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what makes jack and jack so unique is his patented internal projector. this technology allows jackect a bright, clear , animated face that looks like it's right out of a movie. and jack is completely self-contained. >> there's no additional parts to assemble all you have to do is plug and play with jack and jack. >> we've got the coolest house on the block. >> all i had to do was plug it in and the kids loved it. >> the clever usb cable means you can plug jack into an outlet or a portable battery pack so you can bring him anywhere. take with your trick or treat crew or to your next trunk or treat. and by day, jack, it's a festive pumpkin that enhances your fall decor. jack comes an orange , black or white and meet jabarin. >> jack's friends eat the cat and the hartleys together, they will make this season unforgettable jabarin jack before they sell out. we're so sure you love. we're offering a 30 day money back guarantee. and when you order two characters, you'll get free shipping color. click now to get your own jabarin. jack. order your own gever and jack no. go to jabarin jack .
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brothers jack jack and will plummer on opposite sidelines. freshman hits the hole. untouched. they may have gotten his e. the takes e lead. thd arter, cal showing showing guts. on fourth and oner to the tight end for the score.l is on top 28-24.untouched again2 yards to the house.cal wins with with ease. they have a good washington state team this week. week. > >> the san jose state spartans looking for redemption against western michigan. lost to them by 20 last year. cordero to cooks. what a catch. 17-0, san jose state. fourth quarter, this this is kyrie robinson. he continues the offensive explosion. may have been a touch touch there. easy run. 84 yards rushing for robinson on the evening. san jose state wins 34-6. > >> steven f. austin warner. why are you showing us this game, you may ask? robert mcgrew. that mcgrew. that makes it 98-0. and, 98-0. and, yes. takes a knee right here. that would have made made it guess you call it it sportsmanship. still, 98-0, steven f. austin wins that football game. > >> second block of sports is on the way. could the earthquakes stun the
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jack above all the rhombic jack rises. but he has problems with sustainability. even a plastic jack is more reliable on the ground. kage machine. raise on level ground, otherwise it will roll away or the jack will bend. place stops under the wheels, if there are none, bricks, large stones, anything that will prevent the wheel from rolling. look at the load capacity of your jack, it should correspond to the weight of your car. there is a ball in the pocket and it cost the life of all the jacks, except for the rolling jack, how tired i am. athlete in a tuxedo premium sedan originally from japan in a rich configuration with childhood diseases and expensive maintenance testing the second generation lexus is250 maxim why lexus because it is reliable in almost everything? the lexus is was a first-generation compact rear-wheel drive luxury sedan sold in japan as the toyota altezza, a model passionately modified by tuners and drifters. you actually got a new one. it is not, reviewed a lot of cars. what problems did they have? why not a lot of bits? a lot of cars were killed. yes, murder cases and so on. in several trim lev
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jack davis. his most recent book is this. "the bald eagle: the improbable journey of america's bird." jack davis, how did the bald eagle become our national symbol? jack: it's our national symbol, but not our national bird. the u.s. has no national bird. congress has never designated a national bird as it has a national mammal, the bison, and a national tree at a national flower. the bald eagle has been an emblem of the country since 1782 when we put it on the front of the great seal of the united states. and a very popular one. peter: why a national symbol but not a national bird? jack: congress has never designated a national bird. tomorrow congress could technically designate the sidewalk pigeon as the national bird. let's hope they don't do that. but, i am part of a group that is going to launch a campaign to have the bald eagle officially named by congress as the national bird. stay tuned. peter: there is a story we have all heard for years about benjamin franklin and the turkey and wanting that to be a national bird or the national symbol. jack: that story is somewhat apocryphal. then franklin did compare the moral values of the bald eagle with
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jack and jack so unique. is his patented internal projector. this technology allows jack to project a bright, clear , animated face that looks like it's right out of a movie. and jack is completely self-contained. there's no additional parts to assemble. >> all you have to do is plug and play with jabarin. jack, we've got the coolest house on the block. all i had to do was plug it in and the kids loved it. >> the clever usb cable means you can plug jack into an outlet or a portable battery pack. so you can bring him anywhere, take him with your trick or treat crew or your next trunk or tree. >> and by day, jack, it's a festive pumpkin that enhances your fall decor. jack comes an orange , black or white and meet jabarin. jack's friends eat the cat and the hartleys. >> together they will make this season unforgettable jabarin jack before they sell out. we're so sure you love it. we're offering a 30 day money back guarantee and when you order two characters, you'll get free shipping color. click now to get your own jabarin jack order your own jabarin jack. no, go to geben ja
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has dozens of expressions, making him the jack lantern that everyone loves and remembers. what makes jack and jacko unique in his patented internal projector. this technology allows jack to project a bright, clear , animated face that looks like it's quite out of a movie. and jack is completely self-contained. >> there's no additional parts to assemble all you have to do is plug and play with jabarin. >> jack, we've got the coolest house on the block. >> all i had to do was plug it in and the kids loved it. >> the clever usb cable means you can plug jack into an outlet or a portable battery pack so you can bring him anywhere. take him with your trick or treat crew or to your next trunk or treat. and by day, jack is a festive pumpkin that enhances your fall to core. jack comes an orange , black or white and jabarin jack's friends eat the cat and the huntley's together. >> they will make this season unforgettable. your jabarin jack before they sell out. we're so sure you love it. we're offering a 30 day money back guarantee. and when you order two characters, you'll get free shipping color. click no
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jack right between the index finger and the thumb. and i'm told that that's a source of gushing blood. thank you, jack. columbus zoo, director of the columbus zoo jack want to -- he didn't want to call attention he was afraid he would embarrass the show i never had that fear. [ laughter ] i became inured to that. jack walks into the -- and nobody -- you couldn't give him a ride jack walks into the emergency room, and the woman or the attendant, whomever it was at the desk, picks up the emergency phone, because jack's now covered with blood in his abdomen, "gunshot victim gunshot victim gunshot victim," click now everybody in the hospital comes running out toward jack. and they said, "where were you shot?" this and that. and jack said, "no, no, i wasn't shot i was bitten by a beaver." [ laughter ] and now the police hear that - now, this is a real violation, because the police come over and they say, "you know, there are no beaver in new york, sir," because they think they got -- who knows what they got? and he said, "no, no, no, no, no, no, no, the beaver is mine." [ laughter ] and the police said, "you're not allowed -- it's illegal to have a beave
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hall and see the set they've got to actually see a union jack they've got to actually see a union jack on _ they've got to actually see a union jacka union jack on the site rather than red roses _ jack on the site rather than red roses are — jack on the site rather than red roses are red flags. the fact that they sing — roses are red flags. the fact that they sing the national anthem yesterday. there is a whole host of differences — yesterday. there is a whole host of differences about it. and as a result— differences about it. and as a result of— differences about it. and as a result of that, i have not seen labour— result of that, i have not seen labour activists have this kind of spring in— labour activists have this kind of spring in their step that they've -ot spring in their step that they've got at _ spring in their step that they've got at the — spring in their step that they've got at the moment since tony blair's day. got at the moment since tony blair's day~ they— got at the moment since tony blair's day. they actually can send victory now, _ day. they actually can send victory now. and — day. they actually can send vic
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jack russell helmet, well, jack jack russell is just the breed of my dreams after watching the movie at is, then i did not see such dogs, that is, we have, uh, well, in the city there were no jack russells at all. so i thought that i want such a dog. even though i had a dog at the time. well, two dogs. but when i entered the institute i left, well, respectively, in student. write a wish i couldn't afford to have a dog. here, then a rented apartment, too, as it were, well, not really getting a dog. and all the time, as if this process was put off, put off, put off, yes, but at some point, ruslan and i went on vacation, and there i saw a lot of stray dogs. similar to jack russell. and they were so wild that they didn’t react to people at all. they just lived there, in the thickets, bamboo, or what ? well, that is, right here and not at all reacted. that's when i thought that i had enough of everything, how would i have to wait to start. so i came and started looking for my dog. that's exactly the red face. here ruslan was not against it. if in fact not, ruslan was not against it at all.
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jack parrot. jack? is the coffin is on his way. what's the atmosphere like that where you walk? i get yeah indeed. so we're expecting the coffin any moment now to arrive here for this pops more private part of this day's events regarding specifically the funeral . we have seen oversee the pageantry in westminster abbey, and now it arrives here. we've been speaking to people. up and down the road that aligned to and wins. i think it's fair to say that a lot of the people have turned on necessarily, you know, sort of chest beating monica, but a lot of people just here to pay their respects to the queen, a woman that has led this country for 70 years. so just take you through a little bit of what's happened. we had the, our long ceremony in westminster abbey. the queen arrived there from the, the 5 days laying in rest in westminster, who with tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people that attended at the moment. see her coffin . but this is the more formal set of events. we had a number of dignitaries leaders from all over the world attending the funeral. and as we say that the coffin is now arriving in a herse here to windsor castle. jack, we've been seeing a lot of pictures earlier of the arrival of the coffin in windsor, if not at windsor castle where you are. so what else can we expect to happen next? the common will arrive, it will then be moved from her back on to a carriage which will then be moved and taken up what's known as the long walk, which is the 4 kilometer roads, essentially beautiful grass lined road, which is now full of people. we've been told the public are told not to make their way on to the long walk. it's totally full for people to see that last procession of the coffin, which is then going to move up into windsor castle. then it will be taken to saint george's chapel, which is where there be a small what's been called commitment ceremony for a just a few 100 gas. and then after that, later on this evening, that will be the burial weather will only be close family. now tact tell us why is it that the queen will be buried at window? well, certainly it's where many of her closest rattled relatives
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man: so the piece that is in the park it's--a jack totem it's called, and it's a play on words. it's made out of car jacks and truck jacks, but it's also a dialogue with, um, a sort of other narrative within the piece, whichs, uh, "jack and the beanstalk." my interpretation of it is the idea of overcoming your fear and succeeding, you know, but also kind of having a dream that maybe other people might not necessarily be as convinced about, but your conviction to push forward and climb. so the entire sculpture is actually kind of made with room service--they're covers, these kind of warmers, these silver warmers, as well as boot laces, and the boot laces for me is a material i use in my work a lot. it's a kind of metaphor for movement. it's also--within this piece, it's a reference to sort of the adage pulling yourself up by your bootstraps, which is a kind of misnomer in a sense because it's impossible to do that. you kind of need help. you need a community, you need support. the really important component of that in addition to the warmers are the rebars. in a lot of cultures and the culture i grew up in jamaica, a reba
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on friday night at the labor cup in london, now represent team europe and face american. jude jack stopped jack sock and frances tearful, who are playing for team were.
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jack: i will ask about the drug takes. what are we watching? jack: we are watching bio jen. they bet a lot on alzheimer's and also eli lilly. this is not as important so even if the trial doesn't go well they have enough things going on like obesity drug they have that could boost the stock in the future. jackght your eye? jack: lily is favorably mentioned and three more in an active extreme generosity. boston scientific make medical equipment, pacemakers, spinal cords, scopes, patients pool of electric procedures during the pandemic and going back including for routine tests, turned 50 a couple weeks ago. i understand become more fill you with the scopes from the portfolio soon. growth is strong, united health one of our panelists because that one of the best positioned healthcare services companies in the world, that and technology going down and it cells and finally this hugely profitable drug called humira which will face competition next year. it is 12 times next year's earnings but there are other drugs and growth will pick up after that. jack: thank you for that, we couldn't leave the segment without hitting that point. it may feel like the world is going crazy but going back to jack hough who explains we are careening toward normalcy next. and buying your starter home. or whatever t
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jack, but certainly under pressure. simon jack. thank — but certainly under pressure. simon jack jack, thank you. our political correspondent alex forsyth joins us now from westminster. liz truss making it clear that she and the chancellor are sticking to their plans, what is the mood in the party liked? $5 plans, what is the mood in the party liked? ~ , , :, plans, what is the mood in the party liked? a i. plans, what is the mood in the party liked? ,,, liked? as you say, liz truss is holdin: liked? as you say, liz truss is holding firm _ liked? as you say, liz truss is holding firm which _ liked? as you say, liz truss is holding firm which is - liked? as you say, liz truss is holding firm which is exactly l liked? as you say, liz truss is i holding firm which is exactly what you might expect. she spoke a lot about the energy package that she is putting in place, that is because thatis putting in place, that is because that is something a lot of mps support, helping millions of households with their energy bills. what we didn't hear as much from the prime minister on is a recogn
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jack park joins been out from bath brussels. jack, how are your repair leaders responding to the queen's death? we've had a statement in the european commission president of on the line you called her an anchor of stability in the hardest times saying not only that, but also that she took personal inspiration from the queen for i am going to have to interrupt you momentarily. but because we are seeing german chance that i know how old are mantell ladies learned, had taken out or to the death of the british clean. elizabeth. the 2nd moves and touches every one of us across the globe. there is grief and a real sense or sympathy with the family as well. all of the flowers in front of buckingham palace in london, but also in front of the british embassy. right in berlin show. the place that queen elizabeth had in every one's heart here in germany as well, and the cooling and forlorn britain has lost its queen, and the world has lost a figure of a century at yahoo. over 70 years, she reigned. it seems like half an eternity, but the queen embodied the best of our common european legacy democracy and the rule of law. elizabeth elizabeth by 2 guns, dimmed in some em lunch. elizabeth the 2nd devoted her life to the service of her countrymen and women. look to follow dunc barcode often, and we look with gratitude at the life of the queen who stood among other things that were done for you to also over coming m ninty. after the 2nd world war. her many visits to germany, them because of her strong presence and interest in the people she met will stay with us for a long time. over the ladies and gentlemen that i have already turned on for me to share our condolences with british prime minister is trust germany to mourned the death of a queen elizabeth the 2nd. we wish her successor, king charles, the 3rd strength, and kinda all the best for his reign. thank you. they just heard earl german, chancellor, all of charlotte paying his respects to queen elizabeth. let's go back to dw political correspondent, nina houser, who standing in front of the chance, larry, nina, a very brief statement there what stood out to you in the chancellor's words. but it's essentially what we expected is a repeat of what he said on twitter already a late last night, thanking the queen for her role in overcoming the enmity between german and britain during the 2nd world war. so the role that she played in that crucial post war period where she did come to that young democracy here in 1965 to assure the germans that britain did trust them to that they were going to become a different country and that britain would support them so he thanked the queen for that. he also said that she will be missed also here in germany. and what i thought was interesting was when he said she embodied the best of on common european democracy. and he stressed the role of the rule of law, and that i think was a very subtle message that germany still considers britain to be part of the european family. indeed, he also said he, she devoted her life to the service of her country and countrymen, that something we've been hearing time and time again from all leaders. all people paying respects to the queen that sort of sense of duty. and in a reminder, again of those special relationship that the royal family has with germany and germans to the late queen. well, the queen herself, had german routes through her great, great grandmother who was married to a german and then also a prince. philip, her husband, who died last year and had german roots himself and the queen had her very special relationship with this country. because of course, he got to know nazi germany as a young woman and he helped the british troops during the 2nd world war when her country was bombed, essentially by nazi germany. and still after the war, he made sure that to this message got out to the world. the britain does believe that m. o, strong and democratic germany was needed in the global family, if you will. and she did it even though if she didn't exert political influence just the fact that she came here so often unofficial state visits 5 times, once every decade, many times in between. she visited berlin several times when the country celebrated its 750 years of existence. for example. she was also here and that in itself was a fact that term was he always had a very good idea of what was happening in germany and always tried to send signals to the well that the british german relationship was something that was true to her heart but again, i do have to stress the fact that many here in germany, they did a door and a love her. and they loved the fact and also looked up to her for her discipline and for the way that she fulfilled this role and stayed out of politics essentially . but when it came to the briggs debate, many people here were heartbroken to see a queen. so in active somebody who had fought for the british general relationship for so long for the friendship to see that she stay true to herself, she didn't interfere in the debate. and eventually britain left that you and you do have to say that british german relations have deteriorated somewhat, but tons law will have towards also in his statement make clear that m he as sent his condolences to the new british premier list trust. and so of course they are going to try and get on, but of course they have to get to know it at the 1st or i, nina, thank you very much than did over his nina hasa. and as nina was just explaining, the british royal family still proved to be very popular here, although germany abolished its own monarchy more than a century ago. queen elizabeth had ancestors german roots as name was saying, but during the 1st world war, the house of sax recovered, gotta in england, opted for a name change and became the house of windsor. but elizabeth always showed a came interest in her country of heritage a feeling that was mutual. oh, the germans and the queen that was affection on both sides. they clearly liked each other. over half a century, the queen made 5 state visits to germany. more than 2, most of the countries in the world. but the relationship took a little time to warm up. it was 2 decades after the end of hostilities that the british monarch set foot on german soil for the 1st time since the end of the war. the queen's visit was considered a gesture of reconciliation by west germans. very early on, the german public was very sympathetic with his young queen. she was a very modern woman at the time she had a love marriage, so she, she chose her husband and her husband, prince philip, had german routes. although this was played down to the british public as was the queen's own heritage. elizabeth, the 2nd was also descended from german nobility. when the queen returned in 1978, she found a much more self confident, modern west germany relations between the 2 countries had by now normalized her 3rd state visit in 1992 was to a re unified germany the courting at the former border crossing checkpoint charlie, the queen's visit, was seen as a positive gesture at the time when many britons were fearful of a german resurgence. she received a warm welcome in the reinstated german capital term and by and large, really not want to kiss, but it's lovely to have them won a key next door. it doesn't cost anything at all and you get all the glamour in 2004. she was back in, fell in again. this time with a speech with an unusually clear political aspect in which she acknowledged victims on both sides in world war 2 to learn from history to look beyond simplistic stereotypes to realize how often we share the same outcome. her final visit to germany was in 2015. as always, the queen emphasized the deep connections between britain and germany. we can seize a constant interest or between 2 countries, which had become again, very friendly in 5 decades of i think, very stable and, and frankly relationships between germany and united kingdom. queen elizabeth, the 2nd will be remembered as a friend of germany. and let's go back to bronsels now and get some of those reactions from across europe with my colleague, jack herrick. jack, how, how are your of him leaders responding to this news of the queen's death? yes, we heard from europe in commission president saying that she was an anchor of stability in even the hardest times. and we had a statement, particularly eloquent, actually from the french president, a manual, my crohn kind of back hearing what we've heard in that report. and also from what are what the german chancellor olaf shows the same. a statement ran. the queen of 16 kingdoms, loved france, which loved her back. she stood with the giants of the 20th century, said that statement from the french president manual ma chronus hard to underestimate how significant the queen was for european leaders all over the world . she was loved. she was a symbol of the united kingdom. and her last will be found all over europe. and we were just discussing with nina hauser that germany, of course, is no longer a monarchy, but there are many monarchies across the continent. how have your pin royal fami
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friday night at the labor cup in london, now represent team europe and face american. jude jack stopped, jack sock and frances tear foe, who are playing for team world. federal will hang up his racket after that mat. ah, this is al jazeera, these are the top stories. moscow controlled regions in eastern and southern ukraine are voting on whether to become part of russia. the referendums are taking place of no handsome john as zap reacher and curse on until tuesday. keven as western allies say, the vote is a sham and an unlawful land grab united nations. investigators say they found evidence. russia committed war crimes and territories it had occupied in ukraine earlier this year is a violations were committed including rape, torture, and confinement of children. but the investigation in those court here he has showed a large number of ball crowns. private russians can be found to whom incidents of the treatment farther ukrainian showing that since there are 4 tre, mom. not only the russian patrol, so one the ukranian showed, but of course, according to what we found, and much less only toolki
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jack. thank you very much. are correspond jack park there in brussels. and you have been watching our special coverage of the death of britons. queen elizabeth, i'm terry martin. for me and all of us here at dw nurse, thanks for watching. is the end of the pandemic in site. we show what it could look like. will return to normal. and we visit those who are finding it difficult. with success in our weekly coven, 19 special. next on d. w. o. to the point in the opinion. clear positions, international perspectives. rushes war on ukraine, maybe stalling. but that didn't stop a lot of a protein from staging. a massive military drill with some help from his friends brushes, war games with china and india to start as a global arms race. find out on to the point with d. w. a. in a ended glistening place of the mediterranean sea. it's waters connect people of many cultures, seen it almost rock and to far a dual career drift along with exploring modern lifestyles and mediterranean where it has history left its traces. i doing their dream. ah. letter to me this week
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jack paris, who is standing by in london. hello to you, jack. so we can see quite a lot of people behind you, what has been going on on this final day of the queen's lying and state. well just in the last few minutes, we had the national moment of silence for the queen, the whole of the cue, the people that had been queuing up for hours behind me, went silent for one minute at the top of the hour and indeed across the country that took place a moment of reflection to celebrate and consider and reflect on the queen's legacy . as i say, these people have been queuing up behind me for a number of hours the, the queue, the possibility to see the queen's coffee lying in stay in westminster hall is available until 6 30 in the morning, monday morning. and after that, it will only be dignitaries that can attend, and then obviously we will have the funeral, as we heard in the report, joe biden, the u. s. president. he has attended the coffin in westminster hall and a number of other foreign dignitaries in royal was a descending on london to attend the funeral. interestingly as well, we had among them a number of commonwealth leaders, including the australian prime minister, antony albany. his country is seriously considering ending the monarch being head of state that he, along with a lot of other commonwealth countries, didn't really want to talk about the politics of this are attending to respect the legacy at the queen. and that's why they're, they're showing up, as indeed are the thousands upon thousands of people. it queued up because we had coffee and hello for those. indeed, really remarkable that so many people are willing to stay and wait all night long. and just for a chance to pay their respects to the late queen. now you, you mentioned that tomorrow's funeral will, of course, be a massive gathering of world leaders. one exactly is planned. what can we expect? what we know that around to size indignities will be attending the funeral, which is being held at westminster abbey, just a stone's throw away from westminster hall, where she's been lying in state. the funeral will take place there, and then shortly afterwards, her body will be transferred in the coffin of the sea to windsor castle, which is where she is going to be interred. in a private ceremony with only family in attendance, she will be buried next. her husband, the late prince philip, also in the same burial site where her sister and her parents as well have been laid to rest. that is a private, a family affair. but that will not stop the people of britain and indeed the world turning out on the street to reflect this moment as we then obviously hand over to the full reign of prince charles. and i think was interesting, we've had this, you know, 1011 day period now of morning since the queen died with huge events. this q is become something of a national event in itself. i think was what was he is was the funeral is ending. then there will start to be the discussions about the king's coronation, which will be another major event as this country switches from the reign of queen elizabeth, the 2nd, the reign of king charles that i correspond. and jack parrot, and leonard for as jack. thank you very much. let's get a check now. some of the other stories making news around the world. a spanish charity has rescued more than 370 people from the sea in 3 separate operations in 24 hours. one group of migrants spent 4 days drifting in the mediterranean. they were trying to cross to europe from north africa. many of those rescued were suffering from dehydration. the european commission has recommended suspending 7500000000 euros in funds to hungary over corruption allegations, hungarian prime minister victor or bonds. government is accused of mismanaging e u funds and dismantling democratic institutions. the suspension must be approved by a majority of member states within 3 months, which was home, a powerful earthquake as head south east taiwan. the epicenter of the 6.8 magnitude quake was in the coastal city of ty tongue. it was also felt in the capital taipei, it follows at $6.00 magnitude earthquake in the south east. on saturday eveni
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jack _ write andy murray off. he has the will to win. jack draper _ write andy murray off. he has the will to win. jackandy murray off. he has the will to win. jack draper has had i write andy murray off. he has the will to win. jack draper has had a | will to win. jack draper has had a good year. he's got to be feeling confident about reaching the second week of a grand slam for the first time in his career?— week of a grand slam for the first time in his career? absolutely, he is and uncharted _ time in his career? absolutely, he is and uncharted territory, - time in his career? absolutely, he is and uncharted territory, but - time in his career? absolutely, he is and uncharted territory, but he| is and uncharted territory, but he seems really assured. he feels like he belongs... he's always believed in his tennis, but he was hit with injuries earlier in his career, and this is why he's hoping to make his mark. he's already seen off felix oj aliassime. he will fancy his chances. a lot of the british players and people within british tennis have been very excited about jack draper for a tennis have be
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like the four corners of a 4 jack, the more comfortable the jack is, the easier it will be to do. in our tests , two screw rhombic jacksnvolved, more expensive and cheaper rolling and two cylindrical, one hydraulic, and the other screw is made of plastic. well, here are our jacks. i have already chosen, healthy, let's test the strength of the jacks in the laboratory, let's start with the rambic familiar to most drivers. both withstood the load twice as much under pressure. than indicated by the manufacturers. at the same time, the one and a half ton lasted more than two minutes, and the press broke with it. during our attempts to drive the ball into the pocket, it turned out that under the pressure of the jack it was easier to have a flat surface and a uniform load, as soon as the car became krinitsa rhombic monotonous bent. careful car, wait, come back or what? well, what knocks out this one, if we are talking about screw ones, then this is the wear of the screws, the screw stands vertically, and therefore excessive bending loads disable the plastic jack. bread looks like this for new cars, the jack is bent, it is imp
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indeed, we bumped into a mum and her son, jack. jacke next point that they were saying was the end point of the queue. she did not understand where that was, she was quite confused about how to get there. there are people with accessibility issues that are also trying to stilljoin the queue, and there is concern about them. the stewards are trying to do their best to advise people on the best way to go, but we have witnessed them counting how many wristbands they have left, and they are now starting to tell people, you may not get a wristband, which technically means you can no longer join the queue to view the queen lying in state. join the queue to view the queen lying in state-— lying in state. there might be of some very _ lying in state. there might be of some very disappointed - lying in state. there might be of some very disappointed people, j lying in state. there might be of- some very disappointed people, and of course, it is a cold night that a lot of them might be looking forward to. you come act indeed, it is a little bit c
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jacks, jack them up, cut them off. keep an eye out for security and the cops. walk out of here and get these items, 300 bucks apiece, generally, and making 10 or 20 a night. >> reporter: police departments holding evening events to combat the problem so drivers can their vin numbers permanently marked. >> deep hole in the pocket so if anything we can do to try to prevent it, it would be great. >> reporter: according to the nati there are 155 catalytic converter bills in 37 states and congress. 29 of which have enacted laws helping to curb the crime. one step you can take personally to protect your car, adding a steel plate cover over your catalytic converter. >> the amount of time that it would take to steal the converter would deter them from taking it. you can't just jackout here live i'm told to replace a catalytic converter on the prius behind me would cost around $3,000. but if you have comprehensive insurance you're likely covered against catalytic converter theft. guys? >> all right, very important information there, mona. >> still expensive for the car owner or the insurance company. >> sure is. >>> next, grammy winning rapper coolio passing away unexpectedly. what we know so far when we come back with more "gma." ♪ because i been blasting and laughing so long that even my mama thinks my mind is gone ♪ ccs have you given to people? me? about 1000. walgreens...millions. no way can i miss her big debut. with your booster, i think you'll be there. for every twirl. i got a shot so my sister won't get sick. way to go, big bro! so while we're here... ...flu shot, as well? let's do it. when you need to talk vaccinations, our pharmacists are here. ♪ ♪ [ sleep app ] and the end. you have now reached the ouend of the sleep app.e. you're the first person to
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>> i think you are going to expect to see them continue the argument that this special master should be in place to check all the documents, whether classified or not. for what they claim is executive privilege. none of those things are a place-able to any of the documents, much lattice -- i certainly couldn't preemie judge what they will say, but the issues here really aren't that -- >> and then what are you expecting a happening in judge near ease court? the now appointed special master? >> both signs are going to file their layout with what the agenda should be for the special master. they have a touching of the gloves with the special master. and kind of set the rules. >> so, the guardian has a great piece, an analysis on what we have been seeing play out, especially when we look at the rulings of judge aileen cannon in favor of the former president and his team. the title of it kind of says it, which a special master ruling showing trump's takeover of courts has started to sting. in it, they write this. in 14-year term, he slim through about 30% of the entire u.s. federal judiciary. last week, this significance of trump's hyper aggressive re-modeling of the federal bench lurched into view. what do you make of this? >> well, remember, one elections have consequences. and politicians say that a lot, there is nowhere that has been more visible for the last five years than the federal judiciary. the focus of former president trump and senate minority leader -- these judges were favorable to trump and favorable to the republicans in place. still, some of these judges, one of them looked at by the legal community in terms of outliers. and the credentials behind their ideological -- before this last case, he has basically decided to appoint a special master for executive privilege. and has also with the classified material, done the same thing. i don't think is anybody, any judge in the nine states, that would say the former president has people to take the documents. we are in novel legal territory. >> here's a thing, the, why should we be looking at the 11th circuit of any differently? considering the makeup of the 11th circuit, the doj is still wanting to raise the appeal to them. folks that i've been speaking to feel confident in their case, in their appeal case to the 11th circuit. but again, they were confident when it came to a possible ruling from judge cannon, who ruled in former presidents favor. >> yeah, again, i wouldn't prejudge with the 11th circuit is going to do. you are looking at a panel there that contains multiple judges and they might do something we have seen. and the supreme court sometimes opposes former president trump, including justices who he appointed. so that's a little higher level. people who get to that level have been vetted more generally speaking. not to prejudge, but i don't think we know what they are going to do. >> yeah, we definitely don't. but we'll be watching. john finale, great to talk to you, thank you. we want to talk to congresswoman madeleine dean, who served as -- thanks for joining us, we appreciate it, it's good to see you on this sunday afternoon. >> thank you for inviting me. >> yeah, of course. i actually want to reach a quote i read to john finale. and it's titled this. special master ruling shows the takeover of courts has started to sing. in 14-year term, he slammed through 40% of the entire u.s. judiciary. the -- i wonder if we can apply this to some of the rulings we have heard from judge cannon, going into that. a lot of folks are telling me they felt as if he was going to rule in terms of -- that is not where we are having to appeal to the 11th circuit. what do you make of judge's -- >> i haven't read it, thank you for reading those top lines. but it's something we have watched over the course of the last five years. the president promised his inaugural address american carnage. he was previewing for us what he was going to do it every single a level. to your point, and the judicial level, he put in trump plus judges. those who would not adhere to the rule of law. those who were politically biased. many of them, not all of them. i don't want to whitewash the whole thing. but this ruling has become so obvious, this was a late trump appointment. and it was a late request for a special master. we know what donald trump does, he doesn't believe in the rule of law, he never adhered to his oath of office. he stole documents from the white house, he knew he had them, he lied about having them. many try to cover them up. and then the department of justice did the right thing in order to try to protect national security, to get those presidential documents back. so it is sad and cynical that we are stuck with so many of these trump appointed justices, who really do not revere the rule of law. and instead, have a political lens. >> are you worried at all about the appeals process being raised in the 11th circuit? >> i don't, for this reason. i call upon all those judges to do their duty and abide by their oath. we saw that many of the trump appointed judges wrote eloquent opinions, showing that mr. trump had no fraud that would change the outcome of the election. there are very wise trump appointed jurist to know right from wrong. they understand the grift that this former president has been a part of throughout his entire career. but sadly, at the expense of our democracy. >> so, the department of justice has been consistent in raising red flags about the possible damage that is being done and this process is being drawn out. national security concerns, specifically, and they say that in reaction to the judge's ruling, there is direct implications for national security. what is your reaction to that? >> i've been worried about that all along. i'm very worried about the department of justice. if you take a look at the affidavit that is a predicate for getting that legal search warrant to go into mar-a-lago, you can see on what the department of justice was worried about, based on what they had collected in january of this year. top secret documents, so they went in, they collected many more top secret documents, and other classified or unclassified presidential records which never should have been at mar-a-lago for one day. and national security is certainly one of the top things that folks worry about. documents that were taken as they have said, and we don't know the details of it, nor do i think we should, frankly. included in them was the nuclear posture of another country. i don't know if it's a friend. that is doggone scary. what was the former president intending to do? just a set of corruption's, a set of indecencies. and you see so many other political candidates who would be leaders, or republican governors imitating his corruption, his cynicism, his cruelty to americans, to foreigners, and to the rule of law. >> congresswoman, i want to switch gears here a little bit as we look ahead to the midterms. two major things going on right now, we are taking a look at abortion rights in this country. obviously, it seems like a rallying cry for democrats. there is also a political play happening when it comes to immigration concerns in this country, as well. let's talk first about abortion. we have a new nbc poll out with 37% of folks polled that are approving of the decision, versus 61%. i know you feel conch strongly about this issue, you are one of the individuals arrested after the decision was issued by the supreme court. what do you make of this moment for democrats heading towards the midterm elections and seizing on this opportunity to use as a rallying cry to get folks to the polls? >> well, i have to admit you, i got into some trouble, including an arrest in front of the supreme court. to lift up the horror that is the decision. i have three sons, but i have three daughters in law, and a grand son and instantly with the decision, a really corrupt majority on the supreme court, they have tried to relegate women and girls to second-class citizens. i have to tell you, i am at the third campaign event today going to the third one this evening. people in my congressional district of berks county,, women, girls, children. they are fired up. they are not going to take this. we are not going back, we will continue to make private health care choices so that candidates like doug mastriano, who was running in pennsylvania, republican candidates for governor, who participated in the insurrection. he doesn't believe in women's rights to privacy in her own personal health care choices. doctor mehmet on us, he will be our next governor. running here in pennsylvania, everybody knows he -- he is running here as a trumpster, and now he is trying to back away from being a trumpster. pencil vein ye won't put up with. it those two will protect our rights. but it is equally important, as every stop i have made today, abortion is the number one issue. registration here in -- it's way out among all people, but really up among women. some women who have never participated in the political process before coming up to me and saying, i am registered, i'm canvassing, i am knocking on doors. they are not going to get away with this. >> i also want to talk quickly about immigration, as well. whatever side of the aisle you are on, the immigration system in this country is broken and it's been broken for decades. you look at what is happening from -- from busing these people with their young children to places like new york city and boston, and martha's vineyard. especially not having the resources in place to handle this influx of people. being promised things that are just not there. what do you make of it? and then, the big picture though, what is the solution? >> i will agree with your first point. we need a immigration reform for two reasons. to make sure that we honor those who will come to our shores and seek asylum with good cause. but also, we need an immigration reform because we need immigrants in this country. we need immigrants at every level of our economy. immigration makes our country stronger. so you are right about number one. the actions of the governors and both texas and florida are so un-american, literally on american. how about shipping venezuelans? 's shipping these folks to martha's vineyard without any notice, of course. not saying, excuse me, help me here. in fact, if i read it correctly, they move them to the state of florida, as a political ploy. using them like chattel. not thinking about them as human beings, seeking refuge and martha's vineyard as -- does he call the officials to say i need help? of course not. and of course, the grotesque bigotry. do they understand they were venezuelans? do they understand they are fleeing communism? this is political stunts. and i served on the judiciary, i wish we could come forward and pass immigration reform. we have lots of proposals. but since the republicans have love using this to scare people and use it as a cudgel to try to stay in power. it is cruel. people should reject these leaders, and never vote for them again. >> congressman madeleine dean, thank you so much. we appreciate it. new calls for accountability. a mouse grave was found in ukrainian territory previously occupied by russian forces. what would that could mean for the war as ukraine continues to succeed on the battlefield. >> new york congressional candidate will join us. we will discuss how republicans and their radical stance on abortions is changing elections in swing districts like his. and i'm still working. in the kind of work that i do, you are surrounded by people who are all younger than you. i had to get help somewhere along the line to stay competitive. i discovered prevagen. i started taking it and after a period of time, my memory improved. it was a game-changer for me. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. ♪♪ hey dad, i'm almost out. i got you. any questions, chris? all good, thanks maura! there you go, one new inhaler! nice did you get my refill too? maybe [door bell] here you go, sir. you're a lifesaver. have a nice day. healthier is managing all your family's prescriptions in one app. cvs pharmacy. healthier happens together ♪ (customer) save yourself?! all your family's prescriptions in one app. money with farmers. 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(vo) the network you want. the price you love. only from verizon. >> all right, congressman marjorie taylor greene who has a history of heated exchanges around the capitol seems to have once again gotten into a confrontation, and this time it was caught on camera. the incident happened outside the capital on thursday evening. you're looking at the cell phone video after the deputy communications director for voters of tomorrow, mariana pickerel, walked in front of greene as she questioned the gross woman about her stance on gun reform. now we can't see green but, the video appears to show green kicking her from behind. take a look. >> how does the second amendment [inaudible] >> step out of the way. you're blocking -- >> joining me now is the deputy -- mariana coral. mariano, it's good to join you on this. before we have a conversation he can walk me through what happened that day and will happen, we want to read for folks to save in from the organization first released after the incident on thursday saying this. this afternoon, she, marjorie taylor greene, took her offenses to another level as you physically and verbally attack members of our team. in addition to yelling at our executive director, a mexican immigrant, to go to another country, she physically assaulted another young staffer. gen z is fed up with politicians who continue to put our lives in danger, and this aggression as one of the most visible examples yet of what we are up against. what happened? >> well, we were in d.c., advocating for our gen z agenda which is a set of policies that we as voters of tomorrow have, hold, and that broadly, gen z supportive of. we were in congress that day and we addressed it after the house rules committee members, of congress meeting in advocating for youth rights. we went up and ask marjorie taylor greene about some of the policies on the gen z agenda. and she responded with violence. >> and she kicked you when you walk in front of her? she visibly kind of kicked you -- did you harm you at all? what did she say? >> i mean -- i'm not hurt. but she said, excuse me, excuse me. she repeatedly called santiago, our executive director a child abuse or. she called us paid activists, which were not. and she was incredibly rude to us. 70 over other congressional offices, we want to, no one was disrespectful to us. they took a seriously. they listen to what young people had to say. they wanted to pay attention to what we believe in, and marjorie taylor greene did not show us that same respect. >> so you brought the -- mayor, the group starter, and i know you've both been considering pressing charges. any update on that? >> we've been talking to our lawyers and keeping our options open. >> got it. okay. here's what marjorie taylor greene is actually saying. she is saying and called you a group, foolish cowards. and when it comes to santiago she said that she's a pay political activists are just so happens to be blessed to have emigrated to our great country and he should be thankful for american freedoms. like our second amendment, instead of trying to destroy them, if he doesn't like it, he can go back. are you at all surprised by this statement, mariana? what is your reaction? >> i am incredibly disappointed that a member of congress is treating young americans this way. i'm also mexican american. my mom is a mexican immigrants. and that was very difficult for both santiago and i to have someone attack our right to be here, and for santiago, it was something very difficult because he's out here fighting for young voters with the rest of the voters of tomorrow team. and we are trying to get young people representation in congress, we're trying to get young people represented at every level of government, and marjorie taylor greene doesn't believe that that should be happening. >> what did you want folks here -- what did you want her to hear? what did you want other lawmakers to hear? that day -- >> we wanted other lawmakers to hear that gen z cares about our government. we care about the people that represent us. and we have a set of policies that we want to get past. that includes youth voting rights, includes gun violence prevention. it includes lgbtq rights. we really would love to see our members of congress standing up for us, passing legislation that projects, and protects us, protects our friends, and protecting our democracy. so, if you go to the news of tomorrow dot org, you can sign him to volunteer with us, you can try to join our organization, you can find ways to be part of our local chapter. you could also read more about our gen z agenda, read more about about the other policies that were supporting. >> mariana, thank you. we appreciate it. >> thank you so much. >> all right, up next, hispanic voting power in a -- before the midterms. we'll be right back. l be right back. wait, are you my blind date? dancing crew. trip for two. nail the final interview. buy or lease? 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try downy wrinkle guard fabric softener! wrinkle guard penetrates deep into fibers, leaving clothes so soft, wrinkles don't want to stick around. make mornings smoother with downy wrinkle guard fabric softener. it's the greatest sandwich roster ever assembled. next is the new great garlic. the tender rotisserie style chicken is sublime and the roasted garlic aioli adds a lovely pecan flavor. man, the second retirement really changed you. the new subway series. what's your pick? millions have made the switch from the big three the new subway series. to xfinity mobile. that means millions are saving hundreds a year on their wireless bill. and all of those millions are on the nation's most reliable 5g network and most recommended wireless carrier. that's a whole lot of happy campers out there. and it's never too late to join them. get $450 off any new purchase of an eligible samsung device with xfinity mobile. or add a line to your plan today at xfinitymobile.com >> all right, so this is the first weekend of his heritage mansion for the next few weeks ring to be looking at hispanic voting power in four states that are key to the midterm elections. today we're focusing on the state of texas which has seen a really dramatic shift and its political landscape for the last couple years. we saw republicans making and roads with hispanic voters. the latest polling on the governors showing hispanic voters preferring democrats, better o'rourke by 18 points over greg abbott. up here, we're gonna talk more about the texas senior editor jack it came to hispanic voters. when you're looking at that poll, it's pretty interesting that beto does in fact have that lead in the governor's race. i'm wondering when mexican american in the state of texas, what they are saying about abbott's kind of latest push. particularly his focus on kind of these cultural and social issues. >> yeah, that's a great question and i think that besides the fact that it sounds kind of garbage, right now, it's a good time to be asking that question because census data shows that just above a few days ago, we hispanics and latinos became the largest ethnic group in texas. we have the largest plurality of any of groups in texas outpacing white voters. so, that's gonna be very important issue in every election going forward. when it comes to what the community here thinks of abbott, i think it is important to remember, as i know that this show stress, voters are not a bottleneck. when you see mexican americans living on the border, some of abbott's crackd
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ah, joining me now, life from windsor is d w jack power high jack the u. k has 10 days of mourning behind it, filled with emotions, tradition of state funeral service like no other. tell us how things feel now, but it's all over. well, it's been an incredible period of 10 plus days of morning since the queen died. and i think there's a sense of completion, a sense of a page turning here in the united kingdom. the funeral was a huge sort of set of pomp and pageantry. all of the events that were broadcast to millions of people all over the world. i think really, there is a sense that the queen's memory was, was, was done, the respect that it deserves. i think that's the general, overwhelming feeling here in united kingdom this morning. and we really have seen an outpouring of emotion for the queen and also of, of support for the royal family. what do you think? does this bode well for the future of the monarchy? yeah, one of the things the scene to, to buy quite a lot is that image of king charles the 3rd during the commit to ceremony, clearly welling up wit
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jack deville. jack abbeville is the quartermaster general. and the purpose that they were going to go ashore is to scout out where they're going to to lay out the camp, which is where i showed you earlier this option. this vessel is a --. this is a cutter. so that gives you an idea of what the what what what the captains -- would look like. and so that's the kind of boat that we take ashore. this. this is long wharf right here, which is which is where people think that rochambeau landed. this building is the colony house, and the baptist church would have been right about here. so the. looking up from the from the wharf straight up to the colony house is a very imposing view. it's a beautiful building. the british use this building as a hospital during the during their occupation of newport. the french did not a lot of people assume that the french use that building as a hospital, but no diary. none of the french diaries actually talk about the the the colony house other than saying it's a village. it's a grand state building. it's a beautiful public building. so that's about the extent of it. they don't talk about it as a hospital. when russia arrived, one of everybody thinks that they were welcomed with a big brass band and lots of, you know, lots of troops massed on the on the shore and everything. russia always severely disappointed, he said nobody was there. if you read general heath's diary, general heath, as the continental army commander of the new england area, he's in providence, which is about 45 miles away. and he's talking about how, you know, he gave a proper reception to russian bull. well, he's covering his tail because he wasn't there. nobody heard, was there? and this is this is from his diary. and he talks about how russia but went ashore with deville. they they ran into mr. wharton, who was a quaker. mr. wharton lived three houses up from where the colony house was, and what offered him some some horses invites him to t that evening russian bull asked who is in charge of the militia in the area and christopher greene is in charge. but he's not at that particular site. he's elsewhere in the newport area. so they send out an express to go get him to bring him to russia on board, let him know that that russian boy and his troops have arrived once. bear in the view of many bear in the view of many is russia boys second in command when he realizes that russian boys ashore with no bodyguard, he decides that he's going to send the grenadier company of the boat when they're regiment board bonnybridge element is the senior regiment of russian boys army. so he sends the the to the grenadier company are the so the crackerjack troops of the regiment. they are the people who are in time of riot. they would be the what you your when they call out the riot act. they're the ones who show up. they're the sort of elite troops look more like the someone like the rangers today. they you had to be five feet eight inches tall to be to be even considered to be a grenadier and. look in addition to being five feet eight inches tall, you had these bearskin caps which added another 8 to 12 inches to your height. the german grenadiers had they had tight coats which shorter sleeves. so the reason for that is that these guys look like they're giants who are busting out of their clothes, much like the incredible hulk, the french. the french did the same very, very similar look at the the cuffs on the on these sleeves, these guys are from the schwarzenegger regiment. you can tell they're schwarzenegger because of the are the salmon colored facings and the the cuffs. this is the uniform of 1776. in 1778, 70, 79, the uniform changed so that the grenadiers are now wearing. the grenadiers are now wearing caps like the the the infantry soldiers. you see a member of the schwarzenegger regiment back here who's still wearing his his bearskin cap. not everybody changed uniform all at the same time. so they change uniforms gradually. so this guy is still wearing the uniform of 1776, the way you can tell the function of the soldiers is on the turn backs of their coats. this guy is wearing a sort of bomb or grenade, which indicates that he's a grenadier. also on his his sir is belt here is a you well you can't see it hidden by his hand. he's got a slow match. there's a brass a brass container, a four slow match to light the grenades at this point in at this time, grenades are primarily used. what they did not use, they're more this is all more decorative. but one of the things about the grenadiers is the grenadiers and the the the chaser, which are light infantry, are the only ones to allow to wear facial hair. all the other soldiers had to be clean shaven. so this guy is indicate indicates he's clean shaven. this guy is a regular infantry, which you can tell by the the flow to leave on his on his turn backs the the the the the color of the the decoration lines here match the sleeves and the the the facings. so the this regiment is the st thomas regiment. the musicians wear off as it colors of the regiment. in this case, he's wearing blue. but he's got a lot of these these stripes here. the reason the lot of lace that the reason for that is music is very important music in the army governs your entire day from from morning to night. the musician wakes you up, puts you to bed, and he calls out all the other calls during the day. if you if you're on duty they do would call with feet of food what they call a roast beef, which is the lunch call. so they they govern the lives of the soldiers. plus they give all the commands on the field. the officers can't project their voice loud enough, so that everybody can hear the commands. and so they are conveyed by drum and fife. well, the troops land on july 13, 14, 14, 15 and 16. the artillery is unloaded on the 16th. also. by the night of the 16th, all the troops are in in the in in camp. it is the courtney who is the sort of the commissary general of the army had set up hospital. he set up a hospital in providence, one in papa squash point in bristol, rhode island, and another one in newport on the russian bull writes a letter to the called the mobile mulberry, who is the minister of war at that time, on july 5th, 25th, 1780, he tells him that he's got 800 sick and there are some 1500 soldiers who are also sick of scurvy and various other types of illnesses down at the bottom here, hope. there were 153 soldiers who died in newport between 1780 and 81. that's over a period of 11 months, 11 months of peacetime. and mind you and well, not peacetime, but the army, the french army isn't doing anything. they're just in camp and sort of relaxing and trying to recover and recuperate. in providence, there were 27 soldiers who died. 35% of the soldiers who died in in newport, and 44% of those who died in in in providence were died in august and september of that year. most of them from malaria and scurvy, dysentery and cholera with the most common forms of illness in the american army and the british army. smallpox was a was a factor leading cause of death in the french army. it was less so all the soldiers were inoculated before coming here. and there is a case in 1781 where somebody shows up in a french camp and introduces smallpox. at that time. so that's the only instance we have of it, of or indication of of of illness. and here we've got a passage from lopetegui's diary indicating the importance or the how severe this this illness was, particularly seasickness. the last the last sentence is particularly important. what the what's underlying the sentence is that on the way over duchovny they had an opportunity to meet with a cut to occasions where he ran into british ships and he he could easily have captured the vessels. he's got five over 6000 men on board a military soldiers, plus the sailors. he's got another. 6 to 8000 sailors. so he's got enough troops to to engage a fight and the men have been at sea for three months. they're they're rearing for a fight. and he passed them by. he had orders to to bring russian boys troops to america as quickly and as safely as possible. so he ignored those occasions, and the soldiers were very angry with him. and that that that will show up in a couple of moments. i talked about the hospital, the the the newport hospital was set up in the baptist church. remember, the baptist church? i pointed out a couple of slides ago. well, here it indicates that this is from russia. hbo's order book. the order book has never been translated or published, but this is this is the manuscript. and it says that the the the the hospital was set up at the at the the baptist church. it also indicates that the red it in the daily orders indicate who's who, who's doing duties on different days. so in this case, it's indicating that the bonar regiment is is doing the guard duty and he is indicating that they're doing guard duty at at the camp. so he's got 90 men guarding the camp. the then there's a corporal's guard at the hospital. the corporal's guard is about 12 people, 12 men under under a corporal here. the. all the time that the french were in newport, every single day he's he's changing the guard. and the guards are always placed at the same place. the camp, the hospital and the woods castle, which is the landing site. so this is further indication of the importance of woods, castle and it's just lopetegui's diary and russia boys order book that specify which castle russia but never never specifies why he's placing a guard at woods castle. but it's it's assumed because all the soldiers know that that's where they landed. and they understand the the importance of that. it's in lopez diaz diary that you realize that that that's important. okay. also in blanshard claudius shot is a commissary of war and he indicates on july 23rd that rochambeau all attended, he went to visit the sick at the hospital and attended mass there. so this is one of the concerns about rhode islanders. where was the first catholic mass celebrated in rhode island? and in this in this instance, we know that it's celebrated at at the baptist church, which is at the corner of barnes street and spring street. at this time, while the troops are landing, vehicle. don't know why we continue. why is lafayette's brother in law, he was living in the richardson house, which is two houses over from hunter house, which is where the turner had his headquarters and the first week of end of the landing, july 20th, the 23rd, he is sent to connecticut island, which is now called jamestown island. rhode island has 20 or 36 islands, 37 islands. newport aquidneck island, which is where newport is, is the largest. the second largest is jamestown or connecticut island. so he's sent over to connecticut island to guard the bay. he's protecting the the the camp from the the the british had when the british were in newport, they occupied part of connecticut island and nobody is going over there to the same area of the camp to to manage, to maintain that and to protect the the the the port. so in case of an attack and lopetegui mentions that this is the only time that the british could have attacked and successfully conquered the french because there was they were still not organized they were still setting up their camp. they were making their fortifications building to digging the trenches. and so on. so he mentions that as the and then after they after that week, they lost that opportunity because then the french were so well entrenched that it was impossible for them to attack when they landed. one of the the ships, the is the france got lost in the fog and people thought that it had probably got captured or sank. orders were that when the french if the french were not able to landed in new york or newport or if they got separated in the storm, they were to go to to to boston. and that's what happened with this ship. they got lost in the fog and got separated from the fleet. so they went to the boston and they landed there with half of the one regiment, 350 men in this case. and they marched to newport. they arrived in newport on the 28th, which is like a couple of weeks later. one of the things that little bit. yeah. mentions in the in the in his book, in his diary is that on august 25th, august 25th is st louis day, which is king louis of them. day two for the french, the name day is more important than your birthday. you. and so this is a grand birthday when the defenders boat was born, they have a big celebration. they have a big celebration on the anniversary of the the the the name day. does anybody know what a food is? why is it? oh, i've got a few people. okay. he mentions that on on on august 25th, russian bull reviews the troops and they have a further july. this is some 6000 soldiers who are participating in this. so this is one grand parade. i don't know how big macy's parade is, but i would say this would probably the bigger, if not equivalent. so they they fire further july what a further july is, is when when they're all in camp. you it's a running fire. so you you you fire your muskets from left to right, the right to left. and then everybody fires together. so when you have a small company or small army, you might fire individually one person, fire one after another, and when you've got an army of this size, you would probably fire by company. there are ten companies to a regiment, so you would fire you know, like one company after another until you get down to the end of the line. then you reload and you start the fire down the other the other way. and then at the end you fire one massive volley. well, you've got to i'm counting 5000 soldiers here because there's a 10% misfire rate on average. so assuming a misfire rate of 10%, you've got 5000 soldiers firing three rounds apiece. so you've got. 1800 or 1500 shots or you've got this these are the various types of cannons in the fort, in the forts and on the vessels. so this is an indication of how many you know, what the caliber is. and you figure like a 12 pounder might fire, might you might put in maybe a pound, half a pound of at least half a pound of powder, if not a pound, or maybe more, then you've got all the vessels fire. if they fire a 21 gun salute from the vessels, the three cannon shots from each fourth. so this gives you an indication you've got 699 guns, you've got 2008 shots. this is about a ton and a half to two tons of gunpowder. that's being fought and being fired on this anniversary. re that is one massive celebration, one massive fireworks display. this is an of the 1st of july at fort adams. it's a this is the massive of the total company firing firing. this is actually a small the small group does this is a small reenactment. i want to. i want to skip over the the visit of the the native americans if we've got time after which we can come back to that another thing that okay one of the things that. people think is that when washington came to newport in march of 1781, that he was planning the the march to yorktown. the march on yorktown was not planned either. in newport or in hartford or at wethersfield. there were conferences between washington and russia on both. whoops, what happened. oh, okay. there were conferences between washington and russia on board both in wethersfield and in hartford. but what con wallace was not in virginia at the time. well, he was actually in he was in petersburg and he didn't arrive in yorktown until august 1st. so the the allies did not know that that they were going to march to yorktown. they marched from newport to new york and they set up a siege around new york for about a month. they had a lot of expeditions and and skirmishes around new york city and the whole new york area and then they they when when they realized that admiral deborah was coming up and he wasn't going any further than chesapeake bay, then they decided going down south. so that's what they decided to do. march and even at that point, they they hadn't really decided on yorktown. it did just occurred that they're going south, they're going to meet the the french fleet there. and don't engage the con wallace wherever they happen, wherever he happens to be. and he happened to go to yorktown, the. when they left new york, they they wanted to up to a washington was a master of counter counterintelligence. so what he did is he had the french build bread ovens. who doesn't like french bread. so they made a big deal out of this. they going all over the place along the river banks and all over all over the new york area. and they're sending out massive numbers of men to look for bricks to build the ovens. and they're building quite a few ovens. so the british know that if you're building a bread oven, it takes about several days to build an oven. if you're building an oven, you're going to be there for a while. so they was convinced that they're going to stay at in yorktown. well, i mean, in new york. so the army is moving south. he leaves a group behind to keep campfire is burning, make it look like there's a whole army there. there probably maybe 100 guys left behind. and they they've got all these ovens. and everybody knows that the french are building bread ovens. so the army is already almost in trenton by the time that the british realized that the army is on the move, it's too late for them to get ready. they can't they get out there. so that that left all of the troops in new york out of the picture for for the work, for the for the the battle oc. whoops. dutton they died on december 15th. russia happen to be in boston on that day. he was visiting the area nobody had was sent to get him and bring him back russia boy decides to stop on the route and sleep because he was exhausted. so he stayed there the night of the 16th. detonate was buried that morning from the hour of his death to the time of buried there he was there was a his flagship with the depot going was firing cannon every half hour and the men on shore, the troops were firing three musket volleys. remember the the passage i mentioned, i mentioned about detonating not being appreciated by his troops because he passed up these opportunities. well, nobody had has this passage in the hopes he has this passage in his diary that his troops were is his sailors were very much miffed at him. and he lost their respect. so he also mentions that the cortege going from the hunter house, which is down here all the way up to trinity church, which where his funeral was held. trinity church is an anglican church and there's no catholic church in newport at this time. so the funeral is celebrated here and he is buried in the graveyard right next next to the church. and that's where so the whole route was lined by soldiers, two men deep on each side of the street, shoulder to shoulder. now, normally, the men would be 24 inches apart. the entire army stretched out would get would would allow 30 inches apart for it for the men. so if the entire army is turned out along this parade, this mark route of march. that that that takes up the entire army. and so that would leave the navy to be in the cortege behind them. and if there is nobody in the cortege that indicates that he's got they may be 8000 sailors on board who would have been in the cortege and they had a very rather small cortege. well, the things that that nobody i talks about in his diary drawing that that period where there's really not much to that there in newport during a winter is he talks about life in newport he talks about religion. the five major religions that were dominating in newport and rhode island. for that matter. he talks about a quaker be and a quaker marriage ceremony, which he said resembles of a funeral than a marriage. but he also talks about the champlain family, the beautiful the beautiful champlain daughters were very they made a hit with all the souls, all the sailors, because virtually every diary of any of any soldier will talk about the champlain daughters. then he goes on to talk about the the march to yorktown and to new york and then to yorktown. he also talks about from pond oops, from pond is one of the stops on the way on the way back to to the new to the newport in 1782. they stop it from pond for a month and that's an interesting story because there are several diaries who talk about this particular event the night before or they're due to leave. crompton which is now the wood crump pond is what's called pines of richardson, yorktown heights, new york. and the interesting thing about this, this incident is that nobody had has a passage where he's laid down on the floor of the mill during the night. and this man comes in late at night. he shows it, gives him a place to sleep along with the soldiers who are in the in the mill. so he sleeps on the floor. the next morning, he finds out that this is the local sheriff who's come to arrest rush on board because of the property damage that the troops have done on the mill. so he has russia boys ready to mount his horse. he puts his hand on his shoulder and tells them he's under arrest. and russia will ask him what the charges are and he tells them it's for destruction of property russia established that they, a committee of five people to go and inspect the damage and give him their assessment they tell him is the damage is one third of the price that he's asking for. and so russia agrees to pay him half the price. and he says the difference is in goodwill. and he said, look, the way the different diarists interpret this is interesting because some say he's a log. they they portray russia was a law abiding citizen. some indicate that the soldiers drew their swords and they were ready to run the sheriff through. and that that could have been the start of a war. and one diary says that russia both responded to the sheriff saying that. do you realize how bold this is for you to arrest the commander of the french army amidst his troops? this is the whole army could have risen up and will slaughter this guy right there on the spot. and so it's interesting to read the different diaries, get their different interpretations. so i'm going to stop there and open it up for questions and. no questions. you. yes. oh, they want you to go to like in the back. you you have to watch. almost all the rolling. orders from the king exist. yes, they do. well, i have not seen them, but i expect they do. one of the one of the soldiers who came over earlier, there were four four soldiers who came over in 1777 to join the army. and. when you assign soldiers to to the military duty, that becomes a an act of war. this is before the french joined the army. so this is you had to disguise the orders to look like something else. so these guys were ordered to take they were given a leave of absence. take care of personal business, personal was to go to america and help the american army. and so that order exists. so i imagine russia, those orders exist somewhere in the french archives. i have not seen them myself. because you go to my place. that russian boat sailed to yorktown. apparently not. he marched. excuse me. i was under the mistaken assumption that russian bow sailed to yorktown. but he. he marched and he marched and then who? what was the fleet that they show the maps in yorktown, in the french fleet. he did. i haven't research that that particular aspect, but some of the fleet some of the fleet left from elkton, head of elk, the others left from annapolis. so there were two, two different groups that left a good part of the army, marched down marched south, rochambeau went with the army. that was a way of showing, you know, the also being in command. it was also showing that he was he was part of them. he wasn't he was an acting special. he one of the things that russia boy did in all of his camp, all of his camps, is he had his headquarters closest to as close as possible to the soldiers. most officers would be separated from the soldiers, for example, designed in a way was the colonel of the artillery. he his headquarters in newport were about a mile away from the from the troops or from his from the artillery, actually, probably a mile and a quarter. the artillery camp or the artillery park? yes. could you tell us a little about the money, the specie? you know, there's lots of accounts from the american side, civilians, that they were being paid in specie, and that was tremendous. yes. were the french aware of what of the fact they were having been able to pay in specie and etc.? just any comments you had that they might have made about it over? i wish i would have. i had anticipated this question. i would have brought up examples. i've got some some reproductions of french french coins. you're not you're not asking about the the value of the money. you're asking about. yeah. how is it? see, how is how how is it seen. yeah. how do they perceive that. really aware of what they were doing because it was a term. oh yes, yes. they were tremendously aware of what they were doing and in some cases, rochambeau ordered his men or purchases to be to be made in continental currency pay in content currency before you pay in in in coin because when they got to newport as soon as people realize that they were paying in coin they started jacking up prices. and every french diary talks about how they were being taken advantage of by the the local people. now, they came over with with the shipments were to two and a half million leave it at a time to give you an idea of what that entails. you don't just take out your wallet and carry this amount of money. this is all in hard cash. so it's all silver and gold. there was one ship, the la, which was coming in 1781. it was going up the delaware river and it ran aground in the in the bay or in the at the mouth of the delaware. and they couldn't get it couldn't get it off the bar. so they threw the money overboard. and two and a half million leave the crew overboard and they market with buoys because they were being attacked by a band of loyalists in the in the bay. well, one of the soldiers was sent to find some some wagons to bring the cart, the money by the time he arrived, he returned, they had retrieved the money and they had already put it in wagons that they'd required 14 wago
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jack, a business editor with the latest _ money. simon jack, a business editor with the latest thoughts _ money. simon jackst thoughts on what - money. simon jack, a business editor with the latest thoughts on what is i with the latest thoughts on what is likely and what is not likely. and what about the rather winding path that's brought liz truss to number ten? as we heard a short while ago from chris, she was at one stage a liberal democrat but switched to the conservatives and entered parliament in 2010 as mp for south west norfolk. she was for many years completely committed to britain's membership of the european union, but after the brexit vote she changed her mind and said she'd been wrong. she's held various cabinet positions including justice secretary and most recently foreign secretary. our deputy political editor vicki young has the story so far of the politician who's set to be britain's third female prime minister. she is a grafter. she means what she says, she knows what she wants and she gets it. these are some of liz truss's most supportive friends. activists in her norfolk constituency h
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jack beckwith, who would be his best man at his wedding, and would be the namesake of the second son, jack ford. on the back of the third row, left side, second from the end on the left-hand side, that's jack styles, who would be a close friend who is from grand rapids, who would be an adviser to him during his congressional years, and an official adviser during his presidency -- but he and unfortunately that in an automobile accident before the primaries, into the primary season, into 1976. he took lessons from the football field, he took friendships from delta kappa epsilon, and if we go to the next slide -- he leaves the university of michigan with three football offers, all forced to play professional football's. from the packers, bears, and lyons. but he turns them down to go to yale, where he would become the assistant football coach, the junior varsity football coach, and of all things, the boxing coach. he knew nothing of boxing, but before he left for yale, he stopped at the ymca in grand rapids, took some boxing lesson so he would know a little bit about the language, a little bit about the moves, and hopefully fool enough -- the rest of the team. he stays with it. he stays at ya
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>> jimmy: try this one this is good >> i'm coo-coo for cocoa puffs [ laughter ] [ applause ] jack, oh, jack beg that you do this one ♪ [ laughter ] >> in a minute, i'ma need a sentimental man or woman to pump me up feeling fussy, walkin' in my balenci-ussy's tryna bring out the fabulous [ laughter ] >> jimmy: that is how you do it [ cheers and applause i want to show everyone a clip here's jamie campbell bower as vecna in "stranger things. take a look at this! ♪ >> but in the end, he could not control us he could not shape us. he could not change us did you not see eleven he did not make me into this you did. [ cheers and applause >> jimmy: jamie campbell bower, everyone season four of "stranger things" is streaming now on netflix. august 12th, "i am." we'll be right back with a a performance from king princess stick around, everybody! [ cheers and applause ♪ you know that show i was telling you about? yeah i was so close to the stage when i saw her and she... she pulled me in. wasn't expecting that. it was literally... literally the greatest thing i've ever seen... scene... it was such a s
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jack london. jack london was a nobody he was he worked in a pickle factory where he made $0.10 putting pickles in a jar and he was desperate to get out of it. and so he went up as a very young on the stampede, but mostly it's people that you've never heard of. and really benefited from the fact that there's been a lot of scholarship in the last 50 years where, a lot of these smaller stories have come out and i was able to combine them. and so i think that i don't know hopefully something we can talk more about here, but the thing that links the work that done, i was in the military wrote a number of books about afghanistan and iraq. i, i wrote about this, you know, canoe trip to the arctic. the thing that i think connects the work for me is that i have this, this allergy glorification. i like to just getting like the myth version of the story. and i my books about iraq and afghanistan are not there's no glorification in those, for sure. and so i wanted to write the kind of the raw story that i could speaking which has to offer for another one of these you know, it's kind of hard when you go through and the first guy talks about they're going to come and they're going to kill you and burn your bone. the second guy bloodbath on the glacier. obviously, i wrote child friendly book. this boy in the border is my 21st book. i come from texas. and in texas, we say, if you can't write, write a lot. so that's what i've always tried do i write about american history and i try to write about subjects where i can learn a lot. i can't think anything worse than writing a book where you think you already know everything, and all you're doing is just trying to prove you're and anybody who disagrees is wrong. so i always to pick subjects that i very little about and since i know very little about a lot of things, i imagine i'll write another 25 books before i'm done least. but the inspiration for war in the border came because i realized i've lived in texas most of my adult life, and all of a sudden we're talking about border walls and floods of immigrants, invasions and things and i realized i didn't. the history of the us-mexican border and i thought it be useful for me to try to find out what that history was and get it in the book. so if anyone else was interested, could they could learn it to. there's an editor, simon and schuster, who always says if you're going to write a book, make sure it's got 60 drugs and rock and roll. if you can get those three things, people will read your book. i thought this might be a challenge with this subject, but there is six general pershing is trying to court lieutenant patton whose sister and he makes patton be the chaperon on their car date around beautiful el paso. yeah. a romance that's going to work. um, drugs and rock and roll in the same place pancho villa is the yeast wrote a song called la cucaracha, which all of us can sort of hum. but we don't know. most of us. the real version, which is all about the cockroach eating some marijuana. i was surprised that. but i was surprised by a lot of things in this book. and again, i hope we talk about how in our we try to look at maybe the portions of history that are coming knowledge. we try to push back a little bit further. i started to write this book because wondered about wall and the border invasion by hordes dangerous mexicans and i found out that the first time the united states decided to build a wall along the border to keep out the mexicans we didn't want was in 1903 and then it was announced again in 1909. we were going to build that border wall. and then in 1910, the government said, we it this time we're going to build that border wall. and they tried and it didn't work. people would go over it or under it and in a lot of places, the soil couldn't take the weight of the wall. the wall would just crumble. after 1910, it was pretty much decided all that idea is not going to work and all of a sudden it's big campaign issue. and i wondered how come in this big 2016 campaign, nobody is saying, but didn't we try this three times already. and here's what i think happened. i don't think the government was trying to fool americans. i think nobody just wanted to check and find out whether somebody had tried this before or a little element of history. but it's there if you want to do the work that i found lots of other things, some times it reflected badly on the american government. sometimes it reflected badly on the mexican government. a lot of people died on the border who didn't have because you had to countries and to governments that distrust each other and wouldn't talk to each other much. finally, we get in 1916, pancho. and about 400 of his followers crossing the border and attacking an american town in new mexico. columbus, new mexico. their purpose was to enrage the american military and have army chase them back into mexico because the mexican people would be so appalled at the gringos that they don't trust way or coming to invade them again. did you know that in 1914 we actually went into mexico and captured the sea city of santa cruz? derek cruz, and held it for months. went in and took it because we thought the mexican government was getting arms it shouldn't get from germany. all these things. and when i turned my book in to my publisher i got a lot of are you sure all this. well, yes. i'm so today to be up here with these gentlemen who do the same thing. and it's exciting to be able to talk to some people who might really want to know history, the facts not the alternative facts. this is an odd time, america, to be writing nonfiction, but will tell you this. the one lesson i've learned from all my books writing about american history is the problems that claim us today, that obsessives have been problems that have been going on for centuries. everything from gun control to taxes, the proper limited role of government refugees coming in, take american jobs. this is all happened before. and if there is one lesson in history that all of us write about is if we don't face problems and try to solve them in a common sense way with everybody working together, we're going to keep on facing them. the that's why books these guys. right, are important. and the fact that people read them is also important. so thank of you to as well. let's come back and start reading. so let's go ahead and do some of what we've about sort of addressing areas of history that that have been overlooked for you. it comes early in the book and you just amaze at the significance of the flat boat era and how little discussed it is in history books certainly are critical. it was, yeah, 50, 60 years before the covered wagons crossing the dusty plains. it was the ohio river basin and river that created modern america, the economy and the multicultural entity that we became because of masses of immigrants coming down the river. it also followed economic depression of well there were several but the panic of 1837 was pretty severe to so this the book for me into an agenda because what happens is you study history and you see history issued from on high by a few influential professors and then trickles down to the middle school and whatnot. but it started right typically right at the beginning with all the revolutionary founders washington, madison, monroe jefferson, particularly even benjamin franklin were, heavily invested in western lands, they wanted all that land west of the appalachian because in america, at that time wealth was in your land holdings. and george washington died. the wealthiest man in america was 80,000 acres and instead we get you know, skipper neal silver dollar across a river or something and so that kind of seed that we really discuss the actual history that happens we teach the myths so. yes they were very, very effective at backing this revolution and giving a justification for this revolution with the high sounding ideals of the declaration of independence, of the constitution. but in fact, they were they were investors. they're businessmen who wanted as much of the western alliance as they could get. and then you start going through all the rest of american history and examining it from that perspective. so that's i guess i answered the question yeah, yeah. and, and we get back to jeff because of that. i mean so much i was amazed. i was embarrassed at how little of contemporary mexican history i knew. i thought i had a fair grounding in it, but it turns out that really is mesoamerican and pre-columbian stuff was what i knew a lot more about. it's a great book, a fascinating book you talk a lot about the fluid nature of the borders early on and in you're talking about the investors who you know want to expand westward and it was wealthy u.s. citizens who really drove a lot of the in the mexican government formed a democracy in 1821 and because mexico and america were proximate really the same size the government hoped that there would be some from america. how how do we bring democracy to such a large, sprawling area? but america did not send the ambassadors to mexico for another four years because they didn't think the country was probably going to last. and in 1825, when first american ambassadors showed in mexico, they brought a request. from the president, please us all your land that west and northwest into. our country. you know, mexico extends it all the way up into wyoming at this time and. the mexican government had formed a foreign bureau to advise the president, mexico and. the bureau reported to the mexican that america intends to overthrow us within. 75 years, almost two thirds of what was mexico now becomes part of the united states. the mexican citizens who are living in what is now america are told that now you have to pay taxes to the u.s. government. if you can't pay them in time, you're off your land in a series of land were formed the united states because investors would claim they had the title this land that mexican families in what was now american might have lived on for generations. things obviously did not improve much from there. by the time we have vs raid in all of mexico. 95% of the arable land for farming or for mining or for fishing is owned by either the horse and dodos. the rich mexican families or american investors. peasants working. the land make up 80% of the mexican population in all of mexico. this 80% of the people, 2% of the land. the things we're going to combust and, they did eventually. and the funny thing is, when i wrote this book, i was that i would see the american government doing terrible things and i didn't want to see their and the american government did do some terrible things, folks. gadsden purchase the negotiators agreed. america would pay $15 million for those little portions of arizona and new mexico. everybody shook hands on it. then it went to the senate to be ratified in the u.s. senate just said no, we're only going to give them $10 million. they may not like it, but they have to take it anyway. $5 million was a lot of money crucial to mexico, and it was arbitrarily taken away. but it's also true that with the plan, san diego, mexico can militants had a plan to cross the border and take over much of the land that had been part of mexico of time and every white man in america 16 or over would be murdered. and they tried to do it and the mexican government was actually supporting a lot of this. there was their intention on both sides. and this is going on all these years. and what happened, just as you're talking about the mississippi. these things shape and they form and maybe it happened 100 years ago, 150 years ago, but it's still resonates. it still affects us today. we are all of our history as much as we're in the present. and that's why books like these guys write are so important. and it's it's a pleasure being on the with them. we can't just say we're going to look at history and the stuff we like will be true and the things we wish hadn't happened didn't happen. because otherwise we're going to keep on fighting these same problems and it's going to keep frustrating everybody and we're just going to get madder and madder. long speech, sorry. this quote of, brian, you had talked about the thousands of deaths in to all the human deaths there was slaughter of animals along the way as well and you tied the the the the the need try to better themselves directly to the failure of the gilded age and the excess is of that time. yeah that's i guess is a structure here you just talk how you know the influence of frontier is both like a true economic thing but then also as a as a philosophical thing and how america saw itself and. the klondike gold rush happened 30 years after the civil war, and of course, a lot of the violence in the american west, in the westward movement, post-civil war, had to do with civil war veterans that were moving in and, you know, there's as a veteran myself, i guess you start to see some of the you know post-traumatic stress that was on you know, we didn't have a name for at the time. right. but like there's there is like, you know, this has a huge influence on it. and i mentioned because a lot of people that went to alaska at the time saw it as the end of that push. one of the characters in my book. so patti smith was a gangster and a card cheat and etc. , etc., had kind of bopped around the american west would get kicked out of a town for scamming people. move on to the next one. he was a bunco man and he moved to alaska because he called it the last west. it was the last place without a telegraph line and the last place without, a railroad. and it was just going to be like the culmination of a lot of the things these gentlemen are talking about and the i mean, another one of the characters in the book, colonel samuel steele, who's he's the commander of the northwest mounted police at the time up there, you know, northwest mounted police were, not the mounties that we think of now, like smiley people in red jackets or whatever they were like calvary. they had cannons and they had mortars and such, and they were fighting indigenous people across canada. he gets sent there to do two things. one is to is to stop the stampeders from killing themselves and save them from themselves. but the other thing, speaking of, you know, the mexican border was to establish the canadian border between alaska and canada there because it had been surveyed, but it wasn't guarded. and canada didn't trust that the united states wasn't going to try to claim more territory. and so sam steele and so putting maxim machine guns the border to basically keep the gangster tours on the american side and only let the perspective prospectors or the you know people coming into dawson city through if they had enough food it. yeah i'm not sure i'm answering your question but but it is like it's yeah you know, like i don't know the economic of this and the and just the overall cost you mentioned the cost of, of animals. just one last little tidbit to wrap up on that. there were two paths out of alaska into the yukon. one was the chilkoot pass, which was the traditional walking route used by indigenous people for of years. the other one was a trail that white people thought would be much faster, and they called it the white pass. and it was going to be where a railroad was supposed to go and everyone had heard that the railroad was going to be there and that, oh, this must be much easier and so they got horses they didn't know like they didn't know how to hitch horses like these were these were city folk. these were people were not leaving their homestead in nebraska with lots of frontier and then moving to alaska. they were they were leaving new york and chicago and seattle and, you know, they wore leather slip on shoes and suits and rode and trolley cars and a lot of them had electricity like they were a lot of people like us. and then they get up to alaska. they i mean, do you know how to hitch the, you know, a saddle on a horse? you know, how to put a load on? do you know, like do you know how to build a boat? if you had to, which is what they had to do to go down the river, they don't know how to do any of these things because they don't know how to treat horses. the white pass up being called the dead horse pass because tens of thousands of animals die as they're essentially whipped up. the up the pass if a horse was, you know, ten or 15 or $20 at the bottom and it was $0.10 at the top, if you were to purchase one because they absolutely weren't worthless and they just killed them at the top and piled the bodies. and this is an excellent jack london himself, one of the people that writes about that. so. a yeah, like this is the cost of doing business. yeah. i guess is, is is a theme that you're hearing. so in addition to, the, the good solid history in all of that, the books are sort of page turners too. i mean, they are interesting, exciting and fun reads. rinker. you had a big old boat built and, you climbed on it and you went down into the mississippi river. i had no idea what size the flat boat was. tell us a little bit about the flat boats and then tell us how it compared to the tugs and barges that you were amongst some of the pop principles of the flat boat. is it? the hull is exactly flat all the way across. so the displacement of the waters across a broader area then of the whole boat and so they can carry about a one ton per linear foot and my boat was 42 feet by 14 feet and that came in fully loaded compared to about up to ten tons. but my job on the river, avoiding the very large 9000 horsepower tugboats pushin
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jacked -- are jacked up now down in florida. but also around the country. saw yesterday for the third straight time the feds feds have raised the interest rate making it harder to sell a house. why would you if you are paying 3% or 2.6 is what it was when donald trump left office. 2.6 on 30 year income. why would you sign your house and now sign up to pay 6% if not higher? >> brian: we want to get experts, not politicians to tell us where this economy is going. we understand with another fed hike it's going to start affecting jobs. the president keeps saying unemployment is low. and we love that. that's all going to change that housing sales were going fine that all has changed. here are banks ceos who won house committee yesterday especially when it comes to congresscongress jay a pal. let's listen. >> not a big chance but a chance of soft landing. >> inflation is effecting those who can afford it the least. >> i would suggest inflation is going to be a little bit stickier than we would like. >> i think we are fortunate to have had the consumer in good health entering into this but we do expect we are going to be in for tougher times ahead. >> s. >> ainsley: steve? >> steve: one of the things when it comes to tougher times ahead, one of the things and ainsley and brian, we have been talking about this when we have been sitting in new york. we have been getting emails from our friends all across the country talking about how much electricity is costing them and they are having to decide whether or not they will buy something or cool their home. right now here at the villages it is 73 degrees. it's clear. it's a beautiful day, of course, i sound like an ad from them. i sound like i'm from the chamber of commerce. buff it's absolutely perfect weatherwise here. i had the air conditioning running all night long. you know, a lot of people in particularly hot spots have got to run the air conditioner throughout the year. so he they're deciding, you know, what's more important? food on the table or my personal comfort? and unfortunately, and i remember back in the '70s, you know, in the winter people turned the thermostat down and jimmy carter said wear a sweater. don't anybody wear a sweater here, okay? [laughter] >> ainsley: we are all being hammered with our iras and 401(k)s people aren't able to retire now. the housing market is obviously going to get hit because interest rates are going to go up. people are not going to be able to buy new houses that can bees dinners of thousands of dollars per month with these increases. the fed is doing this, they say, to slow the economy. and, therefore, they are all predicting that means unemployment will also go up because of that. right now unemployment is 3.7% they are predicting by the end of next year 4.4%. do you know what's interesting steve and brian in the president has not stopped the spending. he is spending 360. >> brian: that's the bad combination. >> ainsley: climate change. 200 billion on the food shortages around the world. then we have the supply chain issues. have you all tried to reup your lease on your car? your lease is up. you have to get another car. you can't get another one. i was trying to do that and they told me two years. >> brian: on top of that you have got to keep did probably the better deal to keep it. >> ainsley: and buy it. you have to buy it if you have the money to do it. >> brian: usually people walked away because ever the mileage. brian brenberg kings college the economic expert stopped by "fox & friends first" to talk about where we are heading. >> it's going to be here for america because of these rates go up, the economy slows down. they are talking about higher unemployment rates now. they are talking about slower growth. they got this wrong in a big way. but, biden doesn't get it. you saw it on the "60 minutes" interview. he doesn't even admit that we have had inflation spike. >> that's so bad. >> that's such problem because they're going to having the inclination to spend, spend, spend. fed has to fight against that. it prolongs the pain if the administration keeps doing. this. >> steve: see, here's the thing. the inflation right now is 8.3%. the cost to heat your home, which i was speaking of earlier, is expects to increase by double that about 17.2% this season. they are estimating that for every house that's going to turn on the electricity or the gas during the winter months, your power bill is going to go up about $1,200 per house. sean hannity was down here in florida last night and spoke to the former president trump at mar-a-lago in fact this morning we're using the same crew. they came up from mar-a-lago to be here. here is what the president said gas prices could be after november. >> i filled up the strategic reserves when oil was cheap. i bought 75 million barrels at very, very cheap price. filled it all up right to the top. first time it happened in 50 years where it was filled to the top. and they have taken that and they are giving it to people. it's supposed to be meant for war and for the military. they are giving it to people to keep the oil prices down before an election. that's where it's being used when the election is over, gasoline will go through the roof. >> he is stopping the exports to the western countries now to western europe. this is the highest level we have seen energy costs in 10 years. we had the lady, the soundbite yesterday of the lady we interviewed who lives, i believe, in new orleans. she had eight children, i think. she said her mortgage rate was less than what she is spending at the grocery store combined with her heating bill. this is really affecting the lower income families or families like her that have lots of children to feed. >> brian: yeah, of all income levels. let's just add a few things. we know heating is going to go up. air conditioning and utilities is going to be a factor. what the president was referring to is the strategic oil reserve. and he says he has drained it. he goes we had it topped off. it's for emergency. it's for a time of war or economic strife or peril. this is not it. this is for your own political game. >> ainsley: for the midterms tapping into it. >> brian: this is what the republicans are up against in many cases. this is rashida tlaib. what she asked jamie diamond. i would like to ask you all a question. said you have all agreed, please answer this simple question. does your bank have a policy against funding new oil and gas projects? he said absolutely not. that would be a road to hell for america? what do these people not get? they are sitting in a gas heated room. they get in a gas car. they deal with -- they go home and pay the utility bills on oil and gas. she wants to defund it and jackup. >> ainsley: invest in clean energy. >> brian: get a windmill and solar panel. this is what we are up against. these people have a religion so we have the headwinds of our own political operatives. it's just so maddening to think that they are in charge. >> steve: well, you know, one of the things the federal reserve said yesterday when they jacked up rates for the third time in a row. three quarters of a percentage point. they said there is imbalance in the supply chain. they have got to fix the supply chain. i was talking to the villages here. they build about -- they sell 300 houses a month. they sold 4,000 houses last year. they are building them as fast as they can. they can get stuff simply because they buy a lot of it. but gary lester was telling me that one of the patrol cars is at a certain point, they could not get rock for a while. and if you can't get rock, you can't build roads. and if you can't build roads, you can't build houses. and they were really terrified that th
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jack ruby after jack ruby had killed oswald. and questioned him at length. and met with mrs. oswalt and met with marguerite also the mother. he did a lot of work, productive produced a book, jack styles i pointed out he wrote a book. think it came out in 1966 called portrait of the assassin. he believed in the inclusions that the warren commission published. he helped to shape those conclusions, crafting the language that said there is no evidence of any other participation of any collusion of other players that oswald, the evidence indicate oswald is the known assassin. they believed oswald to be the alone assassin. it was also very open with those critics and would say, i heard him stand number of occasions if you have evidence, bring it forward. we are still willing to consider it. but in the absence of any other evidence the conclusion stands. >> a terrific. missy if i can sneak a couple more in here before we have to wrap up. can you talk to us about why did he dump rockefeller in bp and 76? tough decision. ford made principled decisions. but he could also make political decisions. decisions cap political calculus behind them. that was one of them. he wrote himself out, h
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jack, thanks for— coming next friday. simon jack, thanks forjoining _ coming next friday. simon jackmpany to a charitable trust. yvon chouinard said any profit not reinvested in running the business would go to fighting climate change. the patagonia label has amassed a cult following with outdoors enthusiasts, but even more so amongst tech industry leaders in silicon valley. 0ur north america technology reporterjames clayton has more. patagonia sells all sorts of outdoor equipment but it is this, the patagonia vest, that has become iconic here in silicon valley. it's the uniform of the "tech bro." jeff bezos, apple's tim cook, just some of the names sporting patagonia style vests. patagonia has replaced the suit and tie here. part of the reason for the company's success came from its eye—catching position on the environment. it's even taken out ads saying not to needlessly buy their products. their clothes are supposed to be for life. so, there is a particular model of capitalism called shareholder capitalism and it says the only purpose of companies is to maximise shareholder value.
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terry, jack, thank you very much. our correspondent, jack paris. they're in brussels. well, we've got more breaking news for you now. don't have ela has learned that a coup attempt is underway in burkina faso. a blast and heavy gunfire were reported near the presidential palace stay. tv went off air briefly following the reported blast roads in the capital walk a do are being patrolled by troops. this comes after the military seas power in a qu last january. well, joining us as we try to build a picture of this developing story, as dw west africa corresponded, flourish, shook, we're a good to see, flourish now you're joining us from la lagos, nigeria, what do you know about this? a parent who attempt well this morning, a gone fire was heard from the presidential palace and from the headquarters of the ministry june to the states broadcasting network. the tv and radio station were also shut off and surrounded by military men and schools as well. the students way the schools were clues, then students were ax, so go to school to go back home rather now major roads as well
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jack sock and frances tiafoe. americans jack sock and frances tiafoe. ., , ., ., , americans jack sock and frances tiafoe. ., ., ,s not a dry eye in the house as federer - tiafoe. there was not a dry eye| in the house as federer teamed up in the house as federer teamed up with his gradual idol rafael nadal to put on an incredible show for the 70,000 people at the 02 show for the 70,000 people at the o2 arena. it ultimately endedin the o2 arena. it ultimately ended in defeat but relative to the story which was him saying thestgcy which was himsaying to 7 thestgcy which was himsaying to of the spot of goodbye to oneef the scoot of greatest goodbye to oneof the soot of greatest athletes. everybody. thank you. love —e—77 7—_e: if 7—.—t ftttt i all. it has been an amazing i journey. for federer, time now to rest the _ journey. for federer, time now to rest the - injury - journey. for federer, time now to rest the - injury that - to rest the knee injury that has caused him to retire. has caused himtoretire. and enjoy the memories of 24 .. . .and......... 7 and contribution the and contribution t7he7game nd contribution
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the reign of queen elizabeth the 2nd, the reign of king charles 3rd, our correspondent jack parrot in london for as jack. thank you very much. authorities in japan have advised millions of residents to take shelter from typhoon none. model which has made landfall in the southwest is bringing high winds and torrential rain, which is expected to caused flooding. and muslims, strong winds and heavy rain di for nonmetals has hit southwestern japan with gusts of over 230 kilometers per hour. japan spread it in, c, issued a rear alert, warning from 80 iceberg facing phobia conditions. the japanese government convened an emergency meeting and urge people to take care in addition to violent winds, high waves and storm surges, the highest level of bitterness will be needed against mudslides flooding and overflowing rivers. thank you. yes you 4000000 people have been issued. evacuation warnings, some have taken shelter in special if i question sent us. the storm has already left persons of homes without bobbo. transportation is disrupted. convenience stores also shut their doors. during children's and winds are c
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jack: what is your answer? ben: football is back, the stock is up, it is hitting higher lows. probably a good time to look at it. jack: the season kicked off thursday night, your prediction? ben: packers. carleton: eagles. jackeatbox. great productions, great ideas. to read more, check this week's addition of barron.com. that is all for us, see you next week on "barron's roundtable". >> from the fox studios in new york city, this is maria bartiromo's "wall street." maria: and happy weekend to all. welcome to the program that analyzes the week that was and helps position you for the week ahead. i'm maria bartiromo. hess than two months until the midterm elections, and the unifier in chief is trying to rally the democrat base with more divisive rhetoric against the gop. one of the highest ranking senate republicans, john thune, responds today. plus, federal reserve chairman jay powell says he's going to
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jack white, please stand jack because you have been remarkable. and my son, he came from cambridge, he was at cnn with me this morning. he was my assistant. charles jessie franklin, the best son in the world. thank you so much for putting up with me. they are only two that know how hard it is to live with me. and of course, [laughs] the three women in my life as well. you made this possible. my sister, janice terry, for whom i heard the story for the first time when i was 13 years old. she walked this journey with me most of my life. she is beautiful, she's glamorous, and she's really smart and she stuck with me throughout my journey. -- who is a mentor as well. who helped guide me through this process, and then -- you will read about her when you read the book. without those three women we would not be here tonight. i would not have the story. some i am very grateful to them and i love them so. that said, i have a script. this is the script. i have a clicker. i'm going to ask for your patience as i have not yet slept in 48 hours. so, there it is, reclamation. thank you, thank you. reclamation -- the descendants search for her family's lasting legacy. it is part memoir, protect of story and part history lesson. it there it is, reclamation. thank you, thank you. reclamation -- [applause] the descendants search for her family's lasting legacy. it is part memoir, protect of story and part history lesson. it spoke with recollections of the happy youth growing up in a loving, solidly middle class family that appeared unburdened. they appeared on burdened by worldly concerns. in fact, there was much more going on in our household that was immediately discernible. i read about that. there was tension. i read about that tension as honestly as i possibly can. and it was difficult. and of course, as honestly as my girlhood diaries would allow, i've been a writer for a long time. the tension was one reason that i was so intrigued when i first heard the oral history of the descendant of thomas jefferson. and there i am, 13 years old, when i first heard this -- i talk about, in the first chapter of the book, what it was like when i was 13 years old and heard the story or my sister. i'm gonna point to her. the very glamorous one, janice terry. that is my mom. that is me at 13. and these are my nieces, my nieces and my nephews. so janice terri, approximately 20 years older than i, she, to me, was very worldly. when she returned from asia after having spent years there with her husband, who was a thai magazine correspondent. she was back in the states explaining to my dad what her experience there have been. and my sister is a big talker, so she was talking for hours. after a while i got bored with her stories, not with her, with her stories. and so i go to the kitchen and i'm looking to the refrigerator for a snack. and i hear my sister say, and i said, we are descended from thomas jefferson! well, i have to tell you, i was shocked. i had never heard this story before. i couldn't have imagined, as a little black girl growing up in washington d. c., a perfectly happy black girl growing up in washington d. c., that we would have been descended from thomas jefferson. i was excited that i heard this and it's because he was my favorite president. he was my favorite president because he had written the declaration of independence. and i thought that was the most marvelous document ever composed by human beings. i had no idea that, as a 13 year old girl, that thomas jefferson enslaved people. so i could not imagine it -- we weren't president school. were you taught that in school? no. we must have thought. i could not have imagined how that happened. i was so intrigued by this story that i pushed my family to tell me as much as they could about it. and, it is a long story about janice and this information that he conveyed. i want to encourage you to read that book. but i was able to ascertain, as i explore the story, was that my grandmother, my father's mother, was from charlottesville. now, let me tell you about my dad. i first heard the story, it seemed incredible to me. but i looked at my dad, my dad was 6 feet 2, had red hair, a freckled face, and knows that was straight, aside from a slope on his bridge. for those of you who are jefferson scholars, know that jefferson had a slope on his nose. i learned years later that is the jeffersonian nose. i said, there might be something to the story, i mean, look at my dad? eventually, i learned from my dad that his mother was from charlottesville, virginia. my dad didn't like to talk about this stuff. so when i asked my dad about the stories, the first thing he said to me was, that's what they say. we wouldn't talk about it. it was months before he said his mother was from charlottesville. and i said dad, jefferson was from charlottesville. and he said yes, i know. so he was kind of toying with me just a little bit. let me go back to my grandmother. there we are. but i learned from my dad about my grandmother is that her name was eva robinson taylor. it could have been robinson, it could have been taylor. he wasn't sure. he wasn't sure which name was hers, her maiden name. it is because his mother died when he was five years old. he didn't know much about her. he didn't know what her name was. to me, that was remarkable. as a 13 year old girl, my dad was as close as you could get to god. i grew up in a household that was like, father knows best. my father knew everything. and so, again, i couldn't process how my daddy did not know the name of his own mother. i couldn't process how we could have been descended from thomas jefferson. as a child, i was very curious. i kept pursuing and kept asking. dad said his mother died when he was five years old, couldn't remember her face, he couldn't remember her voice. that made the story more compelling for me. i want to bring my dad some peace. i wanted to help him find his family. i wanted -- i knew he was in pain. i wanted him to feel happy. my grandmother was--can you guys hear me? okay. my grandmother was married to this man, arthur just up, he was a sailor, a gunners made in the spanish american war. that may seem merit amazing to you because i don't look that old, do i? well, i am the last in a family of five. i wasn't a surprise. and he was quite a remarkable man. my dad, of course, knew him, but he remarried. once he remarried, the history of his first wife practically disappeared. there is another reason that we lost a lot of that history. my dad had five sisters. here are two of them, louise and thelma, that is really their names. louise is the oldest, that is thelma. the other the sisters -- already--carry. the fifth sister, we don't have a picture of her, helena. and then we have this picture. they were devout catholics. i'm going to point out -- well, i was hoping to point out, give me one second please. charles, you know, i might need you to come help me. there we go. okay, there is our pointer. there is thelma, there is louise, she was quite tall. this is--. and this is the last picture taken of those girls. those are the three girls who were confirmed on that date. april 15th, 1915. and that is the last picture of them because all five sisters died. they all died. from tuberculosis. as did my father's mother. so you can imagine, when my dad revealed these stories for me, how difficult it was for him and how difficult it was for me. that's why we lost the history. he didn't want to talk about it, it hurt too much. but i need to know. i needed to know. i go off, i become a journalist, i move away for a few years, i come back home -- oh, there is one more picture want to show you. i love these pictures. this is my uncle, eugene. only the two boys survived, uncle eugene and my dad. it is very odd when you know your dad as a man, a mature man, and then you see this baby and there is something -- there's cognitive dissonance there. there is my dad. so i go off, i become a journalist, i come back home after a few years. my dad takes me to see my uncle. he remembers a little more about my grandmother because he was older when my grandmother died. he was very generous in the information he shared. and this is a picture, the last time i saw -- the top one is my dad, and there is my uncle, eugene. he says a lot of information with me. it shared with me that my grandmother, who would've been a jefferson descendant, was six feet tall. she had long, straight hair, hanging down her back. she was very sweet, she play the piano, she saying. and she cooked, he said. a little boy would remember that. it's the six feet tall that stuck with me. once again, we know that jefferson was told. on this occasion, my uncle shared with me the picture she just saw and this item. this bible. the date on the bible, as you can see, is 1821. the initials are d t. i kind of get stuck on the tee. i'm thinking, that must mean thomas, that's gotta be thomas! i said i was a journalist, i did not say i was a good journalist. of course, it is taylor. it is taylor. it took some understanding to say, wait a minute, gayle, this is the taylor family. now we call this the taylor bible. my uncle bequeathed this bible to me along with the pictures, so i'm grateful to him and to my cousins who honored that because, had i've been in his shoes i never would've turned over those items. by uncle also shared with me this photograph. now, this is my grandmother's sister. and you can see how fabulous she is. this woman lived as a white woman. which is why i'm not sure of her name. she left her family. my grandfather said that when my grandmother became ill and died, and all four girls died with the exception of carey, and two boys, my aunt comes, she lived in new york. she comes to visit and she says, i want these children to come with me. i want to care for them. she was quite wealthy, as you can see. i want to make sure they are educated and i will care for them. my grandfather of course, he wanted to keep everyone near and close, he lost the rest of his family. she said, well, in fact, if you don't allow me to take those children i will never come back. and she did not come back. listen to what happened. years later, my grandmother died in 1920. many years later. my parents get a call from new york. long distance, this is in the 60s. a long distance call is a big deal. we get this call and the person on the line says, there is a person here who is sick, her health is failing and she is quite wealthy, people are taking her money. and she says she has a nephew named -- my husband is cedric jessup and works at the post office. she says, she needs help. this is her family. my mother says, is this woman white, or, to use the language at the time, negro? she says, she is white. my mom says, she can't be related to us. [noise] there goes that legacy, and my inheritance. it's really quite a tragic story. she lost her family. this is not an uncommon story for black americans. this has happened to many of us, how much has been lost because of the inequities in this country. because people had to make such a choice between family and comfort. what they saw as economic comfort. i think her name was lucy, i think it's a good guess on our part. since i have lost my place on my script here, we are going to roll with it. this is me standing on the east side of the building. i started coming to monticello when jack and charles and i left my beloved hometown, washington, d. c. and moved to richmond, virginia. i would come to monticello on a very regular basis, because honestly, i love monticello. i love history. i knew my family was associated with this place, i just wasn't sure how. i would come here quite often and every time we were on a tour, the guides would hit two -- up to this point, my imagination has not allowed me to wander into the other direction. we would go on a tour, and i would raise my hand every time, i would say, i'm related to sally helmets. and i would keep moving on, back in 2010 i came with charles and charles is tall and at this point he was a tall teenager. we took a tour. i did the same thing, because i am a person of routine and habit. i say i am related to thomas jefferson and sally hemings. and the guide said, great, your family, you are dignitaries. let me take you on a private tour when this is over. at last, this is happening. unfortunately, i don't know her name,
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ford and earl warren flew to dallas to question jack ruby, after jack ruby killed oswald. they questioned him at links, and met with mrs. ford, and met with marguerite, the mother of oswald. and he did a lot of what was work -- he wrote a book. i think it came out in 1966, it was called "portrait of the assassin" -- oswald, he believes in the conclusions that the warren commission published -- he helped shape those conclusion. crafting the language that said there is no evidence of any other participation, of any collusion, of any other players, that the evidence indicates oswald is the loaner session. he believed oswald to be the only assassin. and he was also open with these critics. he would iosay -- i heard him s on a number of occasions, that if you have evidence, bring it forward. we are still willing to consider it. but, in the absence of any other evidence, the conclusions stand. up >> terrific. let me just say if i can sneak a couple more in here before we have to wrap up. can you talk to us about, why did he dump rockefeller as vp in 1976? >> it was a tough decis
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jack: you got a good one for the times. carleton: looking at vanguard yielding 4.2%, getting the cash rate, and low expense ratio. the blue chips like jpmorgan and bank of america and goldman sachs. jack: something a little more exciting. ben: the parent company of corona beer, if we go into recession, stocks hold up better, good things pricing, to make sure it's not too accent of the customers stay around, 5% this year. it holds up very well and looks interesting. jacksions. thanks, guys, great ideas all. check this week's addition of barron.com the, that is offer us, see you next week on dr. youssef: if you have been listening to me for any length of time, you would know that i am not an end time preacher. in other words, that's not something i harp on every sunday. i preach the whole counsel of god. i preach the whole word of god. but this series of messages is a unique series of messages, because i am not speculating about if the end is near or not. i'm only telling you the signs that jesus gives us in matthew 24 and 25, and then you can decide.
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jack: you got a good one for the times. carleton: looking at vanguard yielding 4.2%, getting the cash rate, and low expense ratio. the blue chips like jpmorgan and bank of america and goldman sachs. jack: something a little more exciting. ben: the parent company of corona beer, if we go into recession, stocks hold up better, good things pricing, to make sure it's not too accent of the customers stay around, 5% this year. it holds up very well and looks interesting. jackguys, great ideas all. check this week's addition of barron.com the, that is offer us, see you next week on ♪ >> from the fox studio in new york city, this is "maria bartiromo wall street". elizabeth: welcome to the program that analyzes the week that was in helps position you for the week ahead. i'm jackie deangelis and for maria bartiromo. americans continuing to struggle with red-hot inflation leading to what could be the biggest fed rate hike in more than 40 years next week. i'm asking former white house chief economist kevin hassett and purportedly a manager mark tapper about the
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jack: you got a good one for the times. carleton: looking at vanguard yielding 4.2%, getting the cash rate, and low expense ratio. the blue chips like jpmorgan and bank of america and goldman sachs. jack: something a little more exciting. ben: the parent company of corona beer, if we go into recession, stocks hold up better, good things pricing, to make sure it's not too accent of the customers stay around, 5% this year. it holds up very well and looks interesting. jack, guys, great ideas all. check this week's addition of barron.com the, that is offer us, see you next week on "b is a paid presentation furnished by rare collectibles tv, llc. (music) (announcer) our country was founded on life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. representing this idealism is our american eagle. the bald eagle was chosen in 1782 to represent the united states because of its long life, majestic looks and great strength. the eagle has since become part of our
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that is our jack parish reporting from london. many thanks, jack. some boxing news now. mexican canal low alvarez defeated cause ex donnie rival, cannady gulf kin by unanimous decision to retain the undisputed super middle weight rural title canal. those victory brought their bitter rivalry to an end. the pear previously fought in 20172018 with a controversial draw and the 1st fight over as one the 2nd on a split decision. however, in their 3rd meeting on saturday canal had a clear cut victory. his opponents simply said today can hello was better in a bit of different sports related news. the special olympics got some help in an unusual way to raise funds. the annual plane poll took place in the u. s. at dulles international airport. and it's exactly what it sounds like. teams competed to pull in airliner along the tarmac. the plain pool has been going on since 1992. and it's raised more than $3000000.00 for the special olympics. the world's largest sports organization for athletes with disabilities. you are watching d w news coming up next. the doc
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