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Nov 27, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN
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i was about to move and i was giving up my job. i have since gotten another job, but i said i wanted write books for you guys. i want to write books you think will sell. so i will do mckinley. and i am really glad i did. i spent many years at congressional quarterly, i was the editor there and ceo for 12 years but the company got sold and i was unhorsed. i ended up the editor of a national interest magazine focused on foreign policy. when i was ready to move to the northwest, i gave up that position and started the mckinley book. after it was finished, i was on the board of directors of a nonprofit that oversees magazines and web publishing called the american conservative. that happens to be my political orientation. the magazine found itself without an editor and asked if i would step in. i did. that was a year ago. i am going back-and-forth between washington state and washington dc. brian: on the mckinley book, where did you go to find out what he was like? how did you figure him out? robert: there was not a lot of documentatio
i was about to move and i was giving up my job. i have since gotten another job, but i said i wanted write books for you guys. i want to write books you think will sell. so i will do mckinley. and i am really glad i did. i spent many years at congressional quarterly, i was the editor there and ceo for 12 years but the company got sold and i was unhorsed. i ended up the editor of a national interest magazine focused on foreign policy. when i was ready to move to the northwest, i gave up that...
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77
Nov 5, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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she was slumped behind the wheel and she was dead. and this much was perfectly clear. it wasn't an accident. >>> coming up -- the investigation begins. >> we had to ask ourselves, who would get her to this location and why was she murdered? >> when "dateline" continues. how can you make your hair even stronger? use pantene shampoo together with 3 minute miracle daily conditioner. their pro-v formula is like a multi-vitamin. making your hair 2x stronger see the difference when you add 3 minute miracle daily conditioner. you have enough food thefor your guestslize but not enough fridge. at lowe's, we have more appliances to choose from. so, you can get the right one, at the right price, right now. get your choice of samsung french door refrigerators for $999 at the lowe's "pre black friday deals" event. for this product is overwhelmingly positive. this toothpaste sensodyne repair & protect can actually repair and protect sensitive teeth. and as long as they brush twice a day, everyday, then they can expect to continually have that reparative layer of protection against s
she was slumped behind the wheel and she was dead. and this much was perfectly clear. it wasn't an accident. >>> coming up -- the investigation begins. >> we had to ask ourselves, who would get her to this location and why was she murdered? >> when "dateline" continues. how can you make your hair even stronger? use pantene shampoo together with 3 minute miracle daily conditioner. their pro-v formula is like a multi-vitamin. making your hair 2x stronger see the...
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Nov 5, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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fayed was killed it was impossible he was holding a knife because he was with his attorney at that moment. >> in the same building. >> in the same building. >> he couldn't have gotten away from them long enough to get to the parking garage and kill his wife. >> no. and also, after mrs. fayed was murdered, there was video of footage that put mr. fayed in the courtyard so it was impossible for him to be in two places at one time. >> that security video shows jim fayed trying to make a cell phone call at exactly the moment you see people reacting to pam's screams. not only that, but a tall man wearing a black hooded sweatshirt clearly was not a description of jim fayed. a woman murdered. a bitter divorce. but certainly the husband wasn't the killer. so who was? a very rich mystery was under way. >>> coming up, the hunt is on for a motive and a suspect. did the secret to this killing lay hidden in the rush for gold? >> she wanted to make sure her friends were happy and taken care of, no matter what it took. how can you make your hair even stronger? use pantene shampoo together with 3 minute m
fayed was killed it was impossible he was holding a knife because he was with his attorney at that moment. >> in the same building. >> in the same building. >> he couldn't have gotten away from them long enough to get to the parking garage and kill his wife. >> no. and also, after mrs. fayed was murdered, there was video of footage that put mr. fayed in the courtyard so it was impossible for him to be in two places at one time. >> that security video shows jim...
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Nov 24, 2017
11/17
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. >> it was an execution. >> was this some sort of hit? >> he was in special forces. there must have been something at work. >> that's what police thought too. until they learned about the secret life of this husband and wife. >> they would meet couples on the internet. >> was there a forbidden affair? >> they were probably meeting for sex about four times a week. >> and did it lead to murder? >> she is absolutely cold-blooded. >> soon, there would be questions for mother and daughter. >> it was another shock. >> "the mystery of the murdered major." >>> hello and welcome "dateline extra." i'm craig melvin. like so many others, this story involves a husband and wife. he was a military man, a respected major in the u.s. army, when he was attacked in the middle of the night, police launched an investigation that would reveal eyebrow raising secrets, secrets that might hold the key to murder. here is keith morrison. >> the wind in the northern prairie sweeps across a vast flatland. grave markers around a military ceremony. the final resting spot for a few dozen veterans,
. >> it was an execution. >> was this some sort of hit? >> he was in special forces. there must have been something at work. >> that's what police thought too. until they learned about the secret life of this husband and wife. >> they would meet couples on the internet. >> was there a forbidden affair? >> they were probably meeting for sex about four times a week. >> and did it lead to murder? >> she is absolutely cold-blooded. >>...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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the story always was, he forgot it, it was rainy or he was too short, but the truth is, he was always -- as i have learned -- always a little hesitant to put himself forward. a little insecure, perhaps because he had no education or was an immigrant. he left the camera at home. when he got to the office, lillian rogers, who is his longtime assistant and became a dear friend of the family, basically nagged him until he went home to get it. people always say this is so amazing, this is so incredible, this is such a twist of fate, but if you knew him and her you knew this is how everything happened in their relationship. he hesitated, she nagged, then he did it. [laughter] alexandra: that is how it went. again, it is this weird way, in which for me, i understood as i began to do this work that i knew things i did not even know i knew. i did not know the history of the zapruder, but i knew the zapruder family. i knew how things worked, i knew our story. those were the pieces that could be put together with this bigger history to tell it in a fuller way. he went down to dealy plaza with th
the story always was, he forgot it, it was rainy or he was too short, but the truth is, he was always -- as i have learned -- always a little hesitant to put himself forward. a little insecure, perhaps because he had no education or was an immigrant. he left the camera at home. when he got to the office, lillian rogers, who is his longtime assistant and became a dear friend of the family, basically nagged him until he went home to get it. people always say this is so amazing, this is so...
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Nov 12, 2017
11/17
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it was before work and i was reading my bible.s a little bit after 7:00 when i saw that i had a call from him. >> from darren wyatt. mary knew he was scheduled to meet with the d.a. >> my first thought was he was going to tell me that the meeting was canceled again. >> but that was not the message. not at all. >> he said i'm standing here in front of sam's house and we are making an arrest right now. >> and you thought? >> i got up and i think i screamed there at the mcdonald's. >> years before, darren wyatt had made a promise. now he felt he was keeping it. >> that had to feel pretty good. tears of joy this time. >> sam lopez was arrested and charged with cathy's murder. but he wasn't alone. just as prosecutors now believed he wasn't alone the night he stabbed cathy to death. sam's cousin javier was also arrested and charged with murder. police also arrested sam's older brother armando who was once married to cathy's sister tina and had helped search for cathy. >> it's just a tragic loss. it hurts. everybody loved cathy. >> arman
it was before work and i was reading my bible.s a little bit after 7:00 when i saw that i had a call from him. >> from darren wyatt. mary knew he was scheduled to meet with the d.a. >> my first thought was he was going to tell me that the meeting was canceled again. >> but that was not the message. not at all. >> he said i'm standing here in front of sam's house and we are making an arrest right now. >> and you thought? >> i got up and i think i screamed...
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Nov 7, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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he was criticized for always being late but he was late because he was interested in what he was doing at the time had a meeting. the meeting. he didn't want it to end so there was this sense that he liked the subject and he learned what it was about. then what was interesting at camp david he made it a point of sitting down to and made them puput there themselves in the shoes of the other party so that was his way of saying we need to solve this together. he also loved to have u us argue when there was a disagreement and we'vand we've got to the cat room or the oval office he wanted to know why he had deferred and he would sit there with an ice cold can to his head and a yellow pad and take notes. but yet at the same time he was very open and friendly. can you tell us as a follow up with was thwhat was the most dit relationship that he had with other leaders in terms of disengagement? >> is talking about people that he really didn't want to meet with on the whole he tried to find something to deal with what everybody. i think there were people that were difficult to deal with. one of
he was criticized for always being late but he was late because he was interested in what he was doing at the time had a meeting. the meeting. he didn't want it to end so there was this sense that he liked the subject and he learned what it was about. then what was interesting at camp david he made it a point of sitting down to and made them puput there themselves in the shoes of the other party so that was his way of saying we need to solve this together. he also loved to have u us argue when...
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Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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was.e came from a venerable family and he was a first cousin of emma lazarus and he was at columbia university and columbia law school in the 1890's. two things about him. his father was a judge who got caught in the boss tweed scandals and his father was disgraced and forced to resign from the new york supreme court. i have a part of the chapter called "redemption." cardoza's life was to redeem the family name and he did everything to doing this -- devoted everything to doing this. he is known for his years as the chief judge as the new york state court of appeals, in which most of the legal cases are the cases that he adjudicated while the chief judge of the court. brian: he was on the court for 6 years. did he die in office? david: he died. he went from washington to albany in already-declining health. it was declining on the court and he eventually died in 1938. less than 6 years on the court. brian: hoover nominated him. david: hoover nominated. all of the jewish justices were liberal
was.e came from a venerable family and he was a first cousin of emma lazarus and he was at columbia university and columbia law school in the 1890's. two things about him. his father was a judge who got caught in the boss tweed scandals and his father was disgraced and forced to resign from the new york supreme court. i have a part of the chapter called "redemption." cardoza's life was to redeem the family name and he did everything to doing this -- devoted everything to doing this....
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Nov 27, 2017
11/17
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KNTV
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where was diren? >> it was terrible. i think i screamed for hours. >> i was like, there is no way possible. nothing like this has remotely happened. >>> sunday morning was less than an hour old when the sound of gunshots ricocheted through the prospect neighborhood of missoula, montana. >> 911, what are you reporting? >> um -- a robbery. >> ok what's going on? >> someone entered into our garage. um, shots were fired. >> someone just got shot. >> reporter: a robbery was rare in prospect but a shooting was unheard of. dash cams captured the chaos as first responders raced to the scene. >> stay to the right. >> what's the number? >> stop, stop! >> reporter: it was all happening just a few hundred feet from where foreign exchange student diren dede lived with his host family. >> i kind of woke up with a start. heard four loud pops, bang, bang, bang fairly close together and then a pause and another bang. >> reporter: randy heard the sirens and got out of bed. >> so i went downstairs, just to make sure i could lay my hands on
where was diren? >> it was terrible. i think i screamed for hours. >> i was like, there is no way possible. nothing like this has remotely happened. >>> sunday morning was less than an hour old when the sound of gunshots ricocheted through the prospect neighborhood of missoula, montana. >> 911, what are you reporting? >> um -- a robbery. >> ok what's going on? >> someone entered into our garage. um, shots were fired. >> someone just got shot....
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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WRC
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it was just that she was gone.of me died the day she died. >> just kept saying, not debby, not debby, not deb. >> reporter: debbie's parents time with lars, to support him in their shared grief. >> he could hardly talk. he seemed extremely remorseful. >> was he saying everything that you would wanna hear? like, i messed, i did it, i'm sorry? >> he apologized profusely for it and said it was just an accident. it was dark. >> some people might be really angry but you didn't go down that road? >> we did not go down that road. we supported him. >> reporter: but that support was about to be put to the test. >> coming up -- >> i know that she was frustrated. >> how strong was that marriage? how dark was that night? >> that's your wife. height, weight, shape. how can you not tell that's your wife? >> when "dateline" continues. i feel very proud of what i bring to the screen. i have the greatest job in the world. whget more bang for your buck with $15 kohl's cash for every $50 spent! earn it on everything even our biggest
it was just that she was gone.of me died the day she died. >> just kept saying, not debby, not debby, not deb. >> reporter: debbie's parents time with lars, to support him in their shared grief. >> he could hardly talk. he seemed extremely remorseful. >> was he saying everything that you would wanna hear? like, i messed, i did it, i'm sorry? >> he apologized profusely for it and said it was just an accident. it was dark. >> some people might be really angry...
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Nov 7, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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but the one that was absolutely apparent was an incredible gift for interpersonal relations. >> he waserson who knew what he wanted to do. he said would you nominate me for freshman class president? so i said sure. >> you just had a sense that he was at some people call him a natural. >> the ethos of this place, women and men for others, the public service. this is very much bill clinton. >> after martin luther king was assassinated, washington blew up. he just took a piece of paper into a a red cross and put on te side of his car and drove down into the area. he wasn't affiliated. he didn't call it red cross, he just went. >> always reaching out with that southern people skills that he possessed. >> so help me god. >> so help me god. >> congratulations. >> i don't think anybody ever expects a friend to be president of the united states. >> of course once he was elected in the back of everybody said was oh, well we have the reunion at thete white house? he was a generous as a friend that he invited all of us to the white house for our 25th and 30th reunions while he was president. >> i
but the one that was absolutely apparent was an incredible gift for interpersonal relations. >> he waserson who knew what he wanted to do. he said would you nominate me for freshman class president? so i said sure. >> you just had a sense that he was at some people call him a natural. >> the ethos of this place, women and men for others, the public service. this is very much bill clinton. >> after martin luther king was assassinated, washington blew up. he just took a...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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and it was really similar to mine. >> so it was. ray was turned over to a woman named anna lee brown, who named him jimmy brown. the only name he knew growing up. >> she had told me that she had adopted me. but i was also shipped around a lot from home to home because she had a lot of health problems from what i was told. >> he was neglected and often abused, bounced around for years, until anna brown shipped him off to a colorado couple when he was 14. and that's when he found his birth certificate. started calling himself ray smith, and began puzzling over the apparently unanswerable questions of his life. >> why did ann name me jim brown if my name was really ray? how come i never knew about jehri? things like that. then i wondered, you know, was i kidnapped? >> no answers from anna brown, who died soon after that. and as for life in colorado, by the time he was 16 -- >> things were getting a little rough. maybe because of my past, i wasn't a real easy kid. so i was put into foster care. >> and then? he graduated from high school
and it was really similar to mine. >> so it was. ray was turned over to a woman named anna lee brown, who named him jimmy brown. the only name he knew growing up. >> she had told me that she had adopted me. but i was also shipped around a lot from home to home because she had a lot of health problems from what i was told. >> he was neglected and often abused, bounced around for years, until anna brown shipped him off to a colorado couple when he was 14. and that's when he...
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because it was there was a tank next to the old building was yeah i was only eight floors and we counted how many military vehicles went by. there were eighty two. not just tanks but other military vehicles to hear them just going with machine. lithuanian radio and television programs continued to broadcast. this is where the crowd that protected us stood the whole place was full of people when you. like so many in the city venture gambro tell b.g. and i was worried about her family. that's all my son wasn't intimidated he didn't run away he stood still. people tried to stop the tanks with their bare hands. past the bed you know but it was when the ambulances went out and there was shooting it was terrible the streets were like an ant hill full of people and i had a funny feeling i said to my husband. please go and look for him. it was a computer day cash what. the soldiers used brute force to gain access to the building. anyone who stood their ground was run over by the tax. the presenter didn't know she was off the air. get this is what i get my own. now. i really wanted to reach lands
because it was there was a tank next to the old building was yeah i was only eight floors and we counted how many military vehicles went by. there were eighty two. not just tanks but other military vehicles to hear them just going with machine. lithuanian radio and television programs continued to broadcast. this is where the crowd that protected us stood the whole place was full of people when you. like so many in the city venture gambro tell b.g. and i was worried about her family. that's all...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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it was determined that there was a fragment of something that was on the bullet that was not part of the bullet. there were some question about whether or not it was textile. this would've been significant because this is the bullet that was believed to have hit the president in the head. not the bullet that went through his neck. and so testing was done. the national archives brought in various different agencies -- fbi, armed forces institute of pathology -- to examine it and test it and make a determination. it was determined it was not textile. it was actually some sort of human tissue of some type. and so the next question was, could we determine any dna from this? and that's why we have these slides. it was determined that there was no way to get any kind of dna. there is a report on this which is available on our website. and basically that was why we had retained the slides because we would not dispose of anything. so this is kept in the same physical container as the bullet for which it was derived. here are four cartridge shells found at the scenes of the tippit murder. and
it was determined that there was a fragment of something that was on the bullet that was not part of the bullet. there were some question about whether or not it was textile. this would've been significant because this is the bullet that was believed to have hit the president in the head. not the bullet that went through his neck. and so testing was done. the national archives brought in various different agencies -- fbi, armed forces institute of pathology -- to examine it and test it and make...
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573
Nov 4, 2017
11/17
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KNTV
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eye 573
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it was like he was moving in, and was feeling right at home. was i uncomfortable with it?now this guy's taking his place. >> uh-huh. yes, and brina didn't, she didn't like it either. >> reporter: who was this guy? and what was his reason for coming into sabrina's life? sheriff's detective meyer wondered the same thing. jason bernatene thought the detective had discounted his suspicions about jonathan hearn, but meyer had not. in fact, he wanted to learn much more about this young firefighter from hesperia, california. >> no criminal record that we were able to locate. >> reporter: but this was interesting, the bullet recovered from rob limon's head was tested and -- >> the results from the lab was somewhere -- like a .44 caliber to a .45 caliber bullet that killed rob limon. >> big bullet, big gun? >> yes. >> jonathan hearn have a gun like that registered to him? >> yes, he did. >> reporter: and they found something else registered in his name, a yamaha motorcycle. >> we -- went to the yamaha website, checked out some other motorcycles, similar in the same year, and was ab
it was like he was moving in, and was feeling right at home. was i uncomfortable with it?now this guy's taking his place. >> uh-huh. yes, and brina didn't, she didn't like it either. >> reporter: who was this guy? and what was his reason for coming into sabrina's life? sheriff's detective meyer wondered the same thing. jason bernatene thought the detective had discounted his suspicions about jonathan hearn, but meyer had not. in fact, he wanted to learn much more about this young...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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when i was five, my father was appointed deputy vice chancellor of the university and was assigned a new house on campus, number 305 cartwright avenue. before my family moved in, the previous occupant happened to be in an odd bit of co incidents but would later gain significance, the acclaimed writer. chevy, who was also a staff of the university. i did not think much of this growing up since university staff moved in and out of university housing. until years later when my first novel was about to be published here in the u.s., my editor asked me to tell her about my life. and i did. and then i added oh, by the way, i grew up in a house formerly occupied by one of the greatest writers in the world. and she said to me, her eyes wide, that is the most interesting thing you have told me about yourself. i then resolved at that moment to make sure that this was always included in my biography. as one of my life great achievements. i remember the house as it was then, the light blue torn story house and a large yard, the green hedge of whistling pines, the gracious graveled driveway. he r
when i was five, my father was appointed deputy vice chancellor of the university and was assigned a new house on campus, number 305 cartwright avenue. before my family moved in, the previous occupant happened to be in an odd bit of co incidents but would later gain significance, the acclaimed writer. chevy, who was also a staff of the university. i did not think much of this growing up since university staff moved in and out of university housing. until years later when my first novel was...
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it was a good. idea to be a ship if you shave with a group if you believe if you take the stool for you. with. the union of the soviet socialist republics as the state was officially called was one of the global powers of the twentieth century two hundred ninety million people lived in it locked up behind the so-called iron curtain. the soviet union was founded in one nine hundred twenty two and broke up in one thousand nine hundred ninety one. but the average life expectancy of a soviet man at the time was sixty three years so sixty nine and trolling wasn't a bad age to reach. your the machine a former submarine commander has been running a museum devoted to the soviet union since his retirement. in fact many still wax nostalgic about the soviet union looking back at chief lee and its power and internal cohesion and the victories that it won one hundred fifty peoples in fifteen autonomous republics that was the soviet union. bigger than yours its course it was would throw everyone backs latvians ru
it was a good. idea to be a ship if you shave with a group if you believe if you take the stool for you. with. the union of the soviet socialist republics as the state was officially called was one of the global powers of the twentieth century two hundred ninety million people lived in it locked up behind the so-called iron curtain. the soviet union was founded in one nine hundred twenty two and broke up in one thousand nine hundred ninety one. but the average life expectancy of a soviet man at...
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it was a w merely a shoot that this was repeated as a d.n. not far from is to go and do research to get. the balkan nations had defeated the ottoman empire. the what was to become of ottoman macedonia. belgariad different ambitions from greece and serbia and they were all against the albanians a new war broke out this time between the parties that it only recently been allies it was no longer a war of liberation by the people against their oppressors now it was a war between nations they all fought for themselves and were prepared to destroy only others all those who spoke a different language or had a different face. entire villages were massacred people were displaced raped and forcibly converted areas were to be cleansed with all means possible. more than four hundred thousand people were forcibly moved most of the muslims. it means the beginning of what we would call ethnic cleansing what i think that you have in the nine hundred ninety s. is an example of something that starts in the late nineteenth century and explodes in the early twen
it was a w merely a shoot that this was repeated as a d.n. not far from is to go and do research to get. the balkan nations had defeated the ottoman empire. the what was to become of ottoman macedonia. belgariad different ambitions from greece and serbia and they were all against the albanians a new war broke out this time between the parties that it only recently been allies it was no longer a war of liberation by the people against their oppressors now it was a war between nations they all...
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224
Nov 11, 2017
11/17
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WCAU
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it was daunting and also exhilarating. >> within a week i was wearing pants. >> was that magical?me you put makeup on? >> oh, i felt so beautiful-- it was fun to get dressed up. to choose things that i wanted to wear that i've always wanted to wear. >> reporter: rachel was 31 now, a single mother and suddenly on her own in a world she once considered wicked. she had no house, no job and no experience to find either. nothing in the church had prepared her for this. and her five children, ages 4 to 13, were even less ready than she was. >> mostly the social life was really hard on them. >> how so? >> they cried. they didn't wanna go to school because they didn't know how to make friends. they felt like they were weird like they didn't belong. >> reporter: it didn't help that their father, richard, remained loyal to the flds. we were unable to locate him, but sources tell us he's still a member of the church and hasn't seen his and rachel's children since they fled. >> how did you explain to your children that they would never see their father again? >> i just said, "you know what? y
it was daunting and also exhilarating. >> within a week i was wearing pants. >> was that magical?me you put makeup on? >> oh, i felt so beautiful-- it was fun to get dressed up. to choose things that i wanted to wear that i've always wanted to wear. >> reporter: rachel was 31 now, a single mother and suddenly on her own in a world she once considered wicked. she had no house, no job and no experience to find either. nothing in the church had prepared her for this. and...
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183
Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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he was helpless, he was powerless and he was depending on us to fix it. just really was very empathetic. i put myself in his shoes and i thought that he dealt with it pretty well, considering the circumstances. >> reid waited at his home. everyone waited as minutes became hours, hoping for some contact. but there was nothing. quinn's mom was so stressed that tony kravith suggested a change of scenery and had her brought to this back courtyard of the fbi's jacksonville headquarters. it was around 6:00 p.m. >> gail picked up the phone, her whole physical being changed. >> and it was quinn. >> quinn, quinn, what's wrong? >> and she was completely hysterical on the phone, screaming literally. she was screaming at me. >> quinn, quinn! talk to me, please! >> she was completely incoherent at that point. i couldn't even understand what she was saying. >> quinn, did they hurt you? >> tony kravith could only hear one side of the conversation. >> the blood drained from her face, her knees start to shake, her legs go weak. nobody can understand what she's saying, and
he was helpless, he was powerless and he was depending on us to fix it. just really was very empathetic. i put myself in his shoes and i thought that he dealt with it pretty well, considering the circumstances. >> reid waited at his home. everyone waited as minutes became hours, hoping for some contact. but there was nothing. quinn's mom was so stressed that tony kravith suggested a change of scenery and had her brought to this back courtyard of the fbi's jacksonville headquarters. it was...
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once upon a time there was a country the largest in the world in fact it was an empire it was called the soviet union shortly before it seventieth birthday it vanished from the map. it was. just a shift in the state political issue geopolitical state to the still figure. we are everywhere all over the world a star shines goes an old pioneer socialist youth organization song by the end of the one nine hundred ninety s. that star was no longer shining almost a decade after the collapse of the soviet empire the old republics of the u.s.s.r. had gone their separate ways. the baltic states of estonia latvia and lithuania and decisively turned their backs on moscow and were on their way to becoming members of the e.u. and nato. the other successor states are often referred to by moscow as the near abroad and reflecting an ardent desire for them to somehow still belong to russia but many of them were also now looking to the west. in most of the newly independent states the hope for economic upturn hadn't materialized in russia reform had largely failed a few people had made themselves very
once upon a time there was a country the largest in the world in fact it was an empire it was called the soviet union shortly before it seventieth birthday it vanished from the map. it was. just a shift in the state political issue geopolitical state to the still figure. we are everywhere all over the world a star shines goes an old pioneer socialist youth organization song by the end of the one nine hundred ninety s. that star was no longer shining almost a decade after the collapse of the...
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Nov 24, 2017
11/17
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KQED
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but unfortunately, i was... i was proven wrong.meant to be that way. >> narrator: in a letter to the journal neurosurgery, dr. pellman and other members of the nfl's mtbi committee attacked dr. omalu's paper. >> "these statements are based on a complete misunderstanding of the relevant medical literature..." >> narrator: they even questioned whether mike webster was suffering from neurological problems. >> "there is inadequate clinical evidence that the subject had a chronic neurological condition..." >> the league officials, the doctors and scientists serving on the mtbi committee, not only disputed those findings, they went after dr. omalu with a vengeance. they publicly said he should retract his findings. >> narrator: the nfl doctors insisted dr. omalu was misunderstanding the science of brain injury. >> "we therefore urge the authors to retract their paper..." >> it's an extraordinary move under any circumstances. like, you don't try to get a paper retracted unless there's evidence of fraud or plagiarism or something like that
but unfortunately, i was... i was proven wrong.meant to be that way. >> narrator: in a letter to the journal neurosurgery, dr. pellman and other members of the nfl's mtbi committee attacked dr. omalu's paper. >> "these statements are based on a complete misunderstanding of the relevant medical literature..." >> narrator: they even questioned whether mike webster was suffering from neurological problems. >> "there is inadequate clinical evidence that the...
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492
Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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KNTV
tv
eye 492
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i knew this was the man i was going to marry. ngets my dad was a great man. he was always doing things for my mom. >> he was a great man, but not a perfect man. >> she goes, bonnie, i'm having an affair. >> he would go back and 24th betwe -- forth between them and i said, fix your house. >> you were getting text messages of them having sex? >> yes. i'm done, i've had it with her. >> she sees this woman who has tried to ruin her life. she said, i'm turning around, i'm going to gront her. >> she kept playing this cat and mouse game. she kept braking. >> this is not an accident. >> this is the story of two fiery women battling for the heart of one much loved man. it's about sex, secrets, and lies. red hot texas passion and a bitter feud. all leading to a final showdown on a two-lane highway. >> bexar county, 911. >> i got a black escalade and range rover, they're hauling ass, acting like idiots. >> a high speed chase that went horribly, horribly wrong. >> it was a nightmare. >> reporter: when the dust settled, one life would be over, many others shattered. >> we
i knew this was the man i was going to marry. ngets my dad was a great man. he was always doing things for my mom. >> he was a great man, but not a perfect man. >> she goes, bonnie, i'm having an affair. >> he would go back and 24th betwe -- forth between them and i said, fix your house. >> you were getting text messages of them having sex? >> yes. i'm done, i've had it with her. >> she sees this woman who has tried to ruin her life. she said, i'm turning...
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378
Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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eye 378
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>> there was talk she was going to jog.. >> and there were people who claim they saw a woman they believed was nancy running. and it was proof, the defense says, that she was alive that morning. >> she was about 5'9", in good shape. >> this witness said she reported her sighting to the police after she saw nancy's missing poster. >> how is it that the next day when you saw the flyer you believed it was her? >> because she was so close to me and she had elongated face. that's what drew my attention. >> she wasn't the only one. this man said he got a 30-second look at her as he was driving to work. >> i saw a lady jogging on the right-hand side of the road. jogging towards the bridge. >> but did the police follow up? not for a long time, said these witnesses. >> they ignored everybody that believed they saw nancy for three months. >> same with those suspicious vans, said the defense. >> it was clear that the police had focused on brad to the exclusion of other people. >> it wasn't just brad who had been unfaithful, implied th
>> there was talk she was going to jog.. >> and there were people who claim they saw a woman they believed was nancy running. and it was proof, the defense says, that she was alive that morning. >> she was about 5'9", in good shape. >> this witness said she reported her sighting to the police after she saw nancy's missing poster. >> how is it that the next day when you saw the flyer you believed it was her? >> because she was so close to me and she had...
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Nov 5, 2017
11/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 74
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everything i saw -- it was where i was.had a camera with me all the time and was taking photographs all the time. it is kind of a tour de force that work from that time, 20, 21, out there with the energy and strength to shoot like that. in the 1980's, after rolling stone, i went to vanity fair and tina brown was running vanity fair and trying to pull it up and bring it back and have it survive. i started, i had already started before i left rolling stone doing portraits, but the journalism hasn't left. the journalism is there. i understand journalism, but i left journalism behind because i felt strongly that i was going to have a voice in my photographs. and i felt that you are not supposed to do that with journalism. you are supposed to stay objective. i then sort of said i am going to be a portrait photographer because it is ok to have a point of view in the photograph, but journalism is definitely there. when things happen so fast, that is journalism. i think when you have a little more time to think about it, it can bec
everything i saw -- it was where i was.had a camera with me all the time and was taking photographs all the time. it is kind of a tour de force that work from that time, 20, 21, out there with the energy and strength to shoot like that. in the 1980's, after rolling stone, i went to vanity fair and tina brown was running vanity fair and trying to pull it up and bring it back and have it survive. i started, i had already started before i left rolling stone doing portraits, but the journalism...
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was. a proxy war between two of the biggest powers in the middle east the wrong saudi arabia has escalated directly affecting other countries in the region. hundreds of thousands of taking to the streets. they're outraged at madrid's crackdown on for mike castle and leaders who were behind the region's independence that duration. also this hour a highly anticipated formal meeting between donald trump and valerie uproots in fast failed to materialize pat on the sidelines of the apec summit and agreed to cooperate on syria. and the u.s. justice department demands that r.t. america register as a foreign agent by monday.
was. a proxy war between two of the biggest powers in the middle east the wrong saudi arabia has escalated directly affecting other countries in the region. hundreds of thousands of taking to the streets. they're outraged at madrid's crackdown on for mike castle and leaders who were behind the region's independence that duration. also this hour a highly anticipated formal meeting between donald trump and valerie uproots in fast failed to materialize pat on the sidelines of the apec summit and...
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Nov 22, 2017
11/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 113
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it was found that -- she said it was horrible. all thewomen women and the men in the black section had to use the same filts. they were treated badly. they sat on horrible wooden seats as opposed to what was available in the section for the white ladies. and at this point josephine decides to find a little section in the ship and there she sits throughout the day and a half trip from louisiana to mississippi, which is interstate commence. under the commerce clause of article 1 section 8 the federal government regulates commerce among the several states. however, in this instance when she sues because under federal law there is supposed to be no segregation on interstate commerce, she wins at the trial court level with her attorney. it is appealed to the u.s. supreme court. in the case of hall versus declear results in a loss. not just a loss personally for her but a loss that would pave the way for plessy versus ferguson in 1896. it was determined if blacks and whites were put together on the steam ship there would be violence. wh
it was found that -- she said it was horrible. all thewomen women and the men in the black section had to use the same filts. they were treated badly. they sat on horrible wooden seats as opposed to what was available in the section for the white ladies. and at this point josephine decides to find a little section in the ship and there she sits throughout the day and a half trip from louisiana to mississippi, which is interstate commence. under the commerce clause of article 1 section 8 the...
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Nov 29, 2017
11/17
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KQED
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eye 88
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it was really hard.was just so far beyond what could normally be expected of humanitarian workers, i would say. the pointlessness of it, that's what it felt like. normally, if you work to the point of exhaustion, you can come away from something and feel a degree of satisfaction knowing that you did what you could. i didn't feel any satisfaction at all. it was never about feeling like you'd failed in the level of medical acuity. we did everything we could. it was about feeling the shame of what the world had to offer for liberia at that time, and yeah, the sheer number of deaths. it was just really seeing death, yeah. >> narrator: after sleeping on the streets for five days, finda and her surviving children were finally picked up by an ambulance crew in west point. (siren wailing) they were taken to the new clinic, but when they arrived, there was no room for them. >> it's just crazy, to stand there and look in the face of people and tell them that there is no space. it's surreal, really surreal. if you
it was really hard.was just so far beyond what could normally be expected of humanitarian workers, i would say. the pointlessness of it, that's what it felt like. normally, if you work to the point of exhaustion, you can come away from something and feel a degree of satisfaction knowing that you did what you could. i didn't feel any satisfaction at all. it was never about feeling like you'd failed in the level of medical acuity. we did everything we could. it was about feeling the shame of what...
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Nov 6, 2017
11/17
by
ALJAZ
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be a taliban headquarters it was it was a house that was still all intact but there weren't a stick of furniture in the house all the we we slept on the floor and i and i had to use kind a little traveling road show sort of thing course you would have slide projector yank if there were named electricity in the building but i had some diagrams and charts and sean some things and some just basically to describe the project and and to tell them what the benefits would be and then they were very interested. the message was always you guys will quit fighting with each other and form a government to get you in recognition that allows us to attract the world back to me to be financial. then we may have to deal. but the taliban were on the offensive and drove the northern alliance concept of the cities of my zone in shoney's on to build. they don't control most of the country. mohammad's not too long president during the soviet occupation had been spared by the northern alliance but the taleban showed no mercy not below was first tortured castrated and then harmed alongside his brother. the ex
be a taliban headquarters it was it was a house that was still all intact but there weren't a stick of furniture in the house all the we we slept on the floor and i and i had to use kind a little traveling road show sort of thing course you would have slide projector yank if there were named electricity in the building but i had some diagrams and charts and sean some things and some just basically to describe the project and and to tell them what the benefits would be and then they were very...
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Nov 8, 2017
11/17
by
KCSM
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he was told that his work was sophomoric.reshman. >>narrator: the butler registrar confirms he attended butler alright, but in the summer of '42, between semesters at cornell. butler says it doesn't release information on classes taken or grades earned. >>julia whitehead: but he ended up going to cornell university. he studied chemistry. >>narrator: kurt later said that was the only way his father would let him go to college is if he studied something "useful." his father insisted no architecture to avoid his fate and nothing in the humanities. >>julia whitehead: his father had wanted him to study science very much like his brother bernard. but kurt, he just wasn't as interested in his science courses and didn't do quite as well. >>narrator: it harkened back to when family lore says his grandfather, bernard, cried when he worked at the hardware store all the while dreaming of being an artist. >>nanette vonnegut: he knew for sure that science was not for him when he went to cornell. talk about crying. he probably was .... i th
he was told that his work was sophomoric.reshman. >>narrator: the butler registrar confirms he attended butler alright, but in the summer of '42, between semesters at cornell. butler says it doesn't release information on classes taken or grades earned. >>julia whitehead: but he ended up going to cornell university. he studied chemistry. >>narrator: kurt later said that was the only way his father would let him go to college is if he studied something "useful." his...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN
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what year was this? daryl: this was 1972 or 1973. i was 15. i was born in 1958. april.an: had anybody heard of bruce springsteen? daryl: no. nobody outside of new jersey. asbury park, new jersey. so, the name did not mean anything to me. a year or so later, he is on the cover of "time" magazine, you know? it was like, wow. that is the same guy. brian: i want to show some video from 1997. if people look closely, they will see you at the piano. let's watch this clip. ♪ brian: how did you end up on that stage? daryl: that is a funny story. it was "late night with david letterman," and i knew chuck was going to be on there. i called him and said, can i come up to new york and hang out with you? he said, "all right." they let i took the train or the bus up to new york, and i went to the studio, and he had my name on the guest list, backstage where security was. he was not there yet, so they let me in and said mr. berry is not here yet, but i could go to his dressing room or his waiting room. i went to his waiting room. tony randall was in there and roseanne barr and a couple
what year was this? daryl: this was 1972 or 1973. i was 15. i was born in 1958. april.an: had anybody heard of bruce springsteen? daryl: no. nobody outside of new jersey. asbury park, new jersey. so, the name did not mean anything to me. a year or so later, he is on the cover of "time" magazine, you know? it was like, wow. that is the same guy. brian: i want to show some video from 1997. if people look closely, they will see you at the piano. let's watch this clip. ♪ brian: how did...
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Nov 11, 2017
11/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 87
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i was a drafty, i was u.s. all the way, i was glad i had the chance to do something productive to help people in need of medical treatment. to this day, everything is as clear as a bell to me. if you can address that, and one more thing? since you are both historians, i have taken courses on the vietnam war. "vietnam:ook we use an american ordeal." you know anything about that text in particular? prof. lawrence: i do know that book. it is not one i've used a great deal, but i have a lot of respect for it and have consulted it. i would hold that out as one of the best textbooks out there. as far as the other question, i think it is fair to say kindcans were aware of the of programs the caller asked about. i think the american view of the war as more americans became fixated on it was difficult for the american public to pick out what was most essential about the war. this was one of the things that was jarring for people living through this experience. you understood there were humanitarian programs, but at the
i was a drafty, i was u.s. all the way, i was glad i had the chance to do something productive to help people in need of medical treatment. to this day, everything is as clear as a bell to me. if you can address that, and one more thing? since you are both historians, i have taken courses on the vietnam war. "vietnam:ook we use an american ordeal." you know anything about that text in particular? prof. lawrence: i do know that book. it is not one i've used a great deal, but i have a...
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61
Nov 25, 2017
11/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 61
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. >> i think that was running jo joke. >> it was but he was the guy. so much of what he introduced to the public was a part of the organization lack of corruption and part of the ideas. >> part of the -- was gingrich a part of that? >> it was very much pretrade as regular principles. in many ways the contract was a referendum on ronald reagan which was bill clinton. everybody was confident in that context today, the media portrays the media be in one way but you offer nuance of being how he got into politics, to replace the people who are in power, tell us about his first race. he was a conservative, but he wasn't really, although he wrote in 19741 of the first articles advocating and challenging in the primaries. there is visionary of the time because nobody thought he was going to do it or that he had a chance of being in the primaries he came within an eyelash and a whisker of beating ford's already thinking about politics in the future politics and revolutionary politics. he runs and 74 with the year after nixon resigns and the republicans got wipe
. >> i think that was running jo joke. >> it was but he was the guy. so much of what he introduced to the public was a part of the organization lack of corruption and part of the ideas. >> part of the -- was gingrich a part of that? >> it was very much pretrade as regular principles. in many ways the contract was a referendum on ronald reagan which was bill clinton. everybody was confident in that context today, the media portrays the media be in one way but you offer...
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Nov 6, 2017
11/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 73
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it was so good. a beautiful sound. it was my son. my son. >> kevin was free! but how? >> it's the craziest turn of my life probably. i didn't think it was ever gonna happen. >> here he is, kevin lunsmann. now in his 20s, and this is his amazing story. which began a moment before the kidnappers took his mom away. when she leaned forward and whispered in his ear. >> i remember her words exactly. she said, you have to get home to your father. you have to get back home. and that made me realize that she might be thinking that she may not make it tonight. >> that she might be taken away to be killed? >> yes, i just wanted to cry. i didn't -- i didn't wanna lose her. >> soon after that, they took his cousin away too. >> and after he left, i was alone. there was nothing more. it was just me. >> 14 years old. all alone in that dark room in the jungle. when he finally slept, he had a dream. >> we were in a two-story house, and i turned to my side and my mother's there and my cousin's there, and then all of a sudden a barrage of bullets comes through the walls. all these bullets
it was so good. a beautiful sound. it was my son. my son. >> kevin was free! but how? >> it's the craziest turn of my life probably. i didn't think it was ever gonna happen. >> here he is, kevin lunsmann. now in his 20s, and this is his amazing story. which began a moment before the kidnappers took his mom away. when she leaned forward and whispered in his ear. >> i remember her words exactly. she said, you have to get home to your father. you have to get back home. and...
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was that it was not it was her. saying you'll see my name in the poem that provides you not see it was the part that i said. in similar quote the latter this is the most suitable second look you look in ink is sarka and this up but this is me it's against the suppose him to see the local all the local nursing home or all. dress it up by star and take the. that would get answers would be as simple as that the czar has also filed. suit back in . the us as a c.b. almost lost by last us. barrier mickens out of the clinton. years as in this day americans all of the. away willy. boy eagerly hung up with glee i moved. into the. corps appearing in my youth us or they look at you then when i hear that that there are. only courses. in the best interest and least. the gov hands that with the list. and know when to leave. no so to call them with a name though. which i will domingo see loesch where this. i mean occur in the fields of william. and. then on my ass. but i mean which was. a lot. polar caps our first battle these are
was that it was not it was her. saying you'll see my name in the poem that provides you not see it was the part that i said. in similar quote the latter this is the most suitable second look you look in ink is sarka and this up but this is me it's against the suppose him to see the local all the local nursing home or all. dress it up by star and take the. that would get answers would be as simple as that the czar has also filed. suit back in . the us as a c.b. almost lost by last us. barrier...
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114
Nov 12, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 114
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so what was the question? >> that was it.how did -- the men who were husbands was women. >> some of the husbands had had trouble with this? >> yeah, quite a few had trouble. and some marriages faltered over it. yes. i believe that the amendment for women's voting was passed and finally ratified in 1919. >> no it was passed in 1919 it was rad if id in 1920. >> so it was really a bad time for like progressive thinks raids, we had had during the war all the of the germans being lynched. we had -- ku klux klan coming in. how was it possible to get such a progressive thing passed? >> god question. >> i think there's the flipside of that is that -- it was the end of the progressive era. it was a time of many reform causes, and all of them on that period seem to attract a cross class coalition ad broad tent so the movement to clean up city hall, to rid city governess of political bosses to -- [laughter] stand -- [laughter] it's okay. i know him. it's okay. [laughter] he can join. >> hi kendra. [laughter] yeah so any view is sort of
so what was the question? >> that was it.how did -- the men who were husbands was women. >> some of the husbands had had trouble with this? >> yeah, quite a few had trouble. and some marriages faltered over it. yes. i believe that the amendment for women's voting was passed and finally ratified in 1919. >> no it was passed in 1919 it was rad if id in 1920. >> so it was really a bad time for like progressive thinks raids, we had had during the war all the of the...
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54
Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 54
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it was mr. carnegie who was prevailed upon by mr. morgan and others after the weekend of being locked up in his library in new york city. carnegie was to purchase shares of the tennessee iron and coal company, which had a great smelting plant in birmingham, alabama, and he was aware this would increase his percentage of the domestic generation and production of steel to be something about 67% of capacity, and he wanted, before he purchased that stock, to boost the shares of some of the trust companies in new york. he wanted some assurance that i would not sue under the antitrust laws. and i assured mr. carnegie and this difference between a good trust and a bad trust, that as long as the actions of his corporation, sort of dumping and product and price fixing, which, for example, mr. rockefeller standard's oil trust was guilty, as long as his actions were those of an honest business proprietor without damage to competitors or to consumers through pernicious collusion, that i'd be all right and he would have no fear of the justice dep
it was mr. carnegie who was prevailed upon by mr. morgan and others after the weekend of being locked up in his library in new york city. carnegie was to purchase shares of the tennessee iron and coal company, which had a great smelting plant in birmingham, alabama, and he was aware this would increase his percentage of the domestic generation and production of steel to be something about 67% of capacity, and he wanted, before he purchased that stock, to boost the shares of some of the trust...
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83
Nov 6, 2017
11/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 83
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i knew this was the man i was going to marry. >> at 16? >> at 16. >> they married right out of high school. a year later, daughter nikki was born. were your parents in love? >> oh, yes. we definitely saw love growing up in the house. >> i love my baby. >> what was your relationship like with your dad? >> not your typical father-daughter relationship. like, a best friend, almost. i could tell dad anything. >> four years after nikki came justin. did he really want a son? >> oh, my god. when they pulled that baby out and they said, mr. hall, you have a son, that man cried. >> bill worked hard to give his young family a better life. >> bill used to clean airplanes. he went toollege. and on the weekends, if he was off, he'd go dig ditches. we made ends meet. >> but his true passion was big rigs. so one day he up and quit school, started his own business. bill hall jr. trucking. >> that's what his family did for a living. so it's in their blood. >> bill got his first truck and went to work delivering topsoil. while frances hit the phones to drum
i knew this was the man i was going to marry. >> at 16? >> at 16. >> they married right out of high school. a year later, daughter nikki was born. were your parents in love? >> oh, yes. we definitely saw love growing up in the house. >> i love my baby. >> what was your relationship like with your dad? >> not your typical father-daughter relationship. like, a best friend, almost. i could tell dad anything. >> four years after nikki came justin. did...
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98
Nov 24, 2017
11/17
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 98
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i was a little earlier than oprah. it was martha, then it was oprah, then it was rosie.ars apart. oprah is by far the wealthiest and most powerful, but i consider myself a successful creator of an industry. i have seen a lot of successful people try their hand at television and they fail miserably. you had never done television before. it's pretty audacious to say, "now i'm gonna venture into this area without any experience." and you were successful at it. martha: well, i was good in front of the camera. i learned that modeling. i think that modeling was really the best teacher for me because there you are, standing with 25 people over there telling you what to do and you have to look nice, and act relaxed and pretty in the pictures. so i learned how to behave in front of the camera. - right. - but then, i was also a good teacher and i could easily talk well and do. it's hard to... - it's hard to cut meat and... - and talk, yeah. smile at the camera, and do the whole thing and not burn yourself and cut yourself. i've only cut myself once on camera. and do all of that st
i was a little earlier than oprah. it was martha, then it was oprah, then it was rosie.ars apart. oprah is by far the wealthiest and most powerful, but i consider myself a successful creator of an industry. i have seen a lot of successful people try their hand at television and they fail miserably. you had never done television before. it's pretty audacious to say, "now i'm gonna venture into this area without any experience." and you were successful at it. martha: well, i was good in...
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was. her house was. the only way. was. there. the events of october the ninth nine hundred ninety six made headlines around the world until that point few outside the region had heard of the atrocities being committed in uganda that changed with the abduction of one hundred thirty nine young girls from the residential school of a boca. if . the rebels came under cover of darkness eleven armed militia members stormed the dormitory and took the girls hostage. today there is a memorial to the girls in the courtyard. so when we moved down in their money around nine ten there we started seeing since day when she kept on a good shape to negotiating with them at around one and two there they first started in one place so i think they had a lot maybe two and of a few of the guys to her sister did not choose what to do you may know what to do with come back we have we chose it them scales. and he saw how death that the of us on one side one hundred nine on one side then says that got them to come and talk to us to where i remain mean we o
was. her house was. the only way. was. there. the events of october the ninth nine hundred ninety six made headlines around the world until that point few outside the region had heard of the atrocities being committed in uganda that changed with the abduction of one hundred thirty nine young girls from the residential school of a boca. if . the rebels came under cover of darkness eleven armed militia members stormed the dormitory and took the girls hostage. today there is a memorial to the...
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the end it was a fete the oldest indian priory in that neighborhood was spared. the electoral sacks and he gave the property to his famous subject martin luther and his new family. and in june fifteenth twenty five martin luther married the former nun catalina fun for the reformer had called for the abolition of celibacy in his earliest writings . luther's married life was not untouched by political upheaval my bet is no latin and five bedroom no not just these last lines it's urgent people are waiting. at forty two the former monk became the master of his own household and a happy husband god gave me cater and i don't want to give her up not for france nor for venice. commonalities cold anything. is lent over that already been transferred by. endeavor to dr luther himself is supposed to have said twice a long time not have it. well then it must be right. catalina and martin luther founded an institution. the clerical marriage had a tremendous impact on cultural history because it effectively ended religions demonization of sexuality for teufel long sexuality mas
the end it was a fete the oldest indian priory in that neighborhood was spared. the electoral sacks and he gave the property to his famous subject martin luther and his new family. and in june fifteenth twenty five martin luther married the former nun catalina fun for the reformer had called for the abolition of celibacy in his earliest writings . luther's married life was not untouched by political upheaval my bet is no latin and five bedroom no not just these last lines it's urgent people are...
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125
Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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MSNBCW
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who was he and where was he now? to find out commander mike gyre, hid of the criminal investigations unit said the department chased leads all over the country, from texas, where women were profiled similar to the west mesa women who also gone missing. to states as far away as pennsylvania and florida. the backgrounds and travel patterns of certain types of men seemed to warrant close attention. >> there's probably people that were in albuquerque during the time frame we're looking at and now through investigative leads or other sources, we find something that tells us a little bit more about their lifestyle as well, which would give us, again, that kind of immediate gut reaction. it's got to be. it's got to be that person. >> it was that kind of gut reaction that led detectives to joplin, missouri in august of 2010. >> investigators are tight-lipped at this point but we know this is in connection to the west mesa murders in albuquerque, new mexico. >> the target of the search warrant was a local joplin, missouri, ph
who was he and where was he now? to find out commander mike gyre, hid of the criminal investigations unit said the department chased leads all over the country, from texas, where women were profiled similar to the west mesa women who also gone missing. to states as far away as pennsylvania and florida. the backgrounds and travel patterns of certain types of men seemed to warrant close attention. >> there's probably people that were in albuquerque during the time frame we're looking at and...
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105
Nov 25, 2017
11/17
by
CNNW
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and heard the sonic boom. >> that was it, that was it!coming down. >> there it is. >>> right on the glide slope columbia. >> putting that all together in a technology to make it fly and then landing is remarkable. nothing like it had ever been done. >> touchdown. >> they're down. >> i said, it worked. the damn thing worked. >> the day will come, according to nasa, that a launch will be so routine that the press and television won't even bother to cover it. >> 30 weeks later, after columbia had been returned to the kennedy space center, astronauts flew columbia into space again. >> the space shuttle was like a large truck that could deploy satellites, and it had a robotic arm so that you can repair and upgrade spacecraft. >> and liftoff of the orbiter challenger and the sixth flight of the space shuttle. >> this was the birth of space travel, not just space missions. we're talking about setting a laboratory. almost like a university in space. it started feeling like anybody could be an astronaut. >> the countdown is under way tonight at ca
and heard the sonic boom. >> that was it, that was it!coming down. >> there it is. >>> right on the glide slope columbia. >> putting that all together in a technology to make it fly and then landing is remarkable. nothing like it had ever been done. >> touchdown. >> they're down. >> i said, it worked. the damn thing worked. >> the day will come, according to nasa, that a launch will be so routine that the press and television won't even bother...
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95
Nov 20, 2017
11/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 95
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it was part of a hero mission. when the war ended, he was a huge supporter of the fdr and then of course when fdr died and truman became president, huge supporter mostly because of the dropping of the bombs. he and adlai stevenson supporter, i know a lot of people think there's a lot more to his story. he actively campaigned for adlai stevenson in 1952. stevenson was running against eisenhower so that is part of the individual thought, where even though eisenhower was a war hero and celebrated, he believed that stevenson was more on the same level as roosevelt as the real roosevelt liberal, and eisenhower might have been a touch too militaristic for his taste. in 1956 he supported adlai stevenson again a losing proposition that between 1956 and 1960, charlton heston became a major hollywood star come in fact the biggest star of the 50s and hollywood. he supported john kennedy in the convention he supported jfk. jfk of course won the nomination, and he went out and actively campaigned for kennedy. there was no ambiv
it was part of a hero mission. when the war ended, he was a huge supporter of the fdr and then of course when fdr died and truman became president, huge supporter mostly because of the dropping of the bombs. he and adlai stevenson supporter, i know a lot of people think there's a lot more to his story. he actively campaigned for adlai stevenson in 1952. stevenson was running against eisenhower so that is part of the individual thought, where even though eisenhower was a war hero and celebrated,...
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69
Nov 22, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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even while she was resting from her illness and the school was declining she was still going on with her plans for expansion. she hoped to build a more suitable school that could accommodate 150 students and have sleeping accommodations for students and teachers. her own attempts to raise funds were scarcely successful how one of the historians describes it. she hardly received enough funds to pay for her travels. someone took over for fund-raising but got just enough for salaries and expenses and most pledges were never paid. it made the school appear as a free refuge for africans in washington a political storm arose costing one of the political trustees losing his job at the patent office. meeting in 1857 for the purpose of raising funds for the school created further backlash. in response to that meeting, d.c.'s mayor at that time wrote a letter in the newspaper of the national intelligence objecting saying it would attract free african-americans from adjoining states and educate them so far beyond they're political and social condition it would be a center for anti-slavery activ
even while she was resting from her illness and the school was declining she was still going on with her plans for expansion. she hoped to build a more suitable school that could accommodate 150 students and have sleeping accommodations for students and teachers. her own attempts to raise funds were scarcely successful how one of the historians describes it. she hardly received enough funds to pay for her travels. someone took over for fund-raising but got just enough for salaries and expenses...