You are watching American History tv, all we can, every weekend, on cspan 3. Chief Tadodaho Sidney Hill what an exciting thing going on. To me would start of the game we are playing here that has a whole history in itself it is been part of our history and part of our entertainment. That was played on the other side, and brought to us for our enjoyment and to help our people. We call this the womens shuffle dance. And the women are very important. We honor this with our men. Chief sidney hill with all the things that happened, with the loss of land, and the forced removal of our and the diseases and the wars, we have been diminished as a people. Our culture and our languages and our ways have been attacked, not only physically, but through policies. For us to be hosting other countries today is quite an accomplishment, to say the least. My position is one of traditional leadership and as you know, women choose the leaders. Women are the clan mothers and they give out names and how we f
Captain Scott Mclaren here to discover discusses new press book. Captain mclaren is a graduate of the u. S. Naval Academy Class of 1955 and a veteran of more than 20 cold war commissions and three arctic expeditions. He was awarded the distinguished Service Medal and two legions of merit, as a cold war submarine commander. He was also president of the Polar Society and a former president of the explorers club. Hes the author of unknown waters. Firsthand account of the historic under ice survey by the Continental Shelf. He joins us today from his home in england colorado. [applause] thank you very much. When going to take you through is a hammered up combination of a variety of things. Maybe i had better concentrate on the book, but the very first part is taking you through of the highlights of my first book, the first survey of the entire Continental Shelf at the height of the cold war. When i finished talking about the book, if there is time i started diving the titanic. I was the fir
I wanted to hand this out as a lesson, thinking about how were still connected to the past. There are people i dont, they are not my close personal friends, i like you all very much, but to do that, to hand out a quarter cups worth of sugar, this was the middle ages in europe. It was extravagant. Sugar, in the 1300s, was a rare and expensive good. It was medicine. It was prized and available only to the richest of the rich in western europe. To hand up the small amount i gave you would have been seen as an extravagant thing. Now, it is so much a part of our diets. You can go into a gas station and grab a handful and take it with you. I pay for it. Sugar is so cheap and common, it is hard to avoid it. Is there anyone who has had to give it up for dietary reasons . How easy was it . Terrible. Prof. Paulett right, its hard. Its in medicine and pills. How this came to be how it went from being a rare and expensive good to a thing that is so common that it is hard to avoid, this gets to the
A private landfill in Pasco County is at the center of a lawsuit, accusing the company of several serious violations, including contaminating the groundwater.