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Apr 23, 2016
04/16
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president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs.any other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. these efforts are what history will remember us by. ♪ [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2016] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] secretary, we proudly get 72 of our delegate about to the next president -- votes to the next president of the united states. [applause] ♪ eastern, wet 10:00 will look at some of the speeches by president obama during his two terms at the white house correspondents dinner. this year will mark his final attendance. president obama: it turns out jeb bush identified himself as hispanic in 2009. it is an innocent mistake. it reminds me of when i identified myself as american back in 1961. [la
president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs.any other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. these efforts are what history will remember us by. ♪ [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2016] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for...
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Apr 17, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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eye 46
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president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs.re many other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. these efforts are what history will remember us by. ♪ >> c-span, created by america's television companies and brought to you by your cable or satellite provider. >> this weekend on "american artifacts" we visit the pulitzer prize for graphs gallery. this year marks the centennial of this award. here's a preview. ruby shoots lee harvey 1964. in the photographer worked for the dallas times herald. presidentination of kennedy is burned into the consciousness of most americans of a certain age. he was part of the motorcade covering that visit to dallas. as he is near the book repository, mr. jackson goes down and all of the sudden here's a couple of shots. he looks around and here's three shot. he is sitting there on the ground wi
president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs.re many other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. these efforts are what history will remember us by. ♪ >> c-span, created by america's television companies and brought to you by your cable or satellite provider. >> this weekend on...
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Apr 17, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs. many other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels date deep dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. are what history will remember us by. ♪ announcer: this weekend, the ur, hostedies to by comcast, takes you to tuscaloosa, alabama to showcase the literary culture of the city , which is home to the university of alabama. we will visit archaeological sites and learn how the native american culture lived from the 11th century to the 15th century. >> welcome to mount dale archaeological park. this was the largest city north of mexico and contains the flat-topf about 30 mounds. we are standing at mt. b, the largest amount in alabama, containing about 112,000 cubic years of dirt, and this would have been worthy structure for the highest-ranking leader of the highest-ranking klan would have been. clan would have been. resear
president johnson: mrs. johnson, and mrs. many other hard-working colleagues, put some playground equipment and the schoolyards, and improved the neighborhood parks. i think their shovels date deep dig deep into the future of this land. those shovels, while digging deep, are changing the lives of our children. are what history will remember us by. ♪ announcer: this weekend, the ur, hostedies to by comcast, takes you to tuscaloosa, alabama to showcase the literary culture of the city , which...
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Apr 2, 2016
04/16
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BLOOMBERG
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and johnson.ely known for its baby powder. she reports on a string of lawsuits against johnson and johnson alleging that powder is carcinogenic. >> it's a sad story. a woman namedout jacqueline fox who has died of ovarian cancer. the question is whether use of the powder for hygienic reasons way-- is associated in some with ovarian cancer. it is not as though they are saying it causes it. ist these limits are arguing that johnson and johnson kind of covered up at the risk. it is all about risk and whether they should have been more open about these risks. >> we have to be careful here. these -- there has been nothing conclusive here. the company still saying there is not a strong enough link. >> absolutely. one about's family $72 million. it's one of the early cases in this big pool of 1000 cases. after the verdict, many women contacted her attorney. this is the beginning of a string of at least 1000 women who are alleging this. again, there is no established link what these women are arguing. the
and johnson.ely known for its baby powder. she reports on a string of lawsuits against johnson and johnson alleging that powder is carcinogenic. >> it's a sad story. a woman namedout jacqueline fox who has died of ovarian cancer. the question is whether use of the powder for hygienic reasons way-- is associated in some with ovarian cancer. it is not as though they are saying it causes it. ist these limits are arguing that johnson and johnson kind of covered up at the risk. it is all about...
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Apr 30, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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kissinger and former president johnson, until president johnson died. they both wanted an honorable peace. for his efforts, dr. kissinger won a nobel prize. and after, you see a brief presentation, a video of dr. kissinger after he negotiated that peace treaty, we will bring them forward to introduce into you. thank you. [applause] >> the united states is seeking peace that heals. we have had many armistice is in indochina. ce that willa last. therefore, it is our firm intention, in our relationship to the democratic republic of hostilityo move from to normalization. normalization to conciliation. and cooperation. believe that under conditions of peace, we can contribute throughout indochina to a realization of the humane aspirations of all the peoples of indochina. spirit,ill, in that perform our traditional role of helping people realize these aspirations in peace. >> ladies and gentlemen, please welcome the former secretary of state, dr. henry kissinger. [applause] >> dr. kissinger, welcome. it's a privilege to have you on the stage. one of the thing
kissinger and former president johnson, until president johnson died. they both wanted an honorable peace. for his efforts, dr. kissinger won a nobel prize. and after, you see a brief presentation, a video of dr. kissinger after he negotiated that peace treaty, we will bring them forward to introduce into you. thank you. [applause] >> the united states is seeking peace that heals. we have had many armistice is in indochina. ce that willa last. therefore, it is our firm intention, in our...
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Apr 23, 2016
04/16
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FBC
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johnson, governor johnson senator cruz said we should carpet bomb isis into oblivion. don't know of sand can glow in the dark that we will find out. >> i think this is a problem, how we have addressed this problem. we have addressed these problems with bombs and not our brains. we need to cut off the funding to isis and we need to have congress declare war on isis. not that they haven't been the aggressor but where did al qaeda go? well gee woodcut that had off and now have isis and went isis goes, something else is going to arise. we need to continue is happening in the middle east. the declaration of war from congress and let's cut off their funding. john: a quick answer from twitter. someone called hope asks what you and all foreign aid? >> again we have commitments as a u.s. government to a number of other foreign governments that do not involve policing and these commitments it made would have to keep, i'm sorry we do have allies and we do have enemies in this world. if you think we don't you should look at what china has been doing to us for the past year. 21 mil
johnson, governor johnson senator cruz said we should carpet bomb isis into oblivion. don't know of sand can glow in the dark that we will find out. >> i think this is a problem, how we have addressed this problem. we have addressed these problems with bombs and not our brains. we need to cut off the funding to isis and we need to have congress declare war on isis. not that they haven't been the aggressor but where did al qaeda go? well gee woodcut that had off and now have isis and went...
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Apr 17, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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johnson is going to change. of course, we are going to have the warfare that will erupt between the radical republicans, between all the republicans, and johnson, and the democrats. lincoln was far too great of a politician to review what sidney blumenthal said earlier this morning. a masterful politician. he did not lose that mastery is the war went on. he was able to play the middle , keep the moderates in line, address the concerns of the conservative side of the party, and not completely alienate the radicals. we have to believe, certainly, that his ability to do that would have continued the pace. other ways as well, in which, had lincoln survived perhaps things would have , changed. douglass spoke at length after the assassination about the speech. douglas said the president has expressed himself in favor of extending the rights of suffrage to two classes of colored men. first, the brave colored soldiers who had fought under our flag, and the second is the intelligent part of the south. the declaration on
johnson is going to change. of course, we are going to have the warfare that will erupt between the radical republicans, between all the republicans, and johnson, and the democrats. lincoln was far too great of a politician to review what sidney blumenthal said earlier this morning. a masterful politician. he did not lose that mastery is the war went on. he was able to play the middle , keep the moderates in line, address the concerns of the conservative side of the party, and not completely...
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john: governor johnson?>> we've got an example through the with zurich, switzerland, they made free heroin available. you had to register, but you got as much heroin as you wanted. the idea was to reduce death, disease, crime and corruption. i met with the chief of police from zurich, switzerland when he came to albuquerque for a worldwide drug conference in 2002, and he said when they came out with this program in zurich, i and all of law enforcement could not have been more opposed to this. death, disease, crime and corruption was going to skyrocket. i'm here to tell you that all of those things improved and the citizens of zurich reupped on this program. when you realize that only 8,000 people a year die from heroin overdose, and people say, well, that's because it's illegal. gee-whiz, if it were legal, if it were controlled, meaning, quality, quantity known, you might not have any death. people will still commit suicide, doing anything. john: some people will get addicted so geraldo rivera has a related
john: governor johnson?>> we've got an example through the with zurich, switzerland, they made free heroin available. you had to register, but you got as much heroin as you wanted. the idea was to reduce death, disease, crime and corruption. i met with the chief of police from zurich, switzerland when he came to albuquerque for a worldwide drug conference in 2002, and he said when they came out with this program in zurich, i and all of law enforcement could not have been more opposed to...
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johnson, governor johnson senator cruz said we should carpet bomb isis into oblivion.on't know of sand can glow in the dark that we will find out. >> i think this is a problem, how we have addressed this problem. we have addressed these problems with bombs and not our brains. we need to cut off the funding to isis and we need to have congress declare war on isis. not that they haven't been the aggressor but where did al qaeda go? well gee woodcut that had off and now have isis and went isis goes, something else is going to arise. we need to continue is happening in the middle east. the declaration of war from congress and let's cut off their funding. john: a quick answer from twitter. someone called hope asks what you and all foreign aid? >> again we have commitments as a u.s. government to a number of other foreign governments that do not involve policing and these commitments it made would have to keep, i'm sorry we do have allies and we do have enemies in this world. if you think we don't you should look at what china has been doing to us for the past year. 21 milli
johnson, governor johnson senator cruz said we should carpet bomb isis into oblivion.on't know of sand can glow in the dark that we will find out. >> i think this is a problem, how we have addressed this problem. we have addressed these problems with bombs and not our brains. we need to cut off the funding to isis and we need to have congress declare war on isis. not that they haven't been the aggressor but where did al qaeda go? well gee woodcut that had off and now have isis and went...
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Apr 15, 2016
04/16
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johnson: mr. chris curry is the direction -- director of heeland security where evaluates emergency management, national preparedness, and critical infrastructure issues. he has led reviews of federal programs in efforts to prevent, plan for, and respond to natural and man-made disasters. mr. currie: thank you, chairman, ranking member, other members of the committee. i appreciate the opportunity to be here. i would like to talk about the work done by a defense. defending the u.s. from naturally occurring or man-made biological events is a difficult effort. leadership and coordination are fragmented a large, effort, not only at the federal level, but across levels of government and the private sector. a number of federal departments at this table today alone demonstrates this point. in a hearing last fall, your committee heard the findings and recommendations of the blue-ribbon study panel on bio defense. our work through the years has come to many similar conclusions and recommendations. today, i
johnson: mr. chris curry is the direction -- director of heeland security where evaluates emergency management, national preparedness, and critical infrastructure issues. he has led reviews of federal programs in efforts to prevent, plan for, and respond to natural and man-made disasters. mr. currie: thank you, chairman, ranking member, other members of the committee. i appreciate the opportunity to be here. i would like to talk about the work done by a defense. defending the u.s. from...
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Apr 10, 2016
04/16
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ron johnson: thanks. mr. watts, i want to start with you, because you mentioned, i think, the key point here. most of the testimony has been talking about being on defense. you talked about going on offense. but even in talking about going on offense, you're talking about helping, going, having america going offense to help european be on defense. i want to talk about actually going on offense. i want to talk about the fact that you said that this has been building in syria and iraq, and it was inevitable. and as we watched the events unfold here, and, yes, we're pushing isis back in iraq, but they're gaining territory in syria. they're setting up a stronger base in libya. they're getting into afghanistan. we've having boko haram and other terrorist organizations affiliate themselves with isis. this is growing. i want to talk about an effective offense. and, again, i want to just give some indication here. there's a state department report called the start report, study of terrorism and response to terrorism.
ron johnson: thanks. mr. watts, i want to start with you, because you mentioned, i think, the key point here. most of the testimony has been talking about being on defense. you talked about going on offense. but even in talking about going on offense, you're talking about helping, going, having america going offense to help european be on defense. i want to talk about actually going on offense. i want to talk about the fact that you said that this has been building in syria and iraq, and it was...
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Apr 17, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN2
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johnson liked to do work in bed at night. so it was changed and sent to the white house late in the afternoon so he could read it in bed at night. he later went back to reading it in the morning but makes the point it is the president's book. the president wants it at night he will get it at night. the president wants it in the form of interpretive dance there are going to be a lot of intelligence officers learning to dance >> my recollection is johnson would take briefings sitting in the bathroom occasionally. >> i have heard that story, too. >> you mentioned jfk had trouble sitting still. you are talking about his physical situation. it was difficult for him to sit for long periods. >> i think it was two fronts. the physical condition but his advisors said he was constantly trying to move to the next topic and physically they could get hit him to sit still but they were excited about a meeting and had to chase it down and focus for long periods of time having a document with the original checklist designed and something tha
johnson liked to do work in bed at night. so it was changed and sent to the white house late in the afternoon so he could read it in bed at night. he later went back to reading it in the morning but makes the point it is the president's book. the president wants it at night he will get it at night. the president wants it in the form of interpretive dance there are going to be a lot of intelligence officers learning to dance >> my recollection is johnson would take briefings sitting in the...
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Apr 3, 2016
04/16
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CNNW
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former senator russ feingold, a liberal democrat, is looking to win back his seat that he lost to johnson in 2010. he says since never in the modern era has a supreme court nominee ever been denied a hearing. but johnson's chances may be far more impacted by the presidential race and the senator says that donald trump could actually help his re-election by attracting new voters in rural wisconsin who are angry at washington. >> would you stump at trump? >> just because it rhymes. ronald the donald. you can get all kinds of rhymes out of this thing. >> reporter: republicans are defending 24 senate seats this cycle compared to just ten for the democrats and democrats believe that this issue blocking the supreme court nominee will actually play into their favor when they try to make the case the republican congress has been gridlocked. but ron johnson actually got some very good news this week in a new marquette poll that finds them down just three points in this hotly contested race
former senator russ feingold, a liberal democrat, is looking to win back his seat that he lost to johnson in 2010. he says since never in the modern era has a supreme court nominee ever been denied a hearing. but johnson's chances may be far more impacted by the presidential race and the senator says that donald trump could actually help his re-election by attracting new voters in rural wisconsin who are angry at washington. >> would you stump at trump? >> just because it rhymes....
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Apr 24, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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johnson also had a post-career, very short. to the senate from tennessee. >> a few months. >> i am from rhode island. i just want to ask e-cig -- each , who is for each of you a has beensident who pretty good in your eyes. >> i would go back to reagan. i grew up in a liberal household. we had ar in 1980, mock debate in our high school and i played reagan because there was nobody in the school who supported him. i was the only one willing to be devil's advocate. i grew up in a reagan-hating culture. doing this book for me was really eye-opening in a lot of ways. i have not gone to the other side. i think that most of the prejudices i had growing up about reagan were in one way or another wrong. i have come to think that he was much better president than i ever would have thought, and also a more appealing person. it is hard to spend a lot of time around reagan -- i don't know if claire would agree with this, he is hard not to like. he has a genuine sense of humor. he is nice to people. everyone around him seems to have liked him
johnson also had a post-career, very short. to the senate from tennessee. >> a few months. >> i am from rhode island. i just want to ask e-cig -- each , who is for each of you a has beensident who pretty good in your eyes. >> i would go back to reagan. i grew up in a liberal household. we had ar in 1980, mock debate in our high school and i played reagan because there was nobody in the school who supported him. i was the only one willing to be devil's advocate. i grew up in a...
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Apr 30, 2016
04/16
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we did not do johnson. on my side was a very elegant british journalist named simon jenkins and on the way in, he told me he thought it would be very poor manners to criticize an american president in his own country. and i said, ok i'm out here on my own. and karl rove argued the proposition of not just george w. bush was not the worst president of the last 100 years, but of course the best president of all time. bill kristol took a shrewder tack and said george bush was not good, but not the worst. hoover, carter, nixon. they actually won the vote but i still suggest karl rove stacked the whole in his favor ahead of time. i think, when we think about the whole question, first model all -- first of all, we have to knowledge -- acknowledge it is a parlor game. but it is a really fun parlor game for nerds like me. you can do the same thing with baseball players. we had a debate about who the cultural figures should be up there were a mount rushmore for culture and of course the decision was, they should not
we did not do johnson. on my side was a very elegant british journalist named simon jenkins and on the way in, he told me he thought it would be very poor manners to criticize an american president in his own country. and i said, ok i'm out here on my own. and karl rove argued the proposition of not just george w. bush was not the worst president of the last 100 years, but of course the best president of all time. bill kristol took a shrewder tack and said george bush was not good, but not the...
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Apr 27, 2016
04/16
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LINKTV
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let's go to former governor gary johnson first. can you respond to what is called the acela primary's, the states that donald trump swept? you are former republican governor. your thoughts? >> i think he is going to get the nomination. i think you'll get the nomination on i think he is the most polarizing figure among republicans. i think he alienates over half of republicans. i know you're asking me for my thoughts on trump, but i think hillary is really the same category. she is very polarizing and arguably we have the two most polarizing figures in america today. they will be the nominees. 50% of americans are saying they are independents, well, maybe it in of the day the two of them represent 30% of the electorate. amy: sue wilson beffort, your thoughts on what took place, not only last night, donald trump taking five states, but also the deal being worked out in new mexico and other states that kasich could take new mexico and ted cruz could take other states? your thoughts about this? >> my sense was trump was going to take t
let's go to former governor gary johnson first. can you respond to what is called the acela primary's, the states that donald trump swept? you are former republican governor. your thoughts? >> i think he is going to get the nomination. i think you'll get the nomination on i think he is the most polarizing figure among republicans. i think he alienates over half of republicans. i know you're asking me for my thoughts on trump, but i think hillary is really the same category. she is very...
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Apr 10, 2016
04/16
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KTVU
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has johnson led tonight? >> i think he has. >> no, he didn't lead last week at martinsville. >> chase elliott, he did that on a green flag pit stop cycle. >> between teammates before this thing is over between jimmy and chase. >> jimmy was going for four in a row. white flag in the air, one to go sponsored by credit one bank. call in the dogs. turn out the lights. >> kyle busch going to come around to lead his 34th lap. >> well. >> and score his 36th career win. kyle busch wins the duck commander 500. >> why you don't want to win, my man, kyle, you're the best. >> he joins jimmie johnson as a double winner. 2016. >> good job. good job, guys. >> he's finished in the top five in six of this year's seven races. for the ninth time get the broom out career weekend sweep, won the xfinity race yesterday, thoroughly dominated that one and we're going to bristol where -- he's as good as anybody when we get to bristol. i mean, this team is a on a roll. >> are the trucks and xfinity cars running next week? he might be a
has johnson led tonight? >> i think he has. >> no, he didn't lead last week at martinsville. >> chase elliott, he did that on a green flag pit stop cycle. >> between teammates before this thing is over between jimmy and chase. >> jimmy was going for four in a row. white flag in the air, one to go sponsored by credit one bank. call in the dogs. turn out the lights. >> kyle busch going to come around to lead his 34th lap. >> well. >> and score his...
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Apr 10, 2016
04/16
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johnson committee were jumping off.show during a time of complex urban crisis, attractive surroundings can exist, bringing joy and new opportunities to city dwellers. ♪ >> interested in american history tv? visit our website c-span.org/history to see our upcoming schedule or watch a recent program, american artifacts, wrote to the white house, lectures and series and more. presidency,n the , and parry african-american studies professor at california state university, fullerton talks about the american
johnson committee were jumping off.show during a time of complex urban crisis, attractive surroundings can exist, bringing joy and new opportunities to city dwellers. ♪ >> interested in american history tv? visit our website c-span.org/history to see our upcoming schedule or watch a recent program, american artifacts, wrote to the white house, lectures and series and more. presidency,n the , and parry african-american studies professor at california state university, fullerton talks...
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Apr 23, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN2
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there's been some hike for kennedy and johnson that were one page. and then there are cases of dozens of pages where there's a main analysis and maybe some supplemental papers that are longer. and i think that hooks back to what you asked, because if your research and your feedback from the president tells you this is what the president needs now and he will carve out time to do it, you can get away with a 30-page pdb. most of the time the president's schedule, which is measured in minutes, does not have anything available for anything superflowous. and more often it's probably in the single pages rather than in the tens of dozens. >> thank you very much. great talk, david. you've touched glancingly on a couple aspect obviously of the question, but i wasn'ted to see if i could draw you out a little bit. one of the things that struck me was that the johnson and kennedy kennedy -- in the late '90s and the early 2000s, i wrote for the pdb from time to time. i know i'm not alone in the room in that regard. and in my day, and everybody knows publicly thes
there's been some hike for kennedy and johnson that were one page. and then there are cases of dozens of pages where there's a main analysis and maybe some supplemental papers that are longer. and i think that hooks back to what you asked, because if your research and your feedback from the president tells you this is what the president needs now and he will carve out time to do it, you can get away with a 30-page pdb. most of the time the president's schedule, which is measured in minutes,...
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Apr 1, 2016
04/16
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CSPAN3
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even andrew johnson seems to fade away. most people today have a hard time attaching a name or face to who the radical republicans were. even though tommy lee jones also gives people a way to remember at least one radical republican. most people would be hard pressed to name any of the african-american office holders that we know emerged during reconstruction. or the white office holders that replaced them. this is one reason people think they know anything about reconstruction. there's no framework that people are used to making sense of the you civil war with, even if they imagine gettysburg happens to have been in the middle, that's what the people imagine a narrative arc. they think they at least have that, there's no sense of the construction of the project of sherman's march, it seems to be happening all the time everywhere. there seems to have been largely chaos, sliced in different shapes for different southern states. each one of which followed its own chronology. it lasted two years in some places and 12 in others
even andrew johnson seems to fade away. most people today have a hard time attaching a name or face to who the radical republicans were. even though tommy lee jones also gives people a way to remember at least one radical republican. most people would be hard pressed to name any of the african-american office holders that we know emerged during reconstruction. or the white office holders that replaced them. this is one reason people think they know anything about reconstruction. there's no...
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Apr 2, 2016
04/16
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personality, but the johnson policies. i say, whether you look at america's record abroad, or at home, this is not a time to continue with lyndon johnson. it's time for new leadership under a republican president and a republican administration. [ applause ] it is time to begin. lyndon johnson says, let us continue for four more years. this is my answer. when the strongest nation in the world can be tied down for four years in a war against a fourth rate military power in vietnam with no end in sight, when the richest nation in the world cannot manage its own economy, when a nation with the greatest tradition for the rule of law is torn apart by lawlessness, when a nation which has been a symbol of equality, of opportunity, is torn apart by racial strife, when the president of the united states cannot travel at home or abroad without fear of a hostile demonstration, then i say it's time for new leadership in the united states of america. [ applause ] >> ideas are important to richard nixon. he seeks them from a variety of
personality, but the johnson policies. i say, whether you look at america's record abroad, or at home, this is not a time to continue with lyndon johnson. it's time for new leadership under a republican president and a republican administration. [ applause ] it is time to begin. lyndon johnson says, let us continue for four more years. this is my answer. when the strongest nation in the world can be tied down for four years in a war against a fourth rate military power in vietnam with no end in...
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Apr 19, 2016
04/16
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 298
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johnson & johnson only up 6/10 of 1%.ght now and they are pulling out of five states. i expect that has some impact on them as well. harley davidson doing better was looking for. their keeping their forecast for the year. in acycle sales have been weak spot. harley davidson makes more motorcycles and other manufacturers in the world put together. that is how much it dominates the big bike market. take a look at the big losers. netflix -- we have been talking about it all morning. disappointed analyst with its international subscriber additions. opened up in 130 companies, but they are only going to add 2 million subscribers internationally at the earnings release yesterday. goldman sachs also really disappointing as far as the revenue was concerned, down to the lowest level since before lloyd blankfein got there in 2006. they did beat on earnings, but who does not. ibm also disappointed with its outlook as well as philip morris. vonnie: matt, thank you so much. yields on the 10 year treasuries have declined. we are lookin
johnson & johnson only up 6/10 of 1%.ght now and they are pulling out of five states. i expect that has some impact on them as well. harley davidson doing better was looking for. their keeping their forecast for the year. in acycle sales have been weak spot. harley davidson makes more motorcycles and other manufacturers in the world put together. that is how much it dominates the big bike market. take a look at the big losers. netflix -- we have been talking about it all morning....
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Apr 27, 2016
04/16
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but that leaves only two american companies with aaa rating, johnson & johnson and microsoft. shares of exxon were, none the will up a tick to 8763. >>> ibp raised its quarterly dividend to $1.40 per share up from $1.30 t. yield on thing to is now 3.67%. shares of ibm were up a
but that leaves only two american companies with aaa rating, johnson & johnson and microsoft. shares of exxon were, none the will up a tick to 8763. >>> ibp raised its quarterly dividend to $1.40 per share up from $1.30 t. yield on thing to is now 3.67%. shares of ibm were up a
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Apr 9, 2016
04/16
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secretary of homeland security, the honorable jeh johnson. [applause] since 2009, secretary johnson has been a critical member of the president's national security team, and has a deep understanding of the threats and challenges facing the united states. as the pentagon's general counsel, he helped design and implement many of the policies that have kept our country safe. time and again, he has been in the situation room contribute into critical decisions affecting our national security and public safety. as secretary, he has taken strong steps on both counterterrorism and countering violent extremism, and has led transformational efforts to make our nation a safer place. . some examples. under his leadership, the department has taken aggressive measures to further improve aviation and airport security. this includes enhanced security at overseas airports and continuous background checks on airline and aviation personnel. he recognizes that america's first line of defense against terrorism is our local police, and accordingly last year the de
secretary of homeland security, the honorable jeh johnson. [applause] since 2009, secretary johnson has been a critical member of the president's national security team, and has a deep understanding of the threats and challenges facing the united states. as the pentagon's general counsel, he helped design and implement many of the policies that have kept our country safe. time and again, he has been in the situation room contribute into critical decisions affecting our national security and...
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Apr 4, 2016
04/16
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johnson. if we move on now to the other aspects of the canada deal, inside the eu, financial firms based in the u.k. can sell services contradictory to e.u. countries through passports. does canada have those arrangements in its deal with the eu? >> on passports i see absolutely no reason why they are -- our friends, our partners should not continue -- when you consider their banks benefit very considerably from their presence in london, they would want to have reciprocal arrangements. i think deutsche bank has about 8,000 employees in london. >> tell everybody in the room, it's 11:00 a.m., the bell will sound and we will observe one minute silence, as will the rest of the house of commons, in respect for the -- with respect to the events in brussels. please, carry on, but we may need to interrupt you. >> yes, thank you, mr. chairman. mr. johnson, you assert we get these arrangements, but presumably canada wanted these arrangements and wanted further barriers to be broken down. that was not to
johnson. if we move on now to the other aspects of the canada deal, inside the eu, financial firms based in the u.k. can sell services contradictory to e.u. countries through passports. does canada have those arrangements in its deal with the eu? >> on passports i see absolutely no reason why they are -- our friends, our partners should not continue -- when you consider their banks benefit very considerably from their presence in london, they would want to have reciprocal arrangements. i...