102
102
Aug 19, 2019
08/19
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> john: charles, as you pointed out, ilhan omar is banned from going to israel. israeli officials decided to allow her in under certain conditions. she decided not to go. the white house, saying this is all about politics. she and ilhan omar have a well done mike history of anti-semitic relationships. congressional inquiries here in america will not change the laws israel has passed to protect itself. >> charles: john, thank you very much appeared what does our next guest think about this? former vice presidential nominee, thank you for joining us. this is a quagmire, to say the least for the democratic party. >> i agree. it's a quagmire for israel. last week, i spoke out against israel's decision to deny entrance to these two members of the united states congress. i just think it was wrong and disrespectful to the congress no matter what their opinions are. i have disagreed with these two a lot. what i worry about and what is now happening, unfortunately, is that the whole question of the u.s. relationship with israel would begin to be partisan. it could run and
. >> john: charles, as you pointed out, ilhan omar is banned from going to israel. israeli officials decided to allow her in under certain conditions. she decided not to go. the white house, saying this is all about politics. she and ilhan omar have a well done mike history of anti-semitic relationships. congressional inquiries here in america will not change the laws israel has passed to protect itself. >> charles: john, thank you very much appeared what does our next guest think...
153
153
Aug 11, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 153
favorite 0
quote 0
my name is john charles. i am the science in fast scientist in residence at space center houston. i would like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight. to talk about what you did here for apollo 11, what brought you here in the first place and your recollection of that important day. jack: i was the son of an air force family. we were in various bases around the world. i went to the georgia institute of technology and graduated in 1965. i came directly to the manned space flight center, in particular the apollo systems group. at the time i arrived, apollo had been a program in work, but we were flying the gemini and the gina vehicles. i was in the environmental control, electrical power area. i participated in every lunar flight, including the unmanned one. i was in the ssr staff support room for that. and on all subsequent flights i was in the operational control room, which we called telcom or telview, depending on the flight. that was for apollo 9, 10, 11 and anything that had a lunar module on it. now i will pass it to bob nance. [applause] bob: good morning. this is a big d
my name is john charles. i am the science in fast scientist in residence at space center houston. i would like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight. to talk about what you did here for apollo 11, what brought you here in the first place and your recollection of that important day. jack: i was the son of an air force family. we were in various bases around the world. i went to the georgia institute of technology and graduated in 1965. i came directly to the manned space flight center, in...
87
87
Aug 19, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
[applause] >> my name is john charles, i am your moderator for this exciting panel. i am a retired nasa employee. about 30ssau after plus years of civil service employment -- i left nasa after about 30 years of civil service and i meant. my role in this panel is to be a historian and help you appreciate the significance and the scope of the effort of the apollo program. which could not have been endessful if it did not successfully. the panel we have today is the panel on command module landing and recovery operations. they always say the job is not over until the paperwork is finished. the job is not over until the spacecraft is floating in the pacific ocean and the astronauts are successfully retrieved. we have with us four heroes of that era, people i looked up to and admired as a 14-year-old watching on television back in 1969, and i wished i could be with them in the pacific ocean helping to retrieve those astronauts. left,e on the panel to my heflin, melmily heflin, melmilton richmond, and terry watson. i will open it up to questions from the audience. it us st
[applause] >> my name is john charles, i am your moderator for this exciting panel. i am a retired nasa employee. about 30ssau after plus years of civil service employment -- i left nasa after about 30 years of civil service and i meant. my role in this panel is to be a historian and help you appreciate the significance and the scope of the effort of the apollo program. which could not have been endessful if it did not successfully. the panel we have today is the panel on command module...
92
92
Aug 11, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
my name is john charles. i will be your moderator. i retired from nasa a year and a half ago. i have been living at my childhood families, playing here with the artifacts. it gives me the opportunity to sit on the stage with heroes of the apollo era. people who did the work i only dreamed of doing. we have with those two individuals who worked during the lunar service -- service exploration activities. that was the work done on the moon. it's the reason for the apollo moon missions. not just to have a big rocket or their landing. the objective was to get to the moon and to the moon and do something useful. arthur schmidt, who goes by larry, who was involved in the operations activities. laterally on the missions, helping navigate the lunar rover. when dell mandel. he is an icon of lunar science as far as the early days. he came out here in 1963 and it was here for the lunar landings. mendell has been responsible for understanding the lunar landings and rewriting the test books about what the history of the moon is all about. i would like each of them to describe their experien
my name is john charles. i will be your moderator. i retired from nasa a year and a half ago. i have been living at my childhood families, playing here with the artifacts. it gives me the opportunity to sit on the stage with heroes of the apollo era. people who did the work i only dreamed of doing. we have with those two individuals who worked during the lunar service -- service exploration activities. that was the work done on the moon. it's the reason for the apollo moon missions. not just to...
60
60
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
they did and then open it a little for questions and since i didn't introduce myself, my name is john charles and i'm a scientist here is the center, houston. i would like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight to talk about what you did to apollo 11 and what brought you here in the first place in your recognition of that important day . >> okay. i was the son of an air force family and we were in various places around the world and i went to georgia institute of technology and came directly here to the space flight center and was hired by the operations area and in particular the apollo systems group. at the time that i arrived, apollo had been is a programming work but we were flying the gemini and the gina vehicles. >> i was in the environmental control and electrical power area and i participated in every lunar module flight, including the first unmanned one and, i was in the ss our staff support room for that in a all subsequent flights i was in the mission operation control room in a position we call telecom depending on the flight you are talking about. that was apollo 9 to apollo 1
they did and then open it a little for questions and since i didn't introduce myself, my name is john charles and i'm a scientist here is the center, houston. i would like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight to talk about what you did to apollo 11 and what brought you here in the first place in your recognition of that important day . >> okay. i was the son of an air force family and we were in various places around the world and i went to georgia institute of technology and came...
59
59
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
by the way, since i didn't introduce myself, i'm john charles, the scientist in residence here. i'd like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight to talk a little bit about what you did here for apollo 11 and what brought you here in the first place, and your recollections of that important day. >> okay. i was the son of an air force family. we were in various bases around the world. i went to georgia institute of technology and graduated in 1965. i came directly here to the manned space flight center and was hired by the operations area. and in particular, the apollo systems group. at the time i arrived, apollo had been as a program in work, but we were flying the gemini and the gina vehicles. i was in the environmental control electrical control area. -- i was on -- in the ssr staff support room for that. and on all subsequent flights i was in the mission operation control room in positions we called telcomm or telmu depending on the flight. that's apollo 9, 11, and everything with a lunar module on it. i'll pass to bob nance. [ applause ] >> good morning. this is a big day.
by the way, since i didn't introduce myself, i'm john charles, the scientist in residence here. i'd like to turn the microphone over to mr. knight to talk a little bit about what you did here for apollo 11 and what brought you here in the first place, and your recollections of that important day. >> okay. i was the son of an air force family. we were in various bases around the world. i went to georgia institute of technology and graduated in 1965. i came directly here to the manned space...
73
73
Aug 19, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
[applause] >> my name is john charles, i am your moderator for this exciting panel. i am a retired nasa employee. about 30ssau after plus years of civil service employment -- i left nasa after about 30 years of civil service and i meant. my role in this panel is to be a historian and help you appreciate the significance and the scope of the effort of the
[applause] >> my name is john charles, i am your moderator for this exciting panel. i am a retired nasa employee. about 30ssau after plus years of civil service employment -- i left nasa after about 30 years of civil service and i meant. my role in this panel is to be a historian and help you appreciate the significance and the scope of the effort of the
48
48
Aug 13, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
george was 11-years-old and was the oldest and there was betty, samuel, john and charles about 5-years-old. she had recently also posted her husband to her son by his first marriage back from england where they were educated. they both married at the time of his death. early historians saw her sitting up and managing her household under very difficult circumstances and doing the very best she could for her young which is a reasonable position and one that i've come to. later historians see her as managing resources poorly, having little or nothing to commend herself as a mother particularly to george and this is where the portrayal starts to cough up and then george acquireacquired all of the good behavior of the house of his half-brother lawrence who occupied mount vernon. only biographers for the next sort of flashpoint of the military career. they were worried about the safety and george actually always felt this way, too. later biographers started to criticize her for being overly protective and trying to keep him at home and not encouraging him to follow his dangerous place. you can s
george was 11-years-old and was the oldest and there was betty, samuel, john and charles about 5-years-old. she had recently also posted her husband to her son by his first marriage back from england where they were educated. they both married at the time of his death. early historians saw her sitting up and managing her household under very difficult circumstances and doing the very best she could for her young which is a reasonable position and one that i've come to. later historians see her...
103
103
Aug 16, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
interested in african-american in sports history, randy has written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey, ronald reagan, joe nemeth, and a team biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works are blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x in a mohammed ali and a season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. randy, could you tell us a little bit about your interest in this is a genre? >> yes. this fits perfectly for me by the political history and biography in popular culture. i've only seen myself as working at the intersection between political history and political culture and popular culture. so, i write about performers like you and actors, athletes and i've never really been interested in writing a book about an athlete is just an athlete or an actor who is just an act, but somehow they have to engage in a wider political culture, someone like john wayne or mohammed ali, clearly became iconic and you could tell a person's politics, if i talk to somebody about john wayne the attitude on john wayne will usually tell me
interested in african-american in sports history, randy has written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey, ronald reagan, joe nemeth, and a team biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works are blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x in a mohammed ali and a season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. randy, could you tell us a little bit about your interest in this is a genre? >> yes. this fits perfectly...
289
289
Aug 23, 2019
08/19
by
KTVU
tv
eye 289
favorite 0
quote 0
the city was named after john zafar charles fremont. the area was rich with agriculture, and thrive during the california gold rush. >> it is new and had the revolutionary macintosh computer. >> reporter: but over the decades, the city has transformed with tech, there was the apple factory where the first mac computer was manufactured in the 1980s. now there is the tesla industry. fremont is known for the moderate claimant making it ideal for being outdoors, so it is no surprise thatthis cities busiest attraction is mission peak which offers gorgeous views of the bay. right now the city is currently working to revitalize its downtown area, there is the current town theropods aware the construction is set to begin this fall.>>> and fremont is also designated as a tree city usa. guess how many trees are in the city of fremont? 3 10,000. >> 55,000 trees here in the city of fremont.>>> time now to change and with claudia, she joins us right here on the plaza. >> good morning, we want to give you a tour of the space we are in because it is s
the city was named after john zafar charles fremont. the area was rich with agriculture, and thrive during the california gold rush. >> it is new and had the revolutionary macintosh computer. >> reporter: but over the decades, the city has transformed with tech, there was the apple factory where the first mac computer was manufactured in the 1980s. now there is the tesla industry. fremont is known for the moderate claimant making it ideal for being outdoors, so it is no surprise...
56
56
Aug 25, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
john: john from charles town, west virginia. you talk about kind of the big, broad questions of the 19th century about what is the future of government, what is the future of labor? the civil war in the united states, but what was the reaction on the global stage, if any, to reconstruction in the united states as counterrevolution? prof. zimmerman: one thing i would say is european powers wisely look to the united states. i've written about that in west africa, but it was widely admired around the world. they looked to modern and advanced european colonial powers. the way that it might look backward looked really modern and advanced to colonial powers who thought, this is how to set white supremacy. it was a horrible model. when i say model, i do not mean good. it was very influential on european people and their powers. prof. schoen: to the left. kent: i just have a quick question. my name is kent. take the trend example, lincoln said, yeah, we will play ball with you right now, because we are fighting a war, but don't forget w
john: john from charles town, west virginia. you talk about kind of the big, broad questions of the 19th century about what is the future of government, what is the future of labor? the civil war in the united states, but what was the reaction on the global stage, if any, to reconstruction in the united states as counterrevolution? prof. zimmerman: one thing i would say is european powers wisely look to the united states. i've written about that in west africa, but it was widely admired around...
60
60
Aug 22, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
randy has written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey,jack johnson, and a teen biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works are blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x and mahomet ali and, season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. so, randy could you tell us a little about your interest in this? >> yes. this fits perfectly for me, the political history and biography , popular culture, i've always seen myself as working at the intersection between political history and political culture and popular culture. so, i write about performers, like you, actors athletes, but writing about an athlete who is just an actor. and they have to engage in a wider political culture, they clearly became iconic and you can tell a person's politics if i talk to someone about john wayne and they will usually tell me a great deal about the politics or their attitudes to do the same thing. i brought a quote in here, how can i tie these things together? how can i type politics, political conference, with popular culture s
randy has written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey,jack johnson, and a teen biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works are blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x and mahomet ali and, season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. so, randy could you tell us a little about your interest in this? >> yes. this fits perfectly for me, the political history and biography , popular culture, i've always seen...
92
92
Aug 10, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
he's written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey, ronald reagan, joe namath, a team biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works as blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x and muhammad ali, and a season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. could you tell us about your interest in this genre? me,his is perfect for political history and biography, popular culture. i have seen myself as working at the intersection between political history, political culture, and popular culture. performers, like you. actors, athletes. but i've never been interested in writing a book about an athlete who was just an athlete, or an actor who was just an actor, somehow they have to engage in a wider political culture, like john wayne or muhammad ali, they clearly became iconic, and you could tell their politics, if i talk to someone about john wayne, their attitudes on john wayne will usually tell me a great deal about their politics. or their attitudes on muhammad ali will do the same thing. thinking a quote, about how i
he's written biographies of mike tyson, john wayne, charles lindbergh, joe lewis, jack dempsey, ronald reagan, joe namath, a team biography of the pittsburgh steelers. his most recent biographical works as blood brothers, the fatal friendship of malcolm x and muhammad ali, and a season in the sun, the rise of mickey mantle. could you tell us about your interest in this genre? me,his is perfect for political history and biography, popular culture. i have seen myself as working at the...
57
57
Aug 31, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
once a week since gandy arrived, john who was a state department security person and his wife dawn invited gandy to breakfast at his residence where they chatted about charles a mentor. breakfast was over and john said, i got something for you. follow me. the two walked over and climbed to the seventh floor which housed the departments for state department employees. they stopped in front of the store the west facing apartment and knocked. the door open almost immediately and a mustache man wearing white coveralls smeared with dust poked his head out and motioned them in before closing and locking the door. john bainbridge, the man introduced himself offering his hand. he was long brown hair they gandy thought he had gone out of style a decade earlier and he was excited, a distinct gleam in his eye. we have them here to check out the chimney. but gandy hardly heard john, his attention riveted on a two by two opening that a been carved out of a brick in the west wall of the apartment. the opening were fractured bricks, dust and debris along with a sledgehammer, a massive chisel and a hammer which bainbridge had used to smash through the apartment wall. the o
once a week since gandy arrived, john who was a state department security person and his wife dawn invited gandy to breakfast at his residence where they chatted about charles a mentor. breakfast was over and john said, i got something for you. follow me. the two walked over and climbed to the seventh floor which housed the departments for state department employees. they stopped in front of the store the west facing apartment and knocked. the door open almost immediately and a mustache man...
124
124
Aug 14, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 124
favorite 0
quote 0
charles robinson. john brown. a. h. reeder. these are abolitionists. their names are inscribed in the state capitol, in the state capitol building in topeka. other names. j.h. lane. james montgomery. other names of abolitionists inscribed in the state capitol building. kansas then becomes this place of freedom. now, i'm going to say that, yes, there were whites who were dedicated to the freedom of freeing of black people and i think we have to give them credit here. but ultimately it was the black people who freed themselves. the vast majority of the people who would become free. look at these figures. in 1860 there were only 627. in 1865 there were 12,000. these 12,000 represented 9% of the population which is a larger percentage than there is of black folks in kansas to this day. so why did that happen? let me suggest a confluence of geography and politics. geography meaning on this side of the line, there were a lot of slave holding counties. some of the most intense slave holding counties were in the missouri valley and along the border with kansas
charles robinson. john brown. a. h. reeder. these are abolitionists. their names are inscribed in the state capitol, in the state capitol building in topeka. other names. j.h. lane. james montgomery. other names of abolitionists inscribed in the state capitol building. kansas then becomes this place of freedom. now, i'm going to say that, yes, there were whites who were dedicated to the freedom of freeing of black people and i think we have to give them credit here. but ultimately it was the...
55
55
Aug 21, 2019
08/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
as john said, we had the flash inversion in the yield curve that spooked markets and bond -- charles: does that resonate with the federal reserve? >> financial stability is part of their mandate. they have to pay attention to the increased volatile in the financial markets. they absolutely need to be cognizant of the huge decline in bond yields. charles: francis, irony, as much as president trump pushed jay powell, historically no one pushes the fed around like markets, right? so that inversion, the 800 point decline in the stock market certainly seems to me the wall street is screaming to the fed to be very aggressive. maybe a 50 basis.cut next month. >> i think that is what the is being baked in. powell has to decide whether i keep what is already good going? one quarter point previously is like turning the titanic. they had tightened nine times, or do i save those bullets in case we have credit default or some severe crisis. right now consumer doing well. we don't have any massive defaults in the credit markets. do you save the bullets, you only have 2 1/2% or do you go ahead aggre
as john said, we had the flash inversion in the yield curve that spooked markets and bond -- charles: does that resonate with the federal reserve? >> financial stability is part of their mandate. they have to pay attention to the increased volatile in the financial markets. they absolutely need to be cognizant of the huge decline in bond yields. charles: francis, irony, as much as president trump pushed jay powell, historically no one pushes the fed around like markets, right? so that...
78
78
Aug 7, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
charles blair paused. unsure that he wanted this work, he quoted john brown a stiff price and said white cost $1 apiece. brown said, that's good enough for me. i want them made. now the question is, why pikes? why not more buoy knives? why not swords? why not something else? brown had already used blades in kansas when his men hacked to death five southerners with broad swords. the murders terrified pro-slavery settlors. spreading 1,000 blades across kansas would intensify the scare that brown had started. his choice of weapon matter. john brown was an avid reader of military history and he knew that pikes represented the overthrow of aristocracy. medieval knights gained social and military power because few men had the metal, the courage, to stand and receive a cavalry charge. that changed when swiss peasants skewered charges knights with pikes. a simple-edged weapon in the hands of a determined underclass ended the reign of knights in europe. perhaps circulating a thousand pikes in kansas would produce a similar result against the knights of the south. so if pate's knife threatened a border war, brown
charles blair paused. unsure that he wanted this work, he quoted john brown a stiff price and said white cost $1 apiece. brown said, that's good enough for me. i want them made. now the question is, why pikes? why not more buoy knives? why not swords? why not something else? brown had already used blades in kansas when his men hacked to death five southerners with broad swords. the murders terrified pro-slavery settlors. spreading 1,000 blades across kansas would intensify the scare that brown...
95
95
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
the harshest comments have been made by john major who compared johnson to king to king charles the 1st was later beheaded before the civil war. how are these latest moves from london affecting global markets? >> ayman, would you believe they're one of the drivers this morning. quite a substantial deal when you think about the harsh language coming out from boris johnson's critics after he made that decision to suspend parliament yesterday. i want to go to one of the key drivers before brexit, the trade situation. european markets are trading higher today and u.s. futures predict wall street will see further gains during the u.s. section as well after the chinese commerce ministry commented it opposes an escalation in the u.s.-china trade spat and they are willing to resolve the issue with a calm attitude. offering upbeat comments about the relations been beijing and washington. that is providing a boost in sentiment across the globe. we did see the dollar drop yesterday and wait to see what comes next during the brexit developments. it's not just the uk during the political storm, ital
the harshest comments have been made by john major who compared johnson to king to king charles the 1st was later beheaded before the civil war. how are these latest moves from london affecting global markets? >> ayman, would you believe they're one of the drivers this morning. quite a substantial deal when you think about the harsh language coming out from boris johnson's critics after he made that decision to suspend parliament yesterday. i want to go to one of the key drivers before...
82
82
Aug 23, 2019
08/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for coming on our broadcast and good luck with it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an itling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. >>> last thing before we go tonight. so intense was the flurry of yesterday's words that a couple of things got by. the president touched on so many topics during his shouted q&a with reporters in front of the helicopter, from calling himself to a chosen one to an anti-semitic loyalty trope to threatening a close american ally with the release of fictional terrorist prisoners. there was something else. the president talked again about how he was received after the shootings in dayton and el paso where, remember, in el paso, a member of congress there said the people there felt like they had targeted on their backs because the president had called them i
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for coming on our broadcast and good luck with it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an itling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. >>> last...
81
81
Aug 23, 2019
08/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for comingth it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an itling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. u on te other side of this break what might seem like a small cough can be a big bad problem for your grandchildren. babies too young to be vaccinated against whooping cough are the most at risk for severe illness. help prevent this! talk to your doctor or pharmacist today about getting vaccinated against whooping cough. talk to your doctor or pharmacist today the business of road trips... ...adventure... ...and reconnecting. modernized comfort inn's and suites have been refreshed because our business is you. get the lowest price guaranteed on all choice hotels when you book direct at choicehotels.com. the first survivor of alzis out there.ase and the alzheimer's association is going to
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for comingth it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an itling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. u on te other side of this break what might seem like a...
111
111
Aug 7, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
charles blare paused. unsure that he wanted this work, he quoted john brown a stiff price. he said it would cost a dollar apiece. brown said, that's good enough for me. i want them made. now, the question is why pikes? why not more bowie knives, swords, something else? brown had already used blades in kansas when his men hacked to death five southerners with broad swords. the murder terrified pro safely settlers. spreading a thousand blades across kansas would intensify the scare brown started high pressure his choice of weapon mattered. john brown was of an avoid reader of military history. he knew that pikes represented the overthrow of arris stock raycy. meefld knights gained socialen a military power because few had the metal and courage to stand and receive a cavalry charge. that changed when swiss peasants skewered charging knights with pikes. s a simple edged weapon in the hands of the determined underplas class ended the reign of knights in europe. perhaps circulating 1,000 pikes to yeomen in kansas would produce a similar result against the knights of the south. so
charles blare paused. unsure that he wanted this work, he quoted john brown a stiff price. he said it would cost a dollar apiece. brown said, that's good enough for me. i want them made. now, the question is why pikes? why not more bowie knives, swords, something else? brown had already used blades in kansas when his men hacked to death five southerners with broad swords. the murder terrified pro safely settlers. spreading a thousand blades across kansas would intensify the scare brown started...
94
94
Aug 23, 2019
08/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for coming on our broadcast and good luck with it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an idling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. i...decided to take the dna test. and i...was... shocked. i'm from cameroon, congo, and...the bantu people. new features. greater details. richer stories. get your dna kit today at ancestry.com. - in the last year, of cybercrime every second. when a criminal has your personal information, they can do all sorts of things in your name. criminals can use ransomware, spyware, or malware to gain access to information like your name, your birthday, and even your social security number. - [announcer] that's why norton and lifelock are now part of one company, providing an all in one membership for your cyber safety that gives you identify theft protection, dev
charles koch. a century ago, it was john rockefeller, but the structure is the same. >> thank you very much for coming on our broadcast and good luck with it. we'll follow the story and its progress. we appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> coming up for us, what we could not fit into this broadcast last night due to a flurry of words in front of an idling helicopter, but we found time for it tonight. we'll play it for you on the other side of this break. i...decided to take...
227
227
Aug 9, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 227
favorite 0
quote 2
professor charles gardner j is the john f can billing professor of law at the indiana university morroschool of law in bloomington indiana. he invites his writings on judicial conduct ethics and selection independence, accountability, and administration include more than 70 books book chapters, articles, reports and other publications. prior to entering academia in 1991 he served as counsel to the house judiciary committee subcommittee on courts and property and the administration of justice. under chairman robert w kasten meyer. professor jay has both his ba and jd from the university of wisconsin welcome professors. welcome back home. we welcome all of our distinguished witnesses and thank them for participating in today's hearing. before proceeding with testimony i hereby remind each witness that all of your written and oral statements made to the subcommittee in connection with this hearing are subject to penalties of perjury pursuant to 18 usc section 1001 which may result in the imposition of a fine or imprisonment of up to five years or both. please note that each of your writte
professor charles gardner j is the john f can billing professor of law at the indiana university morroschool of law in bloomington indiana. he invites his writings on judicial conduct ethics and selection independence, accountability, and administration include more than 70 books book chapters, articles, reports and other publications. prior to entering academia in 1991 he served as counsel to the house judiciary committee subcommittee on courts and property and the administration of justice....
29
29
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
what's happening in hong kong our correspondent shonar charles in pain it was at the demonstrations last night and sent us this report on the john mattick developments that. that. was the scene as we arrived at the calle speakin. the good fight. where i'm going to really deliver the tough tough tough tough tough tough to follow suit her book on how the cutting down the long haul. is the take as clear as protesters slowly return. us among them dozens of local residents. many joining charles demanding police retreat. curious bystanders watching all stunned at the scene unfolding in this normally quiet neighborhood the police call for more backup as the mood once again tense dog. the showdown begins the was no i don't know i was told the local mark o'mara not purchased the gun i was on that front all our job now was. each side waiting for the other to make the 1st move but was threatening to tip this standoff over the edge. close to midnight the police moved in. sending people scattering. with the blockade police theorists begin. to die down don't let you out this is a residential area one woman screams people here one to be wearin
what's happening in hong kong our correspondent shonar charles in pain it was at the demonstrations last night and sent us this report on the john mattick developments that. that. was the scene as we arrived at the calle speakin. the good fight. where i'm going to really deliver the tough tough tough tough tough tough to follow suit her book on how the cutting down the long haul. is the take as clear as protesters slowly return. us among them dozens of local residents. many joining charles...
132
132
Aug 27, 2019
08/19
by
KRON
tv
eye 132
favorite 0
quote 0
including eric clapton janet jackson, elton john metallic in the san francisco symphony and then the warriors will kick off their 2019 2020 season. in san francisco charles clifford kron 4 news well the inside of the new arena is getting close to completion outside step serve you know being taken to try and keep the. >>traffic of fans headed to the event center flowing smoothly. our first morning kelly shows us what's ready in what's still in the works. >>18,000 people are going to be able to fit inside the new chase center with their underground parking lot only has room for 950 vehicles now there are other parking lots and parking structures in the area that will be able to accommodate some of the people coming to events here but warriors team officials and the city are urging people to consider taking public transportation first in order to prepare for the crush of the crowd coming to the chase center. recently expanded these platforms for the tea line right across the street. now these new expanded stops will be able to handle. 2 car trains loading simultaneously here. one thing not ready yet is the central subway that will allow that he lied to run
including eric clapton janet jackson, elton john metallic in the san francisco symphony and then the warriors will kick off their 2019 2020 season. in san francisco charles clifford kron 4 news well the inside of the new arena is getting close to completion outside step serve you know being taken to try and keep the. >>traffic of fans headed to the event center flowing smoothly. our first morning kelly shows us what's ready in what's still in the works. >>18,000 people are going to...
37
37
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
st john is the patron saint of bridges the world over but especially in europe i like him in particular protect people who work on the water. here on the rivers bank the 16 arches of the charles bridge dominate the view. i like it in the morning early in the evening you know people it's a good place to call them as you cross the bridge it's like you're taking a step back into time it's like you know most every day i walk across the bridge to get to work. they should but it's not just a transit route to me and i'm inspired by a spiritual as well it seems here going you know makes me think about history as well as the future. bagman has made a little history on this bridge as well. as his initiative a festival is held every year in may in on are of the bridge and it's patron saint and then the stars shine over on and around the charles bridge. and we'll be featuring more european law this week that sold over this edition of arts and culture more about these topics of course in our cultural news room or around the world on the website at d.w. dot com culture. crew here in berlin thanks for watching. the world is getting more simoun. force could justify a lot of problems. the glo
st john is the patron saint of bridges the world over but especially in europe i like him in particular protect people who work on the water. here on the rivers bank the 16 arches of the charles bridge dominate the view. i like it in the morning early in the evening you know people it's a good place to call them as you cross the bridge it's like you're taking a step back into time it's like you know most every day i walk across the bridge to get to work. they should but it's not just a transit...
58
58
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
john durham, the u.s. attorney in connecticut into the origins of the investigation. charlese next few months we'll have a lot more information. charles: ball of collusion. >> ball of collusion. charles: thank you very much. >> thank you, sir. charles: president trump says florida will be totally ready for hurricane dorian. >> fema and all of the first-responders did an incredible job with puerto rico. then we got lucky, took a different course. we got really lucky. we were ready in puerto rico. we're very ready also in florida. and we have a great governor there. he is incredible, doing incredible job, very popular too. charles: resident along florida's east coast are flocking to grocery stores and gas stations in anticipation of hurricane dorian, as the governor declares a state of emergency. dorian is threatening to become a devastating category 4 hurricane before hitting the united states late sunday into monday morning. >>> of course we're watching markets as trade optimism helping to push stocks much higher. a few hours from now president trump is launching the u.s. spa
john durham, the u.s. attorney in connecticut into the origins of the investigation. charlese next few months we'll have a lot more information. charles: ball of collusion. >> ball of collusion. charles: thank you very much. >> thank you, sir. charles: president trump says florida will be totally ready for hurricane dorian. >> fema and all of the first-responders did an incredible job with puerto rico. then we got lucky, took a different course. we got really lucky. we were...
86
86
Aug 7, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
charles stewart. lewis cass and of course john c calhoun who never seems to go away. more importantly the death of the terry of state on board the uss princeton changed everything regarding the convention and its nominees. tyler's a ointment of john c calhoun as secretary of state led to a revival of the question and jeopardized work on annexation. calhoun had already planned to make texas annexation the main issue to use that he could play in 44 and now he had tremendous power to shake not only the focus of the general campaign but also of the democrats nomination process. calhoun in van buren did not like one another. calhoun was looking to torpedo van buren's nomination. already seen as a campaign issue, annexation became more important in the public eye. van buren began to receive queries from individuals and groups of democrats across the country asking for his opinion on annexation and specifically immediate annexation and he chose to respond to one particular request by a mississippi representative, william henry hammett. van buren's letter was published and wr
charles stewart. lewis cass and of course john c calhoun who never seems to go away. more importantly the death of the terry of state on board the uss princeton changed everything regarding the convention and its nominees. tyler's a ointment of john c calhoun as secretary of state led to a revival of the question and jeopardized work on annexation. calhoun had already planned to make texas annexation the main issue to use that he could play in 44 and now he had tremendous power to shake not...
217
217
Aug 24, 2019
08/19
by
KQED
tv
eye 217
favorite 0
quote 0
john yang looks at his life and legacy. ( applause )id >> yang: doch helped his brother charles expand the wichita-based koch industries into one of the largestld privately-orporations in the world. he quickly became a notable figure in elite new york socia circs. e business eventually became the fuel behind one of the highest-spending pol action groups in modern american politics-- "americans forcs prosperity." >> americans for prosperity is responsible for the content of this advertising. >> yang: the anti-tax, pro-small government group poured hundreds of millions of dollars intodi conservative ctes and causes, often through untraceable, so-called "dark mone contributions. >> the president's doing a mediocre job. >> yang: oil- and gas-based koch network spe just under 00 million on the 2012 election-- aunparalleled sum at the time, that filled the airwaves with attack ads. >> president obama's health care law actually one of the largest tax increases in history. >> yang: targeting president obama and the affordable care act, while long denying climate change. in a 2014 interview wit
john yang looks at his life and legacy. ( applause )id >> yang: doch helped his brother charles expand the wichita-based koch industries into one of the largestld privately-orporations in the world. he quickly became a notable figure in elite new york socia circs. e business eventually became the fuel behind one of the highest-spending pol action groups in modern american politics-- "americans forcs prosperity." >> americans for prosperity is responsible for the content of...
98
98
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
while we're talking about overreacting british politicians, john major, conservative prime minister for nine years here, compared the move to charlesat led to an english civil war and then the beheading of the prime minister. that's where we are here on this side of the ocean. >> this really is the first draft of a very dramatic history. cal perry, thank you very much for joining us. really appreciate it. that is tonight's "last word." "the 11th hour" with brian williams starts now. >>> tonight, hurricane dorian strengthens off the coast of puerto rico, but president trump is tweeting insults at the island and its leadership. >>> plus, division and distractions. trump spends another day hunkered down in the white house airing his grievances at mounting controversies. and an ex-cabinet member rebels against his former boss. all of it as "the 11th hour" gets under way on a wednesday night. good evening once again from our nbc news headquarters here in new york. i'm steve kornacki
while we're talking about overreacting british politicians, john major, conservative prime minister for nine years here, compared the move to charlesat led to an english civil war and then the beheading of the prime minister. that's where we are here on this side of the ocean. >> this really is the first draft of a very dramatic history. cal perry, thank you very much for joining us. really appreciate it. that is tonight's "last word." "the 11th hour" with brian...
171
171
Aug 30, 2019
08/19
by
CNNW
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
in fact, john major even likened what boris johnson is doing to the actions of king charles i in theour monarchs who was executed for ignoring and suppressing the will of parliament. as for the other cases, we have lawsuits that have been put forward in belfast, northern ireland as well as in edinboro, scott land and london. almost all of the corners of the united kingdom there, what they all seek to do is block the suspension of parliament. boris johnson has asked the queen to perogue to suspend the sitting of parliament. now, he says that's an entirely lawful thing to do, he wants to do it, because he wants to revive his domestic agenda. his opponents say it's muzzling parliament, not allowing them a say over a critical period in the future of the united kingdom. >> bianca, thank you so much. >> florida is on high alert as hurricane dorian turns toward its east coast. predicted to become a catastrophic storm. when we come back, we have a closer look at how floridians are preparing for dorian. re str! but ocuvite has vital nutrients... ...that help protect them. ocuvite. eye nutriti
in fact, john major even likened what boris johnson is doing to the actions of king charles i in theour monarchs who was executed for ignoring and suppressing the will of parliament. as for the other cases, we have lawsuits that have been put forward in belfast, northern ireland as well as in edinboro, scott land and london. almost all of the corners of the united kingdom there, what they all seek to do is block the suspension of parliament. boris johnson has asked the queen to perogue to...
81
81
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
charles: we got breaking news right now. president trump is taking republican congressman john ratcliffe out of the running for director of nationalntelligence. the president tweeting just moments ago, our great republican congressman john ratcliffe is being treated very unfairly by the lame stream media. rather than go through months of slander and libel i explained how miserable it would be to deal with these people. john decided to stay in congress where he has done such an outstanding job, representing people of texas and our country. i will announce my nomination for the dni shortly. ratcliff had been tapped to replace dan coats. we'll be right back. okay. we won't be right back. we'll talk about this market. the market come back here. we cut losses in half, after president trump putting more tariff pressure on china. it doesn't help the markets today, the wages con inned it to increase, 3% year-over-year. we wanted to see that "wall street journal" is report that more and more americans are sliding into debt, keeping up with the jones or stay in the middle class. joining me to discuss, liz peek, young americans for liberty k
charles: we got breaking news right now. president trump is taking republican congressman john ratcliffe out of the running for director of nationalntelligence. the president tweeting just moments ago, our great republican congressman john ratcliffe is being treated very unfairly by the lame stream media. rather than go through months of slander and libel i explained how miserable it would be to deal with these people. john decided to stay in congress where he has done such an outstanding job,...
68
68
Aug 11, 2019
08/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
off as manchester united take on charles now take care good look at the young man behind me because you'll be hearing lots more about him in the coming years his name is john phillips he's 19 and because i think i'm a great $135000000.00 the portuguese teenager was a summer starting from benfica and many say he is the next christiane and ronald i started it was kind of out that the 2 played against each other on saturday i thought mexico took on the events in a pre-season game in sweden and it's fair to say that it was felix the start of the show for the gold and don't leave it out in a sister that lead to one goes for that fellow there he was subbed all for just 20 minutes to go. meanwhile in the netherlands strong winds brought down a large section of the roof of the stadium. out most incredible pictures but for sure no injuries from the collapses the side were playing at the time engineers checking to see if the structure is safer ahead of the next guy and harley on wednesday. to american athletes a very political process during their gold medal ceremonies at the pan american games in peru i'm a star glenn terry raised her face that the end of the u.s.
off as manchester united take on charles now take care good look at the young man behind me because you'll be hearing lots more about him in the coming years his name is john phillips he's 19 and because i think i'm a great $135000000.00 the portuguese teenager was a summer starting from benfica and many say he is the next christiane and ronald i started it was kind of out that the 2 played against each other on saturday i thought mexico took on the events in a pre-season game in sweden and...
117
117
Aug 27, 2019
08/19
by
KRON
tv
eye 117
favorite 0
quote 0
including eric clapton janet jackson, elton john metallic in the san francisco symphony and then the warriors will kick off their 2019 2020 season. in san francisco charlesord kron 4 news. >>coming up a city council candidate who said she wanted her city has quite as possible. she withdraws from thinking about picking up some cbd oil from your local grocery store you may want to do some research why experts are saying. just when you thought you were done painting... ...you discover paint bleed under your tape... not with frogtape! frogtape is the only painter's tape treated with patented paintblock technology. palock reacts with the water in latex paint to form a micro-barrier against paint bleed, giving you the sharpest lines possible. get professional results with frogtape... no messy lines, no paint bleed. for sharp lines every time, frog it! >>for your help tonight, it seems like cbd oil just about everywhere these days, there's a new gallup poll it says that 14% of adults use products infused with the oil with its growing presence, you're probably wondering what exactly cbd oil does well cbd is now legal across the us as long as it comes from the. >
including eric clapton janet jackson, elton john metallic in the san francisco symphony and then the warriors will kick off their 2019 2020 season. in san francisco charlesord kron 4 news. >>coming up a city council candidate who said she wanted her city has quite as possible. she withdraws from thinking about picking up some cbd oil from your local grocery store you may want to do some research why experts are saying. just when you thought you were done painting... ...you discover paint...
145
145
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
john lonski. >> joanie courtney joining us host of "making money" charles payne great to see everybody. >> o goodof the news the market that no one covered was that not just that manufacturing numbers missed the prices paid component of it, folks is in a deflationary death spiral amazing one of the things fed is worried about market went up 300 points yesterday, because at that point when this came up initially up 300 points yesterday that was the most important thing out there. we got two things fighting each they are both headwinds fed trade, and you know he they were becoming tailwinds back to headwinds that was something also, market cheered bad news because would force fed's hand i am not sure how market is going to react i would think between 150, 200 palatable we want main street to continue to do well wages over 3% minimum year-over-year. >> you said 2.2% earlier jon. >> i said year-to-year wage that is really not all that strong considering the fact you have a 3.7% unemployment rate wage growth well contained, that raises the possibility that we can take unemployment rate well under 3 1/
john lonski. >> joanie courtney joining us host of "making money" charles payne great to see everybody. >> o goodof the news the market that no one covered was that not just that manufacturing numbers missed the prices paid component of it, folks is in a deflationary death spiral amazing one of the things fed is worried about market went up 300 points yesterday, because at that point when this came up initially up 300 points yesterday that was the most important thing out...
156
156
Aug 11, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 156
favorite 0
quote 0
john hancock's name was printed, not signed. this gentleman is correcting me. the secretary. his name was? charles thompson i am being told is the name, i do for to the expertise of my audience. the gentleman in the lime shirt. >> i have two questions. number one, in light of the 1829, 1830 statement, i believe you mentioned john locke? i forget the name. who had said all people are created equal at that time. how can roger tanny have the audacity to say that slaves are property? and my second question has to do with it, i was always under the impression that king george was not really an absolutist as most of us seem to think, but that parliament had a great deal of influence in what was going on. prof. bell: thank you for the two questions. the first one, i would just point out that one of the reasons roger tony and other members of the supreme court could hand down decisions like the famous dred scott opinion from 1857 is that the declaration of independence has no force of law. it is our constitution that has the overriding force of law. interestingly, some judges even today confuse the two. t
john hancock's name was printed, not signed. this gentleman is correcting me. the secretary. his name was? charles thompson i am being told is the name, i do for to the expertise of my audience. the gentleman in the lime shirt. >> i have two questions. number one, in light of the 1829, 1830 statement, i believe you mentioned john locke? i forget the name. who had said all people are created equal at that time. how can roger tanny have the audacity to say that slaves are property? and my...
61
61
Aug 13, 2019
08/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
john bolton has suggested the uk—us trade deal could be agreed sector by sector. but that may not be the case. here's charleseform. what bolton is proposing is probably illegal under the world trade regulation rules, stating that if you do a trade deal involving tariffs, and must apply to substantially all trade between two countries. so the idea you can do it sector by sector does not work, that's why trade deals are not done that's why trade deals are not done that way especially industrial. he's not a trade expertise in geopolitical operator i met ten yea rs geopolitical operator i met ten years ago when he worked for george bush and i think i can say that the three things he hates an equal measure are the eu, and the wto and the united nations he has any international organisation because they can constrain american freedom to work at once. but of course, some of the demand the us will make a britain and the trade agreement such as following us agriculture standards for food safety and plant health and cell line will make it harderfor health and cell line will make it harder for the health and cell line
john bolton has suggested the uk—us trade deal could be agreed sector by sector. but that may not be the case. here's charleseform. what bolton is proposing is probably illegal under the world trade regulation rules, stating that if you do a trade deal involving tariffs, and must apply to substantially all trade between two countries. so the idea you can do it sector by sector does not work, that's why trade deals are not done that's why trade deals are not done that way especially...
87
87
Aug 26, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
he did tell charles that when he retires, they will never replace harvey with a conservative, so he has to go on forever and ever and then john will go on forever and ever at berkeley. a wonderful event. i want to thank everyone for coming. a warm san francisco thank you an to steve and john yoo for excellent job. [applause] announcer: wednesday, the house convenes to consider a number of gun violence prevention bills. watch live at 10:00 a.m. eastern c-span.org,nline at or listen on the free c-span radio app. small network with an unusual name rolled out a big idea. let viewers make up their own minds. c-span opened the door to washington policy for all to see, bringing you unfiltered content from congress and beyond. a lot has changed in 40 years, but today that big idea is more ever.nt than on television and online, c-span is your unfiltered view of government so you can make up your own mind. brought to you by your cable and satellite provider. announcer: president trump joined french president emmanuel macron for a news conference at the end of the g7 summit in france. president macron announced he brokered a preliminary
he did tell charles that when he retires, they will never replace harvey with a conservative, so he has to go on forever and ever and then john will go on forever and ever at berkeley. a wonderful event. i want to thank everyone for coming. a warm san francisco thank you an to steve and john yoo for excellent job. [applause] announcer: wednesday, the house convenes to consider a number of gun violence prevention bills. watch live at 10:00 a.m. eastern c-span.org,nline at or listen on the free...
93
93
Aug 29, 2019
08/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
john modston. he founded the space institute and is an aher tus professor at george washington university. joining him are major general charles bolden, u.s. science envoy for space and former nasa administrator and space shuttle commander as well, as well as dr. allen. [ applause ] >> mike, i'm going to let you sit back and catch your breath a little bit and start with the other two people here. first i'm going to show off my sock. [ applause ] >> i just got back from the celebration at the kennedy space center, where this was one of the door prizes for one of the dinners. who else has saturn 5 on their sock? it's probably in the back and you can't see. let me start with you, charlie. you recently completed a term of duty as the state department's science envoy for space. what does that mean? what did you do? >> i asked the same thing when i was invited to do that. i said, in fact, i want to thank cedar farrell. she is a career professional states department person, and she was my planner, my guide, my everything. the two of us trapsed around the world. i said, why am i being asked to become the state department science envoy
john modston. he founded the space institute and is an aher tus professor at george washington university. joining him are major general charles bolden, u.s. science envoy for space and former nasa administrator and space shuttle commander as well, as well as dr. allen. [ applause ] >> mike, i'm going to let you sit back and catch your breath a little bit and start with the other two people here. first i'm going to show off my sock. [ applause ] >> i just got back from the...