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Dec 30, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN2
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josephine. i could find snippets of her work. so that was daunting because maybe half a chapter and then i would have to put those together to have a picture of her life. so wasn't that difficult malicious grateful especially true the last days of her newspaper she wasn't always right and wasn't always spying on - - kind and compassionate because they didn't have the kind of money that she had and that to say the cake is perfectly priced at $1.50 went almost nobody had a dollar 50 especially not a black woman. but the research was a lot. and how amy said because she died so long ago and lived so long ago but again, she documented everything she did and wrote letters to so many people and she even asked for donations so she's right document everything you do. and a lot of the black newspapers like african-americans or others all over the country and then also came in handy with those was an immigrant from china who got involved in the suffrage movement in chinatown and then you blend in and work
josephine. i could find snippets of her work. so that was daunting because maybe half a chapter and then i would have to put those together to have a picture of her life. so wasn't that difficult malicious grateful especially true the last days of her newspaper she wasn't always right and wasn't always spying on - - kind and compassionate because they didn't have the kind of money that she had and that to say the cake is perfectly priced at $1.50 went almost nobody had a dollar 50 especially...
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Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN2
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but not a lot of has been written about josephine. i got, again, lucky that there-- i could find snippets of her work in other books, so, that was daunting because it was like maybe half a chapter about josephine and then i'd have to pair those together to find of form a picture of her life. so it wasn't that difficult. i was just very grateful that she picked upon yourself, especially towards the end. like the last days of her newspaper. upon herself to write to black women in her voice and she wasn't always ready. she, you know, her-- she wasn't always kind and compassionate. she did sometimes ask women to do things that they couldn't do because they didn't have the kinds of main that she had. for example, saying that, you know, a cake is perfectly placed at 1.50 when almost no one had 1.50 and especially not a black woman, right? and she did that a lot, but the research was-- it was a lot. again, how amy said because she died so long ago, she lived so long ago, but again, like she documented everything that she did and she wrote le
but not a lot of has been written about josephine. i got, again, lucky that there-- i could find snippets of her work in other books, so, that was daunting because it was like maybe half a chapter about josephine and then i'd have to pair those together to find of form a picture of her life. so it wasn't that difficult. i was just very grateful that she picked upon yourself, especially towards the end. like the last days of her newspaper. upon herself to write to black women in her voice and...
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Dec 26, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 63
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so they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. and josephine plays a particularly special role in this museum because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. and fortunately, she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. so i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window, and my mother would have made us a fried egg or something on a roll with butter. italian music, the radio always playing, italian music, italian soap operas and my mother crying all the time. she used to miss her family. she left her whole family in italy. came here as a young girl, and she never saw them again, many years later, she never saw her mother or father again. ♪ [ music ] they made their home here in 1869 the moore family shared this apartment with their three daughters, mary, jane, and agn
so they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. and josephine plays a particularly special role in this museum because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. and fortunately, she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. so i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i...
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Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 84
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so, rosaria and adolfo about tc lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny.larly special role because later in life, she discovered the tenement and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. unfortunately she was really sad about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window and my mother would have made as a fried egg or something on a roll with butter. the radio is playing. italian music, italian soap operas, and my mother crying all the time. [ laughter ] she used to, you know, miss her family. she left her whole family in italy, came here as a young girl, and she never saw them again for many many, years. she never saw her mother or father again. [ music ] >>>next on the presidency, george w. bush presidential library and museumdirector takes us on a virtual tour of the facility. the museum showcases the legacy of the nation's 43r
so, rosaria and adolfo about tc lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny.larly special role because later in life, she discovered the tenement and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. unfortunately she was really sad about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the...
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Dec 6, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 45
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they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine plays a special role in this museum because later in life she discovered the tournament museum. i think that must've been so strange for her to see her childhood home had become a museum and tourist attraction. she was excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have audio of her memories living here. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the us,ow, whatever mom made the radio always playing. italian music, italian soap operas. my mother crying all the time. she used to miss her family. she left her whole family in italy, came here as a young girl. she never saw them again for many, many years. she never saw her mother or father again. ♪ [singing in italian] >> learn more about the tenement museum sunday at 6:00 p.m. eastern, 3:00 pacific on american history tv. american history tv is on social media. follow us at c-span history. > next, a conversation with james baker about leadership and his career. he served as ronald reagan's white h
they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine plays a special role in this museum because later in life she discovered the tournament museum. i think that must've been so strange for her to see her childhood home had become a museum and tourist attraction. she was excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have audio of her memories living here. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the us,ow, whatever mom made the radio...
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Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 81
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so rosaria and adolfo baldizzi lived here with their two children, josephine and -- josephine place ahe tenement museum and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. and fortunately she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. so i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window and we would -- my mother would have made us a fried egg or something on a roll with butter. the radio always playing. italian music, italian soap operas. and my mother crying all the time. she used to -- you know, miss her family, her -- she left her whole family in italy, came here as a young girl and she never saw them again for many, many years later, she never saw her mother or her father again. ♪ >> learn more about the tenement museum friday at 8:00 p.m. eastern here on american history tv. next on the presidency, george w. bush presidential library and museum director patrick mordente takes us on a vir
so rosaria and adolfo baldizzi lived here with their two children, josephine and -- josephine place ahe tenement museum and i always think that must have been so strange for her to see her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. and fortunately she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. so i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window and we...
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Dec 6, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 69
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rosario and aldo for baldizzi lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine plays a particularly special role in the museum because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. unfortunately -- she was excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen, under the window, and my mother would have made us friday gore something on a roll with butter. the radio always playing. it highly music, italian soap operas, and my mother crying all the time. she used to miss her family. she left her whole family in italy. girl.ere as a young and she never saw them again for many, many years. she never saw her mother or father again. ♪ announcer: learn more about the tenement museum sunday at 6:00 p.m. eastern, 3:00 p.m. pacific here on american history tv. reel an history tv's merica brady filled th
rosario and aldo for baldizzi lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine plays a particularly special role in the museum because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. i always think that must have been so strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. unfortunately -- she was excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >>...
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Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 66
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they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine played a particularly special roll because later in life she discovered the tenement . that must have been so strange to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window, and my mother would have made us fried eggs or something on a roll with butter. the radio was always playing. italian music, italian soap operas. my mother would cry. she used to miss her family. she left her whole family in italy and came here as a young girl. she never saw them again. she never saw her mother or her father again. [ singing foreign language ] >>> learn more about the tenement museum friday at 8:00 pm eastern here on american history tv. >>> next on history bookshelf, adrian miller talks about his book,
they lived here with their two children, josephine and johnny. josephine played a particularly special roll because later in life she discovered the tenement . that must have been so strange to see that her childhood home had become a museum and a tourist attraction. she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window, and my mother...
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178
Dec 25, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 178
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rosaria and josephine balducci have two children. i think it would be so strange for her to see that her childhood home became a museum and tourist attraction. unfortunately, she was really excited about the museum and shared some memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the wind window, and my mother would have made us something like bread and butter. the music was always playing, italian soap operas, and my mother crying all the time. she missed her family. she left her whole family in italy, came here as a young girl, and she never saw them again until many, many years later. she never saw her mother or father again. >> they were some of the earliest residents. they made their home here in 1869. the moore family shared this apartment with their three daughters, mary, jane and agnes. baby agnes was just a few months old when the moore family arrived here at 97 orchard street. as you can see around you, the moore family had a
rosaria and josephine balducci have two children. i think it would be so strange for her to see that her childhood home became a museum and tourist attraction. unfortunately, she was really excited about the museum and shared some memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the wind window, and my mother would have made us something like bread and butter. the music was always playing,...
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Dec 17, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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eye 46
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rosario and josephine were both performers. sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. now it's time for a look at the weather with darren bett. hello there. earlier on today, we had a refreshed pay from this wet and windy theme, but we have seen the cloud increasing, thickening up, moving and very rapidly from the atlantic, it brought rain in some places. these weather fronts will take the rain across northern ireland, scotland and push it further into england and wales. for a while, that rain will be happy as well. it will eventually pushed him towards the southeast of england, other areas away from here becoming drier later on in the night. but there is a lot of cloud around, and it's quite blow wheat out there as well. so it's going to be very mild to start friday with tem
rosario and josephine were both performers. sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. now it's time for a look at the weather with darren bett. hello there. earlier on today, we had a refreshed pay from this wet and windy theme, but we have...
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Dec 24, 2020
12/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 17
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josephine a much inas is a historian and gender equity activist in spain i spoke with her to understand how close it and needed quality work in an economic and social context completely different to that of a country like india but we began with some of the issues that have played out similarly in both countries but to him then it must make us what it is that garland as you look at our politics i don't think when i go to the hospital does that matter who asked and got. the holodeck and who was the estonian and then. they got healed and when i see national i mean and the america. i mean i think that not all of those are holidays a letter to. my manic out there i guess what i am going to be done is you know i mean almost any cause you know metta interview not really an idea that are a lot and i mean yes and the sound. and i say that yes but at letter the similar actions are not for the enemy. and us with the most i mean else. paid people in our host economy in the ceiling see those of us who don't have retire and then see it again and see that lets it go on holiday in or. out of him or. y
josephine a much inas is a historian and gender equity activist in spain i spoke with her to understand how close it and needed quality work in an economic and social context completely different to that of a country like india but we began with some of the issues that have played out similarly in both countries but to him then it must make us what it is that garland as you look at our politics i don't think when i go to the hospital does that matter who asked and got. the holodeck and who was...
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Dec 17, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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she sings rosario and josephine were both performers. and now i sing in my dressing room or my bedroom, along the corridor, and in the loo. i couldn't sing the carols because i don't sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else, and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas and a happy new year. # fiona lamdin, bbc news. time for a look at the weather, here's darren bett thank you very much. it's another mild day to day. the best of the weather it continues to be across the eastern side of the uk, where we've had lovely blue skies but further west the weather is changing because the cloud is rolling in. we are going to find the wind starting to pick up and we've already got some showers affecting wales, the cloud increasing in northern ireland, scotland, down the western side of england, with some sunshine further east, but out towards the west that cl
she sings rosario and josephine were both performers. and now i sing in my dressing room or my bedroom, along the corridor, and in the loo. i couldn't sing the carols because i don't sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else, and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas and a happy new year. # fiona...
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Dec 17, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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eye 89
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she sings rosario and josephine were both performers.d in the loo.
she sings rosario and josephine were both performers.d in the loo.
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Dec 11, 2020
12/20
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CNBC
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let's start with josephine in texas. >> booyah, jim, love your show >> i bought source energy infrastructuree years ago was doing real well but then this year for some reason it did a reverse split. >> we have to unpackage to know what it really is. it has been horrendous they start bottoming at the same time i would hold onto it i don't know exactly what's in it let's go to matt in washington >> jim, you are amazing. thank you for what you do. >> a quick shout-out to my parents >> definitely, what's up >> nano dimension. >> 3-d print, if i want 3-d print, i would go to hp. there is another 3-d company that's a spac. we got to check on them, too crowded field. how about that >> let's go to juan in texas juan >> good evening mr. cramer what is your perspective on united >> we have larry williams doing work, he's the best technician he says trade in american air is over on the other hand is a corral spring you have to deal with a couple of real bad quarters i say put it on hold let's go to sheila in tennessee. >> booyah, jim >> what is your take on nvidia and where i should hold onto it? >> ye
let's start with josephine in texas. >> booyah, jim, love your show >> i bought source energy infrastructuree years ago was doing real well but then this year for some reason it did a reverse split. >> we have to unpackage to know what it really is. it has been horrendous they start bottoming at the same time i would hold onto it i don't know exactly what's in it let's go to matt in washington >> jim, you are amazing. thank you for what you do. >> a quick shout-out...
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Dec 17, 2020
12/20
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BBCNEWS
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listening to josephine and rosario, and josephine saying she sings in the loo, i a lwa ys saying sheand weather where you are. good morning. i'm sonja jessup. londoners planning to leave the capital for christmas are being warned that works— including the closure of kings cross station— could cause serious disruption. once the last train's left on christmas eve, there'll be no services until new year's eve while network rail continues its 1.2 billion pound upgrade of the east coast main line. the government's adviser on christmas travel plans has been telling mps about the plans. network rail have reconfigured the works to start only after the last train has gone. that work is replacing a sewer which has been there for the last 150 years. and the only way of replacing it is to close the line. the charity shelter claims more than a quarter of a million people across england are homeless and living in temporary accommodation during the pandemic — the highest number for 14 yea rs. it comes as organisations, including project malachi which supports rough sleepers in redbridge, in east lo
listening to josephine and rosario, and josephine saying she sings in the loo, i a lwa ys saying sheand weather where you are. good morning. i'm sonja jessup. londoners planning to leave the capital for christmas are being warned that works— including the closure of kings cross station— could cause serious disruption. once the last train's left on christmas eve, there'll be no services until new year's eve while network rail continues its 1.2 billion pound upgrade of the east coast main...
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Dec 27, 2020
12/20
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MSNBCW
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. >> charlotte, daniel, olivia, josephine, anna, dylan, mad lynn, catherine, chase, jessie, james, graceine, jessica, benjamin, leon, allison. ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel ♪ [man: coughing] ♪ it's a new dawn, it's a new day... ♪ no matter how you got copd it's time to make a stand. ♪ ...and i'm feelin' good start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy helps people breathe easier and improves lung function. it also helps prevent future flare-ups. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. it's time to start a new day. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy. and save at trelegy.com. ask your doctor aso you
. >> charlotte, daniel, olivia, josephine, anna, dylan, mad lynn, catherine, chase, jessie, james, graceine, jessica, benjamin, leon, allison. ♪ breeze drifting on by you know how i feel ♪ [man: coughing] ♪ it's a new dawn, it's a new day... ♪ no matter how you got copd it's time to make a stand. ♪ ...and i'm feelin' good start a new day with trelegy. no once-daily copd medicine has the power to treat copd in as many ways as trelegy. with three medicines in one inhaler, trelegy...
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Dec 9, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN3
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it was called the josephine allen institute. because in the 1800s before the emancipation proclamation, it was against the law for african-americans to be educated. after the emancipation proclamation, schools started opening everywhere. she opened one to educate young african-americans. this family actually came to mobile, from virginia. they were never slaves, they were elite. they had a big home near dauphin island and they had a big home in the city. in the 1880's and 1890's, they had shotgun homes, that was the way it was. they had a lot of friends. a lot of friends were people like booker t. washington. george washington carver -- the principle of ellen's accounting -- they would go fishing. because of that relationship, a lot of her students got to go to tuskegee university. that meant that when they graduated, they became entrepreneurs. they became teachers, business people, doctors and very successful, throughout the country. that relationship was a great bonding that they had during that time. the funeral home closed a
it was called the josephine allen institute. because in the 1800s before the emancipation proclamation, it was against the law for african-americans to be educated. after the emancipation proclamation, schools started opening everywhere. she opened one to educate young african-americans. this family actually came to mobile, from virginia. they were never slaves, they were elite. they had a big home near dauphin island and they had a big home in the city. in the 1880's and 1890's, they had...
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Dec 27, 2020
12/20
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CSPAN2
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but all i can say about that is josephine baker with this amazing doctor in new york at the beginning of the century, she's the first chief of the new york bureau of child hygiene which is actually the first city children's health bureau in the country. she notices that after they've successfully campaigned, that some of the childrenin the rich neighborhoods are doing much worse . and because they're not being nourished, they are being cared for by trained nurses in uniform . in the best families, but they're not getting thesame kind of care . >> that was pretty amazing i thought. i guess i'd like totalk to you or ask you a little bit about that . what was it that made us move as a society from thinking of this is, this is just part of life that babies are going to die too we should do something aboutthis . we need to get this under control and try and solve the problem. what was the thing that happened or was it a gradual change ? >> it's probably a number of things together. around the beginning of the 20th century people start counting a lot more carefully. there's a book called in
but all i can say about that is josephine baker with this amazing doctor in new york at the beginning of the century, she's the first chief of the new york bureau of child hygiene which is actually the first city children's health bureau in the country. she notices that after they've successfully campaigned, that some of the childrenin the rich neighborhoods are doing much worse . and because they're not being nourished, they are being cared for by trained nurses in uniform . in the best...
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Dec 23, 2020
12/20
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MSNBCW
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i think the best example for me personally is a woman named josephine, african american from californiaerving a life sentence for drugs. in fact, she hadn't used drugs. she didn't sell drugs. she was in the middle of the whole thing. and president obama pardoned her. she still served 24 years. i got to know her, and she literally told me her goal in life is to make up for the time she lost and to be the best grandma in the world. that's what pardons are about. that's what pardons are about. instead, you got a president who is using them to serve his own means. pardoning congressmen to use campaign funds to put their pet rabid on an airplane. pardoning people who money launder while they were part of congress. pardoning people who committed heinous murders in iraq. pardons people who were part of an attempt by the russian government to undermine our elections. what do these things have in common? some pled guilty, some are found guilty. what they have is common is they involve corruption and have direct ties to him or his political police. this is wrong. and as i said, he is trying to li
i think the best example for me personally is a woman named josephine, african american from californiaerving a life sentence for drugs. in fact, she hadn't used drugs. she didn't sell drugs. she was in the middle of the whole thing. and president obama pardoned her. she still served 24 years. i got to know her, and she literally told me her goal in life is to make up for the time she lost and to be the best grandma in the world. that's what pardons are about. that's what pardons are about....
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Dec 20, 2020
12/20
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KRON
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this time period >>kristin kitchen grew up poor, but is now living her dream, she owns the dons josephine boutique hotel in miami she is skeptical the average black family actually felt their net worth growth from 2016 to 2019. but she's optimistic about the future i think that this month this moment with the pandemic. >>and george floyd that there's there's a moment in america where. maybe things will turn around maybe net worth will grow and is in it in a number where it's not 17,000 the 23,000 but and 23,200 1000 to where we would get to 50% of the net worth of the average white person sharon and her family thought they were on their way to that but that was before the pandemic and before the shutdown's how hard is it now. okay so how hard is it now i for me his much truth. depends on what kind of headspace i want to put the word hard in is it easy. no it is not do i make it look like it's easy probably a little more than it is when you go from getting $1000 invoices on a weekly basis. >>to selling tea and maybe getting 10 to $20 per order. >>that gap. or feel right. i don't care who y
this time period >>kristin kitchen grew up poor, but is now living her dream, she owns the dons josephine boutique hotel in miami she is skeptical the average black family actually felt their net worth growth from 2016 to 2019. but she's optimistic about the future i think that this month this moment with the pandemic. >>and george floyd that there's there's a moment in america where. maybe things will turn around maybe net worth will grow and is in it in a number where it's not...
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Dec 23, 2020
12/20
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CNNW
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eye 237
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it's like when president obama pardoned josephine, a woman i had gotten to know who basically was givene sentence when she didn't sell drugs or use drugs because she was in the middle. president obama pardoned that woman and she now says her goal in life is to be the best grandma ever and make up for lost time. african-american woman. that's what we're talking about with pardons. but instead what does he do? he uses this to help out his buddies and, by the way, he's literally burning down the house of justice as he walks out the door. all the work of law enforcement, of fbi, of prosecutors, career people who worked on these cases so hard to take care of white collar criminals. he is basically telling them no, demeaning their work and that's why we need a new president and we're getting to go it by joe biden. >> january 6 is when the congress will count the electoral college. the electoral college counted, joe biden has won again. now we know the president has been meeting with members of the house, vice president pence was there also, they say they're going to raise objections to the el
it's like when president obama pardoned josephine, a woman i had gotten to know who basically was givene sentence when she didn't sell drugs or use drugs because she was in the middle. president obama pardoned that woman and she now says her goal in life is to be the best grandma ever and make up for lost time. african-american woman. that's what we're talking about with pardons. but instead what does he do? he uses this to help out his buddies and, by the way, he's literally burning down the...
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she sings rosario and josephine were both performers. sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. the united nations has added the north african dish couscous to its list of the world's intangible cultural heritage. tunisia, algeria, morocco, and mauritania submitted couscous to unesco together, in a joint bid. their arab maghreb union, which also includes libya, has not met since 1994. a unesco statement describes the listing as part of its efforts to bring peoples and cultures closer together. a chinese spacecraft has returned to earth with the first samples from the moon in more than 40 years. the chung'e 5 spent three weeks in space, sampling rocks and soil and touched down in the northern region of inner mongolia on thursday. tanya dendrinos reports. a
she sings rosario and josephine were both performers. sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. the united nations has added the north african dish couscous to its list of the world's intangible cultural...
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Dec 24, 2020
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josephine plays a particularly special role in this museum, because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. i think that must have been strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and tourist attraction. she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window. and my mother would have made us fried egg or something on a roll with butter. the radio always playing. italian music, italian soap operas. my mother crying all the time. she used to miss her family. she left her whole family in italy. came here as a young girl. she never saw them again, she never saw her mother or father again. ♪ >> learn more friday at 8:00 p.m. eastern here on american history tv. >>> next, on history bookshelf, adrian miller talks about his book "the president's kitchen cabinet," the story of the african-americans who fed our first families from the washingtons to the obamas. he spoke at the 2017 roosevelt reading fes
josephine plays a particularly special role in this museum, because later in life, she discovered the tenement museum. i think that must have been strange for her to see that her childhood home had become a museum and tourist attraction. she was really excited about the museum and shared her memories with us. i have some audio of her memories of living here at 97 orchard street. >> i remember sitting around the table in the kitchen under the window. and my mother would have made us fried...
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Dec 17, 2020
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one sister, miss josephine wilson. kneeses, nephew, cousins, friends, and extended family. what a life. and what a legacy. i also pay tribute, mr. ravine, to mr. lee pioneer west side of chicago business and community leader. whereas the almighty god called to his eternal rest, mr. lee, a skilled mechanic and business leader who became a legend on the west side of chicago in the automobile repair business. and whereas i met him in the late 1960's when one of my staffers, miss arlene, introduced me to mr. nate irwin, who was her mechanic and as working at the repair shop. mr. irwin became my friend and my mechanic. i had a reputation for keeping cars in my community a long time. i drove one car for 19 years. and everybody in the neighborhood knew the car. mr. ray ban and his mechanics kept my cars running for more than 50 years. whatever it was that i drove, they had it running. ultimately he and his colleagues developed a little group of businesspeople, garfield, willie, the knocks family at the hardware store, cliff a
one sister, miss josephine wilson. kneeses, nephew, cousins, friends, and extended family. what a life. and what a legacy. i also pay tribute, mr. ravine, to mr. lee pioneer west side of chicago business and community leader. whereas the almighty god called to his eternal rest, mr. lee, a skilled mechanic and business leader who became a legend on the west side of chicago in the automobile repair business. and whereas i met him in the late 1960's when one of my staffers, miss arlene, introduced...
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Dec 17, 2020
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she sings rosario and josephine were both performers.use i don't sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. now it's time for a look at the weather with darren bett. hello there. the best of the weather today has been across more eastern parts of the uk, where it has been drier and sunnier. but we are seeing the weather changing from the west. and we have got this set of weather fronts coming in, the cloud already thickening up, and it is rain that is coming into western areas as well. through this evening, that wetter weather in the west will continue to push its way eastwards to many parts of the country. some heavier bursts of rain over the hills, but the rain does tend to peter out before it arrives across east anglia and the southeast, and we could se
she sings rosario and josephine were both performers.use i don't sing carols in english. i only sing carols in spain. i do enjoy watching good shows done by great people. it feels like the most christmassy thing i've ever done in my career. we can do something good for somebody else. and how christmassy is that? # we wish you a merry christmas # and a happy new year.# fiona lamdin, bbc news. now it's time for a look at the weather with darren bett. hello there. the best of the weather today has...
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Dec 2, 2020
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josephine from worcester asks is the vaccine safe if you are on different types of medication alreadyern. and in bristol asks what is the long—term effect that the vaccine has on the body? i will ask you both. most of the effect that we see, the adverse effects related to vaccines, actually happen quite soon after injection. we would expect to have any serious adverse effects picked up in the phase three trial. it is unlikely the to decades later. from the current review, we are pretty confident about the safety of the vaccine, because we went and we nt the vaccine, because we went and went through that critical hurdle of the phase three trial. i will allow peter to elaborate. does it mean that if you don't have a short—term effect from it, that long—term you will be ok? most adverse events from vaccines tend to happen quite quickly, those are immune reactions, for example. i think that the data we have so far is promising. the only way we will know for sure is through long—term monitoring of the hundreds of thousands who will eventually receive this vaccine, eventually receive this v
josephine from worcester asks is the vaccine safe if you are on different types of medication alreadyern. and in bristol asks what is the long—term effect that the vaccine has on the body? i will ask you both. most of the effect that we see, the adverse effects related to vaccines, actually happen quite soon after injection. we would expect to have any serious adverse effects picked up in the phase three trial. it is unlikely the to decades later. from the current review, we are pretty...