hazards from volcanic eruptions are pyroclastic at speeds like a jetliner. man: [speaking spanish] jess phoenix: it will obliterate trees. it will take out people. it can even reshape the geology of the area. nobody can outrun a pyroclastic flow. if you are faced with one, you are dead. welcome to violent earth. i m liev schreiber. more than 80% of the earth s surface was forged by volcanoes. they helped create fertile soil for agriculture, and volcanic gases helped form our atmosphere. without volcanoes, we would not have life on earth as we know it. all around the world, every single day, there are 40 to 50 volcanoes erupting under sea, on land, sometimes even under ice. our earth is a living, changing planet. but when a volcano erupts, it also has the power to destroy, like it did in 2018 at mount fuego in guatemala, when a massive eruption buried the surrounding towns in over 6 feet of volcanic ash in a matter of minutes. [music playing] george kourounis: mount fuego in g
major hazards? from volcanic eruptions are pyroclastic flows the rock fragments, and gases are moving at speeds like a jetliner it will it can even reshape the geology of the area. nobody can outrun a pyroclastic flow. if you are faced with one, you are dead. welcome to violent earth. i m liev schreiber. more than 80% of the earth s surface was forged by volcanoes. they helped create fertile soil for agriculture, and volcanic gases helped form our atmosphere. without volcanoes, we would not have life on earth as we know it. all around the world, every single day, there are 40 to 50 volcanoes erupting under sea, on land, sometimes even under ice. our earth is a living, changing planet. but when a volcano erupts, it also has the power to destroy, like it did in 2018 at mount fuego in guatemala, when a massive eruption buried the surrounding towns in over 6 feet of volcanic ash in a matter of minutes. [music playing] george kourounis: mount fuego in guatemala is your stereotyp
A man trailing badly in the polls at all that is background noise ultimately to the kent state shootings in the larger horror of vietnam. People died who should not have on both fronts. Antispaces opened that the once been full and both experienced lifetime scars. Heres a final thought, the best thing that could happen for those who still carried the kent state shootings were the vietnam war close to their hearts is to get what beyond who did what when. In the 20 anniversary janice wax so talked about the speaker. Tour my heart out she said i will never forget and id think they are really important lessons in this but if there is no forgiveness there is no healing and murder goes on forever. And thats my talk. Thank you for coming. [applause] i need to listen to you. Please. [inaudible] im sorry, its in the book. They were in akron. He shot a guy come is there any truth to that. There is a photographer he was taken at one point as a sniper in the sniper, did materialize. There was a gu
Does anyone know how to turn this thing off . I apologize for that image. Thats basically the backdrop. I knew when i first saw the i had to tell my wife and then i discovered which i should have discovered earlier that the university had 130 histories they had collected. The archival people at the library deserved medals, every one of them. Theyve done a spectacular job collecting information. What i had to tell the story is basically 130 memories and then i supplemented that with my own interviewing. Yo let me give you a sense of what that meant from the rating poinh of view. , a woman named Diane Gallagher was working at a pizza joint when somebody comes bursting in the door and they start a little riot out there on the street and she says the revolution has begun so naturally she took her apron off and gave up her pizza cutter job. There was a guy named Denny Benedict and he tells the story they drop the projecto projectoo say to the students the rotc is on fire in the nationa, the
For a complete television schedule, visit booktv. Org. Booktv, 48 hours of nonfiction books and authors. Television for serious readers. Now, we kick off the weekend with steve olsen he recalls the eruption of mount st. Helens in 1980. [inaudible] everybody [inaudible] on a real Beautiful Day that we can manage it. Thank you so much for coming. Before we get started a few housekeeping rules you can take the time right now to silence your cell phones. While you have it out enis it[inaudible] you can sign up for the great events going on with steve olsen. Hes going to talk about his book and im excited for him to do that. In his book, steve has history and Science Behind eruption of mount st. Helens with account of what happened to those people who lived it and those who died. As i said steve has particular connections. One of the big stories as events director im sarah by the way. I dont know if i introduced myself. As events director is bringing to our local connections you can see tha