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Jul 17, 2011
07/11
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if anyone can get the story, eliza griswold can.he book that we -- she gave the subtitle dispatches from the fall line between christianity and islam as the title "the tenth parallel" for the line that she followed in the book, but it could just as well have had the title common ground. the drama that she is working out of the book is very similar to the one that is worked out in the classic book. people of very different beliefs with similar geographic space. religious strife in israel and grim, but the long history of every day encounters of believers of different kinds children of things together, even if they follow different faces no less real. bear witness to the systems of the two religions and the complicated bids for power inside them. the conflict between them. a poet, a commentator, a fellow, but above all i think she identified with the tribe of journalists. recognize and honors. i think she would be very grateful to be here, delighted to be here herself to receive this prize. thank you. [applause] [applause] >> don't fo
if anyone can get the story, eliza griswold can.he book that we -- she gave the subtitle dispatches from the fall line between christianity and islam as the title "the tenth parallel" for the line that she followed in the book, but it could just as well have had the title common ground. the drama that she is working out of the book is very similar to the one that is worked out in the classic book. people of very different beliefs with similar geographic space. religious strife in...
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Jul 17, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN2
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eliza griswold examines the conflict between christianity and islam on the geographical line. 700 of the equator for this to most frequently collide tiered more than half of the worlds muslims live along this line as do 60% of the world's christians. this is a brilliantly way to examine perhaps most important conflicts in the world today. a life that is currently in pakistan, where she is tied down by events and there is a journalist being advised not to move for obvious reasons. and we salute her in assets and nature editor and teacher award on her behalf. [applause] >> thank you, nick and thank you to be a sponsor of the award of the journalism school. i know i am somehow in that story, even if the aftermath of the killing of the modern is something that will have effect on the ground there and anyone can get that story if griswold can. the book that she gave this a title dispatches from the fault line between christianity and islam has the title of the 10th parallel, the line that as she followed the book, could just as well have the title common ground because the drama is workin
eliza griswold examines the conflict between christianity and islam on the geographical line. 700 of the equator for this to most frequently collide tiered more than half of the worlds muslims live along this line as do 60% of the world's christians. this is a brilliantly way to examine perhaps most important conflicts in the world today. a life that is currently in pakistan, where she is tied down by events and there is a journalist being advised not to move for obvious reasons. and we salute...
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Jul 30, 2011
07/11
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KRON
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. >> hi, my name's eliza and i was &/7 wondering from both of if you you think it's important to makeong instrument. maybe a that's why you don't like it, because instruments are really different. perhaps, forne instance, i can' play the piano but i can plate flute because my fingers don't work right on a piano. >> hi, my name is wondered if musicians like yourself that play the kind of music you do get the same respect from kids and adults that pop artists do? >> pop artist does a different job. and they are sort of idols of popular idols, you snow what we do is a rather specialized thing us know what we're all b >> hi, i'm rachel. and we were wondering what the best part of being a professional musician is? >> it's actually my hobby so i get paid for t that's the best part about it you get paid for doing what you like. >> reporter: did you hear that? getting paid for your hob bill? now, if only i can get someone to pay for my shopping hobby. for "teen kids news," i'm sam. >> that wraps up our show but we will be back with more "teen kids news." >> thanks for joining us and have a gr
. >> hi, my name's eliza and i was &/7 wondering from both of if you you think it's important to makeong instrument. maybe a that's why you don't like it, because instruments are really different. perhaps, forne instance, i can' play the piano but i can plate flute because my fingers don't work right on a piano. >> hi, my name is wondered if musicians like yourself that play the kind of music you do get the same respect from kids and adults that pop artists do? >> pop...
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supplied to the reactors core and the turbine began operation all these stages are passing well this eliza's me to see that the station will begin operational test it will generate electricity and disputed by national power grids as for the station itself everything is complete and i don't see any problems with regards to its operation iran is using its own experience to develop the reactor which is planning to launch in the next three or four years this reactor can generate forty five megawatts. my . decision did you make the following russia's proposal to settle the nuclear issue by one of the main provisions of this proposal what do you think about it. first of all i would like to thank russia for its constructive efforts aimed at finding a settlement to iran's nuclear program as far as we are concerned we consider this proposal to be a step forward for breaking the deadlock that's why we view russia's proposal as opposed to the step however while iran seeks a new initiative to settle its nuclear program of the west continues he claims that iran is producing missiles capable of carrying n
supplied to the reactors core and the turbine began operation all these stages are passing well this eliza's me to see that the station will begin operational test it will generate electricity and disputed by national power grids as for the station itself everything is complete and i don't see any problems with regards to its operation iran is using its own experience to develop the reactor which is planning to launch in the next three or four years this reactor can generate forty five...
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washington is reportedly considering both doing its military support of nato his campaign in libya eliza's all the plans again for more surveillance drones claiming it's running out of targets all its own raised five months of that strikes or that some of the rebels maids who support say are abusing human rights a british newspaper claims a grave has been discovered in an opposition controlled area will be also in the fall the innocent life post get out the troops it's all is a recent report by human rights groups that rebels are involved in losing also on a neighboring systems of units so chanted as an independent journalist and spokesman for the person civilians for peace in the libyan reasons he believes native manipulates media coverage of the campaign to justify its goals. i think really fundamentally there's been a problem the way nato the nato nations and their media have related to these so-called rebels i mean these rebels have been conducting mass lynchings of black people throughout the first several weeks and months of this crisis and i raised this directly in press conferences
washington is reportedly considering both doing its military support of nato his campaign in libya eliza's all the plans again for more surveillance drones claiming it's running out of targets all its own raised five months of that strikes or that some of the rebels maids who support say are abusing human rights a british newspaper claims a grave has been discovered in an opposition controlled area will be also in the fall the innocent life post get out the troops it's all is a recent report by...
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Jul 8, 2011
07/11
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KPIX
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great time for eliza, who was with to be beaten by wozniaky in the swedeish open.ring your phone. >> or have it go off an break your opponent's concentration. >> playing in a huge tournament with a cell phone on? >> i'll be home for dinner. i'll get some milk. >> see you at 10:00 and 11:00. it's gets icy to dull pain, hot to relax it away fast. and started earning loads of points. you got a weather balloon with points? yes i did. [ man ] points i could use for just about anything. ♪ ♪ there it is. [ man ] so i used mine to get a whole new perspective. ♪ [ male announcer ] the new citi thankyou premier card gives you more ways to earn points.
great time for eliza, who was with to be beaten by wozniaky in the swedeish open.ring your phone. >> or have it go off an break your opponent's concentration. >> playing in a huge tournament with a cell phone on? >> i'll be home for dinner. i'll get some milk. >> see you at 10:00 and 11:00. it's gets icy to dull pain, hot to relax it away fast. and started earning loads of points. you got a weather balloon with points? yes i did. [ man ] points i could use for just about...
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Jul 2, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN2
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the northern one about the thrilling escape of the fugitive slaves, eliza and george harris with their son harry, and the southern one tracing the painful separation of the enslaved uncle tom from his family when he is sold into the deep south. stowe had learned a lot about popular culture when she was a magazine writer in the 1840s. and in her novel she channeled all of these popular images and more that she'd picked up as an apprentice writer and channeled them into a deeply human narrative. it still moves us today. and it's a narrative with a crystal clear message; slavery was evil and so was the political and economic institutions that supported it. "uncle tom's cabin" shaped the political debates over slavery in ways that have not been recognized. from a dramatic picture of the horrors of slavery intensified the rise of people behind lincoln and the republicans because it made abolitionism which previously had been an unpopular splinter movement -- actual splintered movement, divided among many different forms of anti-slavery, most of them unpopular -- it made it suddenly attracti
the northern one about the thrilling escape of the fugitive slaves, eliza and george harris with their son harry, and the southern one tracing the painful separation of the enslaved uncle tom from his family when he is sold into the deep south. stowe had learned a lot about popular culture when she was a magazine writer in the 1840s. and in her novel she channeled all of these popular images and more that she'd picked up as an apprentice writer and channeled them into a deeply human narrative....
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Jul 3, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN2
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about tom and eva, of course, but you also talk about sam and andy, two enslaved men chasing after eliza as she is trying to cross the ice, and then the topsy character, of course, you talk about those the way we read those is not how mid 19th century people would have read them. >> even to this very day there's characters that people misinterpret as being laughable minstrels. it was created by northern white people, many of themselves racist who -- would -- wore black on their faces and pretended to be afternoons, but they were clowns. it was a racist phenomena, but very, very popular. harriet beecher stowe incorporates that into the book showing them as minstrels and being topsy. these are not clowns, but real people engaged in subversive behavior. sam and andy are -- they team up with a woman, mrs. shelby, to try to frustrate slave captures who are trying to capture fugitive slaves so they use minstrel techniques, but they use it towards a subversive end to try to break the law. the law was the future slave law that demanded future slaves have to be recaptured, so sam and andy look li
about tom and eva, of course, but you also talk about sam and andy, two enslaved men chasing after eliza as she is trying to cross the ice, and then the topsy character, of course, you talk about those the way we read those is not how mid 19th century people would have read them. >> even to this very day there's characters that people misinterpret as being laughable minstrels. it was created by northern white people, many of themselves racist who -- would -- wore black on their faces and...
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Jul 1, 2011
07/11
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MSNBC
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. >> congressman eliza cummings, thank you. eugene, stay with us.joins us on "morning joe," coming up. >> announcer: this past year alone there's been a 67% spike in companies embracing the cloud-- big clouds, small ones, public, private, even hybrid. your data and apps must move easily and securely to reach many clouds, not just one. that's why the network that connects, protects, and lets your data move fearlessly through the clouds means more than ever. >>> welcome back to "morning joe." eugene, we said we were going to get to your piece in the washington piece. assassination by a robot. are we justified? we need to explore these issues. we need to relearn an ancient lesson that no method of waging wars without risk or without consequences. this is the aggressive use of drones by president barack obama. >> we are using drones in over six countries. there was a drone attack in somalia last week becoming the sixth nation on earth where we have drones patrolling the sky. i think we need to talk about this. this is going to expand. these are machines
. >> congressman eliza cummings, thank you. eugene, stay with us.joins us on "morning joe," coming up. >> announcer: this past year alone there's been a 67% spike in companies embracing the cloud-- big clouds, small ones, public, private, even hybrid. your data and apps must move easily and securely to reach many clouds, not just one. that's why the network that connects, protects, and lets your data move fearlessly through the clouds means more than ever. >>>...
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Jul 19, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN
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eliza is draining the last drops away before she places the page into the second wash bath.t will be removed, drained briefly, and then placed between fresh polyester web, and between the same kind of felt paper makers use when they tried to paper that is made. >> to more sophisticated means allow scientists to look closer at the library's writer items and find out more about them. >> the door is open and it is a microscope that uses the electrons to make images. and like a light magnus -- microscope, this can go up to 100,000 times magnification. we can see tiny particles of ink and how fibers and paper relate to each other. we can get this information without doing any damage to the document. >> these technologies have an extraordinary opportunities for us to investigate materials at a level we have never been able to before. >> the library's top traders. we oversee these materials because we had a vault because we keep them in an optimum environment. we can see if we can find unique identifiers and special collections, and in doing this process, it has been an active disc
eliza is draining the last drops away before she places the page into the second wash bath.t will be removed, drained briefly, and then placed between fresh polyester web, and between the same kind of felt paper makers use when they tried to paper that is made. >> to more sophisticated means allow scientists to look closer at the library's writer items and find out more about them. >> the door is open and it is a microscope that uses the electrons to make images. and like a light...
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Jul 19, 2011
07/11
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CSPAN
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eye 157
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eliza is draining the last drops away before she places the page into the second wash bath. it will be removed, drained briefly, and then placed between fresh polyester web, and between the same kind of felt paper makers use when they tried to paper that is made. >> to more sophisticated means allow scientists to look closer at the library's writer items and find out more about them. >> the door is open and it is a microscope that uses the electrons to make images. and like a light magnus -- microscope, this can go up to 100,000 times magnification. we can see tiny particles of ink and how fibers and paper relate to each other. we can get this information without doing any damage to the document. >> these technologies have an extraordinary opportunities for us to investigate materials at a level we have never been able to before. >> the library's top traders. we oversee these materials because we had a vault because we keep them in an optimum environment. we can see if we can find unique identifiers and special collections, and in doing this process, it has been an active di
eliza is draining the last drops away before she places the page into the second wash bath. it will be removed, drained briefly, and then placed between fresh polyester web, and between the same kind of felt paper makers use when they tried to paper that is made. >> to more sophisticated means allow scientists to look closer at the library's writer items and find out more about them. >> the door is open and it is a microscope that uses the electrons to make images. and like a light...