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May 28, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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they said take him to the saloon. the peterson house across the street and there began the vigil from 11:00 at night until 7:22 the next morning. >> i'm going to have to jump in. this is a scene outside of peterson house. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >>> at approximately 10:15 p.m. on april 14th 1865 president abraham lincoln was shot by john wilkes booth inside ford theatre while attending the play "our american cousin." the first person to enter the presidential box was dr. charles leale, a 23-year-old physician who had only completed his medical studies a few weeks prior. along with dr. charles savantak, dr. leale assisted the injured president and enlisted the assistance of a group of soldiers to carry president lincoln out of the theatre pushing against crowds of onlookers and stopping frequently to administer aid to the fallen president. outside the theatre a light rain began to fall. dr. leale recognized that a bumpy carriage ride through the muddy streets of washington, d.c. would be far too much for abraham lincoln's weakened bod
they said take him to the saloon. the peterson house across the street and there began the vigil from 11:00 at night until 7:22 the next morning. >> i'm going to have to jump in. this is a scene outside of peterson house. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >>> at approximately 10:15 p.m. on april 14th 1865 president abraham lincoln was shot by john wilkes booth inside ford theatre while attending the play "our american cousin." the first person to enter the presidential box was dr....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 7, 2015
05/15
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SFGTV
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. >> we have two israel ems one is for grandma's saloon, and this is a permit and this is actually, you know, we have had no opposition from the station and no opposition from the community. the consent items unless there is a member that would like to split them, is there any interest in splitting them? otherwise we can handle this all in one, i don't see any, and so, commissioners, would you guys, like to take a motion? i would move to approve. >> both. >> items on the consent agenda. >> i second. >> there is a motion and a second. >> is there a public comment. and either, last weekend video. i know that they had a pool table and i used to own it and the lady who has it now is a wonderful person and i think that we want to support that and i happen to watch the warriors over there and i think that they have a lucky tv and so it is the good, and that is justice. >> great, any additional public comment? >> seeing none, public comment is closed. and let's take a vote. >> on the motion to approve both of these permits, commissioner lee. >> yes. >> joseph. >> aye. >> moshoyannis. >> aye. >
. >> we have two israel ems one is for grandma's saloon, and this is a permit and this is actually, you know, we have had no opposition from the station and no opposition from the community. the consent items unless there is a member that would like to split them, is there any interest in splitting them? otherwise we can handle this all in one, i don't see any, and so, commissioners, would you guys, like to take a motion? i would move to approve. >> both. >> items on the...
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May 10, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 42
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this would have been the star saloon in 1856 where john wilkes booth would have had a drink before he made his entry back into the theatre. we have today what is called the atlantic building. the theatre was closed down several years back when we created a new lobby for our theatregoers. ford's theatre society and their staff work in here. visitors, when they come to ford's theatre, they don't go through the doors here. they did in the early days and in 1865, but now come in through the atlantic building where the ticket box office is. there are more amenities there. from there, enter into the historic theatre itself. here we have the actual wartime photo showing you the theatre so you can see the facade. the roof is all intact. the sides of the building were redone in the 1960's. you get an idea of the condition of the roads and how many taverns, saloons, and boardinghouses were along here. president lincoln, the only president to attend the theatre during his tenure in office 1861 to 1865, was an avid theatregoer. the literature of shakespeare served as a reprieve for him while carr
this would have been the star saloon in 1856 where john wilkes booth would have had a drink before he made his entry back into the theatre. we have today what is called the atlantic building. the theatre was closed down several years back when we created a new lobby for our theatregoers. ford's theatre society and their staff work in here. visitors, when they come to ford's theatre, they don't go through the doors here. they did in the early days and in 1865, but now come in through the...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 123
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you get an idea of the condition of the roads and how many taverns, saloons, and boarding houses were along here. president lincoln, the only president to attend the theater during his tenure in office to make and 61 to 1865 -- 1851 to 1855, was an avid theatergoer. the literature of shakespeare served as a reprieve for him while carrying a country through its most -- the most destructive war in its history in which over 675,000 americans would perish. here we have a depiction of lincoln as a family man with mary lincoln, his wife, robert titling lincoln, his oldest son, and tad. when lincoln would get away from the white house, in addition to going to the theater which he enjoyed, the lincoln cottage is where he went reflect as well -- would reflect as well and gather his thoughts. lincoln's enjoyment of six very in -- shakespearean literature helped him as a melancholy man deal with the tragedies he had. the lincoln family had four children altogether. eddy died in infancy. willie died of typhoid fever in 1862. tragically, tad lincoln would die of tuberculosis in 1871. mary lincoln
you get an idea of the condition of the roads and how many taverns, saloons, and boarding houses were along here. president lincoln, the only president to attend the theater during his tenure in office to make and 61 to 1865 -- 1851 to 1855, was an avid theatergoer. the literature of shakespeare served as a reprieve for him while carrying a country through its most -- the most destructive war in its history in which over 675,000 americans would perish. here we have a depiction of lincoln as a...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> the next day, wild bill arrives late to the saloon only to find his favorite seat facing a doorken. >> fellas? >> yes. >> charlie, mind if i have that seat so i can see the door? >> all right, fellas. deal me in. >> there was certainly a moment in wild bill's life when it's clear by this point wild bill was not the man he once was. >> at 39 years old, hickok is no longer a lawman. he's a gambler and an aging gunslinger with a violent history and his past is closing in behind him. >> all right, charlie, i'll raise you. [ gunfire ] >> jack mccall is drunk. he's somebody looking for fast fame. mccall comes in and before hickok knows it, takes his gun and shoots him in the back of the head. hickok, face down on the table and is dead. >> jack mccall is later convicted of murder and hanged for his crime. no motive is ever revealed. >> after hickok died, with an ace in his hand, that hand become as powerful symbol in western literature and film that writers and film-makers use to signal the death of the hand. >> unable to outrun his reputation, the gunslinger never gets the chance to f
. >> the next day, wild bill arrives late to the saloon only to find his favorite seat facing a doorken. >> fellas? >> yes. >> charlie, mind if i have that seat so i can see the door? >> all right, fellas. deal me in. >> there was certainly a moment in wild bill's life when it's clear by this point wild bill was not the man he once was. >> at 39 years old, hickok is no longer a lawman. he's a gambler and an aging gunslinger with a violent history and...
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May 27, 2015
05/15
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KNTV
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fans wait for tom brady's appeal on the nfl's decision to suspend him for four games, eagle brook saloonee miles away from where the patriots play, is selling their own tom brady beer called free brady blonde ipa. the menu reads, a wrong has been committed. we as patriots fans want to support tom brady. for every beer sold, the pub will donate $1.00 to brady's favorite charity best buddies. maybe brady will serve his suspension at the pub with a cold brady blond in his hand. >> announcer: "early today" is brought to you by just for men mustache and beard. just you and the look you want. >> dara back to you. >> thanks so much betty. >>> just ahead, dwaynethe record books. >> a whole new take on "fifty shades of grey." you're watching "early today." my cut hurt. mine hurt more. mine stopped hurting faster! neosporin plus pain relief starts relieving pain faster and kills more types of infectious bacteria. when you pick any 3 participating products get a free all better bag. available at walmart. ♪ don't, don't, don't, don't stop the beat ♪ ♪ i can't, can't, can't, can't ♪ ♪ control my feet
fans wait for tom brady's appeal on the nfl's decision to suspend him for four games, eagle brook saloonee miles away from where the patriots play, is selling their own tom brady beer called free brady blonde ipa. the menu reads, a wrong has been committed. we as patriots fans want to support tom brady. for every beer sold, the pub will donate $1.00 to brady's favorite charity best buddies. maybe brady will serve his suspension at the pub with a cold brady blond in his hand. >> announcer:...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> the next day, wild bill arrives late to the saloon only to find his favorite seat facing a dooren. >> fellas? >> yes. >> charlie, mind if i have that seat so i can see the door? >> all right, fellas. deal me in. >> there was certainly a moment in wild bill's life when it's clear by this point wild bill was not the man he once was. >> at 39 years old, hickok is no longer a lawman. he's a gambler and an aging gunslinger with a violent history and his past is closing in behind him. >> all right charlie i'll raise you. [ gunfire ] >> jack mccall is drunk. he's somebody looking for fast fame. mccall comes in and before hickok knows it takes his gun and shoots him in the back of the head. hickok, face down on the table and is dead. >> jack mccall is later convicted of murder and hanged for his crime. no motive is ever revealed. >> after hickok died with an ace in his hand, that hand become as powerful symbol in western literature and film that writers and film-makers use to signal the death of the hand. >> unable to outrun his reputation the gunslinger never gets the chance to face hi
. >> the next day, wild bill arrives late to the saloon only to find his favorite seat facing a dooren. >> fellas? >> yes. >> charlie, mind if i have that seat so i can see the door? >> all right, fellas. deal me in. >> there was certainly a moment in wild bill's life when it's clear by this point wild bill was not the man he once was. >> at 39 years old, hickok is no longer a lawman. he's a gambler and an aging gunslinger with a violent history and his...
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160
May 2, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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the anti-saloon league, the prohibition party. there were all sorts of men involved in temperance. they did not need that part of it, that aspect. >> lots of questions raised. so much more to learn. what you are just saying touches on one of the thoughts that popped up for me. temperance, the push for temperance. i was wondering if that had an impact on turning a lot of men off the idea of women getting to vote because -- at least that they did not drink themselves. a lot of men say no way do you let these women get the vote because i don't want to lose my right to drink. a few years ago i wrote a white paper on the history of social movements in the u.s. the census data is broken down about race and class. my understanding is the woman's movement grew out of the abolitionist movement, were a lot of middle-class women got their training in the abolitionist movement. there were also a lot of working-class women involved early on. in 1840's, 1850's, you had all of those bloodbaths going on at the factories in lowell and the mining camps out west. thousands of poor people dying. my un
the anti-saloon league, the prohibition party. there were all sorts of men involved in temperance. they did not need that part of it, that aspect. >> lots of questions raised. so much more to learn. what you are just saying touches on one of the thoughts that popped up for me. temperance, the push for temperance. i was wondering if that had an impact on turning a lot of men off the idea of women getting to vote because -- at least that they did not drink themselves. a lot of men say no...
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May 2, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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no wonder they stood there lounging with the grace of heavy gunslingers about to sway into a saloon. every gesture was determined by having to move in this underwater weight of chains. i couldn't keep my eyes off of them. they weren't posing but in the silent world everyone is looking at everyone else so it's silent because on the flight deck you are wearing these intense ear protectors. everyone is looking at everyone else the whole time. all communication is visual so you are conscious if you are a guy with a lot of chains around her shoulders like a ammo belt that it's sure for whom it is some kind of fantasy. not a sexual one, more like a fantasy of evolution itself and they were swaggering. there was just a grace that comes from having to minimize effort if the task is to be properly done especially if a good part of that task involves standing around waiting with all that weight on your shoulders. the air was an ecological disaster. it was hot anyway in the heat reared up the deck and then the fumes of jet fuel. whenever a jet maneuvered towards the catapult back to the elevato
no wonder they stood there lounging with the grace of heavy gunslingers about to sway into a saloon. every gesture was determined by having to move in this underwater weight of chains. i couldn't keep my eyes off of them. they weren't posing but in the silent world everyone is looking at everyone else so it's silent because on the flight deck you are wearing these intense ear protectors. everyone is looking at everyone else the whole time. all communication is visual so you are conscious if you...
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May 21, 2015
05/15
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CNNW
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bandidos and said the charity work is a major part of life for many motorcycle clubs like the one at the saloon we start working with abused and neglected children. >> and we have to take care of our veterans. >> i ride with the tribe of judea motorcycle ministry. >> and those who judge them for being part of a motorcycle club. >> this are shows like sons of anarchy and they think ault bikers are like that. >> and people run across you with your colors and they are scared and try to get away from you. >> yeah. i seem to scare people. >> the people that patronize this bar come from different clubs but they feel mischaracterized and misunderstood and misappreciated and they don't expect that to change any time soon especially with what happened in waco. >>> what newly declassified papers revealed that osama bin laden had for americans right up until the day that americans got him. we got the new tempur-flex and it's got the spring and bounce of a traditional mattress. you sink into it, but you can still move it around. now that i have a tempur-flex, i can finally get a good night's sleep. when i
bandidos and said the charity work is a major part of life for many motorcycle clubs like the one at the saloon we start working with abused and neglected children. >> and we have to take care of our veterans. >> i ride with the tribe of judea motorcycle ministry. >> and those who judge them for being part of a motorcycle club. >> this are shows like sons of anarchy and they think ault bikers are like that. >> and people run across you with your colors and they are...
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May 21, 2015
05/15
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CNNW
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roy barnett is the saloon owner. >> it's shows like sons of an arc anarchy and they tling bikers areat. >> reporter: so they're going to see you in your colors and scared and run away from you? >> yeah. >> reporter: they share a common sentiment, they feel mischaracterized misunderstood and misappreciated. and bikers don't expect that to change anytime soon. especially with what happened in waco. gary tuckman, cnn selma, texas. >> and coming up tonight, it's being called bin laden's library. what papers reveal his deadly plans were. le, it is you. real madrid have about 450 million fans. we're trying to give them all the feeling of being at the stadium. the microsoft cloud gives us the scalability to communicate exactly the content that people want to see. it will help people connect to their passion of living real madrid. dear stranger, when i booked this trip, my friends said i was crazy. why would i stay in someone else's house? but this morning a city i've never been to felt like one i already knew. i just wanted to thank you for sharing your world with me. it felt like home. air
roy barnett is the saloon owner. >> it's shows like sons of an arc anarchy and they tling bikers areat. >> reporter: so they're going to see you in your colors and scared and run away from you? >> yeah. >> reporter: they share a common sentiment, they feel mischaracterized misunderstood and misappreciated. and bikers don't expect that to change anytime soon. especially with what happened in waco. gary tuckman, cnn selma, texas. >> and coming up tonight, it's being...
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May 22, 2015
05/15
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MSNBCW
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. >> is this like a saloon wild west saloon?east it's not the secret service. >> seems like the first thing you'd check for when you're regrouping. all right. the hollywood reporter ratings are in $13.8 million people watched david letterman close out his late night career wednesday night. his largest audience since 1994 and that was right after the's him picks. the late show finale outrated every other network show in prime time. it also had its best rating among 18 to 49-year-olds since oprah winfrey appeared on the show in 2005. >> what a great good-bye. >> i loved it. >> i really did. kind of sad, you showed me a picture, already breaking down the set. >> horrible. >> that iconic set that he had behind him with all the bridges and skyline of new york. already being taken out. smashed up and thrown in a dumpster. i hope pieces are being preserved. >> is he going to go -- he's not going to go to vegas, but is dave going to maybe do specials for hbo or specials for showtime? i would hate to positiong think that we're not going
. >> is this like a saloon wild west saloon?east it's not the secret service. >> seems like the first thing you'd check for when you're regrouping. all right. the hollywood reporter ratings are in $13.8 million people watched david letterman close out his late night career wednesday night. his largest audience since 1994 and that was right after the's him picks. the late show finale outrated every other network show in prime time. it also had its best rating among 18 to 49-year-olds...
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May 25, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 41
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no wonder they stood there lounging with the grace of heavy gunslingers about to sway into a saloon. every gesture was determined by having to move in this underwater weight of chain. i couldn't keep my eyes off them. they weren't posing, but in this silent world everyone is looking at everyone else. sorry, it's silent because on the flight deck you're wearing these really really intense ear protectors. in this silent world everyone is looking at everyone else the whole time. all communication is visual. so you're conscious if you're a guy with a load of chains hanging round your shoulders like an ammo belt that you're the fulfillment of some kind of fantasy. not a sexual one, more like a fantasy of evolution itself. and they weren't swaggering there was just the grace that comes from having to minimize effort if a task is to be properly done, especially if a good part of that task involves standing around waiting with all that weight on your shoulders. the air was an ecological disaster. it was hot anyway and the heat reared up from the deck, dense with the fumes of jet fuel. whenev
no wonder they stood there lounging with the grace of heavy gunslingers about to sway into a saloon. every gesture was determined by having to move in this underwater weight of chain. i couldn't keep my eyes off them. they weren't posing, but in this silent world everyone is looking at everyone else. sorry, it's silent because on the flight deck you're wearing these really really intense ear protectors. in this silent world everyone is looking at everyone else the whole time. all communication...
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May 30, 2015
05/15
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CNNW
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. >> right across the street from where i was living was a bar called the saloon. was in there throwing darts one day and ed espinoza, the foreman for mike keenan, came in and threw out a general question, who needs a job? and he hired me as a landscaper plus home repair work. i started work the next day, september 1st. september 26th, i'm sitting in jail. >> in contrast to joe's story, neil discovered that the man who put joe on death row, eddie espinoza, had a very checkered past. >> eddie espinoza was someone who in court admitted that he was an alcoholic. also a drug abuser, a welfare he was someone who was known to drink a 12-pack of beer, would follow that up with snorting cocaine and then follow that up with tequila shots. but eddie espinoza had agreed to a plea deal with prosecutors. and so his story became the prevailing narrative. >> there is absolutely no motive here that would impel joe d'ambrosio to inflict harm upon anthony klann. >> given what he had learned so far, neil was feeling that something had gone terribly wrong in the police investigation o
. >> right across the street from where i was living was a bar called the saloon. was in there throwing darts one day and ed espinoza, the foreman for mike keenan, came in and threw out a general question, who needs a job? and he hired me as a landscaper plus home repair work. i started work the next day, september 1st. september 26th, i'm sitting in jail. >> in contrast to joe's story, neil discovered that the man who put joe on death row, eddie espinoza, had a very checkered past....
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May 18, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN
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eye 68
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but when you are in there, it has little saloon doors that swing closed and have a little magnet holding them. there is a nice fan so you do not suffocate during the night. it has a little light you can turn on and off. it just gives you a little place that is your own. it does not need to be much. but for the long-term psychological health of the crew, it is nice to have a little introspective location. brian: who owns the space lab? col. hadfield: the space station is 15 different nations. ownership is a complex issue internationally. the way we have determined who has access, who has authority, is basically proportionate to how much you put into it. whether you build one of the modules or paid for a part of it. it is divided across 15 partners, proportionate to the amount of gdp or whatever they put into building it. brian: who has put in the most? col. hadfield: the u.s. and russia are the dominant partners. they either built or paid for the building of most of it. two big mission controls in moscow and houston. there is a mission control montreal, germany, japan. but the predominant
but when you are in there, it has little saloon doors that swing closed and have a little magnet holding them. there is a nice fan so you do not suffocate during the night. it has a little light you can turn on and off. it just gives you a little place that is your own. it does not need to be much. but for the long-term psychological health of the crew, it is nice to have a little introspective location. brian: who owns the space lab? col. hadfield: the space station is 15 different nations....
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May 11, 2015
05/15
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MSNBCW
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but at the end of the day are there going to be enough people to go to all these nail saloons, to beions? that is the central question. i think that's something that we're going to have to see how this task force pans out. >> the other piece of this that seems to separate it from other scandals is it's almost an ethnic caste system that's been established in some of these places. you have other immigrants exploiting other immigrants, right? which is not the sort of dichotomy that we're used to seeing. and the sort of very open transparent stereotyping and exploitive behavior from certain ethnic groups upon other ethnic groups. i guess i wonder how unusual is that and how do you begin to unwind that? >> i would actually push back against this. the fact of the matter is a lot of the owners of nail salons are people who work in those nail salons 20 30 years ago, and gradually made their way up. i think the fact is that now koreans are the owners. but to be able to characterize this in sort of this racial division frame, i think it's a little bit difficult. >> do you think that was a fau
but at the end of the day are there going to be enough people to go to all these nail saloons, to beions? that is the central question. i think that's something that we're going to have to see how this task force pans out. >> the other piece of this that seems to separate it from other scandals is it's almost an ethnic caste system that's been established in some of these places. you have other immigrants exploiting other immigrants, right? which is not the sort of dichotomy that we're...
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May 30, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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elegance of the house is a description of 1840 of a man who comes in and says he stood in the elliptical saloons the blue room was called. "i stood under a chandelier that began to napoleon." it had that french cachet. mr. seale: but it was controversial. ms. swain: it was. miss munro had lost a little boy and she was not social anymore. she has been presented in the past as a wilting flower. she was no wilting flower. she was in paris. the word got to them that madame lafayette whose mother and grandmother and sister had been guillotined -- that she was next. they concocted this scheme where mrs. monroe who was a knockout beauty dressed up to the nines got in her carriage, and drove through the streets slowly and finally came to the prison and the coachman got down and gave her card to the dl are. it rattled everything -- card to the jailer. a young woman came to the gate and they embraced. she was released the next day. mrs. monroe was not a wilting flower. you cannot show me a wilting flower that has ever been a first lady. ms. swain: the blue room is on the tour. how many people have been f
elegance of the house is a description of 1840 of a man who comes in and says he stood in the elliptical saloons the blue room was called. "i stood under a chandelier that began to napoleon." it had that french cachet. mr. seale: but it was controversial. ms. swain: it was. miss munro had lost a little boy and she was not social anymore. she has been presented in the past as a wilting flower. she was no wilting flower. she was in paris. the word got to them that madame lafayette whose...
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146
May 25, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 146
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pursued the richmond of the evening clear out of the evening with a sword and had to be disarmed in a saloonrishila and distribute coins. he always got great -- whitman said that even when he was terrible, he was just great. so he was also a drunk. so the theater -- i shouldn't go on about john wilkes booth's father but theater managers learned to look him up before the performance so he wouldn't get too near the bottle. but anyway whitman said the words, fire energy, and abandon found him in him unprecedented meanings. when he was in a passion, face neck, hands would be so fused as i was would be fightful. his whole mean enough to scare the audience actors, often actors were afraid of him. they should have been. now, john wilkes booth carried on the tradition of the american style of acting. whitman was a little uncertain. i saw him several times -- this is john wilkes now on the left. john wilkes on the left. the middle one was -- he had ten children and many of them became actors. so in the middle there's junius jr. and on the right,ed win booth. actually in this -- this was done in novem
pursued the richmond of the evening clear out of the evening with a sword and had to be disarmed in a saloonrishila and distribute coins. he always got great -- whitman said that even when he was terrible, he was just great. so he was also a drunk. so the theater -- i shouldn't go on about john wilkes booth's father but theater managers learned to look him up before the performance so he wouldn't get too near the bottle. but anyway whitman said the words, fire energy, and abandon found him in...
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68
May 1, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN
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the city is the birthplace of rex, known as the arizona cowboy, and is home to the headquarter saloon where the youngest of the fabled earp brothers, warren was killed. the city lies at the heart of the region's blossoming wine industry where 3/4 of all wine grapes produced in arizona are grown. mr. speaker, on this historic centennial, i congratulation the people of wilcox on preserving this gem of the old west and wish them many years of future success. with that, mr. speaker, i yield back. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlewoman yields back. for what purpose does the does gentleman from california seek recognition? >> thank you, mr. speaker. mr. lamalfa: this week we made important strides on water in the west, especially in the time of drought we have in california. we need to do much more to build the supply necessary to get out of the drought. unfortunately, the bureaucracy doesn't reward that with slow permit process or even some of the things we had to battle this week such as deferring more water for fish that isn't even in records of decision or feasibly shown to be scienti
the city is the birthplace of rex, known as the arizona cowboy, and is home to the headquarter saloon where the youngest of the fabled earp brothers, warren was killed. the city lies at the heart of the region's blossoming wine industry where 3/4 of all wine grapes produced in arizona are grown. mr. speaker, on this historic centennial, i congratulation the people of wilcox on preserving this gem of the old west and wish them many years of future success. with that, mr. speaker, i yield back....
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89
May 26, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 89
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the number of the employees to 35 and the budget will salooning to 7.2 bill million. will hand it over to my colleague terry sullivan to bring it home. >> all right. i will keep this brief. needless to say the homeland security act was strictly about terrorism. and to prevent the vulnerability. minimize the damage of the recovery from the terrorist acts in the united states. and obviously as we all know. hurricane katrina and three to four years later was a tremendous wake-up call to this man day. one of the thing that we do in the paper is to chronicle the position of fema and of the federal emergency management agency and the fact that it has a former director that of dubbed it had become a stepchild of the age see. so basically to the terrorism mandate. it is important to note that even after katrina. the terrorism mandate remains on the floor. to this day remains in the department of homeland security though there is an expansion of the natural disaster mandate. but this is attention that clearly existed in the white house apparatus as well. and continues. we argu
the number of the employees to 35 and the budget will salooning to 7.2 bill million. will hand it over to my colleague terry sullivan to bring it home. >> all right. i will keep this brief. needless to say the homeland security act was strictly about terrorism. and to prevent the vulnerability. minimize the damage of the recovery from the terrorist acts in the united states. and obviously as we all know. hurricane katrina and three to four years later was a tremendous wake-up call to this...
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May 12, 2015
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people would recognize this symbol by writing the number 45 on the walls of taverns and saloons. the number 45 came to represent the triumph of the common citizen against the all-powerful force of an over bearing national government. with the example of john wilks in mind, the founding fathers were rightly wary of allowing government access to private activities and the communications of citizens. they feared not only that the government could seize their property but that it could gain access to details about their private lives. it was exactly for this reason that when james madison began writing what would become the fourth amendment in 1789, he used language to make sure that general warrants would not be the norm and in fact would not be acceptable in our new republic. ultimately congress proposed and the states ratified the fourth amendment to the u.s. constitution which provides in pertinent part that any search warrants would have to be warrants -- quote -- particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized close quote. general warrant
people would recognize this symbol by writing the number 45 on the walls of taverns and saloons. the number 45 came to represent the triumph of the common citizen against the all-powerful force of an over bearing national government. with the example of john wilks in mind, the founding fathers were rightly wary of allowing government access to private activities and the communications of citizens. they feared not only that the government could seize their property but that it could gain access...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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people would recognize this symbol by writing the number 45 on the walls of taverns and saloons. the number 45 came to represent the triumph of the common citizen against the all-powerful force of an over bearing national government. with the example of john wilks in mind, the founding fathers were rightly wary of allowing government access to private activities and the communications of citizens. they feared not only that the government could seize their property but that it could gain access to details about their private lives. it was exactly for this reason that when james madison began writing what would become the fourth amendment in 1789, he used language to make sure that general warrants would not be the norm and in fact would not be acceptable in our new republic. ultimately congress proposed and the states ratified the fourth amendment to the u.s. constitution which provides in pertinent part that any search warrants would have to be warrants -- quote -- particularly describing the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized close quote. general warrant
people would recognize this symbol by writing the number 45 on the walls of taverns and saloons. the number 45 came to represent the triumph of the common citizen against the all-powerful force of an over bearing national government. with the example of john wilks in mind, the founding fathers were rightly wary of allowing government access to private activities and the communications of citizens. they feared not only that the government could seize their property but that it could gain access...