1,473
1.5K
Sep 17, 2012
09/12
by
WETA
tv
eye 1,473
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a piece of stone.e edges of the control joint we want to chisel them to look like a piece of stone. then we'll proceed on to applying the secondary color and then start stamping. for people to control this much concrete which is about 23 yards of concrete, you need all hands on deck to attend to the concrete and stay ahead of it. >>miriam: now i know this is a roman slate pattern which matches up with what you have on the edge around your porch, right? >>: that is correct. along with us installing a nice concrete, we like to have areas of stamped color tie-in with each other. so with the porch in the middle, we have an ashlar slate square pattern and around the perimeter, we have the roman slate which ties with the driveway. so we'll tie-in all 3 pieces of concrete together so visually you can kinda see the concept that we're trying to portray. >>miriam: okay, and then you'll be back to do the walk. >>: that is correct. we'll be back to do the walk. we have our step and porch. that height is establishe
a piece of stone.e edges of the control joint we want to chisel them to look like a piece of stone. then we'll proceed on to applying the secondary color and then start stamping. for people to control this much concrete which is about 23 yards of concrete, you need all hands on deck to attend to the concrete and stay ahead of it. >>miriam: now i know this is a roman slate pattern which matches up with what you have on the edge around your porch, right? >>: that is correct. along...
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180
Sep 24, 2012
09/12
by
KRON
tv
eye 180
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and from the first exit is stone ridge.ife even jackie the our reporter will be on the scene, with an update there are no other hot spots. the san francisco and oakland bay bridge is trouble-free. and the san mateo/92 is also to lead- free. and this mood on of the golden gate/101. it delayed-free of the san mateo-- >> good morning, george. we will have a cool down for this afternoon. just as fickle back to work. >> it looks like we could see for this afternoon. perhaps a bit cooler along the coast. as we check out visibility just as just 2 mi.! the coast. there is dense fog! and also to the north bay. for the next couple of hours and before the sun rises. focusing on temperatures at 6:00 a.m. that the blue is representing the 50s. it looks like those microclimates will be developing by 3:00 p.m. the afternoon high, that green is representing the 60s. '70s before the heart of the day. that orange is indicating where we will see those 80s. again, the 80s in the south bay but mainly for the inland/east bay valleys. and looking
and from the first exit is stone ridge.ife even jackie the our reporter will be on the scene, with an update there are no other hot spots. the san francisco and oakland bay bridge is trouble-free. and the san mateo/92 is also to lead- free. and this mood on of the golden gate/101. it delayed-free of the san mateo-- >> good morning, george. we will have a cool down for this afternoon. just as fickle back to work. >> it looks like we could see for this afternoon. perhaps a bit cooler...
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247
Sep 24, 2012
09/12
by
KTVU
tv
eye 247
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that meeting is set for 11:30 at the corner stone church on 17th street. now it follows last thursday's police shooting on 14th street. four officers were in the area and saw two people they thought were gang members. when an officer tried to talk to one of the men, he ran. police say the suspect began to raise a gun at the officer and that is when police shot and injured the suspect. the shooting has sparked several protests in the mission district. an friday night demonstrators threw paint and smashed windows at banks and stores. they also damaged the mission police department and that forced the police department to increase patrols in the area in the mission district. >>> our time now 5:07. firefighters in southern california battling two wild fires this morning. one in river side county. this one has burned more tan 560 acres since yesterday. that fire is now 35% con taped. >>> meantime a fire in a rural san diego county area is only 10% contained. this one started yesterday afternoon eastcap pro if this one was -- evacuations have been ordered. the c
that meeting is set for 11:30 at the corner stone church on 17th street. now it follows last thursday's police shooting on 14th street. four officers were in the area and saw two people they thought were gang members. when an officer tried to talk to one of the men, he ran. police say the suspect began to raise a gun at the officer and that is when police shot and injured the suspect. the shooting has sparked several protests in the mission district. an friday night demonstrators threw paint...
75
75
Sep 23, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 75
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. >> hello, everybody it's me the stone. seen me once before in michigan city. now i'm down here at wabash. >> few inmates have ever made more of a lasting impression on us than james stone. we first met him in michigan city, indiana, during our extended stay shoot at indiana state prison. >> say hi to the public out there jinxster. >> he was known for his constant companion jinxster the cat he was allowed to adopt through a special prison program. >> trying to make a swimming pool in here. >> he was also known for his offbeat sense of humor. >> it's a bird, it's a plane now it's the biobucket man. to the bat cave. >> three years later, when we returned to indiana to shoot our extended stay series at the wabash valley correctional facility, we were surprised to see stone again. he had recently been transferred there. >> i talk to guys who come in here who recognize me that say you are the catman, ain't you? the best thing i can do is say i'm him "meow." see you later. stone is serving 101 years for murder and deviant conduct
. >> hello, everybody it's me the stone. seen me once before in michigan city. now i'm down here at wabash. >> few inmates have ever made more of a lasting impression on us than james stone. we first met him in michigan city, indiana, during our extended stay shoot at indiana state prison. >> say hi to the public out there jinxster. >> he was known for his constant companion jinxster the cat he was allowed to adopt through a special prison program. >> trying to...
73
73
Sep 16, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 73
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officer when stone first arrived. >> me and stone got to know each other quite a bit when i was in charge houses. i was the captain in charge of cell houses. i used to walk the ranges a lot. >> that's when it was fist fighting with officers was allowed. they opened up your cell door and told you to step out, it was punch for punch and forgotten about. there was no writeups involved. it was all about respect. get your teeth knocked out, next day, everything's forgotten about. can't do that now, though. now they call it spouse abuse. >> he would go around and drink, smoke, get in different kind of things like that. >> i was on pills. i was popping all these bull [ bleep ] pills. anything i could get. what the [ bleep ]. you know, what i got to stay healthy or something? you just put me here, i'm more or less just a zombie that ain't just -- but i'm having fun so screw it. i'm going to stay bombed and high and everything and beat everybody up that i can, because that was my hustle, collecting for the dope guys. >> he was a hoodlum. >> by the time we met him in 2008, stone had matured and fou
officer when stone first arrived. >> me and stone got to know each other quite a bit when i was in charge houses. i was the captain in charge of cell houses. i used to walk the ranges a lot. >> that's when it was fist fighting with officers was allowed. they opened up your cell door and told you to step out, it was punch for punch and forgotten about. there was no writeups involved. it was all about respect. get your teeth knocked out, next day, everything's forgotten about. can't...
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154
Sep 28, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 154
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we've got a lot of the stones. keach: how did the lineage head rise so dramatically above his low-ranking kin ? individuals or groups usually acquire power by gaining control of an essential but scarce resource. webster and sanders want to identify that resource and understand how it was controlled. in agricultural societies, the scarce resource is either water or land. webster and sanders wonder -- might modern land use help explain the political evolution of the ancients ? the most fertile land has always been on the valley floor. that's why the maya first settled here. in the beginning, there were fewer people. then, as copan grew into a chiefdom, each lineage head managed a separate plot of land on behalf of his kin group. as the population grew more rapidly, settlement expanded far beyond the original community. in the valley, there was not enough land to go around. and just like today, thousands of farmers spread into the surrounding hillsides. sanders: as the population expands, they start colonizing these s
we've got a lot of the stones. keach: how did the lineage head rise so dramatically above his low-ranking kin ? individuals or groups usually acquire power by gaining control of an essential but scarce resource. webster and sanders want to identify that resource and understand how it was controlled. in agricultural societies, the scarce resource is either water or land. webster and sanders wonder -- might modern land use help explain the political evolution of the ancients ? the most fertile...
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184
Sep 14, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 184
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their counterparts in ancient copan had only stone tools.the metates are worked into rough shape here at the quarry to make them easier to transport back to the village for finishing. the transport system is hardly hi-tech, but it is certainly more efficient than what the ancient copan metateros had available. the maya carried everything on their backs because donkeys, horses, oxen and other beasts of burden did not exist here until the spanish brought them in the 16th century. what interests archaeologists most is that these modern metateros are also farmers, so they work at their craft only part-time. the ancient metateros may have done the same. filomeno gabriel mateo has only enough land to feed his family and a few animals. there is not enough to grow surplus produce to trade for other goods. interpreter: there's definitely not enough to sell, but the harvest does provide enough for the chickens and even the donkeys. we go and get firewood, and the donkey must be in good condition. also, we raise pigs. we may sell a pig, and we also bri
their counterparts in ancient copan had only stone tools.the metates are worked into rough shape here at the quarry to make them easier to transport back to the village for finishing. the transport system is hardly hi-tech, but it is certainly more efficient than what the ancient copan metateros had available. the maya carried everything on their backs because donkeys, horses, oxen and other beasts of burden did not exist here until the spanish brought them in the 16th century. what interests...
143
143
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
KNTV
tv
eye 143
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what is the crowd like on stone street, harry? >> you walk on stone street and see a lot of younger people and older people, too, with jackets and ties. people, they love to sit outside. >> i have to tell you, you know, all the businesses that opened on stone street, ours have been great forred neighborhood. >> in the 11 years since the terror attack in 2001, stone street is one of the largest commercial developments in manhattan. a neighborhood with changing demographics and ideas. tell me, harry, how the neighborhood has changed. >> when i started, it was a 9-5 job. those days, the restaurant was closed at night. the most you could find. i was the first one here that kept my kitchen open after 10:30 at night. outside business now is completely different. >> we try to create things good for both neighborhoods. meaning, you have the wall street financial community down here and you have the people who live down here of t. if you walked down the street in the '80s and '90s, it was hello, harry, hello. now it is somebody else walkin
what is the crowd like on stone street, harry? >> you walk on stone street and see a lot of younger people and older people, too, with jackets and ties. people, they love to sit outside. >> i have to tell you, you know, all the businesses that opened on stone street, ours have been great forred neighborhood. >> in the 11 years since the terror attack in 2001, stone street is one of the largest commercial developments in manhattan. a neighborhood with changing demographics and...
143
143
Sep 11, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 143
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no stone was placed indiscriminately. each was positioned for shape, texture, and color, the parts giving unity to the whole. major artists of international reputation, men like sculptor henry moore and the creator of the mobile, alexander calder, came to share ideas with gallery director j. carter brown about their works, commissioned by the gallery to enhance and celebrate the new building. brown: and then a couple more pieces come out. men: that's right. all right. there we go. that's it. narrator: the artists had been chosen because of their preeminence and their genius for creating monumental works for monumental spaces. moore: that's lovely to have a picasso here. brown: you do give the opportunity to relate in scale to trees and other things and not just the building. moore: all my argument was not to have pieces that are attached to the building. you know, it becomes like reliefs, it's a decoration to the architecture. brown: yes, yes, yes. i think you should have a sculpture that's separate from the architecture
no stone was placed indiscriminately. each was positioned for shape, texture, and color, the parts giving unity to the whole. major artists of international reputation, men like sculptor henry moore and the creator of the mobile, alexander calder, came to share ideas with gallery director j. carter brown about their works, commissioned by the gallery to enhance and celebrate the new building. brown: and then a couple more pieces come out. men: that's right. all right. there we go. that's it....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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190
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 190
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bowl with a carved stone lid set into it. and he opened it up and it was full of pieces of turquoise and that's when he looked around and thought, wait a minute, there's something going on around here. he started mapping them all, he started marking them all on his map until he realized, these are all visual relays. there's a network, a communication network, of some sort. or maybe it was when the moon reached the gap they lit the fire so the signal went out so everybody across the colorado plateau would know the needle has been threaded. and i imagine that day people in chaco canyon all standing there, facing north, looking at a fire tower that would have delivered a message down into the canyon. i imagined people all over the four corners all facing the same direction at the same moment, maybe this didn't happen. everything is conjecture out there, but you know something was going on. how much do you want to know? when i saw that granary up in the cliff, i wanted to know what was inside of it. i thought i could easily break
bowl with a carved stone lid set into it. and he opened it up and it was full of pieces of turquoise and that's when he looked around and thought, wait a minute, there's something going on around here. he started mapping them all, he started marking them all on his map until he realized, these are all visual relays. there's a network, a communication network, of some sort. or maybe it was when the moon reached the gap they lit the fire so the signal went out so everybody across the colorado...
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196
Sep 21, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 196
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the original facade was about 23 feet high, with a roof of stone. you think that sample of eight dates is going to pretty much be in the same range ? keach: archaeologists bill sanders and david webster led a four-year excavation at this site, known as the house of the bacabs. sanders: this is a very impressive household. when we finished excavating all of the buildings and all of the courtyards, we discovered that a population of some 200 to 250 people were close relatives probably or retainers of some kind to a single family and lord who lived in one of the units within this large mass of masonry that you see here. he lived in a very palatial house with a sculpted facade, had a vaulted roof on it. so clearly he was a man of great power and wealth. keach: and what else did the symbolism reveal about this man ? in 1980, excavators began to push heaps of stone and earth aside to reveal walls and steps. archaeologist bill fash was part of the excavation team. fash: during that process we also discovered that the whole building had been covered with sc
the original facade was about 23 feet high, with a roof of stone. you think that sample of eight dates is going to pretty much be in the same range ? keach: archaeologists bill sanders and david webster led a four-year excavation at this site, known as the house of the bacabs. sanders: this is a very impressive household. when we finished excavating all of the buildings and all of the courtyards, we discovered that a population of some 200 to 250 people were close relatives probably or...
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148
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
WMAR
tv
eye 148
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please welcome trey parker and matt stone!success, you haven't changed at all. how you doing? good to see you. congratulations on everything. it's been going great. >> yeah. >> jimmy: the show is fantastic. i guess when a show becomes super popular, it goes on the road and you do it in various cities? >> it's like having a baby. you give birth to this thing and it keeps living and performing and you got to check in on it once in a while. >> jimmy: you check in on a baby just more than once in a while ideally. how many productions are you running right now? >> one in new york and this one. >> broadway and l.a. >> jimmy: then london and -- >> chicago too. >> jimmy: then l.a. to where? >> san francisco. >> jimmy: all right, in new york, you can't get a ticket, like it's sold out. or can you? >> we actually can. that's what's messed up. of course everyone wants us to get them tickets. but what they don't realize, we have to pay for them. with movies and stuff you don't have to worry about that. but it's a living thing and people a
please welcome trey parker and matt stone!success, you haven't changed at all. how you doing? good to see you. congratulations on everything. it's been going great. >> yeah. >> jimmy: the show is fantastic. i guess when a show becomes super popular, it goes on the road and you do it in various cities? >> it's like having a baby. you give birth to this thing and it keeps living and performing and you got to check in on it once in a while. >> jimmy: you check in on a baby...
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183
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 183
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( stone being chipped ) man: well, can you see anything? second man: yes, wonderful things. j. carter brown: for over 3,300 years, the pharaoh tutankhamun has gazed serenely at eternity, confident in his ability to conquer death. everlasting life was his by right of birth. he was pharaoh, king of egypt, the mightiest empire of the ancient world. he was a god. nothing was beyond his means. when tutankhamun sat upon his throne, thousands of years of history and achievement had already preceded him. surely a nation that could bring itself into being and create wonders like the great pyramids could overcome man's final enemy--death. and overcome death tutankhamun has--at least according to the ancient egyptian funerary beliefs, for the very act of speaking his name provides magic to infuse tutankhamun with everlasting life. names were important to the egyptians. a name symbolized one's personality and even one's very existence. to remember the dead was to make them live again. and soutankhamun must, for the whole world has known his name ever since that day in november of 1922, whe
( stone being chipped ) man: well, can you see anything? second man: yes, wonderful things. j. carter brown: for over 3,300 years, the pharaoh tutankhamun has gazed serenely at eternity, confident in his ability to conquer death. everlasting life was his by right of birth. he was pharaoh, king of egypt, the mightiest empire of the ancient world. he was a god. nothing was beyond his means. when tutankhamun sat upon his throne, thousands of years of history and achievement had already preceded...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
203
203
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 203
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. >> most of what they did was stone. metallurgy was just starting to move up into northern chijuajua at that time and they were working with copper. that was just ornamental, so there was no metal going on at all other than imported bells. >> and the shells, they went down to cortez -- not lake -- the cortez sea to get, was that mostly hard or brittle? . >> it was hard but not tool hard. the colorado plateau is covered with chert, a glassy rock that is really really good for making tools, making very sharp edges. you find there are pieces of chert all over the place and you can still cut your skin open very quickly with it and it's been sitting out in the open. >> where does chert come from? . >> it's a marine rock that's mostly silica. you find it in these layers, sandstone layers. if you are especially in a marine or water environment, you will find this layer of chert. it's in all colors, purple, green, red, blue. it's a beautiful rock. . >> one thing i wanted to ask you, the review in the paper recently on sunday sai
. >> most of what they did was stone. metallurgy was just starting to move up into northern chijuajua at that time and they were working with copper. that was just ornamental, so there was no metal going on at all other than imported bells. >> and the shells, they went down to cortez -- not lake -- the cortez sea to get, was that mostly hard or brittle? . >> it was hard but not tool hard. the colorado plateau is covered with chert, a glassy rock that is really really good for...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
105
105
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 105
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on this grave stone are angels and people weeping. what are people waiting for, their ship? here it comes, borne by the deluge. in a market place now frequented by money changers with beards and baggy trousers, who restores the limbs and who throws open the gates for hollow-eyed gods coming in from babylon with red chests and white furious hair? i wonder who? on the day of march 1st in the 5th year after the second millennium, a massacre took place in babylon. it's my pleasure it introduce the next poet, george evans. . >> first, i would like to read a poem by my dear friend and wife, daisy samora, who was to be here today but is in nicaragua, keeping in mind what michael said about jorge and casablanca, i will read it in her language or my spanish first, then in translation. it's a poem directly addressed to poets but certainly to activists as well. (speaking spanish) no man's land. we are a mine field of clarity and whoever crosses the barbed wire comes back to life. but who is interested in crawling through undergrowth? who dares sail a tempest? who wants to come face to
on this grave stone are angels and people weeping. what are people waiting for, their ship? here it comes, borne by the deluge. in a market place now frequented by money changers with beards and baggy trousers, who restores the limbs and who throws open the gates for hollow-eyed gods coming in from babylon with red chests and white furious hair? i wonder who? on the day of march 1st in the 5th year after the second millennium, a massacre took place in babylon. it's my pleasure it introduce the...
223
223
Sep 14, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 223
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with its massive facade of superimposed arches, the colosseum seems to express in stone the grandiose dreams of all empire-builders. but it was a most functional building-- its gates numbered for ticket holders, its concentric vaulted corridors designed to funnel 50,000 spectators to their seats with maximum efficiency. built of stone, brick, and concrete, the colosseum's huge oval interior offered every roman an unobstructed view of the slaughter in the arena below-- arena being the latin word for the sand that covered the wooden floor and absorbed the blood. today the colosseum impresses us more as an amazing feat of architecture than as a work of art, though it strongly influenced the design of both renaissance palaces and modern sports arenas. this thr-dimensional scale model depicts rome in the fourth century, virtually at the end of its spectacular imperial building program. of all the great constructions throughout the empire, one stands above all others ashe crowning achievement of roman architecture-- the pantheon. fittingly, it is a work that expresses not the ugliness of ou
with its massive facade of superimposed arches, the colosseum seems to express in stone the grandiose dreams of all empire-builders. but it was a most functional building-- its gates numbered for ticket holders, its concentric vaulted corridors designed to funnel 50,000 spectators to their seats with maximum efficiency. built of stone, brick, and concrete, the colosseum's huge oval interior offered every roman an unobstructed view of the slaughter in the arena below-- arena being the latin word...
216
216
Sep 18, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 216
favorite 0
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( stone being chipped ) man: well, can you see anything? second man: yes, wonderful things. j. carter brown: for over 3,300 years, the pharaoh tutankhamun has gazed serenely at eternity, confident in his ability to conquer death. everlasting life was his by right of birth. he was pharaoh, king of egypt, the mightiest empire of the ancient world. he was a god. nothing was beyond his means. when tutankhamun sat upon his throne, thousands of years of history and achievement had already preceded him. surely a nation that could bring itself into being and create wonders like the great pyramids could overcome man's final enemy--death. and overcome death tutankhamun has--at least according to the ancient egyptian funerary beliefs, for the very act of speaking his name provides magic to infuse tutankhamun with everlasting life. names were important to the egyptians. a name symbolized one's personality and even one's very existence. to remember the dead was to make them live again. and so tutankhamun must, for the whole world has known his name ever since that day in november of 1922, w
( stone being chipped ) man: well, can you see anything? second man: yes, wonderful things. j. carter brown: for over 3,300 years, the pharaoh tutankhamun has gazed serenely at eternity, confident in his ability to conquer death. everlasting life was his by right of birth. he was pharaoh, king of egypt, the mightiest empire of the ancient world. he was a god. nothing was beyond his means. when tutankhamun sat upon his throne, thousands of years of history and achievement had already preceded...
46
46
Sep 8, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
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but then, again, with the food we get here, you never know. >> stone's a good person. >> stone's a goodhard worker. one of the hardest workers that i know. >> hey, don't clean that stuff. >> getting ready to. >> he's a convict. a convict is one of the older ones. >> oh, right here. here we are. spilled toilet. >> the difference is they respect more people in here. the officers -- i think they respect the officers. they have jobs. they go to work. they stay out of trouble. >> been in prison for 24 years now. when i first came to prison, i didn't have much to lose or anything because the time they gave me was more or less a death sentence anyway. back in the old days, wintertime came around, those windows were bolted open. the heat was shut off. everyone stayed in shop because they'd jog in place and do push-ups or whatever just to stay warm. now these guys have hot water in the showers. didn't have it back then. you have to think about sexuality sometimes because when you take a shower when it's only in the teens, it's like, damn, where did it go? >> the kids are more -- the inmates, the
but then, again, with the food we get here, you never know. >> stone's a good person. >> stone's a goodhard worker. one of the hardest workers that i know. >> hey, don't clean that stuff. >> getting ready to. >> he's a convict. a convict is one of the older ones. >> oh, right here. here we are. spilled toilet. >> the difference is they respect more people in here. the officers -- i think they respect the officers. they have jobs. they go to work. they...
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234
Sep 24, 2012
09/12
by
KGO
tv
eye 234
favorite 0
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. >>> right now all lanes are shutdown southbound -- southbound at stone ridge. i have a map here, interestingly enough our waze app shows it best. a computer has taken a picture it is bumper-to-bumper stopped at the -- stone ridge exit get around this would be 580 to either hop yard or foothill build to get around and back towards 680 on surface streets. southbound 680 at stone ridge, all lanes shutdown, fatality there. crews on scene. expect delays most of the morning and of course we are on top of it here. mike will have your forecast. >>> good morning. live doppler 7 had d dry this morning, a little -- a little fog in the north bay valleys. 48 santa rosa. mile and quarter at half moon bay, everybody in the low to mid 50s until you get to antioch at 57°. in the around fog fades, cooler weather on the way. >>> right now let's get to that major problem with 680 partially closed in the mess san ton area. amy hollyfield is there -- >> reporter: the chp is still waiting on the corner to get here that is why they still have lanes closed, the body is still in the mid
. >>> right now all lanes are shutdown southbound -- southbound at stone ridge. i have a map here, interestingly enough our waze app shows it best. a computer has taken a picture it is bumper-to-bumper stopped at the -- stone ridge exit get around this would be 580 to either hop yard or foothill build to get around and back towards 680 on surface streets. southbound 680 at stone ridge, all lanes shutdown, fatality there. crews on scene. expect delays most of the morning and of course...
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249
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
by
WMAR
tv
eye 249
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load stone way will be shut down. if you are traveling in the area, stick with parkside drive or conneaut way as your alternate route. whawsh no problems there, 16 minutes from the beltway all the way into the city. here's a live look at the west side here at old court road, outer loop extremely slow. that will continue all the way down towards route 40. here's what it looks like in parkville at harford road. sluggish up towards towson. >>> you gotta take a look at this. you've probably seen everybody doing their rendition of the korean music gang em style. you probably haven't seen the mid shipmen do it. but here they are, johnson naval academy in annapolis. they put this video together. they have got some good moves. they did this for spirit videos, they do this leading up to a football game, so this video comes ahead of this weekend's game against vmi. and as lynette said, there's something about a guy in uniform, but then add those moves. >>reporter: gotta love those mid shipmen. >>> remember, we'll have a news, w
load stone way will be shut down. if you are traveling in the area, stick with parkside drive or conneaut way as your alternate route. whawsh no problems there, 16 minutes from the beltway all the way into the city. here's a live look at the west side here at old court road, outer loop extremely slow. that will continue all the way down towards route 40. here's what it looks like in parkville at harford road. sluggish up towards towson. >>> you gotta take a look at this. you've...
169
169
Sep 9, 2012
09/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 169
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we focused in developing stone street around the corner from harry's. >> i know it was originally knowne street for beer brewers in the 1600s. >> yeah, one of the first paved street in manhattan. in the '80s and 90s it was the most unsafe unsanitary street in manhattan and the city downtown alliance worked with the city in redoing stone street the way it was in the late 1600s. the street was completed prior to september 11th. then when 9/11 happened, everything went on pause and rewound a little bit. >> i wasn't here i was in my home in brooklyn and called me and said, what do you like us to do? i says, i didn't know how bad it was so i says prepare the restaurant and have the food ready and we'll see what's going to happen. people came but nobody wanted to eat. we had seven girls in the office. they came down and became nurses. they started cleaning their faces because people couldn't see, they couldn't even see walking in here. >> peter what about from your standpoint in terms of the aftermath of 9/11. >> it was difficult for a good year and year and a half and then you saw things wer
we focused in developing stone street around the corner from harry's. >> i know it was originally knowne street for beer brewers in the 1600s. >> yeah, one of the first paved street in manhattan. in the '80s and 90s it was the most unsafe unsanitary street in manhattan and the city downtown alliance worked with the city in redoing stone street the way it was in the late 1600s. the street was completed prior to september 11th. then when 9/11 happened, everything went on pause and...
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Sep 1, 2012
09/12
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KCSM
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then you lift your hips, bring the stone back, and then out. okay, and then i put my hips up. >> yeah. >> and then i go like... watch out! so, who's the guy at the end yelling at everyone? >> that's the skip. >> what is he telling them? >> he's telling them to sweep the rock as it comes down. he'll say "hurry," "hard," or "yes." >> those are just different ways to say, "keep sweeping." can i try it? >> if you want to. >> [ chuckles ] take this one out. sweep! [ chuckles ] >> aah! >> go! go! yes! go! sweep! sweep. sweep! harder! >> okay. >> [ chuckling ] that was awesome. what's your favorite part of curling? >> well, i like to be here with my friends, and i like the sport. i like the ice. i like the cold. and...i don't know. it just seems fun to me. >> you can hang out with people from different ages and just have a good time. >> my friends and i are having a lot of fun. >> i'd have to say the hardest part about curling would be keeping your balance on the ice. sometimes it can be a little tricky. it's quite slippery. >> yeah, i experienced tha
then you lift your hips, bring the stone back, and then out. okay, and then i put my hips up. >> yeah. >> and then i go like... watch out! so, who's the guy at the end yelling at everyone? >> that's the skip. >> what is he telling them? >> he's telling them to sweep the rock as it comes down. he'll say "hurry," "hard," or "yes." >> those are just different ways to say, "keep sweeping." can i try it? >> if you want...
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Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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MSNBCW
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that's how me and stone met each other. by me -- i was in charge of the cell houses as a captain, and i'd be walking the ranges, and he caught me playing with jinx one day. that's how we became good buddies. we've been friends ever since then. >> my first cat saved my life during a contract hit. he woke me up when the guy tried to take me out, and i ended up sending that guy to the hospital. so my first cat was like a watchdog. you couldn't get near me or anything like that. he guarded me. >> i am in charge of the cat program. you know, that's a switch, but i don't know, i like cats. i like animals. my personal opinion is our cat program is probably one of the best things we've got going on in here. >> by taking a cat, it gave me a sense of responsibility, something to lose, think about. which a lot of these guys in here don't have none of that. >> you ain't going to the vet. i think he thinks he's going to the vet. >> stone, before he got jinx, he was kind of a rebel-rouser. he'd go around and drink, smoke, whatever. not w
that's how me and stone met each other. by me -- i was in charge of the cell houses as a captain, and i'd be walking the ranges, and he caught me playing with jinx one day. that's how we became good buddies. we've been friends ever since then. >> my first cat saved my life during a contract hit. he woke me up when the guy tried to take me out, and i ended up sending that guy to the hospital. so my first cat was like a watchdog. you couldn't get near me or anything like that. he guarded...
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Sep 15, 2012
09/12
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KGO
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please welcome trey parker and matt stone!: with all your success, you haven't changed at all. how you doing? good to see you. congratulations on everything. it's been going great. >> yes. >> jimmy: yes, yes? the show is fantastic. and, i mean -- i guess when a show becomes super popular, it then goes on the road and you do it in various cities and not just new york. >> it's like having a baby. you give birth to this thing and it keeps living and performing and you got to check in on it once in a while. >> jimmy: yeah. ideally you check in on a baby more than just once in awhile. >> just once in awhile. >> jimmy: how many productions are running right now? >> just this one and new york. >> broadway and l.a. now. >> jimmy: and you have london coming up in the future? >> and chicago. >> jimmy: chicago, too. and this one will go from l.a. to where? where is the next stop? >> san francisco. >> jimmy: and already, well, in new york, you can't get a ticket. it's sold out through january. >> we actually can. that's what's messed up.
please welcome trey parker and matt stone!: with all your success, you haven't changed at all. how you doing? good to see you. congratulations on everything. it's been going great. >> yes. >> jimmy: yes, yes? the show is fantastic. and, i mean -- i guess when a show becomes super popular, it then goes on the road and you do it in various cities and not just new york. >> it's like having a baby. you give birth to this thing and it keeps living and performing and you got to...
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Sep 24, 2012
09/12
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KTVU
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it's here at the corner stone church. we are live this morning in san francisco alex savidge ktvu channel 2 news. >>> a homeless camp that was cleared out last month in san francisco may be cleared out today. it's located near the cal train station on fourth and king streets. the coalition on homelessness say homeless people living there have received two notices to leave the camp. now according to the notice the camp will be cleared out at 8:30 this morning. >>> time is 6:09. firefighters in southern california battling two wild fires. one in river side county. this one has burned more than 150 acres. several homes have been damaged. about 200 others are threatened. voluntary evacuation center has been established. this fire by the way is 35% contained. >>> a fire at a rural san diego county is only 10% contained. it started yesterday afternoon east of campo near the campo indian reservation. this one has burned 1700 acres. it has destroyed four homes, threatening about 80 more. evacuations have been ordered and the caus
it's here at the corner stone church. we are live this morning in san francisco alex savidge ktvu channel 2 news. >>> a homeless camp that was cleared out last month in san francisco may be cleared out today. it's located near the cal train station on fourth and king streets. the coalition on homelessness say homeless people living there have received two notices to leave the camp. now according to the notice the camp will be cleared out at 8:30 this morning. >>> time is 6:09....
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Sep 7, 2012
09/12
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LINKTV
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in 1729, a well-digger accidentally struck the stones of an ancient street.ery triggered the longest ongoing excavation in archaeological history. walking through the cobbled streets, pompeii seems abandoned just yesterday. monuments to emperors still dominate the central forum. the graffiti of candidates still scream from the walls. like ceren in el salvador, pompeii preserved a snapshot of daily life. roman scholar andrew wallace-hadrill. i'm interested in ways of recapturing a picture of roman society as a whole. we've got great written sources for the romans, but with them there's always a suspicion that they represent the viewpoint of a thin upper crust. the great thing about pompeii is that, archaeologically, it preserves the full social spectrum from rich to poor. if you look at a standard plan of any part of pompeii, what you see is an extraordinary jumble of lines. and it's not until you start measuring and analyzing that a pattern emerges. what i've done is to group the houses according to size, from largest to smallest. what comes out is a jigsaw o
in 1729, a well-digger accidentally struck the stones of an ancient street.ery triggered the longest ongoing excavation in archaeological history. walking through the cobbled streets, pompeii seems abandoned just yesterday. monuments to emperors still dominate the central forum. the graffiti of candidates still scream from the walls. like ceren in el salvador, pompeii preserved a snapshot of daily life. roman scholar andrew wallace-hadrill. i'm interested in ways of recapturing a picture of...
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Sep 17, 2012
09/12
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KNTV
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. >> this is stone, too, which i like. >> be able to put a manufactured stone that looks like a naturaln this kitchen seems like a perfect fit. >>> you're only going to get benjamin moore historic color if you use benjamin moore paint. you can take the color deck to a different paint store and say, hey, i want benjamin moore's historic mauve blush, but if that store is not a ban jam in moo -- benjamin moore, it's an impost imposter. when you use the paint it enhances the experience. this is going on smoothly, so nicely. it's really just -- a joy to work with. like snow white and the seven dwarfs, you need to whistle while you work. sometimes the directions help a little bit. oh, look at this. the sliver chair from hay needle. >> these look amazing! >> i like the -- like the pop of color. the little texture. >> yeah. the yellow stripes relate back to the sofa. then the stripes of lavender relate back to our accent wall in the dining room. >> frances, the chandelier's beautiful. are we using silk shades in the kitchen or glass? >> the kitchen gets glass. the reason is that in the kitchen
. >> this is stone, too, which i like. >> be able to put a manufactured stone that looks like a naturaln this kitchen seems like a perfect fit. >>> you're only going to get benjamin moore historic color if you use benjamin moore paint. you can take the color deck to a different paint store and say, hey, i want benjamin moore's historic mauve blush, but if that store is not a ban jam in moo -- benjamin moore, it's an impost imposter. when you use the paint it enhances the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 20, 2012
09/12
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SFGTV2
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it's inhaling a vapor that is heated off of a stone.and the statute is very clear in terms of what it defines as smoking. and it has nothing to do with these rocks, and this vapor. >> commissioner lazarus: apparently -- >> smoking has to do with smoke. there's no smoke. there is no smoke. the statute doesn't apply. >> commissioner lazarus: and you also talk about being allowed the opportunity to move the business. i'm not quite sure what that has to do with this either. >> well, under the exemption -- exceptions to the statute, there was the possibility of a grace period to move from a mixed use building to a commercial building. >> commissioner lazarus: grace period allowing what? >> the the relocation of the business. >> commissioner lazarus: but not the continued use -- >> well, at the new location, then the use could continue. >> commissioner lazarus: but that would have to be permitted as well, right? >> that would be allowed as a grandfathered business. >> commissioner lazarus: thank you. >> president hwang: i think the appellant
it's inhaling a vapor that is heated off of a stone.and the statute is very clear in terms of what it defines as smoking. and it has nothing to do with these rocks, and this vapor. >> commissioner lazarus: apparently -- >> smoking has to do with smoke. there's no smoke. there is no smoke. the statute doesn't apply. >> commissioner lazarus: and you also talk about being allowed the opportunity to move the business. i'm not quite sure what that has to do with this either....
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believe not only animals but also all surrounding objects like reverse forests and even stones of souls imitating the sounds they believe capture the power of nature. there are special instruments that accompany the singing guinea says there is even a legend about his instrument a gill it says it wants to leave to poor shefford who had the best horse that won every competition but jealous people killed the horse was revived as an instrument . of suppositional is because of the spirit of the horse going to his dream he said make an instrument from the tree the sounding board from the leather of my face the strings. and to remember me make an engraving of my head out of the instrument he did so cool these from an. which means come back and this melody on the instrument is called. to fly as one of the most famous groups in the republic their next goal is to tour pruitt they say for you are p. and since difficult to pick up and sing so i ask them to teach me and see if i can do it chill you cheer it up. shero you shared them out of that was sure to say can out who was you think gang are oh.
believe not only animals but also all surrounding objects like reverse forests and even stones of souls imitating the sounds they believe capture the power of nature. there are special instruments that accompany the singing guinea says there is even a legend about his instrument a gill it says it wants to leave to poor shefford who had the best horse that won every competition but jealous people killed the horse was revived as an instrument . of suppositional is because of the spirit of the...
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171
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
LINKTV
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eye 171
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this building's made of stone, but in that context, whoa! and that's what we talk about for the sacred. yeah. >> i remember a history professor of mine talked about when the romans took over jerusalem in 70 a.d., and the roman general came into the holiest of holies - the inner temple of jerusalem - and he looked in there, and in this flask was supposedly god. and so he stormed in there and he opened it up and there was nothing in there, and yet to him, it was just a box. but to those who believed, and to the jewish people, it was so extremely significant. and i wanted that - i thought that story would tie in kind of with your waling wall and her thing, that really, it's not maybe the physical that we look for but the emotional and the spiritual that we feel. >> you have to be plugged into it, there's no doubt about it, and that's what you feel when you walk over there, because you go from site to site so that the church of the holy sepulcar, and the rock where jesus's body was washed after it was taken down off the cross, it's there and you
this building's made of stone, but in that context, whoa! and that's what we talk about for the sacred. yeah. >> i remember a history professor of mine talked about when the romans took over jerusalem in 70 a.d., and the roman general came into the holiest of holies - the inner temple of jerusalem - and he looked in there, and in this flask was supposedly god. and so he stormed in there and he opened it up and there was nothing in there, and yet to him, it was just a box. but to those who...
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Sep 11, 2012
09/12
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KRON
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than romancing the stone with a check our stone. and j.r. stone.ter: i can tell you that they to not have paul davis but there is a rapper called ice cube. >> does he used the term what's cracking... >>reporter: thank you. and i ask because he is performing for some of those fans. who else was down there on the field? reggie mckenzie. he started having his name chanted. he was signing autographs and assigning and shaking hands. he was excited and the players were prepared as i mentioned some people were getting ready but the majority of the people were outside. and i was meeting with the people that were tailgating. many have been here since early gone. they did not open the skate until 2:00 p.m. but i want to show you of what they said. >> look at this. butter yeah! raiders! we are coping with the special sauce. the menu are a raiders fan you have to go the oall the way! >> tell me if the eagles? but what is going on? >> i like to have a reference. >> that is bold. >> that is how we do it in philadelphia. >> with the least amount of clothing. >> i
than romancing the stone with a check our stone. and j.r. stone.ter: i can tell you that they to not have paul davis but there is a rapper called ice cube. >> does he used the term what's cracking... >>reporter: thank you. and i ask because he is performing for some of those fans. who else was down there on the field? reggie mckenzie. he started having his name chanted. he was signing autographs and assigning and shaking hands. he was excited and the players were prepared as i...
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at us so example we picked a random kid that didn't even necessarily threw stones at us and used him as a shoe. saluted the stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends with the team instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in the in the occasion so certainly not a good time for the i.d.f. it's finding ourselves being criticised on a number of fronts they are to tell. the u.k. court has shattered the hopes and of the reputation of russia's self exiled tycoon borders but his high stakes lawsuit against a billionaire compatriot roman abramovich was dismissed in one of the most expensive cases in british legal history parties laura smith is in london and has the story for us. the final verdict in this case found against bodies which means that he won't receive a cent of the more than five point six billion dollars that he was asking for from which what i want to promote himself was not in court but his old scheme was he arrived looking very upbea
at us so example we picked a random kid that didn't even necessarily threw stones at us and used him as a shoe. saluted the stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends with the team instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in the in the occasion so certainly not a good time for the i.d.f. it's finding ourselves being criticised on a number of fronts...
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at us so it's going to be picture in the kid didn't even necessarily threw stones at us and used him as a shoe. suited to stone to pull being sprayed by these trends or by the supposed friends who did team instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in. asia so certainly not a good time for the i.d.f. it's finding itself being criticized on a number of fronts policy r.t.e. television. and still ahead for you this hour acting in bad faith we explore the reasons behind in the new president and drive of islamic extremism in russia following a series of assassinations of moderate muslim clerics. and you take orders has shattered the hopes and the reputation of russia's self exile tycoon barak's press office came his eyes safe lawsuit against the billionaire compatriot romano was dismissed in one of the most expensive cases in british legal history laura smith is in london and has a story. final verdict in this case found against bodies which means that he won't receive a cent
at us so it's going to be picture in the kid didn't even necessarily threw stones at us and used him as a shoe. suited to stone to pull being sprayed by these trends or by the supposed friends who did team instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in. asia so certainly not a good time for the i.d.f. it's finding itself being criticized on a number of fronts policy r.t.e....
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threw stones at us and used him as a shield so that the stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends would hit him instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help and he just got injured in the in the occasion now. coming out of another demonstration. which is a palestinian village in footage that was captured on camera these soldiers can be seen going from house to house and physically taking people out of their own not one person was injured but. and there are pictures of this of one a woman. who was manhandled is what. they said not a good time for me and i've been criticized on a number of fronts policy r.t.e. television. and this brings us to the case of pro police sting in the us rachel corrie who was crushed by an israeli army bulldozing two thousand and three the twenty three year old was taking part in a demonstration trying to stop palestinian homes from being destroyed in gaza and a court ruled that israel was not responsible but journalist tom de lay who witness
threw stones at us and used him as a shield so that the stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends would hit him instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help and he just got injured in the in the occasion now. coming out of another demonstration. which is a palestinian village in footage that was captured on camera these soldiers can be seen going from house to house and...
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eld sold it to stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends who'd hit him instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in the in the occasion so certainly not a good time for the idea of finding a been criticized on any number of friends paul if they are our television. and this brings us back to the case of pro palestinian u.s. aka the threat to a quarry house correspondent's raney army bulldozing two thousand and three the twenty three year old was taking part in a demonstration trying to stop a steven holmes from being destroyed in gaza the haifa court ruled that israel was not a told the journalist tom de a witness cory's that claims that israel is trying to sweep the incident under the rug. it's tremendously just pointing out on the basis of what i saw on that day in two thousand and three it's absolutely not possible to characterize what happened as an accident in my view as i told the court and as i told the israeli military investigation b
eld sold it to stones that were being thrown by his friends or by his supposed friends who'd hit him instead of us we were hoping that that would stop him somehow that would stop his friends from throwing stones obviously didn't help him he just got injured in the in the occasion so certainly not a good time for the idea of finding a been criticized on any number of friends paul if they are our television. and this brings us back to the case of pro palestinian u.s. aka the threat to a quarry...