setback the top two stories to in consideration of views of our neighbor to the west who is completely in support of this project. here you can see from the rear of the project this is where we started. we since removed the roof top penthouse with elevator and the pits in order to preserve the views of the roof top for the neighbor. it was important to retain accessibility to the area and my parents are elderly and one is wheelchair bound and this was a concession in the attempts that we gave concession to the neighbor by removing the top portions of the building and the front of the building. we ve done this our building actually is not as tall as the neighbor s building nor as large. i will simply say that here s a good picture of the top of the hill which our building sits at. this is in the neighbor s building and our building here. if you consider that on a horizontal level field the neighbor s building is much taller than ours. it s a 4,000 square foot building. we ar
during world war ii. it starts at 8:00 eastern with real america and a documentary and the living conditions. at 8:20, lekctures in history with a course on how the press handled the japanese interment and american artifacts takes you through the japanese american national museum and at 9:55, oral history with normen manetta. here are some of our featured programs for this weekend on the cspan networks. saturday morning starting at 10:00 a.m. eastern live on cspan, our nation s governors get together to discuss issues affecting their states. guests include danny meier and maria bartarmo of fox business news and on sunday we continue the meeting, featured speakers include jay johnson and gina mccarthy. on cspan 2, saturday, book tv is on the road, appearancing the literalry life of greensboro. and sunday at 9:00 p.m. eastern, wes moore we re traces his career choices from combat veteran to white house fellow, wall street banker to social entrepreneur to find his life s purpo
[inaudible conversations] hi, everyone. i would like to welcome you. thank you so much for coming. we are excited to have jon ronson here with us tonight, journalistst, documentary filmmaker and best-selling author. he cowrote the screenplay. and his writing has appeared in many places including the guardian, the new york times, gq, and others. we are excited to have him here. without further ado, please join me in welcoming. [applause] high. thank you for coming. the story of the worst thing i ever did. it is not in the book. my wife like a special occasion. i. my work chooses the very worst things for special occasions. a surprise we can do is part even though she knows i don t like being touched. as i was being massaged trying to make polite conversation i can t think of anything but my childhood. most people were sexually abused. i said, well i remember that. waiting ages. tonight he glances. suddenly the soup came. i began began to eat it ravenously. john, see the
corporate funding is provided by mutual of america designing customized individual and group retirement products. that s why we are your retirement company. additional support is provided by: and by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. from the tisch wnet studios in lincoln center in new york, hari sreenivasan. sreenivasan: good evening. thanks for joining us. president obama met with rule, the first meeting of its kind in more than 50 years and the latest in a series of developments pointing towards a normalization of relations between the two countries this after a widely photographed handshake last night and a phone call between the two men earlier in the week. the newshour s william brangham has more. reporter: at the summit of the americas meeting today in panama, both president obama and cuban president raul castro hailed the recent improvements in relations between their two long-estra
this is the cbs evening news. axelrod: good evening. i m jim axelrod. we begin tonight in nepal where the police say more than 1,000 people are dead after the worst earthquake there in more than 80 years. the quake hit nepal, a small impoverished nation sandwiched between india and tibet in the himalayan mountains, around noon today. to give you a sense of just how strong this earthquake was the magnitude of 7.8 makes it 16 times more powerful than the earthquake that devastated haiti in 2010. mount everest is in 53 nepal, and the quake caused a deadly avalanche at the climbers base camp. tens of thousands of people in nepal are now spending a chilly stormy night out in the open. here s charlie d agata. reporter: it was just after noon when the killer earthquake struck and triggered chaos on the streets of the capital kathmandu. brick by brick, rescuers raced against time in a desperate search for survivors and any sign of life. but throughout the day, the death toll k