agency. we will go in-depth with congresswoman madeleine dean, ahead. the search is over, an alabama woman who vanished after calling 9-1-1 about a toddler on the interstate is found alive overnight. the new questions about the mysterious disappearance a little later in a live report. i am jonathan capehart. this is an extended edition of the sunday show. this afternoon, candidates for the 2024 republican presidential nomination will appear at day two of one of the largest gatherings of young conservatives and the country. miami mayor francis suarez, and former arkansas governor asa hutchison will take the stage at the turning point action conference in west palm beach, florida, to rally supporters and try to boost their single-engine poll numbers, to help their chances of getting on the debate stage next month. but once again, donald trump, the only candidate running while dealing with two criminal indictments, and possibly more in the pipeline, is sucking all the ox
california, one of the few places to escape the punishing heat. while in europe, blistering temperatures bear down as tourists try to keep cool. tonight, vanished. the mystery surrounding a missing woman from alabama. she called 911 to report a toddler wandering alone then she disappeared. plus, new york s serial killer suspect held without bail. what we re learning about the man accused of murdering at least three women and burying their bodies at the beach. kratom controversy, a popular herbal supplement that critics say can kill. hardships and heroics. the negro leagues and their impact on amererica, far from t baseball field. just amazing the trials an tribulations they had to go through just to play the game they loved. and later, dream on. you know the odds but you re probably lining up anyway for a crack at obscene lottery jackpots, more than a billion dollars combined. this could be your night. i d do it for the heck of it, but people do win. people do
politicsnation. ten nights lead, the showdowns to come. culture or politics have consumed the republican party as we approach an election year. threatening the legislative agenda in congress in the house speaker kevin mccarthy s concessions to the hard right flank of his caucus have led to the passage of a military spending bill. bogged down with amendments targeting diversity programs and lgbtq protections. in the meantime, alabama senator tommy tuberville is holding up dozens of military appointments over the pentagon s abortion policies. some colleagues are warning the blockade could endanger national security. against that backdrop, a potential government shutdown. the showdown looms and the first presidential caucus of 2024 is just six months away. delaware congresswoman lisa rochester joins me shortly to talk about all of it. plus, the phony war on critical race theory is still raging in state houses. and on school boards across the country one of the intellectual archi
In 1985 was exactly 15 years after the largest student strike in america, which you just saw the statistics about there were 700 colleges close it down, 2. 5 Million Students went on strike after kent state and the invasion of cambodia. No one took finals and yet i graduated 15 years later to the middle of the reagan administration. A few of us went to battle on the streets against apartheid in trying to get harvard to divest, but otherwise it was very quiet. All of my friends went off to work at wall street and i just knew that my life was different because of what had happened in the 60s and i was free to choose any career i wanted and living a life i wanted to lead, but i really wanted to know what it was about this revolution in the late 60s that i had missed and how that activism, that awakened generations had changed my generation and all of the generations to follow. I also thought it was a good time to go back and with history i think you are allowed to go back every decade or
Explosion the journalist contends it both major parties are turning elections into a circus of populous ideas and historian Nancy Isenberg provides a history of class in america in white trash. Thats a look at the books the New York Times has suggested to help understand the 2016 president ial election. Many of these authors have or will appear on book tv. You can watch them on our website, book tv. Org cspan, where history unfolded daily. In 1979, cspan wass created as a Public Service by americas cabletelevision companies and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. Sebastian mallaby discusses the life of former Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan in his book, the man who knew. Hes interviewed by alice rivlin. Sebastian, welcome. Im delighted to do this and i think its a fabulous book. I have known Alan Greenspan for many many years and we worked together closely when i was his vice chair and hes a complicated man and these are complicated times and i think you g