252
252
May 4, 2015
05/15
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 252
favorite 0
quote 0
what did henry ford do that sparked productivity and economic growth? the revolution today is in communications but when space-age technology comes down to earth, does it really drive economic growth? some say the days of our economic growth are numbered that soon there won't be enough basic raw materls. are the prophets of doom correct? this has been america's century. giant steps of economic growth have taken us from the auto age to the space age. our real gross national product has increased tenfold. our real income per person has tripled. can we keep up the pace? with the help of analyst richard gill we'll examine that question on this edition of economics usa. the improvement in our standard of living can be tied to our economic growth since 1900. average workers enjoy three times as many goods. all of this because of a continuing increase in productivity, the engine of growth. 70 years ago in the auto industry a productivity revolution took off. how did it begin? why was it successful? turn of the century autos were playthings of the rich. their p
what did henry ford do that sparked productivity and economic growth? the revolution today is in communications but when space-age technology comes down to earth, does it really drive economic growth? some say the days of our economic growth are numbered that soon there won't be enough basic raw materls. are the prophets of doom correct? this has been america's century. giant steps of economic growth have taken us from the auto age to the space age. our real gross national product has increased...
93
93
May 30, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
henry clay, jr. becomes a leader of kentucky troops and is killed at the battle of buena vista just like john harden. henry clay has to face the death of his son in the war he did not believe in. after his son's death, he becomes very religious. he gets baptized into the invisible church and decides to make a speech opposing the war he hopes will bring the war to a close. clay's speech which is hugely important because reporters traveled over 100 miles to hear it and the newly invented telegraph meant within days it was reported around the country. clay's speech touched on all be grounds for opposing the war i mentioned. he talks about how immoral the war is. he says the u.s. has lost its sterling reputation abroad. he talks about american soldiers being disqualified by a wealth spirit of adventure from returning to civil society. he says slaver is a great evil in this might cause the spread of slavery. he also makes it clear there are race show -- racial reasons to oppose the war. he says, does any
henry clay, jr. becomes a leader of kentucky troops and is killed at the battle of buena vista just like john harden. henry clay has to face the death of his son in the war he did not believe in. after his son's death, he becomes very religious. he gets baptized into the invisible church and decides to make a speech opposing the war he hopes will bring the war to a close. clay's speech which is hugely important because reporters traveled over 100 miles to hear it and the newly invented...
91
91
May 2, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
d henry flores. [inaudible conversations] >> welcome to the panel. the panel is called the latino vote, where it is going to. my name is gilbert garcia. i am honored to be here today with two great authors. to my right, matt barreto is the co-founder of research and polling for latino decisions and is professor of political science and chicano studies at ucla and co-author of latino america:how the most dynamic population is poised to transform the politics of the nation. to my far right henry flores is distinguished university research professor in the department of political science at st. mary's university and he has testified in more than and 50 civil and voting rights cases going back to the mid 80s it is the author of a book that just came out two weeks ago latinos and the voting rights act:the search for racial purpose. both of these deal with the same phenomenon. the rapidly growing latino population of the united states and the way the population impacted politics. according to census figures in 2000 the latino population, in 2010, it is 16.
d henry flores. [inaudible conversations] >> welcome to the panel. the panel is called the latino vote, where it is going to. my name is gilbert garcia. i am honored to be here today with two great authors. to my right, matt barreto is the co-founder of research and polling for latino decisions and is professor of political science and chicano studies at ucla and co-author of latino america:how the most dynamic population is poised to transform the politics of the nation. to my far right...
32
32
May 11, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
i have two friends from southwest, henry bloch and ed matheny. fierce on the tennis court. henry and i were right handers who played these other two, who were left handers. ed said, this rivalry is so tough, we will not be friends very long. each one of us would maybe win every other time. but i really had the privilege of meeting two great guys. they are still my best friends i will probably ever have. [applause] mr. matheny: when i was on the battleship new jersey, i watched them launch those kingfisher scout planes bill was talking about he was on. it was like being shot out of a cannon. those things would go from zero to 100 miles an hour in 90 feet. it was like a circus act almost. except they have a net in the circus. they did not have one. host: bill was talking about tennis, but i can hardly imagine how you in the air force managed to get psyched up for missions. you told me yesterday that you rarely came back without holes in your airplane. mr. bloch: it was part of our job. they would wake us up. we flew during the day. raf flew at nigh
i have two friends from southwest, henry bloch and ed matheny. fierce on the tennis court. henry and i were right handers who played these other two, who were left handers. ed said, this rivalry is so tough, we will not be friends very long. each one of us would maybe win every other time. but i really had the privilege of meeting two great guys. they are still my best friends i will probably ever have. [applause] mr. matheny: when i was on the battleship new jersey, i watched them launch those...
43
43
May 16, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
he said i have two friends from , southwest, henry bloch and ed matheny.one of these people. but i learned they were fierce on the tennis court. henry and i were both right handers who played these other two, who were left handers. finally ed matheny called me one day and said, this rivalry is so tough, we will not be friends very long. [laughter] i would have to get psyched up to play. but each one of us would maybe win every other time. but i really had the privilege of meeting two great guys. they are still my best friends i will probably ever have. [applause] mr. matheny: when i was on the battleship new jersey, i watched them launch those kingfisher scout planes bill was talking about that he was on. it was like being shot out of a cannon. they would be this explosion and those things would go from zero to 100 miles an hour in about 90 feet. it was like a circus act almost. [laughter] except they had a net in the circus. [laughter] these guys did not have one. host: henry, bill used the phrase 'get psyched up,' he was talking about tennis, but i can h
he said i have two friends from , southwest, henry bloch and ed matheny.one of these people. but i learned they were fierce on the tennis court. henry and i were both right handers who played these other two, who were left handers. finally ed matheny called me one day and said, this rivalry is so tough, we will not be friends very long. [laughter] i would have to get psyched up to play. but each one of us would maybe win every other time. but i really had the privilege of meeting two great...
68
68
May 29, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
henry: good, we are friends again. [laughter] henry: one more question.this is inspired by something that i do in some of my classes, which is putting me in the hot seat and asking students to come up with questions about things i probably know nothing about, but that's fine. because i just want them to see how i deal with beginning to answer a question. i thought, how could i do that with you and i thought, maybe an out of the blue question i could ask you -- since we're going to see this performance tonight about a demo, what you imagine, if you had your dream come true scenario, what the next demo would be about where technology would go? i realize we cannot build surprise into this so much because you are answering a question, but where would you imagine something like that would happen today, something that would surprise people excite them, get them working on something, point the way forward? sebastian, why don't i start with you? sebastian: i take this to be a question for me about what cool great technology are we going to see in the next two yea
henry: good, we are friends again. [laughter] henry: one more question.this is inspired by something that i do in some of my classes, which is putting me in the hot seat and asking students to come up with questions about things i probably know nothing about, but that's fine. because i just want them to see how i deal with beginning to answer a question. i thought, how could i do that with you and i thought, maybe an out of the blue question i could ask you -- since we're going to see this...
86
86
May 30, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
keith: philemon bryan was a friend of henry flagler. this was really a win-win situation for bryan and flagler. bryan came down with 400 and his labor force. they cleared this whole area which was by that time basically virgin land. at the time that bryan came down, the only person living here was frank stranahan and he had another couple working for him. he operated an overnight camp for people who were taking the stage over the county road and he operated the ferry. he built a trading post and that was really the source for everything for the community. basically they grew tomatoes that created wealth. part of that process was brokers would come in and meet the farmers at the dock and buy their tomatoes. there was no place for them to stay. so bryan's house became a boarding house and quickly within two years, there was an article in the paper saying that they were expanding to have a capacity of 50. i can't imagine what that structure looks like. timothy: at the beginning he put them on his porch, front couch, front living room. ever
keith: philemon bryan was a friend of henry flagler. this was really a win-win situation for bryan and flagler. bryan came down with 400 and his labor force. they cleared this whole area which was by that time basically virgin land. at the time that bryan came down, the only person living here was frank stranahan and he had another couple working for him. he operated an overnight camp for people who were taking the stage over the county road and he operated the ferry. he built a trading post...
42
42
May 9, 2015
05/15
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
so henry and his crew continue on looking for victims., only a mile away, another team of rescuers is trying to reach salvador pena. >> a big beam, a concrete beam came right across his legs. he's still down there, he's conscious, he's talking but his legs are completely crushed. i can hear him moaning right now. >> pena is on the first floor of a mall parking deck operating his sweeping truck when the quake strikes. and now the entire concrete structure is on top of him. >> we have no idea if we'll even come close to getting to him. >> firefighter ray lavalle struggles through the metal and busted concrete to make contact with the victim. >> he's holding his own. his legs are cracked mid-femur there. definitely a lot of pain. >> the whole time he's, get me out of here. i just conversed with him the best i could to try to give him some hope. >> but others aren't as hopeful. the victim is pinned very deep under the pile of rubble, and it will take a huge effort to get just one man out using resources rescuers could use on more people in ot
so henry and his crew continue on looking for victims., only a mile away, another team of rescuers is trying to reach salvador pena. >> a big beam, a concrete beam came right across his legs. he's still down there, he's conscious, he's talking but his legs are completely crushed. i can hear him moaning right now. >> pena is on the first floor of a mall parking deck operating his sweeping truck when the quake strikes. and now the entire concrete structure is on top of him. >>...
106
106
May 3, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
henry allen william for both figures in the case against the clan. this was the newsletter published by the topeka ku klux klan chapter. really have this one issue. this is all we have to go on. i wanted to read a few excerpts where they explain their stance against immigration. this is one of the issues they used to recruit members in kansas. they talked about the immigrants after world war i, far from being the anglo-saxon or scandinavian types 50 years ago in search of home, god, and freedom are today loyal and patriotic americans. they are mostly the scum of the mediterranean and middle european countries. italian anarchist, irish catholics malcontents, russian jews lithuanians, and austrians of the lowest class impose -- compose the current level of invaders. they have the loyalty to the land of their birth. they speak their own languages. they preach their own religions mostly roman catholic or jewish and reader on newspapers. they some of by saying america cannot become a polyglot country and survive. the immigration issue was one of the topic
henry allen william for both figures in the case against the clan. this was the newsletter published by the topeka ku klux klan chapter. really have this one issue. this is all we have to go on. i wanted to read a few excerpts where they explain their stance against immigration. this is one of the issues they used to recruit members in kansas. they talked about the immigrants after world war i, far from being the anglo-saxon or scandinavian types 50 years ago in search of home, god, and freedom...
69
69
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
it was william henry harrison's campaign.e was elected at the age of 68, a record that no president broke again until ronald reagan was elected. who was this man and why did he so easily defeat martin van buren? edna: well, let me see. at the outset, i announce with a bit of pride that he was from charles city county, virginia, my hometown, my home county, but he moved to ohio. he was a military man initially. he had actually studied medicine for a short period of time and decided to join the military shortly thereafter. moved to ohio. he became the territorial governor of indiana and was before that a noted indian fighter. the term "tippecanoe" comes from the battle of tippecanoe where he fought against tecumseh and his brother. the two native americans who were attempting to establish a pan-indian movement. and as territorial governor, tyler was instrumental -- excuse me -- harrison was instrumental in securing land for white settlers and of course, that clashed with native american interest. and so at that battle, harrison
it was william henry harrison's campaign.e was elected at the age of 68, a record that no president broke again until ronald reagan was elected. who was this man and why did he so easily defeat martin van buren? edna: well, let me see. at the outset, i announce with a bit of pride that he was from charles city county, virginia, my hometown, my home county, but he moved to ohio. he was a military man initially. he had actually studied medicine for a short period of time and decided to join the...
65
65
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
there was a scene of a peasant rebellion in the henry the sixth -- henry vi play.here the masses rise up and make demands of the general. ignorant, unethical, it dangerous, i think he knew it is dangerous to having the rule of all and i think he would have been friendly to our kind of constitutional democracy, but i don't know. he wrote plays that flattered kings and queens, so he believed in the monarchy on some level. the question for shakespeare and maybe this is a way to think about this issue, for shakespeare, the culture war was really between the protestants and catholics. that was the left and right of his world. on the protestant left were people who wanted to remake the world into a new jerusalem. and on the right, there was the catholic rituals that had been part of england for so long. so this was the tension. catholicism was illegal during shakespeare's time, he may have, he may have come from a catholic family. so what we see was going on in shakespeare's mind was the battle that he was aware of between protestants and catholics. brian lamb: from the
there was a scene of a peasant rebellion in the henry the sixth -- henry vi play.here the masses rise up and make demands of the general. ignorant, unethical, it dangerous, i think he knew it is dangerous to having the rule of all and i think he would have been friendly to our kind of constitutional democracy, but i don't know. he wrote plays that flattered kings and queens, so he believed in the monarchy on some level. the question for shakespeare and maybe this is a way to think about this...
274
274
May 16, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 274
favorite 0
quote 1
henry. the two men had been opposing lawyers in central virginia courts for several years, he knew him well and when the court's adjourned for winter jefferson satirically recalled that henry would make up a party of 4 hunters of his neighborhood and go off with them to declining woods and has weeks hunting deer of which he was passionately fond, sleeping under a tent before a fire wearing the same shirt the whole time and covering all the dirt of his dress with a hunting shirt. jefferson found this everyman populist posed in authentic and egregiously so. henry was deeply familiar with the lead virginia society even if he chose not to join it. henry's father was a prosperous plantation owner and a colonel in the local militia beat tutored his son at home in latin, shakespeare, ancient history and mythology henry read vergil in latin when he was 15 years old, decades later he could read nero in his speeches wishy gradually adopted a severe persona. contemporary describe his appearance as grav
henry. the two men had been opposing lawyers in central virginia courts for several years, he knew him well and when the court's adjourned for winter jefferson satirically recalled that henry would make up a party of 4 hunters of his neighborhood and go off with them to declining woods and has weeks hunting deer of which he was passionately fond, sleeping under a tent before a fire wearing the same shirt the whole time and covering all the dirt of his dress with a hunting shirt. jefferson found...
38
38
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] it was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? she said who are you anyway? so when i told her she was obviously disappointed in and she said well that's just terrible. she said i drove three and a half hours to meet egg great man like henry kissinger and all i got is a nobody like you. i said i'm sorry and i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better. there was a brief pause and she said well there is. i said what is it? she leaned forward in a conspiratorial manner and i leaned forward and therefore has were touching. she said nobody will ever know the difference. [laughter] she said would you mind signing henry kissinger's name to my poster? [laughter] so i did and it's hanging today in eastern connecticut and a daily reminder to me not to take these introductions to seriously. now most of you have heard henry kissinger speak so here's the best part of the story. about a year ago he and i appeared jointly at a conference in manhattan and there was a moderator and two chairs and he asked us
i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] it was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? she said who are you anyway? so when i told her she was obviously disappointed in and she said well that's just terrible. she said i drove three and a half hours to meet egg great man like henry kissinger and all i got is a nobody like you. i said i'm sorry and i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better. there was a brief pause and she said well there is. i said what is...
70
70
May 9, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
henry ward beecher and harriet beecher stowe. henry james wrote a book called "the siege of london" and they met him and so these were outrageous women in a time when outrage was right there for the men, i mean, we are talking about the robber baron era. i am not good to go into it all here, but i go into life and times and how interesting it was . the fifth avenue hotel had a vertical railway going through every floor, and it was an elevator, and all of these guys would come to fleece everybody else and flees each other -- fleece each other on wall street and there was this one guy, daniel drew, and he -- the story is, once, when he was a cattle drover leading all of his cattle, and he told all of his people to just give them a lot of salt, give them a lot of salt, and then he said give them lots of water, give them lots of water, they drank all of the water, and that rose the weight of the price that you got, and that was the beginning of the phrase "watered stock." he also has a line about he who steals what isn't his pays it
henry ward beecher and harriet beecher stowe. henry james wrote a book called "the siege of london" and they met him and so these were outrageous women in a time when outrage was right there for the men, i mean, we are talking about the robber baron era. i am not good to go into it all here, but i go into life and times and how interesting it was . the fifth avenue hotel had a vertical railway going through every floor, and it was an elevator, and all of these guys would come to...
203
203
May 17, 2015
05/15
by
CNNW
tv
eye 203
favorite 0
quote 0
henry worked with cater.this theater with wayne williams on the night of the bridge incident. henry has no doubt even today about what he saw. >> they were holding hands, you know, like male and female. well, if you're holding hands with one of my co-workers and both of you are males what am i supposed to do, turn my head? the next time i saw him, he was in the courtroom. >> when wayne williams took the stand, he swore he never met nathaniel cater. on the evening henry said he saw them, wayne testified he was home, sick, and asleep in bed. his mother and father, now deceased, backed him up. homer williams said he had the white station wagon until almost midnight. under cross-examination, in his third day on the stand, wayne williams blew up at prosecutor jack mallard. >> that morning, he was a complete different person. immediately he started attacking. he came out of the chute like a bull. when he said, you want the real wayne williams, you've got him, i think all of us -- the jury understood that, yeah. >>
henry worked with cater.this theater with wayne williams on the night of the bridge incident. henry has no doubt even today about what he saw. >> they were holding hands, you know, like male and female. well, if you're holding hands with one of my co-workers and both of you are males what am i supposed to do, turn my head? the next time i saw him, he was in the courtroom. >> when wayne williams took the stand, he swore he never met nathaniel cater. on the evening henry said he saw...
64
64
May 29, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
i wish you could be here henry. henry was a soldier in atlanta. when the train came up then oh, then, how our heart did ache. and lincoln's likeness on the front of the train as if he were there. henry, words fail me when i describe the mournful scene and the anguish of our heart. and i think that little girl spoke for hundreds of thousands of americans. there's a certain poetry if you want to call it that and closure, to lincoln coming down these tracks to this place in his coffin. because as he came he went through the circuit that he had ridden for 23 years, he had ridden through the prairies that were cut by these tracks when they were put in in 1853. and he visited all these towns. so this was a return for him in a very touching way. and he was returned on the same train, on the same tracks that he'd been forever. i bought a book about lincoln's funeral and i was going to start reading it and i just saved it just by chance i was coming back on a train -- these are the same tracks we're on now. passenger trains. i'm on an amtrak train with thi
i wish you could be here henry. henry was a soldier in atlanta. when the train came up then oh, then, how our heart did ache. and lincoln's likeness on the front of the train as if he were there. henry, words fail me when i describe the mournful scene and the anguish of our heart. and i think that little girl spoke for hundreds of thousands of americans. there's a certain poetry if you want to call it that and closure, to lincoln coming down these tracks to this place in his coffin. because as...
98
98
May 24, 2015
05/15
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
but not so long ago, he's just a boy named henry. >> to understand billy the kid, you've got to know, katherine mccarty, an irish immigrant who. co-s over in the wake of the potato famine and billy ends up acquiring a lot of her charm and ability. >> little can actually be proven. >> while legend claims he's born in new york city, the truth is a birth record has never been found. but two things are certain, billy is born into one of the most violent times in american history. as the first verified record of him shows up in silver city, new mexico, in 1868, when he's 9 years old. >> new hampshire is an extremely violent place. you have a mix of ex-con fed rats, hispanics. you have a lot of corruption. law and order is few and far between. >> within a year, kat dies of u tuberculos tuberculosis. henry and his brother bury here in a simple grave and head out into the world, abandoned by their stepdad and split between distant relatives. celebrated from his brother, billie resorts to crime, adopting the ail las, william billy bonnie. >> what have you got for me, sheriff. >> roughian, hig
but not so long ago, he's just a boy named henry. >> to understand billy the kid, you've got to know, katherine mccarty, an irish immigrant who. co-s over in the wake of the potato famine and billy ends up acquiring a lot of her charm and ability. >> little can actually be proven. >> while legend claims he's born in new york city, the truth is a birth record has never been found. but two things are certain, billy is born into one of the most violent times in american history....
32
32
May 16, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
henry: yeah. the only track that amtrak owns -- well, it owns some around the country, but they are traveling with the rights with the privileges of the railroad. the railroad keeps their track of. i have heard this thing about the infrastructure -- railroads, by a large -- you look at the big lines. they spend a lot of money on maintenance, and it comes out of their coffers. host: all right. thanks for the call. we have time for john in redding, california. you get the last role in congress and its role in ensuring safety and the nations passenger rail network. go ahead. john: thank you for taking my call, c-span. fundamentally, congress does not have the vision and the courage to do what needs to be done when it comes to transportation. eisenhower was wrong. he should not have built an interstate system, he should have built an interstate nationwide, not the transit is to him. look at the millions of land up arm -- millions of acres of farmland we put under roads and shopping malls. high-speed r
henry: yeah. the only track that amtrak owns -- well, it owns some around the country, but they are traveling with the rights with the privileges of the railroad. the railroad keeps their track of. i have heard this thing about the infrastructure -- railroads, by a large -- you look at the big lines. they spend a lot of money on maintenance, and it comes out of their coffers. host: all right. thanks for the call. we have time for john in redding, california. you get the last role in congress...
66
66
May 14, 2015
05/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
shawn henry at cloud strike. what do you make of his remarks?he is implying he has information that is not public. and underscores the sense that nothing is private anymore when we are talking about data being cap electronically, how they transmit it. it is not safe. it is not secure. i don't know when he talks about internet freedom, if he is talking about everything being insecure people not having privacy. that sounds like privacy being breached in a way. perhaps hypocritical. i think that when we are talking about data being kept electronically it is never going to be secure. we have two up and recognize that. tom: the assumption emily: we don't know what julian assange has on hillary clinton. tom: there is an assumption made that the u.s. is a monopoly on being big brother. there are multitudes of government agencies from other countries as well as hacker groups and crews that have the capacity to maintain omniscience, to be telepathic as it relates to our personal comings and goings. at a minimum we need to respect the fact that without cy
shawn henry at cloud strike. what do you make of his remarks?he is implying he has information that is not public. and underscores the sense that nothing is private anymore when we are talking about data being cap electronically, how they transmit it. it is not safe. it is not secure. i don't know when he talks about internet freedom, if he is talking about everything being insecure people not having privacy. that sounds like privacy being breached in a way. perhaps hypocritical. i think that...
69
69
May 16, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
and so the idea which cropped up in a special defense panel that henry kissinger ran and that andy was involved in in 1970, basically charlie hurtsfelt who was the guy who gave the go ahead for the arpa innocent and what became the interinnocent suggested to andy -- internet and suggested to andy and jim schlesinger that they needed to measure and track where we stood in various areas of military competition relative to the soviets. now, actually nixon's blue ribbon defense panel suggested as one of its recommendations that they establish that kind of a capability in the defense department. andy didn't have anything to do with that and he was working on intelligence issues for the president and for henry kissinger. and so it wasn't until they reorganized the intelligence community at the end of 1971 that a net assessment capability was recreated, established on the nsc. within a couple of years that was then transferred to the pentagon when jim schlesinger became secretary of defense. schlesinger and marshall were very close going back to the early '60s as both colleagues and friends.
and so the idea which cropped up in a special defense panel that henry kissinger ran and that andy was involved in in 1970, basically charlie hurtsfelt who was the guy who gave the go ahead for the arpa innocent and what became the interinnocent suggested to andy -- internet and suggested to andy and jim schlesinger that they needed to measure and track where we stood in various areas of military competition relative to the soviets. now, actually nixon's blue ribbon defense panel suggested as...
92
92
May 3, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
and henry flores has testified boeing back to the mid '80s and the author of love book that came out two weeks ago. latinos and the voting rights act. they both deal with the latino population in the way it impacts our politics in 2000 the latino population was 12% in 201016. 3% and projections is 25% by a 200050. looking at the impact of the growing population and through polling determining what they are thinking about politics, why people are voting and nonvoting. henry's book looks at the response to this phenomenon the efforts specifically in the republican party and the reason years to suppress the effects of the search for redistributing friday laws and challenges to the voting rights act of 1965 we had democrats saying time is on the democratic party's side of the other hand we have republicans who said they are social conservative and the line that they are republican they just don't know which yet. so with your polling what about that question? >> 84 that introduction. it is the pleasure to be on the panel with dr. flora as to is one of my long time mentors and trusted coll
and henry flores has testified boeing back to the mid '80s and the author of love book that came out two weeks ago. latinos and the voting rights act. they both deal with the latino population in the way it impacts our politics in 2000 the latino population was 12% in 201016. 3% and projections is 25% by a 200050. looking at the impact of the growing population and through polling determining what they are thinking about politics, why people are voting and nonvoting. henry's book looks at the...
84
84
May 31, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
three democratic republicans john quincy adams, henry clay, albert ellison. and then russell and they art -- bayard. this is the team you want. there is a connection to my home park afford mchenry, christopher hughes. he's the secretary for the commission. he was commander of artillery -- artillery. john quincy adams did not think too highly of mr. hughes. he said, houston leave the whole science of diplomacy consists in giving -- hughes believes the whole science of diplomacy consists in giving dinners. who are the british sending? dr. william adams, admiralty lawyer. he's on the team because americans are known to favor legalistic arguments. lord gambier will look out for the british naval interests. they're not going to budge on this issue. the reason they can't is the minute they give up the idea of impressment, what any british sailor does not want to be part of the navy, what are they going to do? desert to an american flag vessel. if you're great britain, if you give up impressment, you just shot yourself in the foot. henry goulburn, is there to look a
three democratic republicans john quincy adams, henry clay, albert ellison. and then russell and they art -- bayard. this is the team you want. there is a connection to my home park afford mchenry, christopher hughes. he's the secretary for the commission. he was commander of artillery -- artillery. john quincy adams did not think too highly of mr. hughes. he said, houston leave the whole science of diplomacy consists in giving -- hughes believes the whole science of diplomacy consists in...
98
98
May 30, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
john tyler learned he was elected as vice president to william henry harrison. in the spring of 1841 he was informed to became the 10th president of the united states. leticia tyler learned that she became the first lady. >> she has another terrible stroke and her husband goes into great morning. -- mourning. and then he meets another young lovely in her 20's. >> julia was the madonna of first ladies. she loved publicity. she had posed as a model at a time when that was frowned upon. by all accounts was bewitching. >> petunia was flourished. she had almost 90 slaves. julia was loving and supportive him tremendously and everything that she did. >> untimely deaths, a secret marriage, and outside personalities are part of the stories of the three women featured in our program tonight. as the political system grapples with the first time a vice president steps into the office of the presidency, and sectional differences continue to grow in the country. good evening, and welcome to "first tonight, the election of 1840, ringing william henry harrison and to office. a
john tyler learned he was elected as vice president to william henry harrison. in the spring of 1841 he was informed to became the 10th president of the united states. leticia tyler learned that she became the first lady. >> she has another terrible stroke and her husband goes into great morning. -- mourning. and then he meets another young lovely in her 20's. >> julia was the madonna of first ladies. she loved publicity. she had posed as a model at a time when that was frowned...
73
73
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
henry kissinger.r. a book about diplomacyh starting with richelau, parkt talking about world order and treaty of versailles and how the nation states come b. he is still able to apply that intellectual framework to this world. >> host: dot clintons hold that same aura?ld >> guest: yes especially with secretary clinton running for president. bill clinton has that, when he comes to then aspen institute, we have as i say people of both parties come. even republicans in our audience inbu aspen when bill clinton is there, doing his tour of the world and just answering questions and remembering everybody's name, and having readt you know, wonky policy papers on how urban revival happens in older cities withpo rivers and how the creative class was there. or how micro payments help womenla in india do certain things, he understands and knows more than anybody else, and he is absolutely hypnotizing when he is giving a dissertation. so he has that aura, definitely dissertation. so he has that definitely. >> host:
henry kissinger.r. a book about diplomacyh starting with richelau, parkt talking about world order and treaty of versailles and how the nation states come b. he is still able to apply that intellectual framework to this world. >> host: dot clintons hold that same aura?ld >> guest: yes especially with secretary clinton running for president. bill clinton has that, when he comes to then aspen institute, we have as i say people of both parties come. even republicans in our audience...
37
37
May 17, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
keith: as henry flagler built hotels up and down the coast ed started working on those. ed had probably five years experience working on big hotels on palm beach, so he came in as really a very experienced expert. timothy: he built three houses. he built a health those kind of a lean to and then he built a house that was out of town. and then he built a third house, this is the king-comarde house. cromartie mary louise king, so that is why we called it the cromartie-ki -- the king-cromartie house. it is one of the most beautiful houses on campus. it is unique. the inn is the number one registry in the archives in the state of florida for this county. keith this hotel opened in 1908. : about that time productivity began. it was that activity that moved it from nothing to an agricultural center. and motivated the locals, the bryans particularly to say that , we need to get organized. because, surprising to me, for 15 years all of these farmers around here, everybody functioned without local authority. any established local authority. they just worked together. they respect
keith: as henry flagler built hotels up and down the coast ed started working on those. ed had probably five years experience working on big hotels on palm beach, so he came in as really a very experienced expert. timothy: he built three houses. he built a health those kind of a lean to and then he built a house that was out of town. and then he built a third house, this is the king-comarde house. cromartie mary louise king, so that is why we called it the cromartie-ki -- the king-cromartie...
124
124
May 22, 2015
05/15
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 124
favorite 0
quote 0
as ed henry said the state department hasn't released all of the e-mails. they said this will not all be out until 2016 and that gives the republicans an excuse to not finish the investigation because they don't have all of the information. hilary clinton said she is only coming once to capital hill. so this is giving a lot of material to people running for president. >> do the voters care bob? are there any indication this is affecting her? she is still maintaining high poll ratings. >> there are some democrats behind the scenes i have talked to that are worried about this and how bill clinton is going to continue giving speeches and that can cause problems for her. the nitty-gritty of the details and tax filings i don't think the average american voter is closely following this. but the transparency and lack there of does resonate with vote voters voters. if you like hilary clinton, you will like her. this could swing some voters. every administration that comes in whether it is obama or clinton they vow to be transparent and republican presidents too. an
as ed henry said the state department hasn't released all of the e-mails. they said this will not all be out until 2016 and that gives the republicans an excuse to not finish the investigation because they don't have all of the information. hilary clinton said she is only coming once to capital hill. so this is giving a lot of material to people running for president. >> do the voters care bob? are there any indication this is affecting her? she is still maintaining high poll ratings....
86
86
May 27, 2015
05/15
by
KTVU
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> henry coleman was a person of interest. investigators are now looking for him. [ indiscernible ] >> her vehicle was located in oklahoma and henry coleman was in possession of the vehicle at the time. >> he hopes the family can now find peace. >> they will be relieved they found their loved one. it will be devastating for a parent. >> reporter: they have been trying to locate henry coleman for six months and they are not sure if he is still alive. investigators say the family is relieved the remains have been found. allie rasmus, ktvu fox 2 news. >>> back to the issue of homelessness in the south bay. $520million a year. how much santa clara county spends on services for the homeless. and that is more money than it would cost to pay for permanent housing. ktvu's ann rubin with more on what the study found and how officials are responding. >> reporter: the study looked at 104,000 homeless people over six years and while it found it is expensive to house them it is more expensive not to. >> reporter: these keys to her apartmen
. >> henry coleman was a person of interest. investigators are now looking for him. [ indiscernible ] >> her vehicle was located in oklahoma and henry coleman was in possession of the vehicle at the time. >> he hopes the family can now find peace. >> they will be relieved they found their loved one. it will be devastating for a parent. >> reporter: they have been trying to locate henry coleman for six months and they are not sure if he is still alive. investigators...
84
84
May 5, 2015
05/15
by
WCAU
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
it's a unique situation for henry and jack because jack is deaf and blind. usually kindsds with a sensory impairment do not get to go to camp with their siblings. andy's camp is one of the camps that we're sending kids do this year. >> tell me about the scholarship program. i'm sure if there was a family in your position they could need some help. >> it's not camp that's expensive. it's not the camp part. it's the interpreter who can be $25 an hour or the aids that can be $15 an hour. the scholarship is covering all of those things plus camp. we're sending the kids to camp with their support person which parents don't often get these experiences for their kids. kids like henry don't generally ever experience summer camp. >> we'll talk about the fund-raiser to help you raise money in a minute. andy, tell me what the camp is like. tell me about the experience. >> i think we live in a world of inclusion now. most kids used be in their own separate class. to have them with typical children playing along side and if their siblings can come along as well it's supe
it's a unique situation for henry and jack because jack is deaf and blind. usually kindsds with a sensory impairment do not get to go to camp with their siblings. andy's camp is one of the camps that we're sending kids do this year. >> tell me about the scholarship program. i'm sure if there was a family in your position they could need some help. >> it's not camp that's expensive. it's not the camp part. it's the interpreter who can be $25 an hour or the aids that can be $15 an...
100
100
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> but not so long ago he's just a boy named henry. >> to understand billy the kid you have to knowbout his mom katherine mccarty, an irish immigrant that comes ore in the wake of the irish potato felon. billy winds up acquiring some of her charm. >> much has been fabricated about billy the kid's life but the fact is it can little can b proven. while legend claims he was born in new york city no birth record has been found. he is bern into one of the most violent crimes of activity. the record attempt shows up in 1868 when he is 9 years old. >> new mexico is an ex traemly violent place. we have a mix of ex-con fed rats. law and toward is few and far between. >> within a year katherine dies of teshg cluberculosis. they bury her in a grave and head out into the world abandoned by their step dad and split between distant relatives. separated from his brother and with few resources and fewer options, billy resorts to crime. abopti -- adopting the alias william billy bonney. >> what you got for me, sheriff? >> high spirited little fella. you only a youngster. >> glad to have you. you wha
. >> but not so long ago he's just a boy named henry. >> to understand billy the kid you have to knowbout his mom katherine mccarty, an irish immigrant that comes ore in the wake of the irish potato felon. billy winds up acquiring some of her charm. >> much has been fabricated about billy the kid's life but the fact is it can little can b proven. while legend claims he was born in new york city no birth record has been found. he is bern into one of the most violent crimes of...
42
42
May 10, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
a boarder emerges from the petersen house, henry safford. hearing the noise, opens the door, holds out a candle to investigate. as he sees the unconscious lincoln in front of ford's theatre, he cries out to the men, "bring him in here." spontaneously, the 16th president would be carried up those steps. at the end of the first floor of the house is a small room with a bed readily available but too short for mr. lincoln. there he will be placed diagonally. the room was normally occupied by a union clerk named willie clark, who was out that night celebrating the winding down of the war. the bed frame here is six feet lincoln is 6'4". they could not remove the frames without collapsing the bed, so his torso will be propped up on pillows with his feet hanging out on the other corner. doctors monitoring his vital signs through the night. dr. leale is in that room the whole time. several doctors will come and go, including lincoln's personal physician, surgeon general barnes will also come. barnes will make an attempt with a probe to extract the bu
a boarder emerges from the petersen house, henry safford. hearing the noise, opens the door, holds out a candle to investigate. as he sees the unconscious lincoln in front of ford's theatre, he cries out to the men, "bring him in here." spontaneously, the 16th president would be carried up those steps. at the end of the first floor of the house is a small room with a bed readily available but too short for mr. lincoln. there he will be placed diagonally. the room was normally occupied...
145
145
May 15, 2015
05/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 1
shawn henry, thank you for joining us. it is time for a status update. when i sat down with kim dotcom, one of the big questions was the status of piracy. it is a problem the entertainment industry is battling. there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. here is what we found. we have come a long way from napster and megaupload. it has been just too easy to of live music movies, and tv shows to the internet and share it illegally. take it from the so-called pirate king himself. kim: if you are a hollywood studio and you release your content in one country first the united states, and roll it out over a couple of months, and other countries along the world, and expect the internet community in these different countries to wait for the release. emily: "game of thrones" is the most pirated show in the world. the latest episode racking up 2.2 million illegal downloads in just 12 hours. that said streaming sites like spotify and netflix are said to actually be reducing the amount of piracy out there because they make it easier to watch and listen to what y
shawn henry, thank you for joining us. it is time for a status update. when i sat down with kim dotcom, one of the big questions was the status of piracy. it is a problem the entertainment industry is battling. there may be a light at the end of the tunnel. here is what we found. we have come a long way from napster and megaupload. it has been just too easy to of live music movies, and tv shows to the internet and share it illegally. take it from the so-called pirate king himself. kim: if you...
51
51
May 17, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
is i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] there was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? who are you anyway? [laughter] so when i told her she was obviously disappointed. she said that's just terrible. she said i drove three and half hours to meet a great man like henry kissinger and all i got was a nobody like you. [laughter] i said i'm sorry you feel so bad. i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better better. after brief pause she said well there is. i said what is it? she leaned forward and a conspiratorial manner and i leaned forward in our forfeits were retouching. she said nobody will ever know the difference. she said would you mind signing henry kissinger's name to my post or? so i did. and it's hanging today in eastern connecticut is a daily reminder to me not to take these introductions to seriously. most of you have heard henry kissinger speak. so here's the best part of the story. about a year ago he and i appear jointly at a conference in manhattan and there was a moderator and two chairs and he asked us questions about
is i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] there was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? who are you anyway? [laughter] so when i told her she was obviously disappointed. she said that's just terrible. she said i drove three and half hours to meet a great man like henry kissinger and all i got was a nobody like you. [laughter] i said i'm sorry you feel so bad. i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better better. after brief pause she said well there is. i...
43
43
May 25, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
is i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] there was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? who are you anyway? [laughter] so when i told her she was obviously disappointed. she said that's just terrible. she said i drove three and half hours to meet a great man like henry kissinger and all i got was a nobody like you. [laughter] i said i'm sorry you feel so bad. i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better better. after brief pause she said well there is. i said what is it? she leaned forward and a conspiratorial manner and i leaned forward in our forfeits were retouching. she said nobody will ever know the difference. she said would you mind signing henry kissinger's name to my post or? so i did. and it's hanging today in eastern connecticut is a daily reminder to me not to take these introductions to seriously. most of you have heard henry kissinger speak. so here's the best part of the story. about a year ago he and i appear jointly at a conference in manhattan and there was a moderator and two chairs and he asked us questions about
is i said i'm not henry kissinger. [laughter] there was a photograph of henry kissinger. she said you are not? who are you anyway? [laughter] so when i told her she was obviously disappointed. she said that's just terrible. she said i drove three and half hours to meet a great man like henry kissinger and all i got was a nobody like you. [laughter] i said i'm sorry you feel so bad. i wish there was something i could do to make you feel better better. after brief pause she said well there is. i...
37
37
May 26, 2015
05/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> and john henry has been covering this for us. anything in that long monologue, that sort of stuck out at you. >> definitely, the tone i have been watching how this is playing out with respect to our new attorney general and this local u.s. attorney consistent with what we are seeing from the top from loretta lynch, which is a whole new approach to these cases and what we saw -- >> what is that approach, what did you hear? what is it going to be. >> i saw a love fest. i saw the u.s. attorney embracing each other saying you know what we had problems but we are partners we are attached a t the hip and we will get this done together. he was so conciliatory, i started to forget what the problem was in the first place. >> i am getting a calfty just listening to him let me get to john henry smith, it is important to remember here, the impetus for this investigation. undertaken by the justice department. michael brelo and the decision on that case was rendered over the weekend. >> that's right. 31 at the time, he was involve one of 13 of
. >> and john henry has been covering this for us. anything in that long monologue, that sort of stuck out at you. >> definitely, the tone i have been watching how this is playing out with respect to our new attorney general and this local u.s. attorney consistent with what we are seeing from the top from loretta lynch, which is a whole new approach to these cases and what we saw -- >> what is that approach, what did you hear? what is it going to be. >> i saw a love...
50
50
May 18, 2015
05/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm john henry smith. thousands are fleeing their homes in into eastern iraq after ramadi has fallen under isil control. some 8,000 have been forced to leave. secretary of state john kerry spoke about isil during his trip to south korea. he said the group and others that he calls daesh are growing stronger in the region, and as such the iraqi government has no time to waste. >> particularly in anbar where you don't yet have the presence of the iraqi security forces in the full numbers necessary to take the fight to dash everywhere yet i underscore yet. there are targets of opportunity like ramadi or somewhere elsewhere dash has the ability to inflict great damage. >> the head of u.s. central command met with iraq's defense minister in baghdad today, and thousands have arrived to kick start the fight. >> they were caught in the cross fire and now they have no place to go. according to the international organization for migration 8,000 people were forced to leave ramadi when fighters belonging to the islamic
i'm john henry smith. thousands are fleeing their homes in into eastern iraq after ramadi has fallen under isil control. some 8,000 have been forced to leave. secretary of state john kerry spoke about isil during his trip to south korea. he said the group and others that he calls daesh are growing stronger in the region, and as such the iraqi government has no time to waste. >> particularly in anbar where you don't yet have the presence of the iraqi security forces in the full numbers...
132
132
May 7, 2015
05/15
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 132
favorite 0
quote 0
(henry rogers) the morning of the awards, she called me and said "henry, i have a terrible cold i'm ind up to her bedroom, where there she was, the queen holding her oscar. (stephen schiff) in terms of career management, the joan crawford story is a great shining example at every stage of her career as she grew older, as what she was doing faltered and the next thing took over she could be the woman scorned in "mildred pierce" and come back and win the oscar. she could adjust her morality in a way, to her looks, to her image. you know, that face changed more than any face in movie history. she knew how to keep an audience going madonna-like. we think of madonna as being kind of immortally in touch with the public pulse; not like joan crawford that was decades. i think once the public has embraced you unless you're a momentary fad or you physically change a lot or you've done something ... loathsome, that will forever turn them off -- one of those three which are all rare. other than that, once a star you can probably be one again. you're just orbiting around the dark side of the moon.
(henry rogers) the morning of the awards, she called me and said "henry, i have a terrible cold i'm ind up to her bedroom, where there she was, the queen holding her oscar. (stephen schiff) in terms of career management, the joan crawford story is a great shining example at every stage of her career as she grew older, as what she was doing faltered and the next thing took over she could be the woman scorned in "mildred pierce" and come back and win the oscar. she could adjust her...
490
490
May 10, 2015
05/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 490
favorite 0
quote 0
margaret hoover, whose great-grandmother was lou henry hoover. and clifton truman daniel whose grandmother was bess truman. and of course everybody knows that susan's mom was betty ford. each of them served in those unique and very interesting times. i want to start with you margaret, because yours is the longest span between great-grandmother and yourself yet you have a lot of interesting insights about a woman who served in what was a very difficult presidency. margaret: she did indeed. thank you, first, to susan for inviting us here tonight. thank you, rick, for hosting and to the foundation for hosting us all here. it's really a privilege to be here in grand rapids and see the museum and library for the first time. we have done this a little in the past together clifton , susan, and i. so forgive us, we may jest a little in between the three of us. to lou henry hoover, my great-grandmother who i never knew, was born in 1874 in waterloo, iowa, was raised in california, and died in the waldorf historia where she died with my great grandfather i
margaret hoover, whose great-grandmother was lou henry hoover. and clifton truman daniel whose grandmother was bess truman. and of course everybody knows that susan's mom was betty ford. each of them served in those unique and very interesting times. i want to start with you margaret, because yours is the longest span between great-grandmother and yourself yet you have a lot of interesting insights about a woman who served in what was a very difficult presidency. margaret: she did indeed. thank...
125
125
May 14, 2015
05/15
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 125
favorite 0
quote 0
my name's henry. (man) seems to me i knew your family, henry.idn't i fix your arm once when you were, oh, bucked off a horse? are you doc boone? i certainly am. ah, let's see. i'd been honorably discharged from the union army after the war of the rebellion. you mean the war for the southern confederacy. i mean nothing of the kind, sir. that was my kid brother broke his arm. you did a good job, doc, even if you was drunk. thank you, son. professional compliments are always pleasing. what happened to that boy whose arm i fixed? he was murdered. (john wayne) john ford was very careful in handling his actors to make sure that no matter what they do, that it helps to create an emotion in the audience. cause after all, good pictures are about people. and if he can get the emotions out of his actors it's naturally going to affect the audience. (lindsay anderson) ford had been a director for over twenty years. and had learned how to work with actors, get performances and to achieve reality in terms of character. i watched you with that baby that other w
my name's henry. (man) seems to me i knew your family, henry.idn't i fix your arm once when you were, oh, bucked off a horse? are you doc boone? i certainly am. ah, let's see. i'd been honorably discharged from the union army after the war of the rebellion. you mean the war for the southern confederacy. i mean nothing of the kind, sir. that was my kid brother broke his arm. you did a good job, doc, even if you was drunk. thank you, son. professional compliments are always pleasing. what...