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Jun 15, 2017
06/17
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but again i would like to warn the advocates against giving a lecture which i know i'm giving a lecture i get the irony. they face a genuine security threat will not take well the lesson of their defensive policy from a state that is unwilling to give the same lecture or condemnation back against those in pyongyang on moscow. a further point on europe and nato even if one or five allies decided they would like the u.s. to remove the tactical bombs, it is a limited step but doesn't fundamentally change the security policy while i'm sure it would be welcomed by advocates as an important step forward, it's important to be aware of how limited that would be. it is a huge step from discussing or changing the policy not only the u.s. but other nuclear weapons states have defined as a central purpose which is to deter anyone else using them. so to try to sum up what can you do to live up to its potential, one others can talk about is to strengthen and make specific and they mentioned the recommendation to link this to the nonproliferation treaty by making mandatory membership a prerequisite. s
but again i would like to warn the advocates against giving a lecture which i know i'm giving a lecture i get the irony. they face a genuine security threat will not take well the lesson of their defensive policy from a state that is unwilling to give the same lecture or condemnation back against those in pyongyang on moscow. a further point on europe and nato even if one or five allies decided they would like the u.s. to remove the tactical bombs, it is a limited step but doesn't fundamentally...
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Jun 1, 2017
06/17
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vance's hillbilly-ology, a book we'll turn to later on in this lecture. these reasons, it's beholden on us, i think, to understand how appalachian stereotypes have evolved over time and how they have been mobilized in different circumstances for the benefit of outsiders and those who live here. but i think i would like to start our story with a negative stereotype, and i want to dissect a negative image of ap latchians in american culture, beginning in the mid to late 19th century. among the oldest and perhaps most persist eent aspects of th view of the people of the mountains is their cultural and economic backwardness, their supposed backwardness. edgar alan poe set one of his short stories published in 1844, in a fictional location, situated to the south and west of charlottesville, virginia. he entitled this short story, the ragged mountains. and it's an interesting story, partially because it's the only short story that poe set in virginia, despite having attended university here, or at that point in virginia. those hills, those ragged mountains, acc
vance's hillbilly-ology, a book we'll turn to later on in this lecture. these reasons, it's beholden on us, i think, to understand how appalachian stereotypes have evolved over time and how they have been mobilized in different circumstances for the benefit of outsiders and those who live here. but i think i would like to start our story with a negative stereotype, and i want to dissect a negative image of ap latchians in american culture, beginning in the mid to late 19th century. among the...
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Jun 11, 2017
06/17
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KPIX
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we have the public theology lecture series. >> this would include things like -- lectures this year on trying to understand how people visualize mecca. so how people have thought about mecca as that subject. we had -- thinking about how different ways in which missionaries move between china, europe and argue about chinese religions, christianity and the interface of those things. we have had talks about jewish studies and faculties to talk about why we should study christian theology. people writing books on the study of the bible. new testament scholars talk about what it means to think about the new testament. both as the historical document and one where a scholar has placed both of those rules in his life. it is quite a diverse group of talks that have a bunch of interest. it is the advantage of the center. it is what the goal is, to produce a conversation that cuts across traditions. deeply historical and speaking to the present political moment. >> we are talking about the berkeley center for the study of religion. university of california berkeley. more when we come back. stay
we have the public theology lecture series. >> this would include things like -- lectures this year on trying to understand how people visualize mecca. so how people have thought about mecca as that subject. we had -- thinking about how different ways in which missionaries move between china, europe and argue about chinese religions, christianity and the interface of those things. we have had talks about jewish studies and faculties to talk about why we should study christian theology....
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Jun 1, 2017
06/17
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. >> on lectures in history, shep period university benjamin bankhearse talks about the role of appalachia. he talks about how it was viewed during the industrial revving loose as backwards hillbillies to people respected for their folk culture in the early 20th century this talk is about an hour. >> all right. let's go ahead and get started everyone. welcome to class. over the course of this semester so far, we have seen how an lash ya perhaps to a greater degree than any other american region is defined to the world and in the minds of its residents by outsiders. we have seen for example how industrialists employed the negative stereotype of the violent hillbilly to rationalize the seizure of thousands of acres of land on the boundary between kentucky and west virginia. the image of an lasha as an impoverished and backward area continues to haunt the region to this day. indeed many residents have absorbed an inverted negative story owe type of the region and its people and to have also construct new identities for themselves based on how they think they are perceived. a classic example o
. >> on lectures in history, shep period university benjamin bankhearse talks about the role of appalachia. he talks about how it was viewed during the industrial revving loose as backwards hillbillies to people respected for their folk culture in the early 20th century this talk is about an hour. >> all right. let's go ahead and get started everyone. welcome to class. over the course of this semester so far, we have seen how an lash ya perhaps to a greater degree than any other...
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Jun 17, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 120
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so i got sent off to school to give lectures instead. as ruth said, i graduated in 2012 got assigned to the naval academy as a permanent professor. once we stopped moving, and my family moved 11 times while i was an operational officer. my girls. normal people moved every cheat years. my wife said -- my girls thought that normal people moved every two years. my wife said we should get more involved in the community. i thought she meant volunteer at a soup kitchen. no, she met the come foster parent spirit which we did. if you want to smithsonian lecture on the opioid crisis in anne arundel county, i can give that one, to you will, but i like to tell people that we are the world's worst foster parents. the idea is to love them and let them go. we love them and adopt them. which is not a sustainable model. [laughter] we have a few more kids. it either keeps me young or will put me in an early grave. i do have a five-year-old editor 22-year-old. in the middle of all that, i wrote a book. do have a five-year-old and a 22-year-old. the subjec
so i got sent off to school to give lectures instead. as ruth said, i graduated in 2012 got assigned to the naval academy as a permanent professor. once we stopped moving, and my family moved 11 times while i was an operational officer. my girls. normal people moved every cheat years. my wife said -- my girls thought that normal people moved every two years. my wife said we should get more involved in the community. i thought she meant volunteer at a soup kitchen. no, she met the come foster...
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Jun 9, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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who likes to lecture our closest allies. but don't reciprocate that urge to be hectoring and lecturing. rather, take seriously the real security dilemmas that both nuclear weapons states and the states that you referred to as umbrella states, i prefer the term those who enjoy extended deterrence, think seriously their security issues. second, pick carefully the targets that you want to persuade. and by that i mean above all don't delay, don't avoid choosing the hard targets. again, as george perkovich points out in his article, it's natural with the movement that depends largely upon civil society, upon ngos in democratic countries to start by seeking to persuade democracies, and to leave aside those nuclear weapons states, russia, china, and above all, north korea, that are impervious to any kind of outside rational argument. but to focus on other democratic states that are part of the western alliance or the asian states that under extended deterrence, risk being perceived as a discriminatory movement, and it risks having
who likes to lecture our closest allies. but don't reciprocate that urge to be hectoring and lecturing. rather, take seriously the real security dilemmas that both nuclear weapons states and the states that you referred to as umbrella states, i prefer the term those who enjoy extended deterrence, think seriously their security issues. second, pick carefully the targets that you want to persuade. and by that i mean above all don't delay, don't avoid choosing the hard targets. again, as george...
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Jun 5, 2017
06/17
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WUSA
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i even thought i resembled him. >> the foundation says dillon delivered the lecture just yesterday. that 4000 word 27 minute speech wrestles with the question, can song lyrics be considered literature. it's a question that 76 year old says he's been struggling with since he won the nobel prize for literature in dillon's entire lecture on our website wusa 9.com and our wusa 9 app. >>> he's a hero on a world series winning baseball team and now he's a hero on the streets. arizona diamond backs legend lewis gonzalez rescued a woman involved in a car crash and the video of the aftermath is dramatic. it was a fiery head-on collision that happened friday night in phoenix. thankfully, the woman gonzalez pulled from the crash is going to be okay. gonzalez described to a local radio station about the moment he jumped into action. >> i was following another car and just saw the accident in front, i stopped and the car right on top of it was starting to catch on fire, so i was just trying to get her out of the car as quick as i can and the fire department and police department did a fantastic
i even thought i resembled him. >> the foundation says dillon delivered the lecture just yesterday. that 4000 word 27 minute speech wrestles with the question, can song lyrics be considered literature. it's a question that 76 year old says he's been struggling with since he won the nobel prize for literature in dillon's entire lecture on our website wusa 9.com and our wusa 9 app. >>> he's a hero on a world series winning baseball team and now he's a hero on the streets. arizona...
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Jun 24, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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. >> tonight on lectures of history, the university of notre dame professor on u.s. american oil interests. here's a preview. culturesare the two that really emerged and one worldviews.d two not just to corporate sectors, but two worldviews, which are in the 1940's will clash. you have major oil, civil religion of crude, which seized the virtue of the large, integrated, multinational company working with ultimate -- government to open up new foreign fields, and in the process promote face and modernity, and in the power of the spending to nurture economic development and democratic values on a global scale, and on the other hand you have independence, wildcat, religion which seized the virtue
. >> tonight on lectures of history, the university of notre dame professor on u.s. american oil interests. here's a preview. culturesare the two that really emerged and one worldviews.d two not just to corporate sectors, but two worldviews, which are in the 1940's will clash. you have major oil, civil religion of crude, which seized the virtue of the large, integrated, multinational company working with ultimate -- government to open up new foreign fields, and in the process promote face...
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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are you giving any other lectures? as it happened, i was giving one next week also on the subject of political power. so they basically took down my words, turned it into a script. i wrote a little abridged thing combining the two things saying how they joined and i recorded it. the interesting thing was, my books are all recorded by an actor. you hear might new york accent perhaps so i said to my agent wants, maybe i could record what. she says, then the price will go down. [laughter] nesbittou mentioned len and this talk that you made on audible.com. idea thee that have no value of an agent and how important it was to you, tell us how it happened. robert: that's a good story. i was a newspaper reporter and i wanted to do a biography of robert moses as i thought that was a way of examining how real political our work in the cities. democracy are in a and we are taught in high school and college that basically the power comes from people casting ballot boxes and people getting elected. but in robert moses, you have a m
are you giving any other lectures? as it happened, i was giving one next week also on the subject of political power. so they basically took down my words, turned it into a script. i wrote a little abridged thing combining the two things saying how they joined and i recorded it. the interesting thing was, my books are all recorded by an actor. you hear might new york accent perhaps so i said to my agent wants, maybe i could record what. she says, then the price will go down. [laughter]...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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lecture is of course, franklin roosevelt who we will look at today. as i said earlier, i will be speaking on franklin roosevelt and his domestic presidency and challenges, initiatives, successes, and failures. i will turn it over to my dearest friend, neville thompson, who is guest lecturing in the class today and we are very honored to have him sharing his research with us so thank you very much for being here and we will turn over to you shortly. we will look today at the histories and election of franklin roosevelt. we begin looking at his early life, political career, and some of the challenges that he was forced to confront as president. this is our theme, as always, it will be posted online so keep this in mind as you are doing your reading. we ove into franklin roosevelt, and who was he? he was born january 13 1882. he was born in a country estate and raised in affluent surroundings. he was paradoxically absolutely loved by the common people. he graduated from harvard, ttended columbia law school, and, before graduating from loss will, he took
lecture is of course, franklin roosevelt who we will look at today. as i said earlier, i will be speaking on franklin roosevelt and his domestic presidency and challenges, initiatives, successes, and failures. i will turn it over to my dearest friend, neville thompson, who is guest lecturing in the class today and we are very honored to have him sharing his research with us so thank you very much for being here and we will turn over to you shortly. we will look today at the histories and...
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Jun 28, 2017
06/17
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FOXNEWSW
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this is not going to be a lecture demonizing welfare mothers and things like.oing to say you as members of the new elite have to be aware of all of the ways in which the elite is screwing the working class in this country. >> tucker: interesting. 50 years ago, that would have been a message delivered most likely by some one on the left. >> yeah. >> tucker: your owe a fairly famous libertarian type person and you get shouted down. >> a couple of points, they didn't know what i was going to say. it wasn't they were protesting that message. second thing, remember, this was 100 to 200 kids out of 2,500. and so, i think with all of these protests on campus, there is a large, i you s expect silent majority. what scares me, they are cowards. when i talk to students and i think it's especially a problem in the humanities and the social sciences and elite universities, they tailor what they write in their term papers and when they say in class to what is in reality a lot of penalties the professors are prepared to impose them if they say the wrong thing. >> tucker: this
this is not going to be a lecture demonizing welfare mothers and things like.oing to say you as members of the new elite have to be aware of all of the ways in which the elite is screwing the working class in this country. >> tucker: interesting. 50 years ago, that would have been a message delivered most likely by some one on the left. >> yeah. >> tucker: your owe a fairly famous libertarian type person and you get shouted down. >> a couple of points, they didn't know...
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Jun 28, 2017
06/17
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the most important event was what went on in the lecture hall.de, there was a criminal felony, and somebody should do jail time for. what went on inside that lecture hall was a repudiation of what the university is all about. >> tucker: it's terrifying. the overarching irony is that your book "coming apart" provides the single clearest blueprint explained in my trunk i like to put it wasn't because of latimer put in. it was the force as you describe in that book. i wish their minds were open to hearing it. [laughs] they'd be a lot better -- >> if they want to have me back. >> tucker: charles murray, thank you very much. the travel ban, cap next we will talk to a democrat who supports the band. we will ask her why i love how usaa gives me the peace of mind and the security just like the marines did. at one point, i did change to a different company with car insurance, and i was not happy with the customer service. we have switched back over and we feel like we're back home now. the process through usaa is so effortless, that you feel like you're a
the most important event was what went on in the lecture hall.de, there was a criminal felony, and somebody should do jail time for. what went on inside that lecture hall was a repudiation of what the university is all about. >> tucker: it's terrifying. the overarching irony is that your book "coming apart" provides the single clearest blueprint explained in my trunk i like to put it wasn't because of latimer put in. it was the force as you describe in that book. i wish their...
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Jun 24, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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they were trying to make me understand it, not a lecture for the camera. we had the same connection we would have had if we were in an improvisation. it was happening in that moment. that dynamic relationship between us is what i began to realize when i left the program, maybe we could teach scientists to communicate at that personal level through the connection that is possible to achieve with an audience, and teach them how to do that while we're teaching them to be scientists so they would leave their education not as accomplished scientists but accomplished communicators. i realized there was all this other stuff happening with the scientists. wasn't just they were learning to communicate science. one scientist told us this training has saved my marriage. so i realized -- another scientist said, you have to tell more people about this. my wife is an art historian, i can't understand a word she says. and anard historian. just show him pictures but he wasn't getting it. there will terms terms and ling, jargon he wasn't getting. concepts. everything can b
they were trying to make me understand it, not a lecture for the camera. we had the same connection we would have had if we were in an improvisation. it was happening in that moment. that dynamic relationship between us is what i began to realize when i left the program, maybe we could teach scientists to communicate at that personal level through the connection that is possible to achieve with an audience, and teach them how to do that while we're teaching them to be scientists so they would...
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Jun 8, 2017
06/17
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KPIX
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disturbing accusations against a stanford lecturer.is alleged crime involving a former student. >> and a bay area man faces years in prison for a scheme involving disabled parking placards. it's all coming up when we come back. >>> welcome back. we are taking a look at our high temperatures around the bay today. temperatures below average this time of the year. the computer is freezing up. but we are going to see temperatures in the low 70s for the warmest spots inland. 60s for some folks. here we go. low 70s for the south bay today. we are hovering near 60 along the coast. closer to the murder 60s in the area in novato and petaluma. rain in the north bay. we'll be showing you where the rain is falling and where it's going to fall coming up. >> we'll take a quick look at your ride along the dublin- pleasanton -- as you approach the dublin-pleasanton interchange. this is 580 approaching 680. headlights heading westbound. back to you guys. >>> an investigation by the dmv could land one san francisco man in prison for years. he is accused
disturbing accusations against a stanford lecturer.is alleged crime involving a former student. >> and a bay area man faces years in prison for a scheme involving disabled parking placards. it's all coming up when we come back. >>> welcome back. we are taking a look at our high temperatures around the bay today. temperatures below average this time of the year. the computer is freezing up. but we are going to see temperatures in the low 70s for the warmest spots inland. 60s for...
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Jun 18, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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so they were taken out of the desire to do a lecture for the camera. they were trying to make me understand. we are the same connection that we would have had if it weren't improvisation. it wasn't improvisation. it was really happening in that moment. that dynamic relationship between us is when i began to realize when i left the program, maybe we could teach scientists and communicate on a personal level through the connection that it's possible to achieve with an audience and do that while we are teaching them to be scientists so they become not only accomplished scientist that accomplish communicators. as we talked i realize there was all this other stuff happening with scientists. it wasn't just that they were ready to come in a cave science. one scientist told us his training saved his marriage. another scientist said you have to talk to more people about this. my wife is a art historian and i can understand a word she says. he wasn't getting it. there was lingo, jargon that he wasn't getting. everything and can be communicated and we can give mo
so they were taken out of the desire to do a lecture for the camera. they were trying to make me understand. we are the same connection that we would have had if it weren't improvisation. it wasn't improvisation. it was really happening in that moment. that dynamic relationship between us is when i began to realize when i left the program, maybe we could teach scientists and communicate on a personal level through the connection that it's possible to achieve with an audience and do that while...
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Jun 10, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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-- they invited henry halleck -- not to give one legally -- measly lecture, but to give 12, 1 night after the next, filling the hall every night. these lectures were later gathered together and published in his major book "elements of military art and science. that came out in 1846. keep in mind that when that book came out -- all these things that happened before, he is 31 years old. 31 years old. , stays in the army, the mexican war comes and he travels to california, and sherman is one of his bunk mates have,s terrible ride they waves going up and down, etc.. he said he did not waste any time. everyone else was playing cards and novels, but he is four novels about napoleon from french to english. he creates that four volume english version that you could spill -- still get, if you like. in the main part of the war, but he is in california, very important in the war. when he gets there, they are still fighting to be done -- ere is still fighting to be done, so he produced space in the small local fighting. he is a very good unit commander. he also serves as secretary of state for
-- they invited henry halleck -- not to give one legally -- measly lecture, but to give 12, 1 night after the next, filling the hall every night. these lectures were later gathered together and published in his major book "elements of military art and science. that came out in 1846. keep in mind that when that book came out -- all these things that happened before, he is 31 years old. 31 years old. , stays in the army, the mexican war comes and he travels to california, and sherman is one...
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Jun 22, 2017
06/17
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KTVU
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i'm your guest lecturer dr. sheldon cooper. expecting applause, but i suppose stunned silence is equally appropriate. i agreed to speak to you this evening because i was told that you're the best and the brightest of this university's doctoral candidates. hmm. of course, that's like saying you are the most important electron in a hydrogen atom. (chuckles) 'cause, you see, there's only one electron in a hydrogen atom. best and brightest, my sweet patootie. all right, let's begin. show of hands, who here is familiar with the concept of topological insulators? don't kid yourselves. i found another tweet from a student at sheldon's lecture.
i'm your guest lecturer dr. sheldon cooper. expecting applause, but i suppose stunned silence is equally appropriate. i agreed to speak to you this evening because i was told that you're the best and the brightest of this university's doctoral candidates. hmm. of course, that's like saying you are the most important electron in a hydrogen atom. (chuckles) 'cause, you see, there's only one electron in a hydrogen atom. best and brightest, my sweet patootie. all right, let's begin. show of hands,...
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Jun 2, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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who likes to lecture our closest allies.but don't reciprocate that urge to be hectoring and lecturing. rather, take seriously the real security dilemmas that both nuclear weapon states and those states that you referred to as umbrella states, i prefer the term those who enjoy extended deterrence, take seriously their security issues. second, pick carefully the target that you want to persuade. and by that i mean, above all don't delay, don't avoid choosing the hard targets. again, as george brokerage point out in his article, it's natural with a movement that depends largely upon civil society, upon ngos in democratic countries to start a seeking to persuade democracies. and to lead aside those nuclear weapon states, russia, china, and above all, north korea, that are impervious to any kind of outside rational argument. but to focus only on the democratic states that are part of the western alliance or the asian states that are under extended deterrence with being perceived as a discriminatory movement, and it risks having t
who likes to lecture our closest allies.but don't reciprocate that urge to be hectoring and lecturing. rather, take seriously the real security dilemmas that both nuclear weapon states and those states that you referred to as umbrella states, i prefer the term those who enjoy extended deterrence, take seriously their security issues. second, pick carefully the target that you want to persuade. and by that i mean, above all don't delay, don't avoid choosing the hard targets. again, as george...
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Jun 6, 2017
06/17
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BBCNEWS
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we will take no lectures from sinn fein either.ifference between meeting people and having them endorse your campaign. even... one at a time. even donald trump said he didn't want the ku klux klan... one at a time, please. let me speak. thank you. we want to work with those who want the paramilitaries to leave the stage. we will continue to do that. we will continue to do it with the lcc because we have got to get the loyalist paramilitaries off the backs of the communities. you won't do that by standing back and lecturing people and passing judgment. you have to engage. you have to go and talk and sit and persuade people to do this. would you talk to isis? i don't see any point in talking to isis because they're not interested in any democratic transition. i will tell you what i would do and it goes back to the question asked originally. we have a watch list, the security services in this country, of people who are already radicalised. it's too late for these people. why do we continue to allow these people to remain in our midst
we will take no lectures from sinn fein either.ifference between meeting people and having them endorse your campaign. even... one at a time. even donald trump said he didn't want the ku klux klan... one at a time, please. let me speak. thank you. we want to work with those who want the paramilitaries to leave the stage. we will continue to do that. we will continue to do it with the lcc because we have got to get the loyalist paramilitaries off the backs of the communities. you won't do that...
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Jun 12, 2017
06/17
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FOXNEWSW
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now, students don't have to give a one page fits a lecture to everyone. you don't have to separate people by age, so all of these things start happening. but we realize, unless we create some proof points the world might not change over the next several years even though tools like khan academy exist. so the lab school that we developed is to be one of those. if you think about those who would send their children that most children experience in terms of education, it is pretty much one type of school system. good schools and bad schools but do you think there's something wrong with the whole system, something more fundamental. what is wrong with the way we think about education in america? >> what happened in traditional schools for the last 200 years including once we grew up in. you group people together around age and perceived ability and you move them at a set pace. what typically happens is a teacher gives an a lecture on exponents some of us get it, some of us don't. >> steve: i definitely don't. >> you have lecture, homework and that continues fo
now, students don't have to give a one page fits a lecture to everyone. you don't have to separate people by age, so all of these things start happening. but we realize, unless we create some proof points the world might not change over the next several years even though tools like khan academy exist. so the lab school that we developed is to be one of those. if you think about those who would send their children that most children experience in terms of education, it is pretty much one type of...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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lectures in history are also available as podcasts. visit our website c-span.org/history/podcasts or download them from itunes. this weekend on "american , historian greg burzynski it looks at --munications between competition between america and china to influence african countries during the cold war. here is a preview. the afromportantly, this conference of 1955, is the man speaking where he importantof a very performance that really did raise china's standing among a lot of afro asian countries that did not have relations with it before the conference. at these conferences, beijing office representative health as they useful afro asian -- represented itself as a peaceful afro asian nation that had suffered in the past and try to create itself as a leader among afro asian countries as a successful example of post colonial nationbuilding. also an important part of chinese diplomacy, sending diplomats abroad. china constantly tried to raise its international profile by sending his representatives to africa, asia am a different afro as
lectures in history are also available as podcasts. visit our website c-span.org/history/podcasts or download them from itunes. this weekend on "american , historian greg burzynski it looks at --munications between competition between america and china to influence african countries during the cold war. here is a preview. the afromportantly, this conference of 1955, is the man speaking where he importantof a very performance that really did raise china's standing among a lot of afro asian...
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Jun 1, 2017
06/17
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BBCNEWS
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it was a lecturing.was condescending, it's showing a message to the chinese people that we students went too far. the hierarchies there were giving us some lecturing, like some lesson. but that cannot be televised to the chinese people, because that would be a wrong message. what happened, really, is, after 20, 30, a0 days, with the pressure, something is happening. and this happened, and then this cannot be interpreted into something else. do you think it made any difference, that image of you sort of treating li peng as an equal, not as some superior being on the top of the party, but as an equal. do you think, whatever happened after 11th ofjune, 1989, in china, that image and that moment still matters? in two aspects, number one, it made an influence for the decision the communist party made when we are talking about massacre. about tanks moving in? yes, i don't think so. the meeting, the set for the occasion was basically part of the whole plan. before that day, they had no plan. they didn't know ho
it was a lecturing.was condescending, it's showing a message to the chinese people that we students went too far. the hierarchies there were giving us some lecturing, like some lesson. but that cannot be televised to the chinese people, because that would be a wrong message. what happened, really, is, after 20, 30, a0 days, with the pressure, something is happening. and this happened, and then this cannot be interpreted into something else. do you think it made any difference, that image of you...
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Jun 9, 2017
06/17
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KPIX
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. >>> only on 5 tonight new surveillance video of a stanford lecturer accused in a creepy crime involving a former student and women's underwear. >> this bay area woman got a gift from her bosses and tone she's suing for racial -- tonight she's suing for racial discrimination. >> tonight a new warning before you click that buy button. this pickup truck plowed into 2 police officers on bike patrol at a high-rate of speed... then took off. and tonight: >>> breaking news out of washington d.c., this pickup truck plowed into two police officers on bike patrol at a high rate of speed and took off. tonight police are not ruling out terrorism. right now within officer is in critical condition. the other is in serious condition -- one officer is in critical condition condition. the other is in serious condition. a public works employee was also struck. his condition is unknown. they recovered a weapon at the scene. >>> new details on the crime we first told you about last night, a stanford lecturer accused of prowling around a former student's home half naked. there may be more victims now. only
. >>> only on 5 tonight new surveillance video of a stanford lecturer accused in a creepy crime involving a former student and women's underwear. >> this bay area woman got a gift from her bosses and tone she's suing for racial -- tonight she's suing for racial discrimination. >> tonight a new warning before you click that buy button. this pickup truck plowed into 2 police officers on bike patrol at a high-rate of speed... then took off. and tonight: >>> breaking...
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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you can view our tv schedule, preview upcoming programs and watch college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. >> c-span, where history unfolds daily. in 1970 nine, c-span was created as a public service by america's cable television companies and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. is onrican history tv cspan3 every weekend featuring museum tours, archival films, and programs on the presidency, the civil war, and more. here is a clip from a recent program. are the two cultures that really emerge, two worldviews, that in the 1940's are going to clash. on one hand, you have major oil which sees the virtue of the large, integrated, multinational company working with government to open up new foreign fields and in the process focus on modernity and expanding capital to nurture economic development and democratic values on a global scale. on the other hand, you have independents, religion of crude, which sees the virtue of the small, independent producer, integrated only on a limited scale, working with local people and loca
you can view our tv schedule, preview upcoming programs and watch college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. >> c-span, where history unfolds daily. in 1970 nine, c-span was created as a public service by america's cable television companies and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. is onrican history tv cspan3 every weekend featuring museum tours, archival films, and programs on the presidency, the civil war, and more....
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
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schedule,v preview upcoming programs and watch college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. "afterwards," a financial expert and economics professor detail how low to moderate income families manage money. in their book, "the financial diaries" -- how american families cope in an air of uncertainty. by "two countered dollars a day, living on nothing in america." >> to risk a small decisions going badly is so much higher for people at the bottom. wealthier people make poor spending decisions all the time. i can come up from some -- with some for me in the last year. but the consequence of that is diminutive. but the consequence for people who are struggling is often really big. >> one of the pieces of data that really surprised me, this is the survey of income and program participation, the government survey. it said between 2009 and 2011, an unusual period after the recession, but during that period, 10 million americans were poor during every month of that period. but 90 million americans at some point were poor during that period.
schedule,v preview upcoming programs and watch college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at c-span.org/history. "afterwards," a financial expert and economics professor detail how low to moderate income families manage money. in their book, "the financial diaries" -- how american families cope in an air of uncertainty. by "two countered dollars a day, living on nothing in america." >> to risk a small decisions going badly is so much...
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Jun 24, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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schedule,ew our tv what college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at www.c-span.org/history. >> c-span, where history unfolds daily. in 1979, c-span was created as a public service by america's cable television companies and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. on lectures in history, university of notre dame professor teaches a class about mid-20th century oil interests. he describes the expansion of u.s. oil businesses abroad to places like saudi arabia and alberta, canada. he argued that religion played a significant role in the business practices of global companies and individual product testers. -- individual prospectors. this class is one hour and 15 minutes. >> good morning. welcome back from spring break and welcome back to our history of oil in american life. today we are going to look at a theical phase between 1930's and 1950's. a moment in which some important turns take place in the life of american oil. two sectors we have been looking at, major oil and independent oil. this is a period in w
schedule,ew our tv what college lectures, archival films, and more. american history tv at www.c-span.org/history. >> c-span, where history unfolds daily. in 1979, c-span was created as a public service by america's cable television companies and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. on lectures in history, university of notre dame professor teaches a class about mid-20th century oil interests. he describes the expansion of u.s. oil businesses abroad to places like...
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Jun 23, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN
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on lectures and history. boom of theas oil mid-20th century and the expansion of u.s.usinesses to saudi arabia and canada. >> a geologist framed the theory saying that american oil reserves were going to really 1970 forcing the country into a difficult situation. this apocalyptic fear of america losing its oil sources is going to drive exploration abroad. >> sunday at four clock p.m. eastern on railamerica. the 1979 united nations film, the palestinian people do have rights. >> violence reads hatred, retaliation only brings for the retaliation. and i for night is paid at high interest rates in our day and age. >> at 6:30, president reagan's speechwriter and the former u.s. ambassador to germany on the trip to berlin and the brandenburg gate speech. ask i knew it was a great -- >> i knew it was a great applause line and i knew it was authentic ronald reagan. history has an arc and we would never celebrate that famous speech if in fact the events of
on lectures and history. boom of theas oil mid-20th century and the expansion of u.s.usinesses to saudi arabia and canada. >> a geologist framed the theory saying that american oil reserves were going to really 1970 forcing the country into a difficult situation. this apocalyptic fear of america losing its oil sources is going to drive exploration abroad. >> sunday at four clock p.m. eastern on railamerica. the 1979 united nations film, the palestinian people do have rights....
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Jun 9, 2017
06/17
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KPIX
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. >>> only on 5 tonight new surveillance video of a stanford lecturer accused in a creepy crime involving a former student and women's underwear. >> this bay area woman got a gift from her bosses and tone she's suing for racial -- tonight she's suing for racial who are these people? the energy conscious people among us say small actions can add up to something... humongous. a little thing here. a little thing there. starts to feel like a badge maybe millions can wear. who are all these caretakers, advocates too? turns out, it's californians it's me and it's you. don't stop now, it's easy to add to the routine. join energy upgrade california and do your thing. you know what i could go for righhmmmw? some sweet barbeque. (over speaker) - or spicy! we got a craving! go go go!!! crashing cravings in the crave van. jack's gonna crash your crave! here, try my barbeque bacon cheeseburger with your choice of sweet or spicy barbeque sauce topped with bacon and onion rings. thanks jack. ha ha! piece of cake. oh, jack! you crave it, we serve it. my new sweet or spicy barbeque bacon cheeseburger and
. >>> only on 5 tonight new surveillance video of a stanford lecturer accused in a creepy crime involving a former student and women's underwear. >> this bay area woman got a gift from her bosses and tone she's suing for racial -- tonight she's suing for racial who are these people? the energy conscious people among us say small actions can add up to something... humongous. a little thing here. a little thing there. starts to feel like a badge maybe millions can wear. who are all...
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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BBCNEWS
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somewhere there is this name on a lecture hall.tally find it up there, you know why. i think that is magical, though, that you can make somebody up and somehow they become more real than yourself. we talked about toby's inspiration behind this book, and we did talk about your grandfather and he got very upset about what he saw as you airing the dirty laundry of the family in public, so there are some pitfalls. imagine his horror having carefully fed me the imaginary story of his life with all its glory and achievement and indeed achieved a lot in his life. he sailed around the entire globe as a british merchant seaman. but byjingo, when he read that book, it was about gun—running in africa, about drunkenness of his wife and himself, and the horror he inflicted... oh, my god. and i was the grandson he adored, and he was the grandfather i worshipped. and he called me in to 22 mitchell way in dublin, where he lived in the most spartan of circumstances. and he sat me down on the chair and i was terrified because the book was there on t
somewhere there is this name on a lecture hall.tally find it up there, you know why. i think that is magical, though, that you can make somebody up and somehow they become more real than yourself. we talked about toby's inspiration behind this book, and we did talk about your grandfather and he got very upset about what he saw as you airing the dirty laundry of the family in public, so there are some pitfalls. imagine his horror having carefully fed me the imaginary story of his life with all...
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Jun 5, 2017
06/17
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KQEH
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i have nod had a chance to listen to your lectures at your garden. but i have -- let me tell you what i've heard. i have some friends who come to hear you speak on weekends. we all know that in l.a., for that matter in oakland, across the country, we see gentrification taking place everywhere. so i know that where your gardens are located, i'll let you talk about it in just a second, a whole bunch of good white folk are moving back into the neighborhoods. i'm told that when you give these lick tours, you're brutally honest about the conditions, about the circumstance, of what needs to be done. when you are giving these kinds of lectures and creating these kinds of conversations to folks who don't look like you and me, who come into the neighborhoods, who think they're doing the right thing, how are they responding to these issues that you're raising about how these conditions were allowed to be created in the first place? >> a lot of them hear it, but we also must realize that the gentrifiers are being gentrified. so they're not moving over there bec
i have nod had a chance to listen to your lectures at your garden. but i have -- let me tell you what i've heard. i have some friends who come to hear you speak on weekends. we all know that in l.a., for that matter in oakland, across the country, we see gentrification taking place everywhere. so i know that where your gardens are located, i'll let you talk about it in just a second, a whole bunch of good white folk are moving back into the neighborhoods. i'm told that when you give these lick...
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Jun 24, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
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eastern and again at midnight eastern on tonight's lectures in history. only on c-span3. >> each week american artifacts takes you to museums and historic places to learn about american history. the heurich house in washington dc was built by christian heurich, a german immigrant who started a successful brewing company in 1872. today, we toured several rooms in that mansion, also called the castle, --of the brewmaster's castle to learn , about the heurich family. this is the first of a two-part series. >> hi, welcome to the heurich house museum. this is the home of christian heurich, washington, d.c.'s most important brewer. he was a philanthropist, and he also was the largest nongovernmental employer and landowner in the city during his lifetime. he lives to be 102, and when he died he was still operating his brewery, and he was the oldest brewer in the world at that time. we are standing at his dupont circle mansion which was really his "i have arrived" statement after he made it in america and built up his brewing empire. this was built between 1892 a
eastern and again at midnight eastern on tonight's lectures in history. only on c-span3. >> each week american artifacts takes you to museums and historic places to learn about american history. the heurich house in washington dc was built by christian heurich, a german immigrant who started a successful brewing company in 1872. today, we toured several rooms in that mansion, also called the castle, --of the brewmaster's castle to learn , about the heurich family. this is the first of a...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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on lectures in history, university of kansas professor adrian lewis teaches a class the 1944ha beach and d-day landings in normandy, france, during world war ii. he describes the german and allied military strategies as well as the command structure. he also talks about the challenges for american troops when trying to land on omaha beach and argues the outcome was not inevitable. this class is about 50 minutes. syllabus, page 10. question number seven and eight, questions number seven and eight on the syllabus, page 10. describe and characterize the normandy invasion, why the allies succeed, analyze german defensive plans, explain victory and defeat, why was the invasion significant? question number eight. why was the battle for omaha beach a flawed victory? those are the questions we want to deal with today. how many have read omaha beach? here we go. [laughter] let me try one more time. how many have read it? ahh. about half. thesis, someone help me out. what is the thesis? you're going to help me out. the thesis basically is saying that the operations failed and the soldiers were
on lectures in history, university of kansas professor adrian lewis teaches a class the 1944ha beach and d-day landings in normandy, france, during world war ii. he describes the german and allied military strategies as well as the command structure. he also talks about the challenges for american troops when trying to land on omaha beach and argues the outcome was not inevitable. this class is about 50 minutes. syllabus, page 10. question number seven and eight, questions number seven and...
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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lectures and history are also available as podcasts. visit our website, www.c-span.org/ history\podcasts, or download them from itunes. >> the battle of midway took place from june 4 to june 7, 1942. in the pacific theater, and resulted in a decisive naval victory for the u.s. over japan. next, author, timothy orr, talks about experiences of u.s. maybe pilots who attacked the japanese fleet in the battle. this 40 minute talk from the macarthur memorial in norfolk, virginia, was part of a day-long symposium to mark the battle's 75th anniversary. mr. pentangelo: ok, ladies and gentlemen, we're ready to continue our program here. it is my pleasure to introduce dr. timothy orr. dr. orr holding a ph.d. from penn state university and is currently an associate professor of history at old dominion university. he is an expert on military history. along with his wife laura, , deputy director of education at the hampton roads museum, he recently published a book, "never call me a hero: a legendary american dive-bomber pilot remembers the battle of
lectures and history are also available as podcasts. visit our website, www.c-span.org/ history\podcasts, or download them from itunes. >> the battle of midway took place from june 4 to june 7, 1942. in the pacific theater, and resulted in a decisive naval victory for the u.s. over japan. next, author, timothy orr, talks about experiences of u.s. maybe pilots who attacked the japanese fleet in the battle. this 40 minute talk from the macarthur memorial in norfolk, virginia, was part of a...
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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WTXF
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he had detweiler for a course in the spring and told us she often infused her opinion into lectures. >> politically, about the presidency. i agreed with her but i didn't like that i had to sit through it during what was supposed to be an academic course. >> reporter: much has been made in recent months about violent student protests shutting down the voices of visiting lectures with whom that they disagree. the detweiler catch offers a different spring on the free speech debate. >> do you feel like her opinion should cost her her job given in this case given out of the context of a classroom. >>> no, i suppose i don't. that was a good question. >> reporter: for the record, ms. detweiler call the police on us when we knock at her door trying to get her side of the story. it should be noted that the freedom of speech that entrained lined in our constitution means for example your criticisms of the government can't get you landed in prison. however, in this case, when you're talking about an adjunct professor without tenure protection, free speech can indeed cost you your job. lucy? >>
he had detweiler for a course in the spring and told us she often infused her opinion into lectures. >> politically, about the presidency. i agreed with her but i didn't like that i had to sit through it during what was supposed to be an academic course. >> reporter: much has been made in recent months about violent student protests shutting down the voices of visiting lectures with whom that they disagree. the detweiler catch offers a different spring on the free speech debate....
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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in the memoir, he admitted "i read a sharp lecture to my troops, but i have never attributed the result to a want of courage on their part." taking another cue from the farewell address, early looked to repair his fractured relationship with his command. importantly, this explanation for early's defeat, not imagine -- not to mention larger confederate defeat, had substantial basis in fact that could be corroborated by primary sources and numbers. and so we moved to early's second strategy, employing primary evidence and numbers usually displayed in tables, those are really convincing, to prove that early had not been out generaled, but simply outnumbered in the valley. early first signaled that he would take this approach in his prominent 1866 newspaper dual with philip sheridan. back and forth with the generals over casualties, captured artillery, the tone went into something savage went sheridan called early "worse than a coward." early rebutted, "he was no gentleman. and as a military commander, a pretender." as gary gallagher has pointed out, the earliest numbers warmer accurate --
in the memoir, he admitted "i read a sharp lecture to my troops, but i have never attributed the result to a want of courage on their part." taking another cue from the farewell address, early looked to repair his fractured relationship with his command. importantly, this explanation for early's defeat, not imagine -- not to mention larger confederate defeat, had substantial basis in fact that could be corroborated by primary sources and numbers. and so we moved to early's second...
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Jun 23, 2017
06/17
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WTXF
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and, fresh off a mistrial on indecent assault charges bill cosby may be hitting the circuit again, lectures he is reportedly planning and what he is hoping to teach young men. >>> also ahead. >> with the first pick in the 2017 nba draft the philadelphia 76ers select markelle fultz from the university of washington. >> and there you have it, sixers get their man and now fans say it is fultz steam ahead. i could not resist it had to be done. great to have you on this friday i'm thomas drayton, bob kelly, good morning to you. >> good morning. just the guys here. >> scott williams, you can tell first weekend of summer everybody is taking off. >> yes. >> i love your idea, less's call sue serio and karen hepp and see if they are up. >> pretend we thought they were running late. >> click. >> wrong number. >> your vacation wasn't really approved yet. >> all eyes are on the weekend forecast a lot going on. we have tropical moisture heading our way. it won't be a complete wash out for weekend but we have several round of that rain to get through. weather by numbers on the scale of one to 10, today we
and, fresh off a mistrial on indecent assault charges bill cosby may be hitting the circuit again, lectures he is reportedly planning and what he is hoping to teach young men. >>> also ahead. >> with the first pick in the 2017 nba draft the philadelphia 76ers select markelle fultz from the university of washington. >> and there you have it, sixers get their man and now fans say it is fultz steam ahead. i could not resist it had to be done. great to have you on this friday...