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FOX News Sunday

temperature and do what's best for the american people, and you do that by working. to. shannon: on this day, democrat john with hickenlooper joined them on the courts. >> when i first came to the senate, i thought it was going to be all hardball but, of course, pickleball's a softball. >> the father of pickle ball even once served in the halls of congress. its creation in 1965 by joel pritchard who was then serving in the washington state senate and was later elected to the u.s. house had the goal of curing summer boredom. steve value januaries and maya ben david are cofound possessor of the d.c. pickleball league. they explain why this is the nation 's fastest growing sport. >> you can play as slow or fast as you want. it's so social, and it really breaks any, you know, different socioeconomic backgrounds. it's really fun. shannon: san the game really took off during the pandemic. >> when covid hit and everybody went outside, simultaneously all

People , Shannon-bream , Democrats , Courts , Washington-state-senate , Temperature , Hardball , John , Hickenlooper , U-s- , House , U-s-congress

FOX News Sunday

temperature and do what's best for the american people, and you do that by working. to. shannon: on this day, democrat john with hickenlooper joined them on the courts. >> when i first came to the senate, i thought it was going to be all hardball but, of course, pickleball's a softball. >> the father of pickle ball even once served in the halls of congress. its creation in 1965 by joel pritchard who was then serving in the washington state senate and was later elected to the u.s. house had the goal of curing summer boredom. steve value januaries and maya ben david are cofound possessor of the d.c. pickleball league. they explain why this is the nation 's fastest growing sport. >> you can play as slow or fast as you want. it's so social, and it really breaks any, you know, different socioeconomic backgrounds. it's really fun. shannon: san the game really took off during the pandemic. >> when covid hit and everybody went outside, simultaneously all

People , Shannon-bream , Democrats , Courts , Course , Pickleball-court , Washington-state-senate , Temperature , Softball , Hardball , John , Hickenlooper

The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer

continues, thieves or illegally making off with what water is left in the lake, water i'm not making that up in our money lead a ceremony here in washington today mark the release of a new quarter. the reverse sayyed, honoring former hawaii congresswoman patsy tukey modo make, congressman patsy mink, the first woman of color clerk ever elected to the house of representatives. it was in 1965. during her time in congress, congresswoman make promoted women's equality in education and in athletics she died in 2002, the year that caitlin clark was born in are things you don't see every day lead. how about an elephant roaming the streets of butte montana evil knievel's. sure. but an elephant there's a circus in town and viola, the elephant apparently got spooked by a car backfiring and she was being washed in the civic center parking lot and as is viola

Water , Lead , Money , Release , Lake , Ceremony , Thieves , Washington-today-mark , Congressman , House-of-representatives , Honoring-former-hawaii-congresswoman , Color

CBS Evening News With Norah ODonnell

glory hallelujah! glory, hallelujah, glory hallelujah, this truth is marching on. [applause] >> norah: that's dr. martin luther king jr. from 1965. and that's tonight "cbs . thank you very much, we are following breaking news in san francisco where a large tree crashed down on multiple cars. >> i can see the eucalyptus tree and the light post crashing down on our car, we were lucky. >> drivers were shaken. we go live to the scene where firefighters say it could have been much worse. heavy hearts as we mark 100 days of war between israel and hamas. >> i think about them in the morning and i think about them before i go to bed. >> how one bay area man is

Norah , Truth , Glory , Marching-on , Glory-hallelujah , Hallelujah , Applause , Jr , Cbs , Martin-luther-king-junior , Dr , Breaking-news

CNN This Morning

CNN This Morning
vimarsana.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vimarsana.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Caucuses , Iowans , America , Life , Jr , First , Nation , Martin-luther-king , Country , Part , Voting , U-s-supreme-court

Morning Joe

that, as the rev said, martin luther king, not popular in the final years of his life. he was seen as too radical by white america. he was seen as too passive and conservative with a small "c" by large segments of black america. he was despised by those who wanted to use violence to push civil rights. and -- who is talking in the studio there? >> i don't know. >> could you ask them to stop talking? >> okay. they heard you. >> here you have, what is remarkable, in 1965 -- 1964 and 1965, we had the second american revolution. as jon meacham says so beautifully and so eloquently, for the first time in american history, the laws of this land actually allowed black americans, the civil rights and the voting rights they had been

Martin-luther-king-iii , Rev , Life , Conservative , White-america , C , Rights , Violence , Black-america , I-don-t-know , Studio , Segments

Morning Joe

1964 and 1965, we had a second american revolution. as jon meacham said so beautifully and so eloquently, for the first time in american history, the laws of this land actually allowed black americans civil rights and the voting rights that they'd been stripped from for so long. and even three years later, people were pushing martin luther king, one of the most transformative figures in american history, certainly, the 20th century, to go even further. and push for violence. he did not do it. and he changed the world in a way very few have. just a remarkable time, important to remember martin luther king and very important for americans, especially this year, when american democracy is on the line. and the rights of black

1964 , 1965 , Three , One , 20 ,

Morning Joe

race and these red hot issues, abortion, cultural issues, because it is core to understanding politics and why voters feel the way they do now. >> we have to go to break. jon, if you could just quickly for us -- i know you can't. but if you could very quickly on martin luther king, jr. day, can you talk once again about the extraordinary historic dominos that fell in 1963 with the march on washington, 1964 with the civil rights act, 1965 with the voting rights act, and talk about how that was the first time that america really got to a point where the promises of

1965 , 1963 , 1964 ,

Morning Joe

the declaration of independence, the promises of the constitution of the united states, the promises of the emancipation proclamation and, yes, the 14th amendment, those promises actually took legislative form. >> sure. it absolutely connects to what we're talking about. there's a big debate in 1619. i would argue that the america in which we live was founded in 1965 as the culmination of the civil rights act, the voting rights act, the immigration act in many ways created the country we live in.

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Deadline White House

right? and so we have to be very, very deliberate in this. and let's be clear. there was negotiation, ali. it happened in 1876 with the rutherford b. hayes compromise. and from 1876 to 1954 we lived in an ethnonationalist state. we've only been a multiracial democracy since 1965. let's be clear. 1965. i was born in 1968. so the data matthew just laid out bears true when it comes to the history of the country. and so part of what we have to do is to be very honest and direct in how we describe the moment. and we have to be clear. what liz cheney did, what we need to do with marjorie taylor greene, is what we need to do with our family members. oftentimes we know they hold noxious views but we want to keep them close because we love them. but we have to call this stuff out or we're going to fall face

Ali-velshi , Negotiation , Compromise , Rutherford-b-hayes , 1954 , 1876 , Operation-saving-democracy , Data , Ethnonationalist-state , Matthew , 1965 , 1968