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May 27, 2020
05/20
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neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from perdue diversity. as nasa prepares for its first launch of u.s. astronauts since 2011 this wednesday, we will go back to its beginnings. to 1979, astronauts trained at morehead planetarium, where they learned celestial navigation techniques. >> at morehead, we still talk about the role we played on the front lines of the cold war, because the space race was a major, major initiative within the cold war. >> t minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0. ignition. >> we are in the campus of the university of north carolina at chapel hill. i amnd
neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from perdue diversity. as nasa prepares for...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN
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neil armstrong learned to fly at 16 years old.y flew into this airport from their homes and business trips they had. armstrong was very close to purdue. through these facilities and taught the students. they are pilots. before they were in space they were pilots. they love airplanes and love to fly. we are landing craft son marge. -- mars. purdue graduates are involved in those missions to mars. u.s.arly a third of all spaceflights have involved astronauts from purdue university. as nasa prepares for its first launch of u.s. astronauts since 2011 this wednesday we will go back to the beginnings. from 1958 to 19 79 astronauts trained at the university of north carolina pot morehead planetarium where they learn celestial navigation techniques. at morehead we still talked about the role we played on the front linesof the cold war.
neil armstrong learned to fly at 16 years old.y flew into this airport from their homes and business trips they had. armstrong was very close to purdue. through these facilities and taught the students. they are pilots. before they were in space they were pilots. they love airplanes and love to fly. we are landing craft son marge. -- mars. purdue graduates are involved in those missions to mars. u.s.arly a third of all spaceflights have involved astronauts from purdue university. as nasa...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. jean serna and was close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from purdue university. as nasa prepares for its first launch of u.s. astronauts since 2011 this wednesday, we will go back to its beginnings. from 1958 to 1979, astronauts trained at the university of north carolina's morehead planetarium, where thear
neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. jean serna and was close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from...
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May 5, 2020
05/20
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armstrong began treating residents with hydroxychloroquine. dr. armstrong joining me now, dr. armstrong, great to see you tonight. thank you for coming on. what was the outcome of treating the residents with hydroxychloroquine? >> what we saw, hydroxychloroquine and zithromycin, we saw that we had 92% of those residents who were treated with hydroxychloroquine getting better. that was paired with the people that we did not treat and so it was an amazing positive outcome that was fantastic. we really were and a bad situation where we felt like we were going to see a lot of the patients die, we felt like the mortality rate was very high, we are seeing things happening in washington state. we saw was happening in louisiana, we felt like we needed to treat these patients very quickly with something that has been proven to work. and so what we saw in cities in china, and the cities in france, that after five days of treatments with hydroxychloroquine, and zithromycin, it dropped to zero on day six. that's what we did come out we treated them with five days of hydroxychloroquine, zi
armstrong began treating residents with hydroxychloroquine. dr. armstrong joining me now, dr. armstrong, great to see you tonight. thank you for coming on. what was the outcome of treating the residents with hydroxychloroquine? >> what we saw, hydroxychloroquine and zithromycin, we saw that we had 92% of those residents who were treated with hydroxychloroquine getting better. that was paired with the people that we did not treat and so it was an amazing positive outcome that was...
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what we come back in my conversation with boris becker should athletes like mayans armstrong get a 2nd chance we'll be right back. there was a clip of she told me yesterday. i was scared but you might say the least it was because. of the late. not something. you'd see in media. today they can put us in the movie at the close to that. notion of the capital. city they say yes. yes. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see that. has changed lives the pharmaceutical companies have a miraculous solution. based drugs the people who are chronic pain and believe that their opiate prescription is working for them in the remedy. to the price at the. close or dependency and addiction to opiates is the long term use that really isn't scientifically just another study actually suggests that. the long term effects may not just be the absence of benefit but actually that they may be causing long term . speaking of glorious awards and it seems to be about not just sport but ethics principles morals
what we come back in my conversation with boris becker should athletes like mayans armstrong get a 2nd chance we'll be right back. there was a clip of she told me yesterday. i was scared but you might say the least it was because. of the late. not something. you'd see in media. today they can put us in the movie at the close to that. notion of the capital. city they say yes. yes. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports...
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what we come back in my conversation with boris becker should athletes like mayans armstrong get a 2nd chance we'll be right back. our culture is awash in lives dominated by streams of never ending electronic hallucinations that emerged fiction until they are indistinguishable we have become the most deluded society on politics as a species of endless and needless political theater politicians more than just celebrity are 2 ruling parties are in reality one party to corporate power and those who attempt to puncture this vast breathless universe of to make news just signed to push through the cruelty and exploitation to me a little more of them are pushed so far to the margins of society including by a public broadcasting system that has sold its soul for corporate money that we might as well be mice squeaking against an avalanche plus we must. take a live news anywhere you go plus an elegant think curated online video library with a built in search engine it will sit right in your pocket to treat interact and just our skin texture stars will talk to the thousands of episodes to explore
what we come back in my conversation with boris becker should athletes like mayans armstrong get a 2nd chance we'll be right back. our culture is awash in lives dominated by streams of never ending electronic hallucinations that emerged fiction until they are indistinguishable we have become the most deluded society on politics as a species of endless and needless political theater politicians more than just celebrity are 2 ruling parties are in reality one party to corporate power and those...
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May 22, 2020
05/20
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patrick armstrong from plurimi wealth stays with us.oming up, richard clarida says the fed may wait before providing further guidance and balance sheet policies. more on that next. this is bloomberg. ♪ berg. ♪ francine: this is "bloomberg surveillance." i am francine lacqua here in london. let's focus on the u.s. economy. another 2.4 4 million americans applied for unemployment benefits last week. month totalwo- roughly equivalent to all of the initial claims fired -- filed during the recession. >> with the unemployment rate at 14.7% in just two months, the u.s. economy has swung from a 50-year unemployment low to jobless numbers not seen since the great recession. labor department numbers show the most severely affected sectors, including travel, entertainment, restaurants, and childcare, accounted for just 20% of payrolls in february but more than half of the job losses in april. although the pace of layoffs appears to be slowing, may jobs figures are expected to bring more bad news. as consumers habits change, jobs related to online
patrick armstrong from plurimi wealth stays with us.oming up, richard clarida says the fed may wait before providing further guidance and balance sheet policies. more on that next. this is bloomberg. ♪ berg. ♪ francine: this is "bloomberg surveillance." i am francine lacqua here in london. let's focus on the u.s. economy. another 2.4 4 million americans applied for unemployment benefits last week. month totalwo- roughly equivalent to all of the initial claims fired -- filed during...
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armstrong and aldrin spent a total of 2. half hours on the surface of the moon as they collected rock samples and raised the american flag they were watched live by 600000000 people only a few of them were aware that the successful moon landing was hanging by a thread in now says mission control center in houston cap com charlie duke had direct radio contact with neil armstrong. now 82 years old he can still recall the dramatic moments. we get very very tight on fuel i call 60 seconds which many as 60 seconds delay and i call 30 seconds the tension is rising in mission control you could hear a pin drop and we were holding our breath will we make it i called 30 seconds and then 13 seconds later he led it but it was very very tight. and very close to abort . yet the 1st lunar landing was a success. 3 years later charlie duke got his own entry in the annals of space travel. don young and i were the 5th landing on the moon back in april $972.00 and i was the 10th man to step all of them and once we laid it i just erupted with en
armstrong and aldrin spent a total of 2. half hours on the surface of the moon as they collected rock samples and raised the american flag they were watched live by 600000000 people only a few of them were aware that the successful moon landing was hanging by a thread in now says mission control center in houston cap com charlie duke had direct radio contact with neil armstrong. now 82 years old he can still recall the dramatic moments. we get very very tight on fuel i call 60 seconds which...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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mark armstrong, the son of neil armstrong. saturday is the next shot.is "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with jesse watters, greg gutfeld, donna brazile, katie pavlich. it's 5:00 in new york city and mrs. "the five." a new era in american space travel put on hold for now. bad weather postponing the launch of two nasa astronauts into orbit from cape canaveral, florida. it would be the first manned rocket launch on u.s. soil in nearly a decade. next attempt is saturday. let's go to phil keating standing by.
mark armstrong, the son of neil armstrong. saturday is the next shot.is "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with jesse watters, greg gutfeld, donna brazile, katie pavlich. it's 5:00 in new york city and mrs. "the five." a new era in american space travel put on hold for now. bad weather postponing the launch of two nasa astronauts into orbit from cape canaveral, florida. it would be the first manned rocket launch on u.s. soil in nearly a decade....
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May 16, 2020
05/20
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everyone is in here from baker to armstrong. what we didn't touch on yet is the global scope of how african people around the world came to know each other in this moment. when brothers get off the troop transport, they meet black women from other places. >> a part of this being a global war, although african-americans entered the war with white americans in 1917, when the world went to war, because this was the period of imperialism, france had at least 17 colonies that went to war when they went to war. the british had colonies in the caribbean and everywhere else. when they went to war, guess who else went to war? their colonial soldiers went to war. those four german colonies went to war. they do meet each other. >> this was in the exhibit, right? >> this is one of our artifacts we are getting from france. >> the caribbean, africa. first thing this we want to thank the gentleman and go into the queue or nay. thank you gentlemen. and i want to encourage everyone, to step up to the microphone, and i will try to keep on time. s
everyone is in here from baker to armstrong. what we didn't touch on yet is the global scope of how african people around the world came to know each other in this moment. when brothers get off the troop transport, they meet black women from other places. >> a part of this being a global war, although african-americans entered the war with white americans in 1917, when the world went to war, because this was the period of imperialism, france had at least 17 colonies that went to war when...
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May 26, 2020
05/20
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we have republican kelly armstrong. great to have you on, sir. you're in house judiciary. more documents too. what shoes are going to drop here? what do you think what do you expect to see? >> we need to continue to do this because we know at this point in time that for sure kevin clients smith lied. he altered an email that went to the fisa court. we don't think he was doing it alone. mr. jarrett was on before and he was talking about the flynn prosecution. we know comey and mccabe actually testified that the agents didn't think that flynn lied in the interview. it was only after the mueller prosecution came about with no new evidence. the person who conducted interview was not even in the room where they charged michael flynn. that is solely, there is a reason that you have conflict of interest as a prosecutor. and drew wise -- andrew wise man and every member of the mueller team, they had direct relationships to the hillary clinton campaign. they needed notches in their belt because they knew there was no russia collusion so we need to continue down this road. elizabeth
we have republican kelly armstrong. great to have you on, sir. you're in house judiciary. more documents too. what shoes are going to drop here? what do you think what do you expect to see? >> we need to continue to do this because we know at this point in time that for sure kevin clients smith lied. he altered an email that went to the fisa court. we don't think he was doing it alone. mr. jarrett was on before and he was talking about the flynn prosecution. we know comey and mccabe...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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mark armstrong, the son of neil armstrong. saturday is the next shot. here is "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with jesse watters, greg gutfeld, donna brazile, katie pavlich. it's 5:00 in new york city and mrs. "the five." a new era in american space travel put on hold for now. bad weather postponing the launch of two nasa astronauts into orbit from cape canaveral, florida. it would be the first manned rocket launch on u.s. soil in nearly a decade. next attempt is saturday. let's go to phil keating standing by. you braved a tornado today. >> yeah, we had a tornado warning in the afternoon, i was talking to you on the 2:00 show. there's no way around it, this is a massively disappointing ending of what was going to be such a triumphant day. spacex has been working for this moment for ten years. elon musk had a dream of launching astronauts on board his rockets, his capsules. and also for nasa, they pride themselves on the public-private partnership that began after the retirement of the space shuttle system. all of the technical i
mark armstrong, the son of neil armstrong. saturday is the next shot. here is "the five." ♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with jesse watters, greg gutfeld, donna brazile, katie pavlich. it's 5:00 in new york city and mrs. "the five." a new era in american space travel put on hold for now. bad weather postponing the launch of two nasa astronauts into orbit from cape canaveral, florida. it would be the first manned rocket launch on u.s. soil in nearly a...
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let's welcome north dakota congressman, republican kelly armstrong. great to see you. my reaction is, i'm always going to go with the side of people calling for release of information. congressman collins, jordan, gowdy have been asking for these transcripts since i've been in congress. and now we find out that an investigation continued after everybody knew there was no underlying crime. elizabeth: yeah. we've got sam that power testified to that -- samantha power, saw no evidence of trump-russia collusion, susan rice testifying, loretta lynch saying that, james clapper. house judiciary chair jerry nadler now wants to call in a.g. barr to testify about why the justice department dropped this case against michael flynn, and adam schiff is saying that the doj move to do that, quote, he says incriminates bill barr. even as flynn's lawyer, sidney powell, says flynn was -- [inaudible] your reaction? >> let's bring anymore, let's bring in kevin kleinsmith the fbi lawyer who altered the e-mail on a fisa warrant. we haven't even held the fall guy accountable yet. and we shoul
let's welcome north dakota congressman, republican kelly armstrong. great to see you. my reaction is, i'm always going to go with the side of people calling for release of information. congressman collins, jordan, gowdy have been asking for these transcripts since i've been in congress. and now we find out that an investigation continued after everybody knew there was no underlying crime. elizabeth: yeah. we've got sam that power testified to that -- samantha power, saw no evidence of...
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berea more of the civil rights turning out of minneapolis minnesota the chemo levy armstrong and author and salon dot com editor at large the walk ins thank you both for joining us today. thank you to. the i want to start with the release of the video showing the the murder of constitutional attorney daniel horowitz the news you know he basically the news of the charges being brought against mcmichaels 2 tweeted out something very very interesting let's take a look at this he tweeted the righteous development is not attributable to a video it's attributable to a video that prosecutors have lot of things to view becoming public that distinction should concern you a great deal that is one of the real ugly realities in america is it not that unless you've got video of a white on black crime it is rarely prosecuted right the. scene of the biggest problems that exists in this country it's like you know so many people are racist but nobody wants to be called a racist or see as greece is even though the race is things all of the time like you know without technology and cell. so many police of
berea more of the civil rights turning out of minneapolis minnesota the chemo levy armstrong and author and salon dot com editor at large the walk ins thank you both for joining us today. thank you to. the i want to start with the release of the video showing the the murder of constitutional attorney daniel horowitz the news you know he basically the news of the charges being brought against mcmichaels 2 tweeted out something very very interesting let's take a look at this he tweeted the...
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May 28, 2020
05/20
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we go now w to minneneapis w whe wewe are joioined by n nekima levy-armstrong, civil l rights attorneyey, activist, foundederf ththe racial justice network and former president of the minneapolis chapter of the nanaacp. welcome back to democracy now! your city is in flames. can yoyou talk about what happed this week and what you're demanding? >> yes. so we knknow george floyd was unjustly killed by minneapolis police officers. ththe video has gone viral. people are outrageged. this is s yet another remininder that the minneapolis police department has a c culture of violencece, specificlyly when it comes to their interactions with the african-american community. and so as a result of what happened to george floyd, we took to the streets in a 2.5 mile m march from the site of where he was killed to the third precinct police station where thousands of people stood in solidarity, standing up for .ustice for george floyd and in the last couple of days, there have been skirmishes between law enforcement officials and protesters. i just actually left the site a little while ago and some of the
we go now w to minneneapis w whe wewe are joioined by n nekima levy-armstrong, civil l rights attorneyey, activist, foundederf ththe racial justice network and former president of the minneapolis chapter of the nanaacp. welcome back to democracy now! your city is in flames. can yoyou talk about what happed this week and what you're demanding? >> yes. so we knknow george floyd was unjustly killed by minneapolis police officers. ththe video has gone viral. people are outrageged. this is s...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. jean serna and was close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from purdue university. as nasa prepares for its first launch of u.s. astronauts since 2011 this wednesday, we will go back to its beginnings. from 1958 to 1979, astronauts trained at the university of north carolina's morehead planetarium, where they learned celestial navigation techniques. >> at morehead, we still talk about the role we played on the front lines of the cold war, because the space race was a major, major initiative within the cold war. >> t minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0. ignition. >> we are in the campus of the university of north carolina at chapel hill. i am sta
neil armstrong was very, very close to purdue. jean serna and was close to purdue. they come here, they have been through these facilities, they talk to the students. they are pilots. before they were spacemen, they were pilots. they love airplanes and they love to fly. now what are we doing? we are landing crafts on mars. by the way, purdue graduates are very much involved with those missions to mars. >> nearly a third of all u.s. spaceflights have involved astronauts graduating from...
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after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tell you to consider one so i might get some. money and not take on the family and employ. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. to make a point. when. you don't think that maybe you might like it. if. maybe. the partner. and if they. want to come to the gunman up to us why paul blackman. class women. need to meet him. as a tapped out of the company public a lot. done. back to gisors financial survival guide. causing bad all. oh you mean there's a downside to artificial mortgage truth don't get carried away report. the world is driven by a dream shaped by one person or those great. things . we dare to ask. me about. busy ringback busy that you must suffer what shiftlessness more than. that. because you mimic most of. the most gutsiest midfielder. you do substitutes. i've. i've. lived. i've. i've i've.
after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tell you to consider one so i might get some. money and not take on the family and employ. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. to make a point. when. you don't think that maybe you might like it. if. maybe. the partner. and if they. want to come to the gunman up to us why paul blackman. class women. need to meet him. as a tapped...
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May 18, 2020
05/20
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armstrong, the master in his time. it emerges in this moment of a new world coming out of world war one. and it means something more to go through this exhibit and go to the top floor and see louis armstrong. now let's sit here and have this conversation. museums are the future of how we begin to narrate and think critically who we are in the world. this is one of the most important places i can think of really, in the world for us to have this conversation in education. >> we will go now to the next question. >> a couple of quick questions. just a follow-up on what john mentioned. black troops -- i don't understand why, here is a man, john j persian, here is a man who served with black troops at the spanish american war, but yet, he was willing to transfer all the black combat troops to france to the french. i would like to know if there is a back story to that. my second question is, those units that they were transferred to, if i'm not mistaken, or the units that the french used to consolidate their colonel troops.
armstrong, the master in his time. it emerges in this moment of a new world coming out of world war one. and it means something more to go through this exhibit and go to the top floor and see louis armstrong. now let's sit here and have this conversation. museums are the future of how we begin to narrate and think critically who we are in the world. this is one of the most important places i can think of really, in the world for us to have this conversation in education. >> we will go now...
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after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think i found a family i mean to imply. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. anything like. the one. that made you write it and. keep. making. important. and you. want to go up to. platinum. class with. the need to meet him. as a tapped out. company public. i am. the world is driven by dreamers shaped past and present those. who dares thinks. we dare to ask. tough and the pull of paris to mcconnell the way the both of us move because ballack itself moved to get on the plaza in this way got to talk so hard not to think of the mother disappeared the moment the look of it i was an optimist or authentic if. this is the only thing that we do is music because everybody fights to use lose weight. to. the floor live from the fifty's look out of this bill frist woody allen all live at the top of a. what i think is this is the funds that is a complimen
after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think i found a family i mean to imply. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. anything like. the one. that made you write it and. keep. making. important. and you. want to go up to. platinum. class with. the need to meet him. as a tapped out. company public. i am. the world is...
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after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think it sounds like sam and i'm glad. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. to me to find. the one. that made you write it and. if. they be. important. and you. want to update us why paul clement. need to meet. us and tapped out. some need to put a lot. done. down. the world is driven by a dream shaped by the person. thinks . we hear to ask. 54 jets and more than 1300 military personnel are headed to air force base in alaska where is that to say come on i'll show you what's the reason for any type of enhanced u.s. military presence in this area of russia. what is it suddenly about the south china sea that makes it so that it 11000000000 barrels of oil. take a look at this map who really owns what kind of says no it belongs to us india says no we claim that that belongs to us both of these countries have nuclear weapons capabilities there is r
after years of secrecy armstrong and they are now learning a lot about. the talent he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think it sounds like sam and i'm glad. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. to me to find. the one. that made you write it and. if. they be. important. and you. want to update us why paul clement. need to meet. us and tapped out. some need to put a lot. done. down. the world is...
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and artists like billy eilish the rolling stones and green days but in joe armstrong live stream performances from their own homes for the one who will together at home charity event on a health care work has. in addition to their live streaming they published a music video made from 60 fan videos filmed at home in the clip has around 50000 hits on you tube. i don't want. the i think a military only way to stay in touch with fans these days is by live streaming concert as a live. afterthought making footage of past gigs available online and you know come. to will now take place in autumn this year provided not down. if not they'll just keep performing on 9. ok so digital platforms are great for musicians to connect with fans and for fans to stream as much music as they want whenever they want but there's a catch companies are collecting vast quantities of personal data professor nick cauldron of the london school of economics explains more. the way we sat or jumped in front of our record player was unknown to the record companies they were blind to that now they're not the vision the market i
and artists like billy eilish the rolling stones and green days but in joe armstrong live stream performances from their own homes for the one who will together at home charity event on a health care work has. in addition to their live streaming they published a music video made from 60 fan videos filmed at home in the clip has around 50000 hits on you tube. i don't want. the i think a military only way to stay in touch with fans these days is by live streaming concert as a live. afterthought...
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secrecy armstrong and we are now learning a lot about. the tap he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think i am and i'm glad. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. and i find. the one. thing that made you write it and. it. may be. important. and you. want to go up to us why paul clement. blessed with. the money to meet him. that tapped out. some need to put a lot. done. am. we go to work. straight home. is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. tyson nation full community. are you going the right way or are you being led so. direct. what is true what is faith. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. or a maybe in the shallows. we're told we're in a new cold war with china it is not coherently explain to us why even worse is the strategy to change there isn't one also besides arms. and finding another one of the. psuedo food. bannock itself mukti about. plus we've go
secrecy armstrong and we are now learning a lot about. the tap he sat in my life to me number 10 percent now i tap into consistency on my hips and. money and i think i am and i'm glad. my fellow americans laos is far away from america but the world is small. and i find. the one. thing that made you write it and. it. may be. important. and you. want to go up to us why paul clement. blessed with. the money to meet him. that tapped out. some need to put a lot. done. am. we go to work. straight...
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May 18, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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and this is from somebody that is a feen for lewis armstrong.ut armstrong, the master of modernism emerges in this moment of a new worldcoming o coming o world war i. you can say let's have this conversation. i think museums really are the future of how we gobegin to narrate who we are in the world. this is one of the most important places i can think of in the world to have this conversation. >> thank you. we go to the next question. yes, please? >> yes. a couple of quick questions. just a follow up of what john mentioned. black troops, i don't understand why here's a man that is john j. persian. here's a man who served with black troops at spanish american war. but, yet, he was willing to transfer all the black combat troops to france to the french. i'd like to know if there is a back story to that. my second question is the units that they were transferred to, if i'm not mistaken, they also were the units that the french used to consolidate their colonial troops. i just want to verify that. my third question, and i'll get out of here, is that
and this is from somebody that is a feen for lewis armstrong.ut armstrong, the master of modernism emerges in this moment of a new worldcoming o coming o world war i. you can say let's have this conversation. i think museums really are the future of how we gobegin to narrate who we are in the world. this is one of the most important places i can think of in the world to have this conversation. >> thank you. we go to the next question. yes, please? >> yes. a couple of quick...
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based on the the recent results will still be strewed to ensure that we can continue safely without armstrong. let's get some perspective on the story with mohammad linear he's have just at britain's lancaster university mohammed thanks for joining us what does the clinical evidence say right now about using hydroxy clark and to treat covered 90 i think the decision by the one of health organisation to cause the communicants fire and to keep the. hydroxycut over weaning stigma forward is based on a one lawyer scale study published last week on the 96 olympics will be if we can get there by proxy meaning i mean 675 in hospital so it's a massive study that collecting the data comes from the sumburgh who made apple based on this study image was a reference to a study which means that for the doubt that been already existing you say that and a lot is based on that to newport and consideration came up one was that people who were communicating with that hydroxycut repeat 25 percent of those died compared to 9 percent on 3 couldn't get over and secondly was that 8 percent of the people who were fea
based on the the recent results will still be strewed to ensure that we can continue safely without armstrong. let's get some perspective on the story with mohammad linear he's have just at britain's lancaster university mohammed thanks for joining us what does the clinical evidence say right now about using hydroxy clark and to treat covered 90 i think the decision by the one of health organisation to cause the communicants fire and to keep the. hydroxycut over weaning stigma forward is based...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN
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seven years after john glenn's 1962 flight as the first astronaut to orbit the earth, neil armstrong become the first astronaut to walk on the moon in 1969. a purdue university graduate is one of 25 astronauts educated -- educated there. >> >> 4 ---10, nine, 8, 7, 6, 5,
seven years after john glenn's 1962 flight as the first astronaut to orbit the earth, neil armstrong become the first astronaut to walk on the moon in 1969. a purdue university graduate is one of 25 astronauts educated -- educated there. >> >> 4 ---10, nine, 8, 7, 6, 5,
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May 18, 2020
05/20
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BLOOMBERG
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he is drew armstrong. we all want this to work. but as i understand, it was a fairly small test, not even designed to figure out efficacy. it was mainly for safety? drew: this is good data and it has passed one of the early checkpoints, which is the small early safety study, it will not be the last look at safety. it does not give us a hint of efficacy. it is news you would want to hear. it tells us there are signs this does some of the right things in a test tube against the virus, that it create some kind of immune response, i'll be at one that has not been tested in the albeit oneand it -- that is not been tested in the real world, and it has a safety protocol in line with other vaccines. did waso be -- what it it showed it created antibodies. we are not convinced what those might do, right? drew: right. there are a couple of different subsets of things they are looking at. they are looking at did this vaccine create antibodies that go and bind to the virus? those are called binding antibodies. it is not enough for the antibodie
he is drew armstrong. we all want this to work. but as i understand, it was a fairly small test, not even designed to figure out efficacy. it was mainly for safety? drew: this is good data and it has passed one of the early checkpoints, which is the small early safety study, it will not be the last look at safety. it does not give us a hint of efficacy. it is news you would want to hear. it tells us there are signs this does some of the right things in a test tube against the virus, that it...
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May 13, 2020
05/20
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: kimberly armstrong owes $300,000 in student loans. she said the feeling of freedom is incredible. >> it's a shock, it's a relief. >> reporter: software developers said that he thought his $50,000 student loan debt would be with him forever. >> we are providing them financial freedom. >> reporter: they saidtheyth's many. >> it's a generational impact. >> reporter: the donors wish to remain anonymous so the students are sending this message. >> thank you. to the donors. thank you so much. god bless you.>> reporter: for students rising above i am michelle griego to learn more you can go to kpix.com. >>> new at 6:00 the state is getting back to business. what guidelines mean for the future of malls? >>> three santa clara county hospitals are playing a new role in investigating the benefits of plasma therapy for covid-19. >>> many seniors missing out on traditional graduation. at a drive-through ceremony be a lifeline? or too little too >>> the alameda county fair the largest in the bay area has been a victim of covid-19. along with the ca
. >> reporter: kimberly armstrong owes $300,000 in student loans. she said the feeling of freedom is incredible. >> it's a shock, it's a relief. >> reporter: software developers said that he thought his $50,000 student loan debt would be with him forever. >> we are providing them financial freedom. >> reporter: they saidtheyth's many. >> it's a generational impact. >> reporter: the donors wish to remain anonymous so the students are sending this...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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. >> seven years after john glenn's 1962 flight as the first astronaut to orbit the earth, neil armstrong become the first astronaut to walk on the moon in 1969. a purdue university graduate is one of 25 astronauts educated there. next, look at major aviation and space milestones in our country's history, and the university's connection to them. >> t minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4 -- we have the main engine start. >> go! fly like an eagle. go. >> we are at the flight simulator building at purdue university. this is where a lot of things started in aviation. the purdue program was the first
. >> seven years after john glenn's 1962 flight as the first astronaut to orbit the earth, neil armstrong become the first astronaut to walk on the moon in 1969. a purdue university graduate is one of 25 astronauts educated there. next, look at major aviation and space milestones in our country's history, and the university's connection to them. >> t minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4 -- we have the main engine start. >> go! fly like an eagle. go. >> we are at the flight...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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FBC
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of course he is the son of neil armstrong and how important it was to neil armstrong, last name i chatted with him, that we never lose our zeal for space. that other countries can and should participate, but we got to be there. today we are going to try to be there. we have colonel terry burke with us right now, might ring a bell. former nasa astronaut, former international space station commander. enormous reputation and background. i'm very honored to have him join us. colonel, us you must be excited here this is moment we thought we would not see and we haven't seen for the better of newspaper years. what do you think? >> been a long time. i wish i was down there, bringing back memories from launching from the same launch bad from space shuttle endeavor about a decade ago. neil: when you look at it, colonel cunningham of the apollo vii flight. very excited about this. didn't mince words about it. he worries about the shift over to private enterprise handling all of this. bemoaning that the private entities are about money, saving money, cost issues. he recognizes that is important in t
of course he is the son of neil armstrong and how important it was to neil armstrong, last name i chatted with him, that we never lose our zeal for space. that other countries can and should participate, but we got to be there. today we are going to try to be there. we have colonel terry burke with us right now, might ring a bell. former nasa astronaut, former international space station commander. enormous reputation and background. i'm very honored to have him join us. colonel, us you must be...
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May 15, 2020
05/20
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BLOOMBERG
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thank you so much to drew armstrong, who heads up our health care coverage at bloomberg.are waiting for donald trump to come out in the rose garden at the white house before -- where he will talk about the initiative to produce a vaccine called work speed where he is putting together a group of people to try to get a vaccine as fast as possible. in the meantime, when we come back, we will be talking with the ceo of the largest medicaid divider in the country about how the plight of americans has been affected by pandemic. that is next on "ounce of power onnext on "balance of power" bloomberg television and radio. ♪ david: welcome back to "balance bloombergon television and radio for the response to the pandemic has put 36 million americans out of work in eight weeks or so. one company that has a unique addition to judge what is going on is 17 of the largest medicaid 1centine.- we welcome the ceo, uncle my door. give us a sense because you do have medicaid, medicare, a lot of what we talk about, seeming to be the most vulnerable to this disease. give us a sense of the dise
thank you so much to drew armstrong, who heads up our health care coverage at bloomberg.are waiting for donald trump to come out in the rose garden at the white house before -- where he will talk about the initiative to produce a vaccine called work speed where he is putting together a group of people to try to get a vaccine as fast as possible. in the meantime, when we come back, we will be talking with the ceo of the largest medicaid divider in the country about how the plight of americans...
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May 3, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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i think louis armstrong is another that was debated. >> but duke ellington isin here . >> a part of it, the process was we thought about we don't want to have it overly weighted with civil rights or activists figures because you could have filled anentire book there . we were sensitive to what's missing. i probably think we added people. wrote richard allen is in there in part because certainly religion is such an important founding. founder of the ame church and religion is so important to black communities and still is and churches play such a role. we probably could have had more religious figures at some point . i may have raised it, we don't have enough religious figures. military. davis is a decorated general is in their and -- >> first african-american general. >> this was a nod to the fact of our contributions to the military and fighting and defending the country. >> there is a connection between jesse owens and benjamin davis who operated during that same time period but came back to the us to the same old world. >> to the same old world and jesse owens and many of those othe
i think louis armstrong is another that was debated. >> but duke ellington isin here . >> a part of it, the process was we thought about we don't want to have it overly weighted with civil rights or activists figures because you could have filled anentire book there . we were sensitive to what's missing. i probably think we added people. wrote richard allen is in there in part because certainly religion is such an important founding. founder of the ame church and religion is so...
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May 13, 2020
05/20
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it resulted in the death of general george armstrong custer, who was a civil war hero, and in the death of almost 300 cavalry men. this was the most shocking event in us history of the late 19th century. within less than 10 years, warriors who were reviled by americans become a symbol of the united states of america. in this exhibition we explore how it is that the battle of little bighorn remained immensely important in the consciousness of americans for over a century, and we explore exactly how it is that imagery of the plains indian warrior in as the stereo typical american indian and also as a symbol of the united states. all of this to say they will be exploring how the indian warrior was used to justify manifest destiny. so our gallery, which explores the battle of the little bighorn, is divided into two halves. in one half, we look at concepts of warfare and what the battle little bighorn was about from their perspective. on the other side we look at how it is the americans responded to the battle and how out of this battle emerged the image of the plane indian warrior. essentia
it resulted in the death of general george armstrong custer, who was a civil war hero, and in the death of almost 300 cavalry men. this was the most shocking event in us history of the late 19th century. within less than 10 years, warriors who were reviled by americans become a symbol of the united states of america. in this exhibition we explore how it is that the battle of little bighorn remained immensely important in the consciousness of americans for over a century, and we explore exactly...