ifill: ray suarez reports on today s gathering of holocaust survivors and the veterans who helped save them, to mark the 20th anniversary of the u.s. holocaust memorial museum. woodruff: our daily download looks at the bogus tweet last week that sent the financial markets into a minutes-long nosedive. ifill: and hari sreenivasan explores pandora s lunchbox with the author of a new book on processed foods. technology has merged with food production in a way that few of us, i think realize, but i the way our bodies procession food, it s stuck somewhere in the stoneage. ifill: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: more than two years ago, the people of b.p. made a commitment to the gulf. and every day since, we ve worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we shared what we ve learned so that we can all produce energy more safely. b.p. is also committed to americ
survivors and the veterans who helped save them, to mark the 20th anniversary of the u.s. holocaust memorial museum. woodruff: our daily download looks at the bogus tweet last week that sent the financial markets into a minutes-long nosedive. ifill: and hari sreenivasan explores pandora s lunchbox with the author of a new book on processed foods. technology has merged with food production in a way that few of us, i think realize, but i the way our bodies procession food, it s stuck somewhere in the stoneage. ifill: that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: more than two years ago, the people of b.p. made a commitment to the gulf. and every day since, we ve worked hard to keep it. today, the beaches and gulf are open for everyone to enjoy. we shared what we ve learned so that we can all produce energy more safely. b.p. is also committed to america. we support nearly 250,000 jobs and invest more here than an
the relationship is excellent. i think there s a lot of cross-fertilization on lessons learned, lessoned identified as the british say. they always assume they re learned. [laughter] but, yes, that is, actually, a really excellent relationship. so yeah, i know i work on a regular basis with individuals on space security issues, and i m going to geneva in the near future and ore places other places. so the substantive links are there. one other question. okay, the cold war between the u.s. and the soviet union is over, however, there may have been areas in which the soviets surpassed the united states in their military education. and now since relations are open, what are we learning, if anything? actually, the naval war college has a relationship with one of the soviet naval education institutions and, again, these are regular exchanges go on. what did we learn specifically? i know this is difficult to accept, but most of the time there is a presumption that we are
definitely the people have the right idea. yes? i wondered if you address the issue as you are talking about right now, the globalization of food, especially from china and that sort of thing. i wondered if you could talk about this. the means to coming from china and other things? yes, and the massive multinational corporations. a lot of those companies that have grown from just being red white and blue to having a lot of process and influence on ingredients the book on vitamins, in the chapter about this, most people never even think about this issue. they come from very strange things. 50% of all vitamins come from china. artificial sweeteners are made in china. their regulations for workers and their a lot of food corporations now. if you are a binational and a type of person, you look at their income statements, you will see that a lot of the revenues our growth revenues. particularly developing markets. india and china are the big ones. and so they were exporting
and on you go back into past. it s difficult to do, but the interesting thing is that you cooperate that, it s not that difficult within certain limits of margin of error. these guys were captured about 4500 per day. if they captured mutants even ecological record of the things were doing. have the energy was three, the other half. the most difficult part is documenting energy capture across the intervening 15,000 years. six points in 2000 a.d., fairly confidently. it s just as the 50,000 years in between that s a bit of a headache. i ve gotten about the mess good-natured, the serious debate calculates things in a very different way. we actually end up in another similar plays on which gives me confidence of what it done is not a total fantasy. but it is difficult to do because the nature of the evidence changes, choosing the doctor time archaeological evidence. it is doable and is a secluded driving force between the developed index. thank you. thank you, dr. morris. the s