0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
in the form of the ghost of his late uncle, frederick the great.ctly, and in a well-placed voice to proclaim that evil forces want to destroy prosia. not a step further, return to your borders, everything is correct, the order, of course, just like that, exactly, uh-huh, exactly the order, congratulations, efim, explanation, showroom, explanation, and you won’t tell us how... tornagi - he e came up with a verse with her name, where he said that he loves, it’s difficult to object to you here, of course, because he really came up with it there, but i need to know from which opera and what role he sang then, no, you already have medals, perhaps i can assume that... this is the opera pskoviteanka, no, as from pskov, so immediately pskovityanka, well, he definitely earned a medal, i’ll ask who is ready to answer, except the prisoner, and sophie saracheva, nizhny novgorod region, the city of kulebaki, and shelyapin performed the role of prince gremin in tchaikovsky’s opera, gremin in tchaikovsky’s opera, evgeny anegin, evgeny, i won’t hide , i love tatya
in the form of the ghost of his late uncle, frederick the great.ctly, and in a well-placed voice to proclaim that evil forces want to destroy prosia. not a step further, return to your borders, everything is correct, the order, of course, just like that, exactly, uh-huh, exactly the order, congratulations, efim, explanation, showroom, explanation, and you won’t tell us how... tornagi - he e came up with a verse with her name, where he said that he loves, it’s difficult to object to you...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the great. as such an informal diplomat on special, including not entirely, so to speak, correct instructions or rather karl peter ulrich. catherine is not the first and not the last woman on the russian throne, but of course she was radically different from everyone else. if we talk about the number of favorites. the era of catherine the great, then she had it, probably more than all the other empresses combined. we must remember how it all began, catherine at a very young age was married to peter fedorovich, the heir to the russian throne, since elizabeth was bezet, he was discharged from galshtinia, they tried to raise him as a russian heir, but i must say, it didn’t work out, he was a german, and remains a german. between spouses. didn’t work out, at the beginning there seemed to be a warm period at the very beginning, but then everything went to hell, i must say that ekaterina and from the very beginning she dreamed of a crown, she was still in germany, being in her duchy and the principality of angalzerb, she dreamed of being lucky, she tried on the russian crown, and as klyuchevsky wro
the great. as such an informal diplomat on special, including not entirely, so to speak, correct instructions or rather karl peter ulrich. catherine is not the first and not the last woman on the russian throne, but of course she was radically different from everyone else. if we talk about the number of favorites. the era of catherine the great, then she had it, probably more than all the other empresses combined. we must remember how it all began, catherine at a very young age was married to...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
alexander gorchakov once said that under frederick the great, this diplomat could have become a ministerk into the water? bisvrk, that's right. catering for 500. after retiring as a trade atache, american katie krieger opened the uriika cafe in this port in 2004 city. the establishment is still operating today. casablanca. absolutely right. like in the movie casablanca. in 1942, the film was shot in a pavilion in the casso blanca itself. there was no urika cafe. not only about birds over 300, the god witzli-putzli advised the nomadic stacks to establish a settlement in the place where a giant eagle would devour a snake, sitting on a cactus, and so, according to legend, this city appeared: mexico city, no, well, you’re nachitetlan, absolutely right. mexico city is now in tetlan's place all night. not just about birds over 200. chinstrap penguins do it at just a few seconds, but up to 600 times within an hour. they fall asleep, maybe. you're right? 300. at the australian restaurant kerens diner, the waiters have every right to behave this way. connecting, cast-iron bridges will cross acros
alexander gorchakov once said that under frederick the great, this diplomat could have become a ministerk into the water? bisvrk, that's right. catering for 500. after retiring as a trade atache, american katie krieger opened the uriika cafe in this port in 2004 city. the establishment is still operating today. casablanca. absolutely right. like in the movie casablanca. in 1942, the film was shot in a pavilion in the casso blanca itself. there was no urika cafe. not only about birds over 300,...
0
0.0
May 11, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
a message to you from the great frederick douglass a great maryland or from the 19th century. i leave you with the words of the great tom paine paine who my son tommy was named after. tom paine came to america in 1774, two years before the american revolution. he fell in love with the promise of america. he saw it immediately. an entire government based on the idea of a democratic self ruled and the rights and freedoms of the people. he said, if this land it up to its potential, it will become an asylum to humanity. not an insane asylum, mind you. ed asylum to humanity, a place of refuge for people's leading -- people fleeing religious, political, and economic oppression from all over the world. in 1776 he wrote common sense, the pamphlet that ignited the american revolution. he said common sense was the sense people have, even if they did not get to go to the princeton theological seminary. the sense we have in common, if we are willing to reason together to speak and listen and not be spellbound by conspiracy theories and mania and nonsense. common sense. anyway, the revolut
a message to you from the great frederick douglass a great maryland or from the 19th century. i leave you with the words of the great tom paine paine who my son tommy was named after. tom paine came to america in 1774, two years before the american revolution. he fell in love with the promise of america. he saw it immediately. an entire government based on the idea of a democratic self ruled and the rights and freedoms of the people. he said, if this land it up to its potential, it will become...
0
0.0
May 17, 2024
05/24
by
RUSSIA1
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
his majesty presented these works as a gift to the prussian king frederick the great.ainting with attributes of art. mercury allowed pegal not only to become a member of the royal academy of arts, but also attracted the attention of high patrons to him. the king's favorite madame pampadour wanted to have her own sculptural portraits of his work. in addition, pegal performed an allegorical composition entitled “love turns into friendship," which transparently hinted at a change in the favorite's relationship with the monarch. by order of madame pampadour, he... mastered several children's portraits, the highest patronage helped pigalle receive large orders, he could execute with equal brilliance, like a revived statue of the madonna and child for the church saints stage. and the monument of louis for the city square in reims. at the feet of the monarch, pegal placed himself. he became the prototype of one of the allegorical figures. the statue of louis was destroyed, which turned out to be a victim of the french revolution. a quarter of a century later it took its place
his majesty presented these works as a gift to the prussian king frederick the great.ainting with attributes of art. mercury allowed pegal not only to become a member of the royal academy of arts, but also attracted the attention of high patrons to him. the king's favorite madame pampadour wanted to have her own sculptural portraits of his work. in addition, pegal performed an allegorical composition entitled “love turns into friendship," which transparently hinted at a change in the...
0
0.0
May 10, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
a message to you from the great frederick douglass a great maryland or from the 19th century. i leave you with the words of the great tom paine paine who my son tommy was named after. tom paine came to america in 1774, two years before the american revolution. he fell in love with the promise of america. he saw it immediately. an entire government based on the idea of a democratic self ruled and the rights and freedoms of the people. he said, if this land it up to its potential, it will become an asylum to humanity. not an insane asylum, mind you. ed asylum to humanity, a place of refuge for people's leading -- people fleeing religious, political, and economic oppression from all over the world. in 1776 he wrote common sense, the pamphlet that ignited the american revolution. he said common sense was the sense people have, even if they did not get to go to the princeton theological seminary. the sense we have in common, if we are willing to reason together to speak and listen and not be spellbound by conspiracy theories and mania and nonsense. common sense. anyway, the revolut
a message to you from the great frederick douglass a great maryland or from the 19th century. i leave you with the words of the great tom paine paine who my son tommy was named after. tom paine came to america in 1774, two years before the american revolution. he fell in love with the promise of america. he saw it immediately. an entire government based on the idea of a democratic self ruled and the rights and freedoms of the people. he said, if this land it up to its potential, it will become...
0
0.0
May 26, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and it was frederick douglass picture. great. it must have been for that 20 something to have frederick douglass come visit the and give him his blessing. it's beyond belief in many respects. so as i told you about booker washington and what he got to get to tuskegee, i'm giving you the short course because i still want you read the book. but i do want to give you an idea about teddy roosevelt, because i know a lot of you are sitting there saying bright, it's huge stretch to compare the two. i get it. slavery, that's that's beyond hard to get through i'm not comparing them directly but teddy roosevelt had money. the one thing he didn't have was health the kid grew up. he had bad asthma. his parents described. and i talked to his great grandson who helped me with the book. he's 80 who knew teddy roosevelt's wife. she lived much passed him into the i think 1959. and i one thing he had is that asthma and when you have asthma as a kid back then, you could do nothing. you just sit and watch. your kid may be choked to death. they had t
and it was frederick douglass picture. great. it must have been for that 20 something to have frederick douglass come visit the and give him his blessing. it's beyond belief in many respects. so as i told you about booker washington and what he got to get to tuskegee, i'm giving you the short course because i still want you read the book. but i do want to give you an idea about teddy roosevelt, because i know a lot of you are sitting there saying bright, it's huge stretch to compare the two. i...
0
0.0
May 10, 2024
05/24
by
1TV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the benefactor expects great services from us, are you talking about king frederick? elsa’s aunt. my angel, since then, i remember perfectly how i saw you. i think we've lost our way. i don't think so. in my opinion, too, we’ll transfer you to a wagon, everything is calmer, prince, prince, well, where is it, prince, i ’m listening to you, prince, i want you to lie down here not far, my dear, i’m very afraid of these natives. tiki, i’ve already missed you, we’re like that. they haven’t spoken for a long time, but your face is always in front of me, i hear your voice, my angel, i live for your look, your smile, your smile, your kiss, listen, hear, the cricket sings, little... pack, and the pubic rays, its strumas, do you know what the cricket sings about? no, but i know, the nurse sang to me about it, it’s a very sad story, the night breathed with a wondrous light, then the star in the window trembled. oh, how the smoochok sings when he is in love with the cricket. zhelk, why hold me together to love me, why love me, the star tells him, yours was not in vain, such is my
the benefactor expects great services from us, are you talking about king frederick? elsa’s aunt. my angel, since then, i remember perfectly how i saw you. i think we've lost our way. i don't think so. in my opinion, too, we’ll transfer you to a wagon, everything is calmer, prince, prince, well, where is it, prince, i ’m listening to you, prince, i want you to lie down here not far, my dear, i’m very afraid of these natives. tiki, i’ve already missed you, we’re like that. they...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the palace chapel and the bed chamber of king frederick the 1st. what makes charlatan burst palace all the more amazing by the gardens, so much nature right in the middle of portland, and it's a great spot to come to, to escape the hustle and bustle of the city. the lake here is connected to this play river, which flows through berlin. so the royalty was able to travel between charleston, but palace and the city palace by going to love. the gardens were originally designed in french style and later expanded in the english landscape garden style. onto the next stop of the day. for the perfect day trip from berlin. and for a little bit of madness, geraniums where you have to check out the green eco problem. the, this charming little palace was designed to look exactly like. and it's holly and villa is a perfect fairytales fault, and it takes less than an hour to get here. from the center of rowland, this new costco summer palace was designed to run to 1825, but the prince karl of prussia. he was thrilled by the beauty of the classical world and wante
the palace chapel and the bed chamber of king frederick the 1st. what makes charlatan burst palace all the more amazing by the gardens, so much nature right in the middle of portland, and it's a great spot to come to, to escape the hustle and bustle of the city. the lake here is connected to this play river, which flows through berlin. so the royalty was able to travel between charleston, but palace and the city palace by going to love. the gardens were originally designed in french style and...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the palace chapel and the bed chamber of king frederick the 1st mixture i left in berth palace all the more amazing are the gardens so much nature right in the middle of portland. and it's a great spot to come to, to escape the hustle and bustle of the city. the lake here is connected to this play river, which flows through berlin. so the royalty was able to travel between charleston, but palace and the city palace by going to love. the gardens were originally designed in french style and later expanded any english landscape garden style. on to the next step of the day. for the perfect day trip from berlin and for i looked about of mediterranean swear, you have to check out the gleam, a co pilot in this charming little palace was designed to look exactly like. and it's holly and villa is a perfect fairytales fault and it takes less than an hour to get here from the center of berlin. this neo costco summer palace was designed to run 1825 for the prince, karl of prussia. he was thrilled by the beauty of the costco world and wanted his very own roman style country house in berlin. the gar
the palace chapel and the bed chamber of king frederick the 1st mixture i left in berth palace all the more amazing are the gardens so much nature right in the middle of portland. and it's a great spot to come to, to escape the hustle and bustle of the city. the lake here is connected to this play river, which flows through berlin. so the royalty was able to travel between charleston, but palace and the city palace by going to love. the gardens were originally designed in french style and later...
0
0.0
May 27, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
bastiat buildings, where everyone knows great french economist frederick bastiat in the book, i resurrect him and we travel around the world and see world as it might be, but is not economic illiteracy right? this is one of my favorite root causes for a lot of bad government policies. i economists tend to think everybody knows that if we go and deregulate will come down. but the problem is that hurt some people. well, we've actually done pretty good surveys, even experimental surveys, where we ask people, what do you think happen if we allow people to build a lot more housing and the rough breakdown of the public is a third of people think that would raise a third thinks no difference a third think it would bring them down. so roughly speaking, the public a random view on this issue we're almost all economists would agree. of course allowing more construction brings prices down. so if people are in two thirds, the public is in total denial. the main benefit of housing. it's not surprising that hardly anyone supports it. so what want to do in the book is change people's minds overcome the
bastiat buildings, where everyone knows great french economist frederick bastiat in the book, i resurrect him and we travel around the world and see world as it might be, but is not economic illiteracy right? this is one of my favorite root causes for a lot of bad government policies. i economists tend to think everybody knows that if we go and deregulate will come down. but the problem is that hurt some people. well, we've actually done pretty good surveys, even experimental surveys, where we...
0
0.0
May 25, 2024
05/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
great to have you here russia is absolutely zeroed in on kharkiv. what is the significance besides being the second largest city, right? >> jessica? yeah it's good to be with you. what are the key things to note about kharkiv, which is right here, is it's only 20 miles from the russian border the russians also have this town of belgorod, which is a major staging area for the russian forces and has been really since the beginning of this war. but kharkiv is really important, as you mentioned, second city. but it's also the key to north eastern ukraine. and when you look at all of ukraine you can see that there were so many different parts of this area, but this is basically the key to everything that's coming to the south and everything that is basically in the eastern part of the country right here. it's basically an effort by the russians to go from the donbass region, which has all of this to include more of ukraine on the eastern side, right there by that borders, important contexts. and yesterday, the secretary of state, anthony blinken, announc
great to have you here russia is absolutely zeroed in on kharkiv. what is the significance besides being the second largest city, right? >> jessica? yeah it's good to be with you. what are the key things to note about kharkiv, which is right here, is it's only 20 miles from the russian border the russians also have this town of belgorod, which is a major staging area for the russian forces and has been really since the beginning of this war. but kharkiv is really important, as you...
28
28
May 19, 2024
05/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
raisi. >> let's bring in retired us air first air force colonel frederick leighton kernel great to seeou. it seems pretty obvious here that they are dealing with some pretty difficult weather and that whether could have been a factor in all of this absolutely. >> jessica and one of the things when you look at the crash site right here, you notice, first of all that it's extremely mountainous, but when there's a weather fronted comes through a place like this. it actually has a major impact because what it's doing is it's creating all kinds of conditions. the elevation is high. that means the temperature is low and it could mean everything from fog to sleet, to even possibly a snowfall in certain areas with the highest elevations. so it's a very difficult terrain to deal with for rescue efforts. and the fact that it's in an area that is not only mountainous, but also really rough terrain makes the search operations really hard to deal with. it. >> it helps explain potentially why it could be 12 hours. now we still don't know where the president of iran is absolutely. >> because in a sit
raisi. >> let's bring in retired us air first air force colonel frederick leighton kernel great to seeou. it seems pretty obvious here that they are dealing with some pretty difficult weather and that whether could have been a factor in all of this absolutely. >> jessica and one of the things when you look at the crash site right here, you notice, first of all that it's extremely mountainous, but when there's a weather fronted comes through a place like this. it actually has a major...
0
0.0
May 14, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i do say that as somebody who great the admirers alastair mcintyre whom i admire more than almost any other thinker but nonetheless i believe he was wrong about frederick nietzsche, aristotle and the modern liberal tradition. here i can mostly only assert these claims and sketch what i think is a better view. i do hope that this will shed some light on our question, civic virtue in a liberal or rights protecting democracy. and what i say about mcintyre i think applies to the post liberal critique of liberalism. first he misrepresents the critique of philosophy. nietzsche didn't show the specifically modern philosophy was an expression of will. and he did not believe himself to have shown that. nietzsche believed he had accomplished something much more radical. he believed to have established that all great philosophy, plato and aristotle no less played more comfortably and was reducible to the moral intention of the philosophers themselves, and all rationalism beginning with plato down to the moment nietzsche was thinking in the middle of the 19th century, all of it culminated in nihi
i do say that as somebody who great the admirers alastair mcintyre whom i admire more than almost any other thinker but nonetheless i believe he was wrong about frederick nietzsche, aristotle and the modern liberal tradition. here i can mostly only assert these claims and sketch what i think is a better view. i do hope that this will shed some light on our question, civic virtue in a liberal or rights protecting democracy. and what i say about mcintyre i think applies to the post liberal...
0
0.0
May 27, 2024
05/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
that's a great question. i don't know of any who were invited to white house or the lincoln did invite african-americans to the white house in the of frederick douglass in august of 1864. he invited douglass to come to the white house to talk with him. it seems apparent that probably invited henry mcneill turner, a black minister in washington, d.c. there soldiers who wrote to lincoln, who then went went to the white house and met him. but i don't know of any cases. lincoln received a letter and then invited. thank you. from these impact fashioned letters, it's that black soldiers committed to supporting the despite continued prejudice. dr. white share a deeper context for kinds of prejudice and inequity that black soldiers experienced. it's really interesting to think about fight that african-americans to go through during the war to, push for equality in. so many different areas of life, social life and political life and even in military life after 63, they are laying their lives on the line. bullets do no
that's a great question. i don't know of any who were invited to white house or the lincoln did invite african-americans to the white house in the of frederick douglass in august of 1864. he invited douglass to come to the white house to talk with him. it seems apparent that probably invited henry mcneill turner, a black minister in washington, d.c. there soldiers who wrote to lincoln, who then went went to the white house and met him. but i don't know of any cases. lincoln received a letter...