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Apr 22, 2015
04/15
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WPVI
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i wish my teacher knew. >> i wish my teacher knew i don't have pencils to do my homework. >> reporterbetter. almost all of them under the poverty line. one writing, i wish my teacher knew my parents or i wish my teacher knew i wanted to go to college. >> kids would share, i wish my teacher knew that i want a friend to play with me. >> reporter: and then something unexpected. >> it was really beautiful to see another kid putting their arm around them or saying we got your back. >> reporter: that teacher then posting the messages on twitter. >> these notes are heartbreaking and it's very common place in a school like this and quite frankly, schools all over the country. >> reporter: teachers across the country with the same assignment. one teacher writing, i wish my teacher knew my tooth is wiggling. donations pouring to buy classroom supplies. >> not only just having it live in a classroom, but giving children a voice to advocate for themselves has been so powerful. >> reporter: and tonight, we give one of those children the last word. >> i wish my teacher knew i loved her with all my
i wish my teacher knew. >> i wish my teacher knew i don't have pencils to do my homework. >> reporterbetter. almost all of them under the poverty line. one writing, i wish my teacher knew my parents or i wish my teacher knew i wanted to go to college. >> kids would share, i wish my teacher knew that i want a friend to play with me. >> reporter: and then something unexpected. >> it was really beautiful to see another kid putting their arm around them or saying we...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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knew? the fact is that the time of nixon's speech in november 3rd when he made it nixon's war, the possibility of the pentagon papers having an effect didn't go down to zero but it went close to zero, in my mind. very low. from then on, i thought that it was a small chance that the pentagon papers could affect nixon because showing what the democrats had done didn't have much bearing on nixon. i didn't think it would affect his policy. leaping ahead i would say it didn't affect his policy. when it did come out in '71, his immediate perception was that it affected mainly the democrats and as kissinger put it, if anything, it helps us a little bit. and nixon saw it the same. in fact, he wanted it out faster even before it came out. and other parts out faster. why did i put it out at all? because by the spring of 1971, i was feeling that with the attack -- actually from the fall of 1970, with the sun te raid, i saw the escalation which had been foreshadowed in cambodia as speeding up and movin
knew? the fact is that the time of nixon's speech in november 3rd when he made it nixon's war, the possibility of the pentagon papers having an effect didn't go down to zero but it went close to zero, in my mind. very low. from then on, i thought that it was a small chance that the pentagon papers could affect nixon because showing what the democrats had done didn't have much bearing on nixon. i didn't think it would affect his policy. leaping ahead i would say it didn't affect his policy. when...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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MSNBCW
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eye 62
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seemed like he knew what he was doing. >> i don't know at that moment if she knew exactly what she wasting herself into. >> i had no clue of what type of drugs it was. i knew that it was not kool-aid. >> soon after we packed the bags or whatever, it was time to leave to go to the airport. everything happened so quickly. >> zip. that's it. >> ready to go. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become number one in oil. because hydraulic fracturing technology is safely recovering lots more oil and natural gas. supporting millions of new jobs. billions in tax revenue... and a new century of american energy security. the new energy superpower? it's red, white and blue. log on to learn more. a scary proposition. you walk onto that lot and immediately you are surrounded, like a guppy in a shark tank. it just feels like, car salesmen want to sell whatever car is best for them, not best for me. there's gotta be a better way. ♪ as long as people drive cars carmax will be the best way to buy them. ♪ ah, ♪h it. ♪ push it. ♪ p...push it
seemed like he knew what he was doing. >> i don't know at that moment if she knew exactly what she wasting herself into. >> i had no clue of what type of drugs it was. i knew that it was not kool-aid. >> soon after we packed the bags or whatever, it was time to leave to go to the airport. everything happened so quickly. >> zip. that's it. >> ready to go. surprised? in fact, america is now the world's number one natural gas producer... and we could soon become...
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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KNTV
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eye 297
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i knew about the facts of the case, and i knew about the family. i never met 'em, but i read all the -- the newspaper articles, and the accounts of them, you know, asking for help. beaumont felt certain that suspected serial killer larry hall was responsible. not only did the hall live 25 minutes from indiana wesleyan, he'd been identified chasing two co-eds there, just a week after tricia went missing. so in the summer of 1995, a month after convicting hall for jessie roach's murder, beaumont was leading a search for tricia. it was in those same indiana backwoods where hall had told indiana authorities he dreamt he killed and buried tricia. >> i wanted to feel like i did everything i could to see if we could find her body. >> reporter: but after two days searching in sweltering heat and humidity, tricia's body didn't turn up. >> we couldn't find anything. doesn't mean it wasn't there. >> reporter: then, beaumont decided to try something completely different. >> i came up with the idea of putting somebody in the prison cell with him to see if we ca
i knew about the facts of the case, and i knew about the family. i never met 'em, but i read all the -- the newspaper articles, and the accounts of them, you know, asking for help. beaumont felt certain that suspected serial killer larry hall was responsible. not only did the hall live 25 minutes from indiana wesleyan, he'd been identified chasing two co-eds there, just a week after tricia went missing. so in the summer of 1995, a month after convicting hall for jessie roach's murder, beaumont...
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408
Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 408
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kissinger knew more than he let on. as far as i can tell from the record kissinger never did -- for the tapes, kissinger never did reveal to nixon that i had worked for him on the options paper or at all for the pierre or the -- the indication of that is, he talks about my dealing with him in the late '60s and then again a meeting he had with me in '71 he tells, at a conference where i confronted him, an m.i.t. conference where i confronted him. he doesn't mention in that conversation that i worked for him in his office in early '69 or that i had too twoo long discussions with him in san clemente in 1970. i i infer that he didn't want to admit to nixon that the man who had just released the pentagon papers had worked directly for him in the nixon administration. >> which is why nixon assumed there had to be a conspiracy. >> there had to be a conspiracy that i must have gotten it from somebody else. now, if they had had a discussion of the fact that i had worked on this, they both would have discussed oh that's probably
kissinger knew more than he let on. as far as i can tell from the record kissinger never did -- for the tapes, kissinger never did reveal to nixon that i had worked for him on the options paper or at all for the pierre or the -- the indication of that is, he talks about my dealing with him in the late '60s and then again a meeting he had with me in '71 he tells, at a conference where i confronted him, an m.i.t. conference where i confronted him. he doesn't mention in that conversation that i...
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 43
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as far as i knew, very friendly. and some of the reasons for not saying some things on ordinary journalistic practice were not to tell me, at the time, that he had it from somebody else. keeping them secret is normal internalistic kind of practice. but whooi he would keep that up for 35 years seemed a little odd. but, in particular it remains somewhat mysterious to me that he did not tell me from the time that he himself, copied the papers, having said that he wouldn't. copy the papers to which i gave him access. he had copied them. and, then, later, he asked me if he could have physical copies. i had asked him not to take them with him in dealing with them to get a decision. i felt as soon as there's a copy out, it's totally out of my control. those copies would have been copyied by other people. everybody had sort of had second thoughts about this. so i thought they won't do it at the end. and then the copies will be all over the place. and somebody will tell the f.b.i. and later events showed there was a good deal
as far as i knew, very friendly. and some of the reasons for not saying some things on ordinary journalistic practice were not to tell me, at the time, that he had it from somebody else. keeping them secret is normal internalistic kind of practice. but whooi he would keep that up for 35 years seemed a little odd. but, in particular it remains somewhat mysterious to me that he did not tell me from the time that he himself, copied the papers, having said that he wouldn't. copy the papers to which...
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260
Apr 19, 2015
04/15
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KNTV
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eye 260
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i knew it.w the minute i saw the body. >> detectives arrested him and sent him to the county jail. state attorney bill lowrie got the case. >> who is tim permenter, who's he? >> i think timothy permenter is a psychopath, someone who had gotten lucky to be with karen. and once you got past the superficial aspect of him and realized what he really was like, she wanted out of that relationship, and that ultimately led to her death. >> prosecutor lowry says permenter thought he could outsmart the cops by acting the bereaved boyfriend, playing it to the hilt at the crime scene. [ crying ] >> but the prosecutor says permenter got thrown off his tearstained script when he called karen's best friend soon after making that 911 call. >> he says, kathryn, it's tim. i'm at karen's apartment, she's laying on the floor, there's blood everywhere and she's been stabbed. >> not she's dead. >> not she's dead, she's been stabbed. >> and he tells her on the phone according to catherine that she's been stabbed. >> o
i knew it.w the minute i saw the body. >> detectives arrested him and sent him to the county jail. state attorney bill lowrie got the case. >> who is tim permenter, who's he? >> i think timothy permenter is a psychopath, someone who had gotten lucky to be with karen. and once you got past the superficial aspect of him and realized what he really was like, she wanted out of that relationship, and that ultimately led to her death. >> prosecutor lowry says permenter thought...
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544
Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 544
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he knew about intelligence gathering and he knew he was a wacko but he had also probably knew i had been taken out of it and told not to be involved. >> to jump ahead, after the break-in, the second one, straun comes to you like on the 20th of june and what does he say? >> he said he has cleaned his files. he said at haldeman's request. obviously, what this means -- you can read it as well as i can. i try not to get too much into supposition because i don't know what was in there. this is where i come from on this -- it's difficult for me to believe that haldeman and nixon did not know there was somebody over there with that capacity. i have never found any evidence they knew someone was going to break into the watergate. i don't have any evidence he knew they got in there the first time and screwed it up and were going back in a second time. the fact that somebody was over there doing that could not have surprised anybody when it surfaced. >>> you've been watching american history tv in prime time. part two of the interview with john dean begins shortly. and every weekend on c-span 3, 4
he knew about intelligence gathering and he knew he was a wacko but he had also probably knew i had been taken out of it and told not to be involved. >> to jump ahead, after the break-in, the second one, straun comes to you like on the 20th of june and what does he say? >> he said he has cleaned his files. he said at haldeman's request. obviously, what this means -- you can read it as well as i can. i try not to get too much into supposition because i don't know what was in there....
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 38
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he said that he knew it was white house and he knew it was after me from the beginning. because, now this will tell you in the sum of your other interviews, he's almost always been said that nothing was found with my name on it and they had photographed nothing. in fielding's office. actually barker had mentioned that they had photographed things in the office, documents in the office. and martinez i think had also mentioned in one interview i think it was his harvard interview, that he had photographed things in the office. what did he photograph? well fielding told me along paper that i had written a 68 page paper called escalating in a quagmire that's the heart of my book, papers on the war. and this document actually could have been some interest to them. it was a long study that i did of decision-making on vietnam which was based on the pentagon papers. and, in fact, it had quotes from the pentagon papers in it. and i had said, without identifying them and i had said in the document very provocatively. i wanted to see what would happen. so i wrote this in 1970. nobo
he said that he knew it was white house and he knew it was after me from the beginning. because, now this will tell you in the sum of your other interviews, he's almost always been said that nothing was found with my name on it and they had photographed nothing. in fielding's office. actually barker had mentioned that they had photographed things in the office, documents in the office. and martinez i think had also mentioned in one interview i think it was his harvard interview, that he had...
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162
Apr 20, 2015
04/15
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LINKTV
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there was a sense that we knew what the bad pollutants were we knew how to measure them, we knew whatlth and environmental effects of tse pollutants were. we had technology that was reasonably ailab at a reasonable cost tossentially eliminate that pollution. that was -- all of that we assumions writn into theaw at time. and ma of ose assumponsare stilthere. and byheaythey're alwrong. welllet's ke e clean aiac the intento eliminate smog how was at supse work? wellthe elements of smog are nitrogenxideanhyocarns that interact in sunlight, they combine in sunlight and cause photochemical oxidants, or smog. now, those two pollutants -- hydrocarbons and hydrogen oxides -- come primarily in places like los angeles from mobile sources -- automobile. schoumacher: but how was the epa supposed to eliminate smog from a city where the car is king? county servisor kenneth hahn had been wrestling with the problem for years. well, people in los angeles loved cars. uh, you grew up liking cars. you'd go over to a high school you'll see more cars in the parking lot than you do bicycles. los angeles coun
there was a sense that we knew what the bad pollutants were we knew how to measure them, we knew whatlth and environmental effects of tse pollutants were. we had technology that was reasonably ailab at a reasonable cost tossentially eliminate that pollution. that was -- all of that we assumions writn into theaw at time. and ma of ose assumponsare stilthere. and byheaythey're alwrong. welllet's ke e clean aiac the intento eliminate smog how was at supse work? wellthe elements of smog are...
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Apr 6, 2015
04/15
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MSNBCW
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eye 74
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seemed like he knew what he was doing. >> i don't know at that moment if she knew exactly what she wasetting herself into. >> i had no clue of what type of drugs it was. i knew that it was not kool-aid. >> soon after we packed the bags or whatever, it was time to leave to go to the airport. everything happened so quickly. >> zip. that's it. >> ready to go. excellent looking below the surface, researching a hunch... and making a decision you are type e*. time for a change of menu. research and invest from any website. with e*trade's browser trading. e*trade. opportunity is everywhere. but sometimes work can get in the way. now capella university offers flexpath, a revolutionary new program that allows you to earn a degree at your pace and graduate at the speed of you. flexpath from capella university. undisciplined overwaterer. she claims he's a cruel underwaterer. with miracle-gro moisture control potting mix, plants only get water when they need it. fight ended. or shifted? miracle-gro. life starts here. well, a mbe a problem,dn't your credit is in pretty good shape. >>pretty good? i
seemed like he knew what he was doing. >> i don't know at that moment if she knew exactly what she wasetting herself into. >> i had no clue of what type of drugs it was. i knew that it was not kool-aid. >> soon after we packed the bags or whatever, it was time to leave to go to the airport. everything happened so quickly. >> zip. that's it. >> ready to go. excellent looking below the surface, researching a hunch... and making a decision you are type e*. time for a...
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70
Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 70
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but he knew what i had been doing. i told him what i was doing through -- i left him in -- let me see when i ended. when i went to cambridge in basically, july of '69 is when i ended. is that right? '6 9d. i'm sorry. yes. he saw the file cabinet was broken into in labor day weekend, '69. >> no, labor day weekend of '71. >> '71. that's right. sorry. so 37 years ago. >> hold for 15 segts here and see if this phone goes away. >> the phone is still -- wait. >> there we go. >> yeah okay. so the pentagon papers had come out in june. so he knew all of that. so he now knows, you know the white house is very interested in this. so somebody has burgled his office. he was certain it was the white house. but i wasn't seeing him then. i was in cambridge. he wasn't in direct touch with me. i called -- something else happened. but let me come to this point. his lawyer, he talked to a lawyer about it. and the lawyer advised him don't get involved. don't get ininvolved. it's a white house operation. and don't tell -- well he said -- he
but he knew what i had been doing. i told him what i was doing through -- i left him in -- let me see when i ended. when i went to cambridge in basically, july of '69 is when i ended. is that right? '6 9d. i'm sorry. yes. he saw the file cabinet was broken into in labor day weekend, '69. >> no, labor day weekend of '71. >> '71. that's right. sorry. so 37 years ago. >> hold for 15 segts here and see if this phone goes away. >> the phone is still -- wait. >> there we...
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Apr 20, 2015
04/15
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LINKTV
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eye 62
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i knew the rest tremendous -- i knew there was tremendous information there.or about 10 years, i really called him once a month, how are you, where are you until david -- amy: explain how you came into the picture. >> lyric and i met about the same time in 2005 working in an afterschool arts program in harlem. one of our students was arrested by the fbi, 16-year-old girl. that shocked everyone. watching what happened to her as a result of her arrest her father was deported, the government decided to -- amy: she was from -- >> west africa. she was 16 years old and had to be the primary caretaker. her mother did not have "or have work. i started to notice the other cap tourism terrorism does the other counterterrorism cases. creating plots and cultivate arrests the fbi could use to sweep in and testify of it treat in the war on terror. while observing these cases, i thought, dramatically, that would be a fascinating story. the relationships being set up between these two individuals target and informant, the informant known this person is ultimately going to be
i knew the rest tremendous -- i knew there was tremendous information there.or about 10 years, i really called him once a month, how are you, where are you until david -- amy: explain how you came into the picture. >> lyric and i met about the same time in 2005 working in an afterschool arts program in harlem. one of our students was arrested by the fbi, 16-year-old girl. that shocked everyone. watching what happened to her as a result of her arrest her father was deported, the government...
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88
Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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MSNBCW
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eye 88
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i knew, this is the night.out past the bed check, swim out, cut the rope on one of the dinghies and to row the dinghy to the mainland. i really had to screw my courage up. as much as i wanted to go, i was scared to death of what was going to happen. this was really leaping off the edge into the abyss here. i'm out past the bed check at night. if i'm caught, the worst. the scariest part was crawling down across the rocks because i'm exposed out here. it was like a stone pier that went out into the water. and they had guards and guns. if they see me, i'm dead. i got to the edge of the water and went in. and suddenly, it's getting a little deeper and i'm breaststroking my way, trying to be quiet. trying not to cough. trying not to get a muggy of water in my mouth. i didn't want them hearing me coughing. i kind of collapsed in the bottom of this dinghy. i had a knife from the canning factory. i had that in my back pocket. and i was sawing the rope that connected it to the boat like this when i heard a noise. up abo
i knew, this is the night.out past the bed check, swim out, cut the rope on one of the dinghies and to row the dinghy to the mainland. i really had to screw my courage up. as much as i wanted to go, i was scared to death of what was going to happen. this was really leaping off the edge into the abyss here. i'm out past the bed check at night. if i'm caught, the worst. the scariest part was crawling down across the rocks because i'm exposed out here. it was like a stone pier that went out into...
1,013
1.0K
Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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WRC
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and you know, and i know it now and i knew it then. i mean, i knew it going through it.g to figure out, you know, how to deal with it. >> reporter: while most men try to keep their indiscretions private, frank howard's dirty laundry was now part of a criminal investigation. but the detectives say they were determined to keep an open mind. >> i think i told michael, let's not get tunnel vision on this. just because he's got a girlfriend, you know, let's make sure we look outside and -- and not just key on that as a possible motive or reason for the shooting. >> reporter: so, the detectives went back to work, examining every piece of evidence they had. turns out that church surveillance tape would take their investigation in a whole, new, direction. 3 f2 investigaciÓn a otro lugar, >> reporter: had someone been stalking nancy? >> it was clear from that video that she was followed. >> she you not a random target. it appears something else is going on here. come close and lend an ear ♪ ♪ and i said hey, hey hey hey ♪ ♪ living like we're renegades ♪ ♪ renegades ♪ >> reporter:
and you know, and i know it now and i knew it then. i mean, i knew it going through it.g to figure out, you know, how to deal with it. >> reporter: while most men try to keep their indiscretions private, frank howard's dirty laundry was now part of a criminal investigation. but the detectives say they were determined to keep an open mind. >> i think i told michael, let's not get tunnel vision on this. just because he's got a girlfriend, you know, let's make sure we look outside and...
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328
Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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KGO
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i knew it wasn't right.till do. >> reporter: back then, mary was most emotional when discussing the relationship with her children from her first marriage. the feelings still much too raw. when you were in prison, your children were now growing up without a mother. how did you feel about that? >> well, prison is not a safe place to touch emotions. there's not a lot of support there for that. and something as deep as the pain that my children went through, that's -- i am afraid to touch that pain. they still go to sleep at night and their mother's not there. >> reporter: how did you get through it? >> well, i lived through it by not touching the pain. >> reporter: but the years have healed some of those wounds. now, it's much easier for her to talk about her older children. they're grown and she says, doing well. mary's even a grandmother. and what is the relationship with your older children with the children that you and vili have? >> when we were first married, they were very involved in our home. they had
i knew it wasn't right.till do. >> reporter: back then, mary was most emotional when discussing the relationship with her children from her first marriage. the feelings still much too raw. when you were in prison, your children were now growing up without a mother. how did you feel about that? >> well, prison is not a safe place to touch emotions. there's not a lot of support there for that. and something as deep as the pain that my children went through, that's -- i am afraid to...
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107
Apr 6, 2015
04/15
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MSNBCW
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eye 107
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i knew people could get arrested. i knew that sentences were severe in places. it wasn't going to happen to me. i knew i was way too smart and good-looking to ever get arrested. and i -- i really believed that. i didn't have to act at all in the walking because the cast itself creates the very motion you need to do. and it's heavy. and it's awkward because you are clumping and clumping and clumping. got to the customs, gave them my passport. luggage was checked. like everybody, they look in your bag, but not much. so they passed me through. the part i was nervous about was kennedy. what's going to happen when i come back there? i knew that if i got caught in new york with hash, i'd be going to jail. it was fine until i had to make my way out to the door. and as i was walking, i realized i'm leaving a trail because my cast was literally breaking apart. all that clumping had loosened the cast up. i was terrified somebody is going to see this and realize that there is something wrong here, that this is not a real cast. but nobody said a word. so it just confirmed t
i knew people could get arrested. i knew that sentences were severe in places. it wasn't going to happen to me. i knew i was way too smart and good-looking to ever get arrested. and i -- i really believed that. i didn't have to act at all in the walking because the cast itself creates the very motion you need to do. and it's heavy. and it's awkward because you are clumping and clumping and clumping. got to the customs, gave them my passport. luggage was checked. like everybody, they look in...
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90
Apr 20, 2015
04/15
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KTVU
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eye 90
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why some knew the truth was buried. >> i knew there had to be more. (tires screeching) never before has this kind of passion this kind of innovation, engineering, design and performance... been available... for this kind of price. the 2015 cla from mercedes-benz. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. >>> in the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake. san francisco city planners began looking for a way to shore up the water supplies should another great fire break out. and as rob roth reported in 2006, that was how the city's back up water system was created. >> reporter: san francisco's firefighter know better than anyone that an earthquake is often a two headed monster. first the jolt, then inevitably the fires that follow such as those that ignited in the marina district in loma prieta. firefighters of the time stood around while the water system failed them and they had to stand around and watch the city burn. survivors remember that. >> i had a cousin that was a fire fighter and he came to our home a
why some knew the truth was buried. >> i knew there had to be more. (tires screeching) never before has this kind of passion this kind of innovation, engineering, design and performance... been available... for this kind of price. the 2015 cla from mercedes-benz. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. >>> in the aftermath of the 1906 earthquake. san francisco city planners began looking for a way to shore up the water supplies...
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52
Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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WCAU
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eye 52
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and i knew, you know what?: just from that, just from that one phrase, that he was dedicated to you? >> right. weird. because i knew he wasn't. it's like my mind was opened at that time. like whoa. it's you. >> reporter: 19 months later, connie painfully pulled herself into court and testified against the man who had once promised to love, honor and cherish her as long as they both shall live. >> my ears were ringing. it was so loud. >> reporter: larry's defense? the same story he shared with us. he'd been framed by the mysterious jerry. to no one's surprise, the jury didn't buy it. >> we the jury in the above entitled cause find the defendant lawrence gerald hoagland guilty of the crime of attempted murder. >> good morning, ladies and gentlemen. >> reporter: a month later at his sentencing, connie and the kids read victim impact statements. it was the first time any of them had spoken to their dad since his arrest. >> larry is no longer my father, and i am no longer his daughter. i haven't spoken to larry in a
and i knew, you know what?: just from that, just from that one phrase, that he was dedicated to you? >> right. weird. because i knew he wasn't. it's like my mind was opened at that time. like whoa. it's you. >> reporter: 19 months later, connie painfully pulled herself into court and testified against the man who had once promised to love, honor and cherish her as long as they both shall live. >> my ears were ringing. it was so loud. >> reporter: larry's defense? the...
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44
Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 44
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guest: i knew three years ago. i was portraying general grant and my first trip up here three years ago, the park service indicated to me they wanted me to be the grant for the 150th. guest: i would be here last august. i had a pretty good idea i would be here last april when i came to meet everyone and the park service met me. i had about one year to prepare. if you had asked me a year and a half ago if i would be here, i would never imagine such an honor. host: this is sort of a highlight -- what do you have on tap? guest: i will probably do reenacting. i will do living history where i can, i have been requested at various laces as i know general grant -- berries places as i had general grant will. guest: i plan on continuing to portray general grant because i have no political ambitions at this time. ultimately, very soon, i'm going to start portraying president grant as well as general grant. host: what sort of events will those be like? guest: living history events, a lot of educational, professional leadershi
guest: i knew three years ago. i was portraying general grant and my first trip up here three years ago, the park service indicated to me they wanted me to be the grant for the 150th. guest: i would be here last august. i had a pretty good idea i would be here last april when i came to meet everyone and the park service met me. i had about one year to prepare. if you had asked me a year and a half ago if i would be here, i would never imagine such an honor. host: this is sort of a highlight --...
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 40
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they knew. but the sight of that coffin was the real reputation of their hopes that lincoln could live. so that coffin was taken down this hallway and laid on the floor right here. and before lincoln's body was placed in a coffin, soldiers took a 35-star flag, possibly 36-star flag, and wrapped lincoln's naked body in the colors of the union. if they follow tradition, the stars would have been wrapped over lincoln's face. lincoln had ordered that the flag keep its full complement of stars in the civil war to symbolize that the union was permanent. and lincoln would not have minded being placed in that rough pine box. so stanton stood here as the soldiers took a screwdriver and screwed the lid on that box. there was no sound. you could literally hear the squeaking sound of the screws tightening and the lid being placed on. and the president was carried out this room, through that hall to the front door, down that curving staircase where a simple carriage awaited him at a military escort was there
they knew. but the sight of that coffin was the real reputation of their hopes that lincoln could live. so that coffin was taken down this hallway and laid on the floor right here. and before lincoln's body was placed in a coffin, soldiers took a 35-star flag, possibly 36-star flag, and wrapped lincoln's naked body in the colors of the union. if they follow tradition, the stars would have been wrapped over lincoln's face. lincoln had ordered that the flag keep its full complement of stars in...
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317
Apr 22, 2015
04/15
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KQED
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eye 317
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we knew the story would be set then and we knew what it would sound like now.his was a country founded and created by immigrants. somebody in all on our lines stepped off a boat or some former transportation put their foot on this soil and went to work. as we started thinking about taking the inspiration from ron's book, we thought okay, here are a lot of events but we have to tell a story. so we had all of the events laid out. we sort of both red the book and made our own time lines and compare hey this really spoke to me, hey this moment feels like it's essential. so then you have those things to build around but it became so apparent early on as we were really designing how the show could function that this idea of doubling characters for instance felt really right on. the character who played lafayette, one of his great friends also plays jefferson. of course they both have this connection to france. they both have this relationship, one antagonistic and one supportive. how can we make the audience feel like who they are and what they understand is actually
we knew the story would be set then and we knew what it would sound like now.his was a country founded and created by immigrants. somebody in all on our lines stepped off a boat or some former transportation put their foot on this soil and went to work. as we started thinking about taking the inspiration from ron's book, we thought okay, here are a lot of events but we have to tell a story. so we had all of the events laid out. we sort of both red the book and made our own time lines and...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 51
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he knew nothing about the war. yamamoto said when they bombed pearl harbor, he had been in america, trained and schooled in america. he knew the american mind, and he made one of the great sayings in the history of the world, i guess, when he said, "i fear we've awakened the sleeping tiger," and that's exactly what they did. they roused our country, and they came forward. you got to looking for his service you can get into. >> some were going to canada to get into the war. rep. hall: that's right. i had a neighbor across the street that went to canada and wound up there before we had ever gotten into the war. there was a feeling of wanting revenge for the things that hitler had done to the other countries and mussolini. much hatred. >> when you do the bomb had dropped, what was the chain of action? rep. hall: three or four days later, they dropped a second one on nagasaki, and then they started suing for peace. it was pretty obvious that the war was going to be over then. it was over shortly after that. the strange
he knew nothing about the war. yamamoto said when they bombed pearl harbor, he had been in america, trained and schooled in america. he knew the american mind, and he made one of the great sayings in the history of the world, i guess, when he said, "i fear we've awakened the sleeping tiger," and that's exactly what they did. they roused our country, and they came forward. you got to looking for his service you can get into. >> some were going to canada to get into the war. rep....
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 57
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he knew when he had a problem or dividend and he knew what would move them. it wasn't always xoxox. we needed to raise the debt limit. johnson used to have these long sheets of everybody's name. they said it was taking money away from people that needed it people that needed housing and johnson said call him up and tell him we are going to put the biggest public housing project in the history of this country in the middle of his fancy district. [laughter] to show them there's plenty of money for housing. i did, and we did get his vote. [laughter] >> he had a tremendous ability to not only explain to people what was in their interest to be on his side. but they had the ability to explain to people why it was not in their interest to be against him. there is a wonderful anecdote in your book. the senator was talking to us one day about all of the things that walter thought of. >> as the chair of the foreign relations they think when you go all this way or that way and what have you and johnson listened as long as he could and he said let me tell you something. the next time you need a
he knew when he had a problem or dividend and he knew what would move them. it wasn't always xoxox. we needed to raise the debt limit. johnson used to have these long sheets of everybody's name. they said it was taking money away from people that needed it people that needed housing and johnson said call him up and tell him we are going to put the biggest public housing project in the history of this country in the middle of his fancy district. [laughter] to show them there's plenty of money...
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Apr 3, 2015
04/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 44
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when i saw it, i instantly knew what it was.led scott manson, who sent it to me, who works here. and i said find this guy. 60,000 views, find him, it is going to be a huge, huge hit. and three weeks later -- emily: you found him at 60,000 views? scooter: yeah, scott sent it to me at 60,000 views -- 66,000 views. emily: by the way, now over 2 billion. scooter: over 2 billion. everyone said the same thing. there is no way you are going to be able to make this record work. it's a korean pop song with a heavy-set korean guy dancing all over the place. emily: what happened when you saw the video of justin bieber? scooter: i saw a 12-year-old kid who had i think, like, eight videos at the time. six or eight videos? he was singing at a contest at a church. i was consulting for akon on a different artist. and i was watching youtube videos of that artist and telling him what i thought of it. they were singing aretha franklin "respect." so in related videos, there was a kid in the distance, a little tiny thing, and i thought it was the sa
when i saw it, i instantly knew what it was.led scott manson, who sent it to me, who works here. and i said find this guy. 60,000 views, find him, it is going to be a huge, huge hit. and three weeks later -- emily: you found him at 60,000 views? scooter: yeah, scott sent it to me at 60,000 views -- 66,000 views. emily: by the way, now over 2 billion. scooter: over 2 billion. everyone said the same thing. there is no way you are going to be able to make this record work. it's a korean pop song...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 51
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i knew this. i knew that frequently, the most powerful people are the ones that have no name recognition in the west, so i sort of applied that same kind of notion to these suicides. i thought, well, maybe this isn't exactly the way it looks either. and roald and i were walking across red square -- this is only, you know, four or five days after the coup had shown itself to be unsuccessful. and i said, you know, i wonder. i wonder if those murders were really suicides. roald laughed and said, oh sure, a very wild idea. but then we got to a dinner party that evening, and roald told everybody that they had to listen to my theory. and i just casually advanced it again. and really, it was very clear that, actually, most people thought that, in fact, those suicides had, in fact, been murders. there were very strange things about the murders themselves. c-span: what did you think? >> guest: well, i'll tell you. kruchina -- now, he's a very key person. he was in charge of the communist party assets. he w
i knew this. i knew that frequently, the most powerful people are the ones that have no name recognition in the west, so i sort of applied that same kind of notion to these suicides. i thought, well, maybe this isn't exactly the way it looks either. and roald and i were walking across red square -- this is only, you know, four or five days after the coup had shown itself to be unsuccessful. and i said, you know, i wonder. i wonder if those murders were really suicides. roald laughed and said,...
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Apr 25, 2015
04/15
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KNTV
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sam knew cathy the best. >> how long have you known cathy?her for over five years. >> reporter: they interviewed him down at the station. >> yeah, i really had fun with her. like i said, that person, i'm serious, would always have a smile. we would always be laughing, making jokes. >> reporter: given their friendship, detectives were curious about what cathy might have shared with sam about albert. since albert tried to commit suicide she was taking it pretty hard. was she confiding in you? >> the only thing she mentioned about him was that he hung himself and she was sorry for him doing that, because she thought it was his -- her fault, okay? that's -- that's how she said it to me. we never really sat down and talked about it. well, you know what? i think she was trying to hide from her problems by smoking out. >> reporter: meaning she was smoking marijuana. cathy's family said that for her that would be out character. sam told detectives he had last seen cathy the thursday before she disappeared. he said she'd paged him several times that d
sam knew cathy the best. >> how long have you known cathy?her for over five years. >> reporter: they interviewed him down at the station. >> yeah, i really had fun with her. like i said, that person, i'm serious, would always have a smile. we would always be laughing, making jokes. >> reporter: given their friendship, detectives were curious about what cathy might have shared with sam about albert. since albert tried to commit suicide she was taking it pretty hard. was...
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183
Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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WRC
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i knew it was a gunshot, i knew it was a gunshot and i knew it was close. >> reporter: she opened the door and saw her husband. >> he's wearing a raincoat, a suit a hat, and he's doubled over, and you can see that he's in pain, and he look at me and says, "i've been shot." >> reporter: the assailants had fled. elizabeth got joyal inside and called 911. >> as soon as that 911 call was done asked my son to lift my legs up because i wanted to make sure that most of, you know the blood was -- >> reporter: stays in the body. >> stays in the body. >> reporter: so you don't lose consciousness. elizabeth is a registered nurse. her training kicked in. >> there was no sign of external bleeding at that point, so that kind of freaked me out, too. as a nurse, i know if it's not bleeding on the outside, it's bleeding on the inside. [ siren ] >> reporter: an ambulance arrived and rushed joyal to the hospital. the .9-millimeter bullet had torn through his bladder and intestines. they had to place him in a drug-induced coma to save his life. he was unconscious for a month. local law enforcement initia
i knew it was a gunshot, i knew it was a gunshot and i knew it was close. >> reporter: she opened the door and saw her husband. >> he's wearing a raincoat, a suit a hat, and he's doubled over, and you can see that he's in pain, and he look at me and says, "i've been shot." >> reporter: the assailants had fled. elizabeth got joyal inside and called 911. >> as soon as that 911 call was done asked my son to lift my legs up because i wanted to make sure that most...
537
537
Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CNNW
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the money was good. >> she knew how to handle people. she could diffuse a situation very quickly. >> she was beautiful, but she was smart about it. >> late one night, as kim drove home from work, she encountered a road rage incident with an angry motorist. >> they started passing her, driving closely behind her and blowing the horn at her and things like that. >> kim was afraid these men had followed her from work, so she went to the police for help. >> she was very shook up. it took a while for the police officer to calm her down. >> she also told them that, hey, i travel this road these nights, and i'm along here about this time. >> the captain placed a radio broadcast to the other officers that were working on his shift to be on the lookout for this red jeep and to look out for her if they saw her on the roadway. >> unfortunately, this didn't help. two weeks later, police found kim's abandoned jeep on the side of the road. the engine was running and the lights were on. >> we knew then that something rotten had happened. >> kim's purse
the money was good. >> she knew how to handle people. she could diffuse a situation very quickly. >> she was beautiful, but she was smart about it. >> late one night, as kim drove home from work, she encountered a road rage incident with an angry motorist. >> they started passing her, driving closely behind her and blowing the horn at her and things like that. >> kim was afraid these men had followed her from work, so she went to the police for help. >> she...
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Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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KNTV
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eye 74
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at the time, derreck says, he knew almost nothing about running a restaurant, but knew a whole bunch about his home town of oakland. derreck: i grew up in the toughest neighborhood in the city; i grew up in acorn. derreck: how you doing over here? female: great, thank you. derreck: all right, great. garvin: derreck says he opened the restaurant wanting it to be a place where customers from all walks of life were welcome. the same went for putting together his staff. derreck: i knew that i would get an urban applicant. i knew i'd get applicants that were all mainly from low income areas in oakland. garvin: and applicants with criminal records, even those having spent some time doing hard time. that didn't matter to derreck. derreck: i saw people that were really wanting and eager to work. that's all i needed to see. derreck: victoria comes in at 6, yama. shaniqua cooper: miesha namore. garvin: it is something he saw in shaniqua cooper. shaniqua: i made some careless decision and i owned up to 'em, served my time. shaniqua: yeah, let me show you the correct way to do it. garvin: now, t
at the time, derreck says, he knew almost nothing about running a restaurant, but knew a whole bunch about his home town of oakland. derreck: i grew up in the toughest neighborhood in the city; i grew up in acorn. derreck: how you doing over here? female: great, thank you. derreck: all right, great. garvin: derreck says he opened the restaurant wanting it to be a place where customers from all walks of life were welcome. the same went for putting together his staff. derreck: i knew that i would...
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CNNW
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. >> we knew that ms. salmon had been involved in an intimate relationship with someone within 24 or 48 hours prior to her death. there were no injuries that would be consistent with forcible rape. >> on the men's jeans found with laura's body, scientists found semen from a different individual, presumably the killer. earlier that day, laura worked at her cashier's job at kroger grocery store. records show she left the store around 1:00 pm. she was supposed to be at an appointment at middle tennessee state university but she never arrived. >> she was supposed to go to mtsu campus to check on her grades and meet some of the office personnel over there. after that, she was supposed to go to her grandmother's house to go swimming. >> investigators found laura's car near the store, miles away from the murder site. investigators found no fingerprints in the car, but they did find a foreign hair. they also found dirt in the wheel wells. >> the fbi lab determined that they were consistent and that there was a hig
. >> we knew that ms. salmon had been involved in an intimate relationship with someone within 24 or 48 hours prior to her death. there were no injuries that would be consistent with forcible rape. >> on the men's jeans found with laura's body, scientists found semen from a different individual, presumably the killer. earlier that day, laura worked at her cashier's job at kroger grocery store. records show she left the store around 1:00 pm. she was supposed to be at an appointment...
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Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 76
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guest: i knew three years ago. i was portraying general grant and my first trip up here three years ago, the park service indicated to me they wanted me to be the grant for the 150th. guest: i would be here last august. i had a pretty good idea i would be here last april when i came to meet everyone and the park service met me. i had about one year to prepare. if you had asked me a year and a half ago if i would be here, i would never imagine such an honor. host: this is sort of a highlight -- what do you have on
guest: i knew three years ago. i was portraying general grant and my first trip up here three years ago, the park service indicated to me they wanted me to be the grant for the 150th. guest: i would be here last august. i had a pretty good idea i would be here last april when i came to meet everyone and the park service met me. i had about one year to prepare. if you had asked me a year and a half ago if i would be here, i would never imagine such an honor. host: this is sort of a highlight --...
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65
Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 65
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i knew she was dying but i was also living with the denial that maybe this isn't real. maybe it will change and be fine. so it kind of made me have to accept that she was except that her life was ending and what would that mean. what would that force me to accept a file if i were going to be faithful to her sense of her life. it also frightened me because that also meant maybe someone was telling her you can stop worrying about your child here this is what will happen. she will be okay. and then of course it also affirming a wish i had for myself seemed really wonderful. all of those feeling terrified me in conjunction with one another and there was something i needed to return to and dwell on and language. i think so much of what i is a writer and doing is trying to find ways language can help me understand what happened. maybe what is happening or what is happening in terms of my understanding of what that means and what i should be moving toward such a person, as an individual. language helped make calibrate my sense of it. and it helped me clarify my sense of what h
i knew she was dying but i was also living with the denial that maybe this isn't real. maybe it will change and be fine. so it kind of made me have to accept that she was except that her life was ending and what would that mean. what would that force me to accept a file if i were going to be faithful to her sense of her life. it also frightened me because that also meant maybe someone was telling her you can stop worrying about your child here this is what will happen. she will be okay. and...
272
272
Apr 10, 2015
04/15
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KQED
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eye 272
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nobody knew anything.or radio you would listen to kcvs san francisco. so after 15 or 20 minutes the crowd is chanting play ball, play ball. they had no idea what had gone on. and then all of a sudden the word came back. the world series was suspended for ten days and resumed a week from the following friday. >> rose: where were you at the time of the munich olympics? tragedy? >> i was the announcer for the since in additionee reds at that point. i had not gone to abc yet. so i was i think i was in san francisco doing a reds-giants series. >> rose: the reason i say that is that someone from abc said to me you know why we did so well is in part because sitting there-- there was a play by play announcer in sports. and he understood the moment. >> are you talking about jim mckay. >> i am. >> who did a fantastic job. >> rose: i am. >> jim mckay was not what you would really call a sportscaster. he was-- i once likened him to a favorite teacher. because jim would take you on this grand tour of the world wide wor
nobody knew anything.or radio you would listen to kcvs san francisco. so after 15 or 20 minutes the crowd is chanting play ball, play ball. they had no idea what had gone on. and then all of a sudden the word came back. the world series was suspended for ten days and resumed a week from the following friday. >> rose: where were you at the time of the munich olympics? tragedy? >> i was the announcer for the since in additionee reds at that point. i had not gone to abc yet. so i was i...