Great streete the of hearing from laura bush and Michelle Obama, who are friends and have done several of these events together, and they very much wanted to do this one together, to talk about first andes and the military their own particular roles and that they have promoted very wonderfully over the years and they wanted to do it together, because they like doing that, which is so heartening in these troubled times. Hear from them, we are going to hear from a member of the military, captain william b. Reynolds iii. Family movedlds from guyana and raised him in a tradition of dedication to service, Public Service, and instilled that in him from the time of his birth, and he took it to heart, went to west point, and then was served, first in korea and twice in iraq, and on the second deployment in iraq, he was the chief of reconnaissance in sniper deployment, in sniper deployment, and six months into that deployment he was nearly fatally wounded by an improvised explosive device. E ca
They did that. Deciphering dogs, and the unique relationship between dogs and humans. And we begin with controversy over u. S. Security and drones and this question, should the u. S. Launch a drone strike on an american citizen suspected of being an alqaeda member . Richelle carey joins us with more. U. S. Officials have not named this person. All they are saying is that he is suspected of planning attacks against meshes overseas. So the question is, can the administration legally kill him with the drone because he is an american citizen . The u. S. Government is now facing a troubling decision. As it considers Lethal Action against an american citizen suspected of working with alqaeda. President obamas stricter drone policy states that an attack may not be possible because the man is a u. S. Citizen. Last year the president addressed the use of drones. For the record, i do not believe it would be constitutional for the government to target and kill any u. S. Citizen with a drone or wi
WATERTOWN — The Board of Education recognized several students and staff during their meeting June 12, including retirees, students moving on to military service, and athletes.