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Aug 31, 2017
08/17
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at the time we were so was at the time, but at the time we were so each other. the venture was, now i am ten years older than she was when she died. —— ten years younger than she was, now i am ten yea rs younger than she was, now i am ten years older than she was when she died. prince william and prince harry have done an awful lot ahead of the anniversary in terms of media interviews. it has been extraordinaire, as well, how they have, you know, embraced irrawaddy's need to mark this 20th anniversary. —— everybody's need to mark this 20th anniversary. — — eve rybody's need. need to mark this 20th anniversary. -- everybody's need. let's move on to theresa may. that is a surprise statement. i do know she was pushed into saying she was here for the long haul. i think this is a media confection. what else is she meant to say when she is asked? no prime minister can say yes, i am here for just as long as my cabinet and the people around the want me to be. she is never to say that. if you look at the wording that she came outwith, she has come out with careful wording
at the time we were so was at the time, but at the time we were so each other. the venture was, now i am ten years older than she was when she died. —— ten years younger than she was, now i am ten yea rs younger than she was, now i am ten years older than she was when she died. prince william and prince harry have done an awful lot ahead of the anniversary in terms of media interviews. it has been extraordinaire, as well, how they have, you know, embraced irrawaddy's need to mark this 20th...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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i have done a lot of writing for the new york times. worked for smithsonian magazine and read about the civil war for them and i had never heard of him. it was a little article that encapsulated his life and i wanted to know more. i wanted to know how this man, who have been told from the time he was a young child that he was not worth anything could have had the courage and determination to find a way out of slavery. i was intrigued and could not reading about him. 1839.born in where was he born and into what situation? guest: he was born in piu forte, south carolina, 75 miles from charleston. it is a very small town at the time, but a very wealthy town. he it was founded with -- the wealth of the town had was from flames that had been imported from west africa. indigo, crops were cotton, and rice. it was mostly rice. he at the time -- host: as you are talking, i was thinking about who was his mother and father? guest: we do not know who his father was. many people believe he was the owner of smalls. his mother was a slave born on the p
i have done a lot of writing for the new york times. worked for smithsonian magazine and read about the civil war for them and i had never heard of him. it was a little article that encapsulated his life and i wanted to know more. i wanted to know how this man, who have been told from the time he was a young child that he was not worth anything could have had the courage and determination to find a way out of slavery. i was intrigued and could not reading about him. 1839.born in where was he...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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here's the lincoln white house at the time of the civil war. you imagine lincoln busy here in the white house, he's not sure he can go to gettysburg, in fact he only decided to go at the very last moment possible, most likely. probably the very weekend before going to gettysburg is when he decided to go, because the monday before the ceremony, that's when the newspapers sent out the worth that lincoln has finally decided to go to gettysburg, in fact it wasn't until the next day that they had the railroad schedule set. it was a last minute decision that lincoln made that he would go. he wanted to go, but he wasn't sure he could go. as he told speed, the day before he left, he found time to write about half of the speech. and here we have images of lincoln in the, what was at that time his office, today it's the lincoln bedroom. he's at the table there, where the emancipation proclamation was signed, earlier this year. and i love the picture of him standing up, for example, in particular, in some ways it's as close to a candid shot as you can get
here's the lincoln white house at the time of the civil war. you imagine lincoln busy here in the white house, he's not sure he can go to gettysburg, in fact he only decided to go at the very last moment possible, most likely. probably the very weekend before going to gettysburg is when he decided to go, because the monday before the ceremony, that's when the newspapers sent out the worth that lincoln has finally decided to go to gettysburg, in fact it wasn't until the next day that they had...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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there is another change he makes probably at the same time too. having returned from the battlefield, having seen the sights that reynolds saw as he was shot from his horse, as he walked the same ground that the army of the potomac and the confederacy fought over. he made another change. a small one that speaks volumes. he underlined in pencil what they did here. that and the change here, the only edits to this document, the first page. i think he is looking over the speech when he underlines "did." he's thinking what am i going to say, how am i going to emphasize things. he underlines just one word, what they did here because the power was coming to him more strongly than it could have in washington, in the lincoln office that he was using. when he was in washington, it was in his imagination, in his mind's eye that he saw gettysburg. walking the battlefield i think is a very different thing i think as we've all experienced who have seen this. why did he mike this transition between two very different pages? there's one element i think in the seco
there is another change he makes probably at the same time too. having returned from the battlefield, having seen the sights that reynolds saw as he was shot from his horse, as he walked the same ground that the army of the potomac and the confederacy fought over. he made another change. a small one that speaks volumes. he underlined in pencil what they did here. that and the change here, the only edits to this document, the first page. i think he is looking over the speech when he underlines...
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Aug 27, 2017
08/17
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time. we put it out there because it is on the front page of the times. this is another reason. ets. they have a very controversial past. we remember the man was sacked and the council stripped of its powers in the past. —— mayor. that makes it more newsworthy when something happens. the express. the coverage of labour's record u—turn, as they call it. the record on brexit. they said they wanted to leave the customs union. but kier starmer has nailed their colours to the mast and say they support a transition period, one in which britain stays within the customs union. they say it will last i— for years. then a new relationship will be created. —— 1-4 new relationship will be created. —— 1—4 labour is trying to carve a position which will win over remainers and leavers. however, the express... we were saying this that several stories are reported differently in different papers. most papers have, the same line, which is interesting. there will be a political cost to take this position. many remainers wanted this. but many ukip voters and tory voters and brexit voters voted for la
time. we put it out there because it is on the front page of the times. this is another reason. ets. they have a very controversial past. we remember the man was sacked and the council stripped of its powers in the past. —— mayor. that makes it more newsworthy when something happens. the express. the coverage of labour's record u—turn, as they call it. the record on brexit. they said they wanted to leave the customs union. but kier starmer has nailed their colours to the mast and say they...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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by the time she had robert, she was in her 40's. t he pretty much grew up as an only child living in the house, the slave house behind the mckee house, which still exists today in beaufort, on the historic registry. brian: what is beaufort, south carolina, like? i know people make a mistake all the time that there is a beauford, north carolina. how far is it from charleston? cate: 75 miles, also on the coast. beaufort is a beautiful town. very small compared to charleston. at the time, they did have a lot of slaves living in town and robert would have gone out to the plantations with mckee to help him with some of his duties. he was seeing a lot of different ways of life. brian: let me interrupt to point out this map. if people are straining to find out where beaufort is an charleston, it is right down there on the southern, southeastern point there. cate: right, and it was a very strategic place for the union army in november, 1851. -- 1861. that is where they decided they were going to have a port. port royal is just south of beauf
by the time she had robert, she was in her 40's. t he pretty much grew up as an only child living in the house, the slave house behind the mckee house, which still exists today in beaufort, on the historic registry. brian: what is beaufort, south carolina, like? i know people make a mistake all the time that there is a beauford, north carolina. how far is it from charleston? cate: 75 miles, also on the coast. beaufort is a beautiful town. very small compared to charleston. at the time, they did...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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at the same time, what is the option? the times — evil strikes again, it says. children hit as stryver targets tourist with a van. more on a statement from ariana —— mariano rajoy. —— as driver targets. saying the response has to be global. security services say it is. we are foiling plots all the time. interesting on page four of the times from charles bremner going through all of the different attacks that have been foiled by police. and it does say here they have been so effective in thwarting fact they have been reduced to the basic use of cars as a have been reduced to the basic use of cars as a weapon have been reduced to the basic use of cars as a weapon and it goes back to the appalling al-anda attack in 2004 when four bombs killed 191 people on the train. they have struggled to deal with that threat and it might suggest why the only way they can do is to use a car rather than a van. yes and some of the extremist groups have been espousing that, haven't they, take a van and use a gun and knife if you get out, and that's what we saw with london. it is a me
at the same time, what is the option? the times — evil strikes again, it says. children hit as stryver targets tourist with a van. more on a statement from ariana —— mariano rajoy. —— as driver targets. saying the response has to be global. security services say it is. we are foiling plots all the time. interesting on page four of the times from charles bremner going through all of the different attacks that have been foiled by police. and it does say here they have been so effective...
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Aug 9, 2017
08/17
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and the times i remember most are the times you remember most, paul, which was the times we spent in our office talking about cases and also talking about life and it was, he walked into his office and you would start with the cases and you would go over every case and you would talk about what to do about them and he would ask questions and you would give your views and then he would tell you sometimes that your views were wrong and i remember when you pressed too hard on something where he disagreed, he would point to the commission on the wall and make you get up out of your chair and go to the commission on the wall and read whose name was on it. and then the other thing he used to do on those occasions, you know sometimes when you -- my clerks do this to me a lot. they say, look, you have to do this. you have to vote this way or vote that way or write this opinion or write that. and he would say, there are only two things that i have to do. stay black and die. so you would have thought we would have learned to avoid that grammatical construction, you know? but we would talk about
and the times i remember most are the times you remember most, paul, which was the times we spent in our office talking about cases and also talking about life and it was, he walked into his office and you would start with the cases and you would go over every case and you would talk about what to do about them and he would ask questions and you would give your views and then he would tell you sometimes that your views were wrong and i remember when you pressed too hard on something where he...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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the center?. >> every society of what slavery at a different time. when you think of it ending war dwindling in the 18th century ad about the same time really the slave trade ends in the united states actually ending slavery with their territory but would maintain slavery in their colonies. >> host: were the african nations or tribes aware of what was happening?. >> africa itself had a slave society so the first africans that were taken to the americans initially to go to spain and portugal and france and other places as well even amsterdam the dutch had them as well so africans did have slaves societies just like elsewhere so those who were taken with those that were already in slaved and they were the first ones that fed into the slave trade. some of them themselves there were examples of traders themselves that would fall into bad circumstances but most people did not know the extent of the of brutality but slavery is a brutal institution people's lives the ed baird denied control of their lives so slavery is brutal where you find it. >> host: of 1
the center?. >> every society of what slavery at a different time. when you think of it ending war dwindling in the 18th century ad about the same time really the slave trade ends in the united states actually ending slavery with their territory but would maintain slavery in their colonies. >> host: were the african nations or tribes aware of what was happening?. >> africa itself had a slave society so the first africans that were taken to the americans initially to go to...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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and it was much discussed at the time. and people like david wills and james speed, in fact, they said, no, lincoln did not feel that way. i, in the -- in the book i argue that lincoln probably, as he did, often spoke deprecatingly of his words in some ways. he talk ed about them short, short, short, that kind of thing, the few remarks i gave, those kinds of things came to him easily. he was not one to puff up his achievements or accomplishments. so when you talk to him about his speech, you could easily say, yes, these few words or something of this sort. and people might have heard him saying these aren't -- not so great, i'm not that -- but what he said to james speed about the compliment that everett gave him and later on, other indications that i give in the book that lincoln did understand that his speech was something that the people talk ed about, and recognized, and that lincoln himself came to understand was something that had been more than just a speech. i do believe lincoln, before the end of his life, did see
and it was much discussed at the time. and people like david wills and james speed, in fact, they said, no, lincoln did not feel that way. i, in the -- in the book i argue that lincoln probably, as he did, often spoke deprecatingly of his words in some ways. he talk ed about them short, short, short, that kind of thing, the few remarks i gave, those kinds of things came to him easily. he was not one to puff up his achievements or accomplishments. so when you talk to him about his speech, you...
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Aug 11, 2017
08/17
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first, one of the things with time travel with the president, time travel stories i didn't have to subscribe to a blend in the idea that the future and past are a place you can actually go to but also subscribe to the president if they have most time travel stories to a place priority on where the time traveler is. so then it's not real in the same sense. >> so any story where it is possible to change things has to subscribe to a kind of mixture. >> the language is inherentlyge present so these issues i thinke are in terms of the science it's so difficult, but again one of the things you're interested in is a philosophical question of how the brain tells time and i think a lot of people, when you talk about your sense of time and knowing the time of day or how long it is until lunchtimeil but what we are doing right now is depend and which is understanding speech, so your brain is timing the pauses in my speech and using the cues to communicate and the brain is incredibly sophisticated and i will give you examples of that. so if i say to sentences like they gave her cat food or they gave her
first, one of the things with time travel with the president, time travel stories i didn't have to subscribe to a blend in the idea that the future and past are a place you can actually go to but also subscribe to the president if they have most time travel stories to a place priority on where the time traveler is. so then it's not real in the same sense. >> so any story where it is possible to change things has to subscribe to a kind of mixture. >> the language is inherentlyge...
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Aug 13, 2017
08/17
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the court? atrk: it was an unusual time the courts. it was a unique time at the end of the 1960's. there were the two vacancies at the time. there was a lot of turmoil within the court that created a crisis within the court at a number of points. when justice powell and justice rehnquist joined the court, a think they had created something momentum that they could not have reverse the momentum if they wanted to. at the end of the day, justice powell joined. at the very end, chief justice burger joined. it switch from a 6-3 decision to a 7-2 decision. host: here are the questions. abortion laws that criminalize all abortions except those requiring medical advice to save the life of the mother. violate the constitution, the court said yes. the 14th amendment due process law protects a right to privacy, including the right to abortion, yes. are there circumstances where a state may enact laws prohibiting abortion, yes. did the fact that roe's naturallyterminated render the lawsuit, the court said no. harrys a bit of justice blackmun's opinion. it was how many pages along in total? mel
the court? atrk: it was an unusual time the courts. it was a unique time at the end of the 1960's. there were the two vacancies at the time. there was a lot of turmoil within the court that created a crisis within the court at a number of points. when justice powell and justice rehnquist joined the court, a think they had created something momentum that they could not have reverse the momentum if they wanted to. at the end of the day, justice powell joined. at the very end, chief justice burger...
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Aug 23, 2017
08/17
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>> bar and have lived here in mesa arizona, born in mesa arizona, a young man in his mid-20s at the time. he was suspected by the phoenix police department of being involved in the abduction of a robbery and kidnapping of three different women, three different occasions. all of those occasions happened in downtown phoenix. the pickup for lack of a better word was done in downtown phoenix. some of the crimes took place out in the desert at the time it wawas thought to be the desert s now 20th street. it's no longer the desert, it is a major part of central phoenix today but that's how it started. a suspect in the crimes. the police went to his home in mesa arizona, two police officers and they asked him if he would come down to the police station in central phoenix. they would drive him down here and they learned about some criminal activity. they weren't sure what at the time, and he agreed to do that so they brought him down here and interviewed him were anticipated, depending on your perspective, here in the building that we are in today. but the police had no directive incident of any
>> bar and have lived here in mesa arizona, born in mesa arizona, a young man in his mid-20s at the time. he was suspected by the phoenix police department of being involved in the abduction of a robbery and kidnapping of three different women, three different occasions. all of those occasions happened in downtown phoenix. the pickup for lack of a better word was done in downtown phoenix. some of the crimes took place out in the desert at the time it wawas thought to be the desert s now...
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at the time milton clark was a toxicologist for the e.p.a. the government agency responsible for environmental protection. with his colleagues he wrote a report condemning dallas practices. just as much right before the reports publication of the corporation would succeed in pressuring the acting chief of the e.p.a. in washington. we went into shock we had never heard of such a thing ever that the company that we were regulating they would have the right to review a report comment on it before it's released and what did they ask you about and it was critically important to say that people were at risk but they did not want to just basically want to squash the report ok and eventually the final report they prevailed and so they truncated it down and removed critical sections and all the conclusions were taken away. pressured by his superiors milton clarke was forced to censor the report. the result pollution in midland michigan would continue for thirty years with impunity. and the executives that would continue denying the dangers. there is n
at the time milton clark was a toxicologist for the e.p.a. the government agency responsible for environmental protection. with his colleagues he wrote a report condemning dallas practices. just as much right before the reports publication of the corporation would succeed in pressuring the acting chief of the e.p.a. in washington. we went into shock we had never heard of such a thing ever that the company that we were regulating they would have the right to review a report comment on it before...
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Aug 12, 2017
08/17
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>> guest: i'm editor of the new york times book review and i oversee book coverage at the new york times. that extends from reviews in the senate book review tour daily critic. to reporting on the industry, to profiles and future. we try to cover not only what the latest is in books, but also to cover the way in which books intersect with the larger culture and news. >> if somebody gets a sunday new york times are subscribe separately, can you read just one? or do they come -- if you look at is this short story? >> guest: i think a book review serves multiple purposes. ideally to tell you what's in the book, to give you a sense of the writing and offer some kind of judgment. i also think a book review is an old form. there is a certain writing that takes place that you link it and the rest of the news report or feature about a book. criticism is an art form. often my hope is that people are not just looking for a book report to see if they just want to read the book but they're also appreciating that writing. also people read the book reviews they don't have to read the book. >> guest: l
>> guest: i'm editor of the new york times book review and i oversee book coverage at the new york times. that extends from reviews in the senate book review tour daily critic. to reporting on the industry, to profiles and future. we try to cover not only what the latest is in books, but also to cover the way in which books intersect with the larger culture and news. >> if somebody gets a sunday new york times are subscribe separately, can you read just one? or do they come -- if...
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Aug 17, 2017
08/17
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he has not given the second inaugural. so lincoln at this time is still very much viewed as a western rube politician by many people. it is possible david questioned whether he could in fact rise to the occasion. at the wills house, there were greetings. there was individuals, notables from the town came to meet lincoln. a man who had been wounded shook lincoln's hand there and said it was the proudest moment of his life. in the evening, at around 9:00 or so, arrived out in front of the house here, the front door here. arrived out there, the band for the ninth new york infantry. that was a signal they were going to have a grand serenade. it's a charming 19th century ceremony where they would play music, they would demand the notable would say a few words, they would and demand that the notable would come out and say a few words, they would march around a little bit and the notable would go back inside and everyone would clap. lincoln made them stand outside 45 minutes or so, yelling for him to come out. that's very important to know for the story
he has not given the second inaugural. so lincoln at this time is still very much viewed as a western rube politician by many people. it is possible david questioned whether he could in fact rise to the occasion. at the wills house, there were greetings. there was individuals, notables from the town came to meet lincoln. a man who had been wounded shook lincoln's hand there and said it was the proudest moment of his life. in the evening, at around 9:00 or so, arrived out in front of the house...
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the tests were being performed at holmesburg. from that time on da was already aware of the dangers of dioxin the company put it in writing in this confidential note from june one thousand nine hundred sixty five . dioxin is exceptionally toxic. some months later dow would study its side effects on the prisoners. and can i say. in this novel you know none of them were in the form. that we would contest something. with. fish an incumbent. in one way and. we found one of the doctors that perform the tests at holmesburg in the one nine hundred sixty s. . today he's an oncologist at northwestern hospital in chicago. sigmund vitamin is preparing to retire. he is one of the few witnesses still alive every day i had a over all of twenty. they were coming in all day. all day long people were all absolutely will it was. a machine. in one nine hundred sixty seven sigmund weitzman was only twenty one years old he was an intern at holmesburg the senior physician overseeing the tests never told him the names of the products used on the prisoners. only reali
the tests were being performed at holmesburg. from that time on da was already aware of the dangers of dioxin the company put it in writing in this confidential note from june one thousand nine hundred sixty five . dioxin is exceptionally toxic. some months later dow would study its side effects on the prisoners. and can i say. in this novel you know none of them were in the form. that we would contest something. with. fish an incumbent. in one way and. we found one of the doctors that perform...
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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pretty much royalty at the time. they were a prominent family who had the respect of a lot of people. he was very fortunate that henry mckee was a kind owner. he was still enslaved which made it a difficult life. but he was fortunate in that he is raised as a house slaved a mother. compared to the life he could have had it was much more. they had access to information and they had regular food and hand me down clothes. it was not ideal but it was better than the life of a plantation slave. we know his mother had one son by the time she had robert. he grew up as an only child living in the slave house behind the mckee house which till exists today. >> it's a beautiful town. they did have a lot of slaves living in town and then robert would have gone out so he was seeing a lot of different ways of life. >> let me interrupt because if people are straining to find out where buford is and also charleston it's right there on the southern southeastern point there. >> it was a very strategic place for the union army in novemb
pretty much royalty at the time. they were a prominent family who had the respect of a lot of people. he was very fortunate that henry mckee was a kind owner. he was still enslaved which made it a difficult life. but he was fortunate in that he is raised as a house slaved a mother. compared to the life he could have had it was much more. they had access to information and they had regular food and hand me down clothes. it was not ideal but it was better than the life of a plantation slave. we...
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Aug 31, 2017
08/17
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he was noted sportswriter of the year in ireland three times and in the uk four times that his main claim to fame is that he really broke and worked very, very hard for years and years and years uncovering the doping program of lance armstrong and his american cycling team, and obvious it was indicated in the end when armstrong conceded. you be talking about his coverage of armstrong and his lawsuits by armstrong as we discussed the matter this morning. to his left is lower appraiser, from austin, texas, with the firm of haynes and boone. laura is an outstanding litigator but i think really her most noteworthy accomplishment is that she was instrumental in getting the texas legislature, texas, to pass and anti-slap act, retraction statute and a reporter shield law all very media protective matters through the texas legislature over the last few years. and finally to her left is tom clare, with the firm of claire and block in alexandria, virginia. tom is in a sense, this is random seeding but is kind of by himself over there on the left. bobby maybe should be the right, i don't know, but h
he was noted sportswriter of the year in ireland three times and in the uk four times that his main claim to fame is that he really broke and worked very, very hard for years and years and years uncovering the doping program of lance armstrong and his american cycling team, and obvious it was indicated in the end when armstrong conceded. you be talking about his coverage of armstrong and his lawsuits by armstrong as we discussed the matter this morning. to his left is lower appraiser, from...
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Aug 10, 2017
08/17
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i'm pleased to have eye vor prickett at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thank you very much, a real honor to be here. let me go back to your quote that you just said. tell me the impact of being there in terms of what you see, feel, worry about. >> yeah, i mean people have described it as the worst urban combat since vietnam. and i mean i don't have experience dating back that far. but it certainly was the most brutal combat i've ever witnessed, not just from, you know, a personal point of view but you know, the effects it had on the population there. and the city itself. so even if you weren't witnessing the fighting fibs first hand what you saw after the fact was, you know, pretty hard to comprehend the amount of firepower that was being used in such a densely packed city. >> rose: you have importantly said at least to me, it's very important, not only to cover the battle but to cover the impact of the battle on the lives around the battle. >> exactly. as anything that is more what i am interested in as a photographer when i'm working in thes
i'm pleased to have eye vor prickett at this table for the first time. welcome. >> thank you very much, a real honor to be here. let me go back to your quote that you just said. tell me the impact of being there in terms of what you see, feel, worry about. >> yeah, i mean people have described it as the worst urban combat since vietnam. and i mean i don't have experience dating back that far. but it certainly was the most brutal combat i've ever witnessed, not just from, you know, a...
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Aug 10, 2017
08/17
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make -- making referees full time. thefl created 24 full time rev positions. the referees have been part time most having other full-time jobs. some are lawyers, a dairy farmer even a high school principal. the nfl is the only pro league without full time reps until now that is. >> how much would you pay for a pair of socks. >> five dollars. >> two dollars. gucci is selling a pair for $525. both of us combined wouldn't buy this. >> still couldn't. >> the socks are completely covered in multi-colored seek quinns, wow. they may be high fashion but they look pretty impractical. what makes them $500 again. >> the sequins but you could go to michaels. pour it on aer9-cent socks. i mean. >> and you can't walk in those, either. can you imagine. >> gucci are you doing too much. coming up on fox5 news morning, a new report on immigration and deportation is the perfect example of perception versus reality when comparing the trump and obama white houses. >> the aclu files a lawsuit against metro claiming they're violating the first a
make -- making referees full time. thefl created 24 full time rev positions. the referees have been part time most having other full-time jobs. some are lawyers, a dairy farmer even a high school principal. the nfl is the only pro league without full time reps until now that is. >> how much would you pay for a pair of socks. >> five dollars. >> two dollars. gucci is selling a pair for $525. both of us combined wouldn't buy this. >> still couldn't. >> the socks are...
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49
Aug 10, 2017
08/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 49
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but the editor of "the times" is one of the best of his generation. two different guys personality wise. strikingly similar professionally. very tough. very high standards. and attempting to raise the bar of expectations at the same time they're dealing with a digital revolution that has caused havoc with their business models. and then comes this amazing story. and they made the decision to commit significant resources to over this so far astonishing presidency. charlie: will one or the other win this or will they simply be n a long struggle? james: a great question. one of the things at the end of the "vanity fair" piece i personally struggled with. i think it is a classic on one level newspaper war but is also one in which both could win but also both could lose. so to that extent, it's not like your traditional newspaper and the ultimate factors have to do with a number of things, the coming of the president of the united states who so actively tries to devalue and delegitimize the press, i think those tie into questions of whether or not a younge
but the editor of "the times" is one of the best of his generation. two different guys personality wise. strikingly similar professionally. very tough. very high standards. and attempting to raise the bar of expectations at the same time they're dealing with a digital revolution that has caused havoc with their business models. and then comes this amazing story. and they made the decision to commit significant resources to over this so far astonishing presidency. charlie: will one or...
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85
Aug 5, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
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and i'm either younger than i look or i was 12 at the time. idahoes say i was 12 at the time. so, i was in my 20s, and it was a good training ground for the second time around, because i sort of knew what needed to me bun issue knew the white house really well. knew how the logistics of being on the road worked. i think that helped a lot. having had that previous experience. >> host: could you good a whole day -- well, first of all, what were the differences between being on the staff at the reagan house and being the chief at the obama white house? >> guest: well, the biggest difference was i knew -- i had already established a relationship with president obama before he was president. so that had already been established. didn't know reagan at all. i wasn't -- my personal views tend to be more on the obama side than the reagan side, but i look at it as an opportunity to document history. with reagan, reagan was much more formal than president obama in that he would always wear a coat and tie, never take his suit coat off. president obama was much more informal. he would take
and i'm either younger than i look or i was 12 at the time. idahoes say i was 12 at the time. so, i was in my 20s, and it was a good training ground for the second time around, because i sort of knew what needed to me bun issue knew the white house really well. knew how the logistics of being on the road worked. i think that helped a lot. having had that previous experience. >> host: could you good a whole day -- well, first of all, what were the differences between being on the staff at...
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55
Aug 11, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 55
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constitutes that as the work? time will tell. >> when you say what is the advantage of perceiving kindness and passage if it doesn't flow. i guess one question, what is the alternative. they can have accurate recordings of this future so that means can increase information, what is the alternative that such an information system. >> if that theory imposes any symmetry on theory, i think that go along way, but that is a beautiful example. it's possible we will never be able to answer these questions. [inaudible] everybody does this. animals don't seem to have a grasp of the past and the future is much as humans. >> how did they come to acquire that ability. some people believe it's metaphor and understanding space and our ability to understand time relies on our ability to understand space. this understands why we in most languages use spatial metaphors to talk about time. in hindsight that was a bad idea or your thinking. [inaudible] this notion that we use spatial metaphors is a patient elevation of time. whether it's
constitutes that as the work? time will tell. >> when you say what is the advantage of perceiving kindness and passage if it doesn't flow. i guess one question, what is the alternative. they can have accurate recordings of this future so that means can increase information, what is the alternative that such an information system. >> if that theory imposes any symmetry on theory, i think that go along way, but that is a beautiful example. it's possible we will never be able to answer...
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Aug 24, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 33
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at the time i'm not sure what she was doing. she had no business being on ths airplane. it that morning and called in sick. according to the family when was hung over from a party the night before. i guess at the time he couldn't fly one of those planes without legally having the stewardess on board.th so i said would you want to come with us? you don't have to do much, just come on board a quick flight and she said sure.lane wit the family, only two weeks before that accident they had experienced difficulty in another airplane and his wife had made a comment that said if something were ever to happen to frank you would want to be with him. that was just two weeks before something did happen. i was able to interview the family and other than being newlyweds, frankie was an amazing young man. one of the most beautiful comments i heard about someone who read the book, actually of ramirez said to me, one of the most profound stories that impacted is a story frank. because i can identify with frank. that blew my mind. f a man also struggled to make it here on his own.t and i
at the time i'm not sure what she was doing. she had no business being on ths airplane. it that morning and called in sick. according to the family when was hung over from a party the night before. i guess at the time he couldn't fly one of those planes without legally having the stewardess on board.th so i said would you want to come with us? you don't have to do much, just come on board a quick flight and she said sure.lane wit the family, only two weeks before that accident they had...
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64
Aug 9, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 64
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hopefully this will set a precedent for the next time it happens.” this will set a precedent for the ppose the danger is there could be other athletes going hang on, i was ill and... what we have not seen too many empty lanes and he is the highest profile casualty. whilst we wait for issac makwala to appear, we keep hearing on the other side, and i think we can bring you live pictures now from bbc sport. this is very strange, the start list for this heat literally just very strange, the start list for this heat literallyjust has one lane in it and blood that is issac makwala. no matter how he performs, he will be able to frame that on his wall. the strangest start list you have ever seen. wall. the strangest start list you have ever seen. here wall. the strangest start list you have ever seen. here he is, issac makwala, not allowed to race in the 400 metres last night because he was in isolation and quarantine. following this outbreak of norovirus. he has to race 20.53 or faster. that is the time of the slowest lucky loser, the portuguese runner david lieber who qualified for the semi
hopefully this will set a precedent for the next time it happens.” this will set a precedent for the ppose the danger is there could be other athletes going hang on, i was ill and... what we have not seen too many empty lanes and he is the highest profile casualty. whilst we wait for issac makwala to appear, we keep hearing on the other side, and i think we can bring you live pictures now from bbc sport. this is very strange, the start list for this heat literally just very strange, the start...
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136
Aug 24, 2017
08/17
by
WPVI
tv
eye 136
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, they do say the driver washe time. reporting live from montgomery county, jeb -- jeanette reyes channel 6 "action news." >>> a passenger who was injured in the tuesday train cash is seeking damages from septa. robison said away was knocked unconscious and suffered other injuries. >> 5:37 a.m., new this morning, someone won the powerball jackpot which was growing since june. a single ticket purchased at the handy variety store we were looking at live in watertown, massachusetts. there it is again, a live picture, looks like police are out there to make sure people are nice and orderly. it's an exiting thing for the store and people in the community wondering who it is. the numbers as they were last night in the drawing, 6, 7, 16, 23, 26 and 4. there were at least two match five winners in pennsylvania that's worth $1 million or $2 million if you shows the power play. >>> eagles take onhedolphins. fans at the field get to see the starters. they hope to play carson wentz and the first team for at least the entire first hal
, they do say the driver washe time. reporting live from montgomery county, jeb -- jeanette reyes channel 6 "action news." >>> a passenger who was injured in the tuesday train cash is seeking damages from septa. robison said away was knocked unconscious and suffered other injuries. >> 5:37 a.m., new this morning, someone won the powerball jackpot which was growing since june. a single ticket purchased at the handy variety store we were looking at live in watertown,...
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68
Aug 31, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 68
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the united kingdom. we stand at a really critical time in the uk.rm issues of trade, the consequences of brexit, defence and security cooperation that have dominated theresa may's talks here. but it's her strikingly blunt, unplanned declaration about her own political future that this trip to japan will be remembered for. ben wright, bbc news, tokyo. 0ur political correspondent eleanor garnier is in westminster for us now. she is not a quitter, what reaction of you had to back? gallo range, i think it is important to know that theresa may did not get back on the aeroplane to japan to set up her ambitions to stay on as leader until 2022. she wanted to slap down a newspaper story and i think over a series of interviews her line on her future hardened and hardened. in the short term i think there is absolutely zero desire for another leadership election amongst conservative mps. they worry that that could trigger another general election. in a sense theresa may's comments will not worry the party. the long—term issue is a completely different story bec
the united kingdom. we stand at a really critical time in the uk.rm issues of trade, the consequences of brexit, defence and security cooperation that have dominated theresa may's talks here. but it's her strikingly blunt, unplanned declaration about her own political future that this trip to japan will be remembered for. ben wright, bbc news, tokyo. 0ur political correspondent eleanor garnier is in westminster for us now. she is not a quitter, what reaction of you had to back? gallo range, i...
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99
Aug 27, 2017
08/17
by
WUSA
tv
eye 99
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i think i had 95 or something the first time around. i thought but i holed a nice really putt to get into the playoff. dottie: three events left in the fedexcup place. what yo your expectations? >> i'm expecting to play very well. i feel like the game is finally back in form like it was leading back into the masters. i feel like i'm swinging everything really well. got a lot of control over the golf ball and i'm feeling really good. obviously getting the win here today gives me a lot of kflt going into next week and the rest of the playoffs. do it. going forward, where do you think you need to improve to continue to dominate? >> i think right now i just need to keep doing what i'm doing. i feel like severing working pretty well. keep working hard on my wedge game. because if i drive it in the fairway, i get a lot of wedges. that's where i have to score. i feel like those are dialed in right now. keep working on those and hopefully keep driving as good as i am. dottie: fourth win in the playoffs in your career. jim: didn't have a single b
i think i had 95 or something the first time around. i thought but i holed a nice really putt to get into the playoff. dottie: three events left in the fedexcup place. what yo your expectations? >> i'm expecting to play very well. i feel like the game is finally back in form like it was leading back into the masters. i feel like i'm swinging everything really well. got a lot of control over the golf ball and i'm feeling really good. obviously getting the win here today gives me a lot of...
89
89
Aug 28, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 89
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with the football transfer window closing in three days' time — clubs are finalising deals. ficially joining on onejuly 2018. the reds have agreed to pay the £48 million release clause that will allow him to move next summer. the fee will easily surpass the £36 million pounds liverpool spent on mo salah this summer. frenchman 0usmane dembele has become the second most expensive footballer of all time after he joined barcelona today from borussia dortmund for an initial £96.8 million. the 20—year old france international has signed a five—year contract with the club. and the deal could rise to £1355 million — barca spending some of the £200 million they received from paris saint germain for neymar. hearts have appointed craig levein as their new manager to replace ian cathro who was sacked before the start of the premiership season. levein, the former scotland manager, was the director of football at tynecastle. hearts have lost twice and won once in the league under caretaker boss jon daly who will remain at the club as a coach. the cyclist chris froome has revealed he is con
with the football transfer window closing in three days' time — clubs are finalising deals. ficially joining on onejuly 2018. the reds have agreed to pay the £48 million release clause that will allow him to move next summer. the fee will easily surpass the £36 million pounds liverpool spent on mo salah this summer. frenchman 0usmane dembele has become the second most expensive footballer of all time after he joined barcelona today from borussia dortmund for an initial £96.8 million. the...
91
91
Aug 2, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 91
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it was the first time in history that's happened. but the congress also had been swept by jefferson's party. and the house of representatives that was going to decide who was going to be the president between jefferson and burr was the outgoing federalist congress, adam's party. >> the lame ducks. >> the lame ducks. >> who had just been reputeuated but the lame ducks is going to be deciding who gets the top slot. >> tlabsolutely. and they are very bitter against jefferson. it has been a fierce campaign. so, you have these very angry federalist who think jefferson's going to take the country in a terrible direction and they're the ones worth task with deciding whether it's going to be jefferson and burr. and it leads to great chaos, the house of representatives cannot decide because of the composition of those deligations. and finally those 37 ballots in just a couple weeks before the president is supposed to be inaugurated, before jefferson finally prevails. up until that point there is great uncertainty and chaos throughout the count
it was the first time in history that's happened. but the congress also had been swept by jefferson's party. and the house of representatives that was going to decide who was going to be the president between jefferson and burr was the outgoing federalist congress, adam's party. >> the lame ducks. >> the lame ducks. >> who had just been reputeuated but the lame ducks is going to be deciding who gets the top slot. >> tlabsolutely. and they are very bitter against...
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is full for the last time we trace to. each one of will carrying twenty kilos of drugs to the first offense to. leave just the word for it. is the free will remain there all medical men boy there is the business for the little guy like. me. i don't see a porno baby don't. make or. i walk down a great. crowd what. about your sudden passing i've only just learnt you worry yourself in taking your last wrong turn. you're out to you as we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry if you like so i write these last words and hopes to put to rest these things that i never got off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned on each. but then my feelings started to change you talked about war like it was again still some are fond of you those that didn't like to question our ark and i secretly promised to never be like it said one does not leave a funeral the same as one enters the mind it's consumed with death this one quite different i speak to you now because there are no other takers. that mainstream media has met its make
is full for the last time we trace to. each one of will carrying twenty kilos of drugs to the first offense to. leave just the word for it. is the free will remain there all medical men boy there is the business for the little guy like. me. i don't see a porno baby don't. make or. i walk down a great. crowd what. about your sudden passing i've only just learnt you worry yourself in taking your last wrong turn. you're out to you as we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry if you like so i write...
92
92
Aug 23, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 92
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i think she wasn't so outspoken at the time is she was saddened. i have seen in the letters she was saddened by the way her husband's reputation was being heard. so i don't know how much more she would have done. but it's really too bad that she expired so quickly. thanks for asking about that. other questions? yes? >> hypothetical. if you could have interviewed her for your book, what would have been the burning question and then off the record just between you and her what question might you have asked? >> thank you. that's a wonderful question. i think i would have asked her about her relationship with her son, who by the way, died relatively young of alcoholism too, kind of like his father. he had tuberculosis too. i would have asked about her relationship with him and also with her daughter-in-law. and why she wasn't closer to them. i think there was a sense at that time that this was she didn't want to really talk about that relationship. she didn't want to be public. with her first husband and it's really too bad. i think that was a sadness t
i think she wasn't so outspoken at the time is she was saddened. i have seen in the letters she was saddened by the way her husband's reputation was being heard. so i don't know how much more she would have done. but it's really too bad that she expired so quickly. thanks for asking about that. other questions? yes? >> hypothetical. if you could have interviewed her for your book, what would have been the burning question and then off the record just between you and her what question...
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126
Aug 25, 2017
08/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 126
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by the time the rescue came, only 316 men were left alive.en onboard that ship and out of the 800 who went into the water. it was the navy's worst disaster at sea. and now with 72 years gone by since then, of the 316 survivors that day, only 1 9 of them are still with us. the wreckage of the ca-35 was never found. until this week. finally. the proof they finally found it after all these years was when they saw the number on the hull. yep. they saw that 35. that's it. this is the u.s.s. indianapolis. ca-35. more than three miles down in the philippine sea. and it's recognizably, see a gun barrel, it was apparently a spare float in this next image from one of the planes that was onboard. there's a dual .40 millimeter aircraft gun with shells still loaded into the gun. the way they found this was with a research vessel owned by zillionair pa zillionaire paul allen, co-founder of microsoft. to find this three miles down, more than 70 years later. what a solemn thing given the number of men who died onboard, given what their last mission was befor
by the time the rescue came, only 316 men were left alive.en onboard that ship and out of the 800 who went into the water. it was the navy's worst disaster at sea. and now with 72 years gone by since then, of the 316 survivors that day, only 1 9 of them are still with us. the wreckage of the ca-35 was never found. until this week. finally. the proof they finally found it after all these years was when they saw the number on the hull. yep. they saw that 35. that's it. this is the u.s.s....
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79
Aug 22, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 79
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the atlantic. but that is going to take some time. head of it, that's where we boost the temperatures. the top end of that weather front will be quite active. so it's one of those days, or certainly one of those mornings, for the greater part of scotland. the rain becoming increasingly confined to northern isles as we move into the afternoon. widely into the teens across the western side of the british isles, with the last of the heat holding on in the south—east and east anglia. and then come thursday, pretty much we're all in this fresher run of atlantic air will come in moving from west to east. that area of low pressure will still be close to ireland. that pushes the front back and across northern ireland, so that is not a shower there, but persistent rain, and will be in the north part of scotland. elsewhere, a pretty reasonable day. temperatures coming back to the seasonal norm. but with a bit of sunshine, it will feel pleasant at about 21 or 22 at best. friday, similar sort of fare. still got the low pressure out there, still th
the atlantic. but that is going to take some time. head of it, that's where we boost the temperatures. the top end of that weather front will be quite active. so it's one of those days, or certainly one of those mornings, for the greater part of scotland. the rain becoming increasingly confined to northern isles as we move into the afternoon. widely into the teens across the western side of the british isles, with the last of the heat holding on in the south—east and east anglia. and then...
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55
Aug 6, 2017
08/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 55
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though the tests were committed to success, the castle bravo explosion was two times more powerful than expected, and resulted in radiation contamination of nearby islands, sickening soldiers and islands. the army department declassified the film in the early 1990's. ♪ >> operation castle, the fifth in the series of tests on the pacific proving grounds. another of the relation of men, of machines, another meeting of airships and troops. here was the best of physics, of metallurgy, of electronics. during the months after the historic definition, preparations for a new series of tests to solve the problems of a deliverable megaton weapon went ahead at an accelerated pace throughout the country. operation castle became a reality and is now successfully concluded. the report which follows is a summation of what occurred at the pacific proving grounds during that operation in 1954. here the league office record is general clarkson, task force commander. >> operation castle was concluded on the 14th of may in 1954. castle was an all thermonuclear test, a test of devices in the megaton range.
though the tests were committed to success, the castle bravo explosion was two times more powerful than expected, and resulted in radiation contamination of nearby islands, sickening soldiers and islands. the army department declassified the film in the early 1990's. ♪ >> operation castle, the fifth in the series of tests on the pacific proving grounds. another of the relation of men, of machines, another meeting of airships and troops. here was the best of physics, of metallurgy, of...
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at the time it was the joker all the more dean role you know really yeah yeah and. he gave me the greatest compliment of my of my entire career sir he said you know he just watched sixteen candles and i was just a puppet is the kid you know. and he told me i was his favorite actor had scenes and he saw jack and he's a writer and i was so amazing that i almost dropped the phone i think i was just eight years so the movie was sorry. if i think close to regret it my it would be that i think you know unfortunately didn't work out but the movie is you know again like all of his films that stands on its own you know really filled john tyler also as is long going to rumor that all of the characters played by you and john hughes films are actually based on use themselves is that true i can't say that that i don't know that that's true you know i think that he just had such a good ear i think he was always drawing from everyone and in his own family had he was the middle child he had two sisters and i remember him talking about that dynamic you kind of felt like an outsider
at the time it was the joker all the more dean role you know really yeah yeah and. he gave me the greatest compliment of my of my entire career sir he said you know he just watched sixteen candles and i was just a puppet is the kid you know. and he told me i was his favorite actor had scenes and he saw jack and he's a writer and i was so amazing that i almost dropped the phone i think i was just eight years so the movie was sorry. if i think close to regret it my it would be that i think you...
94
94
Aug 7, 2017
08/17
by
WCAU
tv
eye 94
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as you mentioned, the second time this happened. the last time this happened was in middle of july, last month, but last night's incident, another large group gathering outside the rec center, here in east germantown. this, of course, happened around 7:30 in the evening, a lot of people were here, philly police tell us about 400 teens and young adults were acting disorderly according to them, throwing bottles of rocks at police officers. three people were arrested. one officer was hit by a bottle, but was not injured. there were also two police cars that were vandalized. police tell us they noticed this is nothing new, second incident here, in as many months. what is concerning to them, the crowd seemed to be growing in number. the event took on a following on social media, being advertised as cookout part two. reference to the last time there was a big gathering here outside this very same rec center in mid-july, same thing, large crowd outside gathered here causing some issues here in the streets nearby. and, of course, police had
as you mentioned, the second time this happened. the last time this happened was in middle of july, last month, but last night's incident, another large group gathering outside the rec center, here in east germantown. this, of course, happened around 7:30 in the evening, a lot of people were here, philly police tell us about 400 teens and young adults were acting disorderly according to them, throwing bottles of rocks at police officers. three people were arrested. one officer was hit by a...
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56
Aug 31, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 56
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the times angle, the eu wa nts we didn't. times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aid. we didn't. the times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aidm we didn't. the times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aid. it is pa rt wants billions in foreign aid. it is part of the divorce bill, things we have already committed to that the eu say, look, you have already committed to this previous to the vote and you should still pay the price for this. apparently, our negotiating team have been looking through it legally and saying, we don't have to do this. their site says we do. this is all coming to the fact that we want to give them some money, because we want to stay within the spirit of a new relationship, but we won't be held to ransom, and that is what they are trying to do. at the moment we have this batting of heads. while we are on the times, look at that photograph. did you see the footage of that arrow coming in and one of the test match special commentators saying it had embedded itself in the ground, the bat
the times angle, the eu wa nts we didn't. times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aid. we didn't. the times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aidm we didn't. the times angle, the eu wants billions in foreign aid. it is pa rt wants billions in foreign aid. it is part of the divorce bill, things we have already committed to that the eu say, look, you have already committed to this previous to the vote and you should still pay the price for this. apparently, our negotiating team have...
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47
Aug 25, 2017
08/17
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 47
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he is aiming to do the double for the first time. e after they were held to a one all draw at bristol city. the home side took the lead. jamie paterson on hand to score after a goalmouth scramble. but, that lead lasted just four minutes. this deflected effort and steve bruce's side get a point. they have michaeljust one of their five league matches. hull city thrash bolton by 4—0. england lost their euro hockey semifinal against the netherlands in amsterdam. the dutch will now take on belgium in the final on sunday. the same two nations are contesting the women's final tomorrow. england will be guaranteed a first world badminton medal after chris and gabby adcock reached the semi—finals of the world championships in glasgow. fitz eavesdropped the game against their opponents from hong kong but they recovered to take the next two. they are likely to face the world number one from china. para canoeists emma wiggs and johnny young have won britain's first gold medal in the canoes brent world championships in the czech republic. she took
he is aiming to do the double for the first time. e after they were held to a one all draw at bristol city. the home side took the lead. jamie paterson on hand to score after a goalmouth scramble. but, that lead lasted just four minutes. this deflected effort and steve bruce's side get a point. they have michaeljust one of their five league matches. hull city thrash bolton by 4—0. england lost their euro hockey semifinal against the netherlands in amsterdam. the dutch will now take on belgium...
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51
Aug 25, 2017
08/17
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CSPAN3
tv
eye 51
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kennedy was in chicago at the time. and so he waited until kenny o'donald and sorrenson and sellen jr had left the room. and he said cureta scott king is in terrible discomfort. it would help if you would contact her. and he said, sure, i'll contact her. give me her number. and he dialled her number in the hotel room. and it was a break through. dr. king's father was really a more prominent player than dr. martin luther king, jr., at the time. he was about to go public with it and announce he was going to vote for kennedy. and jack kennedy went on the plane and said oh, i called king, and he said you did what? bobby kennedy is furious. he said, my god, we've lost the election. he calls in harris waford in the civil rights office and yells at him. he says you're not going to do anything further in this campaign. you may have lost it for us with this one call. jack kennedy didn't have a problem with it, but they did. but then curiously within a day john is very close and he's got wonderful oral histys. and he was a friend
kennedy was in chicago at the time. and so he waited until kenny o'donald and sorrenson and sellen jr had left the room. and he said cureta scott king is in terrible discomfort. it would help if you would contact her. and he said, sure, i'll contact her. give me her number. and he dialled her number in the hotel room. and it was a break through. dr. king's father was really a more prominent player than dr. martin luther king, jr., at the time. he was about to go public with it and announce he...
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Aug 25, 2017
08/17
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this was book was held from the "washington times" a great read. his publications include "slavery and politics in the early american republic," "a s david is a distinguished professor of history at the city of university new york graduate center. he's a historian of the early and 19th century america. and his interests span political and cultural history, slavery, anti-slavery and culture. he had also edited a number of volumes and is the receiipient a number of awards. i look forward to hearing from them tonight. thank you. [ applause ] >> thank you, sarah and thank you all for being here. we're really excited to speak about john adams here. i've done a lot of research i remember fondly in this room over the years. it's fun to be here talking about john quincy adams. this really has selects from the diary as the subtitle suggests. and our presentation will be hefb an on selections from that diary. we have explanatory footnotes to set the context for those entries. and in many ways my remarks tonight will serve that function. i'll kind of introduce
this was book was held from the "washington times" a great read. his publications include "slavery and politics in the early american republic," "a s david is a distinguished professor of history at the city of university new york graduate center. he's a historian of the early and 19th century america. and his interests span political and cultural history, slavery, anti-slavery and culture. he had also edited a number of volumes and is the receiipient a number of...
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Aug 6, 2017
08/17
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so they just let me hang around the shop all the time. i was the first real experience in a discriminatory situation. that experience, the next was i can graduate from high school. i wouldn't do too good with that. i think i've found something to help you. two black guys just got out of the service, decided they would open a school and do all kinds of things. they would open up this laboratory school. and so fine, i could smell bad earning? and you had forms that you poured for your mold. and so, i spent the next two years as an apprentice. back then, 300 bucks down, $15 a month in a calculated that in today's dollars. and so, once i did that and they graduated from high school and send this out to california. spent the summer with relatives and no sooner i got on the train almost when korea broke out in my head because i'm, would you call it coming national guardsmen. combat engineer and had to almost turn right around and come back because they called up my unit. at that time we still had black units. this was one of the last of the peri
so they just let me hang around the shop all the time. i was the first real experience in a discriminatory situation. that experience, the next was i can graduate from high school. i wouldn't do too good with that. i think i've found something to help you. two black guys just got out of the service, decided they would open a school and do all kinds of things. they would open up this laboratory school. and so fine, i could smell bad earning? and you had forms that you poured for your mold. and...
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Aug 13, 2017
08/17
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there were the two vacancies at the time. turmoil lot within the court that created a crisis within the court at a number of points. that,s interesting is when justice powell and justice rehnquist joined the court, a think they had created something momentum that they could not have reverse the momentum if they wanted to. at the end of the day, justice powell join. at the very end, chief justice burger joined. it switch from a 6-3 decision to a seven-to decision. host: here are the questions. that criminalize all abortions except those requiring medical advice to save the life of the mother. the court said yes. the 14th amendment due process law protects a right to privacy, including the right to abortion, yes. roe'she fact that pregnancy was our determining a naturally in the court said no. here 50 pages in total. it is a quick glance at his argument. privacy, whether it be found in the 14th amendment, the concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action is brought enough to encompass the woman's decision wheth
there were the two vacancies at the time. turmoil lot within the court that created a crisis within the court at a number of points. that,s interesting is when justice powell and justice rehnquist joined the court, a think they had created something momentum that they could not have reverse the momentum if they wanted to. at the end of the day, justice powell join. at the very end, chief justice burger joined. it switch from a 6-3 decision to a seven-to decision. host: here are the questions....
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Aug 7, 2017
08/17
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her son, john, was living here at the time of her death in the stone cottage.y then, nancy cook and miriam dickerman had moved away. he decided to sell val-kill. it offered to the national park service and the federal government in 1970 and they were not interested. so we sold the property and he sold eleanor roosevelt's furniture at public auction. it was in 1975 that a grassroots movement here in hyde park started the movement to save val-kill and make it into a national historic site. eleanor roosevelt's story is not just the story of a first lady, but it's a woman activist who really devoted her life to improving the world. she had always hoped that there would be world peace someday. she's really an inspiration to women, because she was a woman of great courage, who spoke out against issues that really needed to be addressed like civil rights. she is an incredible role model for women, even today. she was a woman way ahead of her time. she was a woman who was very important in the 20th century. but her ideas in the 21st century still ring loud today. you c
her son, john, was living here at the time of her death in the stone cottage.y then, nancy cook and miriam dickerman had moved away. he decided to sell val-kill. it offered to the national park service and the federal government in 1970 and they were not interested. so we sold the property and he sold eleanor roosevelt's furniture at public auction. it was in 1975 that a grassroots movement here in hyde park started the movement to save val-kill and make it into a national historic site....