hall, got wonderful marble floor. i remember one of her great fads for a couple years was tap dancing. it was perfect for that. living at althorpe was quite an adjustment from the country home where diana and her brother charles grew up. the inside of the house, very formal. there wasn t a family kitchen. it wasn t fun growing up in this house. i think there was an awful lot of unrest in her home life. but teacher penny walker says life at the west heath school, 100 miles from home, was full of fun and friends. she was part of a really lively group, they were fun and they were naughty and they giggled a lot. and of course, they talked a lot about boys. she was always known to adore prince charles. and her little bedroom cubicle had pictures of him all over it.
johnny spencer was given full custody of the children. they tried to settle back into their quiet life here at park house in the english countryside. but more big changes were yet to come. by the tim diana was , her father was remarried,er grandfather had passed and johnny spencer had inherited a huge estate called althorp. the main were working hall. it was wonderful marble floor. i remember one of her great fads for a couple years was tap dancing. it was perfect for that. living at althorp was quite an adjustment from the country home where diana and her brother charles grew up. the inside of the house, very formal. there wasn t even like a family kitchen. it wasn t fun growing up in this house. i think there was an awful lot of unrest in her home life.
2012 for a seven-day mediterranean cruise and high expectations as they watched the ship fade into the distance, bound for some of the most beautiful cities. soon they d all be locked in a life-or-death struggle to escape. 32 of them didn t survive. this is the story of six who did in their own words with personal detail and raw emotion, telling what happened one tragic night aboard the ship that had it all. here s the wreck of the costa concordia. i had never seen a ship this big. just the size of it. how does a human being build something like this? it looked like a hotel. it was huge. and it was beautiful. marble floor, wood panelling. there s brass and glass and just all sorts of ornamentation and it was really like stepping into
room. he is like i can take you. and you know every person is trying not to meet his gaze. you would immediately feel like you said it s your parents and they are looking at you and you are oh i am looking at my notes. what s going on this. and they have tear translations in the ear. they are saying he s not saying anything. i am not slacking off. he is leaving us with silence. i thought it was amazing and i thought it was a great message to send. he is fantastic. i am not a fan of benjamin netanyahu. he beat a guy herzog whose platform was racist and natural us stick. his campaign was dreadful. first of all my favorite moment of the speech was the tort 5 seconds. 45 seconds. he nailed it. and the backdrop, that wall, it looks like a floor. it looks like a marble floor and i think a janitor will walk up it and start buffering. he is lying on his back and
reporter: and that church is noted at the front of the altar, the marble floor has a message about this is where the remains of president kennedy were memorialized before his internment at arlington cemetery. so the this is a church so identified with the first catholic president. it was the church where his family held mass and remembered him on that day. and it was the third birthday of john f. kennedy jr. where he, on the steps where the pope arrived with all the joy today, it was where that famous photo of the 3-year-old boy saluting his father, that took place here. that s an iconic memory in american life, but many people probably don t realize that it happened here, not at the white house, not at arlington, but at the cathedral of st. matthew. so this is an important place for the local church. and i think in some ways, if you look at the calendar of the pope s visit to washington, this is sort of the home office stop, checking in with the washington archdiocese, meeting with