puppies have passed through here. we are in recovery mode - and we are hopeful for the future, but we do need a little bit of patience for a little biti longer as these dogs make their way through the system. as you saw today, these little i puppies here that we saw today, it will take about two years . for them to make partnership. around 1100 puppies are currently in early training. guide dog says what it needs now is volunteer fosters who can look after dogs in advanced training, dropping them off and picking them up from the charity s offices on weekdays. 0ur volunteers are our lifeblood. guide dogs could not do what we do without our volunteers across the board, across all of our services. and unfortunately, after the pandemic, we did lose a lot of volunteers as people wanted to have a break. being the situation, we also kind of reduced the numbers that were reapplying. so we are at the moment looking very heavily to recruit lots of volunteers, and we ve been very lucky that a l
that includes hamilton, of course, doubt fire, and the list goes on. it s important to remember this was only a couple months after they began to open up the theaters again after the pandemic forced a closure of about 18 months. what we re seeing here, kate, is the sort of larger effort, taking out some of these older tactics to try to slow is spread, and they re dusting these off and reapplying them not only for universities but also obviously for even the theater industry as well as they try to stay a step ahead of this winter surge that all experts seem to agree, kate, is already here. polo, thank you very much. joining me is dr. gene marazzo from the university of alabama in birmingham. thanks for being here, doctor. our correspondents laid out kind of perfectly how it has shifted. i m curious how you describe what s happening right now in so
bias. what he s going to say is, we found no testimonial or documentary evidence. now, the second point that the attorney general is talking about there is on this fisa question. and that s where the ig report says, that while it found no testimony or documentary evidence and you re going to hear that a lot today from him got you. they also say that they re troubled that they couldn t find a satisfactory explanation for why these mistakes kept happening with the carter page fisa application, because as you point out, the ig says it was flawed at the beginning but that these mistakes sort of mushroomed as they kept reapplying for the carter page thing. and you know, one other thing about this is, it turns out that the carter page fisa application didn t yield very much valuable information. it s the subject of this report. a lot of hand-wringing over it on both sides. but at the end, it didn t really
administration, many may not have been reapplying so for all we know, that number could be much greater. how do you know our designated group of dreamers if you don t know who was in the group? very complex question. that will be the job of president trump s administration. here is another issue, executive orders are only as valid for as long as the president who signs them is in office or they are renewed or followed by a subsequent president. so president trump is arguing wait a minute, i m the president, i can t be bound by an executive order that s against what i believe in. he signs an executive order nullifying it and the courts nullify his nullification. julie: the president tweeted this on daca and deals with democrats. many of the people no longer very young are far from angels. some are very tough hardened criminals. president obama said he had no legal right to sign the order but would anyway. the supreme court would overturn, a deal will be made with dems. the most im