Markets already. Inbecause it has been priced the markets already. Doubly more downside as opposed to upside on the trade front as we focus on global growth, textiles under pressure. Textiles remain the focus, Technology Remains the focus, in u. S. China trade negotiations. Win, is touting this as a and i just wanted to highlight, this is down by 3 10 of 1 , but on its way to be the biggest thek exchange here in Southeast Asian region, 5 00plus billion in value, and stocks are leading. Lets look at the fx space. Currencyent to avoid rishaad well, we are looking to the skies now and the stock of manipulation, but Goldman Sachs says nothing new there. Reporter says the hour. You have got china space sat, haslinda. Haslinda you know why we are dollar yuan is not tariff watching it . It went as high as 10 . Traumatized. China data Going Forward, people the daily limit, on a day when chinese stocks are down, this will look and see where the yuan goes from here. Develops and manufactures ver
Can, as balanced as i can, i get to do something fundamentally creative and say this is what i think happened. We begin our look with author david berman and his book arizonas seventerm governor george hunt. If youre going to write a history for arizona and you want to tell it, you cant ignore george hunt because he was so much involved in everything that went on from 1890 to the 1930s and the new deal. A lot of reforms and the right to the water from the Colorado River. He was at the center of everything. George hunt was born in a place called huntsville, missouri, named after his grandfather. And he was in a part of missouri that was settled largely by the upper south. Tennessee and north carolina. His family came from that area. And he was raised on a farm which was devastated terribly by the civil war and raised in poverty, really, and had a tough time subsistence farming. They had to live on what they grew. Had little education. And more than willing to do with his life and decide
We met a year ago at a conference put on by the Buckley Program at yale, and i can see that she at the time she has a real affinity for trying to understand the connection between the Communications World and the media world, on the one hand, and different elements of the conservative movement on the other. So its this is a natural kind of outgrowth of her previous work, looking at that general area. Open to debate is the book, heather has watched not maybe every single one of 33 years worth of firing line episodes but pretty close to it so probably the reigning expert on all things related to firing line. So help me welcome Heather Hendershot to the program. [applause] thank you so much. Its really great to be here, particularly here at the hoover institution, because the hoover was so important to the research i did on the book. I was out at stanford where all the papers are, and of course they have preserved all the episodes and son but the papers and transcriptscouldnt have done it
We met a year ago at a conference put on by the Buckley Program at yale, and i can see that she at the time she has a real affinity for trying to understand the connection between the Communications World and the media world, on the one hand, and different elements of the conservative movement on the other. So its this is a natural kind of outgrowth of her previous work, looking at that general area. Open to debate is the book, heather has watched not maybe every single one of 33 years worth of firing line episodes but pretty close to it so probably the reigning expert on all things related to firing line. So help me welcome Heather Hendershot to the program. [applause] thank you so much. Its really great to be here, particularly here at the hoover institution, because the hoover was so important to the research i did on the book. I was out at stanford where all the papers are, and of course they have preserved all the episodes and son but the papers and transcriptscouldnt have done it
Bit different. We are in the middle of tempe town lake, whats interesting is that most people dont have lakes that are brand new. Our lake is going to be 147 years old very soon. Tell me why it was built . This used to be a stretch of the salt river. Salt river runs quite a way throughout arizona and it was dammed up in the 1930s when roosevelt dam was built. People used to dump garbage in here. We worked handinhand with the army corps of engineers. We took everything out of here that has been here for decades, and we have turned this into a lake and this lake is responsible for 1. 5 billion worth of Economic Development in our community. What changes have you seen . Pretty much nothing that you see here was here with the exception of the two bridges that you see. We are talking about the buildings around here, we are talking about all of this, all the shops, the restaurants. Nothing was here before 1999. Pretty much as far as the eye can see is all new and the lake is responsible for