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May 24, 2022
05/22
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so that was that was something that was his that was personal. that was real and i think that that was and he that was the only time where he where he went against advice of dean atchison. who basically was his chief and only advisor for the second term and and general marshall who was who was in who was enormously influential who truly almost i would almost say i almost say had a man crush on george marshall and and both they both came they both were against this early recognition of israel. so that's what i'm feelings took over. you've studied both eisenhower and truman and they came to the presidency from different angles. what are the difficulties? of becoming commander-in-chief of politician becoming commander in chief. versus a military man having to become a presidential politician. how do the two of them cope with those differing roles historical roles that they themselves have. forgive me a bit of eisenhower discussion now because i just i i feel like i feel as though i got to know him and i think i think for eisenhower it was almost a s
so that was that was something that was his that was personal. that was real and i think that that was and he that was the only time where he where he went against advice of dean atchison. who basically was his chief and only advisor for the second term and and general marshall who was who was in who was enormously influential who truly almost i would almost say i almost say had a man crush on george marshall and and both they both came they both were against this early recognition of israel....
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May 8, 2022
05/22
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was distance and she was able to talk about it, but it was it was still i mean it wasn't i hadn't faded i would say so she had a lot of really good details and that and i spent a long time. it was about eight hours maybe interview with that but also everybody else in that went through the escape with us was is alive, so i spent a lot of time and they were so generous giving me access to journals to their memories letting me interview them sometimes over and over again about certain scenes and then i went to von which is a town on the border between iran and and turkey. it's on the turkish side, and it's that's still a smuggling route. and i mean right now from iranians but also for afghans, so it's it was a really interesting reporting trip. and and i found someone that took me to the took me basically to the border. so i was able to kind of retrace some of the some parts of it. not on foot obviously, but i was able to do it. but yeah, i mean my mother. was seven months pregnant when we left and they all thought that picture shows. i think it shows the suitcases. so we there's there was
was distance and she was able to talk about it, but it was it was still i mean it wasn't i hadn't faded i would say so she had a lot of really good details and that and i spent a long time. it was about eight hours maybe interview with that but also everybody else in that went through the escape with us was is alive, so i spent a lot of time and they were so generous giving me access to journals to their memories letting me interview them sometimes over and over again about certain scenes and...
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May 21, 2022
05/22
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. >> the wedding was beautiful. >> i thought it was a love of my life. i wanted them to find the real killer. i want it all of this to be behind us and go on, happily ever after. >> single mom meets single dad, and in a single moment, it was love. >> he was very handsome. >> he was fun. >> all smiles, very outgoing, charming. >> everything he did melted my heart. >> but there was something else about this dreamy, single dad. something about his past. something deadly. >> i just came in the house, i saw janet on the floor. >> she was crying, he was in shock. his >> whole life was shattered. >> he said, i should probably let you know, my wife was actually murdered. >> killed in a crime that had never been solved. >> she was almost the perfect victim. >> and what about him? he'd become the focus, in his first wife's mysterious death. was he a victim too? >> i'm a father, i have a family, i didn't kill janet. >> i felt horrible for him. >> you don't want to believe? it >> no. who would want to believe that? ♪ ♪ ♪ >> hello, welcome to dateline. vanessa pond w
. >> the wedding was beautiful. >> i thought it was a love of my life. i wanted them to find the real killer. i want it all of this to be behind us and go on, happily ever after. >> single mom meets single dad, and in a single moment, it was love. >> he was very handsome. >> he was fun. >> all smiles, very outgoing, charming. >> everything he did melted my heart. >> but there was something else about this dreamy, single dad. something about his...
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May 2, 2022
05/22
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it was a medical mystery, or was a? was this a case for doctors, or the police. here is dennis murphy with lethal weapon. >> then regency room trauma team was losing her. she'd been wielding glass gasping for breath. >> her heart stopped, so at the restart. >> within minutes, they were doing the breathing on both circulation for 41 year old autumn klein,, wife mother, medical doctor. a rising star in the field of women's neurology. a star whose bite was demean, even as they try desperately to keep her going. >> these are doctors who are treating trauma patients every day. this one had totally puzzled them. >> the woman failing in the er, doctor cline, was in many ways while modern pittsburgh was all about. the gleaming downtown towers don't need to worry more about crime me still no smokestacks along the river. the steel industry here had mostly died by the early 80s and moved overseas. universities, technology, medicine, financed, that was the foundation of the new pittsburgh they call, the renaissance. robert ferrante, and his wife dr., autumn klein, relocated
it was a medical mystery, or was a? was this a case for doctors, or the police. here is dennis murphy with lethal weapon. >> then regency room trauma team was losing her. she'd been wielding glass gasping for breath. >> her heart stopped, so at the restart. >> within minutes, they were doing the breathing on both circulation for 41 year old autumn klein,, wife mother, medical doctor. a rising star in the field of women's neurology. a star whose bite was demean, even as they...
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May 31, 2022
05/22
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that was not the case. why was it?as a child, roosevelt had been weak, sickly, troubled by asthma, terribly troubled by asthma, and weak eyesight. so he set out to correct these shortcomings. worked hard to improve his health. he became a boxer. he became an ardent outdoorsmen. once spent a period of time working on a ranch in the west, and his zest for physical activity, particularly the belligerent kind became legendary. it has become customary to explain roosevelt's personality as being the result of overcompensation for his early physical inferiority. but whatever case that maybe, teddy roosevelt certainly took great pleasure in the physical, the adventurous and the dangerous. surely, few men have ever been able to gratify their desire to such an extent. his life was indeed a full one, so let's just hit the highlights of it. at the beginning, he graduated from harvard in 1880, studied law at columbia afterwards though did not receive his degree. he served one term in the new york legislature. he served six years at
that was not the case. why was it?as a child, roosevelt had been weak, sickly, troubled by asthma, terribly troubled by asthma, and weak eyesight. so he set out to correct these shortcomings. worked hard to improve his health. he became a boxer. he became an ardent outdoorsmen. once spent a period of time working on a ranch in the west, and his zest for physical activity, particularly the belligerent kind became legendary. it has become customary to explain roosevelt's personality as being the...
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May 23, 2022
05/22
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was not as serious about a career as she was. he was a little bit less sophisticated than michele was, but seemed to be very happy with him. >> michelle and jason married in october of 2003. the day after they wedding a shared a big secret. michelle was pregnant. their daughter cassie was born early the next year. >> i love you mommy. >> i love you to cassidy. >> and when she came along, it was love at first sight. >> michelle was an enthusiastic mother. , by all accounts jason was a good that. >> he was a great playmaker. he knew how to sit on the floor and play with his daughter. >> the youngest moved into the house on virtually from 2005. both of them worked, he is a salesman, she a financial specialist. in the summer of 2006, michelle got pregnant again. they kept the news to themselves, but it was clear that something good was happening. >> the comment he said to me was that he was excited to have another baby. not implying that she was pregnant, but excited about the prospect of. but just a few months later, michele was tha
was not as serious about a career as she was. he was a little bit less sophisticated than michele was, but seemed to be very happy with him. >> michelle and jason married in october of 2003. the day after they wedding a shared a big secret. michelle was pregnant. their daughter cassie was born early the next year. >> i love you mommy. >> i love you to cassidy. >> and when she came along, it was love at first sight. >> michelle was an enthusiastic mother. , by all...
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May 30, 2022
05/22
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what was actually the backdrop of this is it was so odd was what i had sold the publishers was actually a history wall street where i appeared to be in for a few pages. the book ended up something completely different than t what i intended back to god. and i bought some point i sat down and i thought my experience was i'm going to try that. but i had onehand on other writers .o i was not, i had no sense that i could just be myself. and what happened as i was writing is a gathering confidence in just being myself. which says that bookhas never left me . at some point i don't know. think about how different you are now from when you were a when you started writing but here i am a sweaty mess in eg the beginning reading all these other writers, trying to figure out how you do this stuff. borrowing their voices. when i write a book now i avoid reading things. i don't want anything in my head . i read the stuff i have to read for the book but nothing that might influence how i, i don't read anything. so i was getting to the point middle of the book where i was learning how to write a book.
what was actually the backdrop of this is it was so odd was what i had sold the publishers was actually a history wall street where i appeared to be in for a few pages. the book ended up something completely different than t what i intended back to god. and i bought some point i sat down and i thought my experience was i'm going to try that. but i had onehand on other writers .o i was not, i had no sense that i could just be myself. and what happened as i was writing is a gathering confidence...
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May 4, 2022
05/22
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and you know, he was, he was helpful.ut i have to say the best thing he did to help his biographer was to keep a very detailed white house diary throughout his presidency. and of course, as you know, he published about 20% of it. and it's a fabulous diary. it's substantive. it's a place where you can see him venting about various issues and personalities and problems he's facing on a daily basis. and i asked him, you know, repeatedly, if he could open up the 80% that was still closed, but he turned me down and he's turned other historians down. but someday, we are going to get access to that diary and i'm sure it's going to require yet another biography of jimmy carter. [laughs] >> our next question is, kai, you wrote a letter to biden from jimmy carter's biographer for the nation magazine. what was the message you wanted to give president biden? >> [laughs] well, that was sort of a tongue-in-cheek article that i wrote for the national recently, lessons that biden could learn from carter. and you know, i sort of, you know
and you know, he was, he was helpful.ut i have to say the best thing he did to help his biographer was to keep a very detailed white house diary throughout his presidency. and of course, as you know, he published about 20% of it. and it's a fabulous diary. it's substantive. it's a place where you can see him venting about various issues and personalities and problems he's facing on a daily basis. and i asked him, you know, repeatedly, if he could open up the 80% that was still closed, but he...
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May 29, 2022
05/22
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but the man that was telling me this was on the inside knew everything was going and there was not a prayer. i didn't have a chance. and yet sometimes it changes. thank you robert behind. yes, dr. gelman, i as a communications major. i'm just curious. could you speak to the televised debate? to let the televised debate that we so much about nixon looked angry and well, we already moved tan and we all know what happened. he was poorly. tanned, you know kennedy looked wonderful, you know, it was it was a match from the very start well and though that those who watched on television thought kennedy one, but those who yes and done radio and those the one or watch listen doing radio thought nixon won all that's nonsense. it never happened. it was just a story. that was done. no one in 60 years has done any serious research on the great debates. do you know what happened? what happened was far easier? in 19 the night before the first debate. nixon is talking to eisenhower and says, you know. i'm going to follow. i'm not going to be the adversarial nixon. i'm going to be a kind and gentle o
but the man that was telling me this was on the inside knew everything was going and there was not a prayer. i didn't have a chance. and yet sometimes it changes. thank you robert behind. yes, dr. gelman, i as a communications major. i'm just curious. could you speak to the televised debate? to let the televised debate that we so much about nixon looked angry and well, we already moved tan and we all know what happened. he was poorly. tanned, you know kennedy looked wonderful, you know, it was...
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May 15, 2022
05/22
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there was glass, there was shrapnel, there was shards of metal everywhere. everywhere. >> teddy knew all the hoagland family's cell phone numbers and she was the one who broke the news. >> i was driving, and she said that there was an explosion and my mom's truck blew up. so i immediately pulled over, stopped, and called my dad, asked him what's going on. what do we do? >> what did he say? >> he said, i just heard, too. i don't really know all the details. >> the hoagland family gathered at uc san diego medical center where connie had been taken for emergency surgery. >> we got to quickly see her rushed from the hallway into surgery. it was probably ten seconds. and i just remember telling her, i love you, and her being awake but kind of being out of it. and then that was it. >> seeing her like that and all the wires coming out of her and the bags hanging and the blood and all that, it was very, very shocking, taken back, i almost felt sick. >> what did you think had happened? >> i thought her truck malfunctioned. we didn't know was it an accident, was it th
there was glass, there was shrapnel, there was shards of metal everywhere. everywhere. >> teddy knew all the hoagland family's cell phone numbers and she was the one who broke the news. >> i was driving, and she said that there was an explosion and my mom's truck blew up. so i immediately pulled over, stopped, and called my dad, asked him what's going on. what do we do? >> what did he say? >> he said, i just heard, too. i don't really know all the details. >> the...
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May 29, 2022
05/22
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so this was an image that was done for public consumption. actually this one predates the white house. this is in georgetown, but it represents something that was a daily activity for caroline and her father that continued into the white house. she would have she would sit with him when he would have breakfast every morning. yeah, and that was you know a time they had together and there was interestingly yes would have been in their private quarters as opposed to these types of images taken by the white house photographers that happened in what you could think of as not not public spaces, but not the strictly private spaces. these were the spaces that were open to other white house staff to you know to dignitaries in some cases to the press so and in a lot of the photos we've seen the children clearly had free run of the white house now, did they ever come into contact with the press with any reporters? because they're also in the white house. so did they have any interactions with them they they did run into that. it's a reporters frequently
so this was an image that was done for public consumption. actually this one predates the white house. this is in georgetown, but it represents something that was a daily activity for caroline and her father that continued into the white house. she would have she would sit with him when he would have breakfast every morning. yeah, and that was you know a time they had together and there was interestingly yes would have been in their private quarters as opposed to these types of images taken by...
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May 29, 2022
05/22
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his was a grand figure and his was a noble nature. it was so simple and yet so beautiful. standing face to face with him. you looked at a man with a mighty record and yet it was not the knowledge of the fact, but the man's latent power that was so impressive with him. it was the perseverance of the man that distinguished him above others and then around the same time he said in a lecture ulysses s. grant was the greatest man. i have ever had the privilege of knowing personally. and i have not known a man with the kinder nature or a pure character. he was called the silent man the sphinx and he was that in public but not in private. there he was affluent and able-talker with a large sense of humor and most rare gift of compacting meaty things into phrases of stunning felicity along with his other great gifts. he had that rare sort of memory the memory which remembers names and faces and then in the final weeks of grand slide, you probably know the story. he was up. own and cottage in mount mcgregor near saratoga springs. he was dying in great agony. he was completing the me
his was a grand figure and his was a noble nature. it was so simple and yet so beautiful. standing face to face with him. you looked at a man with a mighty record and yet it was not the knowledge of the fact, but the man's latent power that was so impressive with him. it was the perseverance of the man that distinguished him above others and then around the same time he said in a lecture ulysses s. grant was the greatest man. i have ever had the privilege of knowing personally. and i have not...
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he was very rich fat so he could make a lot of things happen when you get that was it was like a beautiful wild animal bolt, an independent woman editor to fix. but she was tired of all the success of pulse. i think gunter was the man she needed to protect her sick. one who took care of everything the telephone booths, was malo or a put to g? a should be to go. oh, the to became the european glamour couple. they represented the lifestyle that continues to set standards. today. they married in las vegas any moment into haiti, breathless passion, and the most exciting places in the world. a care free life around the globe. the birth of the international jet set. ah, christie madeau was free light footed, impulsive, and self confident. a whole new type of woman. ah, wherever see. and going to zach's appeared. they were mom, the price of their celebrity. ah, i mean a life that was eat bato did not want. soon she retired i and was if you truly world i left, she was used to doing her own shopping, but from one day to the next that she could no longer leave her house with result. she was essentia
he was very rich fat so he could make a lot of things happen when you get that was it was like a beautiful wild animal bolt, an independent woman editor to fix. but she was tired of all the success of pulse. i think gunter was the man she needed to protect her sick. one who took care of everything the telephone booths, was malo or a put to g? a should be to go. oh, the to became the european glamour couple. they represented the lifestyle that continues to set standards. today. they married in...
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May 15, 2022
05/22
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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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May 6, 2022
05/22
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so, it was a unique time. the planning was you know, it was difficult. because, it was an extremely stressful period. and, we have the world series of major league baseball going on. but the president of the united states was going, not just to the stadium, but going to the field, to the mound. to throw out the first pitch. so, the planning between new york city, support the other federal partners, it made the event extremely... >> the planning, to allow him to go to go to the mound -- if you saw the video, he went all the way to the mound throughout, to throw out the pitch without any security right around him. all of that, was possible because of the planning. tell us a little bit about where agents were... >> yes, there is a photo in the that baseball fans picked up right away on it. during the world series in playoffs, you had two extra umpires. well there was an extra one. but, again, just as the incident with larry, you had the agents in the assassination attempt of of president ford. and they say they all left them. so the agents are to respond an
so, it was a unique time. the planning was you know, it was difficult. because, it was an extremely stressful period. and, we have the world series of major league baseball going on. but the president of the united states was going, not just to the stadium, but going to the field, to the mound. to throw out the first pitch. so, the planning between new york city, support the other federal partners, it made the event extremely... >> the planning, to allow him to go to go to the mound -- if...
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May 9, 2022
05/22
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and that gavin was a victim long after he was murdered.. >> the dea in detroit, michigan, indicted mr. creech on federal judge trafficking charges. if his -- >> in june 2019, john creech was found guilty of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. he's given ten years, ten months. a sentence he will serve concurrently for his charge of manslaughter. >> lisa smith has done her beth 's to restart her life. she and the boys are in hawaii now, far from the wreckage of that california life. it was never as quite as perfect as it looked. >> it was painful to remain there. so, it starting fresh. it is like sanctuary. that is off this edition of dateline. i'm natalie morales. thanks for watching. m natalie morales. thanks >> i'm craig melvin, and i'm natalie morales. and this is dateline. >> there was no way you could look at this, and say this is a person who ran away. the mystery had this sort of sinister side to it. oh my god, oh my god. this is really happening it's happening right now. >> in the dark waters of miami. miles out to see a
and that gavin was a victim long after he was murdered.. >> the dea in detroit, michigan, indicted mr. creech on federal judge trafficking charges. if his -- >> in june 2019, john creech was found guilty of conspiracy to distribute controlled substances. he's given ten years, ten months. a sentence he will serve concurrently for his charge of manslaughter. >> lisa smith has done her beth 's to restart her life. she and the boys are in hawaii now, far from the wreckage of that...
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May 2, 2022
05/22
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i was i was wishing that jimmy carter was president. oh now now, okay, and the reason was that. he and i shared a certain. religious insanity that we believed in the power. of the holy spirit and believed in miracles so just like he believed that he could pass. the panama canal treaty he believed he could get israel in egypt together. everybody everybody said this man is insane. necessarily put them together and they've been together not a single. israeli has killed an egyptian. was that 50 some years now? nor has any egyptian killed in israeli. but jimmy carter was willing. to think outside the proverbial box i was in i went to congress. same time jimmy. joe biden did if i was as close to joe biden. as i was to jimmy carter. i think joe biden has that same kind of humble. spirit the jimmy carter had only difference is he's roman catholic and the spirit moves a little slower. give me all my catholic friends, but but i think i mean just the people that have called me. i was talking to the president of former president of nigeria. and i said, you know. you ought to be president no
i was i was wishing that jimmy carter was president. oh now now, okay, and the reason was that. he and i shared a certain. religious insanity that we believed in the power. of the holy spirit and believed in miracles so just like he believed that he could pass. the panama canal treaty he believed he could get israel in egypt together. everybody everybody said this man is insane. necessarily put them together and they've been together not a single. israeli has killed an egyptian. was that 50...
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most importantly was the child was cardinal months. entity and hungry, unjustly was already in natural war 2 quite famous because he was known for having resisted the nazis and their occupation of hunger. and then after the war, he became the cardinal in the primary church. they arrested him, they can find him, it was choose of being an aristocrat, it became a kind of target of that regime. and then he was put on trial, were publicly he confessed to the charges against him. and there was this fear in washington, the prince of the church, a man known for his church, under nazi pressure. that if he could be broken clearly, the soviets were possession of techniques. mm. the c, i s reaction was primarily around what they thought was brainwashing the concerns with communist brainwashing. what they never seemed to realize was that these communist techniques were actually borrowed originally from earlier american techniques in the 1920s in 1000 ten's, using sleep deprivation, exhaustion exercises. all these other techniques were standards, domestic policing tortures. but they were also driven
most importantly was the child was cardinal months. entity and hungry, unjustly was already in natural war 2 quite famous because he was known for having resisted the nazis and their occupation of hunger. and then after the war, he became the cardinal in the primary church. they arrested him, they can find him, it was choose of being an aristocrat, it became a kind of target of that regime. and then he was put on trial, were publicly he confessed to the charges against him. and there was this...
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May 1, 2022
05/22
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there was no gold or silver. there was no money. you could borrow from a bank thomas jefferson took 54 years and probably the longest home improvement project in history to finish monticello because he could never get enough money to do it at once but that was also that's that's taking a light view of it. he was an absolute. compulsive shopper who just kept spending and spending and they also he had the idea that if the british were going to rip him off he was going to rip them off so he didn't he didn't put spend much time or money paying off his debts to england. he rationalized. he he rationalized everything including his debts. there is a founding father whose name is whose signature is bigger than anyone's. on the declaration of independence. do you think that wealthy merchant and patriot? john hancock is underrated in his contribution to the revolution. i think he definitely is. and i'm i'm working on that frankly. he's underrated because he he's underrated because he overdressed maybe that's too simplistic, but he was born th
there was no gold or silver. there was no money. you could borrow from a bank thomas jefferson took 54 years and probably the longest home improvement project in history to finish monticello because he could never get enough money to do it at once but that was also that's that's taking a light view of it. he was an absolute. compulsive shopper who just kept spending and spending and they also he had the idea that if the british were going to rip him off he was going to rip them off so he didn't...
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May 24, 2022
05/22
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he was he died and was interred. at mount vernon but the funeral did set some precedence that are still in practice today, the the military flourishes the 21 guns salute the riderless horse that we still see today. now over time with advances in in technology and as the country grew funerals began to become more elaborate and significantly when the president died in office like william henry harrison being the first president diane office in washington, dc. there was a funeral procession which might a little bit resemble of what we see today with hundreds of martyrs that march from the white house to congressional cemetery where he was temporarily interred. and then over time with again with advances and technology like the train. and with embalming with abraham lincoln where there can be these more elaborate elongated ceremonies before the president was interred, but still these modest funerals would still be in practice even into the 1900s grover cleveland's funeral from beginning from when the funeral first starte
he was he died and was interred. at mount vernon but the funeral did set some precedence that are still in practice today, the the military flourishes the 21 guns salute the riderless horse that we still see today. now over time with advances in in technology and as the country grew funerals began to become more elaborate and significantly when the president died in office like william henry harrison being the first president diane office in washington, dc. there was a funeral procession which...
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May 25, 2022
05/22
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someone screams, noises, someone was nursed, someone was naughty, someone was sick.me time , we had to rehearse. i had to iron the suits. we had to prepare for performances, because they constantly performed somewhere in the middle of their tour with him in the orchestra. a man arrived, with whom the entire military and post-war history of the orchestra will be connected, a wonderful organizer, director of the band, david isakovich rubinchik. he was once in minsk. before the war, he was in charge, they say that his family is also together with some clubs. with his wife and maria abrahamna and son valery rubinchik in the future, a well-known director managed to evacuate. and so rubinchik was sent to lead this orchestra, i must say that he was the only communist there, in general, uh, from the thirty-second year, and before that he was still a komsomol member . the most important thing to put pressure on isakovich was an excellent organizer. and here the rubychik, firstly, provided all the musicians of the orchestra with a reservation from being drafted into the army,
someone screams, noises, someone was nursed, someone was naughty, someone was sick.me time , we had to rehearse. i had to iron the suits. we had to prepare for performances, because they constantly performed somewhere in the middle of their tour with him in the orchestra. a man arrived, with whom the entire military and post-war history of the orchestra will be connected, a wonderful organizer, director of the band, david isakovich rubinchik. he was once in minsk. before the war, he was in...
27
27
May 31, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 27
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she was there for ten years. it wasn't an accident that she was sent, it was deliberate! they orchestrated the votes of the white house to get her elected as the wfp executive director. >> you may not remember this but when i was named administrator, you gave me a phone call and you said, look, you're about to see this huge agency, boots on the ground all around the world. you said the one thing that you do not appreciate yet is the value of ofta and d.a.r.t.. i just promise you, we will have the conversation again later. the tool of the dart, the ability to coordinate and focus humanitarian assistance, it is the best in the world. it will be terribly valuable. given what we saw with the venezuelan migration. we had cyclones off of mozambique. we have the mexico city earthquake. that was something that was underappreciated. let me switch gears. there is another aspect of the bush 41 era that isn't really thought about. ronald reagan is credited with muscular foreign policy, for good reason. and yet this books reminds us that panama, northern iraq, kuwait, somalia, bush 41
she was there for ten years. it wasn't an accident that she was sent, it was deliberate! they orchestrated the votes of the white house to get her elected as the wfp executive director. >> you may not remember this but when i was named administrator, you gave me a phone call and you said, look, you're about to see this huge agency, boots on the ground all around the world. you said the one thing that you do not appreciate yet is the value of ofta and d.a.r.t.. i just promise you, we will...
15
15
tv
eye 15
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it was humiliating, lose also, abrupt was quick. it was just, you know, take him off, put this on. and then i got dusted with baking soda, which was supposed to be the de lauser, and i was lebanon. the cell, what some bardo did was a very cheap dark off of the kind of thing that milgram was doing. not always embargo, but i think, you know, the guard called john wayne believed that ethics don't matter if the environment is artificial. and that's not true. all life is real life we needed to get tougher with the prisoners and it could well be that we were instructed by the experimenters to get tougher. in fact, i don't think we considered ourselves to be a subject of the experiment. were merely a tool of the researchers to get the results they wanted from the real subjects, which we thought were the prisoners. and i decided to become the nastiest prison guard that i could make myself for. what i was responsible for coming up with all these routines that i would put the prisoners through where i'd have them stand and align, recite their numbers, do push out to do jumping jacks. i'm. i'
it was humiliating, lose also, abrupt was quick. it was just, you know, take him off, put this on. and then i got dusted with baking soda, which was supposed to be the de lauser, and i was lebanon. the cell, what some bardo did was a very cheap dark off of the kind of thing that milgram was doing. not always embargo, but i think, you know, the guard called john wayne believed that ethics don't matter if the environment is artificial. and that's not true. all life is real life we needed to get...
834
834
May 22, 2022
05/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 834
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was one of them a killer? >> this was planned. this was on purpose. >> how could you do something so horrific? >> hello, welcome to dateline. highschoolers, erica freeman -- i like three peas in a pod. after graduation, they even picked colleges in the same city. then one of them went missing. when last seen in a dangerous part of found. as the hours past, the mystery deepens, they uncovered a hidden truth, one they believe might be a motive for murder. here is denis murphy with "circle of friends." >> remember going away to college? maybe your first time away from home. there were new friends to be made. >> oh, god. the first kiss was amazing. >> i thought he was just depressed. you just didn't take it that seriously. maybe we should have. >> for three florida teenagers, the decision they made as they started campus life had terrible consequences. >> it all seemed surreal. we thought this can't possibly happen. >> the story of our three begins in a high school near miami. erica, pedro and christian were inseparable. a trio of fri
was one of them a killer? >> this was planned. this was on purpose. >> how could you do something so horrific? >> hello, welcome to dateline. highschoolers, erica freeman -- i like three peas in a pod. after graduation, they even picked colleges in the same city. then one of them went missing. when last seen in a dangerous part of found. as the hours past, the mystery deepens, they uncovered a hidden truth, one they believe might be a motive for murder. here is denis murphy...
41
41
May 3, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
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now, i was not prepared, i was not a red bader with. as i, say i was a new deal democrat. i had never gone for all of the stories. i've been told, after i got back by some, that there had been this kind of infiltration into the picture business. i wasn't prepared to believe it. i am the one who made the motion, on the board of the guild, i was a board member at the time, not president. i made the motion that, as long as there was this difficulty, that both sides giving a different reason as why there is a strike. why didn't we, the actors, who were involved in any way in that jurisdictional thing, why didn't we invite management and both factions to sit down at a table with us present, as a labor union, to kind of be the mediator there? and to protect against men who had nothing to do with the strike. to sit down and find out, because we had to tell our members whether to go through those picket lines were not. how do you take sides, when a lot of the unions are in the studios and a lot of them are out on the street picketing? the board bought this idea, and we invited the
now, i was not prepared, i was not a red bader with. as i, say i was a new deal democrat. i had never gone for all of the stories. i've been told, after i got back by some, that there had been this kind of infiltration into the picture business. i wasn't prepared to believe it. i am the one who made the motion, on the board of the guild, i was a board member at the time, not president. i made the motion that, as long as there was this difficulty, that both sides giving a different reason as why...
52
52
May 3, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
now, i was not prepared, i was not a red bader with. as i, say i was a new deal democrat. i had never gone for all of the stories. i've been told, after i got back by some, that there had been this kind of infiltration into the picture business. i wasn't prepared to believe it. i am the one who made the motion, on the board of the guild, i was a board member at the time, not president. i made the motion that, as long as there was this difficulty, that both sides giving a different reason as why there is a strike. why didn't we, the actors, who were involved in any way in that jurisdictional thing, why didn't we invite management and both factions to sit down at a table with us present, as a labor union, to kind of be the mediator there? and to protect against men who had nothing to do with the strike. to sit down and find out, because we had to tell our members whether to go through those picket lines were not. how do you take sides, when a lot of the unions are in the studios and a lot of them are out on the street picketing? the board bought this idea, and we invited the
now, i was not prepared, i was not a red bader with. as i, say i was a new deal democrat. i had never gone for all of the stories. i've been told, after i got back by some, that there had been this kind of infiltration into the picture business. i wasn't prepared to believe it. i am the one who made the motion, on the board of the guild, i was a board member at the time, not president. i made the motion that, as long as there was this difficulty, that both sides giving a different reason as why...
57
57
May 2, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
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catherine created that she was there for ten years. it was not an accident she was sent. they orchestrated the vote from the white house as the executive director. >> you may not remember this, when i was named administrator, you gave me a phone call and said you are about to see this huge agency, boots on the ground all around the world. but you said the one thing you do not appreciate is the value , you said to me i just promise you we will have this conversation again later. the tool of the dark inability to focus to meditate assistant is the best in the world it would be terribly valuable. given always thought the venezuelan migration and cyclones and we had that mexico city earthquake you were right, absolutely. that something i agree with you i think is under appreciated. let me switch gears. there is another aspect i think of the bush 41 era that is not really thought about. policy for good reason. reminds us, panama, northern iraq, kuwait, somalia, bush 41 was not afraid to use military force when he believed the cause was just an in line with the international fr
catherine created that she was there for ten years. it was not an accident she was sent. they orchestrated the vote from the white house as the executive director. >> you may not remember this, when i was named administrator, you gave me a phone call and said you are about to see this huge agency, boots on the ground all around the world. but you said the one thing you do not appreciate is the value , you said to me i just promise you we will have this conversation again later. the tool...
206
206
May 22, 2022
05/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 206
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i was like, oh my gosh! oh my gosh? i was just shaking. >> linda pulled into her daughters neighborhood and saw a police officer. >> he said ma'am, could you pull over there? i said no, i need to go to my daughter's house. he said ma'am, will you just pull over their please? >> i pulled to the side and i said what is going on? he said man the only thing i can tell you is that your daughter has expired. >> there is no getting over something like that. as nikki's family try to take it in, investigator set to work trying to figure out who did this. the girl said their mother was still in a room with the door locked when they left the house for school at 7:30. >> we missed the bus, so we had to walk. >> perhaps the crime scene revealed more clues than the girls could. lieutenant chris moon headed back there. >> looking for cellphones, computers. typically victims are gonna have call or spoken with their assailants just before the murder around the time of the murder. >> the attack did not look random. it was not met -- but it was so violent. >
i was like, oh my gosh! oh my gosh? i was just shaking. >> linda pulled into her daughters neighborhood and saw a police officer. >> he said ma'am, could you pull over there? i said no, i need to go to my daughter's house. he said ma'am, will you just pull over their please? >> i pulled to the side and i said what is going on? he said man the only thing i can tell you is that your daughter has expired. >> there is no getting over something like that. as nikki's family...
62
62
May 19, 2022
05/22
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
got dish bring was did dental chicago hers was really big. it was is really be hot. she had so much blood to give. oh, on the 12th of september 2020. the family said they could buys the lots to put machine was switched off. she care died 3 months shy of her 18th birthday. ah, the system failed system feldwood. and if i don't speak to her now and i don't tell the story is going to fail. somebody else again, really su. ah, the queensland coroner announced an inquest into the depths of the women. ah, queensland health minister, yvette daf said in a statement, the women's deaths were tragic and clearly the patience have been badly laid down. sir. she says she expects any allegations about the standard of care at duma g hospital to be investigated. ah biddy booths, sister denise visits the grave yard every day. she was diagnosed with rheumatic heart disease the same day as betty. she's 19 slave. we miss her. along with her, while the man soon half smiled, that full live we not asking for something fancy, be not asking for something magic we asking for delivery of the heal
got dish bring was did dental chicago hers was really big. it was is really be hot. she had so much blood to give. oh, on the 12th of september 2020. the family said they could buys the lots to put machine was switched off. she care died 3 months shy of her 18th birthday. ah, the system failed system feldwood. and if i don't speak to her now and i don't tell the story is going to fail. somebody else again, really su. ah, the queensland coroner announced an inquest into the depths of the women....
54
54
May 29, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
was it was? before that nobody really used the term, but before that journalism was a mess and a lot of it was bad and a lot of it didn't care that it was bad and some of it was very good, but it the purpose of journalism for from up until the 1880s from the beginning in 1690 was as a consumer good that gave people lots of stuff and there weren't a lot of other outlets of print for much of that era for many people living in america in various places. so a newspaper had just lots of things in it some of them through some of them not around the 1880s 1890s you had two separate strands diverging on the one side where this sensational papers the entertainment papers the small town papers. that didn't have a lot of resources and they wanted to attract readers with whatever it took. on the other side. we're more serious newspapers who were starting to feel that they were being damaged by the reputation of these these other ones who were just you know, doing stuff and they they decided they they felt it
was it was? before that nobody really used the term, but before that journalism was a mess and a lot of it was bad and a lot of it didn't care that it was bad and some of it was very good, but it the purpose of journalism for from up until the 1880s from the beginning in 1690 was as a consumer good that gave people lots of stuff and there weren't a lot of other outlets of print for much of that era for many people living in america in various places. so a newspaper had just lots of things in it...
8
8.0
May 28, 2022
05/22
by
NTV
tv
eye 8
favorite 0
quote 0
so that he was, of course, there was a border. sometimes even less, the border strip abroad should be verified people, so the selection was just very, very thorough, so the border troops in this regard and not by chance showed themselves perfectly during the years of world war ii. the enemy was advancing in our unit somewhere with fights somewhere at the pace of frank drape. what does he call? did the veterans themselves leave? here vast russia and only the border guards retreated with a concrete hope for the very near future. the fact is that the border that they heroically defended from the enemy was new. it appeared only in the thirty-ninth year. after hitler took over poland and our troops occupied the territories of western ukraine and western belarus , the new border was not yet fully equipped and poorly fortified. but the old one with its powerful defensive structures is well thought out competently, rebuilt and beautifully armed could become for the enemy. a much more serious obstacle on the mister river there were very go
so that he was, of course, there was a border. sometimes even less, the border strip abroad should be verified people, so the selection was just very, very thorough, so the border troops in this regard and not by chance showed themselves perfectly during the years of world war ii. the enemy was advancing in our unit somewhere with fights somewhere at the pace of frank drape. what does he call? did the veterans themselves leave? here vast russia and only the border guards retreated with a...
51
51
May 26, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
what happened was, isaac was on the bus. there were other soldiers there who are witnesses to what happened and later came forward. the bus stopped, isaac, there would've been no bathroom in the bus. it was a long ride. he was going to visit, he had been away from his family for a long time, serving in the far east, in the war. when the bus stopped, he asked the driver, if he could use the bathroom. the driver was very disrespectful. i'm saying this as close as i can remember the actual quote. isaac said something like, hey, talk to me like i talk to you. have respect. something like that. the police officers, sorry, the bus driver didn't like this. he let isaac go to the bathroom. isaac came back on. the police, the bus driver, drove on, found a police officer and went out and called the police officer to take isaac off the bus. these police officers, from what i understand, from quote testimony, which i have an adroit there, the way isaac says, it tells the story, they're moving along, pushing him, he didn't know where. he
what happened was, isaac was on the bus. there were other soldiers there who are witnesses to what happened and later came forward. the bus stopped, isaac, there would've been no bathroom in the bus. it was a long ride. he was going to visit, he had been away from his family for a long time, serving in the far east, in the war. when the bus stopped, he asked the driver, if he could use the bathroom. the driver was very disrespectful. i'm saying this as close as i can remember the actual quote....
31
31
May 31, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
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to and europe but what i was focused on was was there was this evidence of a crime because they were claiming that he was soliciting a political contribution. essentially they were trying to bend the law. that's what the politics is about now mainly prosecutors trying to bend the law to prosecute their political opponents, and i didn't think there was and then congress moved that very sharply to impeach him and basically overtook anything that the department would be doing. it's very interesting mike reed of the situation was they were so upset. that i made the decision on russia gate that i made the decision. there was no obstruction. and that was the end of it. they didn't want me to act. on the on the ukrainian thing. they wanted to move impeachment first. so that the same thing wouldn't happen to them on ukraine. so they went hell for leather to go on impeachment. the department is not a party in that. we don't really have a mission in that we sit back and and watch and watch the show, but i never thought the president was really in jeopardy. do you think things might have gone d
to and europe but what i was focused on was was there was this evidence of a crime because they were claiming that he was soliciting a political contribution. essentially they were trying to bend the law. that's what the politics is about now mainly prosecutors trying to bend the law to prosecute their political opponents, and i didn't think there was and then congress moved that very sharply to impeach him and basically overtook anything that the department would be doing. it's very...
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7.0
tv
eye 7
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i was wrong, probably, another actor was needed.et's glue on the whole district on the whole district, the floor wanted to make sakharov completely different from the eccentric trinity of the coward dunce and there was a grotai parody - this is their style. a for a high-ranking official. it was necessary to come up with a completely different picture of the role. and at the first shooting of the guide, he shouted from the camera, vladimir abramovich was not funny, what did he say, do not be afraid. leonidovich would be funny, to which gaidai asked, when it will be funny, when the picture is over. the captive of the caucasus was filmed in the crimean city of alushta to the south to the film crew, and then relatives came. thank you, i don’t drink, we would have a prosecutor and i remember very well, uh, i came. uh, the wife of vladimir abramovich on the playground daughter. raechka raechka was only 12 years old. this is such a child, a child, 55 years have passed since the film was released on the wide screen, but there are still whit
i was wrong, probably, another actor was needed.et's glue on the whole district on the whole district, the floor wanted to make sakharov completely different from the eccentric trinity of the coward dunce and there was a grotai parody - this is their style. a for a high-ranking official. it was necessary to come up with a completely different picture of the role. and at the first shooting of the guide, he shouted from the camera, vladimir abramovich was not funny, what did he say, do not be...
484
484
May 21, 2022
05/22
by
KGO
tv
eye 484
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quote 0
this was her prize possession, was this truck.s the financial motive here. brandon is a -- is a free spender. he projects himself as coming from wealth, which he does not. he's about to fail out of school. and this gravy train that he's been on where his parents are essentially supporting his college education is about to come to a crashing end. >> my dad had told him that he had one semester to do right. and if he failed out of school, then, um, he was coming home. my parents weren't gonna fund him going up there and just being a slacker. >> dennis was talking to his sister on the phone, and he said, "we're gonna have a meeting tonight with brandon, and we're gonna bring up all these questions that i have for brandon -- his gay lifestyle, his failing grades." and that's the day the homicides happened. >> the hunt county sheriff's department is investigating the murders of a husband and wife who were found dead inside their rural home. >> you have these two separate lives that brandon was working so hard to maintain. this -- the p
this was her prize possession, was this truck.s the financial motive here. brandon is a -- is a free spender. he projects himself as coming from wealth, which he does not. he's about to fail out of school. and this gravy train that he's been on where his parents are essentially supporting his college education is about to come to a crashing end. >> my dad had told him that he had one semester to do right. and if he failed out of school, then, um, he was coming home. my parents weren't...
85
85
May 8, 2022
05/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 85
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she was...she was gone. it was... to end in that way. it was hard for me to take. i wanted to catch my wife. i wanted to catch her, i wanted to be with her. flo—jo may be gone, but her records and influence certainly live on. i have watched her races. her form is superb. when i was training, i was not even thinking about breaking a record, you know? the last 30 years has produced some great sprinters, but none of them have been able to get within touching distance off flo—jo's records, until elaine thompson—herah's stunning performances last year. she broke flo—jo's olympic records en route to winning gold at tokyo 2020 before going even quicker at the diamond league meeting in eugene, a few weeks later. her winning time 10.54 — just five hundredths of a second away from what seemed an unbreakable record. well, i must tell the truth — it didn't look that fast to me. i didn't feel that fast. so when i returned 10.54, i was like, "what? i had the most horrible race in my life." like, it didn't feel that fast. then i rem
she was...she was gone. it was... to end in that way. it was hard for me to take. i wanted to catch my wife. i wanted to catch her, i wanted to be with her. flo—jo may be gone, but her records and influence certainly live on. i have watched her races. her form is superb. when i was training, i was not even thinking about breaking a record, you know? the last 30 years has produced some great sprinters, but none of them have been able to get within touching distance off flo—jo's records,...
69
69
May 13, 2022
05/22
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 69
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and she was not breathing — but i was looking and she was not breathing.e she was on her face and this nrade _ because she was on her face and this made me nervous. i did not know what to do _ made me nervous. i did not know what to do and _ made me nervous. i did not know what to do. and every time, i was trying to do. and every time, i was trying to get shireen, there is shooting that is— to get shireen, there is shooting that is coming to me. and this is making _ that is coming to me. and this is making me — that is coming to me. and this is making me feel i did not have to... ijust— making me feel i did not have to... ijust touched shireen and her face in the _ ijust touched shireen and her face in the top — ijust touched shireen and her face in the top and lay her to her back and they— in the top and lay her to her back and they shoot her and this has made me more _ and they shoot her and this has made me more afraid of doing anything. and that _ me more afraid of doing anything. and that time, my friends, sorry, not my— and that time, my friends, sor
and she was not breathing — but i was looking and she was not breathing.e she was on her face and this nrade _ because she was on her face and this made me nervous. i did not know what to do _ made me nervous. i did not know what to do and _ made me nervous. i did not know what to do. and every time, i was trying to do. and every time, i was trying to get shireen, there is shooting that is— to get shireen, there is shooting that is coming to me. and this is making _ that is coming to me....
49
49
May 1, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
he was on the london stage as a teenager and before he was was even 20 years old. he was regularly traveling in a vaudeville company music hall gags, aerobatic stunts and the like both of his parents had been entertainers, but they achieved limited success because the father was undone by alcohol the mother suffered from mental illness and was machinely institutionalized which left young charlie really in a very precarious situation. he lived on the streets briefly. he ended ended up in workhouses and and as a result, he had a great interest in touring. as a performer even as a even as an age where someone won't be in fourth or fifth grade. now chaplain's early years on the stage. and what passed for an education for the boys of the workhouse did not generally create an intellectual. and so what he did to compensate throughout his adult life was read a great deal. he also loved talking with people and any political figure any cultural figure that came his way wanted to meet him. he was very interested in talking with them, but he said that the education of the stre
he was on the london stage as a teenager and before he was was even 20 years old. he was regularly traveling in a vaudeville company music hall gags, aerobatic stunts and the like both of his parents had been entertainers, but they achieved limited success because the father was undone by alcohol the mother suffered from mental illness and was machinely institutionalized which left young charlie really in a very precarious situation. he lived on the streets briefly. he ended ended up in...
59
59
May 31, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
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he was a pedophile that was the crime of all.everything else on the laptop would pale in significance. there is no evidence ofn it and in fact i have seen much more of hunter biden's ex-wife than i would like to have seen. everything i have seen is that he is a heterosexual who likes the women in the prostitutes in their 20s and there is no evidence that he has any to kill your preferences. >> maybe that's an appropriate place to end. to end this conversation. [laughter] i want to thank everybody and as we wrap up everybody should grab a copy on the champion whitman profile we did on this series we profile wonderful a women and there's one on miranda so please take a look at that i might also want to mention she did a great job tying about independent women's forum and i want to encourage you to checkck out' independent women's network because we would love for everybody here to sign-up. returning to connect people around the country so we can start making a difference. you guys are allowed to sign-up so we welcome new members. w
he was a pedophile that was the crime of all.everything else on the laptop would pale in significance. there is no evidence ofn it and in fact i have seen much more of hunter biden's ex-wife than i would like to have seen. everything i have seen is that he is a heterosexual who likes the women in the prostitutes in their 20s and there is no evidence that he has any to kill your preferences. >> maybe that's an appropriate place to end. to end this conversation. [laughter] i want to thank...
4
4.0
May 12, 2022
05/22
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 4
favorite 0
quote 0
it was done in the park, eh, everything was so hot until the 22nd year , a lot was done in the city, well , holidays were held, events were where to go with a child to a new school, in which eh, just excellent conditions were created for children, sports grounds, well, the infrastructure the city is taught by a well-known sea, which carries its own energy. it can only be after such a chip of the city. no more. when did we start living in mariupol? the sea this summer is the pier, it’s a party with children, it’s pedestrian, every holiday , the city center was blocked off, they walked, watched, everything was done . well, it’s very good, plus there were five extreme parks. where? it was possible to go there carousels, swings with children , go out, uh, outside the city, they went out there, the beach is crowded, not far from the city, well, for half a day, every day, please, you go to the sea, swim, relax, that’s it. well, it’s just a fairy tale, in a word, i’m just looking at these photos that we just saw before the war some just like ours in perspective, ukrainian barcelona, oleks
it was done in the park, eh, everything was so hot until the 22nd year , a lot was done in the city, well , holidays were held, events were where to go with a child to a new school, in which eh, just excellent conditions were created for children, sports grounds, well, the infrastructure the city is taught by a well-known sea, which carries its own energy. it can only be after such a chip of the city. no more. when did we start living in mariupol? the sea this summer is the pier, it’s a party...
70
70
May 1, 2022
05/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 70
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it was like, you know, it was it was in the capital building. they had the one of the floors of the capitol building they turned into a makeshift a classroom and they hired three faculty members part-time for what would be full-time work and ultimately, you know, she didn't intend he's like no, i'm not going there. but but you you sort of saw the ways that the state was really trying to hold on to this this semblance of separate but equal right? they george mclaurin when he was accepted into the university they put him in the hallway and he was looking into the class when the supreme court said they couldn't do that anymore. they put a little bar in the classroom to segregate black and white students. and so just all of the granular and justices i think were we're important and that helped illuminate this broader story and notably the years that this was happening were. so this this was 1947 through these cases were around 1945 through 1951 52 so pre brown v board and they really laid the foundation for brownview board of education. and notably
it was like, you know, it was it was in the capital building. they had the one of the floors of the capitol building they turned into a makeshift a classroom and they hired three faculty members part-time for what would be full-time work and ultimately, you know, she didn't intend he's like no, i'm not going there. but but you you sort of saw the ways that the state was really trying to hold on to this this semblance of separate but equal right? they george mclaurin when he was accepted into...
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May 6, 2022
05/22
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that was the moment i was always scared of. would the next president's wife scrap the whole thing as she was sick to death of hearing about jacqueline kennedy? or which you forget about me and ensure the white house will be always cared for? well, you have done that, and i thank you. president johnson passed executive order 1145 in march of 1964. it provided a formal structure for future white house restorations by making the white house curator a permanent government position and establishing the committee for the preservation of the white house. flight five, please. flight -- next -- thank you. mrs. johnson said it, and these are her words, that the white house had three main purposes, which she kept in mind during her restoration. first, it belonged to all of the people of the united states and it is the national museum. it really records the way of furnishing at the memories of the wives off everybody who has lived there from john and abigail adams van, second, it was the place where the head of nation extends hospitality t
that was the moment i was always scared of. would the next president's wife scrap the whole thing as she was sick to death of hearing about jacqueline kennedy? or which you forget about me and ensure the white house will be always cared for? well, you have done that, and i thank you. president johnson passed executive order 1145 in march of 1964. it provided a formal structure for future white house restorations by making the white house curator a permanent government position and establishing...
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nathan bedford forest was a romantic figure. he was a celebrity. he was just kind of known as kind of like a, a man he's going to do what needs to be done, right. so he was sort of peep, he had that, that reputation. and he was happy to have his face put on it. he clearly indicated that he was the head of the clan for a group as violent as the clan forest wasn't ideal leader. with a brutal reputation. a former slave trader, he had committed a number of war crimes. with forest at their helm, the clansman stepped off their attacks. the violence reached its peak in 18. 68. with the presidential elections approaching dozens of court houses, churches, and pulling places went up in flames. more than a 1000 murders were committed in 4 weeks. former slaves could by no means be allowed to exercise their rights. doing so would have upset the system of white dominance. and they chose their victims systematically. ah, the main thing that the 1st plan was trying to accomplish was the di activation, the police side of african americans within the south. so they
nathan bedford forest was a romantic figure. he was a celebrity. he was just kind of known as kind of like a, a man he's going to do what needs to be done, right. so he was sort of peep, he had that, that reputation. and he was happy to have his face put on it. he clearly indicated that he was the head of the clan for a group as violent as the clan forest wasn't ideal leader. with a brutal reputation. a former slave trader, he had committed a number of war crimes. with forest at their helm, the...
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May 30, 2022
05/22
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he was looking after me, i was petrified. it was so scary. - i was petrified. it was so scary.there were i people crying, people who had been to hillsborough, i imagine, it was like history repeating. people were talking about it once they got into the ground. at the stampede meant that nobody even checked your ticket. �* . that nobody even checked your ticket. . . . that nobody even checked your ticket-_ not - that nobody even checked your| ticket._ not once. ticket. after all that! not once. all of this _ ticket. after all that! not once. all of this stuff _ ticket. after all that! not once. all of this stuff about _ ticket. after all that! not once. all of this stuff about fake - all of this stuff about fake tickets. _ all of this stuff about fake tickets, we have proper once in our back— tickets, we have proper once in our back and _ tickets, we have proper once in our back and not— tickets, we have proper once in our back and not once did any official come _ back and not once did any official come up — back and not once did any official come up and say, have you got a tick
he was looking after me, i was petrified. it was so scary. - i was petrified. it was so scary.there were i people crying, people who had been to hillsborough, i imagine, it was like history repeating. people were talking about it once they got into the ground. at the stampede meant that nobody even checked your ticket. �* . that nobody even checked your ticket. . . . that nobody even checked your ticket-_ not - that nobody even checked your| ticket._ not once. ticket. after all that! not...
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May 25, 2022
05/22
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this was his one of his have his passions was ornithology. looking for birds writing down the kind of birds that he saw keeping track of that as well as rowing and hunting and pretty much anything you could do outdoors. that's a little bit of what he was like as a young boy as a teenager. when he was 18, he went off to harvard. where he studied for four years this was before there were majors anything like that. he just took classes that he wanted to basically took a lot in history took a lot in natural philosophy and in science. and he married a local girl from boston alice lee. we're to say about her in a second. so it's a little bit of the background to who he would become later on as an adult. then take a few minutes to explain how roosevelt came to prominence before he became president. his first kind of career was as a new york assembly man. so think of the state house of representatives. that's what we're talking about for, new york. we've been reading the novel in his steps written in 1896 and trying to understand the word of the gild
this was his one of his have his passions was ornithology. looking for birds writing down the kind of birds that he saw keeping track of that as well as rowing and hunting and pretty much anything you could do outdoors. that's a little bit of what he was like as a young boy as a teenager. when he was 18, he went off to harvard. where he studied for four years this was before there were majors anything like that. he just took classes that he wanted to basically took a lot in history took a lot...
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my police about for done was just it was, it is one point. although i to probably for the, for what you want with with the dealer photo. so we need to live a very, even with joscelin, a digital video which would be good. you want to talk with your school more stressed and informed us that it would impact w. william rafer. did you could any he just for his whole oh well i'm not sure we have a good evening you paula. my son did is he dismissed as it was that already jillian steve, this is not that no one is a new so if it was a bit to them is besides this school year. so, but you've got any use any issue they have a similar yes. usa law initiatives to deal with when the organization with all ah, needs to come to the russian state. little narrative. i've stayed as on the most landscape div estimation. i'm not getting calls all set up for a group in the city babbled. it's been okay. so mine is the final speed you went home with. we will ban in the european union, the kremlin media machine, the state aunt, rush up to date and school r t spoke mcki
my police about for done was just it was, it is one point. although i to probably for the, for what you want with with the dealer photo. so we need to live a very, even with joscelin, a digital video which would be good. you want to talk with your school more stressed and informed us that it would impact w. william rafer. did you could any he just for his whole oh well i'm not sure we have a good evening you paula. my son did is he dismissed as it was that already jillian steve, this is not...
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47
May 16, 2022
05/22
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and and i was it right i was off and he was also pleasant right? i mean, which was not exactly kind of interactions. i had i'd had to stay troopers prior to that. i don't want to make it sound like well your interactions were with humane and decent. oh, no, it worked. i mean one of the things that so that's so compelling about your description of writing on the trailways bus is the context in which there i took place right in the context of the murders of we're sure in our cheney and goodman, but also also at the same time and much less widely known. the bodies of several black people had been found floating in the nearby river center and things like that. and again, you just never know right whether or not when the bus pulls into the station. you're going to be safe or not. right? well, no, absolutely man. and i mean like i'd compounded it. i'd grown my first beard around the same time. and in that incident we were down so it's it was close to some kind of vacation, right? so there were college students who had gotten on the bus the different poin
and and i was it right i was off and he was also pleasant right? i mean, which was not exactly kind of interactions. i had i'd had to stay troopers prior to that. i don't want to make it sound like well your interactions were with humane and decent. oh, no, it worked. i mean one of the things that so that's so compelling about your description of writing on the trailways bus is the context in which there i took place right in the context of the murders of we're sure in our cheney and goodman,...