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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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we are going to see her private secretary edward young playing an increasingly important role and heting with knowing what she wants. she is not a normal human being in this context. she is the monarch and we have to respect the monarchy. this context. she is the monarch and we have to respect the monarchym is government in her name. we have to respect the monarchym is government in her namem we have to respect the monarchym is government in her name. if boris johnson loses a confidence vote and stays in number 10, what does buckingham palace do. that is when edward young will come into his own. 0bviously all this depends on a vote of no—confidence in september and the fallout from that but as you say, a lot going on behind the scenes to pre—empt any pickle that the monarchy might find themselves in. any observer, a bit more on the hold brexit issue. tangentially, one might say, but no dells ——no deal spells calamity for the union, says gordon brown. he wrote for the observer. again, a bit like the queen, he makes occasional interventions and he was very instrumental in the scottish
we are going to see her private secretary edward young playing an increasingly important role and heting with knowing what she wants. she is not a normal human being in this context. she is the monarch and we have to respect the monarchy. this context. she is the monarch and we have to respect the monarchym is government in her name. we have to respect the monarchym is government in her namem we have to respect the monarchym is government in her name. if boris johnson loses a confidence vote...
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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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CSPAN2
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young. my ambition is to find the emotional grip to revive the tragic human multisided quality that saturates the american saga from 1775 to 1783. so we see lieutenant edward, a young scottish officer in the 43rd regiment of foot, scottish northridge and concord in april 19, 1775 and shot again during the british retreat toward boston, captured by the americans in agony from three bullet wounds. he lingers for nearly two weeks in a twilight of pain and rumors before he to take seven by the way. or we see mary peters the widow of a private killed a bunker hill, while fighting the massachusetts militia as she petitions the commonwealth precisely 5 pounds and 12 shillings in compensation for her husband lost, trousers, stockings, shoes and so concurs in tobacco box. a richard montgomery from montgomery county and the assault on quÉbec. hihit and dies mortally through the face, his effects were shoot off a couple days after his death item by an impaired two volumes of polybius. johnson's dictionary of the english language, a buffalo skin and close brush bought by captain ehrenberg and a wardrobe with ruffled shirts, coats all bought by benedict arnold. or we s
young. my ambition is to find the emotional grip to revive the tragic human multisided quality that saturates the american saga from 1775 to 1783. so we see lieutenant edward, a young scottish officer in the 43rd regiment of foot, scottish northridge and concord in april 19, 1775 and shot again during the british retreat toward boston, captured by the americans in agony from three bullet wounds. he lingers for nearly two weeks in a twilight of pain and rumors before he to take seven by the way....
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Aug 29, 2019
08/19
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MSNBCW
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raise a tremendous amount of money, royce west, manna edwards, a houston still councilmember, there's a lot of talent, young and established in that texas field right now. the georgia race to me, when you chat with democratic operatives who are in the case they feel their candidate quality can be ail little bit better. so much focus on the texas senate race and not up until yesterday on georgia and their candidates there. >> michael steel, for republicans right now, in terms of the top of a ticket, president, vice president, which combination worries you most? >> look, if the election were held today there's no question that joe biden has the best chance to both take back those northern midwestern battlegrounds so the president narrowly won in 2016 and help down ballot democrats in places like north carolina and georgia because of his record as the vice president under barack obama. he should help with turnout in those states so right now, if the election were held today it would be joe biden. at the same time the election is not for a very long time and the
raise a tremendous amount of money, royce west, manna edwards, a houston still councilmember, there's a lot of talent, young and established in that texas field right now. the georgia race to me, when you chat with democratic operatives who are in the case they feel their candidate quality can be ail little bit better. so much focus on the texas senate race and not up until yesterday on georgia and their candidates there. >> michael steel, for republicans right now, in terms of the top of...
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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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CSPAN2
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and being able to mentor these young men and women. >> hello peter and mister edwards. i've two questions. i was working at the gym. my question is a short comment. they asked him there. the republican party left me. are you concerned about this party right now. my second question isen are you concerned that you are a dying party. 73% were democrat. 94 percent of blacks were nidemocrat. your party is supported by white old people. we will get an answer in just a few seconds. i read all the books. i used to read william buckley i am hispanic i'm an immigrant emma american citizen. i have read william buckley and very active in politics and i'm very concerned aboutne the situation with donald trump. i've seen some new people h rush here. i never liked him. i'm surprised he stood up to donald trump. h he has a backbone and many other people don't. the republican party. you're selling your soul. i'm in a make a prediction 2015 i was on spanish radio. he is can we president i made about and i won. i'm in a make another prediction. the republican party is can be sorry that th
and being able to mentor these young men and women. >> hello peter and mister edwards. i've two questions. i was working at the gym. my question is a short comment. they asked him there. the republican party left me. are you concerned about this party right now. my second question isen are you concerned that you are a dying party. 73% were democrat. 94 percent of blacks were nidemocrat. your party is supported by white old people. we will get an answer in just a few seconds. i read all...
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Aug 25, 2019
08/19
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KQED
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edwards is one of the few tobacco farmers in his countyen who's ble to survive. >> when i was a young boy, there was 50-60 tobacco farmers in this area. as of today, there's two. two left. >> sreenivasan: the edwards family have been farming for g foerations, with the next one the way. but to hedge against the unsteadiness, there are now 50 acres of solar fields providing a steady income, and he's trying something new: hemp. marijuana, but it's not. more on th in a bit. why is this a hemp field now? because we've had so ma problems with tobacco the last two or three yearsmeith the gove tariffs, and the u.s. dollar is at an all-time high right now. >> sreenivasan: it's such a new crop that there's a lot to learn. one challenge: keeping male plants out of the fields. a single male plt can spread its pollen over a seven-milese range. >> we've got to go through all the plants and look at the plants. >> sreenivasan: to see if a male one snuck in here. >> it pollinates the rest of the field, and it lowers the quality. >> sreenivasan: and is this fing to be more laboros you? >> much more lab
edwards is one of the few tobacco farmers in his countyen who's ble to survive. >> when i was a young boy, there was 50-60 tobacco farmers in this area. as of today, there's two. two left. >> sreenivasan: the edwards family have been farming for g foerations, with the next one the way. but to hedge against the unsteadiness, there are now 50 acres of solar fields providing a steady income, and he's trying something new: hemp. marijuana, but it's not. more on th in a bit. why is this...
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Aug 15, 2019
08/19
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BBCNEWS
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young versus old. the elders want progress and housing, the youngest want return from stolen land. bryce edwardson. chinese—born lee komaki is making a third bid for public office in his home for the last 31 yea rs, tokyo. the odds are stacked against him; he's a foreigner in a society where only 2% of the population were born overseas. and he is running in tokyo's red light district, where he used to work. here's his story. one of the biggest dinosaur graveyards in the world is being excavated in the united states. the dig, dubbed ‘missionjurassic‘, has already discovered more than a dozen fossils and footprints. but researchers think there could be more than 100 dinosaurs buried there, including new species. our science correspondent rebecca morrelle went to see the dig in wyoming. a hot, dusty landscape extending for miles. but imagine from this barren terrain a dinosaur graveyard where the bones of some of the biggest creatures ever to roam the earth are being discovered. where does this fit on this mass? that slot's straight in here. so, you found the pelvis? yeah, it's brilliant. that's am
young versus old. the elders want progress and housing, the youngest want return from stolen land. bryce edwardson. chinese—born lee komaki is making a third bid for public office in his home for the last 31 yea rs, tokyo. the odds are stacked against him; he's a foreigner in a society where only 2% of the population were born overseas. and he is running in tokyo's red light district, where he used to work. here's his story. one of the biggest dinosaur graveyards in the world is being...
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1.7K
Aug 4, 2019
08/19
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young woman who was clearly so vulnerable? >> oh, absolutely. >> reporter: prosecutors bob edwards and tiffany starr smith saw this case as a relationshipking about domestic violence. we're still talking about orders of protection, and all of the things that go wrong in those situations. >> reporter: you had no witnesses. you had no dna from your suspect. you had no murder weapon. that's a lot of things you didn't have. >> if we didn't feel like we could prosecute it and be successful, we would have never indicted it. we would have never proceeded with it. >> circumstantial cases are -- allow you to be creative. you can take a set of facts and -- and weave a story together for your theory of prosecution. >> reporter: shawn smoot insisted he was innocent. he cycled through five different defense attorneys and the trial was delayed again and again. >> it was surreal, really. you know, because it had been reset 22 times. 22 times. >> reporter: that's torture. >> it is. it is torture. >> reporter: the trial finally started in july 2016, nearly five years after brooke died. robert jolley, smoot's fifth attorney, believed the state's case was
young woman who was clearly so vulnerable? >> oh, absolutely. >> reporter: prosecutors bob edwards and tiffany starr smith saw this case as a relationshipking about domestic violence. we're still talking about orders of protection, and all of the things that go wrong in those situations. >> reporter: you had no witnesses. you had no dna from your suspect. you had no murder weapon. that's a lot of things you didn't have. >> if we didn't feel like we could prosecute it and...
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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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CNNW
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we're hearing from brad edwards who's an attorney who has represented dozens of women who have accused jeffrey epstein of abusing them sexually back when they were minors, some as young as 14 years old. so a number of lawyers representing a lot of these accusers are starting to react to the news of jeffrey epstein's suicide. here's what brad edwards had to say. he said the fact that jeffrey epstein was able to commit the selfish act of taking his own life as his world of abuse, exploitation and corruption unraveled is unfortunate yet predictable. while we engaged in contentious legal battles for more than a decade, this is not the ending anyone was looking for. the victims deserve to see epstein held accountable and he owed it to everyone he hurt to accept responsibility for all of the pain he caused. edwards said once jeffrey epstein was charged here in new york that numerous new accusers had come forward, so they were still hearing from victims who had been afraid to speak out and brad edwards said he hopes more victims will continues to speak out now that epstein is dead. he's saying there is still justice they can get for themselves. he said he's going to continu
we're hearing from brad edwards who's an attorney who has represented dozens of women who have accused jeffrey epstein of abusing them sexually back when they were minors, some as young as 14 years old. so a number of lawyers representing a lot of these accusers are starting to react to the news of jeffrey epstein's suicide. here's what brad edwards had to say. he said the fact that jeffrey epstein was able to commit the selfish act of taking his own life as his world of abuse, exploitation and...
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Aug 9, 2019
08/19
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BBCNEWS
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won the bbc‘s young musican of the year and gained globalfame when he performed at the wedding of the duke and duchess of sussex. now, 20—year—old sheku kanneh—mason is set to play sir edwardsed it. here is our arts editor will gompertz. edward elgar‘s elegiac cello concerto in e minor, written 100 years ago, immortalised byjacqueline du pre in the mid—1960s. she was a 20—year—old cello prodigy then, just as sheku kanneh—mason is now. her performances are very inspiring. i have taken lots of inspiration from her playing. definitely, when i was younger, i wanted to be her. but it will be him front and centre at the proms, giving his version of elgar‘s famous concerto. for me, it's one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. to perform in here is going to be very, very special. elgar wrote it after the first world war, about which he was incredibly disturbed, and it's a very sad piece, in that regard. how does it resonate, 100 years on? it is a terribly sad piece, and i think, although of course i have not experienced anything even close to anyone who lived through the first world war has, but even just by listening to this piece and playing this piece and trying to un
won the bbc‘s young musican of the year and gained globalfame when he performed at the wedding of the duke and duchess of sussex. now, 20—year—old sheku kanneh—mason is set to play sir edwardsed it. here is our arts editor will gompertz. edward elgar‘s elegiac cello concerto in e minor, written 100 years ago, immortalised byjacqueline du pre in the mid—1960s. she was a 20—year—old cello prodigy then, just as sheku kanneh—mason is now. her performances are very inspiring. i...
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edward, thank you very much. joining me to react to all the latest, whether trade wars, earnings sector, all things considered in the market, mellon director of market strategy, liz youngthanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. charles: this is a crazy, wild week. we had a 1000 point reversal from wednesday morning to thursday close. which ones should we be focused on? it feels like not that it is noise, but headline rick, dual risk of trade and fed. we have the other thing going on earnings, economy other things? one side seems to be overshadowing the other side? >> absolutely and the market has been hypersensitive to monetary policy not only here but also abroad. it is still up clear to me whether or not it's a good thing we built so much more transparency in with the fed. i think it was intended to be a god thing, to give out all the information about what they're thinking and planning. i think it has bread a little bit what we heard before, an addiction almost to that news feed. charles: i think you're right. i think before the maestro alan greenspan, you know we negative knew much about the fed was doing. they didn't have the press conferences. they didn't
edward, thank you very much. joining me to react to all the latest, whether trade wars, earnings sector, all things considered in the market, mellon director of market strategy, liz youngthanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. charles: this is a crazy, wild week. we had a 1000 point reversal from wednesday morning to thursday close. which ones should we be focused on? it feels like not that it is noise, but headline rick, dual risk of trade and fed. we have the other thing going...
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100
Aug 30, 2019
08/19
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CSPAN
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young american males are involved in. i would say a limiting 11th and 12th grade. host: edward is in little neck, new york, and educator.ler: thank you for this discussion. it is a pleasure listening to other educators. i worked in the new york city public school system. my job was to help schools implement online education. allink that it would serve of our schools, all of our districts across the country very well to put together a program, a national program, to help schools learn about online education and offer that as an option to all of their students. almost every corporation known uses online education for their benefits packages. i am sure many people have experienced sitting down with hr to learn about their benefits by looking at a screen. our services, institutions, organizations -- everyone is using it to some degree now. that is not easy to take on. online courses require a special discipline, and a good educator who has been trained in order to lead a class like that. so i think i would start a national program to make sure that every student has access to and participate in an online class at least once
young american males are involved in. i would say a limiting 11th and 12th grade. host: edward is in little neck, new york, and educator.ler: thank you for this discussion. it is a pleasure listening to other educators. i worked in the new york city public school system. my job was to help schools implement online education. allink that it would serve of our schools, all of our districts across the country very well to put together a program, a national program, to help schools learn about...
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445
Aug 16, 2019
08/19
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KNTV
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young at heart. happy 100th birthday toal fred birdgreen. a world war ii veteran from brooklyn, honored with a purple heart. we salute your service five years ago thelmane edwardsle's food it happened to me. watch what the town is doing to fight back they're bold. >> falcons. >> i see what they're doing. >> we will see you tomorrow. >> that looks terrifying. >> remember, today.com stories a tee shirt with more than 3,000 glowing reviews. we had five women with different body types try it on for size. then health hy snacks your kids might eat. >> third hour coming up. >> third hour is up next after your local news and some weather. >>> good morning. at 8:56 i'm marcus washington. this morning the power is back on for thousands of people who had it suddenly shut off last night. this is video from larkspur. a pg&e spokesperson says they still don't know what caused the widespread outage that affected marin county, contra costa, and thousands of customers lost their power. most was restored by 1:30 this morning. happening now another fire scare overnight in southern santa clara county. this happened along highway 101 in gilroy. crews were able to quickly extinguish
young at heart. happy 100th birthday toal fred birdgreen. a world war ii veteran from brooklyn, honored with a purple heart. we salute your service five years ago thelmane edwardsle's food it happened to me. watch what the town is doing to fight back they're bold. >> falcons. >> i see what they're doing. >> we will see you tomorrow. >> that looks terrifying. >> remember, today.com stories a tee shirt with more than 3,000 glowing reviews. we had five women with...
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Aug 1, 2019
08/19
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CSPAN
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young america's foundation. reagan is an intellectual. he is comfortable with ideas. he understands the power of ideas. , ah that kind of foundation political leader can do all kinds of marvelous things. >> lee edwardswill be our guest on in-depth sunday from noon to 2:00 p.m. eastern strip edwards is the author of just right, biographies. join our conversation with your questions, comments and tweets. live sunday fromlive sunday from noon to 2:00 p.m. eastern. >> yesterday national security advisor john bolton discussed foreign policy challenges facing the u.s. at a student conference hosted by the young america's foundation. this is half an hour. >> good evening everyone. we are going to get started with tonight's programming so good evening to everyone attending in person as well as everyone watching along online area high serve as program assistant for public relations.
young america's foundation. reagan is an intellectual. he is comfortable with ideas. he understands the power of ideas. , ah that kind of foundation political leader can do all kinds of marvelous things. >> lee edwardswill be our guest on in-depth sunday from noon to 2:00 p.m. eastern strip edwards is the author of just right, biographies. join our conversation with your questions, comments and tweets. live sunday fromlive sunday from noon to 2:00 p.m. eastern. >> yesterday national...
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70
Aug 9, 2019
08/19
by
BBCNEWS
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won the bbc‘s young musician of the year and gained global fame when he performed at the wedding of the duke and duchess of sussex. now, 20—year—old sheku kanneh—mason is set to play sir edwardy inspiring. i have taken lots of inspiration from her playing. definitely, when i was younger, i wanted to be her. but it will be him front and centre at the proms, giving his version of elgar‘s famous concerto. for me, it's one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. to perform in here is going to be very, very special. elgar wrote it after the first world war, about which he was incredibly disturbed, and it's a very sad piece, in that regard. how does it resonate, 100 years on? it's a terribly sad piece. and i think, although of course i've not experienced anything even close to someone who's lived through the first world war has, but even just by listening to this piece and playing this piece and trying to understand the music, i think a lot of that comes across really clearly. he comes from an extraordinary family. all seven children are exceptional musicians, with his elder sister, a gifted pianist, leading the way. what we had was quite rare. the fact that we went to state
won the bbc‘s young musician of the year and gained global fame when he performed at the wedding of the duke and duchess of sussex. now, 20—year—old sheku kanneh—mason is set to play sir edwardy inspiring. i have taken lots of inspiration from her playing. definitely, when i was younger, i wanted to be her. but it will be him front and centre at the proms, giving his version of elgar‘s famous concerto. for me, it's one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. to perform in here...