Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Thank you and good evening. Good evening. It is a good evening. Mr. Speaker, mr. Senate president , members of the general assembly, distinguished guests, my special guests, my family, my husband andy and my son tommy and my daughter cici. [ applause ] and of course my fellow Rhode Islanders. [ applause ] tonight i stand before you filled with optimism for our future because tonight we begin this year stronger than weve been in decades. [ applause ] you know, four years ago, our Unemployment Rate was the highest in america. Today its in line with the national average. The number of people filing for Unemployment Insurance last year was the lowest it has been in 50 years. [ applause ] and our economy has more jobs than at nearly any other time in our states history. [ applause ] weve cut our deficit in half, t. F. Green is booming, and we are the first state in america to teach Computer Science in every public school. [ applause ] and its not
Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Thank you and good evening. Good evening. It is a good evening. Mr. Speaker, mr. Senate president , members of the general assembly, distinguished guests, my special guests, my family, my husband andy and my son tommy and my daughter cici. [ applause ] and of course my fellow Rhode Islanders. [ applause ] tonight i stand before you filled with optimism for our future because tonight we begin this year stronger than weve been in decades. [ applause ] you know, four years ago, our Unemployment Rate was the highest in america. Today its in line with the national average. The number of people filing for Unemployment Insurance last year was the lowest it has been in 50 years. [ applause ] and our economy has more jobs than at nearly any other time in our states history. [ applause ] weve cut our deficit in half, t. F. Green is booming, and we are the first state in america to teach Computer Science in every public school. [ applause ] and its not
Expect high heat and humidity. Im just happy for the the sun. No storms. No, we will keep it nice and quiet good day to hit the pool or head down to the shore or really middle of the week as well. We are looking at the next heat wave. Those are days we will try to stay cool. We will ease into it but lets go outside and go across the river from palmyra, new jersey looking at center city, the buildings, you can still make out. That is a good thing. Eventually that humidity will bring in the haze and tough to make out center sit friday that location. Palmyra cove nature park. Seventyfive at the airport. Seventythree allentown. Mid 70s in reading. Starting to warm up. 70 degrees in doylestown, 72 mount holly, new jersey. Southeasterly wind to daze up around 10 miles an hour, we will start to transport in that warmer more humid air mass. There goes the dew point temperatures. Yesterday they were in the lower 50s, that is why it felt nice, new were talking mid 60s. The once they creep in the
Secretary of state. Joining me from washington is Colleen Nelson of the wall street journal, Jonathan Martin of the new york times, and the newne gearan from york post. How much damage has Hillary Clinton taken . Jonathan it is perception of her strength. Perception drives so much of this. I think it has some of her donors uneasy. It has the democratic elite uneasy. The clinton folks are very upset about what they see as a partisan witch hunt. Privately, democrats especially those close to president obama, and they are scratching their heads about why the clinton folks did not move more quickly on this knowing how aggressive the congressional gop was going to be. Why not deal with it immediately , turn it over, move on . Instead, here we are on the fourth month of the story. Charlie why didnt they do that . Jonathan i think there was resistance because they did not think that she had done anything wrong. They werent going to give in. As you know, that is a decades long tradition with t
He went on to the George Patton museum, which got him involved with world war ii. He has written a couple of fantastic books, one on. Though and one of the stones river and the tullahoma campaign. Though one even per and one on the stones riverryville and the tullahoma campaigns. It was overshadowed by gettysburg and vicksburg. He is here today to talk little about stones river, that sets out tullahoma. That will wrap up 1862 and literally bring us into 1863 with one of the most great defenses of the civil war. Chris kolakowski. Its great to see everyone here today. I have a tough job. We follow those two. Im going to move with some of lack to you and keep ourselves on point. I want to talk about the battle of stones river. I refer to it as stones river. War. A great defense of the unpacking why this battle matters. Youve got a lot more than i thought. Sense of the ground, things like that. The first two days of 1863, just outside of tennessee. Actually smack dab in the center of tenne