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Aug 31, 2020
08/20
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it looks like edith nourse rogers has some flowers. this represents not all the women in congress but lots of them. they are being photograph and being treated by the press as an entity. how that is going to get played out would change. and over the next couple of decades, as people try to figure out what do we talk about when we talk about women in congress? >> this is an interesting photo because it points out, you can go through this and look at the way the women were elected to congress. on the front row is pearl oldfield who succeeded her husband who passed away. then edith nourse rogers then ruth pratt who represented the silk stocking district in new york city. then on the far side here is ruth hannah mccormack of illinois. her father was marcus hannah, who was the republican kingmaker in the early part of the 20th century. and constantly butted heads with william jennings bryan. which is interesting because his daughter ruth bryan owen is on this side of the picture. we have a press account when ruths wereoofs -- sworn into the
it looks like edith nourse rogers has some flowers. this represents not all the women in congress but lots of them. they are being photograph and being treated by the press as an entity. how that is going to get played out would change. and over the next couple of decades, as people try to figure out what do we talk about when we talk about women in congress? >> this is an interesting photo because it points out, you can go through this and look at the way the women were elected to...
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Aug 20, 2020
08/20
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she comes into the house in 1925, the same year as edith norris rogers. the interesting thing about her is that she, like rogers and other women from this early generation, really pursue a strategy of gaining power in the house by assimilating. they didn't push women's issues per se. she really tried to minimize gender differences and norton was extremely successful moving up the committee leadership ladder. she chaired four congressional committees by the time she retired from the house in the early 1950s. one of them was the labor committee during the new deal, which was a major committee and her signal piece of legislation was the fair labor standards act of 1938 which set a 40-hour work week, outlawed child labor, set a minimum wage, and she later said that was the -- just the crowning moment of my house experience. i'm prouder of getting that bill through the house than anything else i've ever done. but she was a no-nonsense legislator. very early on in her career, maybe the year this picture was snapped, she was on the house floor and a bill was bei
she comes into the house in 1925, the same year as edith norris rogers. the interesting thing about her is that she, like rogers and other women from this early generation, really pursue a strategy of gaining power in the house by assimilating. they didn't push women's issues per se. she really tried to minimize gender differences and norton was extremely successful moving up the committee leadership ladder. she chaired four congressional committees by the time she retired from the house in the...
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Aug 6, 2020
08/20
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edith: es una enfermedad que empezamos a caracterizar en 2014.na cantidad de casos bajo investigaciÓn. queremos que los padres lo tomen muy, muy en serio. se esta notando que su hijo de repente tiene algÚn tipo de parÁlisis como ya mencionabas. que de repente el niÑo no puede mover un bracito, una piernita, o tambiÉn se puede notar en la cara a veces. que de pronto de la sonrisa no estÁ asimÉtrica completamente. un pÁrpado esta un poquito caÍdo. todos son manifestaciones de debilidades musculares y lo que queremos es que los padres no dejen de buscar ayuda mÉdica de inmediato. borja: ¿los niÑos enfrentan un riesgo adicional con esta enfermedad misteriosa? ¿precisamente en medio de la pandemia? edith: asÍ es, borja, es algo que no tiene que ver con el coronavirus. tiene que ver con otro virus que tambiÉn le da a los niÑos en el verano, en esta Época que hablaba. entonces no tiene que ver una cosa con la otra. sabemos que los padres han tenido mucho miedo durante esta pandemia. y estamos tratando pues que entiendan que si llegan a ver estos sÍntoma
edith: es una enfermedad que empezamos a caracterizar en 2014.na cantidad de casos bajo investigaciÓn. queremos que los padres lo tomen muy, muy en serio. se esta notando que su hijo de repente tiene algÚn tipo de parÁlisis como ya mencionabas. que de repente el niÑo no puede mover un bracito, una piernita, o tambiÉn se puede notar en la cara a veces. que de pronto de la sonrisa no estÁ asimÉtrica completamente. un pÁrpado esta un poquito caÍdo. todos son manifestaciones de debilidades...
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Aug 19, 2020
08/20
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she had to go and work through edith wilson to do that.at point in time, woodrow wilson had stated publicly he was in favor of the 19th amendment so edith wilson did not stand in the way. >> let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. welcome to the conversation. >> caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the first women to break ground as far as being elected to congress and as a u.s. governor. my understanding is jeanette rankin was the first woman elected to congress. are you saying that all voted for her and also the same thing for the first woman governor which i believe was in wyoming. your comment. >> thanks. let's talk about jeanette rankin. she was elected before women had the right to vote. >> yes, she was. and she only served one term in the house at that point in time. she came back to the united states congress after she had lost a bid to become a senator. and jeanette rankin did serve an important role for women's suffrage when she was in the house. they made her the chair of
she had to go and work through edith wilson to do that.at point in time, woodrow wilson had stated publicly he was in favor of the 19th amendment so edith wilson did not stand in the way. >> let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. welcome to the conversation. >> caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the first women to break ground as far as being elected to congress and as a u.s. governor. my understanding is jeanette rankin...
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Aug 18, 2020
08/20
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>> edith wilson is such a fascinating character. so president wilson's first wife ellen died during his first term. and he married edith wilson who was a socialite. and she was anti-suffrage. occasionally a theory will be sort of floated that maybe he came around because of her influence. there is no evidence for that. any public statements she made was anti-suffrage. his daughters were a little more sympathetic. but edith was not. now by the end of the second term, wilson had a pretty devastating stroke. and edith wilson was running his administration much more than i think we will ever know. and i don't think there is some cache of papers somewhere that will show us how powerful edith wilson was. i think that will always remain a secret. but she was the power behind the throne for definitely the last year of his administration. and there is no reason to think that she's the one who finally said, actually, women should vote. i know it would be a great story. he really came around to the luke warm degree he came around at all for to
>> edith wilson is such a fascinating character. so president wilson's first wife ellen died during his first term. and he married edith wilson who was a socialite. and she was anti-suffrage. occasionally a theory will be sort of floated that maybe he came around because of her influence. there is no evidence for that. any public statements she made was anti-suffrage. his daughters were a little more sympathetic. but edith was not. now by the end of the second term, wilson had a pretty...
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Aug 16, 2020
08/20
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in favor of the 19th amendment, so edith wilson did not stand in the way.host: let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. . welcome to the conversation. caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the breakwomen to ground as far as being elected to congress and governor. in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. so are you saying that all men voted for her? and also the same thing for the first woman governor, who i believe was in wyoming. your comments? host: jeannette rankin was elected before women had the right to vote. guest: yes, she was, and she only served one term in the house at that point in time, and then she came back to the united states congress, after she had lost a bid to become a senator. did servette rankin an important role, however, for women's suffrage when she was in the house. they made her the chair of the committee that would consider the 19th amendment, even though she was only a freshman member of congress at the time. so she did throw her support behind the amendment, so that
in favor of the 19th amendment, so edith wilson did not stand in the way.host: let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. . welcome to the conversation. caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the breakwomen to ground as far as being elected to congress and governor. in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. so are you saying that all men voted for her? and also the same thing for the first woman governor, who i believe was in wyoming....
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Aug 16, 2020
08/20
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she had to work through edith wilson to do that. stated he was had in favor of the amendment. >> let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning, welcome to the conversation. >> thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the first women to break ground as far as congress and the u.s. governor. that this was the first woman elected to congress in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. are you saying that all men voted for her? also, the first woman governor i believe was in wyoming. let's talk about jeanette rankin. she was elected before women had the right to vote. and she only served one term in the house at that point. she came back to the united states congress after she lost a bid to become a senator. --nette rankin did . the freshman was a member of congress at the time. she threw her support behind the amendment so women all the us the united states would have the right to vote. >> jan, you are next. welcome. >> i have a story to tell about my grandmother who was born in 1869. she was 50 years old.
she had to work through edith wilson to do that. stated he was had in favor of the amendment. >> let's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning, welcome to the conversation. >> thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the first women to break ground as far as congress and the u.s. governor. that this was the first woman elected to congress in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. are you saying that all men voted for her? also, the first woman governor...
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Aug 17, 2020
08/20
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. ♪ narrator he married edith : wilkes, a librarian in brush in brushville, where he now owns farmlandeeds and problems not from books or boss-written city machines, but by living and working with us, face-to-face, shoulder to shoulder, and it is face-to-face he would like to meet you now to talk for a few minutes about the problems facing all-americans. -- facing all americans. >> i would like very much to talk to everybody in this country personally about the issues of this campaign. but you understand that the size of the country and the time i have to devote this campaign make that impossible, but i take this method of presenting to you my views on some of the fundamental issues of this campaign on which my convictions are very strong and very clear. because i am a businessman, of which incidentally i am very proud, and was formerly connected with a large company, the doctrinaires of the opposition have attempted to picture me as an opponent of liberalism. but i was a liberal before many of those men heard the word, and i have fought for reforms of follett and theodore roosevelt in
. ♪ narrator he married edith : wilkes, a librarian in brush in brushville, where he now owns farmlandeeds and problems not from books or boss-written city machines, but by living and working with us, face-to-face, shoulder to shoulder, and it is face-to-face he would like to meet you now to talk for a few minutes about the problems facing all-americans. -- facing all americans. >> i would like very much to talk to everybody in this country personally about the issues of this campaign....
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i asked edith morag or from the center for domestic training and development an ngo rescuing girls from abuse why parents in the country often cover up for the abusers you know in the african setup who are more used to the situation whereby if your abuse even by your husband you're supposed to run off to his relatives in for example to your mother in law saw that is where we are coming from so there's a lot of stigma when women go to seek for shelter outside it looks it to paint them in bad light but florence and yvonne are determined to break the stigma they rely on supporters to help finance the shelter and when the shelters cash strapped they do dips into their personal savings it's a huge commitment but they tell me seeing the girls 3 and being normal teenagers makes it all worthwhile. my guest today is to to lower the level i did me she is a coordinator for the lagos based on mistaken sexual violence response she bochum to d.w. news africa you know that we've just heard from some victims in kenya what is the situation in nigeria. good afternoon thank you what happened. we've seen a
i asked edith morag or from the center for domestic training and development an ngo rescuing girls from abuse why parents in the country often cover up for the abusers you know in the african setup who are more used to the situation whereby if your abuse even by your husband you're supposed to run off to his relatives in for example to your mother in law saw that is where we are coming from so there's a lot of stigma when women go to seek for shelter outside it looks it to paint them in bad...
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Aug 3, 2020
08/20
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nos estarÁ acompaÑando edith sÁnchez, aileen marti.ntar a sus reciÉn nacidos con familiares y amigos. una cabina rodante ofrece una compaÑÍa en mÉxico a los padres que quieren presentar a sus bebÉs de forma segura.el invente incluye una capa de vidrio que protege al niÑo y sus progenitores. no les permite interactuar con los invitados. me parece estupendo y asÍ nos despedimos. gracias a todo >> sigue consumiendo acresde terreno del incendio fire y las temperaturas no ayudan a los bomberos. cecilia: exigen justicia racial en las escuelas y un regreso a clases seguros para todos los alumnos. >> hablamos con una experto sobre los peligros de dejar a los hijos solos en el vehÍculo. comenzamos. muy buenas tardes, feliz lunes. en ausencia de yarel ramos le saluda erika flores.
nos estarÁ acompaÑando edith sÁnchez, aileen marti.ntar a sus reciÉn nacidos con familiares y amigos. una cabina rodante ofrece una compaÑÍa en mÉxico a los padres que quieren presentar a sus bebÉs de forma segura.el invente incluye una capa de vidrio que protege al niÑo y sus progenitores. no les permite interactuar con los invitados. me parece estupendo y asÍ nos despedimos. gracias a todo >> sigue consumiendo acresde terreno del incendio fire y las temperaturas no ayudan a...
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Aug 11, 2020
08/20
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edith, vamos a comenzar contigo.orias, no aumenta el riesgo de ningÚn tipo de enfermedad. por ese lado no te tienes que preocupar. entonces, sigamos con la inquietud de ana cristina. quÉ te preocupa? no. no te escucho? no te escucho el audio. lo que voy hacer que yo tengo tu pregunta aquÍ. dice "cÓmo puedo ayudar y apoyar a mis hijos en estos momentos de tantos cambios y quÉ se tienen que adaptar a ir a clases desde la casa. me preocupa porque los veo un poco tristes, ansiosos, sÉ que extraÑan a sus compaÑeros". edith: sÍ, esa zona de las cosas que estÁ sucediendo ahora. fÍjate que los padres somos los que ponemos las pautas de cuÁl es el ambiente y cÓmo se estÁn enfrentando todos los cambios. si nosotros los padres estamos tranquilos, estamos en paz, estamos enseÑando que tenemos que tener tolerancia a la incertidumbre, la frustraciÓn. no tenemos que tener todo bajo control. podemos juntos poder ver cÓmo sobrepasamos y enfrentamos esto. por ejemplo, si tienes a los niÑos estudiando en la casa. puedes tener un lugar
edith, vamos a comenzar contigo.orias, no aumenta el riesgo de ningÚn tipo de enfermedad. por ese lado no te tienes que preocupar. entonces, sigamos con la inquietud de ana cristina. quÉ te preocupa? no. no te escucho? no te escucho el audio. lo que voy hacer que yo tengo tu pregunta aquÍ. dice "cÓmo puedo ayudar y apoyar a mis hijos en estos momentos de tantos cambios y quÉ se tienen que adaptar a ir a clases desde la casa. me preocupa porque los veo un poco tristes, ansiosos, sÉ...
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Aug 19, 2020
08/20
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wilson and his wife edith lived in this house. edith turned it over to the national trust in 1961 on her death. it has been lovingly cared for. we welcome you tonight. i wanted to tell you about how we started this speaker series. our senior manager said to me this summer when i first started the job, there is a commission on the suffrage and i think we should go to that meeting. it is the women's suffrage centennial commission. i said ok. i will go with you. we went down to the library of congress and we sat at a big table. they were about 20 women in the room. a big square table. there were another 20 women on the telephone. everyone goes around introducing themselves. they are from the alice paul house, this commission and that commission. from the national portrait gallery. all these places. it comes around to us and introduce myself. i'm from the woodrow wilson house. there was a collectives suck and sigh, and maybe one or two cases of whiplash. there was no oxygen left in the room. they turned to look to us to say, do you kn
wilson and his wife edith lived in this house. edith turned it over to the national trust in 1961 on her death. it has been lovingly cared for. we welcome you tonight. i wanted to tell you about how we started this speaker series. our senior manager said to me this summer when i first started the job, there is a commission on the suffrage and i think we should go to that meeting. it is the women's suffrage centennial commission. i said ok. i will go with you. we went down to the library of...
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Aug 19, 2020
08/20
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we hope to have the statues erected next year. >> you mentioned edith wilson, who was the second wifeof which are wilson after the death of his first wife. opposed to the women's right to vote. was there an effort either by her or other women that did not want to see women have the right to vote? >> absolutely. it is wilson was not involved in the anti suffrage movement. she was just personally anti suffrage and made her opinions very known to woodrow wilson. and to others in the white house. but there was organized anti suffrage clubs, just as there were women's suffrage organizations to promote the 19th amendment. there was organizations that were constructed to stop the 19th amendment. you see this very clearly in tennessee, in nashville at this final fight in august of 1920 because all of the organizations descend upon nashville. the pro suffrage organizations, but also the anti suffered organizations. also, we have not talked about this yet but there were corporate influences. that were opposed to women's suffrage. the manufacturing industry, the railroad industry and the liquor
we hope to have the statues erected next year. >> you mentioned edith wilson, who was the second wifeof which are wilson after the death of his first wife. opposed to the women's right to vote. was there an effort either by her or other women that did not want to see women have the right to vote? >> absolutely. it is wilson was not involved in the anti suffrage movement. she was just personally anti suffrage and made her opinions very known to woodrow wilson. and to others in the...
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Aug 21, 2020
08/20
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tuve el gusto de conocer a edith.ya que fue en medio de la pandemia cuando trabajaron en Élen donde refleja el ambiente rÚstico mexicano en el que el tequila, la vestimenta de charro y una mujer se hacen presente, sobre todo, cuando de desamor se trata. [mÚsica] >> aunque " decepciones" estÁ incluida en el disco hecho en mÉxico e inlcuso la revista the rolling stones la calificÓ como una canciÓn que se debe conocer y decidiÓ que tenÍa que grabarla en colaboraciÓn. hoy en medio de la incertidumbre por la crisis sanitaria la presentan. [mÚsica] >> con " decepciones" alejandro fernÁndez retomar el mariachi con el gÉnero norteÑo gracias a " calibre 50", algo que describe como reuniÓn entre amigos, los mimos que lo han sacado de zonas de confort para hacer cosas nuevas. este aÑo el cantante mexicano ofrecerÁ su concierto en las vegas para celebrar las fiestas patrias. a decir la fiesta en mÉxico estÁ en pausa hasta que las autoridades dÉ luz verde para que se pueda regresar a los escenarios. [mÚsica] >> televisa espectÁcul
tuve el gusto de conocer a edith.ya que fue en medio de la pandemia cuando trabajaron en Élen donde refleja el ambiente rÚstico mexicano en el que el tequila, la vestimenta de charro y una mujer se hacen presente, sobre todo, cuando de desamor se trata. [mÚsica] >> aunque " decepciones" estÁ incluida en el disco hecho en mÉxico e inlcuso la revista the rolling stones la calificÓ como una canciÓn que se debe conocer y decidiÓ que tenÍa que grabarla en colaboraciÓn. hoy...
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Aug 17, 2020
08/20
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. >> your grandmother was edith will keep. how did the two meet -- edith willke. how did the two meet? >> they were in a neutral wedding party together. he was drawn to her. she was a librarian by training, intellectual in her own right, and there was a natural romance that bloomed. >> david will key is the grandson of the -- willke is the grandson of the 1940 presidential candidate, wendell willkie. he got the republican nomination on the sixth bucket -- sixth ballot in philadelphia. we have the author of "the forgotten man" with us. let's take you to the scene in november of 1940. it was just down the street at the hotel were many reporters gathered to follow the 1940 campaign. wendell willkie came not to declare that franklin roosevelt was in fact going to be elected. he conceded the election. we will follow that with a conversation we had a few weeks ago dick lugar on wendell willkie and his brand of republican politics. >> people of america, i accept the result of the election with complete good will. i know that they will continue to work as i shall for the
. >> your grandmother was edith will keep. how did the two meet -- edith willke. how did the two meet? >> they were in a neutral wedding party together. he was drawn to her. she was a librarian by training, intellectual in her own right, and there was a natural romance that bloomed. >> david will key is the grandson of the -- willke is the grandson of the 1940 presidential candidate, wendell willkie. he got the republican nomination on the sixth bucket -- sixth ballot in...
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want to start a war i wonder what do you think it's been a very exciting debate here in cannes oh i'm edith kimani thank you for watching. what i make fighting debate in d.c. thanks and thanks to all but. now if you would like to watch the full version of this straight debate please have a local noise you tube channel we can't wait to read all your comments there are rapidly growing population is also a challenge in mozambique where since 2005 the number of residents has increased by 30 per cent and more people means more and more cars trucks are the real wellbeing it is a daily struggle for many with them because as we found out on the streets of makoto but innovation is on its way. each morning before sunrise thousands of commuters cram into overcrowded mini buses in the outskirts of. the often have to wait for hours to get a free seat on one of these open trucks. known locally as my loves because the passengers on the crowded transporters have to hang on to each other in order not to fall. in more and they have a as a teacher who has to take this route each day getting to work takes her
want to start a war i wonder what do you think it's been a very exciting debate here in cannes oh i'm edith kimani thank you for watching. what i make fighting debate in d.c. thanks and thanks to all but. now if you would like to watch the full version of this straight debate please have a local noise you tube channel we can't wait to read all your comments there are rapidly growing population is also a challenge in mozambique where since 2005 the number of residents has increased by 30 per...
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Aug 13, 2020
08/20
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y edith gracias por tus consejos.entud". francisca: queremos regalar esta vista de la emblemÁtica guitarra que representa "hard rock" en donde hoy bailaremos en esta noche histÓrica de premio "juventud". jessica: despuÉs de la pausa todo lo que sucediÓ en los ensayos. francisca: ya volvemos, no se vaya! raÚl: no se lo pierdan! estamos escuchando la colaboraciÓn de willy colón. [mÚsica] [mÚsica] prueba entrega el mismo día de target. entregas sin contacto, hasta tu puerta. perfecto para tu día. desde tus mañanitas, o tus tres en punto, o hasta tus buenas noches. sólo descarga el target app hoy. en la ducha. caress intensifica tus sentidos, con su extracto de seda y esencia de aceite floral. obtén una piel radiante, y deja que la imaginación fluya. caress, la inspiración nace aquí. si perdiste tu seguro médico, covered california puede ayudarte. hasta podrías obtener ayuda económica para pagar tu seguro médico. visita coveredca.com para inscribirte hoy. >>invitÁndote para que no te pierda los premios "juventud" este jue
y edith gracias por tus consejos.entud". francisca: queremos regalar esta vista de la emblemÁtica guitarra que representa "hard rock" en donde hoy bailaremos en esta noche histÓrica de premio "juventud". jessica: despuÉs de la pausa todo lo que sucediÓ en los ensayos. francisca: ya volvemos, no se vaya! raÚl: no se lo pierdan! estamos escuchando la colaboraciÓn de willy colón. [mÚsica] [mÚsica] prueba entrega el mismo día de target. entregas sin contacto,...
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Aug 16, 2020
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in favor of the 19th amendment, so edith wilson did not stand in the way.t's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. . welcome to the conversation. caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the breakwomen to ground as far as being elected to congress and governor. in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. so are you saying that all men voted for her? and also the same thing for the first woman governor, who i believe was in wyoming. your comments? host: jeannette rankin was elected before women had the right to vote. guest: yes, she was, and she only served one term in the house at that point in time, and then she came back to the united states congress, after she had lost a bid to become a senator. did servette rankin an important role, however, for women's suffrage when she was in the house. they made her the chair of the committee that would consider the 19th amendment, even though she was only a freshman member of congress at the time. so she did throw her support behind the amendment, so that women a
in favor of the 19th amendment, so edith wilson did not stand in the way.t's go to connie joining us from florida. good morning. . welcome to the conversation. caller: good morning. thank you for taking my call. i have a question about the breakwomen to ground as far as being elected to congress and governor. in 1916, before the 19th amendment was ratified. so are you saying that all men voted for her? and also the same thing for the first woman governor, who i believe was in wyoming. your...
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Aug 13, 2020
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but then he got the help of edith cavel's network. if you haven't read any work about edith cavel, just fascinating her role in world war i. he escaped from netherlands and back to france. just over 25 years later he was 61, he was a five-star general and he was fighting in france and he got captured again by the germans. so during his long military career he had honed his expertise in the german language. he spoke it very well. he also knew about their tactics quite well, so he wasn't surprised when they took him to a prisoner of war camp on a cliff face with guarded entrances. they had a pretty good idea he was quite the fellow. they didn't think he'd be able to escape, so for two years, he looked for ways to escape. he kept learning his german. memorized the area, stole a map. but being an officer he had certain privileges others were not. so he was allowed to get packages from his wife and he got rope and all the other things he needed. took him two years, but he did. and he also got to go on a daily walk. they mentioned, being in
but then he got the help of edith cavel's network. if you haven't read any work about edith cavel, just fascinating her role in world war i. he escaped from netherlands and back to france. just over 25 years later he was 61, he was a five-star general and he was fighting in france and he got captured again by the germans. so during his long military career he had honed his expertise in the german language. he spoke it very well. he also knew about their tactics quite well, so he wasn't...
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Aug 13, 2020
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but then he got the help of edith's network. if you haven't read any of the work about edith cabal, it is just fascinating, her role in world war i. he escaped back to the netherlands in the back to france. just over 25 years later, he was 61. he was a five star general. he was fighting in france it was captured again by the germans. during his long military career, he had honed his expertise in the german language. he spoke at very well. he also knew about their tactics quite well. so he wasn't surprised when they sent him to a prisoner of war camp on a cliff face with guarded entrances. they had a pretty good idea that he was quite the fellow. they didn't think he'd be able to escape. so for two, years he looked for ways to escape. he kept learning his german. he memorized the area. he stole the map. but he was also an officer and being an officer, he had privileges those did not. and he got all of the other things that he needed like rope. it took him to, years but he did. and he also got to go on a daily walk. we mentioned t
but then he got the help of edith's network. if you haven't read any of the work about edith cabal, it is just fascinating, her role in world war i. he escaped back to the netherlands in the back to france. just over 25 years later, he was 61. he was a five star general. he was fighting in france it was captured again by the germans. during his long military career, he had honed his expertise in the german language. he spoke at very well. he also knew about their tactics quite well. so he...
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Aug 17, 2020
08/20
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so for the last year end a half of the wilson administration for all intensive purposes, edith wilson became the first female president of the united states. [laughter] bring it on bring it on, she was making no decisions on her own she insisted, she said she was merely a steward but nobody saw the president of the thousands of people that wanted to see him, nobody saw him, handful only of that without passing through mrs. wilson, all the documents, things that require signatures, commissions, memorandums, nothing appeared before the president of the united states i until mrs. wilson decided what and when the president would act upon them. so she became a pretty supportive one. >> i guess so, if i underscore something that scott said that is so clear when you talk about letters, i don't know what's going to happen 200 years from now that you don't have handwritten letters of historians to look back on, maybe e-mail will be saved but it's certainly not in that language when people had the only means of communications through letters and when you find the letters, it is a treasure, ther
so for the last year end a half of the wilson administration for all intensive purposes, edith wilson became the first female president of the united states. [laughter] bring it on bring it on, she was making no decisions on her own she insisted, she said she was merely a steward but nobody saw the president of the thousands of people that wanted to see him, nobody saw him, handful only of that without passing through mrs. wilson, all the documents, things that require signatures, commissions,...
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Aug 22, 2020
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edith bracco sanchez, a primary care physician and assistant professor of pediatrics at columbia university from the university of alabama at birmingham and a medical professor in the school's division of infectious diseases. i thought we had the sound from nancy pelosi but it was really telling when she said, listen, don't pay attention to or ignore his attacks against mail-in voting. but really focus on his attacks now against the fda. this is something that you expect to happen in third world countries, not in the united states where the fda is a global gold standard. what is your reaction when you hear this from the president? >> it's concerning to me personally but also for all of us. there have been a lot of totalities already from coronavirus as we know. but another cult fatality within this whole epidemic is the depth of trusted voices. why have people in our government who are empowered to give us information, trusted that we can rely on. and one by one they get attacked any time they say something that goes counter to what the president has to say. that's disturbing to me as an in
edith bracco sanchez, a primary care physician and assistant professor of pediatrics at columbia university from the university of alabama at birmingham and a medical professor in the school's division of infectious diseases. i thought we had the sound from nancy pelosi but it was really telling when she said, listen, don't pay attention to or ignore his attacks against mail-in voting. but really focus on his attacks now against the fda. this is something that you expect to happen in third...
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Aug 31, 2020
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and eventually when he started to get healthy again in the badlands he started corresponding with edith and in the end he had a marriage with her dad was as good of a lifelong marriage he could -- they had a whole bunch of kids but somehow when something hurt him in the past unlike lincoln who talk endlessly about the people who were in the past and who wanted to remember them because he said that's the way you bring them back to life he thought if something's got you exercise it from your mind. >> when his wife and mother died the same day he later wrote a letter, very famous later, send the lights had gone out of his life. he essentially felt his life was over and the idea that he would ever become president of the united states at the time certainly did not exist in anyone's mind, right? >> i think that is right. before this all happened to him he looked at is life, as many people do when they are ambitious, as a serious wrong he would like to go up. i'm in the state legislator but i would like to get to the senate and then i'd like to go to congress and he was ambitious and then who
and eventually when he started to get healthy again in the badlands he started corresponding with edith and in the end he had a marriage with her dad was as good of a lifelong marriage he could -- they had a whole bunch of kids but somehow when something hurt him in the past unlike lincoln who talk endlessly about the people who were in the past and who wanted to remember them because he said that's the way you bring them back to life he thought if something's got you exercise it from your...
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Aug 17, 2020
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host: you mentioned edith wilson, who was the second wife of woodrow wilson after the death of his firstife, opposed to women's right to vote. was there an organized effort by her or other women that did not want to see women have the right to vote? guest: absolutely. inth wilson was not involved the nt suffrage movement. she was personally anti-suffrage and made her opinions known to woodrow wilson and others in the white house. there was organized anti-suffrage, organizations and clubs, just as there were women's suffrage organizations to promote the 19th amendment. there were organizations that had been constructed to stop the 19th amendment. you see this clearly in tennessee, in nashville at this final fight in august of 1920. all of the organizations descend upon nashville, pro-suffrage organizations and anti-suffrage organizations. also, we have not talked about this yet, but there were corporate influences. were special interest groups opposed women's suffrage. the manufacturing industry, the railroad industry, and the liquor industry. they played an important role in that fight i
host: you mentioned edith wilson, who was the second wife of woodrow wilson after the death of his firstife, opposed to women's right to vote. was there an organized effort by her or other women that did not want to see women have the right to vote? guest: absolutely. inth wilson was not involved the nt suffrage movement. she was personally anti-suffrage and made her opinions known to woodrow wilson and others in the white house. there was organized anti-suffrage, organizations and clubs, just...
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Aug 22, 2020
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offered us this wonderful opportunity and to partner with them as we did last year with their speaker edith gelles. abigail's rich history in this region inspires us every day. thank you. the hang in historical society is focused like never before on its history. to understand all voices. we currently are in the midst of a campaign for the benjamin lincoln house. which is our effort to purchase the home of hams american revolutionary war hero at one 81 north street. benjamin lincoln, received -- british sort of surrender and your town. or as we like to tell our visiting schoolchildren, that's benjamin lincoln on the white boards. featured so prominently and -- u.s. capital. benjamin lincoln also served him as a clerk, constable, and selectman. he also, came from a family that owns slaves. and to walk -- two blocks from here, there's a slave quarter in the attic of the lincoln home. our next major exhibit here at the museum, generates out of the archeological finds from the nbc's green bush excavation. the artifacts of colonial -- a fishing wait on and allow away tell many stories. but the a
offered us this wonderful opportunity and to partner with them as we did last year with their speaker edith gelles. abigail's rich history in this region inspires us every day. thank you. the hang in historical society is focused like never before on its history. to understand all voices. we currently are in the midst of a campaign for the benjamin lincoln house. which is our effort to purchase the home of hams american revolutionary war hero at one 81 north street. benjamin lincoln, received...
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Aug 5, 2020
08/20
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edith sanchez, primary care pediatrician and assistant professor of pediatrics at columbia universityte, just this week, i am starting to hear parents freak out. they are freaking out, because they have elementary school kids, the schools are not giving them information yet about whether the kids will be going into the classroom, and they don't know if they will be able to work in the fall. how -- how is this doable? >> i mean, in some ways, it's is not. it was totally predictable. about four weeks, i had written a piece for "the atlantic." we need to treat schools like critical infrastructure, like water supply generators, food supply, get it back up in a responsible way. otherwise, we're going to see what we're seeing now. we have, unfortunately, run out of time and there was no money. so what that means is if -- based on my life, if you have not heard from your school district yet, the likelihood that your kids are going in either hybrid or at-home at this stage is incredibly high at this stage. so parents now need to adapt. we are at the stage where our decision to open up the eco
edith sanchez, primary care pediatrician and assistant professor of pediatrics at columbia universityte, just this week, i am starting to hear parents freak out. they are freaking out, because they have elementary school kids, the schools are not giving them information yet about whether the kids will be going into the classroom, and they don't know if they will be able to work in the fall. how -- how is this doable? >> i mean, in some ways, it's is not. it was totally predictable. about...
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Aug 24, 2020
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offered us this wonderful opportunity and to partner with them as we did last year with their speaker edith. abigail's rich history in this region inspires us every day. thank you. the hingham historical society helps us understand all voices. we are currently in the midst of a campaign for the lincoln house, which is our effort to purchase the home of hingham's american revolutionary war hero. benjamin lincoln received the british sort of surrender at your town, or as we like to tell our visiting schoolchildren, that is benjamin lincoln on the whitehorse. (laughter) featured so prominently in the rotunda of the u.s. capital. benjamin lincoln also served hingham as a clerk, constable -- he also came from a family that owned slaves. two blocks from here, there is a slave quarter in the attic of the benjamin lincoln home. our next major exhibit here at the museum, generates out of the archeological finds from the ndas green bush excavation. the artifacts -- they tell many stories. but the amazing story of the tribe for which the commonwealth gets its name, the mattresses -- a mattress to sit.
offered us this wonderful opportunity and to partner with them as we did last year with their speaker edith. abigail's rich history in this region inspires us every day. thank you. the hingham historical society helps us understand all voices. we are currently in the midst of a campaign for the lincoln house, which is our effort to purchase the home of hingham's american revolutionary war hero. benjamin lincoln received the british sort of surrender at your town, or as we like to tell our...
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Aug 20, 2020
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edith daly, 100 years.em. last but not least, happy 100th birthday to lucille azzaretto, a baker from lakewood, new jersey. according to anonymous sources she recollects makes the best cream puffs you will ever taste. from one birthday boy to other birthday boys and girls. >> al, we love you happy birthday, honey. >> thanks, guys. >> we want to wish the very best to a beloved, long-time member of the "today" show family. >> oh, if there were a smucker's jar for people that were just the heart and soul of this place, there would be one for david nasier he spent 45 years with nbc, and over 35 for "today"'s senior production there is a good chance if we were on the road, david was with us nine olympics, super bowls, the kentucky derby, hurricanes, inaugurations, you name it after all that traveling, it is time for david to finally sleep in, relax at home with his wife, leslie david, we love you so much i know we all have so many good memories of being on the road. >> always right here, too. >> yeah. >> unflapp
edith daly, 100 years.em. last but not least, happy 100th birthday to lucille azzaretto, a baker from lakewood, new jersey. according to anonymous sources she recollects makes the best cream puffs you will ever taste. from one birthday boy to other birthday boys and girls. >> al, we love you happy birthday, honey. >> thanks, guys. >> we want to wish the very best to a beloved, long-time member of the "today" show family. >> oh, if there were a smucker's jar for...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 30, 2020
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. >> >> i am edith district 11. frustrated by the actions of supervisors and this moment of powerful racial justice organizations. the poa is more important than black lives. every program needs more funding. these calls for disarming the police are a not naive. people are lost loved ones and you are reticent to make cuts. people are starving and you are unwilling to take money to fund city's basic needs. we have had enough of your actions. we are calling for ending police brutality. we dream ofre a world where elected officials listen instead of looking at phones. the city that invests in communities. your actions are more important than ever w and people will remember who stood for them in the next election cycle. >> next t speaker, please. >> i am a student. i am disappointed at the failures of the mayor and board of supervisors. the proposedth budget cuts publc services. it further criminalizes poverty and people of color. i am calling you on to defund sfpd and fund public services for unhoused people. furthermo
. >> >> i am edith district 11. frustrated by the actions of supervisors and this moment of powerful racial justice organizations. the poa is more important than black lives. every program needs more funding. these calls for disarming the police are a not naive. people are lost loved ones and you are reticent to make cuts. people are starving and you are unwilling to take money to fund city's basic needs. we have had enough of your actions. we are calling for ending police...