It is my pleasure to introduce our keynote session entitled ask the historian, Alexander Hamilton. Our speaker, historian joanne freeman. Dr. Freeman is a professor of history at yale university. She specializes in the American Revolutionary period and Early National american politics and culture. She is the author of several influential Award Winning books. I will mention just two of them. Affairs of honor, National Politics in the republic, 2001. Most recently, field of blood, congressional violence in antebellum america which i found particularly helpful for my own work. If you look at these two books combined, it seems like a reverse echo of the current and contemporary political scene in the United States. From honor to violence. I will leave it at that. Dr. Freeman is also known for her leading scholarship on Alexander Hamilton which she rediscovered, i would say, before broadway did just a couple of years ago. I asked dr. Freeman about her relation with history, and she was kind
Is National Football team touches down in doha ahead of the gulf cup. Could have a Company Welcome to the news hour prodemocracy candidates in hong kong have won an overwhelming majority in local Council Elections voters turned out in Record Numbers supported parties concerned about beijings involvement in the Territories Affairs chief executive kerry lamb has promised to listen humbly in beijing chinas foreign minister reiterated that whole kong is part of china no matter what happens in the elections or we begin our coverage with this report from sarah clarke in hong kong. As dawn broke hong kong to a new Political Landscape more than 70 percent of voters cast their ballots in sundays district Council Elections the prodemocracy party secured a Record Number of seats a lot of people actually sacrifice a lot of stuff but theres a lot in the last 6 months. To actually get this result and i think people are very. United and. Together to try to actually try to win something joshua one was
Pences portfolio . Guest he is neither a shadow president or glorified coat rack. He is kind of in the middle. Social conservative issues. [applause] pres. Trump thank you very much. Special place. Really special place. We couldppointed have had 25,000 people if we did it outside. They all want your seat. You are not giving it up. I know you too well. Please sit down. Lets enjoy it. Lets enjoy ourselves. We have tremendous crowds out there. Look at that. He has my name tattooed on his leg. That is great. I am thrilled to be here. One of the most famous and Thriving Communities anywhere in florida and really anywhere in the world as far as im concerned, the villages. I was thinking about moving to the villages but i could not leave maralago. I got stuck at maralago. I dont know. Area forbeen a great us and a great part of our victory. I dont know if we got 100 , but it was pretty close. Anybody in there not vote for us . We met the folks that built the villages and run the villages. Som
Orientation. The trumps winding down of and state depunding for religious education. Listen to oral arkts on our website, cspan. Org and watch on cspan. President trump traveled to a Retirement Community on floor to sign an executive over aimed at improving private med car offense. He talked about his 2020 president ial opponents and the impeachment inquiry started with house democrats. Announcer , the president of the United States. Really special place. But, where i am disappointed. I said we could have had 25,000 people if we did it outside. They all want your seat. That is the way life goes. You are not giving it up. I know you too well. Please sit down. Lets enjoy it. Lets enjoy ourselves. Now you have got tremendous crowds out there. Look at that. He has my name tattooed on his leg. That is great. I am thrilled to be here. One of the most famous and Thriving Communities anywhere in florida and really anywhere in the world as far as im concerned, the villages. [applause] in fact i
Took all of the medical research amendments and all of the democrats and republicans and said lets put everything in one amendment, susan went along with it and she said that she had the alzheimers amendment specifically. And we had 42 or 43 that had cosponsored amendments when it came to medical research. Now we were all together and that is the way this works in the way that you build the coalition. When you look at heart disease, alzheimers has got the largest footprint out there in the costs are the highest as i understand them of all of these. But the level of Research Dollars that the federal government spends is really a pathetic third or less of what you see going into similar rates. Im interested structurally what you think is happening in this field that has made it difficult to step those numbers up. Thats a good question. I am asked about it as long as i have been in the house and the than it how do you pick your research projects. And it is a deadly disease, it affects chi