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May 27, 2020
05/20
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she left us at the age of 18. she never looked back. in 1937 when she graduated, she went into the field of teaching. she was inspired here and oferstood the significance teaching and paying it forward. she went into teaching for about 13 years. timerine entered nasa at a when america was still living in dual worlds. katherine was having to delicately walk in both worlds. she went to work every day and gave nasa and the astronauts, none of whom looked like her, 100%. she said in spite of how i am -- how i am treated, what i can do, i am going to come here and fight to make sure i do the best there were nasa, three significant space ventures catherine played a very significant role in. one was alan shepard, the first individual that entered space kathering calculated -- while k atherine calculated the trajectories. she played a significant role in john glenn. he centered the end of the death and of his life he would not have entered into space if katherin johnson -- rine johnson n would have not been doing the calculation. also played as
she left us at the age of 18. she never looked back. in 1937 when she graduated, she went into the field of teaching. she was inspired here and oferstood the significance teaching and paying it forward. she went into teaching for about 13 years. timerine entered nasa at a when america was still living in dual worlds. katherine was having to delicately walk in both worlds. she went to work every day and gave nasa and the astronauts, none of whom looked like her, 100%. she said in spite of how i...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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she always said she was not interested. dangled in as she wanted a higher office.assorted part of the repertoire then somebody asked you, are you looking at the next rung of the letter produce what they know no. but i think she's been saying that for long enough that is become believable. it is a big part of your power, very smart observation by jessica. our members no she's not trying to make a name for herself. her predecessor as leader of the before, he wanted to be president. so everyone knew that is much as he was guarding their interest in running the office in the house, he also had his eye on the next thing. had a personal ambition and steak and was going on. she's never had that. no member of the caucus think that she is just kind of address make she can sync the next rung up on the letters that gives her a lot of credibility. she is focused on their interest. host: up until this is the last question for him go with the majority rules here. this is from jeff, will have access to get from a speaker. molly: she went through a series of interviews. i have bee
she always said she was not interested. dangled in as she wanted a higher office.assorted part of the repertoire then somebody asked you, are you looking at the next rung of the letter produce what they know no. but i think she's been saying that for long enough that is become believable. it is a big part of your power, very smart observation by jessica. our members no she's not trying to make a name for herself. her predecessor as leader of the before, he wanted to be president. so everyone...
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63
May 24, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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she always said she was not interested. she never dangled it anything that she might be interested in a higher office. every politician says is greatest part of the repertoire visibly ask you, interesting now, i'm not looking at that next rung. i want to work for the great people in this district and so on. but i think she has been saying that for long enough that is become believable. and it is a big part of her power. it's a very smart observation by jessica. because, remember snow that she isn't trying to make a name for herself. she is not sort of wealth or predecessors as leader of the everyone knew that he wanted to be president. and running in 2004. so everyone knew that as much is he was guarding their interest and running the carcass in the house, he also had gone to the next thing. in the end personal ambition and steak and what was going on. in a sort of diverted his focus and she never had that. a member of her caucus thinks that she is just that had to resonate so that she could go to the next rung up on the le
she always said she was not interested. she never dangled it anything that she might be interested in a higher office. every politician says is greatest part of the repertoire visibly ask you, interesting now, i'm not looking at that next rung. i want to work for the great people in this district and so on. but i think she has been saying that for long enough that is become believable. and it is a big part of her power. it's a very smart observation by jessica. because, remember snow that she...
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May 25, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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she says she knows me. >> absolutely. and i know she knows you. >> sir, i told you everything that i have to tell you. >> you were at the hotel with her saturday and sunday night. >> with her? >> yes. and i'm not going on her word. i'm going on the clerk's word. >> detective cole told osmanovic he had been identified not only by quinn, but also by an employee of the emerson inn. who said that on the same weekend quinn went missing, he saw osmanovic with quinn in room 207. >> it's her word saying that i -- that i took her. >> what's the chances that you and her were staying in the same hotel in the same room at the same time and not knowing each other? what's the chances of that? >> listen, listen, listen. >> cole referred back to quinn's photo and tauntingly asked if this was the woman stacey that osmanovic claimed he was with the night quinn was abducted. >> are you sure that's not stacey, bud? >> it's her word against mine. >> no, it's more than that now. >> how is it more? >> because i have independent people that identified you together. if th
she says she knows me. >> absolutely. and i know she knows you. >> sir, i told you everything that i have to tell you. >> you were at the hotel with her saturday and sunday night. >> with her? >> yes. and i'm not going on her word. i'm going on the clerk's word. >> detective cole told osmanovic he had been identified not only by quinn, but also by an employee of the emerson inn. who said that on the same weekend quinn went missing, he saw osmanovic with quinn...
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May 31, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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how she she to its. when you send two pairs pairs of dwight ab tig's, when be paint the floors, win we borrow a heat, you send me tollhouse chocolate more sellses when, when we sell poems when aget a sewing machine, when we get a husband the country, when we get a flat in london, he looms over all of this brilliant, dangerous, sexual happiness, the only man she cannot boss. he takes her steak and mushrooms and a glass of red wine in bed when she recover from the strain of her exam. the letters she writes to her american psychiatrist shock me. it's early july 1962. she just discovered the hard fact that ted is cheating on her with an exotic working woman who works in -- and rent it their flat inch those first createssed leader she is trying solve the problem of herself. how can she change to accommodate him? moment of trying to hold on to this consuming love before she seize it is over, the letters are darting, the stress, wild. how can i make these women unnecessary to him and keep up my own sense of sed
how she she to its. when you send two pairs pairs of dwight ab tig's, when be paint the floors, win we borrow a heat, you send me tollhouse chocolate more sellses when, when we sell poems when aget a sewing machine, when we get a husband the country, when we get a flat in london, he looms over all of this brilliant, dangerous, sexual happiness, the only man she cannot boss. he takes her steak and mushrooms and a glass of red wine in bed when she recover from the strain of her exam. the letters...
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May 29, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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she's not, i mean she's not, she doesn't make fun or she doesn't make it easy.she doesn't need days, she doesn't speak off-the-cuff that what you she's also a private person. if you, how did you separate how difficult and she cannot she is the crack with the ambitions it takes to actually know that you can actually crack the not enough to write an interesting magazine story or book? >> she's really interesting because so much of politics is documentation. and i don't think she'll ever beconsidered one of the great political orators of our age . she, that's not to say she's not bright and articulate and thoughtful and she isn't one of these robotic politicians that are terrified of saying the right thing. they just repeat themselves over and over and won't answer any questions but he is someone who engages in public introspection. he's not going to tell you all the things she's been thinking about herself. you sort of have to figure out and she's not a natural storyteller. that's part of it to read a lot of compelling political speech fire you actually in stories
she's not, i mean she's not, she doesn't make fun or she doesn't make it easy.she doesn't need days, she doesn't speak off-the-cuff that what you she's also a private person. if you, how did you separate how difficult and she cannot she is the crack with the ambitions it takes to actually know that you can actually crack the not enough to write an interesting magazine story or book? >> she's really interesting because so much of politics is documentation. and i don't think she'll ever...
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40
May 18, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN
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eye 40
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year she realized that she was anything but an airhead. she barely slept, and she was liberated from the family responsibilities, she seemed to do nothing but work with a maniacal level of energy. behind her back, they called her the energizer honey. common team,is a her incredible level of energy. by the time she came to congress in 1987, she was 47 and she had raised five children and seen them pretty much out of the house. after being time, done with her family responsibilities, she was a longtime volunteer. but the word airhead was something she had run up against and she ran for chair of the national committee, and it was something that one official said behind her back about her. i think it was symbolic about the perceptions that she had to bite as she rose in politics because she was a well-dressed middle-age woman, and it was not wantpeople to just to take her seriously. it meant that she had to work hard to get people to see her as a substantive person, somebody who knew what she was doing. host: as you point out in the book, back
year she realized that she was anything but an airhead. she barely slept, and she was liberated from the family responsibilities, she seemed to do nothing but work with a maniacal level of energy. behind her back, they called her the energizer honey. common team,is a her incredible level of energy. by the time she came to congress in 1987, she was 47 and she had raised five children and seen them pretty much out of the house. after being time, done with her family responsibilities, she was a...
124
124
May 3, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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that she scared were you scared i will scared she was. my as home is now a villa at the bon cam one child care center in chiang mai thailand her family brought her here 2 years ago when it became apparent she needed 24 hour to hand them rent them again it came with the simple ok yes yes yes true. but this is going on for 10 years and is slowly. taking her apart from me slowly slowly this is like you know saying goodbye in slow motion. and that's just the hard thing about the disease now for us it's worse in the beginning it was bad for her very bad for her because she realized that what happened but now wolf is false it's false it's very hard. to know about you know how you know mother. you know is. your hobby still hope. walter says bringing my eye here was the best option for her but back in switzerland not everyone agrees well i got even letters from school friends of of my wife telling me i'm an idiot to bring her to dispose her here to dispose her yeah. well it's it's not nice if they'd just people don't know anything to have never e
that she scared were you scared i will scared she was. my as home is now a villa at the bon cam one child care center in chiang mai thailand her family brought her here 2 years ago when it became apparent she needed 24 hour to hand them rent them again it came with the simple ok yes yes yes true. but this is going on for 10 years and is slowly. taking her apart from me slowly slowly this is like you know saying goodbye in slow motion. and that's just the hard thing about the disease now for us...
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May 3, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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she cursed him while she was riding the bus and when she got off the bus, she was arrested and sentenced to spend time in jail. but in montgomery, to points several of you have made, there are several documented incidents of women doing exactly what parks did. some of them did more than once. the first one being epsie worthy. who, in 1943, she argued with the driver, she got off the bus, the driver followed her, spit on her, beat her, and according to eyewitness testimony, she gave as good as she got. i don't know what happened to her, but i'm thinking she probably spent time in jail. henrietta brinson sat in front of a white couple on a bus and was targeted by the bus driver, but she avoided jail because the white couple agreed to move. what you need to understand about segregated buses, generally speaking, there are 10 seats in the front and 10 in the back. sorry,nd 16 seats, i'm white, black, then there was a no man's land in the middle. the white people sat in the front. what is important is that bus drivers had police powers. that makes resisting doubly risky. they could do what a p
she cursed him while she was riding the bus and when she got off the bus, she was arrested and sentenced to spend time in jail. but in montgomery, to points several of you have made, there are several documented incidents of women doing exactly what parks did. some of them did more than once. the first one being epsie worthy. who, in 1943, she argued with the driver, she got off the bus, the driver followed her, spit on her, beat her, and according to eyewitness testimony, she gave as good as...
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270
May 21, 2020
05/20
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FOXNEWSW
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she won, it was stolen from her. she clearly wants it. is she considered totally out of the race? >> well, i think, you know, jason nichols, who was such a wonderful person that we get to have on air and learn from. t he kept talking about african-american male, working-class, african-american males, and how they might not just turn out. one of the things that turned out in hillary clinton and a key battleground state like michigan is that african-americans did not turn out to vote for her. he was being polite, but he wasn't really telling us, frankly, what actually happened. and i think every day that we cover this 2020 presidential election it reminds us of just how poor a candidate hillary clinton was for the democrats in 2016. >> tucker: yeah. if you are on television every day, people can smell what you're about. it doesn't matter what you say. it's like "the far side" cartoon, the one about talking to your dog every day and what the dog hears. >> i love that one. >> tucker: yes. blah, blah, blah, ginger. dana, great to see you. >> t
she won, it was stolen from her. she clearly wants it. is she considered totally out of the race? >> well, i think, you know, jason nichols, who was such a wonderful person that we get to have on air and learn from. t he kept talking about african-american male, working-class, african-american males, and how they might not just turn out. one of the things that turned out in hillary clinton and a key battleground state like michigan is that african-americans did not turn out to vote for...
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101
May 18, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 101
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she went to show a house and she is missing."and i still can read that and feel the same pain. >> reporter: police and beverly's family gathered at the property, trying to figure out where she was. >> how was your dad handling everything? >> i felt like he was hard to read. he would sneak away from time to time. you know, get some -- collect his thoughts. >> reporter: then, around 1:00 a.m. -- >> all of a sudden bam, bam, bam -- three texts. >> i hollered at the officer. i said, "come here, man. come here. beverly texted me." >> reporter: word that beverly was texting gave everyone hope. >> i was ecstatic, like i was like, "this is done. her phone had died, she got somewhere, it's charged. it's good." >> reporter: across town, beverly's friends brenda and stacey got texts of their own. >> our phones both started beepin' at the same time with texts. >> and it -- i mean it was -- >> it -- >> like such an eerie feeling. >> uh-huh. >> i was just like, "oh my gosh." >> what was she saying to you two? >> she said, "i'm sorry, my phone
she went to show a house and she is missing."and i still can read that and feel the same pain. >> reporter: police and beverly's family gathered at the property, trying to figure out where she was. >> how was your dad handling everything? >> i felt like he was hard to read. he would sneak away from time to time. you know, get some -- collect his thoughts. >> reporter: then, around 1:00 a.m. -- >> all of a sudden bam, bam, bam -- three texts. >> i...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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>> yes, she felt beautiful. she felt loved. she felt wanted. she felt taken care of. >> reporter: chris also took on the role of stay-at-home dad while heather worked and attended college part-time. >> it took her about ten years to get her degree from college, and it was almost to the day that she graduated from college that everything changed. >> reporter: at one point before graduation, heather tipped the scales at 400 pounds. but diane says that hard-won diploma now became a roadmap for heather, pointing her to a brighter and lighter future. >> she had so much more confidence. she saw a different life for herself. she immediately started working on her weight. >> reporter: and that's when she found a special group of new friends. women like her who joined this high-powered dance exercise class each week to improve their physiques and their lives. cari cooper was heather's dance instructor. >> when you leave your job, you leave that stress behind, you come here and it's like the happy hour. >> reporter: everyone in heather's life noticed tha
>> yes, she felt beautiful. she felt loved. she felt wanted. she felt taken care of. >> reporter: chris also took on the role of stay-at-home dad while heather worked and attended college part-time. >> it took her about ten years to get her degree from college, and it was almost to the day that she graduated from college that everything changed. >> reporter: at one point before graduation, heather tipped the scales at 400 pounds. but diane says that hard-won diploma now...
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56
May 30, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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she said what she thought. one thing barbara and i talked misses bush about, would bring the pictures. she said, "look what i did." and i would say look to me like you sat and read the book to someone like santa claus. she said no, no, it's a children's reading thing. i said you have to have children in it. there was another picture where she was sitting in somebody's, like, some low-level staff office with all this junk around , and i said a picture is supposed to reinforce what your message is, and this one is very confusing because there's all this stuff in this room and i don't know why you are there or anything, and they got better at that, but that was one of the was surprised and all the vice presidential years that she had not learned -- in all the vice presidential years that she had not learned, and i think it was just she had not cared about things like that. ms. drake: i think everyone would agree with me that one of the hardest jobs in this country has got to be that of first lady of the united sta
she said what she thought. one thing barbara and i talked misses bush about, would bring the pictures. she said, "look what i did." and i would say look to me like you sat and read the book to someone like santa claus. she said no, no, it's a children's reading thing. i said you have to have children in it. there was another picture where she was sitting in somebody's, like, some low-level staff office with all this junk around , and i said a picture is supposed to reinforce what your...
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May 2, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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she could be a bit -- she would pull her rank. she was great friend withhenry wilson, a senator and he was not afraid to tell anybody, like rutger, you know, i don't think what you're telling me that senator wilson would approve of. so there was that aspect. and i could go on but i think enough said. they were human beings, real human beings. >> bob, have a question. you have been fascinated by these five women, and they're all notable but at any point had you considered others to include here and essentially runners up who might be worthy of us being aware of? >> that's a -- there are many other women that i could tick off now who had lesser accomplishments in a sense but these were women who for me did extraordinary things over a long period of time and i couldn't find anybody else who had quite that longevity that i was looking for. and how many people -- my wife told me that three is not necessary lay good number. it's too few. you have to do five so i really focuses on doing five, and not to be silly but it turn out those fiv
she could be a bit -- she would pull her rank. she was great friend withhenry wilson, a senator and he was not afraid to tell anybody, like rutger, you know, i don't think what you're telling me that senator wilson would approve of. so there was that aspect. and i could go on but i think enough said. they were human beings, real human beings. >> bob, have a question. you have been fascinated by these five women, and they're all notable but at any point had you considered others to include...
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May 18, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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and she says if she feared if she showed a single chink in her armor, she would never again be effective>> they see she's emotional and that is the focus. it is all about the women thing. >> and they won't respect you anymore? >> right. >> but she did say aloud now that mike was sick, she would be there for him, as she promised, through the good times and the bad. >> she asked to see him through this. she said what kind of wife would i be? >> in sickness and health. >> right. she wasn't going to leave him. >> but ellen said he had no problem leaving her. in fact, mike was spending more and more time away from ellen and his family. he was going back and forth between albuquerque and phoenix. that's where jeep held its continuing education classes in auto mechanics. >> he still wanted to go to training because he had been going to training all along through his work history. >> a two-day trip became three days, then four days, then a week. ellen was becoming increasingly suspicious of what mike was doing on those long trips away from his family and from her. >> i felt hurt and betrayed tha
and she says if she feared if she showed a single chink in her armor, she would never again be effective>> they see she's emotional and that is the focus. it is all about the women thing. >> and they won't respect you anymore? >> right. >> but she did say aloud now that mike was sick, she would be there for him, as she promised, through the good times and the bad. >> she asked to see him through this. she said what kind of wife would i be? >> in sickness and...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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how she is demoted into this position of no authority within the organizations that she how she -- she is amazing in her survival skills as a leader because when she domestically, she moves her movement internationally. and she owns the international family planning movement. so i think it is true. i think the gloria steinems and martin luther kings, the 1960's might have been the last generation as we are seeing with occupy wall street that there is not one leader that has emerged and it's a populist movement. that's the time. turn tonk we should now our long-suffering audience. i have one joke to tell before you get your questions. i did a book on the stevenson family and i learned a lot of from adlai stevenson. he always says when it is night and you were talking to a group and you come to the end of what sayare going to say, finally to give them some hope. so get your hands up. i saw some hands. >> i'm so grateful for you writing this book. i was at a screening of a documentary of margaret sanger in the past six months. i'm not sure if you are aware of it. to use the word situate h
how she is demoted into this position of no authority within the organizations that she how she -- she is amazing in her survival skills as a leader because when she domestically, she moves her movement internationally. and she owns the international family planning movement. so i think it is true. i think the gloria steinems and martin luther kings, the 1960's might have been the last generation as we are seeing with occupy wall street that there is not one leader that has emerged and it's a...
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May 23, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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>> who was she? where did she come from? how did she get to albuquerque?ll of those questions had been answered as of yet. >> was it possible ida lopez's list was just the tip of the iceberg? >> it's desert. there could be very realistically a lot of bodies. >> this, in a way, suggests maybe there are women out there who aren't on any list. >> that's a possibility. could be others. there could be others. >> when "dateline" continues. . >> when "dateline" continues. thanks for sharing your diy haircuts. thanks for sharing your savage moves, and especially your awkward ones. thanks for sharing your cute kids. and your adorable pets. now it's our turn to share... with the geico giveback. a 15% credit on car and motorcycle policies for both current and new customers. and because we're committed for the long haul, the credit lasts your full policy term. so thanks again. one good share deserves another. could another come aroundot, sothe corner.in. or could it play out differently? i wanted to help protect myself. my doctor recommended eliquis. eliquis is proven
>> who was she? where did she come from? how did she get to albuquerque?ll of those questions had been answered as of yet. >> was it possible ida lopez's list was just the tip of the iceberg? >> it's desert. there could be very realistically a lot of bodies. >> this, in a way, suggests maybe there are women out there who aren't on any list. >> that's a possibility. could be others. there could be others. >> when "dateline" continues. . >> when...
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May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN
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she was able to be with us. she loved the statue. she loved the statue. her family was just in awe, and it was a crystallizing moment that katherine johnson regardless which he does will be a part of west virginia state university forever. today her story is inspiring people around the world. it is said katherine liked to count everything. when she was younger she counted rocks in the yard, counted the steps to church, she counted everything she could get her mind around, and when we dedicated to this statute to her in 2018 on her 100th birthday, i told catherine i knew something she could not count and that was the number of people that she has inspired. so that is the katherine johnson story and it is my happy to young men and women of all races and all economic back drops will take more time to learn about this incredible american icon. >> four, three, two, one, zero and liftoff. >> you have been watching c-span cities tour programs on the history space. our cities tour travels the country exploring the american story. with the support of cable provide
she was able to be with us. she loved the statue. she loved the statue. her family was just in awe, and it was a crystallizing moment that katherine johnson regardless which he does will be a part of west virginia state university forever. today her story is inspiring people around the world. it is said katherine liked to count everything. when she was younger she counted rocks in the yard, counted the steps to church, she counted everything she could get her mind around, and when we dedicated...
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434
May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN
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eye 434
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she was as radiant and beautiful at 99 then she was when she walked on campus in the early 30's. when i left that 99th birthday, i asked myself, "as people learn more and more about katherine sheson, as the university loved so dear, we have to do something to help recognize her and make sure history never forgets how profound she was in helping nasa when the space race." my facultym of together and we started brainstorming. i said, "listen, we will place a statue right here on our campus, her alma mater." eight to nine months when we started planning. the goal was to do it on her 100th birthday. [applause] dr. katherine coleman goebel johnson, you are no longer and never again hidden. [applause] so, on august 20 5, 2018, we had katherine -- so, on august 25, 2018, we had katherine johnson and supporters on the campus. 2, one! 3, [applause] >> on that day it was beautiful. she was able to be with us. she loved the statue. her family was in. it was a crystallizing moment that katherine johnson regardless of what she does from here on out, she will be part of west virginia state uni
she was as radiant and beautiful at 99 then she was when she walked on campus in the early 30's. when i left that 99th birthday, i asked myself, "as people learn more and more about katherine sheson, as the university loved so dear, we have to do something to help recognize her and make sure history never forgets how profound she was in helping nasa when the space race." my facultym of together and we started brainstorming. i said, "listen, we will place a statue right here on...
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124
May 17, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 124
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and then she eventually gets the gun and she empties it. >> and then she said she ran back into the house the gun inside the grandfather clock, and called 911. >> she has no idea he's dead. he's down, but she thinks he's getting up. women in these relationships have this superman complex they give their abusers. >> so yes, she lied about the prowler, said bamieh, did it laujtly, her conditioned response to his abuse. but once the sxwlienktsd bamt spt ieh, their minds were made up that she was a cold calculating killer. so when police found those clothes shoved in the laundry room, they believed it must have been jane's attempt to hide evidence of their crime. but those clothes when tested only had a tiny fragment of gunshot residue, and police never bothered to test the pajamas jane was wearing when she showed up. but bamieh did. and the tests revealed the pajamas were covered in gunshot residue, proving, said bamieh, that jane was wearing those pajamas when she fired the gun. >> so it all supports her story? >> it all does. >> and as for the claim jane jumped up to wash her hands before
and then she eventually gets the gun and she empties it. >> and then she said she ran back into the house the gun inside the grandfather clock, and called 911. >> she has no idea he's dead. he's down, but she thinks he's getting up. women in these relationships have this superman complex they give their abusers. >> so yes, she lied about the prowler, said bamieh, did it laujtly, her conditioned response to his abuse. but once the sxwlienktsd bamt spt ieh, their minds were made...
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59
May 23, 2020
05/20
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KGO
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eye 59
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she was sweet. she was kind. she treated everyone with respect. laugh a lot. >> outgoing? >> definitely. definitely she was outgoing. >> soccer, swimming, basketball. she was -- yeah, she was into a lot of sports and very outgoing with that. >> she already had a boyfriend, but he was very persistent in pursuing her and finally cracked that veneer that she had. >> raven abaroa, he can be charming. he can be charismatic. he will win you over. he will make the room like him. >> what would she say about him? >> she was just was just infatuated. i mean, he has this going for him. he was going to be successful. >> he tried very hard to make everybody believe he had a perfect life. >> i was wary of him, and my first impression was, why is he trying so hard? but i thought, you know, okay, janet likes him. this is her boyfriend. >> he made janet happy, and i loved seeing that. >> raven talked about his courtship with janet to a local north carolina news program. >> she was beautiful, attractive. i just felt so much comfort when i was with her. >> it's the
she was sweet. she was kind. she treated everyone with respect. laugh a lot. >> outgoing? >> definitely. definitely she was outgoing. >> soccer, swimming, basketball. she was -- yeah, she was into a lot of sports and very outgoing with that. >> she already had a boyfriend, but he was very persistent in pursuing her and finally cracked that veneer that she had. >> raven abaroa, he can be charming. he can be charismatic. he will win you over. he will make the room...
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May 25, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 72
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she was -- she got early in 1961 congress to pass the law that she mentioned, can which didn't just protecthe collection, but it established the museum character that the public rooms of the white house must be maintained in perpetuity. it still has to function as a house for the family, and the secret service still has a lot of say about the security issues, but the museum character was what she was so interested in grasping. then she created the curator's office also in 1961 with the idea that you needed a professional staff there to collect, preserve and interpret and conserve the pieces that she found in the house and the things that she was adding to the house. we actually have the dichotomy in our collection today. we still refer to the old collection, which was the stuff that mrs. kennedy found that had survived the 19th century auctions and the giving away of official furnishings, and the new collection was everything she was selecting. but those things to a large extent were older than the things she already had in the so-called old collection. but she had lots of people coming to
she was -- she got early in 1961 congress to pass the law that she mentioned, can which didn't just protecthe collection, but it established the museum character that the public rooms of the white house must be maintained in perpetuity. it still has to function as a house for the family, and the secret service still has a lot of say about the security issues, but the museum character was what she was so interested in grasping. then she created the curator's office also in 1961 with the idea...
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May 11, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 91
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she's terrified, and she's in extreme pain. thank you, you can open your eyes. >> reporter: the final minutes of a young woman's life detailed in a tennessee courtroom. a tragedy that devastated her family and friends. >> this cannot be happening. >> it was really the worst day of my entire life. >> who would do this to our friend brooke. it was awful. it was horrible. >> reporter: secrets exposed, but would justice be served? >> it was never ending, never ending. and i was so frustrated. >> reporter: most people who knew brooke morris remember her radiance and zest for life. >> she was always, always, always dancing everywhere she went. >> reporter: kaitlyn okal met brooke when they were teenagers, growing up just outside knoxville, tennessee brooke the yin to kaitlyn's yang. >> we kind of balanced each other out. she was -- a girly girl and i was more the tomboy. so i'd go to her house. and change into a thousand outfits and try on makeup and do our hair. and then she'd come into my house. and we'd ride four wheelers and play
she's terrified, and she's in extreme pain. thank you, you can open your eyes. >> reporter: the final minutes of a young woman's life detailed in a tennessee courtroom. a tragedy that devastated her family and friends. >> this cannot be happening. >> it was really the worst day of my entire life. >> who would do this to our friend brooke. it was awful. it was horrible. >> reporter: secrets exposed, but would justice be served? >> it was never ending, never...
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May 6, 2020
05/20
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LINKTV
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she's planning to build a transgender football team, making use of her deep involvement she had withtball when she was a man. >> pauline has found her true identity. she's taken off the armor and rebuilt her life. her relationship with her mother is changing too. >> once a month, pauline heads for a small town 400 kilometers south of bangkok. >> every visit to see em and their daughter lasts several days. pauline also supports them financially. >> pauline's daughter, now 8, is back from school. ♪ ♪ tothe french government set announce a plan to help the country's cultural sector. it employs more than one million people, some taking part in a videocononference today with the presidents. -- the president. high schools reopen in the chinese city of wuhan. desks spaced one meter apart and temperatures checked.
she's planning to build a transgender football team, making use of her deep involvement she had withtball when she was a man. >> pauline has found her true identity. she's taken off the armor and rebuilt her life. her relationship with her mother is changing too. >> once a month, pauline heads for a small town 400 kilometers south of bangkok. >> every visit to see em and their daughter lasts several days. pauline also supports them financially. >> pauline's daughter, now...
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May 26, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 43
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when she was wounded she treated her own wound so that she wouldn't be found. she got sick, i don't know if it was the flu or whatever, and she was examined by a doctor who discovered she was a woman and was discharged. the key thing is, they did just discharge her. she got a pension, probably the first women in history to get a pension. in fact, when deborah passed away her husband petition the government for benefit, which in fact he got. regrettably, he was dead by the time they granted it to him. but it is quite a story. she served as robert. another incredible character is doctor mary walker. she was a surgeon, trained in new york. the army is crying for surgeons, to come and to help and take care of the sick and wounded during the civil war. so, she comes in presents or self but they don't want her. why do you think? because she is a woman. she persisted though, in fact, she volunteered her services for sometime. finally threw her persistence they hired her as a contract surgeon. she served in tennessee. she was taken prisoner by the confederate forces, h
when she was wounded she treated her own wound so that she wouldn't be found. she got sick, i don't know if it was the flu or whatever, and she was examined by a doctor who discovered she was a woman and was discharged. the key thing is, they did just discharge her. she got a pension, probably the first women in history to get a pension. in fact, when deborah passed away her husband petition the government for benefit, which in fact he got. regrettably, he was dead by the time they granted it...
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May 30, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 67
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but she had lots of people coming to the white house because she made the public aware she was makingto a museum. it increased nationwide the interest in historic preservation in old houses and the contents of old houses. so one of her early acquisitions was this little engraving -- i am not advancing after all of our conversations. there we go. sorry, wrong button. this 1840 engraving was acquired for the white house collection in 1961. the engraver entitled the piece "all creation going to the white house," because even in 1840, they were envisioning the public was attracted to the white house. at that period, it was attractive because people like andrew jackson were living in the building. --1961, acting kennedy gave gave a whole new level of attraction as a historic site and trying to the presidency and a museum of important american objects. following through her tour route, you see in the upper left-hand corner, the east room as she found it in 1961. not too much has changed from what theodore roosevelt had done to the room in 1902. the chandeliers, the tour shares, the cornices
but she had lots of people coming to the white house because she made the public aware she was makingto a museum. it increased nationwide the interest in historic preservation in old houses and the contents of old houses. so one of her early acquisitions was this little engraving -- i am not advancing after all of our conversations. there we go. sorry, wrong button. this 1840 engraving was acquired for the white house collection in 1961. the engraver entitled the piece "all creation going...
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May 2, 2020
05/20
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FOXNEWSW
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she's not a conservative -- is she still a democrat?she told me she doesn't consider herself a democrat anymore and does not consider herself a republican, she's going to sit out of this presidential election, e she's t going to vote for either party and she told me that she does not see herself participating in any national election anymore. she plans to vote and some of her local elections but this whole process and how she has been treated has turned her off to voting for the democratic party at the national level. >> tucker: i think that's totally fair. this is gotten almost no coverage, has she been attacked? >> she told me that she has received threats, she haste received threatening messages and emails and notes on twitter, she is active on twitter, she has received many threats and she's concerned about this and concerned about where they're coming from. that's something we are looking into as well. one of the other things that she is clear that she wants to do anything she can to come forward forward. she filed a police report
she's not a conservative -- is she still a democrat?she told me she doesn't consider herself a democrat anymore and does not consider herself a republican, she's going to sit out of this presidential election, e she's t going to vote for either party and she told me that she does not see herself participating in any national election anymore. she plans to vote and some of her local elections but this whole process and how she has been treated has turned her off to voting for the democratic...
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she had our teeth taken out and she didn't have 85 and she was younger than i am now and she was my older sister so. i think about what she went through with health issues because of her take. are important. oh my god she'll be seen to by a young student soon to complete his medical. degree because reaching so rania has had time to familiarize himself with the job or you know there are only 2 hours to extract the 1st part. i was right there 15 to you to go to keep us up here so if you are. here you can yeah it's pretty good to hear. he will spend a quarter of an hour removing siring his tooth his 16th of the day. you feel. like i have a big mouth. but there's no time to take a breather here so rainy and now proceeds to the locker rooms i got was around back here because this is a bad day where i'm thankful for everything i had dental pers this is studio like the rest of the temporary facility it's run by volunteers and funded by donations will that help wait a bit more likely it's the last. thursday patients have dental impressions made in this room and next to a new set of teeth is creat
she had our teeth taken out and she didn't have 85 and she was younger than i am now and she was my older sister so. i think about what she went through with health issues because of her take. are important. oh my god she'll be seen to by a young student soon to complete his medical. degree because reaching so rania has had time to familiarize himself with the job or you know there are only 2 hours to extract the 1st part. i was right there 15 to you to go to keep us up here so if you are. here...
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May 1, 2020
05/20
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LINKTV
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she has a goal she hopes to realize after workiking in japa. >> as the weekend came to an end, she headsack to school. >> bye! >> bye-bye, love you. >> two weeks later, she passed the specified skills test for the food industry. now the only thing standing in her way is the red tape stretching between japan and the philippines. the u.n. secrcretary general condemns the lack ofof global leadership during the coronavirus s pandemic. -- obviousviously that the international community is divided when it is more important than ever to be united. barbara: this is al jazeera, live from london. also coming up on the program, an investigation begins in new york after dozens of bodies are discovered in rented trucks outside of funeral home. pastor the p, u.n. prime minister is
she has a goal she hopes to realize after workiking in japa. >> as the weekend came to an end, she headsack to school. >> bye! >> bye-bye, love you. >> two weeks later, she passed the specified skills test for the food industry. now the only thing standing in her way is the red tape stretching between japan and the philippines. the u.n. secrcretary general condemns the lack ofof global leadership during the coronavirus s pandemic. -- obviousviously that the international...
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46
May 24, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 46
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and she did. that is what the book was about. i also know that isn't a permanent solution into the larger issues, that is the point of this whole book is what it means to live with other systemic failure, what it means to live as a society with these issues that can't be repaired by individuals or at least individuals who don't have the same last name so it was this tricky line i would have to walk because i did care about her and we were so close and i was thinking last night when i couldn't sleep about a book called all of our ten. she felt for her protagonist baby and her baby cared for her and they lived in this communal way and maybe if my daughter had been, that seems like a solution in some ways but i don't think so because the whole point was. between the dispassionate journalism and compassionate journalism. when i was worried about her son freezing during a cold winter in which he didn't have a snowsuit and she asked her father to fight alongside with a snowsuit for christmas and i knew
and she did. that is what the book was about. i also know that isn't a permanent solution into the larger issues, that is the point of this whole book is what it means to live with other systemic failure, what it means to live as a society with these issues that can't be repaired by individuals or at least individuals who don't have the same last name so it was this tricky line i would have to walk because i did care about her and we were so close and i was thinking last night when i couldn't...
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jill and i had got on well with us now she knew she had never been released. from the area and on the morning of june 29th 1045 at 6 o'clock i was transported in a van with 7 other prisoners to a berlin airfield and put on a cargo plane to moscow on arrival we were immediately taken in a police van to loop younker prison and put in solitary confinement my cell was very small just 7 paces long with water running down the black painted walls. when you can you myatt new school she didn't know how long they would keep her there or what she was accused of. all the new the new mining but she didn't understand why she was there so what is after all. a decent thing that i spent 6 years in solitary confinement in august 1051 they charged me with helping a bush was state prolonging the war by participating in hitler's dental health care that they said i should have killed hitler for example by breaking a bottle over his head during treatment that way i would have saved the world. and done it as an event. after 6 years in a secret k.g.b. prison and there followed an absu
jill and i had got on well with us now she knew she had never been released. from the area and on the morning of june 29th 1045 at 6 o'clock i was transported in a van with 7 other prisoners to a berlin airfield and put on a cargo plane to moscow on arrival we were immediately taken in a police van to loop younker prison and put in solitary confinement my cell was very small just 7 paces long with water running down the black painted walls. when you can you myatt new school she didn't know how...
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May 24, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 57
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pegye, you know, she -- when she sets her sight on something, she's going to make it happen. it developed really quickly, really, really, quickly. >> reporter: within a year they were married. within four years they had three beautiful kids. pegye and eric went into business together. she opened up her own physical therapy business and eric, a computer whiz, managed the technical side of their venture which quickly became very profitable. >> her business was doin' good. and she was happily married. >> reporter: and the happy couple was also happily spending a lot of money. on a german sports car, italian clothing and a spectacular bluffside home in newport beach. >> they were the little dream story. beautiful girl, good-looking guy, drive nice cars, beautiful children. >> reporter: until that summer day in 1997, when the unimaginable happened. >> male, kind of distraught, said that his wife fell overboard. >> reporter: it was a boating accident, said eric, and the coast guard agreed. something they see all too often. but soon, secrets emerged that would make some people wonde
pegye, you know, she -- when she sets her sight on something, she's going to make it happen. it developed really quickly, really, really, quickly. >> reporter: within a year they were married. within four years they had three beautiful kids. pegye and eric went into business together. she opened up her own physical therapy business and eric, a computer whiz, managed the technical side of their venture which quickly became very profitable. >> her business was doin' good. and she was...
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May 25, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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she was killed? >> we got the call at 7:15 a.m. so between 4:30 a.m. and 7:00. >> the male friend, a college student, was the last known person to see jamie alive. the detective paid him a visit. >> he was upset. obviously. they were friends. and had been for some time. >> the friend's grief seemed genuine, but something was peculiar. when investigators asked for a dna sample -- >> he said no. >> no? >> of course, we wanted to know why. was he the killer or was he not? >> the detective was determined to answer that question. so, he put the young man under surveillance, followed him to a local restaurant. >> and are you hidden somewhere in the restaurant? >> i'm kind of back in a corner, yeah. >> he watched the student have a few drinks, and when he left, the detective snagged the dirty beer mugs and sent them out for dna testing. the results would take weeks, leaving a town full of young people on edge. >> dads and moms were telling their college age kids, be alert everywhere you go. go with people w
she was killed? >> we got the call at 7:15 a.m. so between 4:30 a.m. and 7:00. >> the male friend, a college student, was the last known person to see jamie alive. the detective paid him a visit. >> he was upset. obviously. they were friends. and had been for some time. >> the friend's grief seemed genuine, but something was peculiar. when investigators asked for a dna sample -- >> he said no. >> no? >> of course, we wanted to know why. was he the...
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43
May 27, 2020
05/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 43
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be attacked the way she is and targeted the way she is, mischaracterize the way she's treated and so forth. >> i would not say i got a sense of vulnerability, i did feel like she let her guard down enough to get a little snippy with me which was nice which she finally felt like she could do that. but she is not an emotive person personally, and there's something generational about that, the generation she comes from being born in 1940, she is now 80 years old and comes from a much more formal era, particular for women. i think as you alluded to, you cannot separate the way she carries herself from how she has been treated and turned into the bogeyman and the punching bag and republicans with the 50-foot pelosi where she's a rampaging giant stopping on people and politics -- i'm not saying any of that is necessarily unfair. i think when you're the subject of the onslaught, you do build yourself a suit of armor. shiva described herself that way, i put on a suit of armor and then i go to bed, you throw punching take a punch. she sees politics as combat and she is renowned for her toughn
be attacked the way she is and targeted the way she is, mischaracterize the way she's treated and so forth. >> i would not say i got a sense of vulnerability, i did feel like she let her guard down enough to get a little snippy with me which was nice which she finally felt like she could do that. but she is not an emotive person personally, and there's something generational about that, the generation she comes from being born in 1940, she is now 80 years old and comes from a much more...
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is that she's a good person. with their right. but when i'm dressed as a muslim. on which i miss colors things just make my family. i could go on wearing it but i don't with the queer muslim name we're still in love. looking at the problem isn't the religion but the people if you convert to islam and keep on wearing colored clothing people might think that you're not committed to islam or have even abandoned it. and actually muslim on and that could antagonize religious extremists without the beginning of the vatican as you don't even get those if you thought there was some other films how do you feel about your daughter converting to islam . you know local with. you the guy is that i was and i his and i have to accept it she's my daughter yes he said peik ip she's still a good person and that's what matters most of the libretto is i'm with you to enjoy me here during ramadan i try to relieve her of her chores so that she still always wanted to help me in kit what. i want what's best for her and with them she's m
is that she's a good person. with their right. but when i'm dressed as a muslim. on which i miss colors things just make my family. i could go on wearing it but i don't with the queer muslim name we're still in love. looking at the problem isn't the religion but the people if you convert to islam and keep on wearing colored clothing people might think that you're not committed to islam or have even abandoned it. and actually muslim on and that could antagonize religious extremists without the...
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May 2, 2020
05/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 29
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a few times that she you know yeah she got lucky she changed she would and should go out in the evenings with you know in a 90 a couple times and you know luckily the neighbors found her border back into the house you know if you got her son michael and daughter in law emily looked at care homes in the u.k. we did take it to a cat home and sorry to have a look at is an extremely nice high end facility but it was a facility. it was like a hospital ward the rooms were very nice but they were small and there was a whole hospital beds. you know how could a hospital signs up the exit signs you know you have that feeling smell of of detergent. and a couple of guests asked us if we could help them leave. they feared mary wouldn't survive in such a sterile environment then they heard about a kid resort in thailand. what was mary's reaction when you brought up before perhaps going to thailand of course since you mentioned. face and we show the pictures and the resorts and. there's interesting features excited. mary might now be far away but michael makes sure she's not forgotten so this is the pi
a few times that she you know yeah she got lucky she changed she would and should go out in the evenings with you know in a 90 a couple times and you know luckily the neighbors found her border back into the house you know if you got her son michael and daughter in law emily looked at care homes in the u.k. we did take it to a cat home and sorry to have a look at is an extremely nice high end facility but it was a facility. it was like a hospital ward the rooms were very nice but they were...
1,330
1.3K
May 11, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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she is feisty. she is strong. she's tiny and petite, 120 pounds. let me tell you, she can run those mountains. she is a strong person. if anybody can survive this, she can. >> the missing woman was deceptively strong, not just an experienced hiker but an accomplished martial arts enthusiast as well. >> a blue belt in aikido and a blue belt in judo. >> so take her on at your peril? >> absolutely. she would fight you. she would come home and tell me, i threw this 220-pound man. beat him up today in class. >> by now, with half of georgia looking for this gary hilton, authorities outside tallahassee, florida, to the south were wondering about his connections with the missing woman there. it was then that the detectives got solid information about another killing in a national forest. >> we were in our command post and a detective walked in and said that they had a case, took place in north carolina, involving a husband and wife, that the wife had been murdered in the piska national forest. >> that detective was working an unsolved case that had cops in
she is feisty. she is strong. she's tiny and petite, 120 pounds. let me tell you, she can run those mountains. she is a strong person. if anybody can survive this, she can. >> the missing woman was deceptively strong, not just an experienced hiker but an accomplished martial arts enthusiast as well. >> a blue belt in aikido and a blue belt in judo. >> so take her on at your peril? >> absolutely. she would fight you. she would come home and tell me, i threw this 220-pound...
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85
May 10, 2020
05/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 85
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had she been attacked? had she used it?> i knew, right then, that she absolutely never made it into her house. >> reporter: something had happened in that garage. something very disturbing and it wasn't looking good for rising attorney melissa lewis. >> coming up -- >> where is melissa? >> that's the million dollar question at this point. >> the answer comes all too soon when "dateline" continues. (deep breath) breathe better, sleep better. breathe right. later in life. from an infection human papillomavirus. i knew how widespread hpv is. and while hpv clears for most, that might not be the case for her. i knew there was a vaccine available that could help protect her before she could be exposed to hpv. i knew. so i talked to my child's doctor. now that you know that hpv can lead to certain cancers, don't wait. talk to your child's doctor today. protect your pet with the #1 name in flea and tick protection. frontline plus. trusted by vets for nearly 20 years. frontline plus. who've got their eczema under control.rs, with le
had she been attacked? had she used it?> i knew, right then, that she absolutely never made it into her house. >> reporter: something had happened in that garage. something very disturbing and it wasn't looking good for rising attorney melissa lewis. >> coming up -- >> where is melissa? >> that's the million dollar question at this point. >> the answer comes all too soon when "dateline" continues. (deep breath) breathe better, sleep better. breathe...
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she's headed for back surgeries dr nichols was liza's doctor for 7 years she was the 1st to fall into the trap when i 1st started seeing her i thought she was going to be ok and she was giving me pain medicine to help my back but as the years go by course your body gets used to that medicine so that it doesn't work you know you used to could take one pill. you know and now you're having to take 2 or 3 pain pills because the pain is so bad. so it just increased and it's just a vicious cycle because you know you've got to have the medicine but you know you don't want to have to take that much medicine but you can't i could work and do my job if i didn't have those. lisa had her own addiction what she didn't know is that her daughter was doing the same thing for 3 years chelsea had diabetes which causes muscular pains it was her time to consult with dr nichols. night i asked her about the quantity of medicine she was given her and her response to me was chelsea was an adult that she could talk to me about chelsea's medical but she could talk to me about chelsea's diabetes but she wouldn'
she's headed for back surgeries dr nichols was liza's doctor for 7 years she was the 1st to fall into the trap when i 1st started seeing her i thought she was going to be ok and she was giving me pain medicine to help my back but as the years go by course your body gets used to that medicine so that it doesn't work you know you used to could take one pill. you know and now you're having to take 2 or 3 pain pills because the pain is so bad. so it just increased and it's just a vicious cycle...
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can hear anything in there so she can oh she can't yes good. do you hear me well you hear me when you're. so newish asking lives in kansas city her granddaughter leah is a seattle based filmmaker and she's making a documentary about her grandmother's past and more recent past follow sonja you know oh you did i'm curious how do you think those experiences of your youth those experiences that are so hard to imagine for most of us how how they shaped this woman that you are 7 decades later. never. to tell you how i mean. it was a miracle. out. i am not on. this. time. last i'll have time any time so. that's pretty chill yeah ok 32 you know this other get out if they have been coming here for 14 years this is a place like not only does he just say ok say that we met someone and i think it's been 2530 years he's going to come. down. i usually have a good. drag i say if someone doesn't ask me at all say it to. me they can do it you better bet. it's better ok. look for. thanks. bye. you are no offense but you're no longer a young woman in fact you're
can hear anything in there so she can oh she can't yes good. do you hear me well you hear me when you're. so newish asking lives in kansas city her granddaughter leah is a seattle based filmmaker and she's making a documentary about her grandmother's past and more recent past follow sonja you know oh you did i'm curious how do you think those experiences of your youth those experiences that are so hard to imagine for most of us how how they shaped this woman that you are 7 decades later. never....
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also feels uneasy over the prospect that should she become infected she might not be allowed to have anybody with her in the hospital. as things stand corona patients are not allowed visitors in hospital. on april 15th all of germany was looking to berlin. the government announced the 1st easing up of the lockdown. in may pupils would be going back to school and smaller businesses and hair salons would be allowed to reopen. the shop and even i've got a team of 9 people. and now i have to go back to their normal lives. not within the limits of what's possible. exact and that means higher odds of my catching the virus to hunt. so i have to assume that i'll be getting it eventually. to all and all i can do is hope that adequate health care measures can be taken when i fall ill. and that could finish eckankar. by april 28th 156000 people in germany had caught the corona virus and the infection rate was climbing again. by then each infected person was passing it on to one other person on average. catcha felt like she was climbing the walls. after 6 weeks indoors she ventured out among oth
also feels uneasy over the prospect that should she become infected she might not be allowed to have anybody with her in the hospital. as things stand corona patients are not allowed visitors in hospital. on april 15th all of germany was looking to berlin. the government announced the 1st easing up of the lockdown. in may pupils would be going back to school and smaller businesses and hair salons would be allowed to reopen. the shop and even i've got a team of 9 people. and now i have to go...
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151
May 8, 2020
05/20
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CNNW
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eye 151
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this is one day after she had taken the test and she had tested negative. this is the day we learned one of the president's own personal valets was infected so we'll get to that in just a moment. like right now to the white house and kaitlan collins for the breaking news. and the office investigating the whistle-blower complaint of richard bright determined there is reason to believe he was removed as retaliation and is recommending he is reinstated during the investigation according to his lawyers. kaitlan, tell me more about that. >> reporter: yeah, this is a statement we just got from rick bright's attorneys. of course he was the vaccine chief who was leading that government agency and was removed from his job, tried to be put in a different job but then he filed that complaint this week saying that basically he believed he was moved out of the job for retaliation. he wants his job back, that is why he's filing the complaint and this is a notable development because the investigative office looking into the complaint he filed said that early on they dete
this is one day after she had taken the test and she had tested negative. this is the day we learned one of the president's own personal valets was infected so we'll get to that in just a moment. like right now to the white house and kaitlan collins for the breaking news. and the office investigating the whistle-blower complaint of richard bright determined there is reason to believe he was removed as retaliation and is recommending he is reinstated during the investigation according to his...
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May 22, 2020
05/20
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KGO
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her best. >> no matter how much she was going through it, she always made a way. >> in late march, she and her daughter michelan both got sick and went to the doctor. >> she was telling me about headaches, she normally didn't have headaches. she went to the doctor. he gave her a z pack for flu. never tested her for covid. >> she also had diabetes, when her symptoms didn't get any better, shalandra took her family to the hospital. >> we had to almost fight for a test. we was constantly saying we've been exposed. so i just had to tell them that i was diabetic. >> home to nearly 3 million people, mississippi is the poorest state in the union. studies show blacks get inferior health care and suffer negative stereo typing. in nearly every category, mississippi consistently ranks dead last or close to it. shalandra's results came back positive. two days later, later, later, l, her mother fall. when the ambulance arrived she was still responsive, but within an hour her heart stopped. >> this is what really, truly hurts me and gets me. she left home. i would give it no more than minutes. they
her best. >> no matter how much she was going through it, she always made a way. >> in late march, she and her daughter michelan both got sick and went to the doctor. >> she was telling me about headaches, she normally didn't have headaches. she went to the doctor. he gave her a z pack for flu. never tested her for covid. >> she also had diabetes, when her symptoms didn't get any better, shalandra took her family to the hospital. >> we had to almost fight for a...
482
482
May 1, 2020
05/20
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LINKTV
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she sasaid she tola a friendtt the time.ave spoken to that friend a lot step interviewed her and her story winds up exactly -- i find no inconsistencies with thatat story. her brothther has gone on thehe recordrd with me anand business insider anand others and confird parts of her story. he says he was the e younger brother by s seven years, so o e doesn't think k he was told the fullll story because he e was a younger brother stop but he definitely remembers being told joe biden had his hand inside her close or up her cloththes. and lorraine sanchez, , who also wenent on the record,d, she 1994-1996 inarara califofornia and says s at the e that tara arrived there, she was complaining about h having -- experienced sexualal harassmtt t the hands of her former boss in d.c. i asksked tara, did yoyou expere xual harassmenent from anyone elsese in d.c.? she saidid, n no, only exexperid it within the biden offffice by the hands of joeoe biden. a a number of voicices there -- there are other people, too, byy the way. ii s spoke with
she sasaid she tola a friendtt the time.ave spoken to that friend a lot step interviewed her and her story winds up exactly -- i find no inconsistencies with thatat story. her brothther has gone on thehe recordrd with me anand business insider anand others and confird parts of her story. he says he was the e younger brother by s seven years, so o e doesn't think k he was told the fullll story because he e was a younger brother stop but he definitely remembers being told joe biden had his hand...