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Jun 2, 2016
06/16
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WJLA
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from omaha, nebraska, please welcome back ben woodruff. [cheers and applause] >> how's it going?good to see you again, my friend. welcome back. >> thank you. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> how long ago was the wedding? >> about ten months ago. >> nice, how are things going so far?
from omaha, nebraska, please welcome back ben woodruff. [cheers and applause] >> how's it going?good to see you again, my friend. welcome back. >> thank you. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> how long ago was the wedding? >> about ten months ago. >> nice, how are things going so far?
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from omaha, nebraska, please welcome back ben woodruff. [cheers and applause] >> how's it going?> good to see you again, my friend. welcome back. >> thank you. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> how long ago was the wedding? >> about ten months ago. >> nice, how are things going so far? >> great, great, couldn't be happier. >> hopefully you don't ever have to worry about money again because you're on your way towards $1 million.
from omaha, nebraska, please welcome back ben woodruff. [cheers and applause] >> how's it going?> good to see you again, my friend. welcome back. >> thank you. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> how long ago was the wedding? >> about ten months ago. >> nice, how are things going so far? >> great, great, couldn't be happier. >> hopefully you don't ever have to worry about money again because you're on your way towards $1 million.
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Jun 11, 2016
06/16
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KQED
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. >> brown: ben brantley from the "new york times," thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> woodruff. but first, take this time to hear from your local pbs station. it's a chance to offer your >> woodruff: on the newshour online right now, what's the best way to ensure financial security for your family? think of your family as a business, says one of our making sense columnists. find eight principles to guide you in managing and growing your family's wealth. all that and more is on our web site, pbs.org/newshour. and gwen ifill is preparing for "washington week" which airs tonight on pbs and has a preview. gwen? >> ifill: thanks, judy. hillary clinton wins the week, making history by clinching the democratic nomination, then rolling out coordinated high profile endorsements. so where does that leave donald trump? still defending himself against his own comments, while bernie sanders works out his slow- motion surrender. all that, tonight on washington week. judy? >> woodruff: look forward. and we'll be back, right here, on monday with our regular political analysis from amy walters
. >> brown: ben brantley from the "new york times," thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> woodruff. but first, take this time to hear from your local pbs station. it's a chance to offer your >> woodruff: on the newshour online right now, what's the best way to ensure financial security for your family? think of your family as a business, says one of our making sense columnists. find eight principles to guide you in managing and growing your...
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Jun 10, 2016
06/16
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. >> brown: ben brantley from the "new york times," thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> woodruff. but first, take this time to hear from your local pbs station. it's a chance to offer your support, which helps keep programs like ours on the air. >> woodruff: for those stations still with us, we travel to stone quarries in the rural, northern part of india, where a deadly disease has trapped workers in poverty for generations. fred de sam lazaro has our encore report. >> reporter: across the urban landscape rise majestic sandstone palaces, monuments and temples, built in india's timeless architectural traditions. but what's also timeless is how the stone continues to be mined, far from the cities, here in the rajasthan desert. no one is spared the drudgery, it seems. how old are you? >> ten. >> reporter: he should be in school. it's the law. but history suggests he'll soon graduate to a quarry; part of a vicious cycle of generational poverty and disease. the work is physically brutal under a blazing desert sun. but behind their thick clouds of dust, miners wear nothing but flip fl
. >> brown: ben brantley from the "new york times," thank you very much. >> thank you for having me. >> woodruff. but first, take this time to hear from your local pbs station. it's a chance to offer your support, which helps keep programs like ours on the air. >> woodruff: for those stations still with us, we travel to stone quarries in the rural, northern part of india, where a deadly disease has trapped workers in poverty for generations. fred de sam lazaro...