22
22
Oct 23, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN3
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eye 22
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enjoy reading and read a lot. they're sort of super readers, just like to talk about it. and i mean, the thing that book talk really does is it sort of supercharge just word of mouth, which is has always been really the holy grail in book sales, you know, getting someone to tell their friend that they like a book is like, that's what you want. you want a talker, you want a book that people are going to be chatting with their friends about and, you know, book talk allows people all over the country, all over the world to find like minded people who like similar kinds of books. and so rather than just like talking to the people they know, they can talk to thousands of people. they have they don't know at all. and it allows these sort of communities of almost like mini book clubs in a way, but like sort of this recommendation communities to sort of form organically on their own based on what people are interested in. now, i should have asked this question at the beginning, a kind of a fundamental question are book ta
enjoy reading and read a lot. they're sort of super readers, just like to talk about it. and i mean, the thing that book talk really does is it sort of supercharge just word of mouth, which is has always been really the holy grail in book sales, you know, getting someone to tell their friend that they like a book is like, that's what you want. you want a talker, you want a book that people are going to be chatting with their friends about and, you know, book talk allows people all over the...
17
17
Oct 30, 2022
10/22
by
ESPRESO
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eye 17
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in e-e regions every day - this i read a lot, i still read, if i’m serious, i’m trying to read more, a colleague gave me a gift, as we are very grateful, when i was in uzhgorod, a biography of the portuguese dictator salazar, and i always thought that ukraine gravitates towards this type of regime. so i’m reading this biography now, it’s in czech that's why i don't read as fast as i do, let's say in the languages i read better, but i'll definitely finish it. because it's not so difficult, i read a novel by my favorite writer shmelya yosif. born not far from him in buchach just dedicated to buchach why am i reading all this ailee steinm reading quite carefully because i follow ireland i don't know but what i want to tell you do n't ever do this if you behave like me you will have post-traumatic stress disorder because i'm doing it professionally, i'm missing something something i'm not interested in something interesting i don't have, you know, all this information goes into one ear and goes out the other, they understand what comes out and i'm like, try to live a full life. now i'
in e-e regions every day - this i read a lot, i still read, if i’m serious, i’m trying to read more, a colleague gave me a gift, as we are very grateful, when i was in uzhgorod, a biography of the portuguese dictator salazar, and i always thought that ukraine gravitates towards this type of regime. so i’m reading this biography now, it’s in czech that's why i don't read as fast as i do, let's say in the languages i read better, but i'll definitely finish it. because it's not so...
18
18
Oct 20, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 18
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they were not read. it was only later that they would get up and be bread in front of -- be read in front of the class. there was security in passing the scene to the professor. they would read it and it was moving, and if or swimmers the class, people were complaining they wanted to get through fences so people could read. some of the scenes were so emotionally fraught that they could not read them. i do not think timmy read his, originally. when timmy read it at the performance that we did, after he finished, he disappeared. i asked boris or someone, where is timmy? they said, he is in the bathroom. i found him crumbled in the corner, shaking and sobbing. but, it became this remarkable experience where people would get up in front of the class and all of that emotion would pour out as they read. the entire class would applaud. i will let boris address that. >> very quickly, what we did was -- i do not think anybody knew we would have to read it publicly in front of the class. we was like, complete stre
they were not read. it was only later that they would get up and be bread in front of -- be read in front of the class. there was security in passing the scene to the professor. they would read it and it was moving, and if or swimmers the class, people were complaining they wanted to get through fences so people could read. some of the scenes were so emotionally fraught that they could not read them. i do not think timmy read his, originally. when timmy read it at the performance that we did,...
7
7.0
Oct 18, 2022
10/22
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RUSSIA1
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eye 7
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and read?they tell me, you don't sit like ultraviolet light cause superficial ass of the cornea. here they are 45-50 unlucky most of all to wash makeup brushes and why even with normal cholesterol levels it can happen heart attack questions from dr. alexander myasnikov asks you answer. i feel that on the contrary no it struck me in the very heart. infectious mononucleosis, what is important to know about this disease? what virus causes it and why is it dangerous? how to suspect infectious mononucleosis and by what signs to distinguish it from ordinary angina, you can still communicate and not get necites, but maybe, uh, maybe this is how more than 2 billion people worldwide suffer from visual impairment and blindness and according to world experts health care organizations in 2050. this number could triple to 6 billion. a person with vision problems raises a logical question. what can i do to keep my eyesight from getting worse? let's take a look at the most popular vision myths. is it bad to r
and read?they tell me, you don't sit like ultraviolet light cause superficial ass of the cornea. here they are 45-50 unlucky most of all to wash makeup brushes and why even with normal cholesterol levels it can happen heart attack questions from dr. alexander myasnikov asks you answer. i feel that on the contrary no it struck me in the very heart. infectious mononucleosis, what is important to know about this disease? what virus causes it and why is it dangerous? how to suspect infectious...
47
47
Oct 6, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 47
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you know, we're reading these texts. we're reading we're reading the text. we're reading we're. baldwin talks about his necessity of exploiting a -- with ben and a -- without all of that. and and the students says in a scholar role film probably 120 people. i just want to say i would like it if white students didn't say that word anymore because it hurts in the same class. professor kennedy, these white students proceeded to say that she boom. oh, oh, i'm like they like because because this student who happened to be one of the top two or three students in the classroom infringed on their right to say what they want because they believed themselves like as these colleges encourage us our students sadly to believe that like you know utterances of -- that to me and take interiority are what those folks there do they proceeded to use that word so many times i had to stop the class and then i had to jump in and do my that is not every classroom but what i think that you in your book is that it seems that you believe that the white student or, the white professor or the non black pro
you know, we're reading these texts. we're reading we're reading the text. we're reading we're. baldwin talks about his necessity of exploiting a -- with ben and a -- without all of that. and and the students says in a scholar role film probably 120 people. i just want to say i would like it if white students didn't say that word anymore because it hurts in the same class. professor kennedy, these white students proceeded to say that she boom. oh, oh, i'm like they like because because this...
14
14
Oct 15, 2022
10/22
by
BELARUSTV
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eye 14
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nikolaevich what book are you reading now? i am rereading alice bdk's book the perfect something to read. i want to write the great article collectors, toils, literature that knows the character and vogle unfaithful befits both a writer and a poet and a prose writer and a literary critic. my guest calls himself a soldier word he himself is a lieutenant colonel in the past, a military journalist , editor-in-chief of the zvezda newspaper and ex-minister of information, he also writes children's tales, which he dedicates to his only daughter. today my guest is the chairman of the union of writers oles karlikevich alexander nikolaevich good morning. good differences alexander nikolaevich is of the opinion that in many respects our fate depends on what kind of fairy tales we read in childhood. what was your favorite fairy tale? i'm something ukazsky evicted coils. maxim luzhanina, kind, warm helmets, of course, russian belarusian cossack peoples. and here are the heroes in your own fairy tales. e, they like to travel around belarus
nikolaevich what book are you reading now? i am rereading alice bdk's book the perfect something to read. i want to write the great article collectors, toils, literature that knows the character and vogle unfaithful befits both a writer and a poet and a prose writer and a literary critic. my guest calls himself a soldier word he himself is a lieutenant colonel in the past, a military journalist , editor-in-chief of the zvezda newspaper and ex-minister of information, he also writes children's...
10
10.0
Oct 21, 2022
10/22
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BELARUSTV
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eye 10
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i'm re-reading the book, scaffolding, budaka perfect to read. i want to write the great artikul collectors, toiling, literature that knew the character and howl the innocent befits. this is a writer and a poet and a prose writer and a jacauter literary brick texts, my guest calls himself a soldier of the word. he himself is a lieutenant colonel in the past a military journalist. the editor-in-chief of the zvezda newspaper and the ex-minister of information, he also writes children's tales, which he dedicates to his only daughter. today my guest is the chairman of the writers' union, ales lyukevich alexander nikolaevich good morning good difference alexander nikolaevich there is an opinion that our fate largely depends on what kind of fairy tales we read in childhood. what was your favorite fairy tale? i read helmets, vasily's turns of maxim luzhanina. these were separate kind, warm helmets, of course, you can’t move the match became a folk cossack, a russian belarusian cossack of the peoples of the world. here are the heroes in your own fairy ta
i'm re-reading the book, scaffolding, budaka perfect to read. i want to write the great artikul collectors, toiling, literature that knew the character and howl the innocent befits. this is a writer and a poet and a prose writer and a jacauter literary brick texts, my guest calls himself a soldier of the word. he himself is a lieutenant colonel in the past a military journalist. the editor-in-chief of the zvezda newspaper and the ex-minister of information, he also writes children's tales,...
49
49
Oct 17, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
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enjoy reading and read a lot. they're sort of super readers, just like to talk about it. and i mean, the thing that book talk really does is it sort of supercharge just word of mouth, which is has always been really the holy grail in book sales, you know, getting someone to tell their friend that they like a book is like, that's what you want. you want a talker, you want a book that people are going to be chatting with their friends about and, you know, book talk allows people all over the country, all over the world to find like minded people who like similar kinds of books. and so rather than just like talking to the people they know, they can talk to thousands of people. they have they don't know at all. and it allows these sort of communities of almost like mini book clubs in a way, but like sort of this recommendation communities to sort of form organically on their own based on what people are interested in. now, i should have asked this question at the beginning, a kind of a fundamental question are book ta
enjoy reading and read a lot. they're sort of super readers, just like to talk about it. and i mean, the thing that book talk really does is it sort of supercharge just word of mouth, which is has always been really the holy grail in book sales, you know, getting someone to tell their friend that they like a book is like, that's what you want. you want a talker, you want a book that people are going to be chatting with their friends about and, you know, book talk allows people all over the...
37
37
Oct 5, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 37
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times but a read the whole book. i might've been the first person in america to read the whole book. i was texting dick as as a rg on the airplane going i'm laughing so are the people next to me are concerned. but just to give you a little context if you didn't read the book, my daddy and dick armey lived across the alley from one another in cando and in the book dick tells a story about richard kramer the elder richard, there's a number of richards and references but was passed with teaching the younger richard how to climb poles when dick joined the rural electrical cooperative as line for a summer job. now i love the fact that dick had to go to union shop and work for co-op. that was the last time he did either of those things. but more importantly than that even, charley armey, dick's brother who along with phil gramm really are the two stars of the book. they get more ink than anybody else combined and so charlie armey dick's older brother and my daddy were best man at each other's m wedding. theyer both married
times but a read the whole book. i might've been the first person in america to read the whole book. i was texting dick as as a rg on the airplane going i'm laughing so are the people next to me are concerned. but just to give you a little context if you didn't read the book, my daddy and dick armey lived across the alley from one another in cando and in the book dick tells a story about richard kramer the elder richard, there's a number of richards and references but was passed with teaching...
12
12
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reading now to whenever he comes to our house and we have something to read on a lot. i look on the yellow brown for teachers in the region. the b, b, a burro visits both during and after the pandemic have been the best way to ensure their students they motivated and keep discovering new books live. okay, no problem for people who the books we get from school are the only books we have when we read a book, it motivates us to read a new one, know what the related or whatever. but if we just have the same one for last year, the kids already know them. and then we don't even have internet here, they have a knack. lewis soriano has also built a public library for the school children. and the neighbors don't be re, persona in d, c. beverly oberon goes to places that tend to be neglected to see where people are forgotten. because these are people who deserve respect, who need to be helped, and whose imaginations are to be nurtured. i mean, you said you are smart enough feel. louise soriano is almost like a character out of a gabriel garcia, marquez snellville, a man who take
reading now to whenever he comes to our house and we have something to read on a lot. i look on the yellow brown for teachers in the region. the b, b, a burro visits both during and after the pandemic have been the best way to ensure their students they motivated and keep discovering new books live. okay, no problem for people who the books we get from school are the only books we have when we read a book, it motivates us to read a new one, know what the related or whatever. but if we just have...
19
19
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eye 19
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oh, he always motivated us to read other kids has started reading now too. but whenever he comes to our house, we have something to read up on him. i have a book on liliana, but also for teachers in the region. the b, b, a bureau, visits both during and after the pandemic have been the best way to ensure their students stay motivated and keep discovering new books. ah, look it up and profit for people who the books we get from school is the only books we have seen of when we read a book, it motivates us to read a new one, no more the valid ohio. but if we just have the same ones as last year, the kids already know them and leave them so well, then we don't even have internet here they have a knack on louis soriano has also built a public library for the school children and their neighbors when i don't be when you, when i see baby oberon goes to places that tend to be neglected, to see where people are forgotten. because these are people who deserve respect them, who need to be helped and whose imaginations are to be nurtured. i mean, you said you are smart e
oh, he always motivated us to read other kids has started reading now too. but whenever he comes to our house, we have something to read up on him. i have a book on liliana, but also for teachers in the region. the b, b, a bureau, visits both during and after the pandemic have been the best way to ensure their students stay motivated and keep discovering new books. ah, look it up and profit for people who the books we get from school is the only books we have seen of when we read a book, it...
8
8.0
Oct 3, 2022
10/22
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 8
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i like that you can take books here and you can also read them, and you like read a in what languageting for english, the authors of the project plan to distribute a ukrainian children's book in britain to ukrainian books in english , you were very useful for english libraries because i think that the families who recently arrived saw that the quality of children's books in ukraine is very high and the quality of printing and the quality of the illustrations, that's why books in ukrainian are needed here by ukrainian children, but ukrainian books in english are also needed here because they are like works of art, but the main project ukrainians here to return home after the victory and therefore not stop active use of the ukrainian language in the new country because we want to return to ukraine and it is very important for me to maintain the native language and we also practice with my daughter at home and with the ukrainian teacher who now lives in uzhhorod little book lovers are also happy to be able to read in their native language, i think on friday there is a trip to the librar
i like that you can take books here and you can also read them, and you like read a in what languageting for english, the authors of the project plan to distribute a ukrainian children's book in britain to ukrainian books in english , you were very useful for english libraries because i think that the families who recently arrived saw that the quality of children's books in ukraine is very high and the quality of printing and the quality of the illustrations, that's why books in ukrainian are...
30
30
Oct 30, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 30
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i tend to read. i obviously keep up on what's new and read a lot of new books, but i would say at least half my reading is just filling in gaps that i've wanted to read over the years from everything from a book that came out five years ago to something from 50 years ago. and i'll try bring some of that spirit to the to the books job. i think that people like to hear about interesting or great books from any time period, not what's out now. now will book world go into issues such as the penguin, random house, simon schuster merger, or will you stick pretty, pretty closely to book review? i think that when. no, we'll definitely be covering more news and features in general. but in terms of the industry itself, something is at that level the penguin random house merger. we'll definitely be covering it in collaboration with the media desk at the post, which covers things like that as well. but we have we have expertise to offer there. how would you describe the state of the publishing world today? you k
i tend to read. i obviously keep up on what's new and read a lot of new books, but i would say at least half my reading is just filling in gaps that i've wanted to read over the years from everything from a book that came out five years ago to something from 50 years ago. and i'll try bring some of that spirit to the to the books job. i think that people like to hear about interesting or great books from any time period, not what's out now. now will book world go into issues such as the...
33
33
Oct 6, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 33
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i think the book should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book. it's a great discussion of how washington works and how things get done and don't get done so we are going to have some fun telling our stories. there's a probably 15 or 20 peoe who work for you at one time or another and in addition to all of the great contributions you made directly to policy, one of the great contributions was the incredible number of successful people you mentors including myself. i my story is i worked on the joint economic committee in 1993 and 94 and i remember when i was on the committee and i decided in 1994 that i was going to leave the committee if you were working for a minority member in sthe house democrats were so arrogant at that time it's like republicans weren't even there. i said i loved working for you but i just can't do this anymore. we are not having much of an impact and i will never forget he turned to me and said you cannot leave now. don't leave now because we are going to take the house in november of 94 and you were part inof that revolut
i think the book should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book. it's a great discussion of how washington works and how things get done and don't get done so we are going to have some fun telling our stories. there's a probably 15 or 20 peoe who work for you at one time or another and in addition to all of the great contributions you made directly to policy, one of the great contributions was the incredible number of successful people you mentors...
52
52
Oct 6, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 52
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it's a great read. i actually think this book should be read by all people every political science major in america should be reading this book called leader. it really is a a great discussion of how washington really works and how things get done and don't get done in washington. and so we're going to kind of have some fun. telling our -- army stories. there's probably in this rum deck at least 15 or 20 people who work for you at one time or another and i i say in addition to all of the great. contributions you made directly to policy one of your great contributions was the incredible number of successful people who you mentored including myself. i'm and so my little story about -- army is that i work for -- on the joint economic committee in 1990. 3 and 1994 and i remember that that when that when i was on the committee, and i i decided by the summer of 19 of 1994 that i was going to leave the committee because i just had it, you know if you were a minority remember if you were working for a minority
it's a great read. i actually think this book should be read by all people every political science major in america should be reading this book called leader. it really is a a great discussion of how washington really works and how things get done and don't get done in washington. and so we're going to kind of have some fun. telling our -- army stories. there's probably in this rum deck at least 15 or 20 people who work for you at one time or another and i i say in addition to all of the great....
10
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eye 10
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misha reading came much later. miniatures, pop miniatures, and these two were seen by rakin quite right, they invited raikin and rai. and the theater was already glorified. parnassus 2 was already known in the city. and then raikin invited roma kartsev to the chkalov government sanatorium, where he rested, and he gave a statement to roma roma was treated to a watermelon. and he gave the application form not by hand, write the application. and there was a plan. roma was shocked, then one roman, then roma pulled out in odessa, one remained to work, and he remained to work in the port. eh, he didn't have envy. uh. they went, he took the actors. misha had no actors misha tried to transmit and transmitted his miniatures and roma in the light. and how misha became known, not only to raikin , but also to others. entered into a program that was successful tell stories at our institute a georgian happened here. uh, a georgian student named goridze, but his name is about you. his name is that, and you and the very stupid ass
misha reading came much later. miniatures, pop miniatures, and these two were seen by rakin quite right, they invited raikin and rai. and the theater was already glorified. parnassus 2 was already known in the city. and then raikin invited roma kartsev to the chkalov government sanatorium, where he rested, and he gave a statement to roma roma was treated to a watermelon. and he gave the application form not by hand, write the application. and there was a plan. roma was shocked, then one roman,...
17
17
Oct 2, 2022
10/22
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BBCNEWS
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eye 17
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, . , . to read.nts - to read. tony, unfortunately we have run out of time. the parents are - run out of time. the parents are stressed about this. hopefully we will come back to this and get your thoughts. we will see you at half past 11. thank you very much. thank you forjoining us. i will see you shortly. the next review is at half past 11. goodbye for now. hello. quite a chilly start for some of us on monday with a light wind and clearing skies overnight. very different to how the weather is going to be overall in the week ahead. in fact, we are expecting strong winds and spells of heavy rain. back to the here and now. briefly, high pressure on top of england and wales, that has led to the calm conditions and in fact at six o'clock on the morning on monday in some spots in the countryside temperatures could be a couple of degrees above freezing. compare that to say 10 degrees and western parts of scotland where we have more of a breeze off the atlantic and that is ahead of this with a front which
, . , . to read.nts - to read. tony, unfortunately we have run out of time. the parents are - run out of time. the parents are stressed about this. hopefully we will come back to this and get your thoughts. we will see you at half past 11. thank you very much. thank you forjoining us. i will see you shortly. the next review is at half past 11. goodbye for now. hello. quite a chilly start for some of us on monday with a light wind and clearing skies overnight. very different to how the weather...
27
27
Oct 25, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 27
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i think this quote should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book. it really is a great discussion of how washington works and how things get done and don't get done in washington. we are going to have some fun telling our dick armey stories in there at least 15 or 20 people who work for you at one time or another. in addition to all of the great contributionsnt you made directy to policy when the fear great resolutions was the incredible number of successful people w yu mentored including myself. my little story about sub. is that i worked for dick on the joint economic committee in 1993 or 1994 and i remember that when i was on the committee and i decided in the summer of 1994 i was going to leave the committee.e if you are working for a minority member of the house you might so have not been there. the democrats were so aired and after 40 years like republicans were even there. i went to dick i said i love working for you but i can't do this anymore. we aren't having much of an impact and i'llr never forget dick said steve you cannot leave n
i think this quote should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book. it really is a great discussion of how washington works and how things get done and don't get done in washington. we are going to have some fun telling our dick armey stories in there at least 15 or 20 people who work for you at one time or another. in addition to all of the great contributionsnt you made directy to policy when the fear great resolutions was the incredible number of...
51
51
Oct 15, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 51
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so people could read. some of the scenes were so emotionally fraught they could not read them. i don't think timmyim read his originally. went to me it at the performance that we did for cornell west and james cone, after he finished he disappeared and i asked where's timmy? ms. said i think is in the bathroom and i found him bold in the corner shaking and sobbing. it became a remarkable experience of people get up in the class at all that abortion would pour out as they read. for the entire class when a plot i would let boris also address that. >> very quickly what we did was think anybody knew were going to have to read in front of the class. it was like complete trust in whatever the process. we were taking it as a class. through scenes and papers when he came in he said and by then the train had already left the station. [laughter] 's like i wrote in his come up and read it. after you read it then he wrote this scene the next i had toxt come up and do some reading. that is kind of what tipped it. you c
so people could read. some of the scenes were so emotionally fraught they could not read them. i don't think timmyim read his originally. went to me it at the performance that we did for cornell west and james cone, after he finished he disappeared and i asked where's timmy? ms. said i think is in the bathroom and i found him bold in the corner shaking and sobbing. it became a remarkable experience of people get up in the class at all that abortion would pour out as they read. for the entire...
26
26
Oct 5, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 26
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i think this book should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book called "leader". it is great discussion about how washington works and things get done and don't get done in washington so we are going to have some fun telling our dick armey stories. there are 15 or 20 people who worked with him at one time or another. in addition to all the contributions you made directly to policies, one of your great contributions was the number of successful people you mentored including myself so my little story about dick armey as i worked for dick on the joint economic committee in 1993-1994 and i remember that when i was on the committee, decided in summer of 1994 that i was going to leave the committee, if you were working for a minority member in the house, democrats were so arrogant at that time, it was like republicans weren't even there. i went to dick and said i love working with you but i can't do this anymore, pulling my hair out, not having much of an impact. i will never forget dick turned to me and said steve, you cannot leave now, you said don't
i think this book should be read by every political science major in america should be reading this book called "leader". it is great discussion about how washington works and things get done and don't get done in washington so we are going to have some fun telling our dick armey stories. there are 15 or 20 people who worked with him at one time or another. in addition to all the contributions you made directly to policies, one of your great contributions was the number of successful...
54
54
Oct 5, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
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one of my students, brilliant, brilliant, black woman from milwaukee, we're reading the text, readingwin talks about, necessity of exploiting (n word) was saying and out all of that, and the student says in a room filled probably 120 people, i just want to say, i would like it if white students didn't say that word anymore because it hurts. in the same class, professor kennedy. these white students proceeded to say that sh-- boom, boom, boom. because -- because this student, who happened to be one of the top two or three students in the classroom infringed on their right to say what they want because they believe themselves, like as these colleges encourage our students sadly to believe that like, utter andses of (n word) that demain and take away, and what those folks there do, proceed today use the words so many times i had to stop the classroom and jump in and do my thing. that's not every classroom. but what i think that you do in your book is that, it seems that you believe that the white student or the white professor or the non-black professor is coming from a place where they
one of my students, brilliant, brilliant, black woman from milwaukee, we're reading the text, readingwin talks about, necessity of exploiting (n word) was saying and out all of that, and the student says in a room filled probably 120 people, i just want to say, i would like it if white students didn't say that word anymore because it hurts. in the same class, professor kennedy. these white students proceeded to say that sh-- boom, boom, boom. because -- because this student, who happened to be...
14
14
Oct 15, 2022
10/22
by
ESPRESO
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eye 14
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read more about important events on our website. tv, subscribe to our channels on social networks, see you, events, the most important events, events that are happening right now and affect our lives, of course, the news feed reports about them, but it is not enough to know what is happening, you need to understand antin borkovskyi and invitation experts soberly assess the events and analyze them by modeling our near future every saturday at 1:00 p.m. with a repeat at 10:00 p.m. - studio evening with anton borkovskyi - naispresso good evening we are from ukraine vasyl winter's big broadcast my real name is winter two hours of air time until 21:00 for two hours of your time, we will talk about the most important things. two hours to learn about the war. serhiy zhoretska will broadcast the military results of the day and what is the world? what is there in the world ? to be aware of these news radio broadcasters oleksandr morshynskyi he talks about the economy during the war and new sports evgeny pastukhov is ready to talk about sport
read more about important events on our website. tv, subscribe to our channels on social networks, see you, events, the most important events, events that are happening right now and affect our lives, of course, the news feed reports about them, but it is not enough to know what is happening, you need to understand antin borkovskyi and invitation experts soberly assess the events and analyze them by modeling our near future every saturday at 1:00 p.m. with a repeat at 10:00 p.m. - studio...
50
50
Oct 3, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 50
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i read that.yeah, i know i hazel did a cat in the middle have jumped over the moon i got no i know those are old, all those old stories. yeah. yeah. so this would be the last back here. oh, okay. i can hang out. i can hang out. i love grammar table because it's so low tech. but i was curious, you talked it as a compliment, by the way, just you talked about it to debut. and i was curious what inspired you to go out on the sidewalk? did you have a goal or what what were you trying to accomplish? i often where i often wear a t shirt says grammar, hedonist. you know, i really am motivated i, i think one thing i can say has been true about throughout my life is that i have a good of what makes me happy like that i can really, i can tell and i don't like to do things that make me unhappy for very long and i know the grammar makes me happy and i know talking people talking to people me happy. and one of the miracle girls of the modern age has been the internet ability to connect us across geographic, you
i read that.yeah, i know i hazel did a cat in the middle have jumped over the moon i got no i know those are old, all those old stories. yeah. yeah. so this would be the last back here. oh, okay. i can hang out. i can hang out. i love grammar table because it's so low tech. but i was curious, you talked it as a compliment, by the way, just you talked about it to debut. and i was curious what inspired you to go out on the sidewalk? did you have a goal or what what were you trying to accomplish?...
64
64
Oct 10, 2022
10/22
by
KQED
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eye 64
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i want to read a quote i heard from you.ou said i'm interested in being fully human and thriving for everybody. and particularly in specially for black folk. how did that become your core? >> all artists only have one conversation. they come at it from different perspectives. that is what was inscribed in the inside of me. i think, i work definitely in continuum of the black arts movement. i consider myself being engaged in ancestor work. i'm part of an organization that existed before i existed. i attempt to be a bridge. what comes next? i like to tell people i know what to do. i am doing what was whispered in my ear right before i took my first breath. i came with assignments. >> what a sense of purpose that must give you as you navigate through life. does that resonate with you leila? did you feel like you have always own what your voice and your message in your purposes? >> i think it resonates with me. we are born into this world. was something we may not even know. i did not always know what my purpose was. that's beca
i want to read a quote i heard from you.ou said i'm interested in being fully human and thriving for everybody. and particularly in specially for black folk. how did that become your core? >> all artists only have one conversation. they come at it from different perspectives. that is what was inscribed in the inside of me. i think, i work definitely in continuum of the black arts movement. i consider myself being engaged in ancestor work. i'm part of an organization that existed before i...
38
38
Oct 6, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 38
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i gotp, it and i read it. it it messed me up pretty had to go back to the classroom the next day with id is i had not thought about, history i had not thought about, law precedent i had not thought about. the interesting things about reading this new addition i want to start here is you have had 20 years since this book was initially published to rethink, to understand to sort of take inventory of the new conversations. i'm with the addition seems to me is it seems like i am not sure if you have come to any different conclusion. it seems like in this book you have viewed the last 20 years to prove your point. i'm interested in whether or not that reading is fair? have you come to any new conclusions or new ideas and theories about n word since writing n word 20 years ago? >> i think your view is pretty accurate with one exception. twenty-eight years i said something to the effect no politician with the national ambitions would get close -- no politician with national ambitions would put himself in the position
i gotp, it and i read it. it it messed me up pretty had to go back to the classroom the next day with id is i had not thought about, history i had not thought about, law precedent i had not thought about. the interesting things about reading this new addition i want to start here is you have had 20 years since this book was initially published to rethink, to understand to sort of take inventory of the new conversations. i'm with the addition seems to me is it seems like i am not sure if you...
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18
Oct 14, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 18
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well, come up in read it. after you read it and he was like, who wrote the scene? then the next guy had to come up and do some reading. so that's kind of what tipped it. you came in after him and his wife looked over the scenes and came back with what we thought was good, and we started actually reading the dialogue. >> thank you all so much for speaking. it's really a meaningful experience. i wonder if you could talk a little bit about your decision specifically to teach drama. why drama as opposed to novels, poetry, of the forms of art? and in what ways do you think in addition to writing the play, how does influence of the class and the kind of conversation to having and the lessons you all were learning? >> so the beauty about the program is that i can teach, igs all sorts of stuff. a lot of times when there are holes i will fill it, history, philosophy. and i picked plays that addressed the experiences of my students, august wilson, baldwin, these kinds the figures, because they were really, i mean, a great playwright like wilson is really writing for them. bu
well, come up in read it. after you read it and he was like, who wrote the scene? then the next guy had to come up and do some reading. so that's kind of what tipped it. you came in after him and his wife looked over the scenes and came back with what we thought was good, and we started actually reading the dialogue. >> thank you all so much for speaking. it's really a meaningful experience. i wonder if you could talk a little bit about your decision specifically to teach drama. why drama...
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35
Oct 12, 2022
10/22
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CSPAN2
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eye 35
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you forget, you forget what you read and you can't read everything, so a lot of the material that wework with now is more extensive and it's more scientific. i don't think it always, you know, when you look at large data bases of language use, that doesn't always tell you maybe the most elegant way that will impress upon the reading the idea that you want artistic fashion, but i certainly have benefitted from statistical analyses that i did not have access to when i was younger. >> so, if i'm-- just one last thing, if i'm looking for the way a language is going, i listen to how people are talking. >> right. that's where language is going. >> absolutely. i like your modern grammarian stance. i approve that message. >> 15 years and noticed on standardized test for children, they're capitalizing sun, moon and earth and i did question, because they said it's our sun, our moon, our earth now when you go to type it it automatically capitalizes it, you have to go in and change it to keep a small "s". >> right. is that the reason because it's our sun, our moon, our earth? why do you have to
you forget, you forget what you read and you can't read everything, so a lot of the material that wework with now is more extensive and it's more scientific. i don't think it always, you know, when you look at large data bases of language use, that doesn't always tell you maybe the most elegant way that will impress upon the reading the idea that you want artistic fashion, but i certainly have benefitted from statistical analyses that i did not have access to when i was younger. >> so, if...
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read it one fella. when we started catch a read, the kids got the cages and waited impatiently for me to come by. god, i told them that they could only take the book out of the cage after an hour, but they couldn't wait that long. they went and got an after only 5 minutes. thank god, nothing happened. and i'm sure they were always hoping to actually meet again in columbia as remote municipalities. books are simply too expensive for people to buy . the few books that reached the field hands have all been brought here by louis soriano. who be on the oh, know another of these regulus is lewis fernando. he's the 1st in his family to learn to read. he asked for books with pictures so that his parents could follow what he was reading one by him better. how sad you are. he always makes you smile with his book and almost always motivated us to read him. other kids have started reading now to whenever he comes to our house. we have something to read. my book on louisiana bravo, but teaches in the region the b, b
read it one fella. when we started catch a read, the kids got the cages and waited impatiently for me to come by. god, i told them that they could only take the book out of the cage after an hour, but they couldn't wait that long. they went and got an after only 5 minutes. thank god, nothing happened. and i'm sure they were always hoping to actually meet again in columbia as remote municipalities. books are simply too expensive for people to buy . the few books that reached the field hands have...
40
40
Oct 5, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 40
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they are not going to get, they are not going to read james baldwin, they are not going to read toniorrison, they are not going to read a text that includes the infamous (n-word) because their attitude is going to be who needs it? i'm not going to chance saying the wrong thing, coming off the wrong way and having some student report me to my bosses, so on the question of pressure, we have a lot of pressure and i think we have a lot of pressure that pushes a lot of people to avoid the subject. is that a good thing? second, are there teachers who go about their work in an ignorant fashion? sure there are. i have no doubt there are teachers including white teachers, who are heedless, who are stupidly naÏve. i will give you an example of that. at my alma mater, princeton university, there was a teacher, anthropologist, who taught a course on taboo. that was the course. the very first day of the class the teacher said something along the lines of, he used (n-word) somehow. is it worse for me to say (n-word), or for me to punch somebody in the knows? black students, some of the black stude
they are not going to get, they are not going to read james baldwin, they are not going to read toniorrison, they are not going to read a text that includes the infamous (n-word) because their attitude is going to be who needs it? i'm not going to chance saying the wrong thing, coming off the wrong way and having some student report me to my bosses, so on the question of pressure, we have a lot of pressure and i think we have a lot of pressure that pushes a lot of people to avoid the subject....
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58
Oct 22, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 58
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our instruction just to read this election. but if i may briefly want to say thank you for bringing us together. i've served with most of these people in my 35 years in congress not from the start of their terms, but in part of their terms. and they have left a great legacy. i just want to name three in this room. we celebrated bob dole's 90th birthday, 90th birthday. it was quite a cause for celebration in this room. well, not in this room, but in the newly cannon room. we celebrate it. don young being the dean, the congress and the serving republican. i hosted that the longest serving republican, but it was only three months later when he lay in honor here in this very room as. well, in statuary hall, someone who campaigned for him, is with us. the congressman, new congressman from alaska, congressman paul, who served who campaigned for him being a democrat, but this is how it is here. and then today we sign the legislation dedicating, naming day clinic in honor of our former colleague jackie walorski, whose mother more this
our instruction just to read this election. but if i may briefly want to say thank you for bringing us together. i've served with most of these people in my 35 years in congress not from the start of their terms, but in part of their terms. and they have left a great legacy. i just want to name three in this room. we celebrated bob dole's 90th birthday, 90th birthday. it was quite a cause for celebration in this room. well, not in this room, but in the newly cannon room. we celebrate it. don...
100
100
Oct 10, 2022
10/22
by
KGO
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eye 100
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sometimes you need to take a break from reading. yeah just don't break anything while doing this at home and finally to the battle of lizard versus foul on the golf course. good one. michael ina's of australia captured the moment that a magpie took aim on a monitor lizard. the showdown happened right on the 13th green shout out to florida for this not happening there, by the way. going crazy with reptiles and animals on golf courses. if it's not florida, it's got to be australia that magpie forced the loser too quickly scurry off. locals are no stranger to the magpies fierce territorial nature. impressive ♪♪♪ fr this is "jeopardy!"tage at son here are today's contestants-- an sat and act tutor from las vegas, nevada... an executive assistant from rye beach, new hampshire... and our returning champion-- a homemaker from pittsburgh, pennsylvania... whose 4-day cash winnings total... and now hosting "jeopardy!"-- ken jennings. [cheers and applause] thank you, johnny gilbert. welcome all to a new week on "jeopardy!"
sometimes you need to take a break from reading. yeah just don't break anything while doing this at home and finally to the battle of lizard versus foul on the golf course. good one. michael ina's of australia captured the moment that a magpie took aim on a monitor lizard. the showdown happened right on the 13th green shout out to florida for this not happening there, by the way. going crazy with reptiles and animals on golf courses. if it's not florida, it's got to be australia that magpie...
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Oct 4, 2022
10/22
by
CSPAN2
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eye 66
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wato write something for her i read this and i not sure i'm ready to read that yet. ready to write it but not necessarily read it but tonight i want to give you a little bit of why america, how this is titled. obviously it's a rift on the nina simone mississippi i goddamn but there's a reason i thought about this title and thought about why this was the perfect and only title for a book about the wearing down of black girls and women. in the nina simone's autobiography a spell on you should talk to bobby fascination of civil rights activists medgar evers in mississippi on june 12, 1963 as an inspiration for her first test song. before writing mississippi goddamn she pondered how can you take the memory of a man like mentor evers and reduce all that he was to 3 and a half minutes and assembled to ? evers was an activist and what most violently racist areas in the country. he survived notable attempts on his life. shot in the heart in his own driveway after returning home from a meeting with naacp lawyers 37-year-old evers perished 50 minutes after being admitted to an
wato write something for her i read this and i not sure i'm ready to read that yet. ready to write it but not necessarily read it but tonight i want to give you a little bit of why america, how this is titled. obviously it's a rift on the nina simone mississippi i goddamn but there's a reason i thought about this title and thought about why this was the perfect and only title for a book about the wearing down of black girls and women. in the nina simone's autobiography a spell on you should...
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22
Oct 16, 2022
10/22
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BELARUSTV
tv
eye 22
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right now i'm not reading any. uh, john round that one, but i started reading.not to count it, watched the film and then continued to read it to me a little more than the book version fought me. i liked the film more. but harry potter and the hobbit was my favorite book. do you think lyosha's shyness will get in the way? uh, him in the third round before the animal buttons quickly respond to questions. you know, i think not, but if, of course, there will be ask for clarification, yes, give a more, as it were , detailed answer, then, of course, there will be worry. and, maybe he can say something like that, not that, but let's hope that lyosha will be able to overcome his excitement and shyness and, uh, will show himself perfectly in the third round. and we will get acquainted with the next participant polina let's talk with you, what do you like at school , what do you dislike? just tell me about your school life in a nutshell. well, i'm no different from other participants. i have all my favorite subjects elena nikolaevna what do you think, what did polina keep
right now i'm not reading any. uh, john round that one, but i started reading.not to count it, watched the film and then continued to read it to me a little more than the book version fought me. i liked the film more. but harry potter and the hobbit was my favorite book. do you think lyosha's shyness will get in the way? uh, him in the third round before the animal buttons quickly respond to questions. you know, i think not, but if, of course, there will be ask for clarification, yes, give a...