Missing. The daiichi power plant spread Nuclear Materials over a wide area. One of the worst in history. People in northeast starting the day by remembering those they lost. The tsunami killed nearly 200 people sendai and its hard when i think too much about the disaster, but we shouldnt forget the thoughts of the people in myakao joined a drill in the early morning, preparing for a disaster for one similar that happened five years ago. They practiced evacuating to designated areas. Translator the tears rolled down my face as i recalled that day. During the drill, i had the same enormous fear that i had then and moved as fast as i could, because i do not want to become a victim. Some Dairy Farmers in the city the fukushima operate this facility it, opened last september, with government funding. Translator i would be really happy if people considered our farm getting on track as a symbol of reconstruction. One of the hardest hit places on the coast of the prefecture, nhk world is there
Forecast. 48 to start. We will go 68 for a high. That should say thursday. Not friday. We do have everything coming down out of the north. There is not much of a breeze. What is there is also ushering in a little bit of rain for the north coast. Thats it. 40 napa airport. Palo alto 42. Mid 40s mill valley, sonoma a little warmer, novato, sebastopol 36. Warmer temps. Cool this morning. A few 30s. Lots of upper 60s to a few low, low 70s. All righty, sal. What do you have . 7 01 for us. Word of a protest, steve, near the apple campus. The new apple headquarters that would be on tan tell drive. Thats the one thats being built. It looks like a big circle from outer space there. So far it is not affecting the freeway, but it may be affecting homestead, wolf road, and some of the other streets nearby. So if you drive on homestead or if you drive on wolf road, you may be affected by this. We have a crew on the way. We will let you know more about it. It wont be too long if, indeed, it grows in
As they struggle for their livelihood less free than they had ever been before. Living within the strains constraints of a new settler society. When i look at and read the transcripts and speeches from those negotiations, evidence suggests they were thinking about us. Their descendents. They were holding onto the idea that in 150 years, there would still be a homeland for people in northern minnesota. And there is. Despite the bad acts and that paper involved in this history, we must always remember that very important fact. I am very pleased to be able to be here to introduce a very distinguished panel. Two of them are fellow historians. Another a law professor, and a tribal chairman. They will each speak to us for about 15 minutes. And then we will have time for questions from the audience. Im going to introduce them , and dispense with the tradition we have a universities of long introductions. [laughter] it is hard for me. Because each of them are deserving of very long introductio
To other people to determine the nature of these. Our wampum belts are never presented in Court Despite the aspiration that the treaties are important. These are replicas are important. Hopefully on november 11, we are going to bring back the real versions because november 11 is the anniversary of the treaty. The nation just sent more vermonters to the white house inviting the president or a designee to come to the commemoration. Stay tuned. If this will have any impact, november 11 will give us an indication. Every year, we gather to recite the terms of the treaty. We invite you there. Hopefully, this exhibition and the wampum lot in philadelphia, this will be the place where we can gather together, gather our minds together, and hopefully come together of one mind on what is the true nature, aspirations, and expectations these treaties provide for all of us. These treaties were made not just for our benefit, but for your benefit as well. I appreciate the time i have had here. I would
Weapons accident in damascus arkansas that occurred in 1980. And i use that story, that narrative as a way of looking at the management of our Nuclear Weapons really since the First Nuclear device was invented in 1945. And i hope to remind readers that these weapons are out there. That theyre still capable of being used and that theres probably no more important thing that our government does and manage them. Because these are the most dangerous machines ever built, and i think the subject has fallen off the radar quite a bit in the cold war. Host lets talk about the story. You were telling the story from the ground up. You chose tying it to missile explosion at so why that particular explosion rather than many other incidents that you can lock in the book . Guest my interest in writing about Nuclear Weapons was sparked by i spent time in the air force. I finished writing my book fast food nation and one of the officers told me as sort of the damascus accident to hed been in a Missile