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Aug 21, 2023
08/23
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khaalis himself was not at home that day. susan: he was their target go? shahan: he was.er they massacred all these people, they stayed around, with the blood stained and bloodstained walls. they world shots. some of them drowned in bathtubs. they sat there for a while until khaalis showed up to that house. and khaalis was able to escape and the gunmen ran out and he then entered his house. this is january 1973 and went from room to room screaming in horror as he encountered bodies of his children and grandchildren. that was really the moment that khaalis cracked in some ways. he changed from the people that i spoke to who were there with him, he was never the same after that. those events -- that murder, is directly related to the hostagetaking in 1977. susan: i want to make sure we get the bulk of the story in and leave enough or people who want to read your book. so we have two of this tools, the three legate schools, -- three legged stool's. both groups had hatred of zionism and to the third which you referenced in the beginning was the film about mohammed. i want to
khaalis himself was not at home that day. susan: he was their target go? shahan: he was.er they massacred all these people, they stayed around, with the blood stained and bloodstained walls. they world shots. some of them drowned in bathtubs. they sat there for a while until khaalis showed up to that house. and khaalis was able to escape and the gunmen ran out and he then entered his house. this is january 1973 and went from room to room screaming in horror as he encountered bodies of his...
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Aug 19, 2023
08/23
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she knew who he was. and that was about the end of the conversation. >> was he upset?rse he said he was. and yet ted told his interrogator he fell asleep right away. then got up around 5 am to do chores and drop off his girls with a baby sitter. and meet a coworker at city hall by six. >> it was by 6:00 at the very latest. i was thinking it was like 10 to 6 or something like that when i got there. >> but here's the thing -- ted drove right past susie's apartment. he admitted as much, on his way to the meeting at city hall. and his own timeline put him right there around her front door within minutes of when she walked across the street, all disheveled, after making all night with brad holzer. the very time susie vanished from the face of the earth. >> as the glendive police department checked out the story, ted went home to look after the two youngest girl who were now living with him full-time. while susie's two older kids went to live with val, and her husband. >> mariah was just tormented. she just didn't know what to do with herself. she was so close to her mom. it
she knew who he was. and that was about the end of the conversation. >> was he upset?rse he said he was. and yet ted told his interrogator he fell asleep right away. then got up around 5 am to do chores and drop off his girls with a baby sitter. and meet a coworker at city hall by six. >> it was by 6:00 at the very latest. i was thinking it was like 10 to 6 or something like that when i got there. >> but here's the thing -- ted drove right past susie's apartment. he admitted...
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Aug 5, 2023
08/23
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that was prime territory for development and one reason it was so completely developed was that it wasrelatively flat land. on the western side of rock creek you had great valleys the simpson valley and these other ravines that could be built on easily but on the other side it wasn't as hilly and there was great demand so they built. this was where wardman of the famous wardman buildings built a lot and they just built row after row putting on the holmead swamp which turned into swamp road. because they had basically paved over what was almost 2500 acres of the stream valley and a stream valley or watershed is like the whole and all the water's going to come down because the typography and go to one place which is the storm. so you've got all of this water now coming off a street and the roofs and going into these storm sewers and they have got to come out somewhere while this is where they come out. i like to call it the gates of would they are like arash doors. these are perhaps 15 or 20 feet high and this is at the corner of piney branch -- piney branch parkway and you don't see the
that was prime territory for development and one reason it was so completely developed was that it wasrelatively flat land. on the western side of rock creek you had great valleys the simpson valley and these other ravines that could be built on easily but on the other side it wasn't as hilly and there was great demand so they built. this was where wardman of the famous wardman buildings built a lot and they just built row after row putting on the holmead swamp which turned into swamp road....
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Aug 1, 2023
08/23
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was that true? host: it was absolutely true. and it was much to our benefit. we had at least 100 jewish refugees, top scientists, nobel laureates who worked on the manhattan project with us. because they were refugees from hitler's germany, austria, the nazi company. italy. his prejudices against jewish people, the scientists who were on the forefront of this, was much to the benefit of the allies. host: how does oppenheimer come into this group of scientists and why was he chosen to lead the manhattan project echo -- project? guest: he was an unlikely choice. people were advising the general , whom they should select. none of them had oppenheimer on their list. unlike many of the other possibilities, he had not won a nobel prize. he also had not managed anything. some people thought he can't manage a hamburger shop. he had graduate students and he had to run classes, but that was it. thirdly, he had associations with people who were communist party members, his wife for example had been a member of the comet's party. his brother, his girlfriend. so while he w
was that true? host: it was absolutely true. and it was much to our benefit. we had at least 100 jewish refugees, top scientists, nobel laureates who worked on the manhattan project with us. because they were refugees from hitler's germany, austria, the nazi company. italy. his prejudices against jewish people, the scientists who were on the forefront of this, was much to the benefit of the allies. host: how does oppenheimer come into this group of scientists and why was he chosen to lead the...
10
10.0
Aug 30, 2023
08/23
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eye 10
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the only thing was that was was the town in which. he was born it and it led me to realize that in fact you know writers and historians were trained to see the official documents and the official history things that are written down on paper as having a greater importance than the family's stories. but what i soon realized is when it comes to chinese exclusion, it's the family's stories that hold the keys to the truth. and the official that are kind of fiction that you have to kind of read against the grain for. and so process of working on this book was, was like just like dealing with three different intersections of dealing with the family's stories, looking at the official documents, the english language newspapers, the period and own, trying to come up with my best, my best guess of what really actually happened, what was the actual truth as my family members knew it. yeah, that's something that is very, very difficult to do using the kinds of sources you're using especially it sounds like from what i saw the majority the sources
the only thing was that was was the town in which. he was born it and it led me to realize that in fact you know writers and historians were trained to see the official documents and the official history things that are written down on paper as having a greater importance than the family's stories. but what i soon realized is when it comes to chinese exclusion, it's the family's stories that hold the keys to the truth. and the official that are kind of fiction that you have to kind of read...
20
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Aug 19, 2023
08/23
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anyway, it was, it was. it was really wonderful.so, january 20th, 1977, you're the first lady of the united states. how do you prepare to become first lady? well, becoming first, the hard part for me was going from the farm supply business to the governor's mansion, a beautiful governor's mansion. it was new, but the outgoing governor had only lived in it for two years. columnist don't know for that federal period, authentic federal period, furniture all the way through. and i went to see the outgoing governor's wife after we won and ask who did the cooking? and she said, i do. i said, who serves the table? she said, i do everything i ask, as she did it. and i said, i'd like to see your office. where is your. she said, i don't have one of is in my staff is in the which is that i have an office in the um governor's and the capital with the governor's and they handle my and my correspondence. i said, do you make speeches? and she said, no, i let the governor's mother do that. i went home and said, what have we done? and the all the he
anyway, it was, it was. it was really wonderful.so, january 20th, 1977, you're the first lady of the united states. how do you prepare to become first lady? well, becoming first, the hard part for me was going from the farm supply business to the governor's mansion, a beautiful governor's mansion. it was new, but the outgoing governor had only lived in it for two years. columnist don't know for that federal period, authentic federal period, furniture all the way through. and i went to see the...
40
40
Aug 17, 2023
08/23
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eye 40
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about the martial house was a 40-foot flagpole upon which was a concessions flag that was so large it was said to be seen from the white house on a clear day with binoculars. the white house is about five miles away. ellsworth explains to his andres, he said that flag has become down and it raced across king street into the martial house where he said to the clerk how do i we get to the roof and the clerk just stared at him and said nevermind and races up the stairs to the roof. the clerk went into the backroom and focus the innkeeper a man named james jackson and james jackson was an ardent succession must end of man to a penchant for violence. jackson wants nearly beat a priest to after him. when the priest told the authorities to share front about the posse and went to jackson's home where he barricaded himself inside withbr his brother and began to fire upon this sheriff and his posse but the sheriff threw up his hand and said the assault charge is not worth my life so jackson was a man with a reputation for violence. when the clerk will came in said union soldiers are on the roof
about the martial house was a 40-foot flagpole upon which was a concessions flag that was so large it was said to be seen from the white house on a clear day with binoculars. the white house is about five miles away. ellsworth explains to his andres, he said that flag has become down and it raced across king street into the martial house where he said to the clerk how do i we get to the roof and the clerk just stared at him and said nevermind and races up the stairs to the roof. the clerk went...
16
16
Aug 23, 2023
08/23
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eye 16
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college for women was just opening up but it was out of the question as far as her family was concerned. although she left school at 15 she was really something of a -- she continued her education by going to acting classes in the settlement houses and it was there that she met like-minded people who talked about how to change the world and what was wrong with the world but she had to take a clerical course at her first job was at a packing company and at age 19, she was given 20 and she got involved in the strike. there are two aspects of ethel growing up that i'd like to draw attention to because it's important as they show her extraordinarily -- her extraordinary determination. one of them was she stayed at carnegie hall, not just any old choir but the best choir. they rejected her the first time around because she had to learn. instead of giving up and saying that's not for me she bought a piano. she put the piano in her front room and taught herself how to play and went back for a second audition and was taken on, probably the youngest. so that exposed her to european classical cul
college for women was just opening up but it was out of the question as far as her family was concerned. although she left school at 15 she was really something of a -- she continued her education by going to acting classes in the settlement houses and it was there that she met like-minded people who talked about how to change the world and what was wrong with the world but she had to take a clerical course at her first job was at a packing company and at age 19, she was given 20 and she got...
9
9.0
Aug 23, 2023
08/23
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eye 9
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so we now know that hiss was was guilty. but a man who fought and to clear his name, to his dying day, he never admitted to his perjury. he never admitted to his guilt. and it divided the country for 50 years, for 50 years, half the country believed his innocence, that he was, a man of, the new deal, that he was in, the great liberal tradition. he had been one of the formulators of the united nations and the other half of the country believed he was a traitor a traitor to his class. and to his country. so a man of great controversy, david, why is it that he was able to convince half the country that he was innocent because he was part of the great eastern? and i and i think one of the things when we talked about it a little earlier is that both in your earlier book, time's betrayal and in gods deception, you talk the eastern establishment to a certain degree in gods of deception. you talking about the of those families that were at the core of making american history for example all the people helped shape the state departme
so we now know that hiss was was guilty. but a man who fought and to clear his name, to his dying day, he never admitted to his perjury. he never admitted to his guilt. and it divided the country for 50 years, for 50 years, half the country believed his innocence, that he was, a man of, the new deal, that he was in, the great liberal tradition. he had been one of the formulators of the united nations and the other half of the country believed he was a traitor a traitor to his class. and to his...
14
14
Aug 23, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 14
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i was pretty sure i was right. but the person i was interviewing thought it was something different. at that well and got to wait until the document comes out to see which of us has the better memory of it. i also think that if i could wave a magic wand and released just one of the documents three years ago in time to be chewed on for this project, it would be the state memo steve hadley convened the separate strategy reviews have been done in different departments into an interagency one chaired by jd crouch. at that moment we are trying to figure out as an interagency combined what are the options for representing to the president? there was an option coming from the state department. it was in fear of powerful written memo david satterfield had written that proposed a very dramatic change in strategy, chain and mission, change and goals. we spent a lot of time as a collective wrestling with this option. state department and a very powerful player, it was not a random thought out there. the interviews do not wres
i was pretty sure i was right. but the person i was interviewing thought it was something different. at that well and got to wait until the document comes out to see which of us has the better memory of it. i also think that if i could wave a magic wand and released just one of the documents three years ago in time to be chewed on for this project, it would be the state memo steve hadley convened the separate strategy reviews have been done in different departments into an interagency one...
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41
Aug 14, 2023
08/23
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eye 41
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he was putting on a show, but it was a great show.hy did you choose that quote, and how does it embody antonin scalia i? >> i chose that quote from antonin scalia's youngest child, the fourth of his four daughters, make cilia, because -- meg scalia, she said that because he was larger-than-life, to all of us. and then you see in the epigraph, my conservation to this was to ask, he was cognizant that it was larger-than-life. and she said oh yes, he was putting on a show, but it was a great show. >> throughout the book, his nickname which conjures up a bold fighter in the rain,, despite that he was well-liked. how did he pull off both of these ideas? >> scalia had an amazing mind and a crackling wit, and great personal affability. i like to say he was the kid from queens. he grew up on the streets of queens, so he combined and earthy county america chart with an ivy league intellect. and at times he was capable of grandeur, he would shame week -- shamefully, your piano and start belting out this was carol's or showtunes. but at the same
he was putting on a show, but it was a great show.hy did you choose that quote, and how does it embody antonin scalia i? >> i chose that quote from antonin scalia's youngest child, the fourth of his four daughters, make cilia, because -- meg scalia, she said that because he was larger-than-life, to all of us. and then you see in the epigraph, my conservation to this was to ask, he was cognizant that it was larger-than-life. and she said oh yes, he was putting on a show, but it was a great...
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24
Aug 19, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 24
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was doing and there was criticism. newspaper editorials took sides and people even wrote into their local papers for and against eleanor and the trip. the new york herald tribune side by side, contrasting letters. one was signed by disgusted citizens who demanded a congress investigation into eleanor's active. the other was from someone who lauded eleanor, saying she has all the qualities, the history sense of the future and we have the present hope for in the wife of the greatest president that ever lived. some people wrote directly to the president to gripe about eleanor and a familiar complaint from the traditionalists who not having a more conventional first lady who knew her proper place. but eleanor, unconventional. it is one of the things that the new zealanders, the australians, their newspapers celebrated this. and eleanor was familiar to new zealanders and australians because of news coverage during her time as first lady and her reputation as an advocate for social justice precedes, her as a new zealand news
was doing and there was criticism. newspaper editorials took sides and people even wrote into their local papers for and against eleanor and the trip. the new york herald tribune side by side, contrasting letters. one was signed by disgusted citizens who demanded a congress investigation into eleanor's active. the other was from someone who lauded eleanor, saying she has all the qualities, the history sense of the future and we have the present hope for in the wife of the greatest president...
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28
Aug 5, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN2
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eye 28
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so that as he was investigating when he was writing about this was, mr.rtin the man in the midwest who came to washington started to work for the department of agriculture we actually spent his entire career new wrote about the floor washington dc in a publication he came out in 1918 which is still used by botanists.ll and he was able to actually define this area of the home swamp the others may call them, the term of his magnolia the reason for that isan that the sweet baked magnolia which the relative of the southern ago if we know and love in the sweetbay ago it was in the this area. and here's the flower which looks magnolia like but is actually smelling even nicer magnolia. but it doesn't go anywhere else usually except in these blogs. to read this with detail because is off my laptop because this is very precise and want to blow it here is step. these blogs are sitting in the following which is wherehi the p-letter must meet the coastal editing of the waterfalls and of course great falls loopholes etc. and the sand is sometimes exposed of these foll
so that as he was investigating when he was writing about this was, mr.rtin the man in the midwest who came to washington started to work for the department of agriculture we actually spent his entire career new wrote about the floor washington dc in a publication he came out in 1918 which is still used by botanists.ll and he was able to actually define this area of the home swamp the others may call them, the term of his magnolia the reason for that isan that the sweet baked magnolia which the...
25
25
Aug 9, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN2
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eye 25
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i was vice president o of generl counsel, i was publisher of the magazine group, i was head of businessd business tonight, and i think even for a e wee time i was cfo. [laughter] so it was, like, i had a lot of jobs. and i tell the story in the book i had asked for a $5,000, $10,000 raise, and i was told, no, everyone gets paid the same. and i was, like, but i'm doing a little bit more. and so i think bob knew how unhappy i was because it showed. when the compensation committee -- it's funny when i look back on it, because no compensation, no entire compensation of a publicly-traded company lives with an executive. soso i'm not sure why bob did i, but it was him and two other members of the compensation committee. and i was the first and last meeting they had -- [laughter] with executives, because mine was so -- [inaudible] and it was asking for what i thought was a small amount of money, and they just said no. and i got up from the table, i went into the bathroom, i cried. dried myes eyes, came back out, expect next day i just knew i had to leave becauseha i wasn't being respected, you
i was vice president o of generl counsel, i was publisher of the magazine group, i was head of businessd business tonight, and i think even for a e wee time i was cfo. [laughter] so it was, like, i had a lot of jobs. and i tell the story in the book i had asked for a $5,000, $10,000 raise, and i was told, no, everyone gets paid the same. and i was, like, but i'm doing a little bit more. and so i think bob knew how unhappy i was because it showed. when the compensation committee -- it's funny...
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66
Aug 19, 2023
08/23
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MSNBCW
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eye 66
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he was there. your mom was happy? >> yeah. she looked happy. >> andre was happy? >> yeah. we all were happy. >> at age 8, marcus found himself welcoming a little brother named marquis. >> i think once my little brother came into the picture it was more, you know, i realized that it wasn't just the two of us anymore but we're actually starting to become a family. >> and there were two other stepsiblings in the mix, andre jr. and andrea. and you get along with them? >> yeah. it was pretty great. i had a brother and a sister at home, and it was a pretty cool experience. >> another cool experience, for the first time having a dad. >> he taught me how to swim. he taught me how to throw a football. he even rode me on the back of his motorcycle a few times. it was good to actually have a male figure in the house that i could, you know, do stuff with. >> so andre was living up to his job as your father? >> yeah. yeah, he was. >> for marcus and his mom, everything seemed just perfect. >> honestly, it was like a complete family. it felt like i finally had a complete family. it was t
he was there. your mom was happy? >> yeah. she looked happy. >> andre was happy? >> yeah. we all were happy. >> at age 8, marcus found himself welcoming a little brother named marquis. >> i think once my little brother came into the picture it was more, you know, i realized that it wasn't just the two of us anymore but we're actually starting to become a family. >> and there were two other stepsiblings in the mix, andre jr. and andrea. and you get along with...
40
40
Aug 1, 2023
08/23
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BBCNEWS
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eye 40
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your wild west town, it was your castles, it was your place for dragons, it was the place of dreams,at you had to check in and out of, suddenly, you had to sign to leave your own street and go through a barricade and a sort of primitive checkpoint charlie. what i was aware of was being put on a high alert so, as it were, your emotional engine was revving really high and it was exhausting. that's what i remember, and for everyone, it was absolutely exhausting, and on every side. and families were moving in and out of streets, you know, it was a time of tremendous change and also where the media and the explosion of everything in terms of social activity and political activity in the mid—to—late �*60s was being reflected and shouting out loud from the televisions and from the radio, and so the sense of being in a sort of tumult was very, very palpable. were you scared? most certainly scared. i mean, there's a scene at the beginning of the film which recreates the moment where it kicked off for us. and, you know, it was very alarming, really, to see ten—year—old jude hill, under this ta
your wild west town, it was your castles, it was your place for dragons, it was the place of dreams,at you had to check in and out of, suddenly, you had to sign to leave your own street and go through a barricade and a sort of primitive checkpoint charlie. what i was aware of was being put on a high alert so, as it were, your emotional engine was revving really high and it was exhausting. that's what i remember, and for everyone, it was absolutely exhausting, and on every side. and families...
59
59
Aug 20, 2023
08/23
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>> well, i was pretty upset. i was pretty mad. if it was missing, too, the case against hansen might well be over. was that kind of a, "oh, my gosh, what if this has been destroyed, too? " >> yes. >> because then you're kind of done. >> i was stressed. >> i met with alana williams, the forensic scientist. she went to look for it and she found it. it was in the freezer. and so, thank god. >> still, prosecutor david waymire knew the case had taken a serious hit. >> proving a case beyond a reasonable doubt, unanimously to 12 jurors, would be difficult when we had evidentiary problems. >> justin hansen's defense attorney could now claim the albuquerque police department had mishandled evidence. evidence that may have pointed to another suspect. >> a judge and a jury might very well hold that against us and that could make it more difficult to get a conviction. >> while awaiting trial, the judge allowed hansen to be placed under house arrest. we tried for months to get him to sit down with dateline, but he put us off. he finally agreed
>> well, i was pretty upset. i was pretty mad. if it was missing, too, the case against hansen might well be over. was that kind of a, "oh, my gosh, what if this has been destroyed, too? " >> yes. >> because then you're kind of done. >> i was stressed. >> i met with alana williams, the forensic scientist. she went to look for it and she found it. it was in the freezer. and so, thank god. >> still, prosecutor david waymire knew the case had taken a...
19
19
Aug 20, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 19
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how risky it was. how courageous it was or was too dangerous. nobody actually referred to agency in terms of her being a female. she was accepted but her work use her ability to engage with people from the highest echelons of society as well as hanging out of the bar and drinking beers. when she was in germany, her job was to find out what was going on. no american's have been there during the war because it wasn't ranson belgium. we need to know if we find a peace agreement. how big was our military, economy, infrastructure that was her job to find out. she could be very close friends with the former german army officer and she could be friends with the average working person and that's how she got her information. it so happens that she also had to be joined secret societies on the right and left with socialist and within that group, somebody had a contact of the state department was a double agent. and that is how she ended up in in lubyanca. jeff: there are similar plot twist that a lot of the hires within the oss were from wealthy families,
how risky it was. how courageous it was or was too dangerous. nobody actually referred to agency in terms of her being a female. she was accepted but her work use her ability to engage with people from the highest echelons of society as well as hanging out of the bar and drinking beers. when she was in germany, her job was to find out what was going on. no american's have been there during the war because it wasn't ranson belgium. we need to know if we find a peace agreement. how big was our...
144
144
Aug 6, 2023
08/23
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eye 144
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but what that was was not clear.re all feeling that we were all in this together, we were all worried about christian. he is our friend. we're trying to find out and do whatever we can to help locate him. >> officer peck could see erika was becoming increasingly agitated. so, as the campus cause was checking out the stories these two told him. he decided it was time to bring in investigators from the gainesville pd. the first thing they could do was talk to pedro bravo. >> coming up, a dramatic new clue. >> we find christians backpack. >> where with this discovery lead? >> i overheard the police officers discussing, like, a love triangle. >> when dateline continues! ---------- ---------- feeling better? on top of the worlddddd!!! before advil. advil targets pain at the source of inflammation. when pain comes for you, come back fast with advil liqui-gels. will you pause it real quick? (mumbles) just sold the car to carvana. what? all i had to do was answer a couple questions and got a real offer in seconds. then, they
but what that was was not clear.re all feeling that we were all in this together, we were all worried about christian. he is our friend. we're trying to find out and do whatever we can to help locate him. >> officer peck could see erika was becoming increasingly agitated. so, as the campus cause was checking out the stories these two told him. he decided it was time to bring in investigators from the gainesville pd. the first thing they could do was talk to pedro bravo. >> coming...
113
113
Aug 14, 2023
08/23
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CNNW
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of who he was, where he was, why he was doing what he was doing.windows, use their lighting. this is information we're trying to put out all the time, not just when we know we have a killer on the loose. yochelson: the media had a lot of different names for him. the local nbc affiliate called it the walk-in killer. but another name stuck. martin: the term "night stalker" emerged from one of the daily newspapers. the other names had been floated -- valley intruder, walk-in killer -- but night stalker was the one that ultimately caught on and remains to this day. man: this meeting was the third in arcadia in the past month. all along, investigators have said a tip from the public might be the key to breaking this case. that's becoming more and more important as the investigation goes basically nowhere. linedecker: police started putting together a profile. man: we're doing everything within our power and our resources to protect the community and apprehend the suspect. martin: you look at the type of residents and all the physical evidence, then you
of who he was, where he was, why he was doing what he was doing.windows, use their lighting. this is information we're trying to put out all the time, not just when we know we have a killer on the loose. yochelson: the media had a lot of different names for him. the local nbc affiliate called it the walk-in killer. but another name stuck. martin: the term "night stalker" emerged from one of the daily newspapers. the other names had been floated -- valley intruder, walk-in killer --...
3
3.0
Aug 23, 2023
08/23
by
CSPAN3
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eye 3
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. >> i was born in florida my dad was in the navy. he went up work with the faa in south carolina until 1971 we got transferred to the center and hampton and has been here ever since. >> okay. >> the jew go to school worded to go to school? >> so into high school here griffin high school graduate 1976. >> did you enter military service then? >> that time it was mandatory for freshman. >> you served as the national guard how is that connection? >> after high school is working construction, a few other things. one of the things i was doing was working part-time at the station. there is a man there named bill we got to know each other through working together he is an older guy, he was older to me then. he would always greet me every day and say when you going to come drive my tanks. and i guess i was 18 and nothing sounded better than driving a tank. he said i am telling you, if you want to do just let me know. so he got me, he got me with that, driving tanks sounded great to get love to hunt, i love to shoot. >> shoot the big guns. yes
. >> i was born in florida my dad was in the navy. he went up work with the faa in south carolina until 1971 we got transferred to the center and hampton and has been here ever since. >> okay. >> the jew go to school worded to go to school? >> so into high school here griffin high school graduate 1976. >> did you enter military service then? >> that time it was mandatory for freshman. >> you served as the national guard how is that connection? >>...
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Aug 13, 2023
08/23
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he was very, very that the future of europe was in danger. and he gave a multi network radio address. the evening he got back from moscow where he said the patient is sinking while the doctors deliberate. and then had someone get in touch with harvard who've been trying to give him an honorary degree for several years. but he hadn't had time and said, can we get on the docket for june? and they said, sure. and as marshall was flying up to boston, he was delivering the essence of his speech back the state department. neither the state department nor the white house knew exactly he was going to say that day. he requested that no american be invited to the speech. he asked that it be given very little attention as possible. the press release for the speech was issued single spaced print, which told all the radio announcers that it wasn't important because important press releases were issued in double spaced print to make it easy to read on the radio. let me jump in and ask you why he didn't want the attention here in the u.s.? he was very afrai
he was very, very that the future of europe was in danger. and he gave a multi network radio address. the evening he got back from moscow where he said the patient is sinking while the doctors deliberate. and then had someone get in touch with harvard who've been trying to give him an honorary degree for several years. but he hadn't had time and said, can we get on the docket for june? and they said, sure. and as marshall was flying up to boston, he was delivering the essence of his speech back...
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it was, it was illegal. it was an archaic law, it had no purpose. and he said that what it was being used for it was, you know, it was like you official secrecy is act a secrecy atkin bread and that's what it had be come. that's what it was, a tool to do what the breast do and, and it would totally separate the 1st amendment. and he was obsessed with it. and i just wanted to say add on what arms are saying about nuclear war and is obsessional with that. the last time i spoke to him last time i spoke to him, i just got back from don't ask him variable in my scale. and he wanted to get a feel on what it was like there. because he was very custom mistake about the future. he thought that nuclear war was coming, and so he said to me a favor, let's get off the phone. let's talk about assume, and that's what we talked about, what i was sharing from commanders in a don't ask about the use of a nuclear weapon. he said everything that you told me confirms what i believe. and so he did. that was a deduce a book out when we talked about that. that was what was
it was, it was illegal. it was an archaic law, it had no purpose. and he said that what it was being used for it was, you know, it was like you official secrecy is act a secrecy atkin bread and that's what it had be come. that's what it was, a tool to do what the breast do and, and it would totally separate the 1st amendment. and he was obsessed with it. and i just wanted to say add on what arms are saying about nuclear war and is obsessional with that. the last time i spoke to him last time i...
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Aug 29, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 16
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and that was a and i was know that was made me very happy and it was a very nice it was a very nice older guy and he clearly was like a junkie and he sort of put into you there. but i think he was he was i had really long beard at the time and i'm pretty confident he was staring at my luggage tag, but was there and it yes. man, when you were a child, you travel as a family. do people recognize dad and did they leave like? did they leave him alone or or how did it come? so it's a good question. the question is, when i was a child and traveled with my father, did people leave him alone? do they recognize him? i think i was about nine or ten years old, when i first noticed that people were noticing him in the way i noticed as we would by a table and would whisper like guy's tim russert, right? and that they know you and say, oh, he's in that little scream thing. it's in a little plastic box. okay, i get that. i would say eventually, originally people were very respectful and my dad always liked to interact people. so he was very, very happy, talk to anybody. his only rules were just like, do
and that was a and i was know that was made me very happy and it was a very nice it was a very nice older guy and he clearly was like a junkie and he sort of put into you there. but i think he was he was i had really long beard at the time and i'm pretty confident he was staring at my luggage tag, but was there and it yes. man, when you were a child, you travel as a family. do people recognize dad and did they leave like? did they leave him alone or or how did it come? so it's a good question....
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Aug 19, 2023
08/23
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eye 33
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that was that was very helpful. she was she was prescribed bromides, was prescribed barbiturates.she was told to drink herself, to sleep by the doctors, that that would help. she received electric shock therapy in the early days of like i said, she institutionalized several times. at one point, ernie jerry's doctor suggested that ernie divorce her so that it would shock her into behaving. so this was at a time when folks just did not understand. i think, in fact, if anyone's out here thinking, hey, i would like to write a book someday, write a book about how women experienced health care in the thirties and forties. my goodness. so they had this very kind of coded pendant sort of relationship and then when ernie was gone, jerry would get worse, and then he would home and she would get a little bit better and then he'd get ready to leave again. and then she would get worse and at the time, ernie thought that this was her trying to make him feel bad, or this was her trying to stop his his career or to his professional goals. but, you know, as was looking back on the archival record,
that was that was very helpful. she was she was prescribed bromides, was prescribed barbiturates.she was told to drink herself, to sleep by the doctors, that that would help. she received electric shock therapy in the early days of like i said, she institutionalized several times. at one point, ernie jerry's doctor suggested that ernie divorce her so that it would shock her into behaving. so this was at a time when folks just did not understand. i think, in fact, if anyone's out here thinking,...
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Aug 7, 2023
08/23
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he was not funny. he was not entertaining. but he knew every detail about the areas he was teaching about. you had to learn the geography, the rivers, the mountains, the minerals. as far back as records would allow. that kind of detail in the way that you speak and have all of these details at your disposal, i just wonder what you think of the way history is taught today. it seems to me there is a lot of glossing over. so when i read a book, you mention grant as your hero. when i read a book like the history of grant, i really enjoy it and i enjoy listening to you talk. and i wonder what is your opinion of what you see of the way history is taught today, and if you ever had the opportunity to meet that professor. guest: thank you for that. i have heard the name, i am aware of him. but i have not -- i would guess one of the reasons people came to his lectures is because he told stories. humans like to have the world put into narrative. that is what i do for a living, i put the world into narrative. this goes all the way back. w
he was not funny. he was not entertaining. but he knew every detail about the areas he was teaching about. you had to learn the geography, the rivers, the mountains, the minerals. as far back as records would allow. that kind of detail in the way that you speak and have all of these details at your disposal, i just wonder what you think of the way history is taught today. it seems to me there is a lot of glossing over. so when i read a book, you mention grant as your hero. when i read a book...
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Aug 8, 2023
08/23
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this was my first trip and actually my second trip was just this past september i was supposed to go in may of 20. a for my first research trip for the book. and of course the pandemic scuttled those plans, unfortunately, and and this was really a bummer for me because i like to go to the places that i study and that i research i'd like to be in the landscape not necessarily to kind of feel a sense of history or anything like that but to actually see the landscape and experience it as people in the past may have experienced it even though of course there has been natural change over time. it is not exactly the same but i like to be there so that i can understand what the people i'm writing about kind of saw and what they experienced and and these family trips. we're really important to me too. they i learned to love history by moving through space finding us finding us on maps bound into the rand mcnally road atlas if those are people in the audience who remember that i love a good road atlas and tracking us as as we drove along. so it really isn't a surprise that when i became a his
this was my first trip and actually my second trip was just this past september i was supposed to go in may of 20. a for my first research trip for the book. and of course the pandemic scuttled those plans, unfortunately, and and this was really a bummer for me because i like to go to the places that i study and that i research i'd like to be in the landscape not necessarily to kind of feel a sense of history or anything like that but to actually see the landscape and experience it as people in...
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Aug 26, 2023
08/23
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eye 23
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she was my champion. she was my archive. she had taken the utmost care to preserve the evidence of my existence and growth, capturing me in images saving all my documents and possession. she had all knowledge of my being memorized. the time i was born, my cravings, the first book i read, the formation. every characteristic, every ailment and little victory. she observed me with unparalleled interest, inexhaustible devotion, um. and then in the margins i wrote even better than a mommy mom. that was so moving to me. and i think that it, it wasn't just because she did this you as you've written, but it was because you did this for her. um, and i think as i, i was about to say as a memoirist, but as writers and as observers, but mostly as daughters, i feel like that's almost of the, the hardest things that you can do for your mom, especially when she's not there. so i don't know. i don't know if that was also part of it. writing, crying, and the schmear, was it to help sort of, yeah. i think that there was certainly a love lette
she was my champion. she was my archive. she had taken the utmost care to preserve the evidence of my existence and growth, capturing me in images saving all my documents and possession. she had all knowledge of my being memorized. the time i was born, my cravings, the first book i read, the formation. every characteristic, every ailment and little victory. she observed me with unparalleled interest, inexhaustible devotion, um. and then in the margins i wrote even better than a mommy mom. that...
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have was the crown. perhaps look, you rather memorized it, which task improved his arabic had to start. we should be grateful to the curriculum that he was allowed to have dispute and can't even when it is improved, his knowledge and comprehension of the language and allowed him to memorize the text by how many families, how for them, if we compare and then bell is condition of imprisonment in the french, and i'll jerry and prisons in the prison of enemies and the prison of his brothers was the attitude towards him about the same job either come down to this question because i wasn't born in a french prison to leave for me i was born and teary in prison as i think there are differences and what differences i don't know exactly what the differences with what i would say they existed was he imprisoned a poor under house arrest, look and miss g was imprisoned in a cell in the military guards house 5 young julians and the ship the soon as you now do you are you it wasn't a place called the way it i pay it's
have was the crown. perhaps look, you rather memorized it, which task improved his arabic had to start. we should be grateful to the curriculum that he was allowed to have dispute and can't even when it is improved, his knowledge and comprehension of the language and allowed him to memorize the text by how many families, how for them, if we compare and then bell is condition of imprisonment in the french, and i'll jerry and prisons in the prison of enemies and the prison of his brothers was the...
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Aug 7, 2023
08/23
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he was happy when roosevelt was defeated. coolidge was not pleased, however, by the drift of things in massachusetts. by early 1914, he was alarmed by what he later called a spirit of radicalism, rising in his state, a spirit manifested in bills in the legislature aimed, as he put it, at impairing the property of employers. in his inaugural address as president of the state senate in 1914, he forceful plea appealed to what he later described as the conservative spirit of the people. he titled his speech how faith in massachusetts. it was an eloquent case for a potentially conservative approach to government that was slowly becoming ascendant in his mind. nevertheless, and we must not forget this coolidge's support for progressive social welfare, religious elation did not cease in 1914. it continued as long as he held state office. a coolidge who announced as governor in january 19, 20 that it was now time to, in his words, conserve and retrench rather than to reform, was the same governor who in the ensuing months approved a
he was happy when roosevelt was defeated. coolidge was not pleased, however, by the drift of things in massachusetts. by early 1914, he was alarmed by what he later called a spirit of radicalism, rising in his state, a spirit manifested in bills in the legislature aimed, as he put it, at impairing the property of employers. in his inaugural address as president of the state senate in 1914, he forceful plea appealed to what he later described as the conservative spirit of the people. he titled...
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Aug 3, 2023
08/23
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eye 34
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so this was a woman who was just so on top of things. so, the part about china ended up having to be a whole chapter there was so much there. she astounded me as i think you can tell. it ended up taking me 10 years to write her story and part of that was the constant discovery. and i know this is book is only the beginning of her story. it's heavily footnoted because i felt an obligation to document my sources because other scholars and resources can now take those sources and take the story further. there are lots of questions that i can't answer, did she have any romantic relationships and i can't answer that. i suspect not, i think she was a spinster, but i look forward to maybe somebody coming up with some more enlightening answers to that question. so her involvement in the cherry trees, how did that come about? the story was muddied over the years. it's a complicated story. there were many people involved. it happened over many years. there was more than one batch of trees, as you may have heard, if you know anything about the hist
so this was a woman who was just so on top of things. so, the part about china ended up having to be a whole chapter there was so much there. she astounded me as i think you can tell. it ended up taking me 10 years to write her story and part of that was the constant discovery. and i know this is book is only the beginning of her story. it's heavily footnoted because i felt an obligation to document my sources because other scholars and resources can now take those sources and take the story...
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39
Sep 1, 2023
09/23
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not that he was resentful, but that he was still processing but it was like. it was very different before the war because of the steamboat trade especially, but also there was a different atmosphere, so he decided to mine that but also in an accessible way in which was the adventures of tom sawyer. with some of those kids that he knew growing up and adults making him miserable, so he came up with a brilliant idea to encapsulate the prewar south mississippi were society, and it was such a huge seller that he had to write a sequel to it. it was not only inevitable financially but emotionally to take the material and to turn it. turn it not upside down but in such a way it became a lot more interesting, and that helped harry: -- helped him. harry: so in terms of social commentary, it sends alone really. this is 1880 4, 1885, and you talking about a country in reconstruction or rebuilding at a time when the generation that -- generation of the war is turning over again, and the country is taking a look back. and what twain is doing is stripping the world of its il
not that he was resentful, but that he was still processing but it was like. it was very different before the war because of the steamboat trade especially, but also there was a different atmosphere, so he decided to mine that but also in an accessible way in which was the adventures of tom sawyer. with some of those kids that he knew growing up and adults making him miserable, so he came up with a brilliant idea to encapsulate the prewar south mississippi were society, and it was such a huge...
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that was in february 1991. yes, my father was with saddam. oh my gosh, i have not a when you nothing about him for 2 weeks or of law. yes, there was only able to leap through wrong in the household. the rock is through your on what i can. yes. but he was in a rock when the last the attack against it, the french cool. the americans hadn't confounded saddam had promised my father to leave. rog know, so the americans have our would never be ok with that. where they can then i'm going to can, they would have continued the offensive and, and the 2nd census with a sit down with pull out of kuwait to not. and i mean, of course, they came with half a 1000000 troops armed to the fullest, the that's what sadly been bellows to them. who's saying roland, do mount and make 2 runs, has passed away the truth and took many secrets with them. maybe the european party is still keeps it secrets of lives. yes. rights there are kaiser there archives, documentation and freedom of speech, but trolling, dumont didn't to play a role in trudy's didn't was he wasn't pl
that was in february 1991. yes, my father was with saddam. oh my gosh, i have not a when you nothing about him for 2 weeks or of law. yes, there was only able to leap through wrong in the household. the rock is through your on what i can. yes. but he was in a rock when the last the attack against it, the french cool. the americans hadn't confounded saddam had promised my father to leave. rog know, so the americans have our would never be ok with that. where they can then i'm going to can, they...
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16
Aug 7, 2023
08/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 16
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was it was it was it was, you know, tying it in as ralph was referring earlier, i think, to all of the messiness of the civil war, tying it into a person like olmstead was known for this outright condemnation of the old south. i mean, he was as far as, you, these were people who saw it firsthand and they weren't having it. it needed a new and they needed to convince southern legislatures and a southern president woodrow wilson to sign the legislation for the national park service to be created. so so it was and that's what we're trying to address really is here. what were the origins? well, not the campfires. right now, not the yellowstone campfire, not teddy roosevelt's campfire either. you know, not actually not where the idea came from. and it probably wouldn't be so ingrained in national if it were. it comes of that period of the civil war when the united states, as we know it really gets formed, you know, and all these institutions get formed. and parks are one of them. and they're pretty deeply ingrained as a result. you know, we showed that slide of john muir and roosevelt that
was it was it was it was, you know, tying it in as ralph was referring earlier, i think, to all of the messiness of the civil war, tying it into a person like olmstead was known for this outright condemnation of the old south. i mean, he was as far as, you, these were people who saw it firsthand and they weren't having it. it needed a new and they needed to convince southern legislatures and a southern president woodrow wilson to sign the legislation for the national park service to be created....
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8.0
Aug 2, 2023
08/23
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ESPRESO
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eye 8
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was a pit, it was already buried, the remains of this pit, here it was huge, sasha was lying on the the hanger. here, i was in that corner, lying between me, all of them lay one otoshnik here, here, here is another one otoshnyk was already there to be honest, it was lucky to get into the hole because there was at least some foam underneath and there were two blankets, they said, well , how do i say, i want to go to the toilet, don’t you have a toilet for yourself , guys, do you want to write and do you want to poop, this is your problem, tell dad, don’t forget a lot i don't remember much . i remember how he was in the nursery . that's like how the ego is scratched they probably threw it out. yes, i have it. and they threw it out. and what’s there is scratching at my door? mom, i’m like that. i open the gate and he immediately falls out of it. all he says is that it hurts. all i looked here was nothing . and your soldier is from here. he’s all blue. i'm blue, this is me, i'm the same person more than once, even though i've worked in the hospital, i've seen all kinds of countries, i w
was a pit, it was already buried, the remains of this pit, here it was huge, sasha was lying on the the hanger. here, i was in that corner, lying between me, all of them lay one otoshnik here, here, here is another one otoshnyk was already there to be honest, it was lucky to get into the hole because there was at least some foam underneath and there were two blankets, they said, well , how do i say, i want to go to the toilet, don’t you have a toilet for yourself , guys, do you want to write...
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112
Aug 12, 2023
08/23
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KGO
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he was 16. she was 17.d her son when she was 18. >> i thought to myself, i'm so lonely. i thought, well, if i have a baby, i'll never be lonely again. and i had my son, and i'm not lonely and i love him, and he's great and wonderful. >> her and billy started having problems. they couldn't make things work out. so she decided, i'm leaving, and she left billy. >> vickie leaves her husband and decides to move back to houston with her mom virgie. she has barely a tenth grade education. she has work experience at a fried chicken restaurant, and she's now a single mom with no other apparent skills. >> she works a little at walmart and she works a little at red lobster, but they don't earn a ton of money. so what she does is walk into a gentlemen's club and ask if she can get a job. >> reporter: there were a number of strip clubs near the walmart where she worked, and one of them had a big blue and white sign that had a woman in a bikini. >> i would drive by the work everyday and there was this big neon sign. it w
he was 16. she was 17.d her son when she was 18. >> i thought to myself, i'm so lonely. i thought, well, if i have a baby, i'll never be lonely again. and i had my son, and i'm not lonely and i love him, and he's great and wonderful. >> her and billy started having problems. they couldn't make things work out. so she decided, i'm leaving, and she left billy. >> vickie leaves her husband and decides to move back to houston with her mom virgie. she has barely a tenth grade...
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18
Aug 25, 2023
08/23
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eye 18
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but everything was canceled. and it was a nightmare. an author waited ten years for this book to come out, and then i couldn't see anybody. thank goodness. zoom technology. she came in right at the right moment for me, so i was able to do a lot of zoom book talks but this is almost my first one in person. but then something that i had no control over that was the the just the controversial 2020 election and it's long math and then the creation of the commission to look into january six and i began hear only in the last year or so that people in washington were reading my book precisely because it it threw some light on events of january six, 2021. and i heard that jamie raskin liked my book, the maryland democrat, and he has written a memoir that mentions the book. interesting. it was for him be reading about 1861 while thinking about 2021 and that that was wonderful and senator maggie hassan of new hampshire also tweeted out a plug for my book, which i appreciated i've never met her or jamie raskin. but then the most meaningful of all
but everything was canceled. and it was a nightmare. an author waited ten years for this book to come out, and then i couldn't see anybody. thank goodness. zoom technology. she came in right at the right moment for me, so i was able to do a lot of zoom book talks but this is almost my first one in person. but then something that i had no control over that was the the just the controversial 2020 election and it's long math and then the creation of the commission to look into january six and i...
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21
Aug 27, 2023
08/23
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BBCNEWS
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he really was then. the 2005 guy was a character. my nerves into, probably. i was hiding behind a sort of... a kind of slightly stuttering, kind of, "oh, i'm so brilliant, i can't control my thoughts." there's a streak, a kind of misanthropic thing. a little bit like a battered... yeah, like he might not like going outside very much, that he spends his life in his own head, having these slightly quirky thoughts, these sort of sexually perverted thoughts and, you know, talking about inflatable dolls. # your love for me is not debatable # your sexual appetite�*s insatiable # you never make me wait at all # delectable, inflatable you # and then just going on around about logical philosophy and wearing... i'm looking like edward scissorhands crossed with robert smith from the cure, and you got the sense that he was someone who didn't get out much. yes. and that's very different from who i am and who i was. the next choice you've made for this programme is being commissioned to write the songs for matilda the musical. so you were approach
he really was then. the 2005 guy was a character. my nerves into, probably. i was hiding behind a sort of... a kind of slightly stuttering, kind of, "oh, i'm so brilliant, i can't control my thoughts." there's a streak, a kind of misanthropic thing. a little bit like a battered... yeah, like he might not like going outside very much, that he spends his life in his own head, having these slightly quirky thoughts, these sort of sexually perverted thoughts and, you know, talking about...
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25
Aug 23, 2023
08/23
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eye 25
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there was another patrol that was in the area. they happened to have a pa with them, captain stewart. >> a pa? >> a physician's assistant. he had some medical knowledge. unfortunately, there wasn't a whole lot they could do for me. and honestly i didn't even think i was that bad. i knew i had been burned, but, you know, at one point, i could see my left hand, and kind of think about when you take a lighter to plastic, and it kind of shrivels and melts, i had gloves on, which is fire resistant gloves, but basically the glove had just melted to my hand, and i could just see it was all singed real bad. i knew that was in pretty bad condition. the guys were talking to me, you know, reassuring me, and i was getting a little annoyed with it. i can remember telling them just shut up. i got this. don't worry about it. i did keep asking them, you know, how far out is the medevac? you know, they gave me the same answer, about ten minutes. i'd get annoyed because i had no sense of time. i just said ten minutes ago, why isn't it here now? you
there was another patrol that was in the area. they happened to have a pa with them, captain stewart. >> a pa? >> a physician's assistant. he had some medical knowledge. unfortunately, there wasn't a whole lot they could do for me. and honestly i didn't even think i was that bad. i knew i had been burned, but, you know, at one point, i could see my left hand, and kind of think about when you take a lighter to plastic, and it kind of shrivels and melts, i had gloves on, which is fire...
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31
Aug 18, 2023
08/23
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BBCNEWS
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eye 31
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lucy letby was there, she was sittin: happened.as there, she was sitting next to _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i spoke - happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i spoke to - was sitting next to me. i spoke to her towards the end of the meeting, and i said how tired and upset she must be after two days of this, and i hoped that she was going to have a restful weekend. and she turned to me and said, no, i am back on shift tomorrow. which struck me as being incredible, really. the other staff were very traumatised by all of this, we were crumbling before your eyes almost. and she was quite happy and confident to come into work on the saturday. find and confident to come into work on the saturday-— the saturday. and at was, shortly after that. _ the saturday. and at was, shortly after that, that _ the saturday. and at was, shortly after that, that lucy _ the sat
lucy letby was there, she was sittin: happened.as there, she was sitting next to _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i _ happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i spoke - happened. lucy letby was there, she was sitting next to me. i spoke to - was sitting next to me. i spoke to her towards the end of the meeting, and i said how tired and upset she must be after two days of this, and i...
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29
Aug 18, 2023
08/23
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BBCNEWS
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eye 29
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we heard that there was very _ hybrid she was doing.hybrid she was doing. we heard that there was very methods that - hybrid she was doing. we heard that there was very methods that she - there was very methods that she used, _ there was very methods that she used. one — there was very methods that she used, one of her favourite ways of killing _ used, one of her favourite ways of killing we — used, one of her favourite ways of killing we were told was by the injection— killing we were told was by the injection of air. this is done by inserting — injection of air. this is done by inserting an air bubble from a feedback, then into the job's bloodstream causing all sorts of problems for the child. there are other— problems for the child. there are other methods, the force—feeding of milk in_ other methods, the force—feeding of milk in the _ other methods, the force—feeding of milk in the case of one child. in the case — milk in the case of one child. in the case of— milk in the case of one child. in the case of another two children, there
we heard that there was very _ hybrid she was doing.hybrid she was doing. we heard that there was very methods that - hybrid she was doing. we heard that there was very methods that she - there was very methods that she used, _ there was very methods that she used. one — there was very methods that she used, one of her favourite ways of killing _ used, one of her favourite ways of killing we — used, one of her favourite ways of killing we were told was by the injection— killing we were...
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he was acquitted, which means that the jury was already very peaceful. he already was, honey. to his homeland. he is happy because you are my countrymen. i'm a particle there, your particle is there, that is, about the boorish mort we somehow. in general, everything would be forgotten. i communicated in this company that he let me yes to say, that is, i talked in this company , the singer christina with beglevskaya recalls with nostalgia a merry feast with a jap. i mean, those were great times. there, uh , it's like, of course, you need it. thank you, i ran away, but i think it’s unlikely, because they had kind eyes, open smiles, and they always buy it. today she has several studio albums on tour, and radio rotation in the 2000s. christina sang other people's songs at private parties. we flew. i remember him, i was such a mini-concert, as if giving. yes, we flew to astrakhan as well huge companies. but it was e at that moment at the karaoke level, but they paid me. naturally. here it was black and the edge was the most, that is, they settled me separately in a separate room. t
he was acquitted, which means that the jury was already very peaceful. he already was, honey. to his homeland. he is happy because you are my countrymen. i'm a particle there, your particle is there, that is, about the boorish mort we somehow. in general, everything would be forgotten. i communicated in this company that he let me yes to say, that is, i talked in this company , the singer christina with beglevskaya recalls with nostalgia a merry feast with a jap. i mean, those were great times....