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i got back marco rosa is taking over from tea to head king rosa has won back to back austrian titles with avi's out and led them to the last 4 of the europa league in 2018 week overall glovebox another opportunity to develop things it's a chance to meet. a different regional mentality and on to the us as well. the whole place missing. one famous football name rose and wagner both know well if you're going clock back now was the best man at his wedding while rosa played with and under him and minds together they won promotion to the bundesliga in 2004. and there will also be fresh faces on the touchline. dulce books and caps so when the action all kicks off again. and who else will join us next season the new leagues are measured clubs of course coming up and who's going down let's find out. as it goes in the bundesliga summer joyce while the others lament and have to say goodbye. the bundesliga departures and arrivals. among them when young but lean is moving up after the playoffs. i i i i i yes i see so i after the 1st leg ended tool a goal a straw at home saw them over the law. i w
i got back marco rosa is taking over from tea to head king rosa has won back to back austrian titles with avi's out and led them to the last 4 of the europa league in 2018 week overall glovebox another opportunity to develop things it's a chance to meet. a different regional mentality and on to the us as well. the whole place missing. one famous football name rose and wagner both know well if you're going clock back now was the best man at his wedding while rosa played with and under him and...
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Jun 10, 2019
06/19
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the same things the great civil rights activist like martin luther king, rosa parks, and many others,ck and white, would try to achieve through their marches, demonstrations, their sit-ins, boycotts in efforts to bring white and black adults together. chuck very -- chuck berry and elvis presley were achieving this through music. and that attracted me as well. brian: how long have you been a musician? daryl: professionally? since i graduated from howard university in 1980. i was playing slightly before that, during college. during my formative learning years, was kind of a late bloomer when it came to music. i started when i was 17 in high school, a junior. brian: i want to jump way out of context. there is a new documentary about you on netflix. it is called "accidental courtesy." you have gotten a lot of publicity over this about things you have been involved in. i will ask you to fill in the blanks. daryl: this is the robe of an imperial wizard. this is a white cotton robe with blue adornments. you see the emblem. symbolizes they will shed their blood for the white race. if you look
the same things the great civil rights activist like martin luther king, rosa parks, and many others,ck and white, would try to achieve through their marches, demonstrations, their sit-ins, boycotts in efforts to bring white and black adults together. chuck very -- chuck berry and elvis presley were achieving this through music. and that attracted me as well. brian: how long have you been a musician? daryl: professionally? since i graduated from howard university in 1980. i was playing slightly...
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Jun 29, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN3
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that was a very good seven or eight years before martin luther king became famous or before rosa parks and seven or eight years earlier harry truman started the desegregation of america. stuck in your religious upbringing must've been essential. to -- >> my father was a sunday school teacher and the sermon on the mount-he spells out the essence of what is known as universal human rights. the proper relationship between powerful and the weak and and gentiles between men and women and everyone should be treated equally and that was the foundation of what eleanor roosevelt did and-when the united states has gone through the religions and the essence of what the primary ethical is and--that has never happened before or since and i'm afraid that they are being basically abandoned in many ways from around the world. the carter center is fighting against that abandonment.>> when you are running for president, did you know that the human rights agenda would be as central if you got there? >> there is a general sigh of relief in america than that finally we have resolved the race issue. we had
that was a very good seven or eight years before martin luther king became famous or before rosa parks and seven or eight years earlier harry truman started the desegregation of america. stuck in your religious upbringing must've been essential. to -- >> my father was a sunday school teacher and the sermon on the mount-he spells out the essence of what is known as universal human rights. the proper relationship between powerful and the weak and and gentiles between men and women and...
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Jun 28, 2019
06/19
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king jr. became famous or rosa parks. truman was the one that broke the ice and started desegregation america. mr. meacham: your religious upbringing must of been essential. president carter: it was. i grew up also immersed in a church in plains which was baptist and my father was a sunday school teacher and we went through many parts of the bible. i was a particularly the sermon on the mount and the chapter of matthew. essence ofs out the what is presently known as universal human rights. he spelled out the proper relationship between the powerful and the week, between the jews and gentiles, between men and women and he said everybody should be treated equally. that was the foundation of what said and itevelt evolved into the universal declaration of human rights. there are times in human history where the united states has gone through all the basic measure of revisions and struck at the andnce of the primary moral ethical values are and put them terms but also semi-legal terms which was in the development of the declar
king jr. became famous or rosa parks. truman was the one that broke the ice and started desegregation america. mr. meacham: your religious upbringing must of been essential. president carter: it was. i grew up also immersed in a church in plains which was baptist and my father was a sunday school teacher and we went through many parts of the bible. i was a particularly the sermon on the mount and the chapter of matthew. essence ofs out the what is presently known as universal human rights. he...
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Jun 28, 2019
06/19
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king jr. became famous or rosa parks.n or eight years earlier harry truman was the one that , broke the ice and started the desegregation of america. mr. meacham: your religious upbringing must of been essential. president carter: it was. i grew up also immersed in a inrch in planes -- church ns, a baptist church and my , father was a sunday school teacher and we went through many parts of the bible. i was a particularly the sermon on the mount and the chapter of matthew. jesus spells out the essence of what is presently known as universal human rights. he spelled out the proper relationship between the powerful and the weak, between the jews and gentiles, between men and women and he said , everybody should be treated equally. that was the foundation of what eleanor roosevelt was doing, and it evolved into the universal declaration of human rights. so there are times in human history where the united states has gone through all the basic measure of revisions and struck at the essence of the primary moral and ethical valu
king jr. became famous or rosa parks.n or eight years earlier harry truman was the one that , broke the ice and started the desegregation of america. mr. meacham: your religious upbringing must of been essential. president carter: it was. i grew up also immersed in a inrch in planes -- church ns, a baptist church and my , father was a sunday school teacher and we went through many parts of the bible. i was a particularly the sermon on the mount and the chapter of matthew. jesus spells out the...
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Jun 6, 2019
06/19
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rosa parks and dr. kingn lewis, their work was made possible by the experience of the second world war. in 1964, '65, material prosperity was such. a lot of folks who looked like me were more willing than we had been in the segregation era to more generously apply that jeffersonian sentence that all men are created equal. the story is whoo at extent do apply that meaning. >> thank you so very much. > john has writen about dwight eisenhower. he planned and oversaw that operation. he became our 34th president. >> he could see the death of his own child. he came to the cemetery on d-day plus 20 years, walter koncrite, asked what did that do. they have given us a second chance. they gave us a second chance. it's up to us to make sure that we don't squander that chance. >> we're at a time when this is the first american president who is challenging the post-war institutions and our alliance with europe in many profound ways. >> i think it's at every stage of history it's always important to continue to talk to th
rosa parks and dr. kingn lewis, their work was made possible by the experience of the second world war. in 1964, '65, material prosperity was such. a lot of folks who looked like me were more willing than we had been in the segregation era to more generously apply that jeffersonian sentence that all men are created equal. the story is whoo at extent do apply that meaning. >> thank you so very much. > john has writen about dwight eisenhower. he planned and oversaw that operation. he...
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Jun 22, 2019
06/19
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civil rights era and it's starting to sound like a three day carnival rosa parks didn't give up her seat on day one, martin luther king on day two, and day three we changed the rules >> brian stevenson is used to making people feel uncomfortable about slavery. >> for the next century, we were dealing with the legacy. and that's why we lived through all of that violence and terror through lynchings. that's why we had lawed that codified segregation, and that's why our criminal justice system was so menacing to people of color. we are haunted in america by our history of racial inequality >> reporter: the new hbo documentary "true justice" details his life's journey and the creation of the equal justice initiative >> my clients have been broken by trauma, bias, and discrimination >> the documentary focuses on his fight against the death penalty, his appearances before the supreme court on behalf of death row inmates. >> prosecution ran out and told the media that the state of alabama got the worse killer that ever walked the streets in birmingham off the streets that night. only it wasn't true. >> a lot of the document
civil rights era and it's starting to sound like a three day carnival rosa parks didn't give up her seat on day one, martin luther king on day two, and day three we changed the rules >> brian stevenson is used to making people feel uncomfortable about slavery. >> for the next century, we were dealing with the legacy. and that's why we lived through all of that violence and terror through lynchings. that's why we had lawed that codified segregation, and that's why our criminal...
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Jun 24, 2019
06/19
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i live in montgomery, alabama in the shadow of the advocacy of rosa parks and dr. king be here if lawyers hadn't come into our community so i could go to high school and college. i'm standing on those shoulders and i feel an obligation to carry on the tradition. there are too many other children in this country denied fairer opportunities to create more change. >> it's a big job. >> bryan stevenson, thank you for being here. we appreciate it. "true justice" debuts on hbo this wednesday. >>> financial advisers think you can save big bucks if you stop buying fancy coffee. tim >>> boots, boots. >> now they're a little more than i usually spend on boots -- for rent. >> oh, my god. >> i know. >> i'm going to miss being able to afford food. >> monica never had trouble splurging on friends. tim herrera is in her corner. he takes on the cost of indulgence in a new article headline. here's money advice, just buy the coffee. he argues spending money on simple pleasures like a good lunch or a nice haircut will not make or break your budget. i am really happy to hear this that it's
i live in montgomery, alabama in the shadow of the advocacy of rosa parks and dr. king be here if lawyers hadn't come into our community so i could go to high school and college. i'm standing on those shoulders and i feel an obligation to carry on the tradition. there are too many other children in this country denied fairer opportunities to create more change. >> it's a big job. >> bryan stevenson, thank you for being here. we appreciate it. "true justice" debuts on hbo...
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Jun 12, 2019
06/19
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rosa, redwood city. oakland, san francisco, richmond, half moon bay 85. others that were in there included king city. i haven't even looked in sacramento. the highs yesterday on the left what's normal is on the right. we have just screamed past averages. may was soo cool and june was so far above. to june. oakland, san francisco, the low in san francisco was 72 and i don't think they're going to woe another record warm minimum temperature. so just hard to believe. but that does look like cooling. better than up 4. san francisco always a tough call in the city. because when the breeze kicks in then it falls off the table. so it will not be as bad. 98 to. higher cloud deck should clear out. underneath that blanket. there are some areas of fog. very shallow. not a lot. 70s for some. i mean it's just very warm here for many locations including on the peninsula. although montera and half moon bay. look for another hot day inland with 90s to 100s near the coast as the high finally slowly walks out of the picture. but it's going to another day before inland areas cool down. but anywhere from 70s to 100s. mo
rosa, redwood city. oakland, san francisco, richmond, half moon bay 85. others that were in there included king city. i haven't even looked in sacramento. the highs yesterday on the left what's normal is on the right. we have just screamed past averages. may was soo cool and june was so far above. to june. oakland, san francisco, the low in san francisco was 72 and i don't think they're going to woe another record warm minimum temperature. so just hard to believe. but that does look like...
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Jun 17, 2019
06/19
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MSNBCW
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king jr. was a little known minister and the leader of a bus boycott in montgomery, alabama, that started when activist rosaks refused to give up her seat to a white man. >> this is a nonviolent protest using the method of passive resistance. >> martin luther king was a man of huge thoughtfulness about the strategy that he had asked those who followed him to use. and that strategy was that in the face of violence, you have a moral high ground if you did not return violence with violence. >> negro passengers have been humiliated, intimidated. >> reporter: at first the young minister who went by the unassuming name of m.l. king was only covered by black journalists writing for black papers. >> in particular, "the birmingham world," a black newspaper and its editor emory jackson. he writes about long before anyone else that dr. king is invoking gandhian principles. he becomes referred to in the black press as the black moses. the white editors, they were just living in a different world. >> the majority press, the white press basically ignored african-americans and not just episodes of violence against them, b
king jr. was a little known minister and the leader of a bus boycott in montgomery, alabama, that started when activist rosaks refused to give up her seat to a white man. >> this is a nonviolent protest using the method of passive resistance. >> martin luther king was a man of huge thoughtfulness about the strategy that he had asked those who followed him to use. and that strategy was that in the face of violence, you have a moral high ground if you did not return violence with...
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Jun 29, 2019
06/19
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king jr. giving his i have a dream speech or of the american flag being raised over iwo jima or rosa parks refusing to move to a seat at the back of the bus are all moments and images that help define who we are, moments that exemplify our best and highest values and thus are potent symbols. the narrative of the stonewall uprising is a very powerful story for a number of reasons. it seemed to come out of nowhere and was totally unexpected. it was spontaneous, totally undirected, and happened in a cd club run by the mafia. the groups that first turned against the police were primarily effeminate boys who lived on the streets, sissies rejected by their families and society, prostitutes, a butch lesbian, and trans people. that such a group could not only lead an effective revolt against the police but also terrify them seemed too good to be true, yet this is what happened. the police were astonished and terrified at the anger they witnessed. pine, who led the rate, have written the manual for hand-to-hand combat in world war ii and been seriously injured in the battle of the bulge, yet he said he was
king jr. giving his i have a dream speech or of the american flag being raised over iwo jima or rosa parks refusing to move to a seat at the back of the bus are all moments and images that help define who we are, moments that exemplify our best and highest values and thus are potent symbols. the narrative of the stonewall uprising is a very powerful story for a number of reasons. it seemed to come out of nowhere and was totally unexpected. it was spontaneous, totally undirected, and happened in...