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Sep 14, 2014
09/14
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[applause] >> i just wanted to thank you for writing your book about the brooklyn dodgers and explaining, explaining how about you and your father closer together. my father gave that book to me in brooklyn. he gave it to me shortly before he died and that it brought us closer together so thank you. [applause] i cannot thank you enough for that. thank you so much. what happened is ken burns did a documentary on the history of baseball and came to interview me and it was a lot about the brooklyn dodgers and the red sox, these two teams that almost always one but almost always lost in the end. these beloved teams so i'd saw this program. somebody asked me whether you write about a? i never would have thought about writing a memoir and it meant so much to me because my parents died when i was young. my mother died when i was just 15 and my father died when i was in my 20s. i had never really gone back to my hometown. i eventually grew up in long island but the book allowed me to go back home and meet my old friends again. most importantly i spend my life bringing peace presence to live to b
[applause] >> i just wanted to thank you for writing your book about the brooklyn dodgers and explaining, explaining how about you and your father closer together. my father gave that book to me in brooklyn. he gave it to me shortly before he died and that it brought us closer together so thank you. [applause] i cannot thank you enough for that. thank you so much. what happened is ken burns did a documentary on the history of baseball and came to interview me and it was a lot about the...
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Sep 14, 2014
09/14
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[applause] a big fan of the brooklyn dodgers ensured a book about them as well.the brooklyn dodgers don't exist any longer, so she has shifted her allegiance to the boston red sox. [cheers and applause] she was the first woman to going to the boston red dots locker room. she is a graduate of colby college, phi beta kappa naturally, magna laude. later won a white house fellowship and is a white house fellow was assigned to the white house and work with president johnson directly. after she left, she went to harvard, finisher teaching assignment air. she got her phd at harvard as well and that she began her career after teaching of writing extraordinary books. i think to start by asking you this. you've written books about some presidency obviously couldn't know. franklin roosevelt. if you had a chance to have dinner, who would you want to have dinner with. i keep knowing that people say to you, you could have dinner with one of you guys. i know i should ask abraham lincoln, what would you attend different about instruction had he lived? but i know i wouldn't ask y
[applause] a big fan of the brooklyn dodgers ensured a book about them as well.the brooklyn dodgers don't exist any longer, so she has shifted her allegiance to the boston red sox. [cheers and applause] she was the first woman to going to the boston red dots locker room. she is a graduate of colby college, phi beta kappa naturally, magna laude. later won a white house fellowship and is a white house fellow was assigned to the white house and work with president johnson directly. after she left,...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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CSPAN3
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brooklyn dodgers. >> do you have any record of anthony kansas in the monarchs?>> sure. >> my dad played for anthony about 90 years ago. if there's some way you could -- i would appreciate it. it's been a long time since i even knew -- my dad has been gone 50 years. >> i tell you what. they did play anthony kansas. as i was coming down the freeway today, i'm driving past all these places that i know the monarchs appeared. i know they played at fort riley, at junction city, they were at manhattan, clay center. i can go out west. practically any city that was a city had a baseball team, and they had a kansas league that they would play in. they played all the those cities of not one year, different years. i would do research. i will get your name. i will be happy to supply that information. >> about 1959, satchel spent the summer and pitched for salina blue jays. unfortunately, we still, as a team, suffered under the discrimination scenarios. they didn't spent many nights overnight. but they traveled by bus. of course, after the game liked to eat somewhere. there w
brooklyn dodgers. >> do you have any record of anthony kansas in the monarchs?>> sure. >> my dad played for anthony about 90 years ago. if there's some way you could -- i would appreciate it. it's been a long time since i even knew -- my dad has been gone 50 years. >> i tell you what. they did play anthony kansas. as i was coming down the freeway today, i'm driving past all these places that i know the monarchs appeared. i know they played at fort riley, at junction...
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Sep 1, 2014
09/14
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CSPAN3
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up to the team, the brooklyn dodgers.she said this -- the moment robinson puts on a dodgers uniform, you can begin counting the days to the deaf of the negro leagues. there were a few many negro league players who were questioning what integration might mean in terms of his negative impact on their livelihood. in one of my interviews, the last interview with 2005, he died the following year in 2006 at the age of 94, he said this, we should have, in fact, supported our ne gechlt ro leagues and they should have taken whole teams into the majors or at least make the negro leagues part of the farm system of the majors. but i want you to hear just three minutes of what he also said in my interview with him. it starts off with me saying stuff. i think you can recognize my voice even back then. but then there's buck o'neill because he takes it a step further. so, listen up. >> our own people rather than being in an environment we control rather than over here and they see this as the big time. i think that's the integration. >>
up to the team, the brooklyn dodgers.she said this -- the moment robinson puts on a dodgers uniform, you can begin counting the days to the deaf of the negro leagues. there were a few many negro league players who were questioning what integration might mean in terms of his negative impact on their livelihood. in one of my interviews, the last interview with 2005, he died the following year in 2006 at the age of 94, he said this, we should have, in fact, supported our ne gechlt ro leagues and...
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Sep 2, 2014
09/14
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with one out in the bottom of the ninth propels the new giants to a win and the payment against brooklyn dodgers the dodgers had a lead in mid-august of 13 and a half games. the giants were perceived as dead and buried at one point the dodgers manager when asked about the giants said giants? are they still in the league? they were. they want 38 other final 45 games and finished the season in a time. at a time that called for a three-game playoff. the giants won the first gang. the dodgers won the second. it came down to the finale in new york. many things happened at the polo grounds. that was the home field of the new york giants. tight gang. dodgers pitcher, leans over to jackie robinson in the dugout and says, i've got nothing left to jackie robinson says you go back out there and pitch until your arm also. that brought to court in effect dodgers take a lead in the bottom of the ninth. then he begins to get tight. gives up his finger. gives up another single. runners at first and third. gets an out. gives up a double. now it is second and third. the manager knows his pitcher is spent. he goes
with one out in the bottom of the ninth propels the new giants to a win and the payment against brooklyn dodgers the dodgers had a lead in mid-august of 13 and a half games. the giants were perceived as dead and buried at one point the dodgers manager when asked about the giants said giants? are they still in the league? they were. they want 38 other final 45 games and finished the season in a time. at a time that called for a three-game playoff. the giants won the first gang. the dodgers won...
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Sep 4, 2014
09/14
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WPVI
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she has been a dodgers fan her entire life back when the franchise was in brooklyn and for her it was a dream come true. >> i can't believe i am here, i watch every game on tv, and sat in the seats but never been down here. >> it looked to be a perfect strike if you ask me. >>> cecily tynan has the accuweather forecast when we continue in just a moment. our dad's a plumber. a business manager. and a stickler for homework. i'm john kane running for state senate. dad says the road to a good job starts in the classroom. [ lori ] he's a great dad who sees taxes going up but schools not getting the funding they need. [ john ] so i'd put back the billion dollars corbett cut from education and make sure corporations and natural gas drillers paid their fair share. time to close the loopholes for the tax cheats. dad thinks a lot about education. i'm john kane and it's about time harrisburg did too. >>> so we have unsettled weather moving into the tri-state area. >> and steamy weather as well for the next two days and then it feels like fall. big changes over the weekend, stormtracker 6 live do
she has been a dodgers fan her entire life back when the franchise was in brooklyn and for her it was a dream come true. >> i can't believe i am here, i watch every game on tv, and sat in the seats but never been down here. >> it looked to be a perfect strike if you ask me. >>> cecily tynan has the accuweather forecast when we continue in just a moment. our dad's a plumber. a business manager. and a stickler for homework. i'm john kane running for state senate. dad says the...
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Sep 4, 2014
09/14
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WUVP
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sueÑos, esta anciana de 100 aÑos de edad, se encargÓ de lanzar, ella era fanÁtica de los dodgers cuando jugaban en brooklynieres que te pase lo mismo, nos acompaÑa la psicÓloga_ >> todos hemos pasado por esta situaciÓn. >> cuÁles son las barreras mÁs comunes? >> las mÁs comunes, no somos autÉnticos, creamos ciertos lÍmites, no dejamos a esa persona conocernos a profundidad, no abrimos el corazÓn, no dejamos saber el pensamiento, tambiÉn, no nos queremos comprometer, hay parejas que estÁn de novios 10 aÑos y no pasan al siguente paso, no le dejamos saber lo importante, cualquier comportamiento que vemos, automÁticamente nos va a suceder. >> uno pensarÍa que lo hace. >> puede suceder de ambas maneras, me va a decir, esto no me va a volver a pasar, a veces pensamos que hemos superado los tramos del pasado, volvemos a caer en ese tipo de relaciÓn. >> cuÁles son los pro y los contra? >> los pro, que no te vuelva a pasar. >> que eso es un mecanismo de defensa, sabemos muy bien cuando nos sentimos traicionados, controlados, abusados en una relaciÓn, es un dolor muy profundo. >> es muy comÚn, mirÁ esta chica que l
sueÑos, esta anciana de 100 aÑos de edad, se encargÓ de lanzar, ella era fanÁtica de los dodgers cuando jugaban en brooklynieres que te pase lo mismo, nos acompaÑa la psicÓloga_ >> todos hemos pasado por esta situaciÓn. >> cuÁles son las barreras mÁs comunes? >> las mÁs comunes, no somos autÉnticos, creamos ciertos lÍmites, no dejamos a esa persona conocernos a profundidad, no abrimos el corazÓn, no dejamos saber el pensamiento, tambiÉn, no nos queremos...
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83
Sep 2, 2014
09/14
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CSPAN2
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good morning to all, and thanks, tom, as a lifelong dodger fan and -- [laughter] family whose love of the team dates back to brooklyn, it's always nice to have the salt in that wound. [laughter] so we'll get started. again, it's a pleasure to be here. when jeff asked me to participate, there were a number of different ways that you can go with this discussion. my background, my quick background -- not that i love talking about myself, but it's particularly relevant to this discussion -- i'm about a year out of customs and border protection. i did a number of different stints within the organization, but key to this effort is i was the director of targeting programs at their national targeting center for both passenger and cargo programs. and, you know, there's a real, there's a real push in customs to start moving even more to advance data and using private industry data to help make better risk decisions from the border management perspective. companies have been doing it forever. customs often times gets late to the game when they have these different efforts, but the plea i'd like to make to everybody in this roo
good morning to all, and thanks, tom, as a lifelong dodger fan and -- [laughter] family whose love of the team dates back to brooklyn, it's always nice to have the salt in that wound. [laughter] so we'll get started. again, it's a pleasure to be here. when jeff asked me to participate, there were a number of different ways that you can go with this discussion. my background, my quick background -- not that i love talking about myself, but it's particularly relevant to this discussion -- i'm...