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Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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miss oklahoma was indian. i stand up and i said -- charlie asked me to give you a typical indian greeting. i did know if he meant the kind of greeting that the indians gave the pilgrims at plymouth rock or the kind the lakota and shine give custer at little bighorn. [laughter] so i just said hi to you in my native language. and i will stop there because that was my big step on being able to stand in front of a group dripping wet, no makeup and what makeup there was no sliding down my face and support together enough to talk. so having electricity go out this morning at 2:00 was nothing compared to what i've been through in the past. >> as miss oklahoma, suddenly you're thrust into the spotlight on as a representative of the state, but as we all know a lot of times with native people once we put in the spotlight was so is asked to represent all native people, how did you balance that? how did you become an advocate for native people, but without taking on that representative of the whole? >> well, i think mainl
miss oklahoma was indian. i stand up and i said -- charlie asked me to give you a typical indian greeting. i did know if he meant the kind of greeting that the indians gave the pilgrims at plymouth rock or the kind the lakota and shine give custer at little bighorn. [laughter] so i just said hi to you in my native language. and i will stop there because that was my big step on being able to stand in front of a group dripping wet, no makeup and what makeup there was no sliding down my face and...
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Aug 22, 2011
08/11
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FOXNEWSW
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and capitalists indians achieve. >> your indians are thriving. our indians are working. >> the scott brothers build a company that now employs 16 people putting up power lines. they didn't get any government help. >> it made me drive twice as hard knowing that they wouldn't help us and all. it panned out pretty good for us. >> we just have always been hard workers. >> that's what that is? >> this lumbee tribe maker runs one of the biggest true val hardware companies in the nation. the lumbees are doing well. >> great survivors. great example of how you can continue to persist even under the absolutely the worst, the worst treatment that you could help. >> john: they divorced themselves from these government handouts. they have done well without. >> individuals have done well. >> john: exactly. individuals free of special government. a rae developer who you saw in the sacramento king. jack lowery an original owner of the cracker barrel restaurant or civil bullard who owns granel. >> we had to fend for ourselves and do what we had to do to survive.
and capitalists indians achieve. >> your indians are thriving. our indians are working. >> the scott brothers build a company that now employs 16 people putting up power lines. they didn't get any government help. >> it made me drive twice as hard knowing that they wouldn't help us and all. it panned out pretty good for us. >> we just have always been hard workers. >> that's what that is? >> this lumbee tribe maker runs one of the biggest true val hardware...
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Aug 29, 2011
08/11
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eye 161
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you might have an indian brine. you might know an indian cop, indian judge, indian lawyer. this is who we are. and that's who we want to be, okay? receiving enough nods to satisfy him, he picked up a beat drum and stopped. and did the beat remind him of and a child raised his hand, a heartbeat. one place you hear drums is at a powwow. he asked those who is a powwow. he told everyone they had really good guesses and answered the question himself. it's a celebration where some of us indians, we sing and we dance. we also make new friends and renew old friendships. a powwow is made up of four circles. the very first circle you'll see at a powwow is a drum. it represents a heartbeat. the heartbeat of the powwow, the heartbeat of mother earth. also the heartbeat of other children which is all of us inside this room and outside of this room. without this heartbeat, there will be no powwow. >> so there, we are, right away. there's an individual who lives in this very city, who if you saw on the street, it may not occur to you that you're seeing a native american, but when you scra
you might have an indian brine. you might know an indian cop, indian judge, indian lawyer. this is who we are. and that's who we want to be, okay? receiving enough nods to satisfy him, he picked up a beat drum and stopped. and did the beat remind him of and a child raised his hand, a heartbeat. one place you hear drums is at a powwow. he asked those who is a powwow. he told everyone they had really good guesses and answered the question himself. it's a celebration where some of us indians, we...
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Aug 7, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 114
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what they call federal indian law with the rise of the modern indian nations prepared by 122 study that because but for that body of law there has been paid showboating but been awarded since 1985 where indian nations have lost 80% of their cases coming before the supreme court and sometimes losing more than 88% which means that prison inmates fare better or receive better treatment by the supreme court they and the indian nations. as a lifelong bring tisch -- practitioner of federal indian law, that troubled me and also with our tribal leaders and concern of legal scholars to ask his indian long dead? i have been inspired by the nation's a justice to try to write the book has a unique study of the law to try to understand the forces that work that sort of explain that amazing those cases that relate to american legal history and have someone just decisions that i think many of us take for granted today but cases that were decided by the courts during the course of manifest destiny when our nation was spent on colonizing the land and appropriating the indian land and subjugating bad tri
what they call federal indian law with the rise of the modern indian nations prepared by 122 study that because but for that body of law there has been paid showboating but been awarded since 1985 where indian nations have lost 80% of their cases coming before the supreme court and sometimes losing more than 88% which means that prison inmates fare better or receive better treatment by the supreme court they and the indian nations. as a lifelong bring tisch -- practitioner of federal indian...
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Aug 21, 2011
08/11
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 140
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and capitalists indians achieve. >> your indians are thriving. our indians are working. >> the scott brothers build a company that now employs 16 people putting up power lines. they didn't get any government help. >> it made me drive twice as hard knowing that they wouldn't help us and all. it panned out pretty good for us. >> we just have always been hard workers. >> that's what that is? >> this lumbee tribe maker runs one of the biggest true val hardware companies in the nation. the lumbees are doing well. >> great survivors. great example of how you can continue to persist even under the absolutely the worst, the worst treatment that you could help. >> john: they divorced themselves from these government handouts. they have done well without. >> individuals have done well. >> john: exactly. individuals free of special government. a rae developer who you saw in the sacramento king. jack lowery an original owner of the cracker barrel restaurant or civil bullard who owns granel. >> we had to fend for ourselves and do what we had to do to survive.
and capitalists indians achieve. >> your indians are thriving. our indians are working. >> the scott brothers build a company that now employs 16 people putting up power lines. they didn't get any government help. >> it made me drive twice as hard knowing that they wouldn't help us and all. it panned out pretty good for us. >> we just have always been hard workers. >> that's what that is? >> this lumbee tribe maker runs one of the biggest true val hardware...
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Aug 7, 2011
08/11
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and prominent of a series of indian boarding schools set up to radically select american indians into white society. why reform is at the time, agents have begun aching 80, 1890s. carlisle was closed in 1918, but they saw it american indian race as dying out, as threatened, vanishing was the popular at the time. and in sort of a combination of guilt and policy they decided the best way to save the dying race was to turn them into white. so the -- >> turn them into white? >> to send into these boarding schools which they could not go over five years ago for britain to speak the nato-led which. their hair was cut short a they are put white uniforms and sent out to live with white families for the summers. it was a radical exercise, which did incredible damage to at least two generations of native american students. and actually parenthetically right now there's this very interesting movement going on that is building with the internet, facility by the internet by facebook pages of the descendents of these boarding school students trying to retrace the memory of their grandparents, paren
and prominent of a series of indian boarding schools set up to radically select american indians into white society. why reform is at the time, agents have begun aching 80, 1890s. carlisle was closed in 1918, but they saw it american indian race as dying out, as threatened, vanishing was the popular at the time. and in sort of a combination of guilt and policy they decided the best way to save the dying race was to turn them into white. so the -- >> turn them into white? >> to send...
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Aug 8, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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not just cowboys and indians. not just the west that many people think about or conjure up when they hear that word but the contemporary west as well, the pop culture west, the contemporary west. tonight i am delighted to be here as always. i have always had a great experience covering this location or the other. i was just saying to someone before the event started on this particular tour we had 40 some odd book signings and events and only one of them has been in a chain bookstore and i am very happy about that. [applause] chains are important to me but independent bookstores are more important to me. the independent bookstores are like my route 66. >> bookstores are like those monotonous turnpikes, interstate highways. i have to take them but i prefer to be on the old road, the authentic, the personal. tonight i'm in the unusual position of presenting two books. not just davy crockett but while west 365 from abrams. another brand new book and the real issue. my rascal son in the center, pretty boy, charles aust
not just cowboys and indians. not just the west that many people think about or conjure up when they hear that word but the contemporary west as well, the pop culture west, the contemporary west. tonight i am delighted to be here as always. i have always had a great experience covering this location or the other. i was just saying to someone before the event started on this particular tour we had 40 some odd book signings and events and only one of them has been in a chain bookstore and i am...
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Aug 13, 2011
08/11
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the issue of removal of indian tribes from their homelands. crockett's contradictions extended beyond politics. he had only a few months of form al education, yet he read avidly. he was a man who was also evolving on the stage of a nation in its adolescence, a pioneer whose dreams aptly reflected a restless nation with a gaze pointed toward the west. perhaps more than anyone of his time, david crockett was arguably our first celebrity hero. inspiring people of his own time as well as the 20th century generation. the man, david crockett, may have perished on march 6,36, in the final assault on the alamo, but the mythical david crockett, perhaps more so than any other frontierman live powerfully on. in this way his story then become far more than a one note walt disney legend. while his life continues to shed light on the meaning of america's national character. a spoonful from a chapter entitled, "killed him a bar." [laughter] david crockett believed in the wind and in the stars. this son of tennessee could read the sun, the shadows and the wil
the issue of removal of indian tribes from their homelands. crockett's contradictions extended beyond politics. he had only a few months of form al education, yet he read avidly. he was a man who was also evolving on the stage of a nation in its adolescence, a pioneer whose dreams aptly reflected a restless nation with a gaze pointed toward the west. perhaps more than anyone of his time, david crockett was arguably our first celebrity hero. inspiring people of his own time as well as the 20th...
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Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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lost their homes and were exiled to indian territory. among many americans, especially anglo-texas, this signaled the pending fall of the alamo, but for the people of mexican blood living in texas, the comet was a portent of the mexican's army defeat. it was rediscovered in august 1895, about the time of crockett's defeat for another term in congress. it was visible for an extended period and could still be seen long enough for enterprising promoters to issue the comet almanac in 1836, but not as well of crockett's almanac that year showing him wading the river on a pair of stilts. they claimed that crockett and his nemesis, andrew jackson, forged a truce and that old hickory commissioned crockett to scale the mountains and ring the tail off the comet before it could char the earth. by the time the comet vanished in may 1836 not to be seen again until 1910, the alamo, the last battle of crockett's life were long cold and scattered. finally from crockett, a piece from eel alamo. to nose who claim god may texas, some say crockett invented
lost their homes and were exiled to indian territory. among many americans, especially anglo-texas, this signaled the pending fall of the alamo, but for the people of mexican blood living in texas, the comet was a portent of the mexican's army defeat. it was rediscovered in august 1895, about the time of crockett's defeat for another term in congress. it was visible for an extended period and could still be seen long enough for enterprising promoters to issue the comet almanac in 1836, but not...
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Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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of years, but occasionally an indian shot back, and one fellow was wounded by an indian. you could argue, well, you know, maybe he was right and would have been roughed up and stolen his horse, but he said something about as far as i'm concerned, nine out of ten indians are, you know, i won't say that an indian is better off dead than allye, but nine out of ten cases that's true, and i don't up quire too deeply into the 10th case, and yet at the same time, he once told an indian woman at the white house that one of his regrets he didn't have indian blood. you think, well, that's neat. but he had the idea that white people should marry with indians just to wipe them out genetically. you don't know what to make about it. fans might get anowed with me -- annoyed with me for bringing that up, but his attitude was complex. he invited george washington carver -- booker t. washington to the white house, that's who it was, and he was just trownsed for that. he was just reviled for doing that, and yet, at the same time, when he ran on the blue moose party, he tried to keep blacks
of years, but occasionally an indian shot back, and one fellow was wounded by an indian. you could argue, well, you know, maybe he was right and would have been roughed up and stolen his horse, but he said something about as far as i'm concerned, nine out of ten indians are, you know, i won't say that an indian is better off dead than allye, but nine out of ten cases that's true, and i don't up quire too deeply into the 10th case, and yet at the same time, he once told an indian woman at the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 5, 2011
08/11
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SFGTV2
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in the singular, american indian culture. i wanted to play it for you to give you an example of what might be considered traditional style because after this i'd lake to bring up two guests and play two arrangements that were created especially for this festival that bring in both the irish american and the urban indian. so this is a cedar flute song for you. (playing flute) so now that you have a little bit of powwow and a little bit of cedar flute in your ears, i would like to invite two guests up to perform for you, two arrangements which i made especially for today. first, rita lindall, rita and i are both in the same cohort as the music program at uc berkley and we've been saying for 4 years, we need to play music. so we finally made it happen. so, rita lindall, and then masuro koga. mas and i have been playing together for a very long time, so much so that we wore the same shirt without having to talk to each other about it. mas is in high demand both as a teacher and as a session side man, having played with everybody
in the singular, american indian culture. i wanted to play it for you to give you an example of what might be considered traditional style because after this i'd lake to bring up two guests and play two arrangements that were created especially for this festival that bring in both the irish american and the urban indian. so this is a cedar flute song for you. (playing flute) so now that you have a little bit of powwow and a little bit of cedar flute in your ears, i would like to invite two...
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Aug 1, 2011
08/11
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but with the indians, like i said, his first response was to grab his rifle and when the indians road towards manhattan he said naturally they kind of back off. but when his ranch and thought indians, they would go over and talk to when. at one point, some of this ranch hands a lot and do a whole village of indians. a lot of that was roosevelt and his title of this adventure and excitement and hostility going on there was much more fun. i'm just saying this is my opinion. i could be totally one because indians at that time in that area were treated and shot on sight and so on. even though ostensibly wars were over by a number of years consequently occasionally in india in shoot back and one fellow was wounded by ambien at the time was about without they are. so you could argue maybe he was right. maybe he would've been roughed up. do you know, his attitude -- he said something about as far as i can turn, nine out of 10 indians -- he said i won't say that an indian is better off dead than alive, but nine out of 10 cases it's probably true and i wouldn't inquire too deeply into the 10th
but with the indians, like i said, his first response was to grab his rifle and when the indians road towards manhattan he said naturally they kind of back off. but when his ranch and thought indians, they would go over and talk to when. at one point, some of this ranch hands a lot and do a whole village of indians. a lot of that was roosevelt and his title of this adventure and excitement and hostility going on there was much more fun. i'm just saying this is my opinion. i could be totally one...
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Aug 12, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 175
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they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey out of his scalp. it is a scene beyond description in terms of horror and of course they were avenging -- of venice, bands, events, events, cycle. so word comes the indians are on the warpath. meanwhile, the american -- the garrison of soldiers and mount vernon sent their troops to march these indians tour bonna -- urban. there is not enough protection so they have this meeting, and i have to find us in the book. they have this meeting and somebody has to go warn the people and mount vernon. this clear-eyed man bravely steps forward and says, i will do it. he runs presumably through the night and s
they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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it's a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and thailand and there is a different aesthetic. all southeast asia and asia there are a lot of similarities. >> he is a male entity. he is not -- are you referring to the story? >> it's interesting you should say that. a unique indian concept is one of half male, half female. and that is -- unlike some dances the solo dancer portrays all of the parts in the story. you can portray a feminine aspect and then masculine aspect with the bow and arrow. the male has to portray feminine and the female has to portray masculine. there is a very fierce dance and a soft sort of dance and every dancer has to learn all those aspects. it's very, you know, my teacher i call him a guru in this art form you have to study very, very hard. you have to learn about all the cultural aspects. he says it's liberating because he enjoys and has to learn to bring up the feminine aspect. he's a strong character it's a challenge for him and he likes it. the stories are metaphor cal. i don't l
it's a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and thailand and there is a different aesthetic. all southeast asia and asia there are a lot of similarities. >> he is a male entity. he is not -- are you referring to the story? >> it's interesting you should say that. a unique indian concept is one of half male, half female. and that is -- unlike some dances the solo dancer portrays all of the parts in the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 15, 2011
08/11
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one such group is the kenaitze indian tribe. they are dena'ina people-- a branch of the athabaskan native americans. it was his job to teach me to hunt. i was born in kenai right here in 1923-- born and raised here. [narrator] clare swan is chairperson of the tribe. i just looked back at my roots and began to put them together and realized really how much of that was important to me, and i had tried to, like everyone else, change that because in order to fit-- there was a time when it wasn't fashionable to be native. you were lucky if you were blond and you were light enough that you could pass. no one was allowed to speak the dena'ina language. they didn't allow it in schools, and a lot of the women had married non-native men, and the men said, "you're american now, so you can't speak the language." so we became invisible in the community, invisible to each other, and then because we couldn't speak the language-- what happens when you can't speak your own language is that you have to think with someone else's words, and that's
one such group is the kenaitze indian tribe. they are dena'ina people-- a branch of the athabaskan native americans. it was his job to teach me to hunt. i was born in kenai right here in 1923-- born and raised here. [narrator] clare swan is chairperson of the tribe. i just looked back at my roots and began to put them together and realized really how much of that was important to me, and i had tried to, like everyone else, change that because in order to fit-- there was a time when it wasn't...
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Aug 19, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN
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h., a question about indian consumers -- host: a question about indian consumers demanding more wages. that is the natural cycle of things. how does that effect india's competitiveness, and it creates, i mentioned to more consumers? guest: which is to drive the competitiveness down. in ways where india has been the exporter, and might china, india has been in the software services and called centers and so forth, but skilled labor has been in short supply. you're not seen reports where companies are same -- seen reports were companies are saying that the cost differences have been reduced. they say there is no way 10% difference in the costs between indian labor and corresponding u.s. labor. you're beginning to see that, and part of that is the failure of the indian high education system. on the supply side, the creation of additional skill sets has been much slower than demand. in the indian market, for skilled labor, uc wages rising faster than almost anyowhere else. on the demand side, that is leading to a rising middle class. h., if there is on it and% differential -- host: if the
h., a question about indian consumers -- host: a question about indian consumers demanding more wages. that is the natural cycle of things. how does that effect india's competitiveness, and it creates, i mentioned to more consumers? guest: which is to drive the competitiveness down. in ways where india has been the exporter, and might china, india has been in the software services and called centers and so forth, but skilled labor has been in short supply. you're not seen reports where...
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Aug 18, 2011
08/11
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KQEH
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. >> a close aide of the indian and thai-corruption campaigner said he has agreed to -- indian anti-corruption campaigner said he has agreed to a plan. the news has been greeted with cheers where he has been held since tuesday. police previously insisted he could fast for only three days. >> outside the prison where anna hazare has been held, a compromise has been reached. across india, there has been passionate support for the country's top anti-corruption campaigner. these demonstrations have rattled the government. his anti-corruption campaign has clearly made its mark. >> but if you want to do anything, if you want to get anything done in india, you have to fight. >> he is not fighting for himself. he is fighting for me and my next generation. >> he has struck a chord with millions of indians, with his spectacles in white cap, he is compared to godbee. ahndi.to g but the government sees him as a threat to democracy. >> it is do-or-die now, just like the independence struggle. either we succeed or we sacrifice our lives. >> the country has been hit by a string of high-profile corruption sca
. >> a close aide of the indian and thai-corruption campaigner said he has agreed to -- indian anti-corruption campaigner said he has agreed to a plan. the news has been greeted with cheers where he has been held since tuesday. police previously insisted he could fast for only three days. >> outside the prison where anna hazare has been held, a compromise has been reached. across india, there has been passionate support for the country's top anti-corruption campaigner. these...
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Aug 12, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 168
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they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey out of his scalp. it is a scene beyond description in terms of horror and of course they were avenging -- of venice, bands, events, events, cycle. so word comes the indians are on the warpath. meanwhile, the american -- the garrison of soldiers and mount vernon sent their troops to march these indians tour bonna -- urban. there is not enough protection so they have this meeting, and i have to find us in the book. they have this meeting and somebody has to go warn the people and mount vernon. this clear-eyed man bravely steps forward and says, i will do it. he runs presumably through the night and s
they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey...
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Aug 12, 2011
08/11
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eye 149
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they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey out of his scalp. it is a scene beyond description in terms of horror and of course they were avenging -- of venice, bands, events, events, cycle. so word comes the indians are on the warpath. meanwhile, the american -- the garrison of soldiers and mount vernon sent their troops to march these indians tour bonna -- urban. there is not enough protection so they have this meeting, and i have to find us in the book. they have this meeting and somebody has to go warn the people and mount vernon. this clear-eyed man bravely steps forward and says, i will do it. he runs presumably through the night and s
they are rounding up green tree indians to send them to this very place, right here, green town indians to send them so they will be out of the british -- so they can sign them up for the cause. they march them two miles away and they interthem and they march them and burn their village. one girl, 12 years old i think she is, happens to be visiting from another tribe. her father comes to take her away and they shoot the father and they him and they scalp him. the soldiers are drinking whiskey...
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Aug 10, 2011
08/11
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MSNBCW
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indians win 3-2, on a strange walkoff hit by a pitch. they are three games behind the tigers. >>> the odds-on favorite to win the world series, the phillies, last night, taking on the dodgers out in l.a. one of the reasons they're favorite to win it all, their pitching staff. and that man, cliff lee. last night, doing it all. strikes out andre ethier. he struck out ten. by the way, this is good at the plate. top of the seventh. cliff lee goes deep off ted lilly. that decided the game. phillies win 2-1, on the strength of cliff lee's home run. crazy game. yankees/angels in the bronx. derek jeter scores two. 4-4. then, in the ninth inning, look at that. rivera, blowing another save. bobby abreu, the former yankee, gives the angels a 6-4 lead. that was off rivera. now, bottom of the ninth. runners on the corners. jordan wall streeten does the fake to third and throw. and it works. that never works. they get curtis granderson in a rundown. that was the final out of the game. 6-4, was the final. new york trails boston by 2 1/2 games in the a.
indians win 3-2, on a strange walkoff hit by a pitch. they are three games behind the tigers. >>> the odds-on favorite to win the world series, the phillies, last night, taking on the dodgers out in l.a. one of the reasons they're favorite to win it all, their pitching staff. and that man, cliff lee. last night, doing it all. strikes out andre ethier. he struck out ten. by the way, this is good at the plate. top of the seventh. cliff lee goes deep off ted lilly. that decided the game....
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Aug 25, 2011
08/11
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congressman and an indian parliamentarian. they hadn't officially been hostages, but they certainly had been held against there will. and had clearly feared for their lives. the captures were guards who couldn't grasp that the regime that they served had been swept away. >> it finally dawned on them that qaddaffi's apparatus was gone and they eventually put down their weapons. we didn't want to force the issue with them. at the end of the day there was just two of them that were armed but it was getting increasingly threatening, increasingly hostile. >> reporter: they thanked the red cross staff who had driven them to safety and posed for a souvenir photo. their freedom tonight another sign that the last remnants of the qaddaffi regime do seem to be slowly accepting the inevitable. >> suarez: among those journalists at the hotel was i.t.n.'s john ray. he described his experience earlier today. >> we arrived at the rixos hotel very early on monday morning, having been to green square to witness the rebels taking their place ove
congressman and an indian parliamentarian. they hadn't officially been hostages, but they certainly had been held against there will. and had clearly feared for their lives. the captures were guards who couldn't grasp that the regime that they served had been swept away. >> it finally dawned on them that qaddaffi's apparatus was gone and they eventually put down their weapons. we didn't want to force the issue with them. at the end of the day there was just two of them that were armed but...
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Aug 30, 2011
08/11
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>>reporter: that said, the project has made a real difference to many rural indians, especially farmers. it's estimated that 25% of perishable goods rot, because bad roads stop produce getting to market on time. >>singh: there is a lot of progress, there are national highways here. earlier we had problems transporting our produce. now there is no problem at all and we are benefiting from this progress. we are getting very good rates for our potato crop. >>reporter: however as always there is dissent; while many farmers feel the benefit of the new road network, others are protesting against their land being acquired for infrastructure projects.... and the government's acquisition policies. >>so what if they are making roads, it's not going to feed us. inflation is so high that we can't afford to feed ourselves. >>mccartney: it is very difficult to build roads in india because property rights are so complicated. it can takea long time in the courts to acquire property to widen roads or buy the farmland, reallocate farmland to road building purposes. so it is a very veryslow and long proce
>>reporter: that said, the project has made a real difference to many rural indians, especially farmers. it's estimated that 25% of perishable goods rot, because bad roads stop produce getting to market on time. >>singh: there is a lot of progress, there are national highways here. earlier we had problems transporting our produce. now there is no problem at all and we are benefiting from this progress. we are getting very good rates for our potato crop. >>reporter: however as...
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Aug 7, 2011
08/11
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KPIX
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>> yes, and we have a continued dialogue with the indians, i provide a host guest series, and we provide it, allowing the spanish, indians, and over 2,000 perish families within the school, and so we are interwoven . it's dynamic . >> it's pretty high, and we are gathering materials for that. >> what about those -- >> we have a lot -- we do understand that through betty durks work under chief merin is buried under our feet, we have to be careful on what we are doing and the capitol cap pain . some of the records 200 are buried on the sight, and the others say 800. >> where at op if -- on the property. >> it's such an urban setting that many have been moved throughout the development of the city. soom of the mission records were kept great on the baptism and birth, but the native americans are definitely different. we do know that the priests were exhumed and moved to the mt. olive cemetery. >> i want to ask about fund raisers.we are part of the angle -- angel and there is administer information on that -- there is information on that and you are available to check that out and come. >> w
>> yes, and we have a continued dialogue with the indians, i provide a host guest series, and we provide it, allowing the spanish, indians, and over 2,000 perish families within the school, and so we are interwoven . it's dynamic . >> it's pretty high, and we are gathering materials for that. >> what about those -- >> we have a lot -- we do understand that through betty durks work under chief merin is buried under our feet, we have to be careful on what we are doing and...
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involved i can tell you right now reuters put out a release that was widely quoted saying that one indian for example since citizen who was killed here or bengal from bangladesh i'm sorry one foreign national was killed here a few days ago when nato was intensely bombing civilian infrastructure and it didn't mention the subduing infrastructure i want to add well they quoted that this for national was a security guard this was misinformation this was not correct it was changed later they have been fueling and feeding this psychological war against this country they want tripoli to be in panic that's the whole aim there are snipers here that are sniping that are attacking people they're not there's no game here no organized there's snipers attacking people and there's terrorist attacks here this is just meant to cause trauma here and make people panic and that's the truth. ok now the rebels faced annihilation back in march before nato stepped in right now they're approaching gadhafi strongholds arguably only thanks to coalition air strikes when nato ends its intervention won't that leave a
involved i can tell you right now reuters put out a release that was widely quoted saying that one indian for example since citizen who was killed here or bengal from bangladesh i'm sorry one foreign national was killed here a few days ago when nato was intensely bombing civilian infrastructure and it didn't mention the subduing infrastructure i want to add well they quoted that this for national was a security guard this was misinformation this was not correct it was changed later they have...
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Aug 17, 2011
08/11
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. >> he has struck a chord with millions of indians. he is often compared to the independence leader. like him, he uses fasting and nonviolent protest. the indian government says he is a threat to democracy. >> is do or die now. just like the independence struggle. either we succeed or we sacrifice our lives. >> india has been hit by a string of high-profile corruption scandals. the biggest is the selling of telecom licenses. last year's gains were vastly overspent. the estimated cost was 166 million pounds. several top government officials. >> we are outside the prison. hoping not just to have him released, but to let him have his way. >> this is a movement that is gaining momentum. >> for more on the conditions sparking all of this outrage, i am joined by the wall street journal, and the founding editor of the business newspaper. we always think of india as an economic powerhouse. how much does corruption affect daily business life? >> very much so. i think one of the people in the streets you just said -- in the pc just aired, a lot
. >> he has struck a chord with millions of indians. he is often compared to the independence leader. like him, he uses fasting and nonviolent protest. the indian government says he is a threat to democracy. >> is do or die now. just like the independence struggle. either we succeed or we sacrifice our lives. >> india has been hit by a string of high-profile corruption scandals. the biggest is the selling of telecom licenses. last year's gains were vastly overspent. the...
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Aug 19, 2011
08/11
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KQEH
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how has the indian authorities been perceived in the handling of this case? >> obviously, very negatively. the great news is that india is becoming a major emerging power with major socioeconomic conditions. and the middle class which has become more sophisticated has understood that. the failure on two major respects, first, not understanding as part of this condition, democracy is much more than just holding elections. holding elections, peaceful demonstrators will want to protest and show the basic principle. and second, the other important aspect of any major transition to an industrialized power is to understand that leadership and integrity at the top is much more than individualizing it and personalizing as to whether the prime minister is seen as corrupt or not. the prime minister was seen as incorruptible, but there has been no action on his part over the past year in terms of providing leadership to address major corruption in the party, even in government. and that has basically undermined his reputation. >> the indian government seems to be taking
how has the indian authorities been perceived in the handling of this case? >> obviously, very negatively. the great news is that india is becoming a major emerging power with major socioeconomic conditions. and the middle class which has become more sophisticated has understood that. the failure on two major respects, first, not understanding as part of this condition, democracy is much more than just holding elections. holding elections, peaceful demonstrators will want to protest and...
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Aug 18, 2011
08/11
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indians united in protests against his arrest. these demonstrations have rattled the government. his anti-corruption campaign has clearly made its mark. >> if you want to do anything, get anything done in india, you have to break. >> he is fighting for me and my next generation. >> he has struck a chord with millions of independentians with his spectacles, he is often compared to india's independence leader and shares similar methods of fasting and nonviolent demonstration but the government says he is a threat to india's democracy. >> it's do or die now. just like the independence struggle, either we succeed or we sacrifice our lives. >> the country has been hit by a string of high-profile corruption scandals, the biggest is the misselling of telecom licenses and costs 24.5 billion pounds. last year's commonwealth gains were overspent. the estimated cost was 166 million pounds and evently cost 2.5 billion allegedly because of kickbacks. several government officials have been arrested. there's one clear message from all of this. that indians from all backgrounds are unhappy about
indians united in protests against his arrest. these demonstrations have rattled the government. his anti-corruption campaign has clearly made its mark. >> if you want to do anything, get anything done in india, you have to break. >> he is fighting for me and my next generation. >> he has struck a chord with millions of independentians with his spectacles, he is often compared to india's independence leader and shares similar methods of fasting and nonviolent demonstration but...
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Aug 21, 2011
08/11
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a pretty indian ocean island nation. tourist destination. if i don't have a picture and if i would have every picture i would have to have a rogue gallery of the dictators. he ruled for 20 years the longest dictator in asia and even the middle east. i don't think there was anybody from the middle east who ruled that long. ruled for 2008. until he was ousted by a large democratic movement in the country. using islam, using nonviolent creative process and as a result they had the first democratic government in their history and new president is mohammed nasheed and a remarkable licensing, he -- let me read this to you. june, 1990, after 18 months in solitary confinement, a political prisoner was finally sentenced to a jail term of 3.5 years. by the time that the sentence was handed down, the damage caused by the regular torture he had endured had become overwhelming. his backbone was damaged. he was suffering from internal bleeding. in november, 2008, standing before the chief justice of maldives was that activist ready to be sworn in as the p
a pretty indian ocean island nation. tourist destination. if i don't have a picture and if i would have every picture i would have to have a rogue gallery of the dictators. he ruled for 20 years the longest dictator in asia and even the middle east. i don't think there was anybody from the middle east who ruled that long. ruled for 2008. until he was ousted by a large democratic movement in the country. using islam, using nonviolent creative process and as a result they had the first democratic...
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and thousands of indians living on the breadline are ready to seize a.
and thousands of indians living on the breadline are ready to seize a.
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i wouldn't say it's going to cause the amount that the united states gives to indians is well under it's only a few hundred million dollars which is a lot these days but the point is that often as you mentioned money goes to reconstruction of things that israel destroys so united states is. it's a million dollars to build a road or a school or a hospital or clinic or something like that american made weaponry goes and destroys it and then the united states or europe that's that will pay do rebuild it again so it's an onion cycle on the palestinian side and on these really side is an unending cycle of continue to give without any questions about where the money is why it's being used and what policy this is achieving but you know these lawmakers do have to answer to their constituents and we are entering an election year what do you think they'll be able to say to their constituents and terms of what the american people are getting back to their taxpayer dollars. well i'm afraid i'm sorry that it seems to me that. in public with the rise of the tea party with the rise of. the rise of righ
i wouldn't say it's going to cause the amount that the united states gives to indians is well under it's only a few hundred million dollars which is a lot these days but the point is that often as you mentioned money goes to reconstruction of things that israel destroys so united states is. it's a million dollars to build a road or a school or a hospital or clinic or something like that american made weaponry goes and destroys it and then the united states or europe that's that will pay do...
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an incredibly important dramatic and almost volatile week in this region especially in terms of the indian ocean if the demonstrations in the west bank get out of hand or get very violent i think there will be a reserve call up in israel which will directly affect the constituents of the temperature's keep in mind that most of the people protesting for social justice in the streets of tel aviv and jerusalem are of age to go into the reserves and so if there is a call up for either a ground invasion into gaza or any sort of outbreak of violence in the west bank he will be the ten protesters and they will have to ask serious questions about whether or not they're going to fight for a government that has so far ignored their demand for for economic reallocation inside of israeli society. because we value your opinion on events in the middle east go to our website there you can cast your vote on the reasons behind israel's attacks in gaza at the moment if you voted so far we have not told the last hour seems hard to believe that the latest attacks are a way to sabotage the next months of u.n.
an incredibly important dramatic and almost volatile week in this region especially in terms of the indian ocean if the demonstrations in the west bank get out of hand or get very violent i think there will be a reserve call up in israel which will directly affect the constituents of the temperature's keep in mind that most of the people protesting for social justice in the streets of tel aviv and jerusalem are of age to go into the reserves and so if there is a call up for either a ground...
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Aug 17, 2011
08/11
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how much support does he have among ordinary indians? >> yesterday, they showed without any ambiguity that the level of support is quite high. is it high enough to put the entire political establishment on alert? yes. >> what do you think can be done to solve this dispute right now between the activists and the government? >> i am not privy to that information. it seems to me that this is an opportunity for not only the government, but for the entire political class to rise of to any level of maturity. the political class, including the opposition party, seem to be playing political football with this issue. either they are -- they are supporting the movement of the protester, but they are not moving in the legislation. they need to rise above their partisan political interests and look at the national interest and the entire political establishment should do that. >> in your view, are there good prospects for this anti- corrections bill that is being years -- being discussed right now in parliament? >> this bill being discussed in parli
how much support does he have among ordinary indians? >> yesterday, they showed without any ambiguity that the level of support is quite high. is it high enough to put the entire political establishment on alert? yes. >> what do you think can be done to solve this dispute right now between the activists and the government? >> i am not privy to that information. it seems to me that this is an opportunity for not only the government, but for the entire political class to rise of...
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if you don't have the indians there if you don't have the europeans there you're leaving out a very large amount of that sort of international commerce so i think that the reason that they went up rather than down was because they thought it would work the second thing is to bear in mind it's a did you twenty shouldn't be seen as you go. they are now presenting it in the media as something like g eight heavy g. twenty is really a process a lot of these things have set in train activities that are going to take a long time to to develop you're not going to get a result every every communique is not going to be you know it's sui generous success in itself these things take time and they take a lot of time and finally the idea that leaders don't need to get together if leaders don't know each other and this is my own experience at least they don't learn to trust each other very much they don't learn to take you to understand what each other is issues are. and they begin and it's very easy to demonize people you don't know but when you have them in the room and you're talking to them you can'
if you don't have the indians there if you don't have the europeans there you're leaving out a very large amount of that sort of international commerce so i think that the reason that they went up rather than down was because they thought it would work the second thing is to bear in mind it's a did you twenty shouldn't be seen as you go. they are now presenting it in the media as something like g eight heavy g. twenty is really a process a lot of these things have set in train activities that...
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indian soldiers who killed twelve separatist militants while trying to prevent them from crossing from pakistan controlled kashmir into the indian side to shoot a place of a military control line dividing disputed kashmir between the two countries new delhi says it regularly intercept is missed rebels trying to cross the kashmir border to fight indian rule there. over ten thousand people gathered in new delhi in support of a prominent activist who is on his fifth day of a hunger strike and he says he's physically weak but will not renounce his fight for tougher anti corruption laws in india the campaigner started his fast in jail after being arrested for planning a protest with police approval and sara says indians are fed up with government bribery and the threat the starve himself to death unless parliament passes his legislation. twenty years ago to the day history was making its self heard on the streets here in moscow the city was under military curfew on the second day of an attempt to overthrow mikhail gorbachev the then president of the soviet union tom barr looks back now at t
indian soldiers who killed twelve separatist militants while trying to prevent them from crossing from pakistan controlled kashmir into the indian side to shoot a place of a military control line dividing disputed kashmir between the two countries new delhi says it regularly intercept is missed rebels trying to cross the kashmir border to fight indian rule there. over ten thousand people gathered in new delhi in support of a prominent activist who is on his fifth day of a hunger strike and he...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 27, 2011
08/11
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it's a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and
it's a story from the [inaudible] and so the indian epiics actually the indian epiics for very common in cambodia and bali and
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Aug 13, 2011
08/11
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oklahoma was originally a territory called indian territory. it mainly was used when they ethnically-cleansed the indians from southeastern states. they were shipped out to reservations in the oklahoma. approaching the turn of the century, but the groundwork for this was laid earlier, it became a state. and doing that meant congress had to change the way land was titled in that territory. it was held by tribes, and the dawes act, i believe, around 1900, 1899 gave citizenship to indians in those tribes in return for the tribes redistributing the land so that it was titled by individual indians which then enabled it to be sold and broken up. sort of a complicated thing. what's fascinating, though, to me most about oklahoma's statehood because the lines were pretty much in place from the surrounding states is there were three movements that were taking place virtually simultaneously. the first was this attempt by the native american tribes to create their own state to join together. and they had a convention to do this, and at the same time they w
oklahoma was originally a territory called indian territory. it mainly was used when they ethnically-cleansed the indians from southeastern states. they were shipped out to reservations in the oklahoma. approaching the turn of the century, but the groundwork for this was laid earlier, it became a state. and doing that meant congress had to change the way land was titled in that territory. it was held by tribes, and the dawes act, i believe, around 1900, 1899 gave citizenship to indians in those...
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Aug 2, 2011
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indians win. 9-6. that's your first look at sports. i'm mario solis. >>> now another quick look at the weather, here's bill karins with the weather channel forecast. >> good morning. we had quite the thunderstorms that came through young yesterday. a lot of problems out on long island with two inch large hail. other areas around philadelphia that got nailed by those storms, too. many of the big cities in the east a rough rush hour. this morning low 70s in most case. cooler than that in northern new england. the showers have headed off the coast. it's a dry morning commute. and the forecast will stay pretty dry today and sunny. you don't need to bring your umbrella will you, but it will be warm once again. the forecast for today, somewhere around 89 or so in new york city, did d.c. should be somewhere in the low 90s today. we will have a chance at scattered showers a storms along the gulf and the heat very impressive. easily 105 to 110 today from kansas city southwards, they're saying this will probably be the warmest day in 30 years in
indians win. 9-6. that's your first look at sports. i'm mario solis. >>> now another quick look at the weather, here's bill karins with the weather channel forecast. >> good morning. we had quite the thunderstorms that came through young yesterday. a lot of problems out on long island with two inch large hail. other areas around philadelphia that got nailed by those storms, too. many of the big cities in the east a rough rush hour. this morning low 70s in most case. cooler than...