they said, i don t support the work, it s costing too much money. there was this myth of the british stiff upper lip that s not how it was on the ground at the time. people complain that much the same way they are now about ukraine. and what s happening in russia, the forced evacuation of children from ukraine into russia is a genocide. itjust is, it fulfils the criteria for a genocide, and we are now talking in some of the papers today of the torture of the workers at the zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, russia taking it off the ukrainian electricity grid and putting it on to the russian electricity grid. in an orderfor to the russian electricity grid. in an order for that to happen for safety reasons, they are shelling the plant in order to make the ukrainian grid disconnect, then they have an excuse to run it off the russian grid. this kind of stuff is the kind of thing that does cost a life and is global in its importance. life and is global in its importance. life and is
45 million americans current have $1.6 trillion of debt from their education. those are the headlines. hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the daily mirror columnist, susie boniface and ali miraj, who s a columnist at the article. welcome back to both of you, here s tomorrow s front pages. starting with the sun with its appeal for information over the shooting in liverpool for the sake of olivia, talk. the guardian leads with an exclusive report on russian plans to disconnect europe s largest nuclear plant from ukraine s powergrid, risking a catastrophic failure of its cooling systems. the telegraph reports on a message from prime minister borisjohnson, who asks the public to endure the cost of living crisis to help ukraine win in its war with russia. but the mirror leads with a different plea to freeze our bills ahead of friday s rise in the energy price cap. to the tory leadership race now the times c
U. S. And japanese navies. Leading off is a review of the war in pacific prior to june 1942 then new information about the japanese at the battle. This is live coverage on cspan3. We are pleased and very very proud to be hosting it. I would like to thank our partners that helped put this together. The Hampton Roads Naval Historical Foundation and world war i and world war ii come mem ri commemoration. We couldnt have done it without you. [ cheers and applause ] now, before we get going i do have housekeeping items to pass along. First of all, turn off or silence your cell phones. Keep your programs. We have something of a limited supply of those and please wear your fwbadges throughout the da. Keep in mind we are on cspan so during the q and a use the microphone deployed here on the square. At this time i would like to bring forward my counter part john pentanjelo who will make some remarks, john. [ applause ] thanks, chris. Good morning and welcome. The Hampton Roads naval hue see yum
Batt battle. This talk was part of a day long symposium to mark the battles 75th anniversary. It is about 45 minutes. Were going to kick off our Afternoon Program with a little bit different perspective than some of the things weve been hearing about this morning. We talked a lot this morning about midway from a u. S. Per spect i. Although walt did some talk about the japanese thinking that led them to midway. But we are going to build on that and go a little bit deeper out of the japanese side, specifically the japanese combined fleet and their perspectives because in many ways they are as central to the action. A noted expert on the japanese navy. Hes written numerous publications on various aspects of the naval war in the pacific and should provide illuminating perspective today. Without further adieu, anthony tulley. Thank you all. Thank you for putting this on. Thank you all for coming. Okay. What i would like to do testing. Okay. What i would like to do is i would like to segue i
Batt battle. This talk was part of a day long symposium to mark the battles 75th anniversary. It is about 45 minutes. Were going to kick off our Afternoon Program with a little bit different perspective than some of the things weve been hearing about this morning. We talked a lot this morning about midway from a u. S. Per spect i. Although walt did some talk about the japanese thinking that led them to midway. But we are going to build on that and go a little bit deeper out of the japanese side, specifically the japanese combined fleet and their perspectives because in many ways they are as central to the action. A noted expert on the japanese navy. Hes written numerous publications on various aspects of the naval war in the pacific and should provide illuminating perspective today. Without further adieu, anthony tulley. Thank you all. Thank you for putting this on. Thank you all for coming. Okay. What i would like to do testing. Okay. What i would like to do is i would like to segue i