there are very few people and very few books written by people that had real actual close personal exposure to the president. jim rosebush has written one of those books. one of the few that could say he was there to observe the president personally. i thought my strongest insights came from mrs. reagan. she taught me a lot about how to deal with president reagan and how to communicate with him and help him to be a better communicator and help me be a better bern to work with him. so when he worked with her, i think it was better to help with president reagan. he assisted in negotiating trips with china, japan, korea, france, england and germany. he was very privileged to be in at the very historic bilateral meeting between reagan and gorbachev. he is very insightful in his communicating skills. jim will have to wait for my book for another view. i really can endorse many of his insights into how the president prepared for his speeches and what techniques he used to become th
we ll hear from author gene kopelson about dwight eisenhower and ronald reagan and the pivotal role the former president played in the revolution of reagan in the 1960s. kopelson copy of 1968 dress rehearsal, ike, the discovery institute in seattle hosted this hour and 10 minute program. we re joined this evening by dr. gene kopelson. he s a cancer doctor by trade but an accomplished historian. he s written about theodore roosevelt, washington politics in the 1960s, about the holocaust and other subjects. his talk tonight will center on the first book, which, there s a placard here with the cover called reagan s 1968 dress rehearsal. it tells the little-known story of a friendship that developed and ultimately a mentorship between dwight d. eisenhower and ronald reagan. and as it turns out, i won t steal your thunder. i ll let you tell the story. but dwight eisenhower was really instrumental in ronald reagan s early political career. we all know how that ended with reagan
university to bring in some much needed cash. will they have to give up too much to get it? the appearance. news4 at 11 :00 starts now. it s another chilly night out there after record setting cold this morning. some of us already back into the 30s right now. the good news is we are getting ready to warm up, folks. let s kick it off in the storm center now. doug is this going to be our last frigid morning for a while? i really think it will be. you say a while. this might be the last frigid morning for the next couple of weeks. 25 in martinsburg. 29 towards baltimore. those were both records. dulles at 27. nowhere like that tomorrow morning. we only managed to get to 56 degrees. that was with abundant sunshine in d.c. 52 in annapolis. we got to 36 in petersberg, west virginia. that s the milder air that will start to make its way in tomorrow. the cold won t last. the chilly air is moving out. here comes not just the mild air, but the warm air. temperatures moving b
Tensions are rising between Canada and France over fishing quotas for halibut, a valuable groundfish that migrates across the jurisdictions of both countries.Fisheries and Oceans told CBC News in a statement Friday it is aware of vessels from Saint Pierre and Miquelon as well as the Faroe Islands taking part in recent fishing activity for Atlantic halibut adjacent to Canadian fisheries waters."We are deeply concerned about the impacts of this activity on the sustainability of this important fish
"Economic rationalism. drove the Commonwealth's Canberra policy away from grandiose construction ethic of creating a monument to Australia's national identity," says letter writer JOHN D PURCELL, of Kambah.