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Apr 25, 2015
04/15
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you and your brother when ray gets out?sitting down and going for a nice little walk with him. being able to look at him eyeball to eyeball and talk to him, you know. various things, you know. family. he's got a little girl. he's a grandpa now. i don't have no kids where he does. i'd like to see him be able to be a good father to his daughter and a good grandpa. sure, that would be nice. obviously i'll get choked up as soon as i see him, no doubt. >> are you going to make it this time staying out? >> yeah, i believe i'm going to make it, no doubt. >> coming up, ray slagle approaches his release date. >> i have no doubt in my mind. you know, i'm going to do it. [ bleep ]. this is dead. >> but his final hours are consumed by doubt. >> i started -- i'm practically having a panic attack. i'm like, man, am i going to make it? >>> at the limon correctional facility in colorado, ray slagle became a successful hustler because of his ability to deal with other inmates. >> all right, guys. >> but as a father of a teenager, he wasn't
you and your brother when ray gets out?sitting down and going for a nice little walk with him. being able to look at him eyeball to eyeball and talk to him, you know. various things, you know. family. he's got a little girl. he's a grandpa now. i don't have no kids where he does. i'd like to see him be able to be a good father to his daughter and a good grandpa. sure, that would be nice. obviously i'll get choked up as soon as i see him, no doubt. >> are you going to make it this time...
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Apr 30, 2015
04/15
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as you know ray lewis is in town. is that helpful? >> ray lewis is very helpful.t realize it outside the city but he is such an immense influence in this town. he's canceled his appearance at the draft tonight to be here to help the city through this. he has been very committed to this city. and as adam jones of the orioles, he's also a very influential member of this community, and he has also been vocal. and i believe both of them can really really help us through this. >> edward norris thank you so much for being with me this morning. i appreciate it. >> yeah good to see you. >> nice to see you too again. i'll be right back. (music throughout) one coat coverage, one coat guaranteed, one happy couple. marquee, behr's most advanced paint and primer, only at the home depot. new york state is reinventing how we do business by leading the way on tax cuts. we cut the rates on personal income taxes. we enacted the lowest corporate tax rate since 1968. we eliminated the income tax on manufacturers altogether. with startup-ny, qualified businesses that start, expand or
as you know ray lewis is in town. is that helpful? >> ray lewis is very helpful.t realize it outside the city but he is such an immense influence in this town. he's canceled his appearance at the draft tonight to be here to help the city through this. he has been very committed to this city. and as adam jones of the orioles, he's also a very influential member of this community, and he has also been vocal. and i believe both of them can really really help us through this. >> edward...
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Apr 17, 2015
04/15
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tourism, manta ray diving tourism. and i feel that that definitively can be an incentive you know for government to say: listen this animal is worth a lot more alive than it is dead. we've lost about 88 % of the population in the last 8 to 10 years. we don't really have much time to rebuild these numbers before they are regionally extinct here. even so, mozambique has yet to place the manta ray on its list of protected species. >> bangladesh has an image problem. a string of deadly accidents, like the rana plaza fire in 2013, prompted global calls for reforms. in part conditions did improve, but the collapse of a cement factory a few days ago cast doubts on whether these changes will be enough. now the country's political turmoil is making headlines....more than 100 people have died in anti-government protests since the beginning of this year. investors are pulling out and many people fear that newly acquired rights could get lost in political chaos. >> for the past two months, bangladesh has been rocked by shutdowns,
tourism, manta ray diving tourism. and i feel that that definitively can be an incentive you know for government to say: listen this animal is worth a lot more alive than it is dead. we've lost about 88 % of the population in the last 8 to 10 years. we don't really have much time to rebuild these numbers before they are regionally extinct here. even so, mozambique has yet to place the manta ray on its list of protected species. >> bangladesh has an image problem. a string of deadly...
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Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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each manta ray has its distinguishing marks. she also works with genetic samples for what may be the world's most comprehensive manta ray data bank. >> mantaays are worth a lot of money, and mozambique is currently ranked number four in terms of countries around the world that are profiting from the manta ray tourism. and mozambique is making somewhere in the vicinity of seven to eight million dollars a year off manta ray tourism, manta radiving tourism. and i feel that that definitively can be an incentive you know for government to say: listen this animal is worth a lot more alive than it is dead. we've lost about 88 % of the population in the last 8 to 10 years. we don't really have much time to rebuildhese numbe before they are regionally extinct here. even so, mozambique has yet to place the manta ray on its list of protected species. >> bangladesh has an image problem. a string of deadly accidents, like the rana plaza fire in 2013, prompted global calls for reforms. in part conditions did improve, but the collapse of a cem
each manta ray has its distinguishing marks. she also works with genetic samples for what may be the world's most comprehensive manta ray data bank. >> mantaays are worth a lot of money, and mozambique is currently ranked number four in terms of countries around the world that are profiting from the manta ray tourism. and mozambique is making somewhere in the vicinity of seven to eight million dollars a year off manta ray tourism, manta radiving tourism. and i feel that that definitively...
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Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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>> immediately i say -- >> that's rai. >> that's rai gharizian. >> rai has been arrested. >> oh, thiseps toward freedom. >> now that you guys know i'm innocent, what are you doing to get me out of here? >> i'm sorry, erik. there is nothing we can do. >> what do you mean? you got the guy. why? why am i still in prison? >> wait, wait, wait, what are you talking about? you got the real guy. why am i still in jail? >> there is nothing we can do. >> even knowing that i was innocent, they still could not get involved. >> what the? but you're the drug enforcement agency! >> here i'm facing a possible death sentence, and they can't do anything for me. and i hated them for that. >> jenab, jenab, out. >> i started learning the language. >> i'm hungry. go get me some fruit. i'll give you 100 rupees. my mom sent me money through the embassy. return. tike. and that's where it started. he is like do you need anything else? i started asking for bigger things. kfc chicken, go get me some ice cream. eventually i told the guard -- >> cell phone. >> i want a cell phone. he's like i can do that. i cost m
>> immediately i say -- >> that's rai. >> that's rai gharizian. >> rai has been arrested. >> oh, thiseps toward freedom. >> now that you guys know i'm innocent, what are you doing to get me out of here? >> i'm sorry, erik. there is nothing we can do. >> what do you mean? you got the guy. why? why am i still in prison? >> wait, wait, wait, what are you talking about? you got the real guy. why am i still in jail? >> there is nothing we...
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Apr 5, 2015
04/15
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thank you so much, ray. ray: thanks. charlie: thank you, gary. we will be right back. stay with us. ♪ charlie: the president announced charlie: the president announced this afternoon a tentative nuclear deal where they have lots of things to work out. we see the framework for a deal. i know you have not had time to look at it. at first glance, how does it look? adm. mullen: it looks, it is a framework and it looks pretty reasonable to me from a standpoint of the details. i think the devil is in the details and there is a lot of that that has to be revealed and worked out. i'm taken back with the numbers i have seen in terms of some of the issues that iran agreed to in terms of the length of time. there are a couple of issues that they have taken after 15 years, there is one after 25 years. from what i can see at this point, it looks fairly reasonable. when i got asked -- even when i was serving, i was asked about iran. i used to talk about very narrow space that diplomacy offered and that was so much better than the other options which are iran with a nuclear weapon wh
thank you so much, ray. ray: thanks. charlie: thank you, gary. we will be right back. stay with us. ♪ charlie: the president announced charlie: the president announced this afternoon a tentative nuclear deal where they have lots of things to work out. we see the framework for a deal. i know you have not had time to look at it. at first glance, how does it look? adm. mullen: it looks, it is a framework and it looks pretty reasonable to me from a standpoint of the details. i think the devil is...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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. >> this is "inside story" from al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez in washington. during the height of the cold war, cuba was frozen outs but the world kept changing. the soviet union assess assess ceased to exist. one thing didn't change, cuba still wasn't welcome and it was becoming a sore spot in bilateral relations, didn't want to see cuba kept in permanent pariah status. 2014, president obama announces a major change in step. president raul castro was among heads of state participating in the hemisphereic confab, and cuba well be removed from the list of state sponsoring terrorism. saturday president obama will meet with raul castro, the first u.s. cuba summit in more than 50 years. cuba ton way back but not all the way back this time on the program. we'll begin this "inside story" at the summit with peter corncornblue, director of the national security archive in washington. welcome to "inside story", peter. is this kind of the last chapter of the cold war that we're watching here? >> well we're witnessing a day tant coming to the detente. that all can discus
. >> this is "inside story" from al jazeera america, i'm ray suarez in washington. during the height of the cold war, cuba was frozen outs but the world kept changing. the soviet union assess assess ceased to exist. one thing didn't change, cuba still wasn't welcome and it was becoming a sore spot in bilateral relations, didn't want to see cuba kept in permanent pariah status. 2014, president obama announces a major change in step. president raul castro was among heads of state...
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Apr 24, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. we're looking at the announcement by mcdonald's this week that it will stop buying chickens raised on antibiotics also used on humans. in the days since, there's been praise and skepticism. we're looking inside big food. chick-fil-a had already moved to antibiotic free poultry. panera has used it for a century. susan von broderers and arianda gann. welcome both of you. ended. do you think this is public relations, mcdonald's is famously well aware of what people are saying about it or an important change in the american food supply? >> i think it's a bit of both. i think it's what americans have been wanting a while, they've been wanting transparency . where their foods are produced how they are produced and where they're coming pr. it'sfrom. it's got to be good pr. i think it's a bit of both. >> your chdges chickens from your suppliers have always been raise raised without antibiotics. is it easy for your farmers or for someone who is doing large factory farming? >> yes of course, th
i'm ray suarez. we're looking at the announcement by mcdonald's this week that it will stop buying chickens raised on antibiotics also used on humans. in the days since, there's been praise and skepticism. we're looking inside big food. chick-fil-a had already moved to antibiotic free poultry. panera has used it for a century. susan von broderers and arianda gann. welcome both of you. ended. do you think this is public relations, mcdonald's is famously well aware of what people are saying about...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. >> on "america tonight": sex crimes on campus. lessons learned after a groundbreaking year of reports. >> did you know that title 9 was something that could be applied, that universities could be held responsible under title 9 before this happened to you, before you saw oreport? >> i never heard of title 9. i was one of the people that thought oh it's never going to happen to
i'm ray suarez. >> on "america tonight": sex crimes on campus. lessons learned after a groundbreaking year of reports. >> did you know that title 9 was something that could be applied, that universities could be held responsible under title 9 before this happened to you, before you saw oreport? >> i never heard of title 9. i was one of the people that thought oh it's never going to happen to
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Apr 1, 2015
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. >> baits graduated from crystal ray and baltimore maryland. part of a network of 28 small private jesuit high schools. the vast majority of their students live in poverty. >> what are you looking for? >> a student who wants to achieve, and has agreements in school systems, who are dragging the kids along. >> if you believe you can achieve something, you have everything in the building. if you come along for the ride. we invite you. discipline. >> you'll be using the homework for the class assignment. >> reporter: and a focused learning environment. a demanding school. you may wonder how do families afford the tuition. who is paying for this? >> corporate america. >> reporter: corporate america is putting inner city baltimore kids though school. student. >> reporter: almost 100 donors, including almost every company has jumped on board the programme. what do they get out of this? >> these are the young people that will be turned loose in the world, the young people that will change the culture, society. why not be a part of that. why not partic
. >> baits graduated from crystal ray and baltimore maryland. part of a network of 28 small private jesuit high schools. the vast majority of their students live in poverty. >> what are you looking for? >> a student who wants to achieve, and has agreements in school systems, who are dragging the kids along. >> if you believe you can achieve something, you have everything in the building. if you come along for the ride. we invite you. discipline. >> you'll be using...
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Apr 1, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. the white house said documents being hammered out light on specifics, spell out what sides still have to work on. john kerry, who had planned to leave switzerland today is staying. and the iranian delegation is willing to stay as long as it takes. americans who say they're skeptical to the obama administration's commitment to iran, they don't trust iran to keep a deal it makes with world powers. but that doesn't change the conversation much. do inspections work? can they fake compliance? can they care on a parallel program in secret while reaping the benefits? we figured we would ask someone whose answers are more than jade the guesses. federal arms control inspector welcome to "inside story." >> good to be here, ray. >> if a country summits itself to an international inspection regime, first of all how does that work? we've got an iran that already has labs and centerfuges, how does that work? >> that's what we're going to find out, i think. people have made a lot of comparisons with
i'm ray suarez. the white house said documents being hammered out light on specifics, spell out what sides still have to work on. john kerry, who had planned to leave switzerland today is staying. and the iranian delegation is willing to stay as long as it takes. americans who say they're skeptical to the obama administration's commitment to iran, they don't trust iran to keep a deal it makes with world powers. but that doesn't change the conversation much. do inspections work? can they fake...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. >> humanitarian mission land lands in yemen. strikes against houthis. >>> hello and welcome to al jazeera live from our headquarters i'm elizabeth farrah. also ahead extending the hand of friendship, the u.s. and cuba begin to normalize their relationship. >>> the man
i'm ray suarez. >> humanitarian mission land lands in yemen. strikes against houthis. >>> hello and welcome to al jazeera live from our headquarters i'm elizabeth farrah. also ahead extending the hand of friendship, the u.s. and cuba begin to normalize their relationship. >>> the man
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Apr 16, 2015
04/15
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ray's sister beverly remembers that ray's dog loved him so much that he slept under ray's car while ray was in vietnam. after ray was killed in action, his parents left the farm and moved to town. his sister took ray's dog to her farm ten miles away, but the dog ran all the way back home to wait for ray under his car. ronald christie goodiron. christie was from shields and was born december 23, 1947. he served in the marine corps third tbat tall i don't know -- third battalion. christie was 20 years old when he died february 28, 196. his father paul goodiron served in world war 1 rand was a code talker. christie's close cousin paul goodiron also served in vietnam. unfortunately, paul unexpectedly died last month. paul's son corporal nathan goodiron was also killed in action in 2006 serving his country in the u.s. army national guard in afghanistan. christie's family remembers him as smiling all the time. today they honor him at palos by raising the american flag that they received when he died and singing the vietnam warrior's song to honor christie. christie's family appreciates readin
ray's sister beverly remembers that ray's dog loved him so much that he slept under ray's car while ray was in vietnam. after ray was killed in action, his parents left the farm and moved to town. his sister took ray's dog to her farm ten miles away, but the dog ran all the way back home to wait for ray under his car. ronald christie goodiron. christie was from shields and was born december 23, 1947. he served in the marine corps third tbat tall i don't know -- third battalion. christie was 20...
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Apr 16, 2015
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i'm ray suarez.me on the programme we have been talking about the increasing difficulty the state are having buying and using the drugs for lethal injections. utah state representative paul ray helped return an old method of execution to use, so his state has a different position. he joins us from salt lake city. why did you propose and help enact a return to the firing squad in utah? >> thanks for having me. the reason being that the law is - we have the death penalty in utah. the drawings are not available. we needed a way to do the executions so the thought was let's bring back the firing squad. we currently had, if lethal injection was institutional, we added the caveat was if drugs weren't available within 30 days of the execution, the firing back was a fallback. >> have you lost with concern or interest where one state or the other are executing men and women because of problems with the drugs. >> we have watched that closely. i started this a year ago, last march, i realised that the drug was
i'm ray suarez.me on the programme we have been talking about the increasing difficulty the state are having buying and using the drugs for lethal injections. utah state representative paul ray helped return an old method of execution to use, so his state has a different position. he joins us from salt lake city. why did you propose and help enact a return to the firing squad in utah? >> thanks for having me. the reason being that the law is - we have the death penalty in utah. the...
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Apr 29, 2015
04/15
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ray: minority officers, they're the ones that are showing me support.he little nods of the head, a little wink. they can't come up and shake my hand, but they are showing me support. and i realize why that is. 'cause the minorities of the police department have suffered. they relate to suffering more so than the white officers. subsequently, they're more behind me because they realize this is all about injustice. jake: the police are people, too. they have families also. they're trying to pay their bills. [siren] and it think it's people above the police that are saying, listen, if you don't want to do this, if you don't want to arrest those kids, we'll find somebody else to fill your job. i think they're scared to lose their jobs. nicole: you're pushing us off of the sidewalk, which we're allowed to walk on as pedestrians. for no reason, aside for the fact that we're protesting here. you're basically infringing upon our first amendment rights. there's really no other reason for you to do that. >> we're not perfect human beings. some of us are gonna los
ray: minority officers, they're the ones that are showing me support.he little nods of the head, a little wink. they can't come up and shake my hand, but they are showing me support. and i realize why that is. 'cause the minorities of the police department have suffered. they relate to suffering more so than the white officers. subsequently, they're more behind me because they realize this is all about injustice. jake: the police are people, too. they have families also. they're trying to pay...
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Apr 6, 2015
04/15
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from death row, anthony ray hinton. when you came outside, your first reaction to standing outside, on the other side of the bars? >> ooh! thanking god all along, seeing so many cameras and family and friends. it was a long time, but i just felt so relieved at knowing i was finally being free for something i had been telling people that i didn't do. it was a feeling like i never felt before. i can't really explain it to you or you can understand it, but from where i had been for 30 years, just being able to come out and knowing i wasn't going to have to be locked back up, it just is an amazing feeling. amy: your mother died in 2002 when you were in prison? >> yes. amy: were you able to visit her grave when you left? >> yes, i went to her grave. it was my rock. that was everything i had. and i would have loved to be able to say "they finally got it right, mama, and i'm home." i know she would've been the happiest person. she probably would have cooked me all my favorites. and we would just sit down and hug. she wouldn't
from death row, anthony ray hinton. when you came outside, your first reaction to standing outside, on the other side of the bars? >> ooh! thanking god all along, seeing so many cameras and family and friends. it was a long time, but i just felt so relieved at knowing i was finally being free for something i had been telling people that i didn't do. it was a feeling like i never felt before. i can't really explain it to you or you can understand it, but from where i had been for 30 years,...
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Apr 23, 2015
04/15
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ray-ban tells them to stop selling its trademark shades.r dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth. my dentist has told me your enamel is wearing away, and that sounded really scary to me and i was like well can you fix it can you paint it back on and he explained that it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee and to eat healthier and it was a real easy switch to make. i want regularity. of course i do, it's a big part of good digestive health. can't i just have regularity without having to think about it, let alone talk about it? benefiber conveniently helps support good digestive health and maintain that word. benefiber is all natural, clear, taste-free and dissolves completely. you know what benefiber tastes exactly like when you put it in water? water! the only way you'll know you're taking fiber is by how great you feel. and by how little you're thinking about
ray-ban tells them to stop selling its trademark shades.r dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth. my dentist has told me your enamel is wearing away, and that sounded really scary to me and i was like well can you fix it can you paint it back on and he explained that it was not something that grows back, it's kind of a one-time shot and you have to care for it. he told me to use pronamel. it's gonna help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee and to...
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Apr 4, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. go to an older school and it's not hard to find a college or university's museum to itself. glass trophy cases ancient track shoes, slightly deflated basketballs and footballs painted with the results of a particularly crucial historic game and those ancient photographs collections of very old images of very serious young men and young women staring back at the photographer waiting to give it all for the good old alma mater. those seep ya photographs shape the organization of today the kid whose talent has given him a scholarship or maybe a shot at a professional team. you don't hear much about the tsunami of money running through scholastic athletics for all of the people except the running guards and the high jumpers and the ones who people watch. it would be unthinkable for those guys in the leather helmets to ask to be paid. but they didn't play for coaches who make millions and stadiums that make hundreds of millions. the games and the pressures to perform have changed but the pe
i'm ray suarez. go to an older school and it's not hard to find a college or university's museum to itself. glass trophy cases ancient track shoes, slightly deflated basketballs and footballs painted with the results of a particularly crucial historic game and those ancient photographs collections of very old images of very serious young men and young women staring back at the photographer waiting to give it all for the good old alma mater. those seep ya photographs shape the organization of...
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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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ray and jacob are good friends now, but it sure didn't start out that way.eve hartman on the road next. allergies can distract you. so when your symptoms start, doctors recommend taking non-drowsy claritin every day of your allergy season. with claritin, you get powerful, non-drowsy relief 24 hours a day, day after day. which is important because with fewer symptoms to distract you you can focus on the extraordinary things you do every single day. live claritin clear. every day. >> pelley: we end the week with steve hartman, and a confrontation between a cop and a criminal. it may sound like the start ofe an all-too-familiar story but-t this one takes a couple of unexpected turns "on the road." >> reporter: they were the bitterest of enemies. for more than a decade, here onuk the streets of milwaukee, two men shared mutual disgust. one was a hard-nosed cop named ray robakowski. >> i wasn't a social worker. i was a police officer. my job was to take care what needed to be taken care of. >> reporter: which is why you didn't like him? >> definitely didn't, no.
ray and jacob are good friends now, but it sure didn't start out that way.eve hartman on the road next. allergies can distract you. so when your symptoms start, doctors recommend taking non-drowsy claritin every day of your allergy season. with claritin, you get powerful, non-drowsy relief 24 hours a day, day after day. which is important because with fewer symptoms to distract you you can focus on the extraordinary things you do every single day. live claritin clear. every day. >>...
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Apr 28, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez. now, if you need to you can knit stories together from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. stories that may not be inspiring. we are looking at college bound schoolers, and the new curriculum for a.p. history. will the board look at a national framework, and come up with different matters to get the job done. joining me is two guests. jim, before the break you talked about low flexibility. over the course of the year, very different versions are carolina. >> it's possible. teachers teach in a different way. the point of the framework is for them to be emphasised . yes, they might teach in different ways depending upon culture, ways in which they see the needs of their students. we have to trust the expertise. we ought to show more professional development. and provide professional development teachers. it doesn't tell mechanics how to work. the state doesn't tell them how to do heart surgery. teachers are qualified to teach american history. let's teach it. >> the kids are closing up b
i'm ray suarez. now, if you need to you can knit stories together from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. stories that may not be inspiring. we are looking at college bound schoolers, and the new curriculum for a.p. history. will the board look at a national framework, and come up with different matters to get the job done. joining me is two guests. jim, before the break you talked about low flexibility. over the course of the year, very different versions are carolina. >> it's possible....
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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i'm ray suarez.recent years more and more armed forces and strategists are thinking about what happens when aqua fers dry up or rains are unreliable does it make a place more vulnerable to conflict regional international or ethnically based. in some places the ability of a place to support a nation is diminished by the water supply. think sudan and other areas. there were ongoing conflict but when farmers found it impossible to farm when herdsman had to range further from home to water cattle it ratcheted up tensions there and fanned them into a full-blown armed conflict. the vulnerability of the maldives - a string of islands in the indian ocean threatened with sea level rides, may show up in the chronic instability there. it's tough to make a good life for millions of bangladeshis as they cling to a smaller territory that's not under threat of floods. all this month on al jazeera america we are doing special programs and reports called "fragile planet." tonight a look at the threats of water insecu
i'm ray suarez.recent years more and more armed forces and strategists are thinking about what happens when aqua fers dry up or rains are unreliable does it make a place more vulnerable to conflict regional international or ethnically based. in some places the ability of a place to support a nation is diminished by the water supply. think sudan and other areas. there were ongoing conflict but when farmers found it impossible to farm when herdsman had to range further from home to water cattle...
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Apr 23, 2015
04/15
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some of the money went to his campaign, but the campaign didn't have ray-ban's consent. told the campaign to stop and it did. >>> and the first youtube video is uploaded ten years ago today. >> they have really, really, really long trunks. >> in me at the zoo one of the youtube founders describes a clip that ran just 18 seconds. a year later google paid $1.6 billion in stock for youtube. this year nearly 145 million americans watch a youtube video. that is nearly half of the u.s. population. alison? >>> so jill, today is take your children to work day, and my kids don't want to come to work. it's 4:00 in the morning. what about yours? >> i don't have any kids but there's little excitement going on here. >> it's a little early. 4:00 a.m. we've got nothing. jill wagner at the new york stock exchange. >>> a federal judge approved a settlement between the national football league and thousands of players who followed cushion-related lawsuits and it could cost the league up to a billion dollars over the next 65 years. under the agreement the nfl will pay out around average of
some of the money went to his campaign, but the campaign didn't have ray-ban's consent. told the campaign to stop and it did. >>> and the first youtube video is uploaded ten years ago today. >> they have really, really, really long trunks. >> in me at the zoo one of the youtube founders describes a clip that ran just 18 seconds. a year later google paid $1.6 billion in stock for youtube. this year nearly 145 million americans watch a youtube video. that is nearly half of...
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anthony ray hinton.an fresh off death row after 30 years for a crime he didn't commit and the man that helped free him. thanks for your patience. ray, let's try this again. you're a free man one week. how does it feel? >> well it feels wonderful. i have to pinch myself to tell myself i'm free but i'm having a problem once it turn dark. i haven't been outside in the dark in 30 years, so i be telling my friend it's time for us to get back in. he says you free it's okay. it going to take me little time. i'm getting use to it. i like it. >> i bet you do like it. that's incredible. the notion of being in a five by seven cell for 30 years you did. but darkness what is it about darkness that makes you afraid? >> they don't let you be outside at a certain time in the penitentiary. you have bed check at 6:00. i'm used to somebody coming counting making sure you're this your cell. when you been doing it 30 years and know the routine like i know it it takes a while to get use to someone not coming through to count
anthony ray hinton.an fresh off death row after 30 years for a crime he didn't commit and the man that helped free him. thanks for your patience. ray, let's try this again. you're a free man one week. how does it feel? >> well it feels wonderful. i have to pinch myself to tell myself i'm free but i'm having a problem once it turn dark. i haven't been outside in the dark in 30 years, so i be telling my friend it's time for us to get back in. he says you free it's okay. it going to take me...