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Aug 4, 2014
08/14
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most facilities like spring creek are operating in maximum capacity.e the overcrowding, about a third of alaska's inmates are sent to private facilities in arizona. that's our report. thanks for watching. i'm john seigenthaler >>> next on "meet the press," our focus is on the search for solutions to key crises around the u.s. and the world. >>> the first ever known ebola patient on u.s. soil is now being treated at an atlanta hospital. what's his prognosis? and how is the u.s. government responding? i'll ask the head of the centers for disease control. >>> no end in sight to the war in the middle east. strong backi ining for israel f president obama. >>> plus, your government at work, not working. the most do-nothing congress ever heads for vacation. tempers flare on the house floor. will anything get done on t
most facilities like spring creek are operating in maximum capacity.e the overcrowding, about a third of alaska's inmates are sent to private facilities in arizona. that's our report. thanks for watching. i'm john seigenthaler >>> next on "meet the press," our focus is on the search for solutions to key crises around the u.s. and the world. >>> the first ever known ebola patient on u.s. soil is now being treated at an atlanta hospital. what's his prognosis? and how...
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Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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that she wanted to attend and palm springs. i took off work and drove her down. i don't know, i guess i spoke up and said something. the next thing i know is we have not election, a yearly election. call the next day saying that i had been elected as a member of the tribal council. i was floored. i couldn't believe it. in our localtart politics. >> she transformed this tribe in a way that no one can deny. the ramifications of her efforts and palm springs have many impacts across the country. what she was doing here was setting in motion guidelines for modern governments that would development,mic which is what the tribes desperately needed. she transformed this tribe into one of the richest tribes in the country by virtue of her efforts. >> i grew up in palm springs, california. in 1921. was born i was born in section 14, which is in downtown palm springs. parents had a motor court there. kids and going to school, and a regular life. it was interesting because of the fact that i had joined the women's republican club and was an
that she wanted to attend and palm springs. i took off work and drove her down. i don't know, i guess i spoke up and said something. the next thing i know is we have not election, a yearly election. call the next day saying that i had been elected as a member of the tribal council. i was floored. i couldn't believe it. in our localtart politics. >> she transformed this tribe in a way that no one can deny. the ramifications of her efforts and palm springs have many impacts across the...
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Aug 14, 2014
08/14
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>> there is a bloody springs.ssippi and -- close to alab >> you don't even know. >> i don't know. >> you don't know where it is. >> it's real, though. i'm sure people are watching from bloody springs and lovely. it was named bloody springs the rumor has it because of the civil war. >> oh, my gosh. >> yeah. fun. >> back across to kathie lee. >> good morning. lovely lady came the farthest from manhattan. author and poet edgar alan poe is said to haunt multiple locales of what city? newark, new jersey, charleston, south carolina, washington, d.c., or baltimore, maryland? >> i'm going to guess baltimore, maryland. >> yeah. you almost didn't. >> that was an excellent quick change. baltimore? >> yes. his family is from baltimore. he lived there a period of time and this bar, the last place he was seen drinking at called the horse you came in on supposedly is haunted by him. live show from there. >> kathie lee, by the way, tim says he's -- kathie lee, can you hear me? >> yeah. >> is obsessed with your bathtub. >> i am. >
>> there is a bloody springs.ssippi and -- close to alab >> you don't even know. >> i don't know. >> you don't know where it is. >> it's real, though. i'm sure people are watching from bloody springs and lovely. it was named bloody springs the rumor has it because of the civil war. >> oh, my gosh. >> yeah. fun. >> back across to kathie lee. >> good morning. lovely lady came the farthest from manhattan. author and poet edgar alan poe is said...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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and spring hill kind of went ahead and did it quietly. and so in martin luther king's letter from a birmingham jail he mentioned springfield college as one of the places that had inspiration and tried to do the right thing. i just want to call attention to the fact that in addition to those dramatic headlines where you saw police dogs and you saw the bombs church in birmingham and those horrific scenes that were the flip side of the courage that the civil rights leaders and protestors were displaying but you had these quieter things going on in a number of different places. mobile had a man who -- an african-american man whose name -- ohn le fluorescent and ledfleur decided that he was going to take on segregation and started one of the chapters mobile.aacp here in he went about pursuing the right to vote, lynching, desegregating buses and public accommodations and mostly he did it through negotiations and lawsuits and that kind of thing , less by demonstration and confrontation. e found a few moderate a alleys that would part ways that b
and spring hill kind of went ahead and did it quietly. and so in martin luther king's letter from a birmingham jail he mentioned springfield college as one of the places that had inspiration and tried to do the right thing. i just want to call attention to the fact that in addition to those dramatic headlines where you saw police dogs and you saw the bombs church in birmingham and those horrific scenes that were the flip side of the courage that the civil rights leaders and protestors were...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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it is from chattanooga that following spring that william tecumseh sherman will take a combined union army group and advance southward from chattanooga toward atlanta and into that military-industrial heartland, and disrupted and destroy much of it, and bring the war to a close in the spring of 1865. observers and participants at the time believed that union wasess here at chattanooga a signal of alternate union success in the war. some has said this was a death knell of the confederacy. chattanooga remained in union hands from their seizure of it in this campaign in 1863 onto the end of the war. and in part because it was a inon base and garrison town the last year and a half of the war, it allows a number of individuals from the north to come to chattanooga and began exploiting the resources that are in this greater chattanooga region. even before the war was over, chattanooga's industrial segment of its economy that was beginning to grow just before the civil war actually gets reinvigorated in the closing then willthe war, and boom in the late 1860's and 1870's. we are located righ
it is from chattanooga that following spring that william tecumseh sherman will take a combined union army group and advance southward from chattanooga toward atlanta and into that military-industrial heartland, and disrupted and destroy much of it, and bring the war to a close in the spring of 1865. observers and participants at the time believed that union wasess here at chattanooga a signal of alternate union success in the war. some has said this was a death knell of the confederacy....
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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but in the end of the arab spring for both arab and regional politics. almost as obvious as the case of egypt whose revolutionary dynamic has attracted the concern and intervention of other countries both arab and non-arab, especially turkey and the latter category. in this regional engagement. and i will add here and come back to the fact that the dynamic of turkey's own politics has a bearing for the questions raised by the arabs bring. but, of course, of the core of the arab spring was the arab countries and their results. at the beginning of the revolts had two goals. first, the overthrow of the existing autocrats and second, the replacement of autocratic regimes with renewed democratic ones. where does this stand? well, four of the five autocrats are gone. apart from khaddafi, the worst of the lot, but the establishment of new democratic regimes has largely failed to materialize. one possible exception is to news. what happened? to obviously there were different factors in different countries that have contributed to this failure and no doubt we wil
but in the end of the arab spring for both arab and regional politics. almost as obvious as the case of egypt whose revolutionary dynamic has attracted the concern and intervention of other countries both arab and non-arab, especially turkey and the latter category. in this regional engagement. and i will add here and come back to the fact that the dynamic of turkey's own politics has a bearing for the questions raised by the arabs bring. but, of course, of the core of the arab spring was the...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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but in the end of the arab spring for both arab and regional politics. almost as obvious as the case of egypt whose revolutionary dynamic has attracted the concern and intervention of other countries both arab and non-arab, especially turkey and the latter category. in this regional engagement. and i will add here and come back to the fact that the dynamic of turkey's own politics has a bearing for the questions raised by the arabs bring. but, of course, of the core of the arab spring was the arab countries and their results. at the beginning of the revolts had two goals. first, the overthrow of the existing autocrats and second, the replacement of autocratic regimes with renewed democratic ones. where does this stand? well, four of the five autocrats are gone. apart from khaddafi, the worst of the lot, but the establishment of new democratic regimes has largely failed to materialize. one possible exception is to news. what happened? to obviously there were different factors in different countries that have contributed to this failure and no doubt we wil
but in the end of the arab spring for both arab and regional politics. almost as obvious as the case of egypt whose revolutionary dynamic has attracted the concern and intervention of other countries both arab and non-arab, especially turkey and the latter category. in this regional engagement. and i will add here and come back to the fact that the dynamic of turkey's own politics has a bearing for the questions raised by the arabs bring. but, of course, of the core of the arab spring was the...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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outer loop side toward silver spring. go ahead and choose your alternate route. icc i've been subjecting on the north side and east -- suggesting on the north side and east-west highway on the west side. let's go back over to our maps. the holiday, yes it will begin today and definitely throughout the day tomorrow. just remember to use your seat belt. no cell phones, please. and drive sober or get pulled over. the big campaign is on. >>> partly sunny skies in a few minutes anyway. sunrise coming up at 6:33. the few clouds we have making for a very pretty morning sky here in washington. and it's still a little muggy. if you haven't been outside yet, you have the ac on, it feels better in your house. we will change that. as the morning wears on, drier air will move in and it will feel really nice by the middle of the day and afternoon. let's start out with a look toward the east just a few moments before sunrise. we'll have a good deal of sun. going to be a warm one. mid- to upper 80s as the drier air moves in so it will comfortably be warm. a front has come throug
outer loop side toward silver spring. go ahead and choose your alternate route. icc i've been subjecting on the north side and east -- suggesting on the north side and east-west highway on the west side. let's go back over to our maps. the holiday, yes it will begin today and definitely throughout the day tomorrow. just remember to use your seat belt. no cell phones, please. and drive sober or get pulled over. the big campaign is on. >>> partly sunny skies in a few minutes anyway....
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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this is a town home here in the spring garden neighborhood. as sky force 10 zeros in, it looks like activity on the second floor. it looks like most of the smoke coming from the second floor of this townhome on north 12th street. we will bring you more information in terms of who is in this building and whether there are any injuries. stay with nbc 10 and nbc10.com for the latest on the fire here in spring garden. >>> tonight, we are hearing the dispatch calls that followed a helicopter crash at the jersey shore earlier today. >> station 77 on response. in the field for a helicopter field. >> one injured. >> nbc 10 has been following this story for you throughout the day. we first told you about it this morning at 11:00. sky force 10 over of the scene. this was a sports field in cape may courthouse. the helicopter belongs to the department of mosquito control. the helicopter was on its way back to base after doing routine mosquito surveying. the pilot and an employee on board had to be taken to the hospital as a precaution. the pilot not hurt.
this is a town home here in the spring garden neighborhood. as sky force 10 zeros in, it looks like activity on the second floor. it looks like most of the smoke coming from the second floor of this townhome on north 12th street. we will bring you more information in terms of who is in this building and whether there are any injuries. stay with nbc 10 and nbc10.com for the latest on the fire here in spring garden. >>> tonight, we are hearing the dispatch calls that followed a...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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these guns begin to be fielded in the late summer and spring of 1863. as i noted, by the time of the confederate defeat on missionary ridge in november of 1863, many are in the confederate army of tennessee's artillery compliment, because 13 of the three dozen guns lost at chattanooga are these confederate manufactured 12-pound napoleons. there was also in augusta a clothing production facility that employed 1,500 women, producing uniform items for confederate soldiers. but perhaps the most important of all of the industrial facilities in augusta was the confederate state's powder works that was developed there. gorgus will slightly exaggerate the case by saying that at the beginning of the war, no powder was produced in the southern states. there were really only some very small powder mills, like the one to the northwest of nashville. but one of the most critical resources that the new nation would need, even if as they fought in 1860, one, it would be a short war, would be gunpowder. and george washington rains was tasked with deciding on a location,
these guns begin to be fielded in the late summer and spring of 1863. as i noted, by the time of the confederate defeat on missionary ridge in november of 1863, many are in the confederate army of tennessee's artillery compliment, because 13 of the three dozen guns lost at chattanooga are these confederate manufactured 12-pound napoleons. there was also in augusta a clothing production facility that employed 1,500 women, producing uniform items for confederate soldiers. but perhaps the most...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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in the spring they cut house out from the rest. they separated from others and drones and some to the road and shift to market. to the sweet water ended july 19th, 1889, with the branding eight miles west of watson's cabins on horse creek on what is now the dumbbell ranch. durbin's son and botwell had been talking for months about what to do about james averell and ella watson. on july 20th, durbin's son, botwell, and maclean wrote east toward horse creek, the rest were on horseback. they stopped at the office of the sweetwater chief where they found conner talking with his newspaper editor and a six. a road to what some's ranch with a tour down her fence and let her cattle out and threaten to kill her unless she got in the buggy. she got in the buggy. they headed southward james averell's for that met him first driving toward casper for supply. at gun point they forced him into the buggy. to stay out of sight of the store they took a roundabout route to the sweetwater river and headed west upstream for two miles. a friend of james
in the spring they cut house out from the rest. they separated from others and drones and some to the road and shift to market. to the sweet water ended july 19th, 1889, with the branding eight miles west of watson's cabins on horse creek on what is now the dumbbell ranch. durbin's son and botwell had been talking for months about what to do about james averell and ella watson. on july 20th, durbin's son, botwell, and maclean wrote east toward horse creek, the rest were on horseback. they...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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now there are four witnesses to what happened at spring hill.s also criticized when they say, he gave the orders and should have rode out and confirmed they were done. to which an answer would -- to which an answer was published in "confederate veteran." it seems to me a strange military discipline that a commander in chief should issue orders and then go to the front to see they were executed. was that the custom of general johnston or any other great commander? how could general hood know of the dereliction of any particular officer on the spot to correct it? how are you going to go out and ensure that something was done when you do not know where the mistake was going to be made? ok, now some of the cool new stuff that was found. i shouldn't say found, because they were always there. let's say realized. this is a handwritten letter from stonewall jackson to richmond, recommending hood for promotion after the battle of antietam. it is written in stonewall jackson's handwriting and signed by him. i opened it up and read it and felt very privile
now there are four witnesses to what happened at spring hill.s also criticized when they say, he gave the orders and should have rode out and confirmed they were done. to which an answer would -- to which an answer was published in "confederate veteran." it seems to me a strange military discipline that a commander in chief should issue orders and then go to the front to see they were executed. was that the custom of general johnston or any other great commander? how could general...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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i think this started with the arab spring that the democrats championed. it's honestly turned into a jihadist coming out party and we are supplying the music, people. this is a huge problem. we got rid of gadhafi in the name of democracy. that was a bipartisan effort. john mccain and president obama, let's get rid of this guy. we should have kept him in power. we shouldn't have meddled in egypt. now we have a huge problem. we have caused a lot of this. >> you had an interesting thought. we're beginning to realize, or a lot of people are realizing that dictators are not as bad as jihadists. >> i would like to -- there's so many things i would like to say. first of all, you changed tactics in war. that's what happens. this crowd that everybody is talking about ran like scalded dogs off that dam and they are in retreat. i'm not saying they are not a threat, but they certainly when they are confronted with real force, they have found that they can just not madge through things they want to. we thought about let's assume you're in britain and have a passport. y
i think this started with the arab spring that the democrats championed. it's honestly turned into a jihadist coming out party and we are supplying the music, people. this is a huge problem. we got rid of gadhafi in the name of democracy. that was a bipartisan effort. john mccain and president obama, let's get rid of this guy. we should have kept him in power. we shouldn't have meddled in egypt. now we have a huge problem. we have caused a lot of this. >> you had an interesting thought....
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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that spring, robert e. lee and his army showed clearly as the confederacies greatest hope.es s. grant had come east to manage the armies in virginia, but ulysses s. grant had never met robert e. lee in battle. at charlottesville -- a charlottesville newspaper editor wrote in april, the conflict has, in a sense, narrowed down to virginia. and to this campaign. uncertainty reigned in new york financial markets. gold inched upward towards $200 an ounce. the looming union presidential election gave confederates hope. from the richmond examiner, april 6th, 1864. there is a pleasing prospective collapse and ruin both financial and political for the yankee nation in this very year. it is due and overdue. but we must not forget to bring an account to a complete and final liquidation. we have to do our part, and our part is one crushing and crowning victory. and so, the armies came. >> welcome to all of you. we're very glad you're here. my name is john hennessy, i'm the chief historian at fredricksburg and spotsle vina national military park and we welcome you to the opening of the
that spring, robert e. lee and his army showed clearly as the confederacies greatest hope.es s. grant had come east to manage the armies in virginia, but ulysses s. grant had never met robert e. lee in battle. at charlottesville -- a charlottesville newspaper editor wrote in april, the conflict has, in a sense, narrowed down to virginia. and to this campaign. uncertainty reigned in new york financial markets. gold inched upward towards $200 an ounce. the looming union presidential election gave...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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frequently the springs were bad and many times michelle had springs pop-up to hit her in the face and she got fingers caught in the done but they were not hard to fix. that is the duty of the ak-47 it is a simple machine. we just got better as the year went on. so this is kind of a nightmare p.j. she worries every does and she works on. willis say that a soldier's hands? does it go to someone else? if they're hurt somebody with the thoughts that goes through her mind. end with this woman who had befriended her to help her get through every day that is so cool to get to work from soviet weapons and never thought i could do this. so the deployment to afghanistan you see in the book how each of the women's struggles to figure out how to gets through that year away from home and the strain of puts on them and their partners that hall and on desma children in her case. debbie worries about her daughter who was just married and does get pregnant while she is away and has the baby before she makes it home. so she gets the news issues pregnant in afghanistan bank gets the news the baby is bor
frequently the springs were bad and many times michelle had springs pop-up to hit her in the face and she got fingers caught in the done but they were not hard to fix. that is the duty of the ak-47 it is a simple machine. we just got better as the year went on. so this is kind of a nightmare p.j. she worries every does and she works on. willis say that a soldier's hands? does it go to someone else? if they're hurt somebody with the thoughts that goes through her mind. end with this woman who...
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Aug 15, 2014
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eisenhower has received his fourth star in the spring of 1943.s in the process of ascending from lieutenant cornell to five star general in 42 months. an average of six months between promotion. he had arrived at his first field command in the caves of ji bral ter having never commanded a platoon in combat and now suddenly he's a theater commander. victory in north africa enhances eisenhower's stature and confidence. one british general remarks that he is utterly fair in his dealings and i envy the clearty of his mind and the power of accepting responsibility. i think that's accurate. the reporter, drew middleton, described him as walking up and down pacing patterns on the rug, his flat harsh voice like sparks flung from an emery wheel. he could be a knit picker. he complained that not one officer in 50 knows how to use the english language. mastering the distinction between shall and will. as a field marshal. he has a spotty record in north africa and doesn't show much more aptitude for it in sicily and southern italy. when most of those german
eisenhower has received his fourth star in the spring of 1943.s in the process of ascending from lieutenant cornell to five star general in 42 months. an average of six months between promotion. he had arrived at his first field command in the caves of ji bral ter having never commanded a platoon in combat and now suddenly he's a theater commander. victory in north africa enhances eisenhower's stature and confidence. one british general remarks that he is utterly fair in his dealings and i envy...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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by the spring of 1863, this operation in atlanta employed 3,000 women a month. sewing uniform items together. and if we do not discount the sundays, just crude mathematics means that on a daily basis, about 100 women were arriving and departing the columbus -- excuse me, the atlanta clothing depot, delivering finished products and checking out more bundles and taking them home. there probably was a pretty busy street corner scene there each day in 1863 and 1864. now, while this complex that i have described, is set in place, and was so successful, the product really of the hard work of not only george washington raines and richard tyler, and james h. burton, john mal let and george washington cunningham and frederick c. humphries, and isaac m. st. john, and a host of others, while that capacity to produce war materiel had reached such a point that between july 1, 1864, and january 21 of 1865, it could issue more than 200,000 complete suits of uniforms to its soldiers in the field just in that time period. i do have to note a few qualifications. it was not always
by the spring of 1863, this operation in atlanta employed 3,000 women a month. sewing uniform items together. and if we do not discount the sundays, just crude mathematics means that on a daily basis, about 100 women were arriving and departing the columbus -- excuse me, the atlanta clothing depot, delivering finished products and checking out more bundles and taking them home. there probably was a pretty busy street corner scene there each day in 1863 and 1864. now, while this complex that i...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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as winter melted into spring, the simple question was which would give out first? union army was on the north side in what was the largest, a ten square mile area marked by tree stumps, filth, dead horses and buzzards circling over head. >> it was in worse, but still defiant. each side waited. but 1864 would be different because of the entrance on the scene of one man. grant spend eight year in one -- in 1861, his father secured him -- and according to legend. son, you've got a good job now, don't mess it up. sen this commission was certainly not based on good looks. to one observer, grant was, quote, an ordinary scrubby-looking man with a slightly seedy look, neither a conversationalist or mixer, he was a man who always seemed to be alone. nevertheless, while other union commanders were failing, grant had climbed steadily up the military ladder with resounding victories stretching from ft. henry in 1862 through vicksburg, to missionary ridge in 1863. he was clearly the north's man of the hour when linking ordered to take command of all federal forces. somewhere ne
as winter melted into spring, the simple question was which would give out first? union army was on the north side in what was the largest, a ten square mile area marked by tree stumps, filth, dead horses and buzzards circling over head. >> it was in worse, but still defiant. each side waited. but 1864 would be different because of the entrance on the scene of one man. grant spend eight year in one -- in 1861, his father secured him -- and according to legend. son, you've got a good job...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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as chief of all union military forces in the spring of 1864, u.s.grant devised a grand strategy involving coordinated offensives by number of union armies stretching from louisiana all the way to virginia. and as you know already, the two most important of these offensives were those of the army the potomac here, or in virginia, rather, and that of william t. sherman who commanded what was called the military division of the mississippi. grant's orders to sherman for the campaign dated april 4th, 1864, were pretty straightforward. grant told sherman to move against the confederate army of tennessee commanded by general joseph e. johnston and to break it up, then get into the interior of the enemy's country as far as you can, inflicting all the damages you can against their war resources. at the same time, sherman was supposed to prevent johnston from detaching elements of his army to reinforce either lee's army in virginia, or confederate forces out in louisiana. that is sherman's objective, then in the atlanta campaign. if you look at sherman's rec
as chief of all union military forces in the spring of 1864, u.s.grant devised a grand strategy involving coordinated offensives by number of union armies stretching from louisiana all the way to virginia. and as you know already, the two most important of these offensives were those of the army the potomac here, or in virginia, rather, and that of william t. sherman who commanded what was called the military division of the mississippi. grant's orders to sherman for the campaign dated april...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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that spring, robert e. lee and his army shone clearly as the confederacy's greatest hope. ulysses s. grant had come east to manage the armies in virginia, but ulysses s. grant had never met robert e. lee in battle. at charlottesville -- a charlottesville newspaper editor wrote in april, "the conflict has, in a sense, narrowed down to virginia. and to this campaign." uncertainty reigned in new york financial markets. gold inched upward towards $200 an ounce. the looming union presidential election gave confederates hope. from "the richmond examiner," april 6th, 1864. "there is a pleasing prospective of collapse and ruin, both financial and political, for the yankee nation in this very year. it is due and overdue. but we must not forget to bring an account to a complete and final liquidation. we have to do our part, and our part is, one, crushing and crowning victory." and so, the armies came. >> welcome to all of you. we're very glad you're here. my name is john hennessy, i'm the chief historian at fredricksburg and spotslyvania national military park. and we welcome you to
that spring, robert e. lee and his army shone clearly as the confederacy's greatest hope. ulysses s. grant had come east to manage the armies in virginia, but ulysses s. grant had never met robert e. lee in battle. at charlottesville -- a charlottesville newspaper editor wrote in april, "the conflict has, in a sense, narrowed down to virginia. and to this campaign." uncertainty reigned in new york financial markets. gold inched upward towards $200 an ounce. the looming union...
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Aug 15, 2014
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and that campaign certainly has taken center stage this spring. just as it has in our national far tiff about the liberation of europe since june 6th, 1944 when it permanently eclipsed the dramatic protracted sa eed stru italy. we'll try to bring that italian war back into focus a bit. >> i have not seen the movie "paisan." some saw it. if you have questions bit, i am not your man and second i'll talk mostly about the campaign in italy up through the fall of rome which was june 4th, 1944. the war goes on but for the most part i don't know that much about it. it becomes a sad cul-de-sac of a campaign for that last almost year of the war in europe. we'll talk about the first stages, though of italy. so, the allied campaign to liberate italy first from itself and then from the germans lasted 608 day, it cost 312,000 allied casualties. that's about 40%. it's equal to 40% of the casualties incurred in that bigger, more famous campaign in northwest europe. it dragged what churchill called the hot rake of war up the entire thousand-mile length of the boo
and that campaign certainly has taken center stage this spring. just as it has in our national far tiff about the liberation of europe since june 6th, 1944 when it permanently eclipsed the dramatic protracted sa eed stru italy. we'll try to bring that italian war back into focus a bit. >> i have not seen the movie "paisan." some saw it. if you have questions bit, i am not your man and second i'll talk mostly about the campaign in italy up through the fall of rome which was june...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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grant's plans came early in the spring and summer of 1864. that is why the campaign is so important. the effort against mobile had to be abandoned, very early because confederates won victories on the red river in louisiana. threatened to attack new orleans. maybe even regain possession or regain control of the mississippi river. union troops that were scheduled to go against mobile, had to be held to protect the federal holdings in louisiana. that was abandoned, the campaign up the shenandoah valley, ran into the union market. they were defeated by the core of cadets from the virginia military institute. with a little help from some confederate army units that happened to be in the area. the third campaign under benning lynn butler came to grief, because as he started up confederate reinforcements rushed up and that left only the two big campaigns grants himself as i said, led the main union army in virginia, against robert e. lee, and they fought a titanic series of battles against virginia. grant constantly living around the circumference
grant's plans came early in the spring and summer of 1864. that is why the campaign is so important. the effort against mobile had to be abandoned, very early because confederates won victories on the red river in louisiana. threatened to attack new orleans. maybe even regain possession or regain control of the mississippi river. union troops that were scheduled to go against mobile, had to be held to protect the federal holdings in louisiana. that was abandoned, the campaign up the shenandoah...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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so i went over in spring fully intending on staying for two weeks during spring practice.that was it. and when i showed up -- and i'm not kidding you, i saw kids who could not do basics in much of anything -- i was, like, this is going to be the biggest waste of two weeks of my life. and about four days into it, i was in love. these kids, smoky, new chicago and greenlaw, the three neighborhoods that surround manassas where the kids come from. 7,885 dollar annual median income of. of the family with children under 18 years old, 12.5% consist of a married couple. fewer than 50% of the families have an operating vehicle. i told you an 18-year-old male was three times more lake louis vuitton -- likely to be incarcerated by his 8th birthday -- 18th birthday than to be in column. in college. it is as bad as it gets. and these kids showed up to practice every day with a smile on their face and a willingness to work because anything to be to part of something positive, they were there. and i fell in love with their reis sill yens. i fell in love with their respectfulness. i'll be
so i went over in spring fully intending on staying for two weeks during spring practice.that was it. and when i showed up -- and i'm not kidding you, i saw kids who could not do basics in much of anything -- i was, like, this is going to be the biggest waste of two weeks of my life. and about four days into it, i was in love. these kids, smoky, new chicago and greenlaw, the three neighborhoods that surround manassas where the kids come from. 7,885 dollar annual median income of. of the family...
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78
Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 78
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that shows the extent of japan's conquest by the spring of 1942. blitzkrieg and rampage in the pacific on a very strict timetable of get it done, don't wait, the democracies are slow, they are not ready, explains why they thought they could get away with it. they came quite close to doing it. >> returning to her comment on churchill and india. what i had was that churchill's argument was his fear of indian self-government was the fact that they would remain untouchable. >> it is not entirely garbage. the question is, was churchill's fear of indian self-government because he hought that there would be internal strife? when the japanese were getting so close to india, they have the navy in the indian ocean and they were approaching the land borders, that the british could not afford the danger to losing india. the simple fact is winston churchill had not been in india since 1898. i have looked through the correspondence that churchill had with the viceroy of india at the time. nd i have looked through the correspondence which churchill's ambassador h
that shows the extent of japan's conquest by the spring of 1942. blitzkrieg and rampage in the pacific on a very strict timetable of get it done, don't wait, the democracies are slow, they are not ready, explains why they thought they could get away with it. they came quite close to doing it. >> returning to her comment on churchill and india. what i had was that churchill's argument was his fear of indian self-government was the fact that they would remain untouchable. >> it is not...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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the confederates are in silver spring. important one. the important one he gets shot at is going to be on the next day, as he circulates. he makes a stop down at -- there is no haines point at that time. where haines point is now, he watches the boats and ships arrive with the members of the 6th corps, two divisions of them under wright and detachments of the 19th corps that have come all the way from louisiana to hampton road and have joined the troops up. and some of the troops could remember this tall man, seven foot tall when he has his top hat on, now if we knew we were going to have two 6'4" presidents, we would have had a better measurement of them. we have two 6'4" presidents, one is abraham lincoln, the other is lyndon baines johnson. you do not know which is the taller, because they don't go to have any such things as that. and they see the president nibbling on a piece of hard taft. they then move out throughout georgetown pike, out through georgetown, because the first reports the general received, the confeder
the confederates are in silver spring. important one. the important one he gets shot at is going to be on the next day, as he circulates. he makes a stop down at -- there is no haines point at that time. where haines point is now, he watches the boats and ships arrive with the members of the 6th corps, two divisions of them under wright and detachments of the 19th corps that have come all the way from louisiana to hampton road and have joined the troops up. and some of the troops could remember...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
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WUSA
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press the district and type in spring mill bakery. click on its july 11 report and the app shows baismght violations -- basement violations of no cold or hot water. the bakery says we did not intentionally try to operate with no hot our system just was not recovering as needed and that has been fixed. we have licensed pest services monthly and do not have a problem with rodents. now this man's using the wusa9 restaurant alert app to look up the sushi bar on 8th street northeast. its july 2 report cites 14 closures including sewage backup observed at the sump pump area and the chef not washing hands between switching tasks. >> it's not safe. you need to wash and sanitize your hands all the time. >> reporter: in a statement hikari's manager says the temporary interruption in service was solely due to plumbing issues which were completely unforeseen although there were additional citations, we can confirm that none compromised the integrity of our product and all were rectified immediately. click montgomery k and search this restaurant o
press the district and type in spring mill bakery. click on its july 11 report and the app shows baismght violations -- basement violations of no cold or hot water. the bakery says we did not intentionally try to operate with no hot our system just was not recovering as needed and that has been fixed. we have licensed pest services monthly and do not have a problem with rodents. now this man's using the wusa9 restaurant alert app to look up the sushi bar on 8th street northeast. its july 2...
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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KNTV
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spring. and the warm springs is set to open by the end of next year. a lot of progress. in half an hour, we'll hear how much this closure that might seem small to some people, how much its impacted business owners in the area. again, that's coming up in 30 minutes. live in south fremont, stephanie chuang, "today in the bay." >> we'll look forward to it, thanks steph. >>> still ahead, more than 100 inmates escape after a rocket hit the prison in ukraine. >>> plus an experimental drug on the move. what's happening right now in hopes of keeping the deadly ebola virus from spreading. >>> you're watching "today in the bay." >>> new orleans police are looking for suspects involved in a drive by shooting that left three people dead and three children hurt. all of the victims were in front of a house when a dark car pull of men started shooting and sped off. 18-year-old female and an unidentified male likely in the late 20s were pronounced dead at the scene. shooting took place in an area that's been
spring. and the warm springs is set to open by the end of next year. a lot of progress. in half an hour, we'll hear how much this closure that might seem small to some people, how much its impacted business owners in the area. again, that's coming up in 30 minutes. live in south fremont, stephanie chuang, "today in the bay." >> we'll look forward to it, thanks steph. >>> still ahead, more than 100 inmates escape after a rocket hit the prison in ukraine. >>>...
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664
Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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KQED
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spring board manages and charges fees up to $550 a student.ing parents and teachers partners, giving parents reading strategies to use at home. this may be unconventional, but according to these families, it works. do you find you actually use these strap strategies at home? >> yes, always. it helps because we try to use our old strategies that we had. they're bad. we don't do that no more. >> look at the picture. look at the picture if you don't know it. >> clouds? yes. i've never been in a partnership like this before. it's given me a lot to teach my grandchildren. >> reporter: after two years at spring board, addison is a much better reader. >> she was struggling a lot with letter sounds. what i noticed most about her, it was really hindering her confidence. she came back this year and it is a different kid. the confidence she has is unbelievable. >> reporter: in addition to reading together, the program encourages parents to let the kids see them reading thiern own -- their own. >> right now i'm reading a book about obama. i haven't read i
spring board manages and charges fees up to $550 a student.ing parents and teachers partners, giving parents reading strategies to use at home. this may be unconventional, but according to these families, it works. do you find you actually use these strap strategies at home? >> yes, always. it helps because we try to use our old strategies that we had. they're bad. we don't do that no more. >> look at the picture. look at the picture if you don't know it. >> clouds? yes. i've...
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102
Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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MSNBCW
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it was a different story at the spring creek correctional center in alaska. >> [ bleep ]. >> prisoner demonstrated aggressive agitated behavior by using abusive language and continually banging on his cell walls causing injury to his hands and wrists. >> when spring creek's extraction team was called to remove steven blevins from his cell, he was in a state of rage and had been pounding the walls with his bare fists for over an hour. >> [ bleep ] come on come on come on. >> but when we first met blevins, he was in a much calmer state as he told us how mental illness led to murder. >> i fell in june of '93, psychotic delusion, out on a fishing boat. i attributed it to working too much, too long, too hard. and basically tweaked out and killed a couple guys. i've been fishing out of dutch harbor for about 4 1/2 years. and never thought about murder, never contemplated killing somebody. but a guy walked by me one time and just -- i thought that he was going to kill me and i killed him and another guy first. >> how? >> with a knife, fishing knife. just a six-inch fishing knife in the chest
it was a different story at the spring creek correctional center in alaska. >> [ bleep ]. >> prisoner demonstrated aggressive agitated behavior by using abusive language and continually banging on his cell walls causing injury to his hands and wrists. >> when spring creek's extraction team was called to remove steven blevins from his cell, he was in a state of rage and had been pounding the walls with his bare fists for over an hour. >> [ bleep ] come on come on come on....
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50
Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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WRC
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camp springs at 70. 68 in gaithersburg. latest check of the satellite and radar and you can see clouds all across the area looking back further to the west over the mountains and continuing into west virginia, we're seeing breaks in the cloud cover there. helping to bring that cloud cover out. here's your hour-by-hour forecast for the rest of today. temperatures in the mid-70s. increasing humidity as you get into the afternoon hours. still mostly cloudy skies at 1:00. temperatures at that point around 80 degrees. but by the afternoon hours, the later afternoon hours like 4:00 p.m. we'll start to notice partly sunny skies. we hit our high temperature around 4:00. that's 86 degrees today. this evening most of us are dry and in far pretty pleasant evening. for those of you living in the mountains. for tomorrow hot and humid. look at the high temperature here on the seven-day. 92 degrees for a high tomorrow. not only that, but it is noticeably muggy. we'll have a little more sunshine around tomorrow. here's your planner for tom
camp springs at 70. 68 in gaithersburg. latest check of the satellite and radar and you can see clouds all across the area looking back further to the west over the mountains and continuing into west virginia, we're seeing breaks in the cloud cover there. helping to bring that cloud cover out. here's your hour-by-hour forecast for the rest of today. temperatures in the mid-70s. increasing humidity as you get into the afternoon hours. still mostly cloudy skies at 1:00. temperatures at that point...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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arab spring. he described you as a new generation -- what was needed was a new generation of don't leaders whose primary development, their own people, not the enrichment of tribe, sector, party. and part of the difficulty and failure of the arab spring was noncorrupt, that there was not enough support and the arabs, u.s., israelis for noncorrupt institution-focused leadership. do you agree, has the arab spring failed and are these the reasons why the arab spring has failed? >> i'd like to still believe it's a nature of a work in progress, although it's hard to use those words to describe the state of play when you're looking at the extent of violence and extremism that has taken place and continues to take place. nevertheless, you know, from time to time, i think it's really important to try to take a step or two away from what you see, to put it in perspective. i think it's useful to look at the experience of other nations and other revolutions, going back -- not that far back in history, recent
arab spring. he described you as a new generation -- what was needed was a new generation of don't leaders whose primary development, their own people, not the enrichment of tribe, sector, party. and part of the difficulty and failure of the arab spring was noncorrupt, that there was not enough support and the arabs, u.s., israelis for noncorrupt institution-focused leadership. do you agree, has the arab spring failed and are these the reasons why the arab spring has failed? >> i'd like...
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Aug 29, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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i'm gonna compress the spring. and when i do that, i can put a projectile here, and watch this, gang, a little spring gun, okay? out it goes, no surprise. but i've got another ball that i can put on the end here like this, and when i go like this, it falls essentially straight down, a little bit out, okay, but kind of downish. this one goes outish. now, i'm gonna do them both at the same time. when i do them both at the same time, you guys got to figure out, hey, which one is gonna hit the ground first, the one that just drops down, or the one that... [whistles] ...goes out? a lot of people think, "oh, the one that's fired out is gonna be in the air for a longer time." do you know why? because gravity gonna start to pull it. "oh, i didn't know you're moving, go ahead." and gravity not gonna pull so hard. what do you guys think? let's try it. i tell you what, i tell you what, if you hear this, all a's. [laughter] all--for this course, all a's. registrar would say, "you got all a's in your class?" i'll say, "i had a
i'm gonna compress the spring. and when i do that, i can put a projectile here, and watch this, gang, a little spring gun, okay? out it goes, no surprise. but i've got another ball that i can put on the end here like this, and when i go like this, it falls essentially straight down, a little bit out, okay, but kind of downish. this one goes outish. now, i'm gonna do them both at the same time. when i do them both at the same time, you guys got to figure out, hey, which one is gonna hit the...
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187
Aug 8, 2014
08/14
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WPVI
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. >> they flew a drone over the hot springs and crashed it. iselle is causing problems on the big island and along the southern coast of . >> authorities at yellowstone national park are investigating the crashing of a drone into the largest hot spring. a tourist approached a park economy that -- the park authority about retrieving a drone. now drones are banned in the national parks. park rangers have not determined if the drone damaged the spring. >> time to check the traffic around here. see what's going on friday morning commute. looking live at i-95 at girard, no southbound delay at 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. monday, the ramp from i-95 northbound to girard will close. you got to watch for that. use the ramp to allegheny and turned around and head to i-95. don't forget the issues with the trolleys, 10, 11, 13, 34 and 36 being diverted to 40th and market. >> reporter: we're 66 in an comfortable. you'll see 71 in philadelphia at 9:00 a.m. 78 by noon, in the 70s in the morning and 80s in the afternoon. breeze might be less than yesterday, but we
. >> they flew a drone over the hot springs and crashed it. iselle is causing problems on the big island and along the southern coast of . >> authorities at yellowstone national park are investigating the crashing of a drone into the largest hot spring. a tourist approached a park economy that -- the park authority about retrieving a drone. now drones are banned in the national parks. park rangers have not determined if the drone damaged the spring. >> time to check the...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 55
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so, too, were the believes of the men who fought that bloody spring. indeed, in spite of so many lost lives, those believes and ideas about nation, government and home became even more deeply enslie enshrined in the hearts and minds of those left to fight on tonight to reflect upon and learn from today. >> writing soon after the war with a perspective on hindsight. sally putnam came to believe that in its own unique way, cole harbor had been a landmark event in the 1866 campaign across central virginia. she wrote, the battle of cold harbor forever removed the impression of general lee's army and ended the attempt to take richmond from the north side. the barefooted, ragged, ill-fed rebel army which had been under fire for more than a month had achieved a succession of victories unparalleled in the history of modern warfare. however, putnam also noted the resolution of the union army and its leader, saying the most striking feature in the character of this distinguished federal army seems to be quiet determination and indomitable perseverance and energy
so, too, were the believes of the men who fought that bloody spring. indeed, in spite of so many lost lives, those believes and ideas about nation, government and home became even more deeply enslie enshrined in the hearts and minds of those left to fight on tonight to reflect upon and learn from today. >> writing soon after the war with a perspective on hindsight. sally putnam came to believe that in its own unique way, cole harbor had been a landmark event in the 1866 campaign across...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
tv
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the spring is on both sides of the creek. that is where there was a spring of oil. oil was coming to the surface. in 1889, a fellow named shannon came out here. he was from a pennsylvania oil company and sell is going on and drilled the well three miles north of here. that was the first well in this area. it produced 10 barrels of oil per day. speculation in this area really when rampant and there was a lot of claims made and leases and that type of thing. so, that was the beginning of the great salt creek oilfield. first started, it was a cattle town. cattle and sheep ranching was real big. when oil started, that was when it started to grow. there was such an influx of people. you got the instant wealth of the oilfield. whereas, before that, it was a half dozen ranchers who would come to the general store and buy goods for a month. once the oilfields started, casper started to boom. casper is where the first refinery was built. casper was the end of the rail lines. that is where the oil went -- to casper, to get on the rail line. to go to the larger refiners. where
the spring is on both sides of the creek. that is where there was a spring of oil. oil was coming to the surface. in 1889, a fellow named shannon came out here. he was from a pennsylvania oil company and sell is going on and drilled the well three miles north of here. that was the first well in this area. it produced 10 barrels of oil per day. speculation in this area really when rampant and there was a lot of claims made and leases and that type of thing. so, that was the beginning of the...
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361
Aug 15, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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army at this point incidentally we are talking about the spring of 1943 has 6 million soldiers. it's grown to 8.3 million. there are 343,000 lieutenants alone in the u.s. army. they have to do something. well, the british also make extravagant claims to overcome this yankee skepticism. they overegg the pudding as one critic says. they assert, for example, that germany was unlikely to fight hard for mainland italy, that the allied commitment in italy would be modest and require no substantial occupation and that a successful fight in the mediterranean could end the war in 1944. none of these prophecies is true. what emerges as is so often the case in coalition warfare is a compromise forged after bitter debate. the sicily invasion will go forward in july 1943 and until then, and after then in the cross channel invasion of france will also be launched in the late spring of 1944. they agree on this, sicily and then what would become normandy, but until then general eisenhower, the allied commander in chief in the mediterranean, is to come up with a plan for operations after the sic
army at this point incidentally we are talking about the spring of 1943 has 6 million soldiers. it's grown to 8.3 million. there are 343,000 lieutenants alone in the u.s. army. they have to do something. well, the british also make extravagant claims to overcome this yankee skepticism. they overegg the pudding as one critic says. they assert, for example, that germany was unlikely to fight hard for mainland italy, that the allied commitment in italy would be modest and require no substantial...
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temperatures are on the nice side of things. 75 now in d.c. 68 toward camp springs. 65 in buoy. a nice evening shaping up. i think it will be a nice weekend. the only system we are dealing with is down to the south. lots of showers roanoke to richmond around virginia beach. a lot of cloud cover. i'll watch this, monitor and track it as we make our way through the next couple of days. i'll let you know how it may affect the weekend especially if you are traveling to the south. that and a lot of other things in a few minutes. >> thank uh you, doug. surveillance video shows robbers equipment from d.c. students. in they struck here monday, getting away with nine apple computers, just two weeks before school starts. the robbers got in through a side window. they hit the same school last september. they were never caught. that's when cardoza just re-opened after $130 million renovation. we checked with d.c. police. they say eight d.c. schools have been burglarized this summer. even as a loving mother and grandmother was laid to rest her family questions what led to her death. karen wi
temperatures are on the nice side of things. 75 now in d.c. 68 toward camp springs. 65 in buoy. a nice evening shaping up. i think it will be a nice weekend. the only system we are dealing with is down to the south. lots of showers roanoke to richmond around virginia beach. a lot of cloud cover. i'll watch this, monitor and track it as we make our way through the next couple of days. i'll let you know how it may affect the weekend especially if you are traveling to the south. that and a lot of...