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Dateline

nathan and denise leuthold had met years earlier back in the 80s when they were both students at a small baptist school in central illinois. even at that young age, nathan knew there was something to the sparkling little girl. >> i was in third grade, and she was in fourth grade at the time and i doubt she even knew i existed but even then, i thought she was the cutest girl in the school. >> what was it you liked about her so much? >> it was the bouncy curls in the happy-go-lucky smile. junior high, i began to see her character, the kind of person she was that way. >> it was in high school that nathan and denise got to know each other better though they did not date, as most teens do, because they both came from religious families. >> our parents did not believe in dating. i went to her church activities

Denise-leuthold , Lithuanian-student-nathan , Something , Students , School , Girl , Age , Grade , Fourth-grade , Central-illinois , Baptist , Little-girl

Dateline

>> the judge sentenced nathan to 80 years in prison saying how same -- shameful it was nathan killed denise in her own home. >> such an ugly -- it seems only appropriate you will likely end your life in a different type of place. cold and gray and isolative. >> for the state, it was a satisfying ending to a case they have to painstakingly stitched together. >> i think he tried to portray this image of a wonderful person but in reality he was nothing more than a cold- blooded killer. >> as for denise's parents, they are still hurting from such a sudden loss. at least they have her children close as they are raising them. how did you tell them their father killed their mother? >> they knew he was on trial for murdering their mother and a jury had convicted him. right

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Oleksandr Zinchenko

which lost their parents during the war and also, you know, for those who lost one of the family members as well. they started with one building. now they're growing quite big, quite a lot, i mean, and they have, i guess, six buildings, also one hospital, which is trying to treat the kids which are struggling with their health. and i'm trying to help as much as i can, you know, every single time. and i'm talking to them, knowing the real numbers — when i ask her how many kids you have at the moment, and she said, like, 300 kids and 80% of them is below five, which don't have parents anymore because of the war, and it's super tough to accept, to be honest. you've got kids of your own under five. exactly. being a dad, it's something like... anything involved with the kids, for me, it's super tough.

War , Lot , Parents , Building , One , Family-members , Buildings , Six , Kids , Health , Hospital , Don-t

Breakfast

way to go to match the drama of the weekend's first scottish cup semi final when it was a hart who both missed and saved a penalty in celtic�*s win over aberdeen. chris mclaughlin reports. in the glorious glasgow sunshine there was plenty of pre— match optimism. but there was one clear favourite, celtic under brendan rodgers have never lost a scottish cup match. but afterjust two months minutes, they switched at the back and they did the rest. celtic stunned, aberdeen and up, the lead did not last long aberdeen with your own defence of fellow. they could not quite capitalise. as the game swung from end to end the chances kept coming, took hour for celtic to turn to their own bench and it paid off with james forrest on his four 80th appearance for the club showing why he is still a huge fan favourite. the holders now in control. aberdeen levelled with

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Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg

20 largest economies to have parked our emissions and we've done that in a sensible and pragmatic way and we want to keep doing that and we've seen the economy grow by 80% and we've been protecting household finances. , ., , finances. deborah says the conservatives _ finances. deborah says the conservatives and - finances. deborah says the conservatives and labour. finances. deborah says the - conservatives and labour need to commit to a net zero, it's far too important not to. david says we cannot rely on renewables solely, the sun does not always shine on the wind does not always blow. let's have a final word with the panel. the investigations into mps. layla moran, there is a story about one of your colleagues paying thousands of pounds to party officials to do work on her behalf in the constituency stop do you think yours are entitled to look at what happens and think who are these people? irate what happens and think who are these --eole? ~ . what happens and think who are these neale? . ., what happens and think who are these --eole?~ . ,. , what happens and think who are these n-eole?. ., ,. , , people? we all welcome scrutiny but are colleagues _

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Morning Joe Weekend

we are surrounded by allies we don't know we have because folks don't talk about it enough coming at it from a politically charged word of climate change, alienate people. you connect over your favorite hiking trail or a fishing hole or the way you build your community in a more sustainable way. what if our kids went to school on electric school buses so we didn't have to breathe these diesel fumes? dr. king didn't say, i have a nightmare. people were living the nightmare. not enough of us talk about the dream of building a more clear and sustainable world and the tools are readily available right now. >> you write about your children in this book. we all have children. i have grandchildren. and yet, there is concern among the young more than middle-aged people about climate and everything like that. generally speaking, in the larger world, people don't go around really believing. i mean we just lead with a story about the ocean warming and coral reefs disappearing. we see it every day.

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FOX and Friends Sunday

whether it cost him the speakership but it heads to the senate. two senators on the show this morning who will be voting on that probably as early as tuesday and see what they think about what the house sent back over. kayleigh: mike johnson wanted to distinguish this from the funding that passed he said we made it better in the house and 80% is replenishing american arms he said there's a lone mechanism to this how does this defer in terms of the accountability that what senate did. >> 9 billion dollars or so that would have strict controls on it he promises there are ways that it is going to be tracked so he says there are some conservative priorities that were built that are different from the senate so see if it is so different that it cost votes or loses votes in the senate. but you know there's plenty of skepticism you have jd vance out there who wrote a piece in "the new york times" saying we have to level with the american

Senate , Kayleigh , Senators , Voting , Morning , White-house , Show , Mike-johnson , Two , Funding , Arms , Terms

Forensic Files II

which was not left at any of the crime scenes. police in huntsville, texas, were confronting something they'd never seen before. when this case dropped, serial killer wasn't something that came to my mind. burrough: the idea that there was a serial killer in some small texas town, as one of the police said to me, you know, "you might as well tell me there was some nuclear terrorist on the south side of our town making a nuclear bomb before i'd be thinking that there was a serial killer." narrator: corwin served just 9 years of a 40-year sentence for the attempted murder of his high-school classmate. and you say, "well, what gives? this is texas. isn't texas supposed to be super tough on offenders?" well, yes and no. back in the '80s, the problem that texas had was it was growing incredibly rapidly, and with the growth in people came a growth in prisoners. as a result, not only were texas prisons incredibly crowded, but there was immense pressure to get them -- as they said --

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FOX and Friends Sunday

kayleigh: deep psychoanalysis. will: neocons were conservative. pete: they were but then neocons now retired back to instincts utopians. will: the movement was converted conservatives to the 70s and 80s when it happened. pete: crystals that's where it whatted. anyway. kayleigh: interesting stuff. pete: it devolved. kayleigh: yesterday 12 years since columbine shooting and honored his daughter's legacy with a remarkable organization that saves lives . he joins us next. (thinking: eddie, no frasier, frank... frank?) fred! how are you?! fred... fuel up to 7 brain health indicators,

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Velshi

earning in minutes. and we've never had inequality at this level, and it is as bad in the food system as anywhere. and these people are doing essential work for us. they are feeding us. what could be more fundamental, and yet we don't show our appreciation. >> eric, want to talk about consolidation in this industry. the number of companies, a very big effort, something i learned in the film is that the food industry spends more on lobbying than the defense industry. four companies control 85% of beef processing, three companies control 83% of cold cereal, two companies control 70% of sodas, two companies control 80% of baby formula, which we learned about during the pandemic, all the sudden why there's no baby formula on the shelves and you learn it is not a secure, robust system.

People , Level , United-states , Inequality , Food-system , Anywhere , Essential-work , Companies , Number , Eric-schlosser , Consolidation , Industry