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sad so margot. 96 isn't it saxon when someone knows about final winds when they can tell you about every great every since and. of course events but could you be seduced by someone with an intimate knowledge of the potato. below their current readers talking about potatoes well in midsummer night right now but soon the narrator's uncle has a special gift for potatoes he can identify every variety of potato by taste even if they're boiled or fried. what's that you say not a turn on well it gets more ridiculous from there the narrator a floundering author is commissioned to write a 12 page magazine article about potatoes his quest for spot knowledge takes him down a rabbit hole of misadventures in the newly were unified. he goes searching for a dead professor's potato archive winds up with the worst haircut of his life and meets tina a sex phone operator who wrote her master's thesis on the potato in german literature. i'm sure you also know the potato was considered and for d.c. ak a botanist in nuremberg in the year 634 writes that he had potatoes baked for him and having eaten his meal
sad so margot. 96 isn't it saxon when someone knows about final winds when they can tell you about every great every since and. of course events but could you be seduced by someone with an intimate knowledge of the potato. below their current readers talking about potatoes well in midsummer night right now but soon the narrator's uncle has a special gift for potatoes he can identify every variety of potato by taste even if they're boiled or fried. what's that you say not a turn on well it gets...
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region is much larger and it reaches all the way to dissolve the river and up to berlin and down to the saxon or a month and a fish you can sink this spray broadswords might have made a bad choice by coming here with all the canals and many mosquitoes here but water played an important role it's essential for catching fish and there are plenty of forests in the area and the swamps help keep invaders out. so i think the overall conditions for settling right here in the middle of the spray about weren't actually that bad after all. as he didn't. need to get us out when he went over the century have been persecuted their language for baden can you tell us a bit about the history. versus the sorbs were christian honest and they were treated like a minority for hundreds of years when they were more or less oppressed across the ages looked they never govern themselves there was never a sore bridge again. but against all odds the sorbs managed to preserve their culture especially by adapting on postle that was their key to success and that's a given in the un puzzle at this. point and with the heat
region is much larger and it reaches all the way to dissolve the river and up to berlin and down to the saxon or a month and a fish you can sink this spray broadswords might have made a bad choice by coming here with all the canals and many mosquitoes here but water played an important role it's essential for catching fish and there are plenty of forests in the area and the swamps help keep invaders out. so i think the overall conditions for settling right here in the middle of the spray about...
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champions league for the 1st time starting in july he swapping germany's provincial south west of the saxon metropolis of life see. him as a mother always felt at home. it'll be nice to come back as a guest next season that's all that long and beyond birth weather is cold shoulder just visiting this wonderful region and its wonderful people there was never a day i didn't enjoy driving into work. but the kind of talk where mr gannon school reform been noddles man succeeds ralph running resumes full time as sporting director it's the next step up for the 31 year old touchline prodigy meticulous strategist of the modern attacking school he looks a very good fit all tramp vicious like sick of the force if you only need to look at what he's achieved since becoming head coach at hoffenheim. took over the team but you seemed as good as relegated steer them to safety for starters from there all the way into europe. noddles month successor and hoffenheim was his assistant there for 2 years for troika fresh from helping eric 10 harding take i.x. to the brink of the champions league final and now back
champions league for the 1st time starting in july he swapping germany's provincial south west of the saxon metropolis of life see. him as a mother always felt at home. it'll be nice to come back as a guest next season that's all that long and beyond birth weather is cold shoulder just visiting this wonderful region and its wonderful people there was never a day i didn't enjoy driving into work. but the kind of talk where mr gannon school reform been noddles man succeeds ralph running resumes...
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indian will saxon area u.s. u.k. and australia and none of them responded positively both. explain the reasons why some of them said that it wasn't. some of them said it wasn't high enough on their news agenda some of them said that it was not within their core area of interest but you know there have been reporting all of them on the case of julian assange when it was about his cat and his skateboard and kind of the allegations that he smeared excrements on the walls but when you have a serious piece that actually tries to damascus this this public narrative to actually show the facts below it then they're not interested. both the u.k. and australia have rejected torture claims how do you respond to that in the sense of that you are actually accused of meddling in the process of the british court system as far as i'm aware. well basically i'm exercising my mandate a mandate that has been supported by the u.k. and by australia whenever i have criticizing other countries they were instrumental also in getting me appointed on this mandate and to be clear i you know the foreig
indian will saxon area u.s. u.k. and australia and none of them responded positively both. explain the reasons why some of them said that it wasn't. some of them said it wasn't high enough on their news agenda some of them said that it was not within their core area of interest but you know there have been reporting all of them on the case of julian assange when it was about his cat and his skateboard and kind of the allegations that he smeared excrements on the walls but when you have a...
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Jun 2, 2019
06/19
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that they looked more, for lack of a better word, anglo-saxon? it is a feeling, but it is everywhere. i think that even westerners themselves, however they defined them, by geography, or culture, or something else, generally sense that the west was a place that did not abide by conventional norms. that they decided for themselves. and they resented places and situations where things were decided for them. that is again, kind of turnerian, in that way, and they resented those who had a static society. it is why people went west, many of them, to get away from that, to be freer. that is defined in so many ways it is almost impossible. we have had a few western historians try to explain it. >> but the people of the time definitely drew a distinction. they believed westerners were different. >> the people in the west were quick to call themselves western. it started almost immediately when they hit the ground out there from wherever they had come. i have long argued that it is not until the war that southerners redefined themselves. from that same so
that they looked more, for lack of a better word, anglo-saxon? it is a feeling, but it is everywhere. i think that even westerners themselves, however they defined them, by geography, or culture, or something else, generally sense that the west was a place that did not abide by conventional norms. that they decided for themselves. and they resented places and situations where things were decided for them. that is again, kind of turnerian, in that way, and they resented those who had a static...
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Jun 15, 2019
06/19
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. >> an update on an expensiveph saxone being stolen from a we're the slowskys. we like drip coffee, lanovers- -waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying t on fancyhnology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not. >>> welcome back. an upte on a strange burglarly case we have f beenlowing for more than a week now. a saxophone that was stolen twice from a d.c.usic store is back on the shelf and a suspect has been arrested. we have the story of how a store employee helped track down the stolen sax. >> she loves this sound. at her music store i northwest d.c.'s tinley town but she hates -- [ alarm ] >> the awful sound of her store's alarm. >> the theft. it's a roller coaster of the burglary. >> this roller coaster story thuts on the surveillance vearo rsday morning. 55-year-old vin
. >> an update on an expensiveph saxone being stolen from a we're the slowskys. we like drip coffee, lanovers- -waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying t on fancyhnology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd...
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and edgar theerlder refd to the son of what anglo-saxon alfred. the >> as tall as a seven story building weighing 77 tons one dinosaur is named for what mythical family of giants overthrown byzeus? jefferson? answer? >> titans. >> that is among the african-americans who made a mark in the 1920s, with what -- langley. >> garvey. >> right. rrect. to encourage newborn chicks to imprint on birds instead of humans zookeepers dressed up like -- >> crane. >> nice, langley. 2345 is the end of the round. [ cheers a applause ] [ cheers and applause ] >>> that was an exciting game, you fabulous teams. let's do this thing and make these scores official. again with langley from mclean,g ia. selena, matt and dan. 435 points. [ applause ] from fairfax county, jefferson high school fred, ben, william. 520 points. [ applause ] and coming back for the championship round later this nth we have sandy springs friends from sandy springs, maryland, michelle, justice and allen with support from the wildebeest, 550 points. [ applause ] >> a little bit of excitement there.
and edgar theerlder refd to the son of what anglo-saxon alfred. the >> as tall as a seven story building weighing 77 tons one dinosaur is named for what mythical family of giants overthrown byzeus? jefferson? answer? >> titans. >> that is among the african-americans who made a mark in the 1920s, with what -- langley. >> garvey. >> right. rrect. to encourage newborn chicks to imprint on birds instead of humans zookeepers dressed up like -- >> crane. >>...
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Jun 19, 2019
06/19
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KQED
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profiles off of the national socialist movent's, like, equivalent of facebook, this ceing called new saxon. >> exactly, nazi facebook. and we keep sending stuff to the military, like, examples of people... >> thompson: oh, really? y >> sayinh, "you should look at this guy, he looks like he might be in violation." and, you know, most of the time we never even hear anything back from them. i just think that the military needs to have pressure put on it to put this at the top of its list. if that means shuffling around resources, so be it. we don want another mcveigh, right? you just can't have this. >> thompson: with nobody at the d.o.d. willing to talk to me, i sit down with a former military prosecutor who has handled white supremacist >> okay. and i can see this is a response a congressman who's apparently asked a question... >> thompson: yeah. >> as a follow-up to some of the work you guys were doing in these articles about service members. >> thompson: major general john ertenberg served as the deputy judge advocate g-- the second-highest-ranking jag officer in the u.s. army. he later o
profiles off of the national socialist movent's, like, equivalent of facebook, this ceing called new saxon. >> exactly, nazi facebook. and we keep sending stuff to the military, like, examples of people... >> thompson: oh, really? y >> sayinh, "you should look at this guy, he looks like he might be in violation." and, you know, most of the time we never even hear anything back from them. i just think that the military needs to have pressure put on it to put this at...
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Jun 4, 2019
06/19
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KPIX
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take a look at the saxon slowing things down, that's not the only place. >>> we have a warm upcoming be felt inland. if you take a look at the numbers inland on the deep shades of red, that's the areas coming in 60 degrees above average. concorde and livermore, that's where you guys fall. everyone else across the bay will be about 10 degrees anit will be like this today and tomorrow, and then look at thursday and friday, we cool back down and we get closer to average. plus, you earn miles on everyday purchases.mos yoe with this special offer. need another reason? enjoy an introductory no annual fee. to apply, visit hawaiianairlines.com z3cp9z zi0z y3cp9y yi0y >>> the 7 pm news tonight on kpix 5. ♪ >>> good morning to our viewers in the west. it's tuesday, june 4th, 2019. welcome back to "cbs this morning." ahead, a second day of diplomacy for president trump in britain. we'll hear what he said in this morning's news conference with prime minister theresa may. >>> plus, a d-day hero remembers the men he saved and the friends he lost 75 years ago. but first here's today's "eye opener"
take a look at the saxon slowing things down, that's not the only place. >>> we have a warm upcoming be felt inland. if you take a look at the numbers inland on the deep shades of red, that's the areas coming in 60 degrees above average. concorde and livermore, that's where you guys fall. everyone else across the bay will be about 10 degrees anit will be like this today and tomorrow, and then look at thursday and friday, we cool back down and we get closer to average. plus, you earn...
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Jun 18, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN3
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it seems to me to be white anglo-saxon and protestant in this nation gives you the ability to make or change the rules at will. and the rules just need to be the rules.>> you've talked previously about two different elements and want to drill into. the first of which is this idea, and you were just talking about this, too, the idea, the power of art to force conversation and move a spectrum, and why it's important for artist to be able to express things at the mainstream. also, kind of the double standard, you think about things such as outlaw countries, and yet i can't recall the less congressional hearing around indecency in country music. so what do you think, what you think is the importance of these genres, and the freedom of artists to be able to speak freely, even if that freedom leads to what some people might find offensive as it relates to the writing of injustice. >> everything in art will offend someone. you wouldn't have fig leaves over statues if someone at some point had and said all those statues have to all of a sudden be covered because i'm offended. for me, i think
it seems to me to be white anglo-saxon and protestant in this nation gives you the ability to make or change the rules at will. and the rules just need to be the rules.>> you've talked previously about two different elements and want to drill into. the first of which is this idea, and you were just talking about this, too, the idea, the power of art to force conversation and move a spectrum, and why it's important for artist to be able to express things at the mainstream. also, kind of...
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Jun 26, 2019
06/19
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speak, a guy from miami his main problem was that miami ,t one time was 80% anglo-saxon now may be 19%at is the way of the world. they have been moving around. in america, people always move around. they need to do soul-searching. congress, they need to break it down, the approval of the house of representatives, the approval of the senate, and the american people can move forward. host: go ahead and finish up, sorry. it, do that is about soul-searching about the people they voted top us. on twitter says the migrant crisis has been created by the migrants themselves to come here not legally without respect or regard for u.s. lost, 80,000 americans die from flu complications last year according to the cdc but it makes headlines when to illegals die from the flu. -- two illegals die from the flu. the money passed last night includes provisions in addition , it requires money the customs and border patrol to establish health standards for children's and adults in custody and requires homeland security to submit a plan to make sure all migrants have translation services and limits the amou
speak, a guy from miami his main problem was that miami ,t one time was 80% anglo-saxon now may be 19%at is the way of the world. they have been moving around. in america, people always move around. they need to do soul-searching. congress, they need to break it down, the approval of the house of representatives, the approval of the senate, and the american people can move forward. host: go ahead and finish up, sorry. it, do that is about soul-searching about the people they voted top us. on...