MALL PLAN / ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT THE NATIONAL MALL THE MALL CONTENTS: THE AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT THE AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT .................................................................................................... 249 Context for Planning and Development of the National Mall ...................................................................251 1790–1850..................................................................................................................................................251 L’Enfant Plan....................................................................................................................................251 Changes on the National Mall .......................................................................................................252 1850–1900..................................................................................................................................................253 The Downing Plan...........................................................................................................................253 Changes on the National Mall .......................................................................................................253 1900–1950..................................................................................................................................................254 The McMillan Plan..........................................................................................................................254
    [Show full text]
  • Local Arrangements Guide for 2020
    SCS/AIA DC-area Local Arrangements Guide Contributors: • Norman Sandridge (co-chair), Howard University • Katherine Wasdin (co-chair), University of Maryland, College Park • Francisco Barrenechea, University of Maryland, College Park • Victoria Pedrick, Georgetown University • Elise Friedland, George Washington University • Brien Garnand, Howard University • Carolivia Herron, Howard University • Sarah Ferrario, Catholic University This guide contains information on the history of the field in the DC area, followed by things to do in the city with kids, restaurants within walking distance of the hotel and convention center, recommended museums, shopping and other entertainment activities, and two classically-themed walking tours of downtown DC. 2 History: In the greater Washington-Baltimore area classics has deep roots both in academics of our area’s colleges and universities and in the culture of both cities. From The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore—with one of the oldest graduate programs in classics in the country to the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, VA, classicists and archaeologists are a proud part of the academic scene, and we take pleasure in inviting you during the SCS and AIA meetings to learn more about the life and heritage of our professions. In Maryland, the University of Maryland at College Park has strong programs and offers graduate degrees in classical languages, ancient history, and ancient philosophy. But classics also flourishes at smaller institutions such as McDaniel College in Westminster, MD, and the Naval Academy in Annapolis. Right in the District of Columbia itself you will find four universities with strong ties to the classics through their undergraduate programs: The Catholic University of America, which also offers a PhD, Howard University, Georgetown University, and The Georgetown Washington University.
    [Show full text]
  • March/April 2009 3 a Fundraiser Reception Was Held on the Lawn of the Little White House with Clifton Truman Daniel on March 13
    2 Message from the Chief Conductor HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MR. PRESIDENT 20 Boston 8 Key West 16 Conch Tour Train 12 Savannah 14 San Diego 4 St. Augustine 10 Washington, D.C. © 9 CAST Anniversaries W i s c o n s 13 CASTmembers of the Month o n H i s t 18 Famous Faces o r i c a l S 7, 19, 21, 25 If You Only Knew... o c i e t 11 Personality Profile y 6 Pet of the Month Philleo Nash, with guitar, serenades President Harry Truman (with sunglasses and towel around neck) and unidentified members of the Truman White House at Key West, Florida. The woman seated on the chaise lounge is thought to be 22 Safety First Truman's daughter Margaret. 6 Someone’s in the Kitchen With... No, it was not President tion of the state of Isreal. 7 Vendor Spotlight Obama’s birthday, but one The first of our guest was a real American 19 Welcome Aboard closer to Key West’s heart. hero, Col. Gail Halvorsen, on of the Berlin May 8th marked the 125th Airlift’s most famous pilots. He is more N birthday of the 33rd famously known as the Candy Bomber. As President of the United an airlift pilot in Berlin, Col. Halverson saw States, Harry S Truman. a group of hungry German children at the In honor of the occasion, end of the runway and upon meeting them the Little White House host - came to the conclusion perhaps we could ed a week long series of end wars by winning the loyalty of the next events culminating with the generation.
    [Show full text]
  • MEMORIAL.Pdf
    Memorial Memorial Chapel at Virginia Tech i Memorial What do these stones mean to you? By William David Miller Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirement of the degree of Master of Architecture. January 15, 2001 Blacksburg, Virginia ______________________________________________________________________________________ Heinrich Schnodt committee chair _______________________________________________________________________________________ Michael O’Brien committee Co-chair _______________________________________________________________________________________ William Brown _______________________________________________________________________________________ William Galloway ii Dedicated to MERLIN PARKER 1918 - 2000 iii investigation - abstract introduction - Origins influences - Biography - What do these stones mean to you? intuition - Observations - The Pragmatism of Memorials - Object - Site - Path introspection - Confession - intuition vs. interpretation imagination - The project - The Martin Luther King Memorial interpretation - Conclusion APPENDIX intermission - Kovak Memorial iv v investigation Vision is now completely focused. It sees and looks for only one thing. It is driven to capture one thing again and again with an almost unfulfillable desire. It is then that I begin to wonder whether the building is concealing something I may never be able to capture in its entirety. Can it be that the building has a soul? - Helene Binet 1. Handprints, painted cave ruins, Arizona. vi They lay claim to space... ...and give us something to be next to... What do these stones mean to you? At some point in man’s history, there came a moment in time when he realized an inherent need to be remembered. Whether it was man’s first sin and its immedi- ate consequences of earthly mortality. Or whether it was the progress and devel- opment on an evolutionary scale where man emerges and with it invention and time to contemplate his existence.
    [Show full text]
  • V I E W E R ' S G U I
    VIEWER’S GUIDE Created by Cable. Offered as a Public Service. THE MISSION To provide our audience with access to the live, gavel-to- • To provide the audience, through viewer call-in gavel proceedings of the U.S. House of Representatives and programs, direct access to elected officials, other the U.S. Senate and to other forums where public policy decision-makers and journalists on a frequent is discussed, debated and decided – all without editing, and open basis; commentary or analysis and with a balanced presentation of points of view; • To employ production values that accurately VIEWER’S GUIDE convey the business of government rather than • To provide elected and appointed officials and others distract from it; and who would influence public policy a direct conduit to the audience without filtering or otherwise distorting their • To conduct all other aspects of the C-SPAN points of view; networks’ operations consistent with these principles. THE C-SPAN NETWORKS The C-SPAN networks were created by the cable industry and With headquarters in Washington, D.C., C-SPAN employs are offered as a public service to provide access to balanced, more than 250 people who work to fulfill cable’s Covering the Events that Shape the Nation commercial-free coverage of the American political process. commitment to public affairs programming. The networks The networks are privately funded by the cable industry and also provide other information and education services, without government or taxpayer support. including C-SPAN.org, C-SPAN Radio, C-SPAN Classroom and the C-SPAN Bus. VIEWER’S GUIDE C-SPAN was launched in 1979 to provide live, gavel-to-gavel coverage of the U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • N Stage D E G G 9 11
    THE WASHINGTON L AND IF AMERICA IS TO BE A GREAT BUT ONE HUNDRED YEARS LATER, NATION THIS MUST BECOME TRUE. I AM HAPPY TO JOIN WITH YOU TODAY IN WHAT THE NEGRO STILL IS NOT FREE. ONE SO LET FREEDOM RING FROM THE WILL GO DOWN IN HISTORY AS THE GREATEST HUNDRED YEARS LATER, THE LIFE OF PRODIGIOUS HILLTOPS OF NEW DEMONSTRATION FOR FREEDOM IN THE HISTORY OF THE NEGRO IS STILL SADLY CRIPPLED HAMPSHIRE. LET FREEDOM RING OUR NATION. BY THE MANACLES OF SEGREGATION FROM THE MIGHTY MOUNTAINS OF FIVE SCORE YEARS AGO, A GREAT AMERICAN, IN AND THE CHAINS OF DISCRIMINATION. NEW YORK. LET FREEDOM RING FROM WHOSE SYMBOLIC SHADOW WE STAND TODAY, ONE HUNDRED YEARS LATER, THE THE HEIGHTENING ALLEGHENIES OF SIGNED THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION. THIS NEGRO LIVES ON A LONELY ISLAND PENNSYLVANIA! MOMENTOUS DECREE CAME AS A GREAT BEACON OF POVERTY IN THE MIDST OF A VAST LET FREEDOM RING FROM THE MONUMENT GROUNDS AT LIGHT OF HOPE TO MILLIONS OF NEGRO SLAVES WHO OCEAN OF MATERIAL PROSPERITY. SNOWCAPPED ROCKIES OF COLORADO! HAD BEEN SEARED IN THE FLAMES OF WITHERING ONE HUNDRED YEARS LATER, THE LET FREEDOM RING FROM THE INJUSTICE. IT CAME AS A JOYOUS DAYBREAK TO END NEGRO IS STILL LANGUISHING IN THE CURVACEOUS SLOPES OF CALIFORNIA! THE LONG NIGHT OF THEIR CAPTIVITY. CORNERS OF AMERICAN SOCIETY BUT ONE HUNDRED YEARS LATER, THE NEGRO STILL AND FINDS HIMSELF AN EXILE IN HIS SYLVAN THEATER OWN LAND. SO WE HAVE COME HERE WASHINGTON MONUMENT 1 MULTIPLE VOICES GRASS-CRETE PARKING LOT/FLEX SPACE NEW NATIVE GARDEN AT SURVEY LODGE From its beginning Washington DC was constructed out of wilderness; a nature through the creation of a range of spaces for democratic interaction.
    [Show full text]
  • Honors Awards Z Financial Aids the University of Arizona Record
    1978-1980 Scholarships-Honors-Awards-Financial Aids Item Type Book Authors University of Arizona Publisher University of Arizona Rights Permission to use or to order reproductions must be obtained from the University of Arizona Libraries, Special Collections. Contact us at [email protected], or (520) 621-6423. Download date 07/10/2021 06:32:34 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/288563 zICC OTHE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA RECORD N aaC ó 1978.80 Scholarships DC Honors Awards z Financial Aids The University of Arizona Record 1978.80 Scholarships Honors Awards Financial Aids THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA TUCSON, ARIZONA THE UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA RECORD Vol. LXXI, No. 2 July 1978 The University of Arizona is an Equal Employment Opportunity /Affirmative Action Employer. In compliance with Title IX (Educational Amendments of 1972), Title VII (Civil Rights Act of 1964), and Section 504 (Rehabilitation Act of 1973), the University does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, creed, color, national origin, or handicapping condition in its educational programs or activities, including admissions and employment. Inquiries concerning ap- plication of Title IX, Title VII, and Section 504 may be referred to Dr. Jeanne McCarthy, Assistant Executive Vice President, Administration 503, phone 602 -884 -3081. Statement of Mailing Privilege The University of Arizona Record is issued seven times a year. Pub- lished monthly during July, August, and October; and semimonthly dur- ing April and June. Second class postage paid, Tucson,
    [Show full text]
  • Foundation Statement for the National Mall and Pennsylvania Avenue National Historic Park
    FOUNDATION STATEMENT FOR THE NATIONAL MALL AND PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NATIONAL HISTORIC PARK CONTENTS must be consistent with and contribute to ful- filling the park’s purpose, significance, and Foundations for Planning and Management .... 1 mandates. The National Mall & Memorial Parks ............... 2 • Purpose: The park purpose is the specific Purpose .......................................................... 2 reason that a particular park was estab- Significance.................................................... 4 lished by Congress or the president. State- Fundamental Resources .............................. 5 ments of the park’s purpose are grounded Fundamental Values..................................... 5 in a thorough analysis of the park’s estab- Primary Interpretive Themes...................... 5 lishing legislation (or executive order) and Other Important Resources and Values .... 6 legislative history, including studies prior to authorization. Purpose statements may The National Mall................................................. 6 go beyond a restatement of the law to Purpose .......................................................... 6 document shared assumptions about what Significance.................................................... 7 the law means in terms specific to the park. Fundamental Resources .............................. 7 Fundamental Values..................................... 8 • Significance: Park significance statements Primary Interpretive Themes...................... 9 express why the park’s resources
    [Show full text]
  • 2021 Issue 1
    M.E.B.A. Marine Engineers’ Beneficial Association (AFL-CIO) 2021 (Issue #1) At Sea and Ashore New Work Further Diversifies Job Opportunities for Membership The engine department on the MAERSK ATLANTA following a successful voyage some months back. Left to right are C/E Aaron Lord, QMED Sammy Sanders, KP Cadet Hailey Hicks, Wiper Gustavo Guerra Morhaim, 1st A/E Vladimir Chpatchev, 3rd A/E Richard Goronski, Electro Derek Chestnut and 2nd A/E Frank Crifasi. They are in front of their newly fabricated tool board showing off some American pride, made possible by QMED Sammy and Cadet Hailey. Faces around the Fleet M.E.B.A. 3rd Mate Mathew Daghir coming out of the 4DB outer starboard ballast tank on the CAPE DOMINGO during an ABS special survey. The DOMINGO is a Keystone- A rare and delightful green flash sunset, captured by photographer Jonathan Land who managed Ready Reserve Force vessel berthed doubles as an M.E.B.A. member and Third Mate onboard the M/V LIBERTY PROMISE. in Charleston. Thanks to Capt. Pat McGourthy This was taken off the Egyptian coast. for the great photo. On the Cover: Members working under our contract with Philadelphia Ship Services (PSS) recently removed and overhauled a towing winch from a tugboat in Jersey City. M.E.B.A. has been pursuing new initiatives and job opportunities for our highly- skilled membership both at sea and ashore. Marine Officer The Marine Officer (ISSN No. 10759069) Periodicals Postage Paid at The Marine Engineers’ Beneficial Association (M.E.B.A.) is published by District No.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014 USNA Viewbook.Docx
    Introduction United States Naval Academy As the undergraduate college of our country’s naval service, the Naval Academy prepares young men and women to become professional officers and leaders of sailors and Marines. Naval Academy students are midshipmen on active duty in the U.S. Navy. They attend the Academy for four years, graduating with Bachelor of Science degrees and commissions as ensigns in the Navy or second lieutenants in the Marine Corps. Naval Academy graduates serve at least five years in the Navy or Marine Corps. Around the Yard The scenic Naval Academy campus, known as the Yard, is located in historic Annapolis, Md., where the Severn River flows into the Chesapeake Bay. With its combination of early 20th-century and modern buildings, the Naval Academy is a blend of tradition and state-of-the-art technology that exemplifies today’s Navy and Marine Corps. Throughout the Yard, tree-shaded monuments commemorate the bravery and heroism that are an inherent part of the Academy’s heritage. Buildings and walkways are named for Naval Academy graduates who have contributed to naval history and their nation. The Naval Academy also is the final resting place of Revolutionary War naval hero John Paul Jones, whose words, “I have not yet begun to fight,” have inspired generations of naval officers. His crypt is located beneath the Academy chapel. Tourists and midshipmen also appreciate downtown Annapolis, which lies just outside the gates of the Academy. History Secretary of the Navy George Bancroft laid the foundation for the Naval Academy when, in 1845, he established the Naval School at Fort Severn in Annapolis.
    [Show full text]
  • Scholarships-Honors-Awards-Financial Aids
    1984-1987 Scholarships-Honors-Awards-Financial Aids Item Type Book Authors University of Arizona Publisher University of Arizona Rights Permission to use or to order reproductions must be obtained from the University of Arizona Libraries, Special Collections. Contact us at [email protected], or (520) 621-6423. Download date 08/10/2021 01:38:08 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/288549 AR I 1984 -1987 Scholarships Honors Awards Financial Aids RECORD The University of Arizona 19R-: A Proud Beginning The University of Arizona 1885 1985 A Proud Beginning "The goals of the University of Arizona are to provide the opportunity for the acquisition of comprehensive education and usable skills, to serve as a resource for the expansion of knowledge through research; and to extend the opportunity to improve the quality of life by making available the services and resources of the University, its faculty and staff, to the students of the University and citizens of the State. " The University of Arizona Record 1984 -87 Scholarships Honors- Awards Financial Aids The University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona 3 The University of Arizona Record Vol. LXXVII, No. 2 February 1984 The University of Arizona is an EEO /AA employer and does not dis- criminate on the basis of sex, race, religion, color, national origin, age, Vietnam Era Veterans' status, or handicapping condition in its admissions, employment, or educational programs or activities. Inquiries may be referred to Celestino Fernandez, Ph.D., Assistant Vice President for Affirmative Action, Administration 501, 602/621 -3081. Statement of Mailing Privilege The University of Arizona Record is issued seven times a year.
    [Show full text]
  • John Paul Jones
    John Paul Jones For the Led Zeppelin musician, see John Paul Jones During his next voyage aboard the brig John, which sailed (musician). For other uses, see John Paul Jones (disam- from port in 1768, young John Paul’s career was quickly biguation). and unexpectedly advanced when both the captain and a ranking mate suddenly died of yellow fever. John man- aged to navigate the ship back to a safe port and, in reward John Paul Jones (July 6, 1747 – July 18, 1792) was a Scottish American sailor and the United States' first well- for this impressive feat, the vessel’s grateful Scottish own- ers made him master of the ship and its crew, giving him known naval fighter in the American Revolutionary War. [3] Although he made both friends [1] and enemies among 10 percent of the cargo. He then led two voyages to the America’s political elites, his actions in British waters West Indies before running into difficulty. during the Revolution earned him an international repu- During his second voyage in 1770, John Paul viciously tation which persists to this day. As such, he is sometimes flogged one of his sailors, a carpenter, leading to accusa- referred to as the “Father of the United States Navy” (an tions that his discipline was “unnecessarily cruel.” While epithet he shares with John Barry). He later served in the these claims were initially dismissed, his favorable rep- Imperial Russian Navy, subsequently obtaining the rank utation was destroyed when the sailor died a few weeks of rear admiral. later. John Paul was arrested for his involvement in the man’s death, and was imprisoned in Kirkcudbright Tol- booth but later released on bail.[4] The negative effect of this episode on his reputation is indisputable,[3] although 1 Early life and education the man’s death has been linked to other causes as the physician of a ship where the carpenter traveled home Jones was born John Paul (he added “Jones” in later witnessed in the court.
    [Show full text]