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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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and he was also the reason why she was found.called meredith fisher to go to the house. >> jason young's business trip that night was routine. security tape showed him getting gas, 7:30 p.m. as he left raleigh. two hours later seen on tape at a cracker barrel restaurant in greensboro. later checked into the hampton inn in hillsdale, virginia. and him again at midnight. he also made a phone call around midnight. and that was the last time anybody heard from jason young until he made another call at 7:40 the next morning. >> a normal person would look at this and say he was 170 miles away. he's got an alibi. >> that sounds like a great distance, you know? but 170 miles you can get between the crime scene and the hotel in about 2 1/2 hours. >> perhaps, but there were curious anomalies at the crime scene. couldn't explain them. a jewelry box was missing two drawers. so was it a bungled burglary? then there were footprints near the body that seemed to eliminate jason. an obvious print on the pillow was a size 10. but jason wore a size
and he was also the reason why she was found.called meredith fisher to go to the house. >> jason young's business trip that night was routine. security tape showed him getting gas, 7:30 p.m. as he left raleigh. two hours later seen on tape at a cracker barrel restaurant in greensboro. later checked into the hampton inn in hillsdale, virginia. and him again at midnight. he also made a phone call around midnight. and that was the last time anybody heard from jason young until he made...
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Jan 28, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN
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the rowhouses where he was for -- he was born, one of them was his maternal grandparents, he was born1895 during a blizzard. the entire inner harbor was frozen over. it connects to the ballpark. as people know, one of his father's many saloons was located in what is now centerfield of camden yards. brian: there's a famous photograph in there of his father and babe ruth standing behind the bar. where was the bar and why with a working together? jane: this was after the red sox won the world series in 1915. am i right about that? and he used his world series money, which was $3000 and change, a fair amount of change in 1915, to by his father, the gentleman all the way far right in the frame, this bar called ruth's cafe. theou hone in on photograph, there is a calendar made with a woman sitting on an outfield fence. this is opposite the seltzer tower you see from the stands at camden yards. the building is still there. it is now a men's club called the goddess. brian: why would there even be a museum -- i don't mean to act negative about it -- and use them to a bruise and baltimore -- tw
the rowhouses where he was for -- he was born, one of them was his maternal grandparents, he was born1895 during a blizzard. the entire inner harbor was frozen over. it connects to the ballpark. as people know, one of his father's many saloons was located in what is now centerfield of camden yards. brian: there's a famous photograph in there of his father and babe ruth standing behind the bar. where was the bar and why with a working together? jane: this was after the red sox won the world...
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Jan 20, 2019
01/19
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CNNW
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eye 150
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it was egalitarian. it was anti-hierarchy.alism against a social authority. >> we saw influences of sort of hinduism and eastern asian culture coming in. >> women aren't shaving their legs or their armpits and no one's wearing deodorant and women are wearing mumus and caftans and jesus sandals are in abundance. >> if you're dropping acid and seeing 85,000 new colors you haven't seen before, yyou want o wear some pretty crazy outfits. >> men are wearing torn clothes and going shirtless and people don't care about grooming. >> for men, that is when long hair really began. they grew the beards. everything was about let it go. >> when men had their hair long it was a statement of anti-establishment attitude. it was a statement of individuality, that you're going to be your own person and not just this kind of corporate flunky who did everything to serve the man. >> don't be afraid. don't be ashamed. we want black power! we want black power! we want black power! what do you want? >> black power! >> what do you want? ♪ >> the late '
it was egalitarian. it was anti-hierarchy.alism against a social authority. >> we saw influences of sort of hinduism and eastern asian culture coming in. >> women aren't shaving their legs or their armpits and no one's wearing deodorant and women are wearing mumus and caftans and jesus sandals are in abundance. >> if you're dropping acid and seeing 85,000 new colors you haven't seen before, yyou want o wear some pretty crazy outfits. >> men are wearing torn clothes and...
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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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MSNBCW
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eye 106
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was it a flat? was it spongy? was it soft?his to happen >> reporter: whatever shape the tire was in, the henthorns apparently tried to change it using jacks that normally used for a boat because harold told the cops the jack that came with the jeep was broken. >> he couldn't get it to work. and he even said that he sprayed some oil or solvent on it to try to get it to work, and it didn't, wouldn't work. >> reporter: but no oil or solvent was ever found to corroborate his story. then there was the biggest question of all -- >> how do you get under a car and have a car fall on you it just didn't make sense to me. it never has >> reporter: once again, harold seemed to tell multiple stories. patricia montoya remembers him saying lynn went under the jeep to retrieve a lug nut. lynn's old friend kim laferriere says harold told her lynn was going after a flashlight, not a lug nut. and roxanne burns remembered harold saying something else entirely >> he said, she was changing the tire, which made the hair on my neck stand up straight
was it a flat? was it spongy? was it soft?his to happen >> reporter: whatever shape the tire was in, the henthorns apparently tried to change it using jacks that normally used for a boat because harold told the cops the jack that came with the jeep was broken. >> he couldn't get it to work. and he even said that he sprayed some oil or solvent on it to try to get it to work, and it didn't, wouldn't work. >> reporter: but no oil or solvent was ever found to corroborate his...
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Jan 12, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN3
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eye 80
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apollo 2 was a flight that was -- wally was the commander. i later concluded that he was kind of a stand-in commander there. and don eisley and myself. and it was at that period of time where we were trying to wean up the gemini program. some of our guys were still tied up as prime and backups in the gemini program. others were available to begin working early on on apollo, which we were doing. the spacecraft was the first one being made by rockwell. compared to what we'd been used to seeing at mcdonald, which eventually became mcconnell douglas, but it just was not all that good. they did not have the same attitude they had at mcdonnell. new engineers, they haven't -- they had an n.i.h. syndrome, it wasn't invented there, it wasn't any good. partly because wally was insistent that they hire some of the people from mcdonnell. it all got straightened out in the end, but in the beginning, they were really off base. they were way behind schedule. they didn't have a receptive attitude to having the flight crew out there involved in the testing, t
apollo 2 was a flight that was -- wally was the commander. i later concluded that he was kind of a stand-in commander there. and don eisley and myself. and it was at that period of time where we were trying to wean up the gemini program. some of our guys were still tied up as prime and backups in the gemini program. others were available to begin working early on on apollo, which we were doing. the spacecraft was the first one being made by rockwell. compared to what we'd been used to seeing at...
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Jan 28, 2019
01/19
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so i knew he was who he said he was, and that he was at least 21. >> reporter: who did he say he was?ame was andy wegener, and that was the e-mail address that he had contacted me from, was andy wegener something-or-other at gmail.com. >> reporter: where'd you meet? >> i work part-time at a gas station. it's public. there are cameras in the area. and if something bad were to happen, i know of at least two or three people that are in the area a lot that would probably come to my rescue. >> reporter: is that the kind of thing you have to do when you sell a weapon? >> that's the thing i do when i sell a weapon because i've got entirely too much to lose. i have a family. i have a job that i love them both. i did not want to jeopardize those. we met at the station. i showed him the rifle in the back end of my car, and then i filled out a bill of sale, because i wanted to make sure that this was trackable. i kept a copy. he kept a copy we reviewed everything to make sure that it was what he wanted and make sure everything was, you know, up to snuff. >> reporter: you saw his photo i.d. >> i
so i knew he was who he said he was, and that he was at least 21. >> reporter: who did he say he was?ame was andy wegener, and that was the e-mail address that he had contacted me from, was andy wegener something-or-other at gmail.com. >> reporter: where'd you meet? >> i work part-time at a gas station. it's public. there are cameras in the area. and if something bad were to happen, i know of at least two or three people that are in the area a lot that would probably come to...
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1.1K
Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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KGO
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and she was sensitive. she was loving. she was generous.e children and teach them the nature of yosemite. >> i asked her if she was ever afraid, and she said, no, we knew they had suspects in custody. >> she had memorialized it in her diary. at one point even wrote, "the monsters are gone," meaning the fbi had gotten the people who did this. and they were behind bars. >> but it turns out the monsters weren't gone. cary stayner was very close by. it's tough to quit smoking cold turkey. so chantix can help you quit "slow turkey." along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting. chantix reduces the urge so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix. you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help right away if you have changes in... behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts or actions, seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel pro
and she was sensitive. she was loving. she was generous.e children and teach them the nature of yosemite. >> i asked her if she was ever afraid, and she said, no, we knew they had suspects in custody. >> she had memorialized it in her diary. at one point even wrote, "the monsters are gone," meaning the fbi had gotten the people who did this. and they were behind bars. >> but it turns out the monsters weren't gone. cary stayner was very close by. it's tough to quit...
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105
Jan 14, 2019
01/19
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MSNBCW
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eye 105
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>> it was a woman who was on the phone.comes out a while later, he's all spruced up, ready to go out. >> when "dateline" continues. how's your cough? i'm good. i took 12-hour mucinex and sent it far away. hey buddy, have you seen a nice woman with a cough? woahhh! mucinex dm releases fast and lasts 12-hours, not 4. send coughs far away all day. >>> in november of 2007, the man who shot david jackson to death was found guilty of the crime and sent to prison for the rest of his life. but a couple of days after he was sentenced, wolfe sent out word that he was ready to tell the rest of the story. sure, he said he was the trigger man and, yes, his father-in-law was determined to get rid of david permanently. but to set their trap, to lure david to the kill site, the motel, they needed bait and that bait, said wolfe, was barbara. barbara who did not require percent situation. quite the contrary, said mr. wolfe. >> barbara britton is in the middle. from what i was able to learn about david, he would have never gone to that hotel
>> it was a woman who was on the phone.comes out a while later, he's all spruced up, ready to go out. >> when "dateline" continues. how's your cough? i'm good. i took 12-hour mucinex and sent it far away. hey buddy, have you seen a nice woman with a cough? woahhh! mucinex dm releases fast and lasts 12-hours, not 4. send coughs far away all day. >>> in november of 2007, the man who shot david jackson to death was found guilty of the crime and sent to prison for the...
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347
Jan 19, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN3
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eye 347
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now there was. they put this together on a national basis, they formulated a commission of so many bosses would rule on certain intrafamily problems. this had the semblance of a corporate entity. that was more power for the kansas city crime family. then in 1932 was the piece there is a starts. the board of code that board of police commissioners had to be elected locally. they elected the border police commissions. the city, lock stock and barrel. it was truly an open city. go?did that book title gangsters, the roaring 30's , theyers, the dillinger's would come to kansas city for rest and relaxation. check in with john will as a a. this was a notorious city. the money flowed in. it --alled and this money flowed in by the millions. 1933, prohibition is over. the mob is looking for new vistas. gambling is one they got into. they continue to grow, they continue to prosper. they don't go away because there's no more bootlegging. and gradually, as these other ,riminal groups do fade away it's the nation
now there was. they put this together on a national basis, they formulated a commission of so many bosses would rule on certain intrafamily problems. this had the semblance of a corporate entity. that was more power for the kansas city crime family. then in 1932 was the piece there is a starts. the board of code that board of police commissioners had to be elected locally. they elected the border police commissions. the city, lock stock and barrel. it was truly an open city. go?did that book...
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she disturbed man while i was hunting scared off the birds i was after. they were laughing so loudly they saw me in the forest and gave me this flippant look. he disturbed me when i was about to follow the girl. and he later said during an interrogation that he was a poacher he'd also shot animals but left them in the forest for him it was just about killing us. so that contradicts the notion of him being in one in fact he was a very confused individual. after three years of murdering at will and without being identified the serial killer was finally caught when an attack on a local farmer stirred did not go as planned. as f.l. said you had to forrest a call to him stop where are you going and shimon replied to the village of the forest and then said no that's the other direction and shimon said well i'm going this way thinking he was a poacher the forest went after him shimon immediately drew his pistol and opened fire at the forest one touching off the infested fiat. germans gun jammed enabling the seriously wounded forester to get away. before he died
she disturbed man while i was hunting scared off the birds i was after. they were laughing so loudly they saw me in the forest and gave me this flippant look. he disturbed me when i was about to follow the girl. and he later said during an interrogation that he was a poacher he'd also shot animals but left them in the forest for him it was just about killing us. so that contradicts the notion of him being in one in fact he was a very confused individual. after three years of murdering at will...
2,453
2.5K
Jan 12, 2019
01/19
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KGO
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i thought i was doing god's work. it was just -- i was crazy.lked off the set. and i walked off the show. i was always at least 50% self-destructive but when it wasn't working, i didn't know what i felt. bipolar? i was tripolar. i was quadpoalr. who the hell knows what kind of polar i was. i had 35 different feelings in 5 minutes. i was nuts when i was away from the camera. >> blake went through a messy divorce. and he went back into therapy. he quick acting eight years and got into politics. supporting ceser chavez and working against nuclear power. >> i made a lot of money. i was already a millionaire. but i was lost. i was lost in life. >> so by the late '90s, blake is acting very, very rarely. he works out. he plays his guitar. he goes to jazz clubs. he's sort of a figure on the periphery of hollywood. but he's not working at all. so one night, he went to a club, chadney's, and this blonde woman approached him. and it turns out her name is bonnie lee bakley. it would have been a good night to have stayed home. it's tough to quit smoking cold
i thought i was doing god's work. it was just -- i was crazy.lked off the set. and i walked off the show. i was always at least 50% self-destructive but when it wasn't working, i didn't know what i felt. bipolar? i was tripolar. i was quadpoalr. who the hell knows what kind of polar i was. i had 35 different feelings in 5 minutes. i was nuts when i was away from the camera. >> blake went through a messy divorce. and he went back into therapy. he quick acting eight years and got into...
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77
Jan 20, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN3
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eye 77
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alexander hamilton's worst enemy was not who broadway thinks it was. aaron burr may have shot the man, but it was albert gallatin who destroyed his life's work, the financial system that he had created for the new federal government. hamilton was proud of that system. he thought that the federal government's ability to borrow vast amounts of money would allow the united states to become a great nation. gallatin disagreed. he thought that endless public borrowing was a drag on the private sector and a prescription for economic failure. in the first great fight over how to pay for the federal government, it was gallatin who won. when thomas jefferson appointed albert gallatin to be the secretary of the treasury, the federalists who had controlled the government under presidents washington and adams were worried. they braced for the worst. they had just lost the presidency for the first time in an election so bitterly contested that it took 36 ballots in the house of representatives to make jefferson president. they had also lost the majority in congress.
alexander hamilton's worst enemy was not who broadway thinks it was. aaron burr may have shot the man, but it was albert gallatin who destroyed his life's work, the financial system that he had created for the new federal government. hamilton was proud of that system. he thought that the federal government's ability to borrow vast amounts of money would allow the united states to become a great nation. gallatin disagreed. he thought that endless public borrowing was a drag on the private sector...
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Jan 12, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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if it was admiral t law it was a different justice. we should deference you get difference in return. so it is not just the right thing to do, it is the smart thing to do. a third factor was that marshall was always the smartest man in the room. and many of his colleagues were brilliant jurists themselves. but they all acknowledge his superiority. his mind was not quick. it took him a while to get going. but once he did, he was almost implacable. william he started out as an advocate later became attorney general. he described marshall's monmouth atlantic ocean. everyone else's minds were mere ponds. then there was tenure. marshall was chief justice for 34 years. still a record. he will swear in five presidents and nine inaugural. he is picked by john adams in goes to the second term of andrew jackson. then the middle of that tenure, there is an 11 year. , 1812 through 23 where there were no personal changes on the supreme court. we've only had one such period ever again. so marshall is there a long time to exercise his geniality, his
if it was admiral t law it was a different justice. we should deference you get difference in return. so it is not just the right thing to do, it is the smart thing to do. a third factor was that marshall was always the smartest man in the room. and many of his colleagues were brilliant jurists themselves. but they all acknowledge his superiority. his mind was not quick. it took him a while to get going. but once he did, he was almost implacable. william he started out as an advocate later...
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51
Jan 13, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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eye 51
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of course there was a slave revolt going on. it was complicated. the decision to empower the free men of color was understood to impact colonial power. it was personified by the rival of french commissioners. quickly moved to dissolve the assemblies and hold new elections under a multiethnic franchise. again france changed and a conflict occurred between a new governor general who sided with frenchablished commissioners and free blacks. that culminated in the .overnor's dismissal confined with other political prisoners, they persuaded the sailors to side with the local authorities and they attacked .he city heavy fighting ensued. the destruction of the city on the 20th of june marked it out as the most violent day of any days. revolutionary 85%r a fire swept the city, of the urban area had been devastated. .he the day after the city fell, the commissioners declared that all blacks fighting would be granted freedom. they rallied to the cause and removed the governor general and his troops. if this reestablished his control, it also made them prisone
of course there was a slave revolt going on. it was complicated. the decision to empower the free men of color was understood to impact colonial power. it was personified by the rival of french commissioners. quickly moved to dissolve the assemblies and hold new elections under a multiethnic franchise. again france changed and a conflict occurred between a new governor general who sided with frenchablished commissioners and free blacks. that culminated in the .overnor's dismissal confined with...
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75
Jan 2, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN
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eye 75
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i was always interested in what was going on. i responded to what was being said. i can remember, one of my first toories, is the visit belfast to visit terrence o neill, in 1965. but from then on, i can remember -- i came from water ford, a fairly long way. those days, it seemed like a long way from belfast, because people did not really travel very much at that time. but i can remember, that visit man, it generated a lot of enthusiasm. a bit trivial when i look back on it, but i remember people talking around me saying, this led to us having a single soccer team for the whole island of ireland. well the days of that best -- the days of george best, that would not have been a considerable advantage for both parts of the island, really. and i remember in '68, i suppose that was the first year when i really became conscious of what you might call the world of politics and public affairs. and every member what was happening. i can remember, obviously, the assassination of martin luther , the assassination of robert kennedy, the great upheavals happening in america at
i was always interested in what was going on. i responded to what was being said. i can remember, one of my first toories, is the visit belfast to visit terrence o neill, in 1965. but from then on, i can remember -- i came from water ford, a fairly long way. those days, it seemed like a long way from belfast, because people did not really travel very much at that time. but i can remember, that visit man, it generated a lot of enthusiasm. a bit trivial when i look back on it, but i remember...
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i thought it was a huge bang i had no idea what it was then there was another bang and then it really started bam bam bam bam bam bam. to attack his started shooting assault rifles firing over one hundred twenty rounds in the space of a few minutes if we knew there was still there and that they had reloaded. then i heard steps on broken glass. glass in those steps kept coming closer. and i knew now he's standing next to me. the attackers searched for survivors and shot them in cold blood. then they left the cafe. and that's when a colleague of mine screamed get out now. the ground was covered in countless bodies. the dialogue but in that instant your survival instinct takes over. you just put one foot in front of the other and try not to see what's around you. our goal was the taj mahal hotel and we can see that the other end of the street. but the taj mahal palace hotel was already under attack to. the group of gunmen had arrived at mumbai's waterfront in an inflatable dinghy they split up and attacked five targets small taney asli this is security camera footage. police and military
i thought it was a huge bang i had no idea what it was then there was another bang and then it really started bam bam bam bam bam bam. to attack his started shooting assault rifles firing over one hundred twenty rounds in the space of a few minutes if we knew there was still there and that they had reloaded. then i heard steps on broken glass. glass in those steps kept coming closer. and i knew now he's standing next to me. the attackers searched for survivors and shot them in cold blood. then...
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37
Jan 29, 2019
01/19
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ALJAZ
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eye 37
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was the she was at least that was good that was and it was. i have this recurring nightmare of him not having died in that plane crash and walking into this office and screaming at me and saying or the have you done to my office where all my things. get out of my chair get out from behind my desk and what are you doing here i do have i mean it's not a nightmare that he's still alive that's not the nightmare i bought but it's the repercussions of me sitting there trying to justify what i've done over the last decade to. immortalize his memory to a certain degree and to continue his legacy and to continue his company. i think there would be an inner peace i would call at a certain point in my life where i would feel that i have nothing left to prove to them i think. perhaps. a string of awards perhaps some recognition for what i've done would. allow me to sit back and say. i hope you're happy now. a final episode of ma and me well as we know a lot has happened in africa since two thousand and six and although mother is no longer with us his soun
was the she was at least that was good that was and it was. i have this recurring nightmare of him not having died in that plane crash and walking into this office and screaming at me and saying or the have you done to my office where all my things. get out of my chair get out from behind my desk and what are you doing here i do have i mean it's not a nightmare that he's still alive that's not the nightmare i bought but it's the repercussions of me sitting there trying to justify what i've done...
144
144
Jan 1, 2019
01/19
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 144
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>> and if there was one thing that washington, d.c., was not lacking in the spring of 1994, it was peopleg questions. i've always looked forward to what's next. and i'm still going for my best even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib not caused by a heart valve problem. so if there's a better treatment than warfarin, i'm up for that. eliquis. eliquis is proven to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. so what's next? seeing these guys. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned me
>> and if there was one thing that washington, d.c., was not lacking in the spring of 1994, it was peopleg questions. i've always looked forward to what's next. and i'm still going for my best even though i live with a higher risk of stroke due to afib not caused by a heart valve problem. so if there's a better treatment than warfarin, i'm up for that. eliquis. eliquis is proven to reduce stroke risk better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis...
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that was what i was taught. as a young child. people. eileen cronan was one of several follow the my babies born in cincinnati where an american drug company richardson merrill had their headquarters like the german drug company merrill promoted the drug as completely safe even during pregnancy like green and merrill had no evidence to back this up. merrill applied to the federal drug administration in one nine hundred sixty for approval to bring sullivan might onto the american market and was allowed to conduct clinical trials on patients across the country now it wasn't a clinical trial at all what it was was a marketing campaign trumped up to look like a clinical trial michael magazine it is an australian lawyer and former investigative reporter who spent years researching these a lot of my disaster what merrill wanted to do was to familiarize doctors with a drug so that once they got approval they would have doctors all ready to go through with a drug raid to prescribe it like crazy during this time richardson merrill handed out two
that was what i was taught. as a young child. people. eileen cronan was one of several follow the my babies born in cincinnati where an american drug company richardson merrill had their headquarters like the german drug company merrill promoted the drug as completely safe even during pregnancy like green and merrill had no evidence to back this up. merrill applied to the federal drug administration in one nine hundred sixty for approval to bring sullivan might onto the american market and was...
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245
Jan 27, 2019
01/19
by
CNNW
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eye 245
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not wounded -- >> he was. >> he was wounded.d! he was -- the president was hit? he is in stable condition. all this information -- we have one more bit of information. the bullet that struck the president has not yet been removed. and he's not undergoing surgery at this time. he was, however, struck in the left chest. the last word we had is that he was conscious and that his condition was described as stable. oh, my god. ♪ ♪ can i cross it off yet? almost. and. now. the volkswagen atlas. with available digital cockpit. life's as big as you make it. half of small businesses fail within 5 years.ne. and more people than ever struggle with debt. intuit is here to change this story... with giant solutions like turbotax, quickbooks and mint that give everyone the power to prosper. intuit. proud makers of turbotax, quickbooks and mint. always a catch. like somehow you wind up getting less. but now that i book at hilton.com, and i get all these great perks. i got to select my room from the floor plan... very nice... i know, i'm good at
not wounded -- >> he was. >> he was wounded.d! he was -- the president was hit? he is in stable condition. all this information -- we have one more bit of information. the bullet that struck the president has not yet been removed. and he's not undergoing surgery at this time. he was, however, struck in the left chest. the last word we had is that he was conscious and that his condition was described as stable. oh, my god. ♪ ♪ can i cross it off yet? almost. and. now. the...
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80
Jan 20, 2019
01/19
by
CNNW
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eye 80
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it was pretty terrifying. it was frightening. >> i was in charge of the nighttime operation.nted to shoot him on sight. that was our job. take him out on the street. we flooded the streets of new york. >> there's people dying, and we're trying to stop it, okay? it's everybody. it's not you. it's everybody. that's all we're trying to do. >> okay. >> in terms of the victim count, that doesn't place him at the top of the list in terms of the most deadly serial killers, but it was new york city. what happens in new york city, well, that's international news. >> good evening. harry is on vacation. here are our top stories. 100 more police join the hunt for the son of sam killer in new york. >> the search continues for the .44-caliber killer who has come to be known as the son of sam. >> he warned in one of his sick and threatening letters to the press and to the police, sam's a thirsty lad, and he won't let me stop killing until he's had his fill of blood. >> it was a really miserably hot summer in new york, and everything went dark. and i heard someone on the street go, oh, it's
it was pretty terrifying. it was frightening. >> i was in charge of the nighttime operation.nted to shoot him on sight. that was our job. take him out on the street. we flooded the streets of new york. >> there's people dying, and we're trying to stop it, okay? it's everybody. it's not you. it's everybody. that's all we're trying to do. >> okay. >> in terms of the victim count, that doesn't place him at the top of the list in terms of the most deadly serial killers, but...
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and he was it was annoyed that was that was the word and we took that that was taken as as a harsh rebuke of the news media you know about twenty five years ago and you can contrast that with with what you hear from the president now we've come a long way what effect do tribalism have on the election of the democrats taking back the house. yeah i mean i think this is this is becoming we talk about the south the old the different places now and in how they identify sort of politically i think the there's a long term trend here that i identify in the book that has really excel aerated in it maybe even reached its completion under donald trump and in the last two years and that's the suburbs that's metropolitan areas all around the country just outside cities it's an area that these are voters generally you know college educated they tend to be more economically upscale they tend to be more moderate maybe it really liberal culturally in the past they voted republican probably on pocketbook issues on taxes on things like that but democrats have been eyeing them for a long time they've made in
and he was it was annoyed that was that was the word and we took that that was taken as as a harsh rebuke of the news media you know about twenty five years ago and you can contrast that with with what you hear from the president now we've come a long way what effect do tribalism have on the election of the democrats taking back the house. yeah i mean i think this is this is becoming we talk about the south the old the different places now and in how they identify sort of politically i think...
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Jan 13, 2019
01/19
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[ laughter ] >> marty and i met when i was 17. he was 18. i was in college.l for daughters. in those days, there was a strict quota for women. there were four men to every woman. so for parents, cornell was the ideal place to send a girl. if she couldn't find her man there, she was hopeless. my first semester at cornell, i never did a repeat date. [ applause ] but then i met marty, and there was something amazingly wonderful about this man. he was the first boy i ever knew who cared that i had a brain. most guys in the '50s didn't. one of the sadnesses about the brilliant girls who attended cornell is that they kind of suppressed how smart they were. but marty was so confident of his own ability, so comfortable with himself that he never regarded me as any kind of a threat. >> we all were struck by the tremendous difference between marty and ruth. marty was the most gregarious, outgoing, life of the party. ruth was really quite recesssive in a way. shy, quiet, soft voice. but they worked. they worked. >> he's so young. meeting marty was by far the most fortun
[ laughter ] >> marty and i met when i was 17. he was 18. i was in college.l for daughters. in those days, there was a strict quota for women. there were four men to every woman. so for parents, cornell was the ideal place to send a girl. if she couldn't find her man there, she was hopeless. my first semester at cornell, i never did a repeat date. [ applause ] but then i met marty, and there was something amazingly wonderful about this man. he was the first boy i ever knew who cared that...
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Jan 21, 2019
01/19
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that was marvelous. bill buckley and turns of journalism he valued most was the quality of the words and this led him to make some poor choices of the national review. he gave liberal writers there start or increase prominence by publishing them which annoyed her publisher at the time to no end in wary conservative magazine. but fortunately he did not know is have to choose between the quality of the words in the ideological soundness, but rick for kaiser rudely exemplified what bill wanted a national review writer to be eloquent, cultured, distinct and witty. we can't be sure anymore what bill with ink of anything the national review is doing these days. we don't get the memos anymore. something i am completely confident in his every time i publish some name bill buckley would love that and that goes for his latest book better educational system is increasingly failing us when it comes to history jabbing aside or supporting it, but we kept history writing and biography in this country and rick was reall
that was marvelous. bill buckley and turns of journalism he valued most was the quality of the words and this led him to make some poor choices of the national review. he gave liberal writers there start or increase prominence by publishing them which annoyed her publisher at the time to no end in wary conservative magazine. but fortunately he did not know is have to choose between the quality of the words in the ideological soundness, but rick for kaiser rudely exemplified what bill wanted a...
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Jan 2, 2019
01/19
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one of the fact, it was different, it was wrong, it was different. and so -- am i -- >> if you can just accelerate just a bit. the story is wonderful. can i just say i think most people here have no idea of how all of this happened with the tribes. it's really such an important story, and i wonder if you could fast-forward to what you did in order to get the tribe reinstated. >> okay. that was my problem in coming here because how would you be able to come and tell me what a tribe is and where we were? we decided we need to do something. the land was being sold, and they gave it away by the leases or trusts. but it was still being done. we had no voice in it and we didn't know how non-indians were getting to occupy the reservation, and that land not being ours. remember, without land there is no indian. we finally, , after the collocad trust system was picked up and realized, what we think it is decided, and we had, again, that's where ted kennedy comes in. there was a fund, the american, native american rights fund which was illegal from that was es
one of the fact, it was different, it was wrong, it was different. and so -- am i -- >> if you can just accelerate just a bit. the story is wonderful. can i just say i think most people here have no idea of how all of this happened with the tribes. it's really such an important story, and i wonder if you could fast-forward to what you did in order to get the tribe reinstated. >> okay. that was my problem in coming here because how would you be able to come and tell me what a tribe...
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Jan 19, 2019
01/19
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it was, the canal was practical. it was going to be about shipping materials and moving things. but it also had a ceremonial function. and he designed ceremonial events. the white chalk lines, the white lines drawn over the top of the painting, a painting in process especially these paintings took two years, there's a lot of changes have to take place since you've come along. and we decided that we couldn't see where the edge of the original city was and that chalk line is what we called boundary road which is called florida avenue. so we'll just keep blasting along here. now, we're finished. so we're going the look at a few things close up. i've talked to the left here is the white house. this is enormously magnified when you see the actual painting, the white house is this big. but the mall running there, along sides of the mall, l'enfant suggested that houses of diplomats and other grandies, that's what he says on the plan. in later writing he suggests that there would be places of entertainment. so his view changed as it went along. and he wrote a lot. but as much as possibl
it was, the canal was practical. it was going to be about shipping materials and moving things. but it also had a ceremonial function. and he designed ceremonial events. the white chalk lines, the white lines drawn over the top of the painting, a painting in process especially these paintings took two years, there's a lot of changes have to take place since you've come along. and we decided that we couldn't see where the edge of the original city was and that chalk line is what we called...
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Jan 29, 2019
01/19
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i was getting up to leave the room. it was the end of the evening. and he was very angry.till care member the mistake i made. we'll never be able to forget what he said to me. he was yelling at me. big man. a couple inches away from my face. my back is up against the wall. the doors to my right through the rest of the room is to my left i can't really get past him. he says to me -- it was almost a compliment thrown in there. he says to me, you are smart enough to be me one day. me,if you don't want to be maybe should just go marry some fat rich jewish -- because maybe all your good for is making babies. and you are sitting there like, ok. i need to get out of here. i don't believe that's true about me. but you can't forget that. so 2017 the article comes out and your memo is joined with the awareness that came out in both these pieces and subsequent reporting and then women coming forward themselves. whether we're talking about angelina jolie organ culture -- paltrow, rosanna arquette, rose mcgowan talking about being raped right here at the sundance film festival in 1997.
i was getting up to leave the room. it was the end of the evening. and he was very angry.till care member the mistake i made. we'll never be able to forget what he said to me. he was yelling at me. big man. a couple inches away from my face. my back is up against the wall. the doors to my right through the rest of the room is to my left i can't really get past him. he says to me -- it was almost a compliment thrown in there. he says to me, you are smart enough to be me one day. me,if you don't...
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was. had toured with revelatory and played with tuscany that ben had greenhouse was a master cellist and he had a very distinctive sound. given and we were a sort of family we were looking for the bluebird of happiness. and we were working together to find beauty in music and the wooden in the school i'm not sure that that was. so i guess in love and if i i tell people this every time they ask me that guy gets i was the fifth and last violinist in both zone. but there is only one manakin presta it was presley's she wanted viva his sound is total devotion to the music that kept the trio together he says once on the inside out he made it what it was let's and that's it us was. just fossils are there were some moments when the trio made musical history and i'm incredibly pleased and proud to have been part of it lies and until at the same time i think it was great that the trio was able to leave the stage so to speak when the time came directly. following up she called the numbers. this is th
was. had toured with revelatory and played with tuscany that ben had greenhouse was a master cellist and he had a very distinctive sound. given and we were a sort of family we were looking for the bluebird of happiness. and we were working together to find beauty in music and the wooden in the school i'm not sure that that was. so i guess in love and if i i tell people this every time they ask me that guy gets i was the fifth and last violinist in both zone. but there is only one manakin presta...
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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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i was writing poems, i was writing short stories, i was writing plays. but writing was kind of my go-to. it was the thing that felt like it anchored me in the world and still does. but i took classes. i took classes, you know, i took creative writing classes at delphi, i took classes at the new school, i took classes in iowa. whenever there was a writer i wanted to work with, still to this day, i mean, you know, i take -- i would take the class if there was a writer who i really -- >> host: the air writers' workshop -- the iowa writers' workshop? >> guest: they had a summer program. .. where are starting foundation to harbor artists, i'm not going to be teaching but i'm going to be big -- figuring out the spaces. something i can't do. i have respect for teachers. >> next call for jacqueline wood sphron arnold in dallas, texas. hi, arnold. >> caller: i appreciate you guys taking my call. i was impressed with jacqueline and the manner how she responded to individual that said black kids are more safe than white neighborhoods. i get irk with people not havi
i was writing poems, i was writing short stories, i was writing plays. but writing was kind of my go-to. it was the thing that felt like it anchored me in the world and still does. but i took classes. i took classes, you know, i took creative writing classes at delphi, i took classes at the new school, i took classes in iowa. whenever there was a writer i wanted to work with, still to this day, i mean, you know, i take -- i would take the class if there was a writer who i really -- >>...
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Jan 5, 2019
01/19
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this book was an idea before it was a column. the editors of ladies' home journal envisioned it for a way for first lady eleanor roosevelt to combat the rumors, innuendos, and backstairs gossip about the white house. as well as a way to answer these other queries about which the public rightly or wrongly thinks it has to know. more practically, the editors thought that a question and answer column would be easier to edit because they did not think eleanor roosevelt was a very good writer. that was the plan. but it did not work out that way. because eleanor roosevelt and her readers soon turned the column into a two-way conversation about almost every aspect of american life. unlike my book, which is organized thematically, i have organized this talk chronologically, starting with the white house in world war ii. i thought what we could do today would be to eavesdrop on the conversation that eleanor had with her readers. when the column first began in 1941, franklin roosevelt was beginning an unprecedented third term. europe was a
this book was an idea before it was a column. the editors of ladies' home journal envisioned it for a way for first lady eleanor roosevelt to combat the rumors, innuendos, and backstairs gossip about the white house. as well as a way to answer these other queries about which the public rightly or wrongly thinks it has to know. more practically, the editors thought that a question and answer column would be easier to edit because they did not think eleanor roosevelt was a very good writer. that...
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Jan 29, 2019
01/19
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of course, he himself was. that was bad enough. nancy reagan, he helped her husband get elected. the reagan's had many gay friends, but they were publicly and on a policy level as bad as you can be for gay rights and had only the hiv-aids plague at the time. cohn appealed to them for special treatment as he was secretly dying of the disease. ronald and nancy reagan got him into an experimental treatment program at the nih that very few people could get into. there are telegrams we show on-screen of ronald reagan ignoring the greatest public health crisis of our time, roy cohn, wishing him good health and god speededs he gets out of the hospital and gets back home after a round of experimental treatment. amy: and talk about how donald trump, the man who called roy cohn's best friend, how he dealt with roy cohn suffering from aids. >> many people who were witnesses of the relationship cite that trump did back away from cohn when he was on his deathbed. at the same time, cohn was disbarred very late in his life with almost weeks left
of course, he himself was. that was bad enough. nancy reagan, he helped her husband get elected. the reagan's had many gay friends, but they were publicly and on a policy level as bad as you can be for gay rights and had only the hiv-aids plague at the time. cohn appealed to them for special treatment as he was secretly dying of the disease. ronald and nancy reagan got him into an experimental treatment program at the nih that very few people could get into. there are telegrams we show...
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was. i want to be careful over scribing their particular views to their childhood or. remember them a value which we have to be very careful wife in this book because you know they get the gist but we do list in the book a series of names of ones who grew up somewhere else in affluence and their families have gone and this includes the families of leading remain as they become and family were at the top of the world a few generations ago and it was david doing that with time to be shit you know you get a feeling of being diminished in britain if you were in the top one percent. your grandfather your great grandfather was a siding whether he wanted to buy in india or do something else big in london and you were trying to get a job in a stockbroker well i want to get on to some of that commonwealth colony stuff and enter second. ironic though that to morris virgin is just center on england's oldest colony. in the book you claim almost no with of understanding of england's first colony in ele
was. i want to be careful over scribing their particular views to their childhood or. remember them a value which we have to be very careful wife in this book because you know they get the gist but we do list in the book a series of names of ones who grew up somewhere else in affluence and their families have gone and this includes the families of leading remain as they become and family were at the top of the world a few generations ago and it was david doing that with time to be shit you know...
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Jan 5, 2019
01/19
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that was 1967. 1968 we had the apollo 6 mission, which was uncrewed. it was also a failure.ed so at the time. but parts of the first stage of the apollo 6 mission fell off the rocket. the second stage, only three of the five engines ignited, and that final stage, the module, the single engine that would need to be reignited over and over again on a trip to the moon failed to reignite even once. the spacecraft barely made it to orbit and it did not achieve the velocity necessary to test the heat shield as though it were coming back from the moon. by the way, that single engine that had to be reignited on apollo 8, it had to ignite to get to the moon, reignite to slow down in the lunar orbit, and reignite to change orbit, reignite to leave lunar orbit and correct that orbit, the trajectory, to come home. apollo 6, in august, 1968, that failed to reignite even once. we were in this massive contest of ideas. political ideas. we were in a contest of technology and economics between the united states and soviet union. in this contest the next day after apollo 6, word came the and
that was 1967. 1968 we had the apollo 6 mission, which was uncrewed. it was also a failure.ed so at the time. but parts of the first stage of the apollo 6 mission fell off the rocket. the second stage, only three of the five engines ignited, and that final stage, the module, the single engine that would need to be reignited over and over again on a trip to the moon failed to reignite even once. the spacecraft barely made it to orbit and it did not achieve the velocity necessary to test the heat...
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she was in a state of needed medical attention. or if it. was she was a. she was away from me and trying to say my name and i was taller than her. just hold on i want to get you know. i'm going to be long. and frantically. banging on all the doors and the apartment for a call the police will call him as the police came and lamar spoke to the police and the police immediately decided that he was there a suspect and so on that day very day he was arrested in fact we have a police report where the detective basically says on the same day of the killing we can close this case if we can just get our monson to confess. i got a phone call. telling me that my son had been arrested for killing a young lady. i know that could never never never be possible. from the training that he had had from the time he was born until twenty two years when they took him away from me i was devastated how with. a kid and i couldn't sleep i walked the floor wondering what had happened why it happened and why would they choose. kristina brown dies a few hours later in hospital. the o
she was in a state of needed medical attention. or if it. was she was a. she was away from me and trying to say my name and i was taller than her. just hold on i want to get you know. i'm going to be long. and frantically. banging on all the doors and the apartment for a call the police will call him as the police came and lamar spoke to the police and the police immediately decided that he was there a suspect and so on that day very day he was arrested in fact we have a police report where the...
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Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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president.like being the only reason he said he was president because -- was because he was worried if somebody else was elected, they would lose the effect of the war. >> you can watch the entire program on the memoirs of lewdness is -- ulysses s. grant tonight. presidency, richard moss talks about how presidents have used covert means to conduct since the diplomacy. mr. moss is the author of nixon's back channel to moscow. johnson and nixon as well as a 1968t overture, the candidate hubert humphrey, which he declined. the gerald r. ford presidential library hosted this one our 15 minute event. there out to tonight's engagement. we are honored to have richard maas here to speak about his new "nixon's back channel to
president.like being the only reason he said he was president because -- was because he was worried if somebody else was elected, they would lose the effect of the war. >> you can watch the entire program on the memoirs of lewdness is -- ulysses s. grant tonight. presidency, richard moss talks about how presidents have used covert means to conduct since the diplomacy. mr. moss is the author of nixon's back channel to moscow. johnson and nixon as well as a 1968t overture, the candidate...
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Jan 19, 2019
01/19
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america's promise was unfulfilled, but the future was bright. monuments to african americans were designed with the idea to unify the community and they sought input from all segments of the community unlike , monuments for confederate statues, where the african-american community was never consulted. mitch landrieu, former mayor of new orleans, expressed my view as well as anyone when he analyzed the meaning of the confederate statues and monuments in his city, he says the statues were not honoring history or heroes, they were created as political weapons, part of an effort to hide the truth, which is that the confederacy was on the wrong side of humanity. they helped distort the myth of southern chivalry to detract from the terror tactics that deprived african-americans of fundamental rights. for those of you not aware, mitch landrieu removed statues of jefferson davis, robert e lee, beauregard and a monument , honoring the militant white supremacist terrorist organization. these monuments recognized african americans that whites perceived as
america's promise was unfulfilled, but the future was bright. monuments to african americans were designed with the idea to unify the community and they sought input from all segments of the community unlike , monuments for confederate statues, where the african-american community was never consulted. mitch landrieu, former mayor of new orleans, expressed my view as well as anyone when he analyzed the meaning of the confederate statues and monuments in his city, he says the statues were not...
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Jan 20, 2019
01/19
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he was a famous celebrity. he was the victor.e was a household name everywhere, including in america. and in these top secret instructions, they basically say, look, the british army is at maximum strength and likely to decline. france's resources are exhausted. the italian army is knocked out. the russians are about to be knocked out. and we will lose the roughly two million russian reserves that we were counting on to last for the duration of the war. he american reservoir must replace the russian reservoir. and then later, i was doing research in london, and i was sort of looking through the lloyd george papers in the houses of parliament, and i was reading, around the same time as he was visiting america, there was a meeting of the british war cabinet, and a senior policy advisor to lloyd george, says, look, without the americans, we, the allies, cannot win the war. the best we can get is an inconclusive stalemate. but more likely we'll lose. only the americans, he says, can delivert knockout punch. this is in the spring of 1
he was a famous celebrity. he was the victor.e was a household name everywhere, including in america. and in these top secret instructions, they basically say, look, the british army is at maximum strength and likely to decline. france's resources are exhausted. the italian army is knocked out. the russians are about to be knocked out. and we will lose the roughly two million russian reserves that we were counting on to last for the duration of the war. he american reservoir must replace the...
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Jan 6, 2019
01/19
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lot, it was >> i was so looking forward -- i was so looking forward to doing this.>> in the beginning, there was talk of this being the yuppie show. and you mentioned it tonight. you said if there were a category for the most annoying show, this might win as well. >> what some people perceive as annoying has nothing to do with yuppie. it is a word that is made up by demographers and advertisers to sell soap. it doesn't have anything to do with what the show is. >> "thirlty-something" was not a giant hit but it was a niche hit. it attracted an enormously upscale group of advertisers. >> the network cared who was watching and not how many were watching, and that was more and more catching on in the '80s. >> the prosecution will ask you that you look to the law, and this you must do. but i ask of you that you look to your hearts as well. thank you. >> "l.a. law" was partly a classic lawyer show. but it was intertwined with their personal lives and different lawyers who were sleeping together and trying to get ahead. >> the reality level on that show was like a foot or
lot, it was >> i was so looking forward -- i was so looking forward to doing this.>> in the beginning, there was talk of this being the yuppie show. and you mentioned it tonight. you said if there were a category for the most annoying show, this might win as well. >> what some people perceive as annoying has nothing to do with yuppie. it is a word that is made up by demographers and advertisers to sell soap. it doesn't have anything to do with what the show is. >>...
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Jan 1, 2019
01/19
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all i was sitting in was responsibility. traveling the country, i have given myself a little bit of permission to sit in celebration, because i have an appreciation for the gravity of what we accomplished and what it means to so many people. that is what i am feeling right now, is humbled, hopeful, acutely aware of the responsibility at this time in our country, and -- and i am also align myself to feel a little celebratory now that the gravity is setting in. shirley: i heard you have a fear of flying, is that true? how do you deal with that? ms. pressley: hopefully this is one of the things that makes me allegedly more relatable and endearing, that i am so transparent about these things. [laughter] ms. pressley: i know for a long time, that was not something that people in public life would be revealing and transparent about -- anxieties, phobias, fears. but yes, i do not love flying. i'm sure that has a little bit to do with the lack of control. [laughter] but i have been pushing through. i remember at one point, maybe wit
all i was sitting in was responsibility. traveling the country, i have given myself a little bit of permission to sit in celebration, because i have an appreciation for the gravity of what we accomplished and what it means to so many people. that is what i am feeling right now, is humbled, hopeful, acutely aware of the responsibility at this time in our country, and -- and i am also align myself to feel a little celebratory now that the gravity is setting in. shirley: i heard you have a fear of...
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this was the last time i was to see them. right my parents. since. in september of forty two crossed into switzerland at three in the morning as part of a group of fifteen jews attempting to rights the group. was discovered by the swiss border police and they were arrested and during that all very weary. my parents with small children were allowed to stay my parents and another couple who didn't have any children were given to the french police if i had stayed with them if i had been with them we might well have been able to stay in switzerland are going through in those days rational decisions were very hard for jews to make sure it was pointless. after the french police put my parents in a carriage they then went to syria paris where there was an assembly camp for jews and on the third of november one thousand forty two former boss yells from dancing school they were fields transported with transport number forty two auschwitz. four hundred and three sixty eight. and four hundred fourteen women certainly and. eighteen other persons whose gender was
this was the last time i was to see them. right my parents. since. in september of forty two crossed into switzerland at three in the morning as part of a group of fifteen jews attempting to rights the group. was discovered by the swiss border police and they were arrested and during that all very weary. my parents with small children were allowed to stay my parents and another couple who didn't have any children were given to the french police if i had stayed with them if i had been with them...
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Jan 12, 2019
01/19
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i was -- >> seth: okay. >> i was abroad and so i was six hours ahead. message by the time i woke up the next morning. >> seth: and then, do you go into it with nerves. because obviously people get impersonated on it. this was done with love. sometimes they're not. >> yeah. >> seth: yeah. >> yeah, absolutely. >> seth: other people were tweeting about "snl" this week and they were less happy. >> they were not so thrilled about that. yeah. [ light laughter ] no. i mean, even if it had been terrible, i feel like i still would have been thrilled. [ light laughter ] >> seth: that's great. that is right way to go into it. one of the coolest things about season two is it opens in paris. and this is not sound stage paris. you guys actually got to go to paris. >> we did. >> seth: i mean was that just so exciting to shoot there? >> it was amazing and so strange to start the season that way. >> seth: yeah. >> new york is a character in the show. and so to begin season two in paris, we were very confused. but it was amazing. we ate all the baguettes. we drank all th
i was -- >> seth: okay. >> i was abroad and so i was six hours ahead. message by the time i woke up the next morning. >> seth: and then, do you go into it with nerves. because obviously people get impersonated on it. this was done with love. sometimes they're not. >> yeah. >> seth: yeah. >> yeah, absolutely. >> seth: other people were tweeting about "snl" this week and they were less happy. >> they were not so thrilled about that. yeah....
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Jan 17, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN3
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actually born, not when it was born because it was there before the government entity was commercialized for the first time is when they and they released it and there was legislation which i covered and actually al gore, that's how i met al gore because he was principal considered a brief behind the and he did in fact invent the internet. and he was integral to that. so you imagine that people had great thoughtfulness towards what was going to happen or the implications. i mean they absolutely did not. and i think that is the lie that is now being borne out today that you think that you know mark zuckerberg for example, and to name someone who is plunging toward disaster right now [ laughter ] had an idea of what was going to happen. i don't think they had any idea whatsoever and in fact designed the systems in a way that if you had an idea what was going to happen and any kind of anticipation you might have made any other choice. >> i don't think people knew what was going to happen because it's unimaginable what has happened, 14 years ago facebook was a website that no one took seriou
actually born, not when it was born because it was there before the government entity was commercialized for the first time is when they and they released it and there was legislation which i covered and actually al gore, that's how i met al gore because he was principal considered a brief behind the and he did in fact invent the internet. and he was integral to that. so you imagine that people had great thoughtfulness towards what was going to happen or the implications. i mean they absolutely...
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Jan 11, 2019
01/19
by
CNNW
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eye 119
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beyond that, jayme was taken to a local hospital where she was looked over and examined and was held overnight for observation. and the suspect was interviewed and subsequently brought back down here to barron county. that's all i have right now. >> thank you for the work that they helped in this case. the suspect was arrested and is being held in the barron county jail. that suspect is jake thomas patterson. he is 21 years old. he is currently being held on two counts of first degree intentional homicide for the murder of jayme's parents and one count of kidnapping. district attorney white will give a brief comment next. >> thank you. first of all, i want to thank everyone with law enforcement for the tremendous work that they did to bring jayme home. that starts with sheriff fitzgerald and the barron county sheriff's department. it includes the fbi, the division of criminal investigation and the hundreds of officers who came to barron county to assist in this investigation. i saw first-hand how brave, determined and dedicated these men and women are. it has truly been an honor to s
beyond that, jayme was taken to a local hospital where she was looked over and examined and was held overnight for observation. and the suspect was interviewed and subsequently brought back down here to barron county. that's all i have right now. >> thank you for the work that they helped in this case. the suspect was arrested and is being held in the barron county jail. that suspect is jake thomas patterson. he is 21 years old. he is currently being held on two counts of first degree...
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it was you know it was acting on his own. while he was spurred and the russian spy future was spurred by warns you will be overly cautious a little social for your view. that the left doesn't have any humor and. picture here i mean. it's a very he's a braggart he's boastful he's very self-centered of course we've been watching this for years here but there is in looking at the indictment it looks like miller's is writing the story it's things that are have not been confirmed the whole the whole role that we played in this and their relationship with trump none of that is only growing but it's it's alleged assumed in the indictment why there's roger stone being charged where has he been arrested and put through the process of starting because the other things that roger stone he can flip him he can force him to flip and say things that he needs him to say guess that he doesn't care but i just don't just like he didn't really care about paul in the fourth even though judge one of the judges and then when the fourth. said that y
it was you know it was acting on his own. while he was spurred and the russian spy future was spurred by warns you will be overly cautious a little social for your view. that the left doesn't have any humor and. picture here i mean. it's a very he's a braggart he's boastful he's very self-centered of course we've been watching this for years here but there is in looking at the indictment it looks like miller's is writing the story it's things that are have not been confirmed the whole the whole...
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Jan 23, 2019
01/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 36
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was going to sit up was what i was i was no i was i. don't have to call someone like us who isn't she was how he was about this. woman or how to make you care you was young i was how this is going to react i does it i see the way it's a young joe. when i. tell you he was a few males you know i. you know. just because you. cite this is. because it. wasn't. the cause it. was a. pow. so . i'm. going to ask you. who. was not. the. ground. zero. zero. zero zero zero zero. zero one yes it was. a. little call girl. who was. one of the close. i can you tell i really didn't get them given how the. you know that my way was playing when. i thought i was going to be going to go out and i don't know yeah that was how do you know it was you know no one. was she was was. the. mother you don't see which one is your home is it's hard to tell you which is the only you in this is you know. the other can you just the tears in his hand and probably to me seeing one that is. coming. your force who knew your. balls whole. deal only the time though you thought
was going to sit up was what i was i was no i was i. don't have to call someone like us who isn't she was how he was about this. woman or how to make you care you was young i was how this is going to react i does it i see the way it's a young joe. when i. tell you he was a few males you know i. you know. just because you. cite this is. because it. wasn't. the cause it. was a. pow. so . i'm. going to ask you. who. was not. the. ground. zero. zero. zero zero zero zero. zero one yes it was. a....
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think if it was. i'm and i made you go in also yeah nice what i like your i like your costume the dress was just so sorry the old woman a very old woman you don't look like an old woman although maybe would be if you do it like i am an old. well do you know who i. did you think i'm with this like yeah that's robocop me that's maybe maybe a. man of steel manisty is better. yeah robocall robocop is the idea. while i was talking to the bearded lady musher disappeared somewhere i went to look for the slow. starter we live and it's a jimmy had a pretty. yellow who would just read. this in the. simplicity of the need to steer me to dummy up to the school just with a beach ball. with a touch the east end. is the issue so she really isn't just a place and here's a reason why. duff is to be. done. with them yet. ok. those could be the echo of such as. holding the leash yes i told the english i was a kid and i was just plus. owns it was like five years ago i have years ago oh my god the way i have been thinking
think if it was. i'm and i made you go in also yeah nice what i like your i like your costume the dress was just so sorry the old woman a very old woman you don't look like an old woman although maybe would be if you do it like i am an old. well do you know who i. did you think i'm with this like yeah that's robocop me that's maybe maybe a. man of steel manisty is better. yeah robocall robocop is the idea. while i was talking to the bearded lady musher disappeared somewhere i went to look for...
63
63
Jan 22, 2019
01/19
by
CSPAN2
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eye 63
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he was. he was attentive to what they're saying and listening to what they were saying and i think turning point in the election was 100 clinton call these people deplorable. what, a lot of republicans -- the left how these people with contempt. these were working-class reagan democrats who worked 40 hours week, worked hard and felt like no one was paying attention to them. their financial stress and their worry about their jobs in factories leaving the small towns they lived in and went not nancy pelosi but hillary said these are irredeemable, the pourable people this was an elitist view of liberals that somehow they know better than people themselves about how to run their lives. that was the key to trump's victory. i didn't know he would win but i knew he had a good shot at it. remember, people are saying there's no way zero chance but. >> host: the night of the election i think hillary clinton was 95% to by the way one lesson i learned from the trump campaign and this is an important less
he was. he was attentive to what they're saying and listening to what they were saying and i think turning point in the election was 100 clinton call these people deplorable. what, a lot of republicans -- the left how these people with contempt. these were working-class reagan democrats who worked 40 hours week, worked hard and felt like no one was paying attention to them. their financial stress and their worry about their jobs in factories leaving the small towns they lived in and went not...
104
104
Jan 30, 2019
01/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 104
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was. the scoreline going out of the tournament and the disappointment of their founds all seem to be getting too much for the u.a.e. players if my lad meant taking out his frustration with an elbow in injury time it was scored by v.a.r. . and meant he had to be sent off to qatar we're not finished though ha made a smile making it four nil to see arguably the biggest win in the history of qatari football this year. they now move on to friday final against japan when we see them stage the first world cup in the middle east in twenty twenty two as asian champions. al-jazeera. well from going to the game in qatar is watched and cheered at home and fans and set up in the capital doha also jabari went along to one of them. well the feeling here is of jubilation and proud moments for the locals and all the ex-pats that have been watching this game it was a very exciting game for them to watch they said that they felt very proud of the outcome of today's game was actually more important for the fa
was. the scoreline going out of the tournament and the disappointment of their founds all seem to be getting too much for the u.a.e. players if my lad meant taking out his frustration with an elbow in injury time it was scored by v.a.r. . and meant he had to be sent off to qatar we're not finished though ha made a smile making it four nil to see arguably the biggest win in the history of qatari football this year. they now move on to friday final against japan when we see them stage the first...