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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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policy priorities; survivors of the pulse nightclub shooting, five years later; and artist tristan eaton, making his mark on a large scale. next on pbs newshour weekend. >> pbs newshour weekend is made possible by: sue and edgar wachenheim iii. the andersonamily fund. bernard and denise schwartz. the cheryl and philip milstein family. barbara hope zuckerberg. the leonard and norma klorfine foundation. the peter g. peterson and joan ganz cooney fund. the estate of worthington mayo- smith. we try to live in the moment, to not miss what's right in front of us. at mutual of america, we believe taking care of tomorrow can help you make the most of today. mutual of america nancial group, retirement services and investments. >> for 25 years, consumer cellular's goal has been to provide wireless service that helps people communicate and connect. we offer a variety of no-contract plans, and our u.s.-based customer service team can help find one that fits you. to learn more, visit www.consumercellular.tv. additional support has been provided by: and by the corporation for public broadcasting, a pr
policy priorities; survivors of the pulse nightclub shooting, five years later; and artist tristan eaton, making his mark on a large scale. next on pbs newshour weekend. >> pbs newshour weekend is made possible by: sue and edgar wachenheim iii. the andersonamily fund. bernard and denise schwartz. the cheryl and philip milstein family. barbara hope zuckerberg. the leonard and norma klorfine foundation. the peter g. peterson and joan ganz cooney fund. the estate of worthington mayo- smith....
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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joe eaton is his name. i want to shout that out because he made it possible for me to even be where i'm at. my grandfather, my dad, jerry eaton, they worked inside that barbershop and then that's where the civil rights movement for north tulsa even started was in that barbershop. and many black men got arrested for protesting, restaurants that wouldn't allow blacks to even eat in there. so when we get that economic development party because blacks in our community, we need funding and we need money. that's what we need. you know? it's been taken away from us. and destroyed our property and has never been given to us. those survivors that are surviving right now, they need funding. they need money. and people need to understand that they are the ones who suffered first. >> yeah. >> before you start having all these big festive and all this stuff going on, you need to take care of them first. >> yeah. let me ask you this. president biden announced some policy initiatives today to help, for instance, directing
joe eaton is his name. i want to shout that out because he made it possible for me to even be where i'm at. my grandfather, my dad, jerry eaton, they worked inside that barbershop and then that's where the civil rights movement for north tulsa even started was in that barbershop. and many black men got arrested for protesting, restaurants that wouldn't allow blacks to even eat in there. so when we get that economic development party because blacks in our community, we need funding and we need...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted... but does this add up?ng of india going on the red list with what's happening now? certainly, delta is the problem right now. it accounts for more than 90% of the you cases —— new cases, and one adviser extort describe what happening this way. we adviser extort describe what happening this way.- adviser extort describe what happening this way. we are in the earl un- happening this way. we are in the early grip of— happening this way. we are in the early grip of this _ happening this way. we are in the early grip of this virus. _ happening this way. we are in the early grip of this virus. it - happening this way. we are in the early grip of this virus. it is - happening this way. we are in the early grip of this virus. it is this i early grip of this virus. it is this delia _ early grip of this virus. it is this delta variant. _ early grip of this virus. it is this delta variant. we _ early grip of this virus. it is this delta variant. we got _ early grip of this virus. it is this delta variant. we got 7000
injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted... but does this add up?ng of india going on the red list with what's happening now? certainly, delta is the problem right now. it accounts for more than 90% of the you cases —— new cases, and one adviser extort describe what happening this way. we adviser extort describe what happening this way.- adviser extort describe what happening this way. we are in the earl un- happening this way. we are in the early grip of— happening this way. we...
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Jun 28, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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. >> diana would never want harry to go to eaton because he would compares to his brother's success. >> prince harry decided that he was going to be a bad boy. the reasons he didn't do well was partly his fault. >> in 2002, headline emerged of harry's drinking and marijuana use. >> did it seem like it was more antics? >> i personally was worried that there was something deeper, it was medication going on. >> after graduating from eaton, harry escaped to africa during his gap career for humanitarian work. >> it was an escape from this heavy duty world of royalty, always being watched, always being photographed. he could be very ordinary. >> he spent two months with children in need and others whose parents had died from aids. he saw in them something that he felt was missing in his life, care, love and attention, the loss of his mother. harry not only felt in love with the children and the country, he began a serious romance with a wealthy girl from south africa, chelsea davies. >> he's very free spirited. she also shared his love of africa. >> chelsea remained constant in harry's lif
. >> diana would never want harry to go to eaton because he would compares to his brother's success. >> prince harry decided that he was going to be a bad boy. the reasons he didn't do well was partly his fault. >> in 2002, headline emerged of harry's drinking and marijuana use. >> did it seem like it was more antics? >> i personally was worried that there was something deeper, it was medication going on. >> after graduating from eaton, harry escaped to...
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113
Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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CNNW
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. >> diana always said that she never wanted harry to go to eaton because he would be compared to his brother's success. and she thought this would be the undoing of harry's confidence. >> prince harry says that he decided that he was going to be a bad boy so that the reason he didn't do well there was, partly, his fault. was deliberate. >> reporter: in 2002, headlines emerged of harry's drinking and marijuana use. >> did it seem, brits that it -- >> it's all part of the growing up process. but i, personally, was worried that there was something deeper. there was a touch of self-medication going on. >> reporter: after graduating from eaton, harry escaped to africa during his gap year for humanitarian work. >> it was an escape from this heavy-duty world of royalty. always being watched. always being photographed. he could be very ordinary. >> reporter: he spent two months with children in need and others, whose parents had died from aids. >> he could see that there were holes there in their lives. i think, absolutely, he saw, in them, something that he felt was missing in his life. car
. >> diana always said that she never wanted harry to go to eaton because he would be compared to his brother's success. and she thought this would be the undoing of harry's confidence. >> prince harry says that he decided that he was going to be a bad boy so that the reason he didn't do well there was, partly, his fault. was deliberate. >> reporter: in 2002, headlines emerged of harry's drinking and marijuana use. >> did it seem, brits that it -- >> it's all part...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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with me are harriet line, chief political correspondent at the daily mail, and george eaton, senior 0nlineor at the new statesman. let's go through the front pages. the daily mail leads on the news that the murderer colin pitchfork has been cleared for release from prison, with a plea from his victims�* relatives to keep him locked up. the metro features an official report by mps that warns the future of the nhs is at risk, and that chronic understaffing means it is being held together by the goodwill of its burnt—out workers. the financial times reports that finance ministers are plotting a raid on amazon's lucrative cloud computing business to ensure it pays more corporate tax under a new g7 agreement on a global rate. the i writes that vaccines are winning the variant battle, with only 2% of people admitted to hospital having had two doses of a vaccine. the guardian reports that borisjohnson has set himself on a collision course with scores of his mps as number ten suggested it would defy an order to bring a vote on foreign aid cuts. the telegraph says brussels will start a trade war wi
with me are harriet line, chief political correspondent at the daily mail, and george eaton, senior 0nlineor at the new statesman. let's go through the front pages. the daily mail leads on the news that the murderer colin pitchfork has been cleared for release from prison, with a plea from his victims�* relatives to keep him locked up. the metro features an official report by mps that warns the future of the nhs is at risk, and that chronic understaffing means it is being held together by the...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted... but does this add up? average at the moment and a doubling time around a week. but was the red list disk agent responsible for this? this is one current adviser. in other words, to some extent, the timing didn�*t matter because the timing did matter because if delta had been delayed, more people would have been vaccinated and we know the vaccine reduces the chances of getting delta and of getting seriously ill because of it. but timing isn�*t the whole story. look at this. the uae brought in extra restrictions on the 22nd of april. france was the 24th, the us, the 4th of may. the uk, remember, was the 23rd of april. it wasn�*t out of sync with these countries. here�*s an american official telling us the delta variant is doubling every two weeks, so it�*s probably going to become the dominant strain here. more broadly, the who says delta is in over 60 countries, so why is the uk particularly affected? it may be the volume of people who came in. doctorjeffrey barrett is quoted in the independent and says...
injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted... but does this add up? average at the moment and a doubling time around a week. but was the red list disk agent responsible for this? this is one current adviser. in other words, to some extent, the timing didn�*t matter because the timing did matter because if delta had been delayed, more people would have been vaccinated and we know the vaccine reduces the chances of getting delta and of getting seriously ill because of it. but timing...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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he served there from april eaton 61 until he joined the 23rd in 1864. he is from williams county virginia, but his family was freed a long time ago, so he moved to ohio, where he served as a free man and a teamster and a scout. while black men were not allowed in the union and confederate armies, there were light skinned blacks who actually passed for blacks who are in both armies. and we will never know the full extent of how many did that. but one example is lieutenant colonel william and read of the first north carolina colored infantry, later designated to the 35th u.s. 18. in some places he was listed as white, in other places he was listed as a lotto. but his father was a white danish manned and his mother was a black slave from the virgin islands. reed was a abolitionist from new york, but he graduated from military school in denmark. and most people think of that as being germany, and it does become part of germany after the second prussian war. and he served in the danish army before coming back to the states. he would lead the first north caro
he served there from april eaton 61 until he joined the 23rd in 1864. he is from williams county virginia, but his family was freed a long time ago, so he moved to ohio, where he served as a free man and a teamster and a scout. while black men were not allowed in the union and confederate armies, there were light skinned blacks who actually passed for blacks who are in both armies. and we will never know the full extent of how many did that. but one example is lieutenant colonel william and...
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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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and anthony eaton met in a chateau in france and planned the entire invasion conspiracy invasion, which they were trying to keep from eisenhower's because they knew he wouldn't like it. now by this time everybody knows that except the british to this day and the reason that is is because anthony eden simply flatly denied it in his memoirs. so they don't know it. they're like us they're like everybody. it's hard to believe that your leaders flatly lie to you. not hard to believe that they mislead a little that. they don't tell you the whole truth. that they you know, they fudge and they frame it and spin it and so forth. which they do all that. in fact, that's mostly what they do. they also lie a great deal all the time. not just the president not just republicans or democrats presidents and not just our leaders. not just democratic leaders. as i have stone said he summed it all up in the way one of the major messages of this book. he summed up and i'd heard him say this but i didn't believe it till i've been through it. all government officials lie and nothing they say is to be believed
and anthony eaton met in a chateau in france and planned the entire invasion conspiracy invasion, which they were trying to keep from eisenhower's because they knew he wouldn't like it. now by this time everybody knows that except the british to this day and the reason that is is because anthony eden simply flatly denied it in his memoirs. so they don't know it. they're like us they're like everybody. it's hard to believe that your leaders flatly lie to you. not hard to believe that they...
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Jun 28, 2021
06/21
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CNBC
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>> morgan stanley now, over 3% dividend yield, the acquisition of eaton advance on top of e trade means asset under management. >> brian >> if i'm right about crypto, then coin base should have a good day. >> karen. >> city group, don't feel bad that you didn't get to increase your dividend but you still have your buybacks and there is great value there. >> on thursday, you said the islanders had a 20% chance of -- to win and they lost good for you, melissa lee. bio gen, it did what it needs tnks >>hafor watching fast. "mad money" starts right now. >> my mission is simple. to make you you money. i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there is always a bull market somewhere and i promise to help you find it. "mad money" starts now hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica my job not just to entertain but educate and teach so call me or tweet me @jimcramer. sometimes this market divides itself into categories that are just mind blowing. today was all about ol
>> morgan stanley now, over 3% dividend yield, the acquisition of eaton advance on top of e trade means asset under management. >> brian >> if i'm right about crypto, then coin base should have a good day. >> karen. >> city group, don't feel bad that you didn't get to increase your dividend but you still have your buybacks and there is great value there. >> on thursday, you said the islanders had a 20% chance of -- to win and they lost good for you, melissa...
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Jun 15, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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sure my mom was completely bewildered as to why it was that that i loved all my lunch every day on eaton. and what i want to say about that is that of course i suffered no great deprivation from not eating my lunch. that's not a thing. but i think three things came out of that, of reflecting from that experience. the first is that the kids who did a marking did it with impunity, which is to say, it was a normal part of their experience. and no one was there to call them out on it. like i said, i mean, i certainly didn't say anything, and it was not the vocabulary, really, for me to say anything about. the second thing is that, although of course it's no great deprivation not to eat your lunch, it wasn't me, it was me, [inaudible] to question my own belonging in a particular community. that so many of us have experienced these incidents internalize the stigma of it, and they begin to feel something is wrong with you that you're not conforming in some way, that you are not, quote, unquote, normal in some way. and i think, like i said, virtually every asian american that i know has experien
sure my mom was completely bewildered as to why it was that that i loved all my lunch every day on eaton. and what i want to say about that is that of course i suffered no great deprivation from not eating my lunch. that's not a thing. but i think three things came out of that, of reflecting from that experience. the first is that the kids who did a marking did it with impunity, which is to say, it was a normal part of their experience. and no one was there to call them out on it. like i said,...
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Jun 25, 2021
06/21
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KRON
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. >> at eaton canyon road again, it's eastbound. we're not seeing much of a delay, a long 5.80, or 8.80 or 2.38. so that's some good news for that. as you're heading into the city this morning. no major issues for you on your morning commute. you're looking at a little under 7 minutes for you to make it to that fremont street exit heading across towards the peninsula a little under 14 as traffic starts to pick up there. look at the golden gate bridge as you're traveling into the city about 19 minutes. we'll have more throughout the morning. the darya and james, back to you. thanks reyna. >> so we have a warning from police. the chp is going to be cracking down on speeders this weekend. starting today and through sunday. officers are going to be looking to tickets speeders all across the state kron 4. sarah stinson is live at the bay bridge with the details. good morning, sarah. >> where, of course people are speeding as they normally do coming barreling through the toll plaza. it always surprises me how fast people go through the to
. >> at eaton canyon road again, it's eastbound. we're not seeing much of a delay, a long 5.80, or 8.80 or 2.38. so that's some good news for that. as you're heading into the city this morning. no major issues for you on your morning commute. you're looking at a little under 7 minutes for you to make it to that fremont street exit heading across towards the peninsula a little under 14 as traffic starts to pick up there. look at the golden gate bridge as you're traveling into the city...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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guestsjoining me tonight are harriet line, the chief political correspondent at the daily mail, and george eaton0nline editor at the new statesman. from tomorrow, anyone aged between 25 and 29 in england will be able to book a coronavirus jab. the head of nhs england said the country was on the "home straight" of the biggest vaccination programme in its history, which launched just six months ago. as our health editor hugh pym reports, wales is even closer to jabbing all adults. the welsh government says it will be the first to reach an important milestone — offering all aged 18 and over a first coronavirus vaccine dose, and that's the aim by next monday. the target for the uk as a whole is for all adults to be offered a firstjab by the end ofjuly. by any standards, this is a remarkable achievement and a tribute to the hard work of all those involved in the programme, to all of those doing the complex work of planning behind the scenes, and to the thousands of people vaccinating and helping to run the clinics across our country. it was welcome news for those in cardiff we spoke to today. the fac
guestsjoining me tonight are harriet line, the chief political correspondent at the daily mail, and george eaton0nline editor at the new statesman. from tomorrow, anyone aged between 25 and 29 in england will be able to book a coronavirus jab. the head of nhs england said the country was on the "home straight" of the biggest vaccination programme in its history, which launched just six months ago. as our health editor hugh pym reports, wales is even closer to jabbing all adults. the...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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MSNBCW
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seamus eaton and there's a stanza in it that i think should be the definition of our call today for youngeaches us not to hope on this side of the grave but then once in a lifetime that long tidal wave of justice rises up, and hope and history rhyme. let's make it rhyme. [ applause ] >> a speech equal parts soaring and biden-esque folksy there. president biden marking the 100-year anniversary since the tulsa race massacre, making clear that that is exactly what it was. he said, in one line that i think received the loudest applause, it was not a race riot. it was a massacre. honoring the survivors and their families. joining our conversation, kim atkins, "boston globe" columnist and msnbc contributor. jason johnson and claire are still here. jason, i want to come back to you. i think this may be the most important speech of the biden presidency in that he opened this chapter of so much violence and so much pain, and he tied it to three conversations we have on this show every day, including the one we started with. a death bed conversation with the late, great john lewis where they talked
seamus eaton and there's a stanza in it that i think should be the definition of our call today for youngeaches us not to hope on this side of the grave but then once in a lifetime that long tidal wave of justice rises up, and hope and history rhyme. let's make it rhyme. [ applause ] >> a speech equal parts soaring and biden-esque folksy there. president biden marking the 100-year anniversary since the tulsa race massacre, making clear that that is exactly what it was. he said, in one...
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Jun 20, 2021
06/21
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BBCNEWS
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injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted. .. but does this add up?asn't out of sync with these countries. here's an american official telling us the delta variant is doubling every two weeks, so it's probably going to become the dominant strain here. more broadly, the who says delta is in over 60 countries, so why is the uk particularly affected? it may be the volume of people who came in. doctorjeffrey barrett is quoted in the independent and says... he also points out denmark had individual cases of delta at the same time as the uk, but not a huge volume of them, and delta's impact in denmark is much smaller. all of which feeds into the ongoing arguments of the timing of the red list decision. arguments that have an urgency because delta is becoming more and more of an issue. the problem at the moment is that the projections that include a significant third wave, which is what the delay today is designed to try and prevent, also say that in one month's time, the situation is very unlikely to look any better. the professor makes a longer—term point,
injune, george eaton of the new statesman tweeted. .. but does this add up?asn't out of sync with these countries. here's an american official telling us the delta variant is doubling every two weeks, so it's probably going to become the dominant strain here. more broadly, the who says delta is in over 60 countries, so why is the uk particularly affected? it may be the volume of people who came in. doctorjeffrey barrett is quoted in the independent and says... he also points out denmark had...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
by
BBCNEWS
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injune, george eaton at the new state and said... but does this add up?ening this way. we are in the grip of the early stages of a third | grip of the early stages of a third wave of the virus and it is delta variant. we have 7000 cases on average a day at the moment and a doubling time which is somewhere around a week. but doubling time which is somewhere around a week.— doubling time which is somewhere around a week. but was the red list decision responsible _ around a week. but was the red list decision responsible for _ around a week. but was the red list decision responsible for this? i around a week. but was the red list decision responsible for this? this i decision responsible for this? this is one current uk government advisor. . . is one current uk government advisor. , . , . . . is one current uk government advisor. , . . . , advisor. this india delta variant is now uuite advisor. this india delta variant is now quite common _ advisor. this india delta variant is now quite common around - advisor. this india delta variant is now quite common ar
injune, george eaton at the new state and said... but does this add up?ening this way. we are in the grip of the early stages of a third | grip of the early stages of a third wave of the virus and it is delta variant. we have 7000 cases on average a day at the moment and a doubling time which is somewhere around a week. but doubling time which is somewhere around a week.— doubling time which is somewhere around a week. but was the red list decision responsible _ around a week. but was the red...