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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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the reality in the state of indiana. that is what we continue to do. >> steve from the department of homeland security. i am the executive director of the indiana department of homeland security. just like they mention, there's a lot that is just unknown about this particular illness. come it leaveses it open for a lot of folks to be able to spread that misinformation using social media platforms and other places out there. it's ever more important right now that you look for credible sources of information. one of the reasons that we do these press briefings here is a that we can actually give correct information to the public so that we can get out -- so that the public knows what we are doing. ppe levels, etc. there are different medications that are being looked at. vaccine questions. all kinds of things are out there. we are to -- trying to provide those answers. just make sure that when you are looking for this information, you are using credible sources for your information. >> could you elaborate? give a thumbnai
the reality in the state of indiana. that is what we continue to do. >> steve from the department of homeland security. i am the executive director of the indiana department of homeland security. just like they mention, there's a lot that is just unknown about this particular illness. come it leaveses it open for a lot of folks to be able to spread that misinformation using social media platforms and other places out there. it's ever more important right now that you look for credible...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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indiana legislative insight. governor holcomb: good afternoon. >> ed, you have to unmute your microphone. >> good afternoon. on thetive question, state level and for the senator on the federal level. changes in health related policies are priorities -- policies or priorities should be the subject of debate in the primary and general election campaign? senator braun: that should go to me, since you aren't on the ballot. -- governor holcomb: that should go to me, since you aren't on the ballot. then we should turn it over to senator braun, who is not on the ballot either. , to be little eerie honest with you, to be on the ballot and not be putting any focus on it. i am going to continue to operate that way for the foreseeable future, and let the chips fall where they may. i've got a full-time job. we are all working overtime. that will have to take care of itself. having said that, i will be perfectly comfortable talking about every single step and decision that we make, anywhere, any day. senator. senator braun: i
indiana legislative insight. governor holcomb: good afternoon. >> ed, you have to unmute your microphone. >> good afternoon. on thetive question, state level and for the senator on the federal level. changes in health related policies are priorities -- policies or priorities should be the subject of debate in the primary and general election campaign? senator braun: that should go to me, since you aren't on the ballot. -- governor holcomb: that should go to me, since you aren't on...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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and lincoln in indiana. his subjects probe some of the most interesting and relevant topics in blankets life. he's won awards for his work. he recently had the opportunity to travel to seoul where he addressed the korean abraham lincoln society. i know i'd like to hear more about that. how can i get on that gravy train? today he will talk to us about his new book, the black heavens. abraham lincoln and death which was published earlier this year by southern illinois university press. a review at civil war monitors states, students of the 16th president will want to add this concise thought-provoking and sensitively written volume to their bookshelves. please welcome me in joining -- please join me in welcoming brian dark. >> hello everybody it's great to be here. i want to thank you for the invitation. i've gotten to see some old friends, among many my come pinion in korea, fred. we had fun. meaning lots of wonderful people. you are heroes, everybody in this room is a hero to a group of students at anderson
and lincoln in indiana. his subjects probe some of the most interesting and relevant topics in blankets life. he's won awards for his work. he recently had the opportunity to travel to seoul where he addressed the korean abraham lincoln society. i know i'd like to hear more about that. how can i get on that gravy train? today he will talk to us about his new book, the black heavens. abraham lincoln and death which was published earlier this year by southern illinois university press. a review...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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he did not torture any more animals in the indiana woods. and once he wrote an essay about him being kind to animals an insects. when his brother crushed a turtle at a near by tree, he once said that an ant's life is as sweet as us. his indiana neighbors referred constantly to the tender heartedness, and so this is far from the callous and unfeeling youngster, and quite to the contrary, and if anything, he seemed to be noble in the capacity to feel the suffering and the loss of others around him, even turtles. soon after the family arrived in india indiana, the young lincoln was found to face death in a more profound way. in the fall of 1818 several of the lincolns fell seriously ill, first with the uncontrollable shaking and then a severe thirst, a loss of appetite and general fatigue and then with severe stomach stomach cramps a vomiting and then it grew worse. they were suffering from the milk sickness caused when cows injesed a local plant that was the white snake root. it resembled a daisy, but it contained a chemical that turned the co
he did not torture any more animals in the indiana woods. and once he wrote an essay about him being kind to animals an insects. when his brother crushed a turtle at a near by tree, he once said that an ant's life is as sweet as us. his indiana neighbors referred constantly to the tender heartedness, and so this is far from the callous and unfeeling youngster, and quite to the contrary, and if anything, he seemed to be noble in the capacity to feel the suffering and the loss of others around...
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Apr 18, 2020
04/20
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it was in those same indiana backwoods where hall had told indiana authorities he dreamt he killed and buried tricia. >> i wanted to feel like i did everything i could to see if we could find her body. >> but after two days searching in sweltering heat and humidity, tricia's body didn't turn up. >> we couldn't find anything. doesn't mean it wasn't there. >> then beaumont decided to try something completely different. >> i came up with the idea of putting somebody in the prison cell with him to see if we can get him to tell us what he did with tricia reitler. >> they didn't think you were crazy? >> most people did think we were crazy, yeah. but i was able to convince them we should do it anyway. >> enter jimmy keene, the drug dealer beaumont had just convicted and sent to a low security prison. why did he stick out in your mind? >> because i knew he was kind of a con man. he was smart. i knew if anybody could pull it off, he would probably be the one to be able to pull it off. >> he said, you've been trained in martial arts. he said, you can go into a dangerous environment where a lot o
it was in those same indiana backwoods where hall had told indiana authorities he dreamt he killed and buried tricia. >> i wanted to feel like i did everything i could to see if we could find her body. >> but after two days searching in sweltering heat and humidity, tricia's body didn't turn up. >> we couldn't find anything. doesn't mean it wasn't there. >> then beaumont decided to try something completely different. >> i came up with the idea of putting somebody...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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he's a professor of history at anderson university in indiana. he is the author of numerous books on abraham lincoln, "imagining america," "lincoln in indiana" and others. his subjects probe some of the most interesting and relevant topics in lincoln's life and he has won awards for his work including the best book on lincoln published in 2007. he had the opportunity to travel to seoul where he addressed the korean abraham lincoln society. i know. i'd like to hear more about that. how can i get on that gravy train? today he will talk to us about his new book "the black heavens" a review at civil war monitor states students of the 16th president will want to add this concise thought provoking and sensitively written volume to their book shelves. please join me in welcoming brian dirck. [ applause ] >> well, hello, everybody. it's good to be here. it really is. i wanted to thank you for the invitation. i've gotten to see some old friends, among many. my boone companion in korea, fred you're here somewhere. we had fun. we sure did. meeting a lot of
he's a professor of history at anderson university in indiana. he is the author of numerous books on abraham lincoln, "imagining america," "lincoln in indiana" and others. his subjects probe some of the most interesting and relevant topics in lincoln's life and he has won awards for his work including the best book on lincoln published in 2007. he had the opportunity to travel to seoul where he addressed the korean abraham lincoln society. i know. i'd like to hear more about...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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employees, then we are going to disinvest in indiana. because how am i going to bring my customers there, my employees there, and how am i going to hire and make a great tech company there if they are discriminating against lgbtq employees and customers and everybody else? and that opened a door. by the next day, every other company like cummins, eli lilly, in indiana, and hundreds of other companies, even companies all over the world said, we agree with marc. we are also going to disinvest. mike pence called me and said, well, what are we going to do? i'm like, i think we are going to have to issue rolling economic sanctions against the state of indiana. [laughter] and he is like, well what does that mean? i am like, i don't know, but i think it's going to be bad. he's like, well, what should we do? i'm like why don't we resolve this? we know each other. this is not that hard. and in fact, i sent two of my employees to his office. within a couple of days it was worked out. he changed the law, and it was all behind us. by the way, i thin
employees, then we are going to disinvest in indiana. because how am i going to bring my customers there, my employees there, and how am i going to hire and make a great tech company there if they are discriminating against lgbtq employees and customers and everybody else? and that opened a door. by the next day, every other company like cummins, eli lilly, in indiana, and hundreds of other companies, even companies all over the world said, we agree with marc. we are also going to disinvest....
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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indiana, republican senator indiana mike braun. thanks for joining us. we have a headline crossing the bloomberg which is the u.s. has slashed its forecast for 2020 oil by more than 120 million barrels per day. in the meantime, prime minister boris johnson is in the hospital in icu and their monitoring. dominique rap has been speaking about his condition. we will go to london to get an update next on mr. boris johnson. this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. ♪ david: this is "balance of power." boris johnson is in the hospital observed for covid-19. we go to david merritt, our colleague in london for an update. we have had some news about the prime minister's condition. david m.: we were just hearing from his deputy, the foreign b, who says there has been no significant change, no deterioration in the prime minister's condition. he remains in the intensive care unit in the hospital in london. the situation can be described as serious, but he has been put on oxygen to help his breathing. no mechanical aids, not on a ventilator, whi
indiana, republican senator indiana mike braun. thanks for joining us. we have a headline crossing the bloomberg which is the u.s. has slashed its forecast for 2020 oil by more than 120 million barrels per day. in the meantime, prime minister boris johnson is in the hospital in icu and their monitoring. dominique rap has been speaking about his condition. we will go to london to get an update next on mr. boris johnson. this is "balance of power" on bloomberg television and radio. ♪...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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a number of those classmates i had came out of southern indiana, central indiana, but i was at a hotel in springfield, illinois, years back, and the waiter brought coffee. it was 6:15 in the morning. and he came to the table and he said, you want coffee? and i was stunned. and i said where are you from? and he said springfield. i said how long have you lived here? my whole life. and i thought, this is -- this is what i've waited for. and it was from the descriptions of the letter writers at the time. but when i met david donald at gettysburg for the richard nelson award of achievement, he wanted to hear it. and i thought what do you say to the author of a lincoln biography that was just awarded the pulitzer? i thought about that a while but i gave him the voice and he smiled that smile that is ever so david donald and he said it's as i expected. don't ever change it. >> so can you give us a full line right here in abraham link lincoln's voice as you interpret it? >> if we could first know where we are and whether we're attending, we could better judge what to do and how to do it. >> th
a number of those classmates i had came out of southern indiana, central indiana, but i was at a hotel in springfield, illinois, years back, and the waiter brought coffee. it was 6:15 in the morning. and he came to the table and he said, you want coffee? and i was stunned. and i said where are you from? and he said springfield. i said how long have you lived here? my whole life. and i thought, this is -- this is what i've waited for. and it was from the descriptions of the letter writers at the...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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and in indiana we may be flattening the curve right now. but the area underneath the curve, which represents the number of infected, that is going to stay the same. so all of the stuff that we're doing right this second is to free up medical capacity so that we don't lose patients that we don't have to lose. unfortunately, some people are going to get this disease and they're going to die despite everything that we do for them. but the people who are going to die because we can't care for them is the big deal. and that's what we're trying to prevent. so if we flow open widely too soon, we're going to have a secondary rural rush that's going to be really challenging. right now we've been very protected by our geography. there are only 50,000 people in my entire county. but when everybody goes back to work and goes back to the cities, we've got a lot of industry here. they're going to bring it back home. so when new york is cooling down, jasper, indiana may be ramping up. >> hey, sam stein, as we look at the president going after the w.h.o.,
and in indiana we may be flattening the curve right now. but the area underneath the curve, which represents the number of infected, that is going to stay the same. so all of the stuff that we're doing right this second is to free up medical capacity so that we don't lose patients that we don't have to lose. unfortunately, some people are going to get this disease and they're going to die despite everything that we do for them. but the people who are going to die because we can't care for them...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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clearly some of the people who voted for george wallace in 64 in indiana voted for bobby kennedy and 68. i go into george wallace in here a little bit because kennedy and wallace were competing for the same voters. in appalachia. george wallace was a piece of work. appetite and 68 when he was campaigning, he couldn't run for reelection forgot his wife elected governor of alabama, and when she had i think their third child in 61 or 62, the doctor saw some suspicious tissue but, of course, told george and said you need her to get this checked out. it might be cancerouset tissue. she had cervical cancer. george was running for reelection at the time, i don't want to deal with that. he never told her it wasn't until late 67 that she finally was formally diagnosed with cancer and then died in i think march or april of 68. and then of course wallace was running for president at the time and farmed out his three kids to relatives. not a nice man. i'm just going to go out on a limb and say that but it was fascinating to look at, george wallace and bobby kennedy that was overlap in their cons
clearly some of the people who voted for george wallace in 64 in indiana voted for bobby kennedy and 68. i go into george wallace in here a little bit because kennedy and wallace were competing for the same voters. in appalachia. george wallace was a piece of work. appetite and 68 when he was campaigning, he couldn't run for reelection forgot his wife elected governor of alabama, and when she had i think their third child in 61 or 62, the doctor saw some suspicious tissue but, of course, told...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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this is their total cases in cass county, indiana, over time. this is not, that is not a good trend line. this is the growth in cases in cass county, indiana, day by day, again, not good, not a good trend line. they have closed that tyson plant in cass county, indiana, but today, with the case numbers now in that one county topping a thousand, the ceo of the local logansport memorial hospital said quote, our hospital is not equipped with enough staff or resources to care for numbers like this. and so that county in indiana has put in place a state, a new state of emergency, an a stricter stay-at-home order than what is in place statewide. and now, here's another one, to watch. and that we're going to talk a little bit more about tonight. it's been unfolding in greeley, colorado. you might have heard about the particular problem they've got in greeley. you might have heard about the big outbreak they've got at the jbs plant. specifically because at one point, it got mentioned at the white house by vice president mike pence. >> i spoke today to th
this is their total cases in cass county, indiana, over time. this is not, that is not a good trend line. this is the growth in cases in cass county, indiana, day by day, again, not good, not a good trend line. they have closed that tyson plant in cass county, indiana, but today, with the case numbers now in that one county topping a thousand, the ceo of the local logansport memorial hospital said quote, our hospital is not equipped with enough staff or resources to care for numbers like this....
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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a small lab based in indiana developed its own test in just three weeks. now it's donating 50,000 kits to new york city. joining us now is one of the men behind that lab, zak khan is a partner at aria diagnostics just outside indianapolis. zak, welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> your lab was originally just processing tests but started to actually manufacture them yourselves. what made you decide to make your own test, especially given how hard we've all heard it is to just find the components you need? >> i think you hit the nail on the head. you're right, it was difficult to find the components to make the kit put together. we started initially ordering the full kit, and then after a few days realized it was getting difficult to get the full kits. so we said, okay, let's order swabs. it might help for me to describe a bit of the anatomy of the test kit. it's very simple. there's a swab. there's a vial with either viral transport media or saline and then a bag. so when you start deducing down, what we can get and what we can't get, we quickly found t
a small lab based in indiana developed its own test in just three weeks. now it's donating 50,000 kits to new york city. joining us now is one of the men behind that lab, zak khan is a partner at aria diagnostics just outside indianapolis. zak, welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> your lab was originally just processing tests but started to actually manufacture them yourselves. what made you decide to make your own test, especially given how hard we've all heard it is to just...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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rco >> let me ask you an indiana-centric question. roger penske says there are 230,000 seats at the indianapolis motor speedway. obviously this year's 500 is not going to be held and is going to be floated. when do you think that day will come when 230,000 race fans can sit alongside each other? >> it may be sooner than we want it to be. but i think realistically, brian, i think we're looking at a vaccine. i think that certainly the economy is going to start opening up. >> stages over the next couple, few months. but until we are fully vaccinated or we reach herd immunity, packing 230,000 people into an area seems pretty dangerous to me. because we have to remember, and i don't think we're talking about it enough from a medical standpoint, right? we talk about the spike in the curve and flattening the curve. and in indiana we may be flattening the curve right now. but the area underneath the curve, which represents the number of infected, that is going to stay the same. so all of the stuff that we're doing right this second is to n fr
rco >> let me ask you an indiana-centric question. roger penske says there are 230,000 seats at the indianapolis motor speedway. obviously this year's 500 is not going to be held and is going to be floated. when do you think that day will come when 230,000 race fans can sit alongside each other? >> it may be sooner than we want it to be. but i think realistically, brian, i think we're looking at a vaccine. i think that certainly the economy is going to start opening up. >>...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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doc at memorial hospital and health care center in jasper, indiana. and, doctor, far from germany, there is fox news, and i want to play you this clip and have you explain what it is they're talking about on the other side. >> we've seen 1,227 deaths in the state of california with a possible incidence or prevalence of 4.7 million. that means you have a 0.03 chance of dying from covid-19 in the state of california. >> more informed debate is exactly what we need to make wise decisions going forward. unfortunately for all of us, informed debate is exactly what the authorities don't want. they want unquestioned obedience, so they're cracking down on free expression. >> so, doctor, if you've been watching this broadcast or any fox news in prime time, you know that the angle here is their view that covid-19 is less lethal than advertised. this is kind of a part survivalist, part libertarian, part straight-up air support for the president's position to reopen the country. how would you fill in the gaps here? what should people know about this argument? >>
doc at memorial hospital and health care center in jasper, indiana. and, doctor, far from germany, there is fox news, and i want to play you this clip and have you explain what it is they're talking about on the other side. >> we've seen 1,227 deaths in the state of california with a possible incidence or prevalence of 4.7 million. that means you have a 0.03 chance of dying from covid-19 in the state of california. >> more informed debate is exactly what we need to make wise...
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Apr 5, 2020
04/20
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that was interesting was in 64, george wallace ran as a democratic candidate in the primary and in indiana he had like 24206% of the vote just running as a straight out racist candidate then four years later kennedy ran in indiana and at the primaries 40% of the vote. so clearly some of the people that voted for kennedy in 68. by the way, i go into george wallace in your little bit george wallace was a piece of work man, so at the time, and 68, when he was campaigning he couldn't run for reelection think they had their third child and 61 or 62, the doctor saw some suspicious tissue, but of course told george and not arlene and said you need to get arlene to get this checked out it might be cancerous tissue and she had cervical cancer. but george is running for reelection of time and said i don't want to deal with that. so he never told arlene. it wasn't until late 67 that arlene finally was formally diagnosed with cancer and then died and i think in march or april 68. chris wallace was running farmed out his three kids for relatives. >> not a nice
that was interesting was in 64, george wallace ran as a democratic candidate in the primary and in indiana he had like 24206% of the vote just running as a straight out racist candidate then four years later kennedy ran in indiana and at the primaries 40% of the vote. so clearly some of the people that voted for kennedy in 68. by the way, i go into george wallace in your little bit george wallace was a piece of work man, so at the time, and 68, when he was campaigning he couldn't run for...
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Apr 2, 2020
04/20
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we mean the indiana health service. they are in remote area, rural areas. the governors of the north western states that may not have the advantage of these high throughput machines that are across to east coast and in high metro area, colorado and across the west coast. we have prioritized the presidential 15 minute test to the indiana house services and public health labs so they can support nursing home testing and other areas where we think surveillance is absolutely key. at this moment they prioritized in that way. >> i'm glad you asked that. today there's 18,000 of these machines already out there. we're trying to find out exactly where every one is because you can see that gives you maiamazi flexibility. 18,000 test s a huge amount. it gets to your question about how we moving out what is new. really figuring out who should those go to. these will be in the community to share those machines into the community who need the testing now. that's an incredible question that needs to bans s ts to answ next 24 hours. >> you said it's still a point of debate
we mean the indiana health service. they are in remote area, rural areas. the governors of the north western states that may not have the advantage of these high throughput machines that are across to east coast and in high metro area, colorado and across the west coast. we have prioritized the presidential 15 minute test to the indiana house services and public health labs so they can support nursing home testing and other areas where we think surveillance is absolutely key. at this moment...
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Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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strikes the gulf coast, when wildfires strike the west, when flooding or tornadoes hit in places like indiana, you are accustomed to have a declaration of emergency approved, then resources flow from fema. in this situation, as we deal with a nationwide declaration and an epidemic, what we have explained to governors is what president trump directed. that we leave no stone unturned to find resources around the country and world, including ventilators. and we make sure as the coronavirus epidemic impacts individual areas, that the health-care care workers and families and patients impacted have what they need when they need it. and what i would say to the people of kansas is that we are looking at their numbers every day just as in the case of every
strikes the gulf coast, when wildfires strike the west, when flooding or tornadoes hit in places like indiana, you are accustomed to have a declaration of emergency approved, then resources flow from fema. in this situation, as we deal with a nationwide declaration and an epidemic, what we have explained to governors is what president trump directed. that we leave no stone unturned to find resources around the country and world, including ventilators. and we make sure as the coronavirus...
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Apr 5, 2020
04/20
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esta ciudad existe y se encuentra en indiana. angie sandoval hablo con sus residentes quienes se han tomado el censo como una competencia, para ver quien se queda con el premio mayor. >> unos meses de temperaturas extremas en este pueblo de indiana. llegamos en medio de una tormenta de nieve. los noticieros adviertan a sus residentes que las temperaturas continuarÁn bajando. sin embargo, en el ayuntamiento, el termÓmetro estÁ que arde. el presidente del concejo municipal de esta ciudad de unos 35,000 habitantes, ha desafiado a los alcaldes de las poblaciones vecinas a competir por el tÍtulo de campeÓn del censo 2020. >> me preocupa que se la gente no responde al censo y no tenemos cifras exactas de cuÁntos somos, nuestra comunidad podrÍa ser afectada. reportera: aunque esta es una competencia sin trofeos. >> si logramos que una familia que nunca participÓ en el censo complete el formulario, eso representa $100,000 que le llegaran a la comunidad. reportera: durante el censo de 2010, este pueblo quedÓ en cuarto puesto a ni
esta ciudad existe y se encuentra en indiana. angie sandoval hablo con sus residentes quienes se han tomado el censo como una competencia, para ver quien se queda con el premio mayor. >> unos meses de temperaturas extremas en este pueblo de indiana. llegamos en medio de una tormenta de nieve. los noticieros adviertan a sus residentes que las temperaturas continuarÁn bajando. sin embargo, en el ayuntamiento, el termÓmetro estÁ que arde. el presidente del concejo municipal de esta ciudad...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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reporter quoted a voter in indiana, a white kid, said yes, if you don't like negroes around here veryou much, will kennedy wants to improve life for the negro, why do you think so. he said i don't know, i just do. remember he was the running attorney general sci-fi event that came from the background of law and order andnd i think they saw him as somebody who would balance, a certain balance the interest of communities with law & order. but the anything that was interesting is that in 64, george wallace ran as a democratic presidential candidate in the primary in indiana got something like 24 - 26 percent of the boat pretty is running straight out. and then four years later, kennedy. in indiana and one with 40 percent of votes are clearly some of the people vote did for george wallacepl in 64 voted for bobby kennedy's estate. soy go into this and a little bit of the book. i think kennedy and wallace were kind of competing for the same voters. in appalachia. george wallace was a piece of work then. [laughter]. hopeful so at the time and 68 when he was campaigning, he could not run for re
reporter quoted a voter in indiana, a white kid, said yes, if you don't like negroes around here veryou much, will kennedy wants to improve life for the negro, why do you think so. he said i don't know, i just do. remember he was the running attorney general sci-fi event that came from the background of law and order andnd i think they saw him as somebody who would balance, a certain balance the interest of communities with law & order. but the anything that was interesting is that in 64,...
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Apr 2, 2020
04/20
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four years later, kennedy ran in indiana and won the primary with 47% of the vote. clearly some who voted for george wallace it also voted for bobby kennedy and 68. by the way i go into george wallace because i think kennedy and wallace were competing for the same voters in appalachia and george wallace was a piece of work. [laughter] so at the time and 68 when he was campaigning he can't run for reelection, he elected governor of alabama and her lien when she had her third child and 61 or 62, the doctor saw some suspicious tissue but told george you need to get this checked out. cancerous. andy has cervical cancer, but george was running for reelection at the time did not want to deal withun that. so it was not until late 67 that she was finally formally diagnosed with cancer and died in march or april of 68 and of course wallace was runningng for president and his three kids went to relatives. not a nice man. but it was fascinating -- george wallace and bobby kennedy, there was definitely overlap in their constituencies. >> i would support that, i grew up in penns
four years later, kennedy ran in indiana and won the primary with 47% of the vote. clearly some who voted for george wallace it also voted for bobby kennedy and 68. by the way i go into george wallace because i think kennedy and wallace were competing for the same voters in appalachia and george wallace was a piece of work. [laughter] so at the time and 68 when he was campaigning he can't run for reelection, he elected governor of alabama and her lien when she had her third child and 61 or 62,...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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garcia had since moved to indiana. so the detective called the indiana state police. >> the indiana tate police came back that day and said we have records of dr. garcia purchasing specifically a smith and wesson sd-9 9 mill neater eimeter shore the murders. >> the magazine you found in the home would fit that weapon? >> yeah. >> now he needed to know whether anthony garcia was in omaha on mother's day 2013. with little to go on, the detective followed the money. >> i wanted to find out where he had active credit cards and banking accounts. >> and he found an answer, a credit card issued to anthony garcia had been used twice in the omaha area on mother's day 2013. the first charge was at around 12:30 p.m. at casey's general store just outside omaha. this is store video of garcia buying beer. the second was two hours later, at a chicken joint in west omaha called the wing stop. the wing stop is about a mile from dr. bewtra's home. >> i was able to get a receipt for that that showed it at 2:26. well, i knew that dr. bewt
garcia had since moved to indiana. so the detective called the indiana state police. >> the indiana tate police came back that day and said we have records of dr. garcia purchasing specifically a smith and wesson sd-9 9 mill neater eimeter shore the murders. >> the magazine you found in the home would fit that weapon? >> yeah. >> now he needed to know whether anthony garcia was in omaha on mother's day 2013. with little to go on, the detective followed the money....
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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as brandy who is an icu nurse in indiana. just one of the heartland states that is struggling now too. i mentioned at the top of the show one of the biggest coronavirus clusters in the country, if not the biggest, this is just discovered in south dakota which is a state where there's still no stay-at-home order. they're not alone. sharing a border is nebraska where there's also no stay-at-home order. hospitals in grand island in central nebraska said yesterday they are filling up and they are starting protocols to ship their patients tout other nebraska hospitals for relief. next to nebraska in south dakota is of course the great state of iowa which also has no stay-at-home order despite having more than 1,800 known cases in the state of iowa. they've got another republican governor there who thinks that's fine. today iowa announced its largest one day spike which was 189 cases in one day driven by 86 new cases associated with one meat plant alone, another meat packing plant. this time it's a tyson pork atlanta in iowa. they'
as brandy who is an icu nurse in indiana. just one of the heartland states that is struggling now too. i mentioned at the top of the show one of the biggest coronavirus clusters in the country, if not the biggest, this is just discovered in south dakota which is a state where there's still no stay-at-home order. they're not alone. sharing a border is nebraska where there's also no stay-at-home order. hospitals in grand island in central nebraska said yesterday they are filling up and they are...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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reporter: about a voter in indiana a white kid. do you support bobby kennedy and he said yeah. >> you don't like very much. kennedy wants to improve -- why the support kennedy? i don't know, just do. he was attorney general so he kind of had that background of law and order and i think people saw him as being somebody who would balance, balance the interests of communities with order. the other thing that was interesting was that in 64 george wallace ram has a democratic presidential candidate in the primary in indiana got something like 2426% of the vote just running him straight out in four years later kennedy ran in indiana and won the primary at 40% of the vote. clearly some of the people who voted for george wallace in 64 voted for bobby kennedy and 68. i think kennedy andn wallace wee kind of competing for the same voters in appalachia. george wallace was a piece of work. at the time in 68 when he was campaigning he could run for re-election so he got his wife and her lean elected governor of alabama and when she had a think
reporter: about a voter in indiana a white kid. do you support bobby kennedy and he said yeah. >> you don't like very much. kennedy wants to improve -- why the support kennedy? i don't know, just do. he was attorney general so he kind of had that background of law and order and i think people saw him as being somebody who would balance, balance the interests of communities with order. the other thing that was interesting was that in 64 george wallace ram has a democratic presidential...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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[laughter] if you grow up in northern indiana and you don't end up at harvard, you might have ended up in notre dame, he's always been an notre dame football fan any choice maintained by coupled even coaches over time, the art that he has chosen is landscape from indiana and from maine where they have a vacation home, he has pictures of himself with william when crist we work for as i mentioned, and he has a picture of henley friendly he was a u.s. a part of a rails for the second court of judge and he had very high regard for, pictures of his children, and of course all the u.s. reports, the bound books eithe are there. you can see different parts of his life play out. but the one thing in his chambers, he has a lot of people coming, about a gas come into his chambers but back when he was a young lawyer, his offices were known for being the devoid between his pictures. we had a colleague by the name david pike, remember david, he would work for illegal trade newspaper and he often said it was so hard to get a feel on john roberts when you dealt with him one-on-one and he interviewed h
[laughter] if you grow up in northern indiana and you don't end up at harvard, you might have ended up in notre dame, he's always been an notre dame football fan any choice maintained by coupled even coaches over time, the art that he has chosen is landscape from indiana and from maine where they have a vacation home, he has pictures of himself with william when crist we work for as i mentioned, and he has a picture of henley friendly he was a u.s. a part of a rails for the second court of...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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. >> reporter: and new hot spots are emerging from indiana -- >> these people might walk in through the emergency department and within an hour they're on life support. >> reporter: -- to missouri >> i've been a nurse for 11 years, and i have to say this is something that i have never seen before. >> reporter: to south dakota where the governor is resisting a stay at home order despite one of the nation's largest pork processing plants shutting down after more than 400 workers got sick >> this plant would have been up and running because it is exempted as an essential business part of our critical infrastructure plan. >> reporter: in new york the curve is flattening but despite assurances there's enough protective gear for medical workers, new york city officials are now asking sports teams for rain ponchos to use as makeshift surgical gowns for a health system still under incredible stress >> in the past two weeks i've probably seen as much death i've seen in the past three years.>> reporter: dr. angelo is a third year er resident at st. barnbus hospital in the bronx where these refrig
. >> reporter: and new hot spots are emerging from indiana -- >> these people might walk in through the emergency department and within an hour they're on life support. >> reporter: -- to missouri >> i've been a nurse for 11 years, and i have to say this is something that i have never seen before. >> reporter: to south dakota where the governor is resisting a stay at home order despite one of the nation's largest pork processing plants shutting down after more than...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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host: karen is in clayton, indiana. caller: hello, and thank you so much for bringing up the idea of public health system. that is comprehensive. i worked for the health department in indiana for a long time and my question is this -- how are the chicago hospitals, the mayor and the governor utilizing your rural health hospitals? i believe the rural health hospitals are all kind of floundering at this point with regulations and lack of equipment, but this would be an opportunity to shore those up for the hundreds of thousands of people in rural areas. host: thank you for caller. -- calling. a couple of callers calling about rural hospitals. guest: it is tough for us to keep up with the rules and regulations and instructions coming out of all of the literature being made, and this is not because people are trying to make it difficult. this is because we are learning about the virus and doing it in real-time. any time we have a substantial preponderance of the evidence that says we need to change something, we need to mak
host: karen is in clayton, indiana. caller: hello, and thank you so much for bringing up the idea of public health system. that is comprehensive. i worked for the health department in indiana for a long time and my question is this -- how are the chicago hospitals, the mayor and the governor utilizing your rural health hospitals? i believe the rural health hospitals are all kind of floundering at this point with regulations and lack of equipment, but this would be an opportunity to shore those...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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tonight i'm working at ius, which is in avon, indiana. it is 5:48 a.m., which means the end of my shift will be soon. the unit i'm working on is normally an eight-bed icu. we are up to, i believe, 24 to 28 beds of intensive care patients. i spent the first three hours of my night, intubating, lining chest tubes and stabilizing a patient that was going to code, but we were able to stabilize her. keep the quarantine going. i know we've been doing it for a long time, and it's easy to get lax. but we keep getting more and more admissions, and these people might walk in through the emergency department, and within an hour, they're on life support. and their ages run from young to old to no comorbidities, meaning they didn't have any medical problems before to having lots of medical problems before. but by the time they get to me, they are -- we're trying really hard to keep them alive. and sadly sometimes they get even sicker. now their kidneys aren't functioning. you know, other organ systems start to fail. keep the quarantine going. this is
tonight i'm working at ius, which is in avon, indiana. it is 5:48 a.m., which means the end of my shift will be soon. the unit i'm working on is normally an eight-bed icu. we are up to, i believe, 24 to 28 beds of intensive care patients. i spent the first three hours of my night, intubating, lining chest tubes and stabilizing a patient that was going to code, but we were able to stabilize her. keep the quarantine going. i know we've been doing it for a long time, and it's easy to get lax. but...
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Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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we're going to check in with a doctor in indiana where the worst of this virus has yet to arrive. it's tough to quit smoking cold turkey. so chantix can help you quit slow turkey. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help right away if you have changes in behavior or thinking, aggression, hostility, depressed mood, suicidal thoughts or actions, seizures, new or worse heart or blood vessel problems, sleepwalking, or life-threatening allergic and skin reactions. decrease alcohol use. use caution driving or operating machinery. tell your doctor if you've had mental health problems. the most common side effect is nausea. talk to your doctor about chantix. subut when we realized she wasn hebattling sensitive skin, the most common side effect is nausea. we switched to new tide plus downy free. it's gentle on her s
we're going to check in with a doctor in indiana where the worst of this virus has yet to arrive. it's tough to quit smoking cold turkey. so chantix can help you quit slow turkey. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix, you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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. >> dana: the president of purdue university in indiana says he's planning for students to get back to campus in the fall. he said smaller classes and mandatory face masks could be part of that plan. produce president mitch daniels joins me know and he's also the former governor of indiana and contribute and call columnist at "the washington post." i wanted to ask you something about your experience as governor. when you try to address things like the dmv and made it more of a customer service thing than a government thing, when you heard the stories like the school district saying they might not even be back until january, how are people supposed to get back to work at their kids aren't back at school? is there something the government can do to think this through a little bit better? >> i think there is and i will not second-guess any decisions made up until now, dana. we have learned a lot in the last few weeks and a lot of it bears on schools, whether it's k-12 or a school like the one where i work. one of the most dramatic findings that we now have seen, and all over the world
. >> dana: the president of purdue university in indiana says he's planning for students to get back to campus in the fall. he said smaller classes and mandatory face masks could be part of that plan. produce president mitch daniels joins me know and he's also the former governor of indiana and contribute and call columnist at "the washington post." i wanted to ask you something about your experience as governor. when you try to address things like the dmv and made it more of a...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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mayor joshua marsh from greensburg, indiana. >>> breaking news from washington, d.c. president trump informed congress that he is removing the inspector general who flagged the ukraine whistleblower complaint which led to the impeachmen impeachment. chairman of the house intelligence committee adam schiff spoke with me. >> he is decapitating the leadership in the middle of the national crisis. it is unconscionable. it sends a message throughout the federal government and particular to other inspector generals if they do their job as this professional did in mike at atkinson, they, too, may be fired by a vindictive president. >> joining me now is nbc news correspondent who brought us the news, ken der erkdelainian. there is no hint of wrongdoing on the part of the inspector general. >> no hint, ali. "the new york times" is quoting that his fate was sealed as soon as the trial ended. what this appears to be is the latest of the long line of retaliatory moves by trump who anyone acting against him. you remember sondland and vindman were both fired in february. nbc news w
mayor joshua marsh from greensburg, indiana. >>> breaking news from washington, d.c. president trump informed congress that he is removing the inspector general who flagged the ukraine whistleblower complaint which led to the impeachmen impeachment. chairman of the house intelligence committee adam schiff spoke with me. >> he is decapitating the leadership in the middle of the national crisis. it is unconscionable. it sends a message throughout the federal government and...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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KPIX
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mary barra said the first batch just rolled off the indiana assembly lines. >> i have to think this is one for the record books. it really is the cooperation between the ventec team, the g.m. teams, the engineering specialists. >> reporter: the virus toll is heavy for essential workers. in new york city at least 59 transportation workers, 23 members of the n.y.p.d., and five members of the f.d.n.y., have succumbed to the virus, including e.m.t. gregory hodge, a 24-year veteran of the department and 9/11 first responder. but 30-year-old daniel spano is evidence the virus does not discriminate. >> i thought i had my son forever. i'm just so devastated. >> reporter: spano was a fitness trainer in perfect health when he got infected. >> he called my parents, and he was like, "i can't, i can't, i can't--" and my mom was like you can't what? and he said, "i can't breathe." at that point my dad went to go to his apartment and on his way called an ambulance for him. >> reporter: he died without any of his family by his side. >> we had to say goodbye to him through an ipad. my brother, my baby
mary barra said the first batch just rolled off the indiana assembly lines. >> i have to think this is one for the record books. it really is the cooperation between the ventec team, the g.m. teams, the engineering specialists. >> reporter: the virus toll is heavy for essential workers. in new york city at least 59 transportation workers, 23 members of the n.y.p.d., and five members of the f.d.n.y., have succumbed to the virus, including e.m.t. gregory hodge, a 24-year veteran of...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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. >> one of the quotes in the book, a reporter asked a voter in indiana, a white kid, do you support bobby kennedy? yes, you don't like negroes around here. i think a lot of people saw kennedy, he was attorney general and he came from a background of law and order and people saw him as someone who would balance the interests of communities with law and order. in 64, george wallace ran and 26% of the vote, a straight a racist candidate, kennedy won in indiana and the primary with 40% of the vote and so many people voted for george wallace in 64, voted for bobby kennedy, i go to george wallace, kennedy and wallace competing for the same voters in appalachia. george wallace was a piece of work. when he was campaigning, and in alabama, when she had their third child in 61-62, the doctor saw some specific tissue, told george you need to get this out, it might be cancerous tissue, cervical cancer. i don't want to deal with that. it wasn't until 67, formally diagnosed with cancer. in 68, chris wallace was running for president, burned out 3 kids to relatives, and a nice man. it was fascinat
. >> one of the quotes in the book, a reporter asked a voter in indiana, a white kid, do you support bobby kennedy? yes, you don't like negroes around here. i think a lot of people saw kennedy, he was attorney general and he came from a background of law and order and people saw him as someone who would balance the interests of communities with law and order. in 64, george wallace ran and 26% of the vote, a straight a racist candidate, kennedy won in indiana and the primary with 40% of...
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Apr 19, 2020
04/20
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FBC
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music plays ] >> i'm jamie colby, and today i'm heading to the annual blueberry festival in plymouth, indiana. it's not exactly the kind of place you'd expect to see a massive california redwood, but this tree rocks because it rolls. >> my name is jamie allen, and, in 1985, when i was 23, my father passed away, and he left me something that his father left him, and it's kept me on the road all my life. >> jamie? >> jamie? >> [ chuckles ] how are you? it's really great to meet you. and how funny we have the same name. let's get started, then. >> all right, here we go. >> this is one serious tree trunk. [ mid-tempo folk music plays ] and the "root" of the story, according to jamie, is in the late 1930s... when her grandfather, james allen, is a lumberjack in northern california. james, a widower with a son in the army, sees redwood trees so massive that several men can easily fit inside the hollowed trunks. one day, during a sudden rain squall, he seeks shelter in the trunk of a giant redwood. that's when it occurs to james that he could actually make a home out of one. >> it was the tail end o
music plays ] >> i'm jamie colby, and today i'm heading to the annual blueberry festival in plymouth, indiana. it's not exactly the kind of place you'd expect to see a massive california redwood, but this tree rocks because it rolls. >> my name is jamie allen, and, in 1985, when i was 23, my father passed away, and he left me something that his father left him, and it's kept me on the road all my life. >> jamie? >> jamie? >> [ chuckles ] how are you? it's really...
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Apr 17, 2020
04/20
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michigan, ohio, wisconsin, minnesota, illinois, indiana and kentucky will coordinate with each other to slowly start easing restrictions. meanwhile the number of jobless americans continues to grow. another 5 million people filed unemployment claims last week. 22 million have now lost their jobs in the last month >>> hundreds of drivers lined up across states in the southeast to take advantage of free or reduced cost food from food banks in georgia to heavily discounted chicken in north carolina while some of these places saw more than a thousand drivers. starbucks preparing to reopen as conditions get lifted. the ceo says they are transitioning to a monitor and adapt phase and may open for to go orders. >>> a hospital suspends ten nurses during the pandemic according to the national nurse's union, they refused to enter rooms with patients being treated with covid-19 without getting n-95 masks they're investigating the incident the nurses are on paid leave >>> mark zuckerberg has put the breaks on any large events until june of 2021 any efforts with 50 or more people will be held vir
michigan, ohio, wisconsin, minnesota, illinois, indiana and kentucky will coordinate with each other to slowly start easing restrictions. meanwhile the number of jobless americans continues to grow. another 5 million people filed unemployment claims last week. 22 million have now lost their jobs in the last month >>> hundreds of drivers lined up across states in the southeast to take advantage of free or reduced cost food from food banks in georgia to heavily discounted chicken in...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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FBC
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mitch daniels has, purdue university president, former governor of indiana joins us now. i want to go through specifics of your plan, governor. it is quite specific. i was reading through it yesterday. how did you come up with it? you must have been talking to a lot of people? what is the process? >> you give us too much credit. we don't have a plan yet. i illustrate ad number of specifics that illustrate a overall strategy or over all intention that we have to resume what we think is essential part of a high-quality education which is the on-campus experience. we're not wedded yet to any specific steps and don't pretend we have all the answers. what we have said is that, we view this as a problem to be tackled if at all possible and if we're going to do it well we got to start now. connell: that is an important distinction because that talks or speaks to the flexibility you have to have or you're saying that you have considering things could obviously change. on the screen i will go through some of the steps that you talked about in your note yesterday. you talked about
mitch daniels has, purdue university president, former governor of indiana joins us now. i want to go through specifics of your plan, governor. it is quite specific. i was reading through it yesterday. how did you come up with it? you must have been talking to a lot of people? what is the process? >> you give us too much credit. we don't have a plan yet. i illustrate ad number of specifics that illustrate a overall strategy or over all intention that we have to resume what we think is...
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Apr 8, 2020
04/20
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aaron krairl, a pediatrician at the indiana university school of medicine. doctor, because we're trying to take an accounting of different areas in the country, let me first ask you how your institution, how your state of indiana is doing? we see your former governor now, the vice president with a blizzard of numbers and reassurances every day at the white house briefing. i'm wondering what it's like on the ground? >> like everywhere, we're concerned that there could be a surge that could overwhelm the health care system. we were able to put some shelter-in-place orders in before a lot of things got really bad. we've seen a much slower increase. that, of course, means our peak will probably come later, but it should be more manage lk. there are differences around the state of how well people are complying with shelter-in-place, how well the essential workers are being defined. in general, it feels like there's been enough done and things are in hand. of course, time will tell in the next few weeks. >> there are a lot of concerns about rural hospitals and pla
aaron krairl, a pediatrician at the indiana university school of medicine. doctor, because we're trying to take an accounting of different areas in the country, let me first ask you how your institution, how your state of indiana is doing? we see your former governor now, the vice president with a blizzard of numbers and reassurances every day at the white house briefing. i'm wondering what it's like on the ground? >> like everywhere, we're concerned that there could be a surge that could...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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mayor martin, what about in -- in indiana? you spoke to tyson foods a month ago about how to prevent the spread of coronavirus. but, clearly, that was not enough. >> yeah, you know, we're in an unprecedented time. you know, it's not something that you want to happen and it's not something that you can prepare for. and so you can't -- i don't think we can really point the finger at anybody in this situation. a month ago, when tyson was explaining what they were doing, it looked like it was going to be okay. but, again, unprecedented time, so you're going to see, you know, certain things that are going to come about and we're seeing that all across the world. you know, you can't plan for some things. you know, you can be proactive but, eventually, something's going to come about and you just got to be able to be that leader and react in the right way, at that time. >> did you discuss potentially closing the plant on that -- on that phone call? >> we had talked about working with the county health department. so the health depart
mayor martin, what about in -- in indiana? you spoke to tyson foods a month ago about how to prevent the spread of coronavirus. but, clearly, that was not enough. >> yeah, you know, we're in an unprecedented time. you know, it's not something that you want to happen and it's not something that you can prepare for. and so you can't -- i don't think we can really point the finger at anybody in this situation. a month ago, when tyson was explaining what they were doing, it looked like it was...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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john indiana. jeff? >> and they're still doing it. perhaps you see the guys over thoverthe shoulder, a parking lt filled with cars with illinois plates on it that's because indiana never shut its golf courses down. but a lot of states did and right now, even now, if you look on a map, you will see about a dozen states that still forbid golf. he can't get out there, even the golfers say this is a sport that is actually made for social distancing. you hit your ball, you go up in the middle of nowhere somewhere and it's not a problem. in fact, one of the golf course owners in illinois said hey come on then he put his quote up there. he says it more succinctly than i can that this is a sport that in some ways is very few people on a lot of acres out there. and they do follow social distancing guidelines. in fact, we've observed the folks here today and everybody -- i've talked to several golfers who say listen, we don't want to try to get around the guidelines. it's not like we are not afraid of coronavirus but we keep apart, we don't tou
john indiana. jeff? >> and they're still doing it. perhaps you see the guys over thoverthe shoulder, a parking lt filled with cars with illinois plates on it that's because indiana never shut its golf courses down. but a lot of states did and right now, even now, if you look on a map, you will see about a dozen states that still forbid golf. he can't get out there, even the golfers say this is a sport that is actually made for social distancing. you hit your ball, you go up in the middle...
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Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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wheen while in indiana nearly 100,000 people are without power after another tornado ripped through the area causing significant damage to several buildings. there are also several reports of power lines and trees down. >> going to be a tough morning for them let's see how it's longing for the rest of the day. >> good morning. it has been a very busy evening and weir going to continue to watch the severe weather threat now for the carolinas. the squall line continues to make its way across that area, even west virginia this is a very strong cold front making its way across the central u.s. also a heightened awareness for central texas this afternoon from houston all the way to bay city, the coastal areas of texas, 39 million under that severe weather risk. also plenty of snow for the higher elevations of new york city all t wheayntinue to builds going to start with the severe weather. >> still to come -- >> watch for your severe weather outbreak and also an update on flattening the curve coming up >> still to come, markets brace for another unemployment record. >> and inside the effort
wheen while in indiana nearly 100,000 people are without power after another tornado ripped through the area causing significant damage to several buildings. there are also several reports of power lines and trees down. >> going to be a tough morning for them let's see how it's longing for the rest of the day. >> good morning. it has been a very busy evening and weir going to continue to watch the severe weather threat now for the carolinas. the squall line continues to make its way...