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Our first speaker this morning comes to us from the macarthur memorial in a norfolk, virginia. When i was there visiting this spring. It was my first opportunity to get it down and visit. He said the only thing that is equitable for the type of thing he is overseeing would be a president ial library. That stunned me a little bit. That is a significant thing. If you think about what Douglas Macarthur did during world war ii, afterwards in korea, he really shaped the face of the pacific in a way that no one else has. That repository of documents and memorabilia and artifacts is really a significant component of the 20thcentury. Chris kolakowski is the caretaker of that. It was really quite a remarkable shift for me, as i understood what chris is up to down there. But thats his day job. By night, he is still in love with the american civil war. He got started in fredericksburg in spotsylvania. He has since gone on to perryville, w ....
Cities across the country, exploring American History. A look at our visit to santa rosa, california. Youre watching American History tv, all we can, every weekend on cspan3. We looked in the north. Such a huge black cloud. It looked like smoke out of a train or something. We ran into the storm house because we thought it might be storming. We had to tie wet rags over our mouths just to keep from smothering. The oldtimers said they had never seen nothing like that. Our house was sealed, but that dust came through somehow. Even the stucco houses. You had to mop real good when it was over. You just couldnt get it out no other way. Lynn today we will be looking at our dust bowl migration archives, which we have had since 1994 materials gathered beginning in 1974, primarily by gerald haslam. He received dozens of letters offering to provide him with material. He also gathered ....
Threat. We were off about 160 points. You could see opening down under pressure. Stocks down. It seems like they are now trading in direct correlation with oil. We just added inventory numbers. Inventory went up 1. 5 billion barrels. This hour we have mary kissel from the wall street journal. We talk about the benefits. There are some things to be worried about when oil starts to crash. You remember when you said you cannot just drill out our way to lower gas prices. There are no quick fixes or silver bullets. I am seeing a lot of upside from this, charles. It was associated with massive pullbacks. This is different this time. The way america produces its oil and gas. This is a technological step up. This is something that will happen over a period of years. I am not saying that we will not see the price go back up, you will see that play out over a period of years. Charles i got a report. It went down month over month. Pulling back a little bit on this drilling miracle. This is where ....
Brown from malaysia, special correspondent Steve Sapienza reports on the social and environmental costs of harvesting palm oil, found in products ranging from cookies to cosmetics. One big reason the oil is so cheap to produce is the steady supply of migrant labor. It relies on 500,000 global workers to feed demand for the product and fuel malaysias economic prosperity. Woodruff ray suarez talks with journalist Phil Bronstein about his profile of the navy seal credited with shooting osama bin laden. He talks about going in the room, rolling in the room as he puts it and being kind of shocked at how tall bin laden was and having to raise his gun up to shoot him. Brown we get closing thoughts about the president s speech tonight from mark shields and david brooks. Thats all ahead on tonights brown and we get some closing thoughts about the president s speech tonight from mark s ....