Jack Ousley Moore, 98 years old, passed peacefully into God’s loving care at home in Houston, Texas, on Saturday, January 23rd, surrounded by family. “Triplets, and All Boys” declared the Brownwood newspaper when Jack was born on December 4, 1922, in Clio, Brown County, Texas. The triplets, Jack, Joe and Jene joined their five other siblings. The Moore family lived far from town, so their father, Lawrence Moore, delivered all three babies, each weighing around eight pounds. Sadly, one of the triplets, Joe, died as a young boy, but the identical twins, Jack and Jene, continued through life as best friends and constant companions. They enrolled in Texas A&M together in 1941 and they enlisted in the army together in December, 1941. Both Jack and Jene became officers and served in the Philippines where Jack became company commander. They attended the famous Aggie Muster on the island of Corregidor on April 21, 1946, and are in the iconic photo of that occasion. After the war, the t
Joe Chinn was 8 years old when the family moved from Huntington to Cleveland, Ohio, in November 1948. Four years later, they returned to Huntington because his father was laid
understood within the political context at the time. meaning, is that president facing the set of challenges that his that he s capable of responding to. lawrence moore, who was the white house physician for ronald reagan and for george h.w. bush. after he got out of the white house he actually put down on paper what he thought were the relevant standards. he said is the president acting appropriately. is he communicating clearly? is he expressing good judgment? those were the kind of measurements he would use to decide whether a president was fit for office or not fit for office. these are the kind of things ultimately the people around president trump will have to decide if they see some deterioration over time. that was a striking element of the piece. we ll have to squeeze in a commercial break here, when we come back i want to talk about the impeachment section of the your article, which is is as important as the 25th amendment, obviously. we ll be right back.
as you surveyed the investigation landscape of multiple investigations in the congress and the fbi investigation. do you have in the back of your mind just kind of a rough notion of the calendar in front of us and when you expect certain investigations to blossom in a way that can reveal more than we now know publicly. well, lawrence, this is purely a guess, now, but i find in my experience that the only way you ll get a timetable that s collapsed in some way and that gets to an answer quickly, is if a lot of this investigation is done first behind closed doors, until the committee knows where they re going to come out or has a good idea and then they start bringing people in for testimony, knowing what they need to find out specifically from those people and in an efficient way, it s less efficient if they have people coming before the committee, one by one at a time and then trying to figure out on the basis of
because gay rights groups nationally have been so energized by this, and students in virginia have been so energized by this, i think if he s looking to escape a jesse helms national tarnish on this, he s underestimating his opposition here, do you agree with that? i agree. they threaded the needle only within the conservative part of the republican party. not in the country nationally, not in virginia nationally. don t forget, right across the river here in washington, gay marriage is legal. i think he s kidding himself, i agree with you if he thinks he solved any problem with the country as a whole. howard fineman, thank you for doing reporting for this, on this for us tonight. and thanks for your time, howard, nice to see you. thank you, rachel. coming up on countdown bill maher weighs in on health care reform and former congressman massa. it s an amazing interview with lawrence and bill maher.