Have you ever sat down for a meal maybe a holiday meal and had something you loved maybe, pumpkin pie but wondered how put the right ingredients together, threw them in the oven, and made something delicious? If anyone knows where to find the answer, it's Juli McCloone, curator of the Janice Bluestein Longone Culinary Archive at the University of Michigan Library. Juli joins "creative:impact" host Deb Polich to talk about the history of food.
are probably paper. steve: the solution would be obviously for mcdonald s to start baking bread because that was the exception hates idea unions love it their people $22 an hour more money for the workers. ainsley: just fire more people to spread out the costs that they have been paying all this time and pass on the extra costs to the customer. brian: or automation. you walk, in hit a button and a robot or a rumba will deliver your fries. steve: roomba. brian: the rumba takes forever. steve: some guidances over with a burger. brian: i came up in dance so that s still on my mind. ainsley: too slow we need to make them faster. sitting there watching your meal on the other side of the dining room, come on. ainsley: your dogs shed a lot do you have them.
but the girls can t go to school. we ve been to schools here that are all closed. we have just told them for the time being they should not come to office and school so in that time we can come out with some sort of solution. reporter: even the youngest understands something is not right. 10-year-old aziza complains about having to stay home all day. we just do housework, cleaning, baking bread, and sweeping the floors, she says. i love my work. it s my right to work, and i need to work because i got education in this country, and the government spent money on me, and even my family, and i want to express myself to my society. reporter: brave then, brave now. only now, after more than two decades of progress for their wives, their daughter, and their family incomes, so many more afghan men support them. haji noor ama tells us not even 1% of afghan people are against
pledging to deliver a thousand take missiles and anti- stingray craft missiles those weapons have been used to slow the russian advances we have seen a putin s work here in ukraine. now, a curfew has just been put into effect here in lviv or just a week ago the students were out today they are inside nervous, very scared others wondering should they flee? arthel. arthel: it cannot even imagine trying to get provisions if they were able to get enough before they hunkered down? that is a great point, arthel purchased yesterday which will grocery store here. remember for days and weeks were reporting how there s no panic in this country the shelves were full at all of the stores pretty much different story here today. we went yesterday, there s no bottled water on the shelves. most of the canned goods were gone pray things like toilet paper all the essentials you think if you are going to hunker down, though supplies were all missing there so people baking bread. there was some fruit an
and we have written the letters to the embassy in europe, they re ready to see us, but here comes the second problem, sergei sunday 60 years old and no men can leave the country, so we re here, and for how long, we have absolutely no idea, and we really have absolutely no bread, we are baking bread. sorry to interrupt, just on that, what level of communication are you able to have with officials in the united states, is there any suggestion from the u.s. saying that could be some assistance to get you out of the country a 1-month-old baby, in kyiv, at a time like this. sergei is a green card holder and a citizen of ukraine and technically not we called the state department and there is a hot line there, and unfortunately, they were not able to really