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Mar 26, 2018
03/18
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and cathy was devastated. >> she was so upset. she was crying.t believe that someone would do something like that. >> reporter: and now the torrez family was left to wonder if and how all of this connected to cathy's disappearance. >> just felt like you were out in this time warp. you know, there was no days and no nights. and you didn't want it to be dark because you wanted to keep looking. >> reporter: the next big search was planned for saturday morning, february 19th -- one week since cathy had last been seen. >> we got all the maps ready, and we had just got another box donated of flyers. and everything was set. >> reporter: and then around 3:40 a.m. saturday, there was a knock on mary's front door. police find cathy's car. >> cathy's shoe was on the floorboard and there was blood within the interior of the car. >> what had happened to cathy? today we're out here with some big news. jardiance is the only type 2 diabetes pill proven to both significantly reduce the chance of dying from a cardiovascular event in adults who have type 2 diabetes
and cathy was devastated. >> she was so upset. she was crying.t believe that someone would do something like that. >> reporter: and now the torrez family was left to wonder if and how all of this connected to cathy's disappearance. >> just felt like you were out in this time warp. you know, there was no days and no nights. and you didn't want it to be dark because you wanted to keep looking. >> reporter: the next big search was planned for saturday morning, february 19th...
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Mar 20, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN
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there was a case called -- in which a black woman was taking a steamboat down the mississippi was well off, she was trying to get to her plantation that she owned. herwas interested from as a, first-class heaven consequence of being african-american. that challenge went to court. it turned on a question that was not irrelevant to the sea. and it turned on the question of the fact that the steamship started its journey outside of the state. the interstate commerce clause governed. if it was interstate, it -- interstate, it would have been a different result. you had a similar issue in plessy. plessy was not the first individual to challenge the railroad law that you put up on the screen. there was another individual. that trip started outside of the state, so the same result. plessy's case was totally intrastate so it raised the question and only the question of whether or not it was himtitutional to segregate in a railroad car under the law. an interesting note. the railroad companies did not like this law either because it was expensive. >> right. in more than one way. they might have
there was a case called -- in which a black woman was taking a steamboat down the mississippi was well off, she was trying to get to her plantation that she owned. herwas interested from as a, first-class heaven consequence of being african-american. that challenge went to court. it turned on a question that was not irrelevant to the sea. and it turned on the question of the fact that the steamship started its journey outside of the state. the interstate commerce clause governed. if it was...
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Mar 20, 2018
03/18
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the law that was being challenged was going to be upheld. and so he ruled against homer plessy. >> we saw in our timeline that it took almost three and a half years for this case to make it to the supreme court. part of that was some strategy on the part of albino tourget, hoping for a more favorable court. >> i don't know specifically why this case was being litigated for so long. it wasn't unusual in the 19th century for cases to take a long time to get to the supreme court. i can think of cases in the 1830s that were first argued in 1831, but never got decided until after john marshall had died, until 1837. it wasn't that unusual for cases to take a long time to percolate. but even today, it's not unusual for it to take a couple years for something to get to the supreme court. but there might have been something specific going on. i don't know, ted, do you know why it took that long? >> well, i think you're correct when you say that it took some time, and it's a rule today, it's always been a rule that it takes a while for these cases to
the law that was being challenged was going to be upheld. and so he ruled against homer plessy. >> we saw in our timeline that it took almost three and a half years for this case to make it to the supreme court. part of that was some strategy on the part of albino tourget, hoping for a more favorable court. >> i don't know specifically why this case was being litigated for so long. it wasn't unusual in the 19th century for cases to take a long time to get to the supreme court. i can...
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230
Mar 31, 2018
03/18
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MSNBCW
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he was wonderful toll be around. >> he was a good kid.e really was. >> behind a grin and demeanor was a determined and ambitious businessman. spent time in the corporate world now interested in going the steve jobs route. his wife understood. backed rusty to the hilt when he wanted to focus on a startup. >> they were partners in every way, shape and form. whether in life, whether it was through business ventures. i think they were both able to treat each other in a way that made each other better. >> their marriage seemed solid to people who knew them. for now rusty's grief stricken friends and family wanted answers. answers that seemed to be taking a long time in coming. >> no one had any idea who did this, what happened. >> for weeks after rusty's death, police had been trying to untangle the business relationships. suspicious he had been gunned down by a professional hitman, they were looking for a money trail to liead him to his keele. >> it cost us thousands of investigative hours and time. >> turned out this crime wouldn't be solved
he was wonderful toll be around. >> he was a good kid.e really was. >> behind a grin and demeanor was a determined and ambitious businessman. spent time in the corporate world now interested in going the steve jobs route. his wife understood. backed rusty to the hilt when he wanted to focus on a startup. >> they were partners in every way, shape and form. whether in life, whether it was through business ventures. i think they were both able to treat each other in a way that...
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Mar 5, 2018
03/18
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in 1968, when valenti was already out of the white house, he was at a dinner party and she was injured or was basically -- schlesinger was basically trashing the war policy. moyers was still in the white house. schlesinger says, what are you talking about? nobody from the kennedy-johnson administration very seriously doubted the way it was going in vietnam. johnson's administration was heavily populated by kennedy holders. schlesinger was the kennedy family's court historian, was never able to record johnson's place in history, which is not to minimize what a difficult man johnson was. brian: we have talked about lyndon johnson a lot on this network. how did you go about writing a book that was different than others, not duplicating? joshua: i can't wait for the next volume of his book. they are foundational. he is a biographer, and although i deal with elite actors, i don't view this as a biography, per se. it's really a history of political ideas, history of the way government administrated certain programs. it is a book about johnson, but it is not really a book about johnson. it is
in 1968, when valenti was already out of the white house, he was at a dinner party and she was injured or was basically -- schlesinger was basically trashing the war policy. moyers was still in the white house. schlesinger says, what are you talking about? nobody from the kennedy-johnson administration very seriously doubted the way it was going in vietnam. johnson's administration was heavily populated by kennedy holders. schlesinger was the kennedy family's court historian, was never able to...
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Mar 28, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN3
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he was -- he was stuck. he couldn't figure out how to get out of the war. he was tied in too much with military, industrial complex, and he probably wasn't feeling all that good. he didn't do well in new hampshire, so by the end of the month he said the hell with it all, and he decided to let others step up, and, you know, we know the result. i will say one last thing about the primary and the passion that the ballot children had and the passion that a lot of people nationwide brought to the -- brought to the election process and wanted to campaign and get involved in politics. because of the division that we saw in new hampshire between democrats fighting with democrats. i mean, people did not talk with one another for years if they were supporting johnson or if they were supporting mccarthy, and four years later if they were supporting mcgovern or muskie. because of that and certainly with the republicans several years later running into the watergate problems and seeing national politics on their party di
he was -- he was stuck. he couldn't figure out how to get out of the war. he was tied in too much with military, industrial complex, and he probably wasn't feeling all that good. he didn't do well in new hampshire, so by the end of the month he said the hell with it all, and he decided to let others step up, and, you know, we know the result. i will say one last thing about the primary and the passion that the ballot children had and the passion that a lot of people nationwide brought to the --...
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Mar 27, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN3
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>> yes, i was in areas where it was used. but again let's take a look at the framework under which this war was being fought. i think it was the most complicated war that the united states has ever had to fight. it's not necessarily a negative thing to say at this point that maybe a stalemate given the s a strategic statements, just like north korea versus south korea. and east and west germany. and that's the way a lot of people including myself were attempting to do. can you preserve a portion of ha country and develop a diplomacy and overtime have something come out of it, south versus north korea is a great example. and the other thing that i think should be remembered is that there were at the extreme left, there were people who had revolutionary goals in this country that didn't connect with vietnam at first. the great example of that is the students for democratic society, sds which was at the vanguard at more of the violent protests. they were formed in 1962 with the port her on statement at the university of michigan
>> yes, i was in areas where it was used. but again let's take a look at the framework under which this war was being fought. i think it was the most complicated war that the united states has ever had to fight. it's not necessarily a negative thing to say at this point that maybe a stalemate given the s a strategic statements, just like north korea versus south korea. and east and west germany. and that's the way a lot of people including myself were attempting to do. can you preserve a...
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Mar 18, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 67
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she was an artist, she was an author. she was a civil rights activist, a producer, a poet. and if you've ever heard her speak, she was an orator. and i think for a wake forest what she represents is our emphasis on teaching and the development of students as citizens. also as good people. doctor angelo is most famous for two things, or autobiography, i know why the caged bird sings which was published in 1968 and later became a film and a 1970. she also wroteother autobiographies and secondly for the inaugural poem , for clinton's auger is in organization on the pulse of morning that she resided at the inauguration in 1993. so we had papers of doctor maya angelou that focus on her film and theater work. her main literary papers are at the center for research in black culture in new york city but we document basically for work, early work in film before she came to a chorus, doctor angelo had a long career in television, film and screenwriting in addition to her writing career. so we spoke from the maya angelou film and theater collection. this is a hope, this is from the fi
she was an artist, she was an author. she was a civil rights activist, a producer, a poet. and if you've ever heard her speak, she was an orator. and i think for a wake forest what she represents is our emphasis on teaching and the development of students as citizens. also as good people. doctor angelo is most famous for two things, or autobiography, i know why the caged bird sings which was published in 1968 and later became a film and a 1970. she also wroteother autobiographies and secondly...
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Mar 2, 2018
03/18
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it was typical of the time. it was a brand-new nation, economy was loosely knit. there were opportunities to come successful. mccullough did that. --did it initial late initially. it is part of what people think the united states stands for. we don't have a position of comptroller today. but it was significant. guest: it was the person who was the central figure in the armament of the treasury who , thecare of the warrants treasurer of the united states. host: i wish there was more documentation. to go from this corruption case always to the speaker -- all the way to the speaker of the maryland house, to know more about how his life story turned out. it was very typical of what you find when you dig through early american records. the same family names pop up again and again. there weren't enough qualified and talented men to go around. the justices on the supreme court, each of them held positions in state government, they were legislatures or governors. that was in part because of the bleeding out out of loyalists after the revolution and it was hard to get an e
it was typical of the time. it was a brand-new nation, economy was loosely knit. there were opportunities to come successful. mccullough did that. --did it initial late initially. it is part of what people think the united states stands for. we don't have a position of comptroller today. but it was significant. guest: it was the person who was the central figure in the armament of the treasury who , thecare of the warrants treasurer of the united states. host: i wish there was more...
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Mar 6, 2018
03/18
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BBCNEWS
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that was it. well, i didn‘t ask them. they were brought without my knowledge. no, i suppose that we went off to london, the bbc‘s sportsnight had just been started and so i was on that, and then we went off and had dinner, friends, partners, and then we thought, well, we might as well wait and see what the newspapers say. so we went into a nightclub until about 2:00 in the morning and we thought, well, you know, it does seem to be causing quite a kerfuffle. i hear you put on a bit of a cabaret in the nightclub, is that right? i don‘t think i did. they say i sung something, but it‘s inconceivable, impossible. sir roger, we left you, if i remember rightly, singing time on your hands in a nightclub on the following day. you‘ve claimed that, but i could not possibly comment. well, you certainly celebrated the achievement. you had about two hours sleep, as i understand it, that night. the following day, busy again, in london, up 0xford, back to london, and the press by now were of course pursuing you.
that was it. well, i didn‘t ask them. they were brought without my knowledge. no, i suppose that we went off to london, the bbc‘s sportsnight had just been started and so i was on that, and then we went off and had dinner, friends, partners, and then we thought, well, we might as well wait and see what the newspapers say. so we went into a nightclub until about 2:00 in the morning and we thought, well, you know, it does seem to be causing quite a kerfuffle. i hear you put on a bit of a...
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Mar 28, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 87
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so it was -- it was -- it was a happy feeling. and as i say, it was almost as though president johnson was on his way out of jail, because he always felt -- in that particular carrier, he always felt very confined by the white house. and so it was a feeling of freedom. >> one other conversation on the evening of march 31st. this is with willard wirts who served as labor secretary let's listen. >> mr. president. >> yes, bill had how. >> that was the greatest contribution to peace in all of history. >> i hope so we are sure going to work on it. >> magnificent. beyond that i only want to tell you that at the right time i'll do everything in my power to reverse that decision. and i think i'm smart enough to. >> no. >> to know that right now is not the time. i didn't want to you say anything. >> let's not reverse it god bless you you've been in there and i'm grateful to you. >> it put new a position to do what woodrow wilson wasted the opportunity to do and what some other people wasted the opportunity to do. i just wanted to salute a
so it was -- it was -- it was a happy feeling. and as i say, it was almost as though president johnson was on his way out of jail, because he always felt -- in that particular carrier, he always felt very confined by the white house. and so it was a feeling of freedom. >> one other conversation on the evening of march 31st. this is with willard wirts who served as labor secretary let's listen. >> mr. president. >> yes, bill had how. >> that was the greatest contribution...
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Mar 31, 2018
03/18
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people thought he was a free person of caller, and there was no way the things he discussed was no waynd there the things he discussed about slavery on the eastern shore, it was not true. and he was blamed as "inarticulate." so he wrote the narrative to refute those claims, so he had to travel all through europe. great britain. susan: ireland as well? mr. mcclarin: ireland and scotland, yes. susan: so what set him on the path of the compliments with -- of his a compliments with education? mr. mcclarin: yes. susan: and how did he get education as a slave child? mr. mcclarin: he would obtain education through his slave mistress, and she took a liking to young fred. was when she was teaching him the letters are the got wind her husband of her teachings of the young stopped he pretty much the early forms of teaching. was a realized -- that transformative moment, realizing that knowledge was power. that sent him on his quest to becoming his own master. becoming literate, an early intellectual. susan: so he not only was self educated, but he took it upon himself, very dangerously, to educate o
people thought he was a free person of caller, and there was no way the things he discussed was no waynd there the things he discussed about slavery on the eastern shore, it was not true. and he was blamed as "inarticulate." so he wrote the narrative to refute those claims, so he had to travel all through europe. great britain. susan: ireland as well? mr. mcclarin: ireland and scotland, yes. susan: so what set him on the path of the compliments with -- of his a compliments with...
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Mar 11, 2018
03/18
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 24
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why do you think that was? and do you think it was fair?yd: you know, i think there were a number of factors. one, you can't escape the first factor, which is that we were very involved in things. for all the advice that we give, no one was asking us for advice on how to manage our public relations. we were flat-footed. we have been an institution for our whole lives. we didn't have a relationship with the american public. another name for the public is consumers and taxpayers. we did not have a consumer business. so we became the symbol of the mortgage business, but we didn't do mortgages. we bought mortgages from other firms and if you are buying mortgages from another firm, you are giving cash to them to do other mortgages which means we are an enabler of behavior. the accusation was, and it was born out by settlements where we agreed to a set of facts where we might not have done the due due diligence on mortgages that were acquired. so there is behavior in there. that is one factor. there was also the issue that we managed our risk pre
why do you think that was? and do you think it was fair?yd: you know, i think there were a number of factors. one, you can't escape the first factor, which is that we were very involved in things. for all the advice that we give, no one was asking us for advice on how to manage our public relations. we were flat-footed. we have been an institution for our whole lives. we didn't have a relationship with the american public. another name for the public is consumers and taxpayers. we did not have...
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Mar 30, 2018
03/18
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it was pretty clear this was an american victory. as well as german prisoners of war, it was a stunning american victory, the movie does a pretty good job. those are american tanks. they did get the he-111s flying through the valley. a.j. who was there, said, you know, if we could whip one german division, we can whip any german division. the problem is, the germans don't have a lot of divisions left. we recognized the fact that the germans were expending a wasting asset in on the steps of russia, and they weren't going to replace these guys, any guy they killed here wasn't going to come back. that could be a staff officer, a general officer. in the beginning of may, that's what happened. when the german pocket is squeezed and they fall, and you're talking about a quarter of a million soldiers are wiped off the table of battle from the german army, it was a huge victory. for the american army. kassarine was a learning point. we learned that the half track is not a very good tank destroyer and wasn't really in service much longer afte
it was pretty clear this was an american victory. as well as german prisoners of war, it was a stunning american victory, the movie does a pretty good job. those are american tanks. they did get the he-111s flying through the valley. a.j. who was there, said, you know, if we could whip one german division, we can whip any german division. the problem is, the germans don't have a lot of divisions left. we recognized the fact that the germans were expending a wasting asset in on the steps of...
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if it was no life why daddy was there. i. at first i was really happy to be with you. and i genuinely gave us lots of little gifts. they take us for rides in their cars they said they take us anywhere we wanted them you manage mentioned. the. bad lesson we're doing i bet you they took us home and gave us pocket money so they gave us money to brainwash us. they took us for rides and then brought us home . and sometimes they take us to the mosque and gave us white clothes to wear. generally have been bad after prayers they'd close the mosque and gather all the children together. they bring us guns you want i don't have there was a switch with the spring you'd have to press it and then that's how it opened is have all the other images have and they say to us good job. they gave us presence and seeing them thrown i've had am then the men would take us to the religious where we practiced firing at a tank on the way if you couldn't do it they'd kick you out of the group. that i will hi there. i don't. have i and yet what i liked
if it was no life why daddy was there. i. at first i was really happy to be with you. and i genuinely gave us lots of little gifts. they take us for rides in their cars they said they take us anywhere we wanted them you manage mentioned. the. bad lesson we're doing i bet you they took us home and gave us pocket money so they gave us money to brainwash us. they took us for rides and then brought us home . and sometimes they take us to the mosque and gave us white clothes to wear. generally have...
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Mar 11, 2018
03/18
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then sudden tli, there was silence, which was quite unlike her. trail of clues led detectives to one of chicago's most exclusive neighborhoods. would those clues lead them to nailah? here's keith morrison with "smoke and mirrors." no, no, it was hot and it was late, after midnight, september 27th, 2007. >> pretty secluded area next to a forest preserve. >> so it was. and it was clear and dark and still and vacant. here where the deep wood fought back against the decaying suburban sprawl, and then nothing was clear at all. i never cried this violent cry. >> you're experiencing everything but it's not true. >> you're just waiting to wake up. >> it just feels like you're literally in a nightmare. >> yes, still does. the name you'll want to remember is nailah. >> the meaning was one who succeeds. >> this is nailah's mother, maria. >> i wanted her to be successful and she was. she lived her name. >> quite true. as, frankly, have the rest of them in this big family. this is leah, the first born. >> we might need a graph or a chart because it's kind of i
then sudden tli, there was silence, which was quite unlike her. trail of clues led detectives to one of chicago's most exclusive neighborhoods. would those clues lead them to nailah? here's keith morrison with "smoke and mirrors." no, no, it was hot and it was late, after midnight, september 27th, 2007. >> pretty secluded area next to a forest preserve. >> so it was. and it was clear and dark and still and vacant. here where the deep wood fought back against the decaying...
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Mar 25, 2018
03/18
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it was scary. >> it was instinct that told her something was wrong, said lindsay. so she called 911. >> 911, state your emergency. >> a woman was killed. >> now, hours and hours later, the detectives confronted chris with lindsay's story. why, they asked, didn't her story match his? >> i'm not going to say she's lying, she sounds like a truthful kid, whatever. but i don't know. i can't explain what she's saying she saw. >> so now that question we posed as we began. did lindsay patterson really know what she saw? >>> dateline returns after the break. >>> after his wife's drowning death in a backyard spa, police asked chris hall to explain what happened that morning. what chris did not know was that his neighbor had also talked to police. and she told a very different story than the one chris was telling. here again is keith morrison. >> chris and cristi hall's three daughters clung together in grief and shock, all through the dismal evening hours of that worst of all days, june 7, 2007. waiting for their father to return from the police station. and they wondered, w
it was scary. >> it was instinct that told her something was wrong, said lindsay. so she called 911. >> 911, state your emergency. >> a woman was killed. >> now, hours and hours later, the detectives confronted chris with lindsay's story. why, they asked, didn't her story match his? >> i'm not going to say she's lying, she sounds like a truthful kid, whatever. but i don't know. i can't explain what she's saying she saw. >> so now that question we posed as we...
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112
Mar 11, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN3
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he was at the pentagon the same time i was. when he found out that i was going to take over battalion, we had lunch together and he said -- when i get to campbell, look them up. i got there on a sunday afternoon, i told my wife this in she said -- well, go look them up. division commander, he lives in a big white house. said come on, drive up there, he told you to look them up. you know how wives are, sometimes. i knocked on the door and he answered. and he recognized me. so, in the transition, he put me in the vip guest quarters, right next to the commanding general's , untiluntil i took over i got quarters. >> ok, all right. around this time, one of the battalions coming back from accident.a tragic the gander incident. could you tell me a bit about that? yes. the division participated in what was now called the multinational force observer. as a result of the camp david accords, i believe president carter signed them and the u.s. agreed as a part of it to establish a series of truce lines. a separation line between the egypti
he was at the pentagon the same time i was. when he found out that i was going to take over battalion, we had lunch together and he said -- when i get to campbell, look them up. i got there on a sunday afternoon, i told my wife this in she said -- well, go look them up. division commander, he lives in a big white house. said come on, drive up there, he told you to look them up. you know how wives are, sometimes. i knocked on the door and he answered. and he recognized me. so, in the transition,...
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182
Mar 17, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN
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what was unusual was there was no oral argument. they depended on briefs. why is that? >> >> back then, the court heard a lot more cases than it does today. california,s from it was quite an arduous journey. what to get out as quickly as possible and get the sentence off of their head. wasn't asback then big as it was today. 20th very common to apply century ideas to the 19th century courts. the capri in court said these cases were relevant but people -- >> and no c-span of course. the arguments made focus on the laundry owner said what? >> they said these warrants were -- these laws not being enforced. the key point is arbitrariness. generally, if you want to have a permanent you need to say, you have to ventilation for this laundromat. it has to have good equipment. there was no standard. it just said, you apply for the permit. period. they said, there's no standard for which against these standard should be enforced and enforcement itself was unconstitutional. susan: next up. >> thank you for sharing insights. [indiscernible] applyth amendment didn't and it wasn't un
what was unusual was there was no oral argument. they depended on briefs. why is that? >> >> back then, the court heard a lot more cases than it does today. california,s from it was quite an arduous journey. what to get out as quickly as possible and get the sentence off of their head. wasn't asback then big as it was today. 20th very common to apply century ideas to the 19th century courts. the capri in court said these cases were relevant but people -- >> and no c-span of...
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Mar 21, 2018
03/18
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BBCNEWS
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tonight, we look at who he was and why he was radicalised. we have worked on this report which contains images of the attack some may find distressing. london under 22nd of march last year. the attack floors the accelerator, mounting the pavement of westminster bridge. watch the highlighted circle. the car was his murder weapon. this was not a random attack. it was an individual who had beenin attack. it was an individual who had been in extremists for many years and whose behaviour was like many extremists we have seen. minutes later, he sent a document to his whatsapp group justifying his attackers. it was called retaliation. three people were killed outright on the bridge. one died later in hospital. newsnight has learned it could have been even worse. security sources have told newsnight these barriers saved 25— 30 lives on the day of the attack, and that is because masoud's car was forced onto the road. he drove along here and cut back into the pavement, crashing the car on the left over there. my god. seconds later, he jumped out of his
tonight, we look at who he was and why he was radicalised. we have worked on this report which contains images of the attack some may find distressing. london under 22nd of march last year. the attack floors the accelerator, mounting the pavement of westminster bridge. watch the highlighted circle. the car was his murder weapon. this was not a random attack. it was an individual who had beenin attack. it was an individual who had been in extremists for many years and whose behaviour was like...
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143
Mar 17, 2018
03/18
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MSNBCW
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eye 143
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he was fun. he was fun. he -- he really was. >> reporter: "he" was tom clayton. he served as the jackal's "instigator," the guy who starts fights. when he and kelley locked eyes, it was game over. >> she met him that weekend. she met him that weekend and -- >> she met the bad boy. >> yes, she did. >> was it instant for them? >> yes. it was. >> reporter: they were married about two years later. and a few after that came the kids. >> reporter: a girl and a boy. tom traded in his hockey skates for work boots to run a home restoration business. now andrea had her best friend back home, plus tom. >> what did you love about him? >> he was very generous. he would shower her with things. we had a mutual friend, who he and his wife passed away in a car accident. and he -- tom immediately called men -- me and was like, "we've got to do this. let's do this fundraiser." we did, you know. and he was like a brother. >> reporter: almost ten years into the marriage, kelley still gushed about her tom. >> and she was just talking about he's the greatest guy. i hit the jackpot with
he was fun. he was fun. he -- he really was. >> reporter: "he" was tom clayton. he served as the jackal's "instigator," the guy who starts fights. when he and kelley locked eyes, it was game over. >> she met him that weekend. she met him that weekend and -- >> she met the bad boy. >> yes, she did. >> was it instant for them? >> yes. it was. >> reporter: they were married about two years later. and a few after that came the kids....
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was. inside of a god i never doubted that his custody was justifiable and it was also justified from a medical perspective you know his health was repeatedly assessed to ensure that he was fit to remain in custody has a definite. but total of seven experts were commissioned by the berlin regional court the defense and the public prosecutor's office. refused to speak with most of them. he remained silent often for hours. it was not for nothing that he was known as a master of secrets. mr newcome when were you wounded. concern you tell me that. and where were you born. mr male you can remain silent that's fine it's like let's both be silent. and we both want to return to mars so does that will be possible mr milkha i have two or three hours place to say how we spend it is up to you and. mr milkha you were born on december twenty eighth nineteen zero seven in the district of vetting in berlin the board of adding the red getting. even letters to your mother died when you were three years old y
was. inside of a god i never doubted that his custody was justifiable and it was also justified from a medical perspective you know his health was repeatedly assessed to ensure that he was fit to remain in custody has a definite. but total of seven experts were commissioned by the berlin regional court the defense and the public prosecutor's office. refused to speak with most of them. he remained silent often for hours. it was not for nothing that he was known as a master of secrets. mr newcome...
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know why because the guys i was in my life and i was i thought i was. by the early fifty's the defeated germany was recovering and on the way to becoming one of europe's most powerful states maria brown the success was a metaphor of this economic miracle. by starting the film with a picture of hitler and finishing it with portraits of the west german chancellor since our first been to criticize their silence regarding naziism and the methods that governments have used to achieve economic success. let. me see. if you spoke to germans about the economic miracle at the time the nazis were basically barbarians who came from heaven knows where occupy germany and call. a huge amount of chaos and then they were thrown out by the allies that was it it wasn't the germans or the dea not sufficient process took place and then the people said we've changed we had nothing to do with what happened no idea don't ask my neighbor. i you can sure ship us if we move the enemy whether i want you to first spend the rebelled against this very conservative germany era veal th
know why because the guys i was in my life and i was i thought i was. by the early fifty's the defeated germany was recovering and on the way to becoming one of europe's most powerful states maria brown the success was a metaphor of this economic miracle. by starting the film with a picture of hitler and finishing it with portraits of the west german chancellor since our first been to criticize their silence regarding naziism and the methods that governments have used to achieve economic...
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Mar 18, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN2
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no longer was the foreclosure something that was going to happen, it was something that was currently happening, something i was already getting through which meant somehow i might emerge, perhaps not unscathe ised, but stable, sane, not a total wreck of a person. so i took the fact that i shushed my dogs and helped the mailman turn around in the drive to be a good sign, an indication that i would survive this, that someday we would refer to the time our house was foreclosed in the past tense. it would be something that happened long ago, something barely worth mentioning. the house we lived in before the financial collapse, we would say, the home we lost just before things got better. i had experienced this same kind of numb acquiescence several years before when my grandfather was dying. for months i had been so consumed with grief and worry over his failing health that when he was actually lying in his hospice bed, his breath slow and raspy, the air filled with strange, acrid scents, something in me released. all those months of trying to keep him alive, of holding out hope that he
no longer was the foreclosure something that was going to happen, it was something that was currently happening, something i was already getting through which meant somehow i might emerge, perhaps not unscathe ised, but stable, sane, not a total wreck of a person. so i took the fact that i shushed my dogs and helped the mailman turn around in the drive to be a good sign, an indication that i would survive this, that someday we would refer to the time our house was foreclosed in the past tense....
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Mar 27, 2018
03/18
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LINKTV
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i was busy. i was working a lot.my: explain what happened when you u are arrested, where e youe taken. >> i'm going to explain a lot of that in my book. i'm in the process of writing a book at the moment. a lot of -- there is a lot of --ormation that i would ask was exposed to in a very overwhelming time for me. i'm also dealing with who i am. there's a lot going on which i will be able to get into far more detail in my book. amy: when you were taken to kuwait, describe the place you were kept. >> i got taken to kuwait after cid detain me in 2010. amy: cid stands for? >> criminal investigation division. the u.s. army intelligence, criminal investigation division. big metal cage. i was staying there. a sense of who i was. i lost a sense of time. i lost a sense of location. i had been in this cage for 60 days, but ie did not really know. i didn't have access to a calendar. after about 20 or 30 days, i mean, i just became so depressed and so overwhelmed that i just gave up. amy: a cage and solitary. no one else was ther
i was busy. i was working a lot.my: explain what happened when you u are arrested, where e youe taken. >> i'm going to explain a lot of that in my book. i'm in the process of writing a book at the moment. a lot of -- there is a lot of --ormation that i would ask was exposed to in a very overwhelming time for me. i'm also dealing with who i am. there's a lot going on which i will be able to get into far more detail in my book. amy: when you were taken to kuwait, describe the place you were...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 16, 2018
03/18
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SFGTV
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there was -- the variance was issued, it was appealed, it was upheld, hearing request was denied, been no changes to the building permit subsequent to that. therefore, the permit was correctly approved by the planning department and i'm available for any questions you may have. >> appellant make notes of the notation or the comment of 51 feet. is there any special thing associated with the property being 51 feet in height? >> not that i'm aware of. but often times, information like that may be put on the face of the building permit and what actually is determined, what is permitted to be built is on the plans, and the plans, measured height of the building per the planning code is 50 feet. >> ok. thank you. >> reviewed and approved and appears to have been issued correctly. >> thank you. any public comment on this item? please step forward. >> not more me but my father. can i use the lower microphone? >> he can use that, sure. you can lower the microphone. hold on one minute, i think that microphone needs to be turned on. >> wait a minute. i'm sorry. working now. ok. try it. >> i would
there was -- the variance was issued, it was appealed, it was upheld, hearing request was denied, been no changes to the building permit subsequent to that. therefore, the permit was correctly approved by the planning department and i'm available for any questions you may have. >> appellant make notes of the notation or the comment of 51 feet. is there any special thing associated with the property being 51 feet in height? >> not that i'm aware of. but often times, information like...
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Mar 23, 2018
03/18
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CNNW
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it was more about the way it was presented. it was about we don't want to tarnish your image an deep your brand wholesome and whole. that's awesome. that's great. that's the whay i perceive this contract. have you heard the term catch and kill? >> i had not. >> do you know what that is now? >> i do now. i do now. >> what's your understanding of catch and kill is? >> from what i'm learning is a catch and kill is somebody for like, yourself, taking a story about someone you like or care about or have a friendship about or they squash the story so it didn't hurt you. or hurt them. >> ami which says they don't do catch and kill but a number of former employees have told the new yorker that it routinely they have done catch and kill. they have purchased the rights to a story, done an interview, get your story about donald trump but then they never publish it. they own the rights to it and you can't tell it to anybody else. the story is killed add a favor to, in this case donald trump. >> right. >> that's the allegation of what was g
it was more about the way it was presented. it was about we don't want to tarnish your image an deep your brand wholesome and whole. that's awesome. that's great. that's the whay i perceive this contract. have you heard the term catch and kill? >> i had not. >> do you know what that is now? >> i do now. i do now. >> what's your understanding of catch and kill is? >> from what i'm learning is a catch and kill is somebody for like, yourself, taking a story about...
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Mar 9, 2018
03/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 46
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handsseriously, when i say commotion, it was big! oh, i was so say commotion, it was big!had put a car in the field for the indianapolis 500. i think a lot of try—fest would tell you the first time they make the field at indianapolis is a moment you will never forget. of course then you figure out that what you really want to do is win the thing! you're thinking, who's behind you, what are their driving habits? who is ahead of you? what mistakes are they likely to make? on the first lap you just really want to keep yourself out of any trouble. in that race, i had a mechanical failure. out of any trouble. in that race, i had a mechanicalfailure. when we finally decided the car was not going to be fixable, i left the pits and headed back to the garage. there was a lot of enthusiasm in the stands at that point. janet is not a newcomer to car racing... my best finish at indianapolis was ninth in 1978 with a team i've formed and managed to myself. my best finish in indycar racing was fifth at milwaukee. i wasn't racing to prove anything about women, because the fa ct anything a
handsseriously, when i say commotion, it was big! oh, i was so say commotion, it was big!had put a car in the field for the indianapolis 500. i think a lot of try—fest would tell you the first time they make the field at indianapolis is a moment you will never forget. of course then you figure out that what you really want to do is win the thing! you're thinking, who's behind you, what are their driving habits? who is ahead of you? what mistakes are they likely to make? on the first lap you...
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for you there was a lot going on here and it was cool to be part of it that the backdrop was cool toopecially at night when the cathedral was lit up that was special and it makes you want to stay out there a while longer and skate to my not only good fans of some of the clan. the debate went on for twenty years finally the skateboarders had to move elsewhere some of them is still upset about that decision. those are the kinds of it's purely subjective some people thought that we were violating the integrity of the cathedral but how can you damage cathedrals reputations in is the world so how can you do that by skateboarding the matheson and him here. so what is acceptable and what isn't outside cologne cathedral the debate about that is probably as old as the building itself it continues today fueled by the immediate proximity of the city's main railway station. to pick i know no other european city has a cathedral right next to a railway station you almost stumble into the cathedral when you leave the station the cathedrals north door used to be open and on a rainy morning commuters
for you there was a lot going on here and it was cool to be part of it that the backdrop was cool toopecially at night when the cathedral was lit up that was special and it makes you want to stay out there a while longer and skate to my not only good fans of some of the clan. the debate went on for twenty years finally the skateboarders had to move elsewhere some of them is still upset about that decision. those are the kinds of it's purely subjective some people thought that we were violating...
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that was he's decision. and i can again you know just to tell you what i feared that it was not easy and of course you know that was debated and allies there what would happen after and what would be their reaction from from the west from our from americans who sponsored. this in kiev and of course there their reactions alters. your cheap. goods and belief that obama would not dare to oppose him and gave the green light. on the twenty third of february putin attended the closing ceremony of the olympic games and three days later the crimea awoke to find itself in the hands of russian special forces went. landed during the night. one sovereign state ukraine had been invaded by another russia. province when he went into crimea we saw that this was a potential. but it was a surprise that he did in the way he did his goal is to keep ukraine destabilized and to make sure that it never completes any kind of western orientation he is not as we like to think of him especially here in the us a grand strategic thinker
that was he's decision. and i can again you know just to tell you what i feared that it was not easy and of course you know that was debated and allies there what would happen after and what would be their reaction from from the west from our from americans who sponsored. this in kiev and of course there their reactions alters. your cheap. goods and belief that obama would not dare to oppose him and gave the green light. on the twenty third of february putin attended the closing ceremony of the...
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1.1K
Mar 19, 2018
03/18
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MSNBCW
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was huge.was very, very important. >> but if tom foley was in that house and pulled the trigger, the question remained why. the answer, said carbon, is quite simple. murder for money. >> potentially, yes. >> money, in the form of an insurance policy. >> i think that he wanted out of the marriage and did whatever he needed to do to make sure that that happened. >> and if he got $310,000 in insurance money and got out of the marriage, so much the better? >> yes. >> the evidence against tom foley was circumstantial but compelling. you think he faked that burglary? >> yes. >> and killed his wife? >> yes. >> they never found the murder weapon. what do you think happened to the gun? >> i wish i knew. >> but even without it, in march of 2009, one month after dar foley was gunned down in her shower, state police arrested tom foley and charged him with his wife's murder. >> and i just -- what? why? i was, like, this could not be happening. why do you think i did this? i did not kill my wife. >> to tom a
was huge.was very, very important. >> but if tom foley was in that house and pulled the trigger, the question remained why. the answer, said carbon, is quite simple. murder for money. >> potentially, yes. >> money, in the form of an insurance policy. >> i think that he wanted out of the marriage and did whatever he needed to do to make sure that that happened. >> and if he got $310,000 in insurance money and got out of the marriage, so much the better? >>...
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doing and play it by ear it was spontaneous i gave melissa quick questions i was areas that i was going to cover but it wasn't limited he didn't say i was totally spontaneous i didn't have any limitation you know all the way to us and as you can see every day i look different he was always the same he looked very together i would sometimes. play here was blown in the wind. i guess i changed appearances several times but. in other words i'm the opposite of american anchor i don't look like megan kelly i don't look like you even. sam that's a compliment. i know what kind of great effort it takes to get that kind of access but. that's not easy i mean a lot of russian journalists and top journalists don't get that kind of access right and i know how much effort it took you to make this happen and make it come together and then the minute this comes out it was so talked about in russia and obviously the whole american press right away lashed out at you saying yourself flattering to certain that you're about entry or just want to do you care to get under under your skin because that's a lot o
doing and play it by ear it was spontaneous i gave melissa quick questions i was areas that i was going to cover but it wasn't limited he didn't say i was totally spontaneous i didn't have any limitation you know all the way to us and as you can see every day i look different he was always the same he looked very together i would sometimes. play here was blown in the wind. i guess i changed appearances several times but. in other words i'm the opposite of american anchor i don't look like megan...
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Mar 18, 2018
03/18
by
CSPAN3
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>> i was in areas where it was used.ake a look at the framework of which this war was being fought. it was the most complicated for the exits has ever had to fight. necessarily a negative thing to say, perhaps a stalemate given the strategic circumstances and the power of the antiwar movement here was an certainouble goal at a point just like north korea versus south korea, just like east germany forces westermann did that is how it a lot of people look at what we were at trying to do. can you preserve a portion of the country and establish a democracy, and then have something different come out of it? south korea is a great example. the other things that i think should be remembered, there were of the extreme left, people who had revolutionary goals for this country that did not connect with vietnam efforts. a great example is that were that with the think art of these violent protest. they were formed in 1962 at the university of michigan. they thought race was the issue which they could galvanize america into revoluti
>> i was in areas where it was used.ake a look at the framework of which this war was being fought. it was the most complicated for the exits has ever had to fight. necessarily a negative thing to say, perhaps a stalemate given the strategic circumstances and the power of the antiwar movement here was an certainouble goal at a point just like north korea versus south korea, just like east germany forces westermann did that is how it a lot of people look at what we were at trying to do....
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doing and play it by ear it was spontaneous i gave melissa quick questions i was areas that i was going to cover but it wasn't limited he didn't say i was totally spontaneous i didn't have any limitation you know all the way to us and as you can see every day i look different he was always the same he looked very together i would sometimes. play here was blown in the wind. i guess i changed appearances several jobs but. in other words i'm the opposite of american anchor i don't look like megan kelly i will look like you even. sam that's a compliment. i know what kind of great effort it takes to get that kind of access but. that's not easy i mean a lot of russian journalism top journalists don't get that kind of access right and i know how much effort it took you to make this happen and make it come together and then the minute this comes out it was so talked about in russia and obviously the whole american press right away lashed out at you saying yourself flattering to that you're about entry or just want to do you care it is again it under your skin because that's a lot of work you do
doing and play it by ear it was spontaneous i gave melissa quick questions i was areas that i was going to cover but it wasn't limited he didn't say i was totally spontaneous i didn't have any limitation you know all the way to us and as you can see every day i look different he was always the same he looked very together i would sometimes. play here was blown in the wind. i guess i changed appearances several jobs but. in other words i'm the opposite of american anchor i don't look like megan...
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whether it was russian or ukrainian was of no interest it just didn't matter. for many people here the fact that the soviet union ultimately collapsed on the divergence of its constituent parts is an accident of history a painful failure. i think ashore in the genesis of a soap. people one that was no longer split up into separate nationalities but had something of a common identity was a concept repeated like a mantra in the soviet union for many years and i think that idea certainly existed to an extent and is definitely still present in many people's minds today if you want. the future is shaped by the past and in that sense to most inhabitants of crimea russia feels closer than ukraine. if you cut a slot. experts of international law tell us that russia annexed crimea is the whole thing the demographic picture shows us that roughly sixty percent of its population is russian for just under twenty five percent ukrainian and twelve percent crimean toss and that the official result of the referendum was a communist style ninety seven percent in favor of leave b
whether it was russian or ukrainian was of no interest it just didn't matter. for many people here the fact that the soviet union ultimately collapsed on the divergence of its constituent parts is an accident of history a painful failure. i think ashore in the genesis of a soap. people one that was no longer split up into separate nationalities but had something of a common identity was a concept repeated like a mantra in the soviet union for many years and i think that idea certainly existed...
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29
Mar 31, 2018
03/18
by
BLOOMBERG
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she was a better student than i was.realistic to make these kinds of products in the united states, you would say, these shoes and those kinds of things? phil: it is as we speak, but the manufacturing technology is changing very, very rapidly, so out there somewhere five or 10 years, there will be some shoe manufacturing done in the united states, which is supposedly good news. the bad news is there will not be a lot of jobs. it will be automated. david: you were a runner for quite some time. you never actually hurt your knee so much, you don't have artificial knees or hips. phil: i do not. david: so how did you avoid those problems by running so much and not having damaged your body? you were just a graceful runner, or good shoes? phil: i don't have very much muscle mass, so i was lucky that way. but, yeah, i still get out and walk. when i was, i think 70, when i was out for one of my runs, i got passed by a woman with a baby carriage and realized that maybe i should really quit trying to run and just walk. [laughter] d
she was a better student than i was.realistic to make these kinds of products in the united states, you would say, these shoes and those kinds of things? phil: it is as we speak, but the manufacturing technology is changing very, very rapidly, so out there somewhere five or 10 years, there will be some shoe manufacturing done in the united states, which is supposedly good news. the bad news is there will not be a lot of jobs. it will be automated. david: you were a runner for quite some time....
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75
Mar 12, 2018
03/18
by
CNNW
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eye 75
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it was because she was vivacious and she was charming, and she was funny, and she spoke back and hadpinions. she did sort of stand out. >> as america enters the war, joseph seizes an opportunity to restore the kennedy name. >> once the united states was in war, he was smart enough to know there was no stopping them. they were going to go in. that was the patriotic thing to do. sure enough, joe kennedy helped them. >> joseph p. kennedy jr. reports for preliminary training. >> joe kennedy was the oldest son and therefore the most beholden to please dad. and joe kennedy wanted joe jr. to be president of the united states. >> now it's a first seat in america's defense for a young man who saw what happened over there. >> unlike joe, jack was not dutiful. he had a little bit of a rebellious streak. gallivanting around, chasing girls. he was also sick a lot. >> when jack is 2 years old, he contracts scarlet fever and he is basically sick for the rest of his life. fallen arches, bad knees, chronic colds, you name it, he had it. >> jack gets an office job in the navy intelligence service. bec
it was because she was vivacious and she was charming, and she was funny, and she spoke back and hadpinions. she did sort of stand out. >> as america enters the war, joseph seizes an opportunity to restore the kennedy name. >> once the united states was in war, he was smart enough to know there was no stopping them. they were going to go in. that was the patriotic thing to do. sure enough, joe kennedy helped them. >> joseph p. kennedy jr. reports for preliminary training....
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251
Mar 3, 2018
03/18
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KQED
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eye 251
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it was the company that was completely and utterly ruled by harvey. and harvey was a dictator.actresses' acting abilities involved with us flying somebodi and sp $20,000 on a role that would have cost $2,000. >> narrator: in his response toi "frontline,"nstein denied this and said thate and prince repeatedly cshed over budgets and other production issues. t but nearee years later, new york's aorney general would discover evidence of how weinstein was using company resources. >> we have emails, we have documents demonstrating that he was using the company to advance his sexual ierests. and there were a lot of employees who were either manipulated or intimated into helping him along. >> narrator: the attorney general alges that c executives and the board repeatedly failed to take meaningf steps to curb weinstein's behavior. >>here was a human resourc department at the weinstein company that not only didn't do anythit it appears to have been manipulated by harvey into helping him cover it up. ofere were lotof complaints, there were lots reports of harassment, abuse, and a toxic wo
it was the company that was completely and utterly ruled by harvey. and harvey was a dictator.actresses' acting abilities involved with us flying somebodi and sp $20,000 on a role that would have cost $2,000. >> narrator: in his response toi "frontline,"nstein denied this and said thate and prince repeatedly cshed over budgets and other production issues. t but nearee years later, new york's aorney general would discover evidence of how weinstein was using company resources....
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24
Mar 3, 2018
03/18
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 24
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it was, it was terrifying, i would say. so i was on a two hour teleconference.on't know what is going on. all we can see is the cnn helicopter feed, but if something happens to the reactor, this is horrible. two-hour teleconference. i am in perth, australia. click. i have to go do a town hall with 1000 people. so i have to walk like 20 steps. and i am going from the world as we know it is ending, to walk in and say, hey, guys, i am feeling good today. everything is groovy. right? everything is cool. we are going to get through this and things like that. and i think good leaders know how to be in the moment, intense, but compartmentalized. and i have always been able to do that in my personal life as well. ♪ david: i was in the oval office with my family after the surge in iraq. the president said, general, when are you going to have the guts to ride a mountain bike with me? i said, mr. president, do you have any idea who you are talking to? i said i am going to give you an experience that you can write off on your income taxes as education. david: right. [laught
it was, it was terrifying, i would say. so i was on a two hour teleconference.on't know what is going on. all we can see is the cnn helicopter feed, but if something happens to the reactor, this is horrible. two-hour teleconference. i am in perth, australia. click. i have to go do a town hall with 1000 people. so i have to walk like 20 steps. and i am going from the world as we know it is ending, to walk in and say, hey, guys, i am feeling good today. everything is groovy. right? everything is...
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55
Mar 17, 2018
03/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 55
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the windmill was nonstop review, it was called revudeville, so it was a review theatre, with nudes.t. so, the audience could sit there all day. the proudest years of the windmill were during the second world war. it allowed nothing to interfere. they were the only west end theatre open throughout the london blitz. really brave girls who stood there while the bombs landed all around them. the house manager came out onto the stage and asked the audience if they wanted the performance to continue, and almost every time the answer was yes. one of the most important things, the thing the audience would come to see, was the nude poses at the back of the stage. it was the obscenity laws, and you were not allowed to move in the nude on a london stage, or on any stage in the country. it was censorship. you can't be sexy if you stand still. although i don't know! so, the lord chamberlain‘s office, they'd come, very happily! they were very pleased to come to the shows and say, "that's a bit too much, you can't say that." but they always tipped us off when they were on their way! 1964, by then,
the windmill was nonstop review, it was called revudeville, so it was a review theatre, with nudes.t. so, the audience could sit there all day. the proudest years of the windmill were during the second world war. it allowed nothing to interfere. they were the only west end theatre open throughout the london blitz. really brave girls who stood there while the bombs landed all around them. the house manager came out onto the stage and asked the audience if they wanted the performance to continue,...
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she was on the contract she was a working i was starting out. it was a wonderful time with those early is and there we are the next thing i know we're going to make this picture together no one knew it but marilyn and i that we had this with history so everything we did was based on something we had already done and billy like that he like the chemistry between us. no nobody knows. if the. when marilyn took on the role she'd already shot the seven year itch with wilder she didn't work in new york attempting to break free of her typecast hollywood role at least the dumped law and. she brought along her coach paul astronomers wife of the actor studio director least rosberg. also on set was her husband playwright arthur miller who strapped for cash had talked her into doing the movie. marilyn hated the sexual innuendo and the heroines name sugar. it was the recipe for a nightmare shoot and that. arthur miller. the picture was terrible and he thought she should be playing. the virgin mary or someone. of. the arthur miller was i thought. now. second
she was on the contract she was a working i was starting out. it was a wonderful time with those early is and there we are the next thing i know we're going to make this picture together no one knew it but marilyn and i that we had this with history so everything we did was based on something we had already done and billy like that he like the chemistry between us. no nobody knows. if the. when marilyn took on the role she'd already shot the seven year itch with wilder she didn't work in new...
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Mar 29, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN3
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it was interesting to be that close to the evil and how willing he was to die. >> tunesian victory was a world war ii propaganda film on the north africa campaign and released in early 1944. the documentary used combat footage and reenacted scenes and segments with president roosevelt and french president charles de gaulle. it told the story with alternating british and american naur rate e narrators. approximately 275,000 soldiers surrendered. this is an hour and 15 minutes. ♪ >>> 18 hours out. destination unknown, a military secret. the largest overseas expedition guided by the american navy. some 3,000 miles away an even greater convoy moves in its appointed place across the seas shielded by the british navy. destroyers in close support and beyond the horizon battleships. from the decks of aircraft carriers and from the shore planes of the fleet that travel the skies and search the skis, the outpost of a protected screen. east nor east the american convoy. nothing like these two armadas had disturbed the waters since the world was made. this was a combined operation that began some
it was interesting to be that close to the evil and how willing he was to die. >> tunesian victory was a world war ii propaganda film on the north africa campaign and released in early 1944. the documentary used combat footage and reenacted scenes and segments with president roosevelt and french president charles de gaulle. it told the story with alternating british and american naur rate e narrators. approximately 275,000 soldiers surrendered. this is an hour and 15 minutes. ♪...
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Mar 31, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN2
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what was that like? >> it was great. justice scalia's favorite movie was the coppola movie, the godfather one and 2. he especially likes godfather 2. it was quite something getting together. coppola was i would say suspicious, a little bit reticence. the highest was broken, talking about growing up in new york and they got along well but early on in the conversation, one thing i do remember is there was talk about global warming and i think coppola was suggesting justice scalia was a denier about global warming and justice scalia said how many trillions of dollars are you willing to spend in the next 50 years to affect the temperature of the planet by half a degree? how many? what are you willing to do? that was his view which had to do with economics more than whether the planet is actually growing warmer and whether there is climate change. he was not a denier of that. >> back to michael corleone he after that. please join me in thanking bryan gardner. [applause] >> here's a look at some authors featured on booktv's af
what was that like? >> it was great. justice scalia's favorite movie was the coppola movie, the godfather one and 2. he especially likes godfather 2. it was quite something getting together. coppola was i would say suspicious, a little bit reticence. the highest was broken, talking about growing up in new york and they got along well but early on in the conversation, one thing i do remember is there was talk about global warming and i think coppola was suggesting justice scalia was a...
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Mar 4, 2018
03/18
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one was in marbury vs. madison and the other one was -- was in dred scott. so in a sense, marshall's vision of a very strong federal government and specifically a strong jewish did set -- judiciary did set the stage to precip at that time the civil war. >> how long was the opinion when it is issued? >> in terms of pauges, 30 or 40. >> and would that be tep cal of the time? >> it's longer than many. >> what would a typical decision be like today? >> oh, they really run the gamut. it depends on how many people on the court disagree. but some cases could be as short as two pages. some run over 100. >> you both made reference to this particular package from the decision. but let's share it with our viewers. the power to tax votches the power to destroy. that the power to destroy may defeat and render useless the power to create. that there is a plain repugnance in conferring on one government a power to control the constitutional measures of another. which other with respect to those very measures is declared to be supreme over that which exerts the control are
one was in marbury vs. madison and the other one was -- was in dred scott. so in a sense, marshall's vision of a very strong federal government and specifically a strong jewish did set -- judiciary did set the stage to precip at that time the civil war. >> how long was the opinion when it is issued? >> in terms of pauges, 30 or 40. >> and would that be tep cal of the time? >> it's longer than many. >> what would a typical decision be like today? >> oh, they...
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Mar 19, 2018
03/18
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MSNBCW
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>> i was up. i was up. well, i was laying back down.n the couch, getting ready to go back to sleep. i didn't expect him that early. but -- >> but you were expecting him? >> yeah. he said he was going to come over. >> how long was he there? >> till -- from when he got there, which was roughly 6:45 till 8:27 on the dot. >> they were pretty consistent. you know, anthony was -- his -- his time was pretty consistent with -- with michael's. but we still, you know, we -- we didn't know if they were in this together or -- or what. >> angel was on. that's what i watch in the morning. and some -- >> you watch -- you watch the episode of angel wednesday morning? that hour? tell me what you -- >> no, actually, i talked to michael for pretty much the entire hour. but angel was on the boob tube. >> reporter: as he sat in the interview room, investigators didn't know what to make of this talkative character. so they hooked anthony up to a polygraph machine. and asked him again where he and michael were that morning. >> you didn't even come close to pa
>> i was up. i was up. well, i was laying back down.n the couch, getting ready to go back to sleep. i didn't expect him that early. but -- >> but you were expecting him? >> yeah. he said he was going to come over. >> how long was he there? >> till -- from when he got there, which was roughly 6:45 till 8:27 on the dot. >> they were pretty consistent. you know, anthony was -- his -- his time was pretty consistent with -- with michael's. but we still, you know,...
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Mar 16, 2018
03/18
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LINKTV
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>> my father wwho was in his 8's was injured. i laid very still in the mud as if i was dead and i glanced at him. i saw him, but i'd cannot speak to himim in fear they might hear me and shoot me. i wanted to yell at him to lay down and maybe they won't shoot again, but they noticed him and shot half of his head away. amy: 50 years ago today on march 16, 191968, u.s. soldiers slaughtered 500 vietnamese women, children, and old men. one soldier said he was ordered to kill anything that breathed. we will look back at this horrific day and speak to an american peace activist and two vietnam war veterans who have returned to vietnam to mark the 50th anniversary of my lai and to remember the role of gi resistance in stopping the vietnam war. >> we want to commemorate and to respect the terrible, terrible massacre and the sacrifice that the vietnamese suffered those years ago, and to come as service people, as veterans to sorry, we take responsibility, and we will continue to work for peace. amy: today, a democracy now! special. my lai
>> my father wwho was in his 8's was injured. i laid very still in the mud as if i was dead and i glanced at him. i saw him, but i'd cannot speak to himim in fear they might hear me and shoot me. i wanted to yell at him to lay down and maybe they won't shoot again, but they noticed him and shot half of his head away. amy: 50 years ago today on march 16, 191968, u.s. soldiers slaughtered 500 vietnamese women, children, and old men. one soldier said he was ordered to kill anything that...
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Mar 13, 2018
03/18
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CSPAN
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what was unusual was there was no oral argument. they depended on briefs.osh: back then, the court heard a lot more cases than it does today. california,s from it is quite a journey. wanted to get out as quickly as possible and get the sentence off his head. then was not as big as it is today. i think it is very common to apply a 21st century lens to the 19th century court. they were relevant. they did not pay much heed to the supreme court like they do today. greg there was no c-span, of course. made focus ont the laundry owner said what? >> they said these warrants were .ot being enforced generally, if you want to have a permanent you need to say, you have to ventilation for this laundry. it has to have good equipment. there was no standard. it just said, you apply for the permit. they said, there's no standard for which against these standard should be enforced and enforcement itself was unconstitutional. -- next up. >> thank you for sharing insights. -- scotus held that the amendment apply to noncitizens but it was not until much later that yick wo came
what was unusual was there was no oral argument. they depended on briefs.osh: back then, the court heard a lot more cases than it does today. california,s from it is quite a journey. wanted to get out as quickly as possible and get the sentence off his head. then was not as big as it is today. i think it is very common to apply a 21st century lens to the 19th century court. they were relevant. they did not pay much heed to the supreme court like they do today. greg there was no c-span, of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 24, 2018
03/18
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SFGTV
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the case was at a director's hearing on september 14th, it was, and i and an order was posn september 21st. so the appeal was filed on the order which is what is before you right now and the permit was signed off shortly thereafter on october 6th. so what we have here before us i believe is relief has been sought on the assessment of costs which is the assessments are $1,191.66. plus monitoring fee, accruals of $145, and there will be a final assessment at closure of the case at d.b.i. of about $400 which, you know, we can work with the customer on that potentially when they come to see us. so permit signed off and we have compliance, the stairs is complete, and we are ready to close out the case pending the payment of these departmental costs. and i think that it's before you simply because the appeal was filed just before the permit was signed off. any questions? >> do they still want to have -- >> based on their appeal it sounds like they're petitioning on relief of the costs. >> was it fair to say that there were delays with the complexity of going to the different departments whi
the case was at a director's hearing on september 14th, it was, and i and an order was posn september 21st. so the appeal was filed on the order which is what is before you right now and the permit was signed off shortly thereafter on october 6th. so what we have here before us i believe is relief has been sought on the assessment of costs which is the assessments are $1,191.66. plus monitoring fee, accruals of $145, and there will be a final assessment at closure of the case at d.b.i. of about...
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later is often happened in antiquity it was put to other uses because water was an extremely important element i mean especially for christian baptisms. cassiodorus lived in two cultures the classical culture he had been born into and the christian one in which he died it is here that he first saw the light of day in an ancient town which had a form of theatre and a circus but his birthplace was abandoned even in his lifetime. scum chance with thrown into the fountains including the image of a man whom the sculptors of antiquity portrayed so naturally that even the semi paralysis of his face is recognizable. the ancient town was abandoned and rebuilt on the hills of squid are changed. did not last long either. the fate of cassiodorus is famous library is unknown. and i said gallop it shared we know for certain that after cassiodorus is death both the value monastery incentive maria to terry. and also square logic castle were destroyed. probably by the lombards is that the beast will. be maintained only. the monastery was destroyed its manuscripts burnt and its knowledge lost and yet fo
later is often happened in antiquity it was put to other uses because water was an extremely important element i mean especially for christian baptisms. cassiodorus lived in two cultures the classical culture he had been born into and the christian one in which he died it is here that he first saw the light of day in an ancient town which had a form of theatre and a circus but his birthplace was abandoned even in his lifetime. scum chance with thrown into the fountains including the image of a...
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51
Mar 3, 2018
03/18
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i was out in an area that was the center of these problems, developing while that was happening. i saw a lot and i reported on a lot that was very worrisome. from day one, when i went into the bank, i met with our banking supervision folks. they told me how concerned they were about commercial real estate lending. we had booming housing markets. we supervised small community banks. their commercial real estate lending, especially for land acquisition and development, was growing at a very rapid pace. lending was growing more rapidly than deposits. they were beginning to rely heavily on brokered deposits. very high concentrations often in small geographic areas that were the center of what became the housing boom and bust. quite a few of them ended up failing later on. my staff was very worried about that. that focused me. i had many directors and business contacts involved in housing. in san francisco you could not go to a cocktail party without people telling eye-popping tales about deals that had been struck on house prices. how much house prices were going up. i heard all of t
i was out in an area that was the center of these problems, developing while that was happening. i saw a lot and i reported on a lot that was very worrisome. from day one, when i went into the bank, i met with our banking supervision folks. they told me how concerned they were about commercial real estate lending. we had booming housing markets. we supervised small community banks. their commercial real estate lending, especially for land acquisition and development, was growing at a very rapid...