0
0.0
Apr 5, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he goes with weinberger to the 80 w and then goes with weinberger to the and he becomes step secdef at. the and then and then at and now h.w., of course is what we call now health and human services hhs and. then he returns i love this piece of the story to the foreign service because henry kissinger because of course we had we talk about this period having not mentioned henry kissinger. so he surfaces and he personally, as president. ford mm hmm. to have well, i guess it's get me carlucci to portugal. so us tell us what was going on in portugal at the time and why henry kissinger thought that your father was a person who could address, you know, what he needed and right. so during this period of time, portugal was transitioning. the 50 years prior, portugal under an autocracy and kissinger was extremely worried and convinced that portugal was going to fall under communist rule. so he wanted to send tough guy carlucci. he viewed him as tough guy carlucci to portugal to to change the situation. my nominated as ambassador there goes to portugal, and within and does the of the same things
he goes with weinberger to the 80 w and then goes with weinberger to the and he becomes step secdef at. the and then and then at and now h.w., of course is what we call now health and human services hhs and. then he returns i love this piece of the story to the foreign service because henry kissinger because of course we had we talk about this period having not mentioned henry kissinger. so he surfaces and he personally, as president. ford mm hmm. to have well, i guess it's get me carlucci to...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
but the vast majority in the room, most of them almost certainly disagreed with weinberger, booed the protesters what i would the elad was a place with overflowing classrooms and meeting halls, keg parties, debates, plays, and sport events always well attended, which are made for rich community. many of my best friends today are people i met in those packed rooms for decades ago i've returned to my campus several times since then and for many years it felt very much the same place i had been to all those years ago. but over the last decade, campus life has seemed center. and then came covid, which like a neutron bomb, decimated community life on campus while leaving all the beautiful buildings intact in his essay, belkin quotes or residential assistant at another college whose job it was to help socialize the freshmen many wouldn't leave their rooms even for dome meetings. asieh over text if they could video chat instead, the bewildered rass, i was literally across the hall a college official at another place suggested this may be the new normal there may be no real return to the past
but the vast majority in the room, most of them almost certainly disagreed with weinberger, booed the protesters what i would the elad was a place with overflowing classrooms and meeting halls, keg parties, debates, plays, and sport events always well attended, which are made for rich community. many of my best friends today are people i met in those packed rooms for decades ago i've returned to my campus several times since then and for many years it felt very much the same place i had been to...
0
0.0
Apr 29, 2024
04/24
by
KNTV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: and they're already coming out in south carolina, where they're taking over sarah weinberg's backyard. did you think it was going to be this bad? >> no. no. i really wasn't prepared because i've never seen this before. this is my first invasion. they moved in. and they have stayed. >> reporter: stayed mostly under her gazebo, clinging on to every corner and crevice. >> they think this is a safe spot. >> reporter: it's already getting so loud in newberry county, people are calling the sheriff to complain. >> we had a leap year. we had an eclipse. now we've got cicadas everywhere. >> reporter: why so many this year? one set of cicadas comes out every 17 years, another every 13 years. this year, there is an emergence of both broods. that hasn't happened since 1803. they're coming out from alabama to missouri, and where they may overlap the most, illinois. >> they're talk, you know, epic numbers, biblical kind of numbers of them in that area. >> so something historic potentially is brewing in the midwest. >> it definitely is historic for year. >> reporter: augusta, georgia agricu
. >> reporter: and they're already coming out in south carolina, where they're taking over sarah weinberg's backyard. did you think it was going to be this bad? >> no. no. i really wasn't prepared because i've never seen this before. this is my first invasion. they moved in. and they have stayed. >> reporter: stayed mostly under her gazebo, clinging on to every corner and crevice. >> they think this is a safe spot. >> reporter: it's already getting so loud in...
0
0.0
Apr 2, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
on behalf of my colleagues on the book prize jury, michele crowe, kristen mcwherter and daniel weinberg, it my honor and pleasure to announce the 2023 howard holter or lincoln book prize winner edward acorn for his the lincoln miracle inside the republican convention, the changed history. not yet. acorn presents a brilliantly written, riveting account of the 1860 republican convention that was held in chicago during summer of that year. he recounts in comprehensive how abraham lincoln the darkest, dark, stunned the political pundits of the time by defeating william seward of new york. considered by most observers as overwhelming favorite for the republican nomination for president. acorns page. turner. i must admit, i could not put this book down even i knew how it would end places the in the cigar smoke filled hotel rooms of party movers and shakers and on the raucous convention floor, introducing us to lincoln's rivals, and especially his convention managers who worked the key state delegations and made the essential deals to achieve lincoln's nomination. the 1860 republican conventio
on behalf of my colleagues on the book prize jury, michele crowe, kristen mcwherter and daniel weinberg, it my honor and pleasure to announce the 2023 howard holter or lincoln book prize winner edward acorn for his the lincoln miracle inside the republican convention, the changed history. not yet. acorn presents a brilliantly written, riveting account of the 1860 republican convention that was held in chicago during summer of that year. he recounts in comprehensive how abraham lincoln the...
0
0.0
Apr 10, 2024
04/24
by
KNTV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
with andy richter and the max weinberg 7. and now, here's the guest, conan o'brien!at's what we're talking about. that's right. that's right. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] come on. [ cheers and applause ] oh, that was a standing ovation. >> that was -- man, that was -- come on! knock it off! [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: that's gotta feel good. that's gotta feel -- >> conan! >> you know, i know you meant well, but i have "the tonight show" for ten minutes and you just ate into my time. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: we'll give you time. >> this is all the time i have. knock it off! >> jimmy: standing up on this desk, i was almost as tall as you are. you're a very tall individual. >> yes, i'm a freak. yeah, it's not good. i'm a kind of height -- and many people have said that it's -- "that would hurt your career to be that tall." i was told that there were -- over the years, guests that might not want to come on, especially male actors that are smaller. 'cause i would tower over them. so, it's a true story. what i would do for years -- and you can see it on tape -- is i would
with andy richter and the max weinberg 7. and now, here's the guest, conan o'brien!at's what we're talking about. that's right. that's right. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] come on. [ cheers and applause ] oh, that was a standing ovation. >> that was -- man, that was -- come on! knock it off! [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: that's gotta feel good. that's gotta feel -- >> conan! >> you know, i know you meant well, but i have "the tonight show" for ten minutes and...
0
0.0
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
by
KNTV
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> and now, a stunning decision in the harvey weinberg case sparked the me too movement. his rape conviction was overturned and now, he is serving a 23-year prison term for sex abuse, and since then, nearly 100 women came forward with pressure from weinstein. chloe malos is following the conviction. what does this mean for weinstein who is currently in prison? >> zinhle, i am standing here in downtown manhattan where the criminal trial took place behind me, and i sat through everyday of that criminal trial in 2020, and the court of appeals has said that the individuals who testified known as mulino witnesses who testified for bad acts should have been inadmissible, and for that reason, they are overturning the conviction, but he obviously does have, and he could stand to face 16 years in a california prison at some point for separate charges, but i did speak to one of harvey weinstein's former criminal attorneys today, and i asked how unprecedented was it that this thing is overturned? >> well, what comes to mind for a lot of people looking at this, this is the court of a
. >>> and now, a stunning decision in the harvey weinberg case sparked the me too movement. his rape conviction was overturned and now, he is serving a 23-year prison term for sex abuse, and since then, nearly 100 women came forward with pressure from weinstein. chloe malos is following the conviction. what does this mean for weinstein who is currently in prison? >> zinhle, i am standing here in downtown manhattan where the criminal trial took place behind me, and i sat through...
0
0.0
Apr 4, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
little bit of the the actual document that's in the national archives the stay of execution as dan weinberg will tell you, that is not abraham lincoln's handwriting on this. but lincoln said in granting this respeot, it becomes my painful to admonish the prisoner that relinquishing all expectation of pardon from hume by human authority. he himself alone to the mercy of the common god and father of all men and can see what lincoln is doing here. he was reminding a slave trader that africans were human beings, made in the image of god who deserved and respect. they were not of merchandise to quote tawney, to be bought and sold whenever a profit could be made. and so lincoln gave gordon two weeks to think about what he had done. and then two weeks later, the execution is scheduled to take place. well, the night before the execution, some friends of nathaniel gordon snuck some cigars in to him and they had poison hidden in cigars. and the night before the execution takes place, gordon opens cigar and takes the poison, and the guards hear him writhing in pain and they in and they find him on the
little bit of the the actual document that's in the national archives the stay of execution as dan weinberg will tell you, that is not abraham lincoln's handwriting on this. but lincoln said in granting this respeot, it becomes my painful to admonish the prisoner that relinquishing all expectation of pardon from hume by human authority. he himself alone to the mercy of the common god and father of all men and can see what lincoln is doing here. he was reminding a slave trader that africans were...
0
0.0
Apr 7, 2024
04/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
her defense attorney was robert weinberg. >> how was she doing? >> she is under so much pressure.according to diane attorney, she was at the shop because he forced her to be there. >> cody was a very, very difficult character to live with. very volatile. violent. i would say that she was subject to his commands, come to the shop. cocome with me. >> diane's story was like patricia's. she was a wife that went along out of fear. >> diane had nothing to do with this at all. >> so when patricia turned down her plea deal and refused to testify, a door opened for diane. >> you are willing to plead guilty to the new charge and the enhancement and receive a possible sentence of up to four years in prison? >> diane made a deal with the prosecutor, pleading guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter, in exchange, she agreed to testify in the case against patricia, and her testimony would be explosive. diane said patricia wasn't forced into anything, but instead, took part in planning the murder. >> gianni was talking about wanting to find this guy and retaliate. according to diane, those dis
her defense attorney was robert weinberg. >> how was she doing? >> she is under so much pressure.according to diane attorney, she was at the shop because he forced her to be there. >> cody was a very, very difficult character to live with. very volatile. violent. i would say that she was subject to his commands, come to the shop. cocome with me. >> diane's story was like patricia's. she was a wife that went along out of fear. >> diane had nothing to do with this at...
0
0.0
Apr 18, 2024
04/24
by
CNBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
joining us is charles ellison, founding director of the weinberg center at the university of delawareood morning to you. we had a pretty fiery debate with ann lipton from tulane university yesterday about exactly what may or may not happen as a result of this effectively whether shareholders, if they did vote, in fact, again, now, to put this plan back in place, that that would be a legal thing to do she seemed to suggest she thought it was not what do you think? >> i agree with her on that one. look, they can vote on it, but the judge in the opinion pretty clearly says not only was the process bad, but the result that the equity comp they designed was effectively a gift to mr. musk, that there was no value received now, companies give things away, money away, without corporate purpose. but everyone's got to agree to it you got to get every shareholder and that's not going to happen here i mean, the idea is that having a shareholder vote, of disinterested shareholders is helpful in determining something was fair, but she's determining it wasn't and that's the issue you have to rethink
joining us is charles ellison, founding director of the weinberg center at the university of delawareood morning to you. we had a pretty fiery debate with ann lipton from tulane university yesterday about exactly what may or may not happen as a result of this effectively whether shareholders, if they did vote, in fact, again, now, to put this plan back in place, that that would be a legal thing to do she seemed to suggest she thought it was not what do you think? >> i agree with her on...