187
187
Aug 20, 2014
08/14
by
WPVI
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eye 187
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and it's dirtied the name of san marino. >> when they think of san marino, they're gonna think of the from his own dog, it was just lying on the sidewalk, and flings that feces onto a neighbor's doorstep. >> i was stunned. this is shocking to the whole community. >> reporter: because the man caught on camera lobbing that little numero duo, none other than the man in the big chair, the mayor. and mayor dennis kneier has gone the way of nixon, he resigned. we've been trying to get in contact with you about the whole dog poop thing. >> well, i haven't gotten any messages. and i'm really busy now. >> reporter: he's just woken up. >> are you a psychologist? >> i'm not. >> and neither am i. and i can't answer your question other than to say it was a mistake. i was tired in the time that i did it. it was a mistake. >> reporter: dr. ari novick is a psychologist -- an anger management expert. >> we all have made judgment errors. >> he said he was tired. >> deprivation can do that. but there's never an excuse for throwing feces on your neighbor's yard. >> reporter: the neighbor in question is t
and it's dirtied the name of san marino. >> when they think of san marino, they're gonna think of the from his own dog, it was just lying on the sidewalk, and flings that feces onto a neighbor's doorstep. >> i was stunned. this is shocking to the whole community. >> reporter: because the man caught on camera lobbing that little numero duo, none other than the man in the big chair, the mayor. and mayor dennis kneier has gone the way of nixon, he resigned. we've been trying to...
55
55
Aug 23, 2014
08/14
by
KCSM
tv
eye 55
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and san marino -- all 24 square miles of it -- is unique in that it's still an independent country.while novel today, tiny two-bit dukedoms like this were once the norm. medieval italy -- like most of europe before the rise of modern nation states -- was a collection of independent, little san marino-style city states -- many of them no more than fortified towns on hills. >>> hello, and welcome to nhk "newsline." i'm ross mihara in tokyo. >>> rescuers in western japan are continuing their search for people missing in landslides. police in hiroshima say 40 people have died. 47 others are missing or unaccounted for. search efforts have been temporarily suspended in some districts to prevent a second disaster. it has been raining on and off since thursday night, and authorities fear that could trigger more landslides. firefighters, police officers, and self-defense force personnel are helping with rescue and recovery. authorities have sent in heavy equipment, but the roads are narrow and the machines are too big to access some sites. rescuers have had to resort to
and san marino -- all 24 square miles of it -- is unique in that it's still an independent country.while novel today, tiny two-bit dukedoms like this were once the norm. medieval italy -- like most of europe before the rise of modern nation states -- was a collection of independent, little san marino-style city states -- many of them no more than fortified towns on hills. >>> hello, and welcome to nhk "newsline." i'm ross mihara in tokyo. >>> rescuers in western...
47
47
Aug 24, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 47
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this time, rosenbach didn't say actually i was just on my way to san marino california. he said you have it. >> was awasn't a 100,000 powerb? for >> it was purported to be in the press a 100,000 powerbook.
this time, rosenbach didn't say actually i was just on my way to san marino california. he said you have it. >> was awasn't a 100,000 powerb? for >> it was purported to be in the press a 100,000 powerbook.
39
39
Aug 30, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 39
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on the west coast in san marino, calif. you have the huntington library, museum and gardens. henry huntington's pockets were much deeper than folger's. for instance, he bought 200 entire libraries where as folger but just a few entire libraries. but they had different objectives in their collecting. like jpmorgan, huntington loved bindings. folger had no interest in decorative bindings mainly from the nineteenth century. morgan and huntington liked pristine books. folger was unimpressed with a pristine book. what he loved was marginalia, writing in the margins which showed how readers reacted to the content. if you take the first folio, the 82 copies in the folger, you have a number of people who were inspired by shakespeare and they rode their own poems in the margins of the first folio. if they were an artist, they drew on the margins of the first folio. if they thought they knew the queen's english decor record shakespeare in the first folio. a last difference between huntington and folger is what they would do with their duplicates. and to have a lot more having bought 20
on the west coast in san marino, calif. you have the huntington library, museum and gardens. henry huntington's pockets were much deeper than folger's. for instance, he bought 200 entire libraries where as folger but just a few entire libraries. but they had different objectives in their collecting. like jpmorgan, huntington loved bindings. folger had no interest in decorative bindings mainly from the nineteenth century. morgan and huntington liked pristine books. folger was unimpressed with a...
141
141
Aug 22, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 141
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quote 1
the map from austin, to tallahassee, to raleigh, to nashville, to baton rouge, to little rock, to san marinoo new york we're getting collection nothing. and so it won't be quite as bad in the future as it has been in the past, but the risk of all of this was that joe johnston's view of the atlanta campaign was almost completely accepted for decades. in the 20th century. the fact that you -- in 1930s and 1940s, that's what you hear. he would have defeated sherman outside atlanta. he would have flanked him order to nashville, would have forced him to retreat to -- back up through illinois, across the great lakes. sherman, the remnants of sherman's pathetic army would have been drowned in hudson bay, after which joe johnston would have turned and marched on washington and forced abraham linking to -- joe johnston was great. and it's very different to get people to understand what they see in movies and on television is just not necessarily so. there was a movie made back i believe in the 50s. one or two of you might be old enough to remember that. but it's a movie said in australia in the after
the map from austin, to tallahassee, to raleigh, to nashville, to baton rouge, to little rock, to san marinoo new york we're getting collection nothing. and so it won't be quite as bad in the future as it has been in the past, but the risk of all of this was that joe johnston's view of the atlanta campaign was almost completely accepted for decades. in the 20th century. the fact that you -- in 1930s and 1940s, that's what you hear. he would have defeated sherman outside atlanta. he would have...
84
84
Aug 22, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 84
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quote 0
the map from austin, to tallahassee, to raleigh, to nashville, to baton rouge, to little rock, to san marinonew york. that stuff was so scattered. we're getting collections now and published information on the confederate army on the west so it won't be quite as bad in the future as it has been in the past. but the result of all of this this was that joe johnston's view of the atlanta campaign was almost completely accepted for decades in the 20th century. the fact you grow up in atlanta as i did in the 1930s and 1940s, that's what you hear. joe johnston was just the greatest thing since grits. if he had been left alone, if that idiot jefferson davis had not removed him from command he would have defeated sherman outside atlanta. he would have driven sherman back to chattanooga. he would have flanked him on to nashville. he would have forced him to retreat to louisville and pursued him across the ohio river back up to illinois, acro across the great lakes. the army would have been drowned in hudson bay after which joe johnston would have turned and marched on washington and forced abraham li
the map from austin, to tallahassee, to raleigh, to nashville, to baton rouge, to little rock, to san marinonew york. that stuff was so scattered. we're getting collections now and published information on the confederate army on the west so it won't be quite as bad in the future as it has been in the past. but the result of all of this this was that joe johnston's view of the atlanta campaign was almost completely accepted for decades in the 20th century. the fact you grow up in atlanta as i...
24
24
Aug 24, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 24
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quote 0
this time, rosenbach didn't say actually i was just on my way to san marino california. he said you have it. >> was awasn't a 100,000 powerb? for >> it was purported to be in the press a 100,000 powerbook. the >> [inaudible] >> could you comdid you come toe microphone please. >> did the checks that you examine to tell him all the prices they paid for the collection x. >> as you can imagine some of them are for the individual books and others were for groups of the books and other times you could tell he and other times you couldn't. he bought 82 of them. i think the least he paid was maybe $300 is the most was $53,000. in the book i use a formula to tell the reader how much that is in today's dollars. it's important to go through with the invoices and some's folger himself got mixed up and what he had paid. some of it was in dollars and some of it was in pounds. since he was paying for them and once he compared the description with the entity he said i don't want it. that's why he was so valuable at the standard oil. he could look at a sheet of paper giving the oil refin
this time, rosenbach didn't say actually i was just on my way to san marino california. he said you have it. >> was awasn't a 100,000 powerb? for >> it was purported to be in the press a 100,000 powerbook. the >> [inaudible] >> could you comdid you come toe microphone please. >> did the checks that you examine to tell him all the prices they paid for the collection x. >> as you can imagine some of them are for the individual books and others were for groups...