[applause] well, thank you and welcome everyone to a very exciting day for the inaugural launch of our project called chinese handcuffs. In case you didnt pick one up on your way and we had these for everybody on the way out, which has become the emblem of this project. The socalled childs game in which you voluntarily immobilize yourself. This is one product that actually was made in china but i look for one that was made in china. Because i think it is critical for us to start to recognize what we are doing to ourselves, visavis u. S. Energy security and advocating our Energy Security voluntarily to china in the name of climate. They are doing this and highly predatory deliberate campaign to overtake us in energy and make us dependent on them. The good news is that we can write the ship and reverse this if we take it seriously. So today the first panel which discusses the Chinese Campaign we are very pleased to publish their guard many, many people at heritage i would like to thank,
Protests continue to spread to College Campuses across the nation, the Speaker Of The House expresses support to jewish students at Columbia University. Officials there say they are making progress in conversations with protest leaders. Correspondent Steve Harrigan is on the columbia campus for us tonight. Good evening, steve. Steve good evening, shannon. The Speaker Of The House warned the protesters here today that calling out the National Guard was a real possibility. Neither israel, nor these jewish students on this campus will ever stand alone. House Speaker Mike Johnson met with jewish students at Columbia University, adding to the growing calls for University President shafik to step down. We cant allow this hatred and antisemitism to flourish on our campuses and it must be stopped in its tracks. The clock is ticking as tuesdays midnight deadline to dismantle the tenths on campus came and went. The University Says its making progress and extended talks with Student Negotiators f
Its a campus of structures that sit on about 40 acres, and it is a village setting in many respects. But within that village, every structure houses an amazing collection. In 1947, amassed an amazing collection that the Shelburne Museum houses amongst 39 buildings. Its a plethora of objects and collections within collections, from impressionist art to weathervanes to Cigar Store Indians and one of the largest objects she collected, which was steamboat, which applied the waters of Lake Champlain from 19 61953. As i said, int, 1906, which you can look at as the cost or the changeover from spe steam era the cu from the steam era to the internal combustion engine. She was one of 29 steamers built on the lake and she was the last one. She basically operated on Lake Champlain as a day boat. Long,ke is over 125 miles but the ticonderoga ran from the vermont shoreline to the new new yorkne shoreline. Her homeport was burlington, vermont. The passages were about an hour or an hour and a half, b
Up next on American History tv, a Panel Discusses the textual tradition of the declaration of independence. Including how it reflects the times to which it was written and the newer reproductions that followed the original. Panelists include historic document dealer and the editor of the papers of Thomas Jefferson. Among the questions they examine is how punctuation influences how the declaration is read and interpreted. The National Archives hosted this event. It is about 90 minutes. Ted the declaration. This is 2 hours and 45 minutes. Good morpning, everybody. Its a pleasure to be here. Thank you so much for joining us. I want to start by thanking our hosts, the archives. Its been extraordinary, the way theyve jumped into supporting my effort to bring more attention to the question of how we read the declaration of independence and how we think about the diversity of the declarations textual tradition. We are punctuating happyinesshappiness. Were focused on the second sentence intent
In full swing. Our contractor has finished pouring the foundations for the building, and will start putting up steel in another month. We are right on schedule to open the museum in early 2017. And that was the first of a twopart look at the collections of the museum of the american revolution. In part two, we will see a part of George Washingtons tent from the revolutionary war. Up next on American History tv, a Panel Discusses the textual tradition of the declaration of independence. Including how it reflects the times in which it was written and the newer reproductions that followed the original. Panelists include a historic document dealer and the editor of the papers of Thomas Jefferson. Among the questions they examine is how punctuation influences how the declaration is read and interpreted. The National Archives hosted this event. It is about 90 minutes. And how later generations interpreted the declaration. This is 2 hours and 45 minutes. Good morpning, everybody. Its a pleasu