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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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kilpatrick manages to avoid being captured. the confederates are now free to march into fayetteville. however, union infantry are endlessly delighted by this embarrassing encounter that kilpatrick has with hampton at munro's crossroad. they nickname this battle kilpatrick shirttail skedaddle. sherman reaches fayetteville on the following day, march 11. promptly orders the first michigan engineers and mechanics to burn the former u.s. arsenal there. he will rest his army there until march the 15th, when he will begin the final stage of his progress to his destination. in the meantime, on fairbury 22nd 1865, department of north carolina troops commanded by major general john m. schofield capture wilmington. schofield has been transferred east from nashville, tennessee with the 23rd army corps. they are joining terry's forces. now there is going to be a new objective. sherman is going to be headed towards goldsboro. i will be his first destination where he will refit his army before beginning -- continuing the march into virginia.
kilpatrick manages to avoid being captured. the confederates are now free to march into fayetteville. however, union infantry are endlessly delighted by this embarrassing encounter that kilpatrick has with hampton at munro's crossroad. they nickname this battle kilpatrick shirttail skedaddle. sherman reaches fayetteville on the following day, march 11. promptly orders the first michigan engineers and mechanics to burn the former u.s. arsenal there. he will rest his army there until march the...
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76
Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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kilpatrick manages to avoid being captured. the confederates are now free to march into fayetteville. however, union infantry are endlessly delighted by this embarrassing encounter that kilpatrick has with hampton at munro's crossroad. they nickname this battle kilpatrick shirttail skedaddle. sherman reaches fayetteville on the following day, march 11. promptly orders the first michigan engineers and mechanics to burn the former u.s. arsenal there. he will rest his army there until march the 15th, when he will begin the final stage of his progress to his destination. in the meantime, on fairbury 22nd 1865, department of north carolina troops commanded by major general john m. schofield capture wilmington. schofield has been transferred east from nashville, tennessee with the 23rd army corps. they are joining terry's forces. now there is going to be a new objective. sherman is going to be headed towards goldsboro. i will be his first destination where he will refit his army before beginning -- continuing the march into virginia.
kilpatrick manages to avoid being captured. the confederates are now free to march into fayetteville. however, union infantry are endlessly delighted by this embarrassing encounter that kilpatrick has with hampton at munro's crossroad. they nickname this battle kilpatrick shirttail skedaddle. sherman reaches fayetteville on the following day, march 11. promptly orders the first michigan engineers and mechanics to burn the former u.s. arsenal there. he will rest his army there until march the...
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Apr 4, 2015
04/15
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kilpatrick of the richmond news leader, and john chancellor of nbc news. we'll continue the questions now with mr. wicker. mr. wicker: dr. king, you said a moment ago that alabama was a state that gives respectability to the resistance and defiance of the law, and you listed an observance of the law by local agencies in the south as one of the cardinal aims that you were seeking. yet on march 9, you led the second march on montgomery in violation of a federal injunction not to march. you said that order was unjust and john lewis, one of your colleagues, said that negroes had a constitutional right to march, injunction or no injunction. now, was that in keeping with the spirit of non-violence and the restraint that has always characterized your movement, and could you explain your reasoning in defying the court order that day? dr. king: well, let me say two things to that, mr. wicker. first i did not consider myself defying the court order that particular day. i consulted with my attorneys before the march, and they stated that they felt that it was an inva
kilpatrick of the richmond news leader, and john chancellor of nbc news. we'll continue the questions now with mr. wicker. mr. wicker: dr. king, you said a moment ago that alabama was a state that gives respectability to the resistance and defiance of the law, and you listed an observance of the law by local agencies in the south as one of the cardinal aims that you were seeking. yet on march 9, you led the second march on montgomery in violation of a federal injunction not to march. you said...
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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hampton and kilpatrick has been squirmishing almost constantly during their progress and kilpatrick has managed to steal a march around hampton's force, and he's gotten between the confederate calgary and the infantry under hardy. so kilpatrick sets up a series of roadblocks to prevent hampton from reaching the town of fayetteville and joining forces with hardy. but what he does is he presents hampton with an ideal opportunity to concentrate on an isolated part of the calvary at monroe's cross roads. it just so happens that kilpatrick's headquarters are located there. and it's a dawn on march 10 1865 that hampton launches a surprise attack on kilpatrick's camp succeeds in sweeping everything before him. driving the federals into a swamp. in fact, the attack is so successful that the confederates are disorganized giving the federals an opportunity to counterattack and drive the confederates out of their camp. kilpatrick manages to avoid being captured and the confederates are now free to march into fayetteville. however, union infantry are endlessly delighted by this embarrassing encount
hampton and kilpatrick has been squirmishing almost constantly during their progress and kilpatrick has managed to steal a march around hampton's force, and he's gotten between the confederate calgary and the infantry under hardy. so kilpatrick sets up a series of roadblocks to prevent hampton from reaching the town of fayetteville and joining forces with hardy. but what he does is he presents hampton with an ideal opportunity to concentrate on an isolated part of the calvary at monroe's cross...
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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ALJAZAM
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as kate kilpatrick reports the push for a panama competitor could wipe them out. >> reporter: the 140ple who live in this remote indigenous village on the remote area of nicaragua has been abandoned by the central government. it is one of the poorest and least developed area of the country. the people here live off hunting fishing and farming. the community is home to the last remaining speakers of the indigenous rama language. >> we the rama, we plant eat and we live. we don't bother nobody. >> reporter: but that life is about to change. in the middle of the biggest infrastructure build in the world. the nicaragua canal. >> the people we don't feel too good about it. we sad about it. why we sad? got many of my people in, they don't know where they want to live. they don't know where them going going. them suffer. >> in june 2013, the nick rog juan government granted the right to juan jang and his company, a groundbreaking ceremony was held in december although there's been little sign of construction yet. while nicaragua's indigenous population make up only 13% of the entire populati
as kate kilpatrick reports the push for a panama competitor could wipe them out. >> reporter: the 140ple who live in this remote indigenous village on the remote area of nicaragua has been abandoned by the central government. it is one of the poorest and least developed area of the country. the people here live off hunting fishing and farming. the community is home to the last remaining speakers of the indigenous rama language. >> we the rama, we plant eat and we live. we don't...
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Apr 21, 2015
04/15
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BLOOMBERG
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bloomberg contributing editor david kilpatrick. a film festival this week. we will talk out to a director. we will be back with my partner emily chang right after this break. ♪ cory: virtual-reality purchased by facebook, the first use cases are coming out. a virtual-reality film based on the little prince came out of the tribeca film festival. >> vr and ar are completely new art forms. it is completely different from all art forms that came before it. that includes a cinema, operas musicals, and you put in all of those things and he put inside a real-time engine and you are able to see virtual-reality. cory: the storytelling part has to be very difficult because the viewer is not in a static position. in a comment book, the viewers there. in tv, and viewers there. in movies the viewer is there, and we were walking around the planet. we saw the little prince come out. >> you can turn it around 360 degrees and there was a solar system. cory: you could hear the wiring -- watering can. >> we have people who are used to telling stories and teaching movies. uf to
bloomberg contributing editor david kilpatrick. a film festival this week. we will talk out to a director. we will be back with my partner emily chang right after this break. ♪ cory: virtual-reality purchased by facebook, the first use cases are coming out. a virtual-reality film based on the little prince came out of the tribeca film festival. >> vr and ar are completely new art forms. it is completely different from all art forms that came before it. that includes a cinema, operas...
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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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BLOOMBERG
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emily: you said when you spoke to david kilpatrick, you could not construct a short-term model by whichbecomes profitable. do you have a better idea now when this will become profitable? mark: no. the reality is that if a lot of people can't afford to pay for data access in these places, there probably aren't big ad markets and it probably isn't going to be particularly profitable in the near term. we will probably lose a bunch of money because supporting facebook is a service of storing photos and content people want to share. we probably won't offset it by making much. emily: you said connectivity is a human right. you want to do good things. if that's the case, why not give access to the complete internet? why just a few specific apps? mark: it comes down to the ethics of how this works. it turns out that most of the internet is consumed by rich media, especially videos. if you look at things like text, text messages, search or wikipedia or basic financial or health information, that can be delivered for relatively cheaply and can often consume less than 1% of the overall infrastruct
emily: you said when you spoke to david kilpatrick, you could not construct a short-term model by whichbecomes profitable. do you have a better idea now when this will become profitable? mark: no. the reality is that if a lot of people can't afford to pay for data access in these places, there probably aren't big ad markets and it probably isn't going to be particularly profitable in the near term. we will probably lose a bunch of money because supporting facebook is a service of storing photos...