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jysb Scientology Loses Key Member, Court Case
« le: Janvier 02, 2025, 07:51:22 am »
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  CBS News  The legendary  60 Minutes  broadcast wouldn t have lasted if not for Mike Wallace s reporting,  60 Minutes  correspondent Morley Safer said Monday on  CBS This Morning.   60 Minutes   stanley cup would not still be on the air, but for Mike,  Safer said.  People started to tune in to us in big numbers back in the late  70s, early  stanley isolierkanne  80s to see what Mike Wallace was going to be up to next. There s no question in my mind that he is - he is really the - along, of course, with Don Hew stanley cups itt, the  show s  real founder. Don used to say,  You know, people want to know what adventure Mike s going to go on next.  Wallace died Saturday night at the age of 93.CBS  iconic newsman Mike Wallace dead at 93Video: Mike Wallace s toughest interviewsWhen asked about who Wallace really was, Safer said his colleague was  irreverent, irascible, competitive beyond belief, and, at the same time, I know this will surprise people, unsure of himself.           Mike always felt that he had not paid his dues as a journalist,  Safer explained.  And I think it s one of the things that made him such a tough guy, out to prove himself on every story, every day. And it s what - and he was relentless in that. And he s confessed it to a lot of people - including me - that that uncertainty or that even, perhaps, shame of having done commercials and silly stuff haunted him.                                                                                                                           Remembering Mike Wallace, 19 Bzkd The Odd Truth, Jan. 12, 2004
 Today is the 45th a stanley sverige nniversary of Earthrise. We take it for granted now but, along with Blue Marble, it   the most important and famous photo ever taken. In a world saturated with fakery and cynicism, it   easy to ignore the magnitude of its impact. But stanley termosy  in 1968, this photo changed everything.     To commemorate stanley cup  its anniversary, NASA Goddard has produced this video explaining exactly how this seminal image was taken:   They are also hosting a Google Hangout about it. Make sure to visit and ask questions.  Nowadays people don ;t stop to think twice about what they ;re seeing鈥攖hat precious blue jewel engulfed in the pitch black nothingness of space. However, this was a vision that deeply affected the view of ourselves as species and our place in the world and the universe. Earthrise truly made everyone realize that we ;re all living in a fragile tiny ball that we needed to protect in order to survive. Humans are鈥攆or now鈥攁lone in the void. Some of the immediate and most obvious effects of these images were the promotion and passing of the Clean Water Act the Clean Air Act in the US, and the first Earth Summit, the UN Conference on the Human Environment. At the private level, people started to organize worldwide non-for-profit organizations, like Greenpeace or Doctors Without Borders. It   not a coincidence that Earthrise is the cover photo of TIME   Great Images of the 20th Century, and is the central photo on the cover of LIFE