Thứ Sáu, 23 tháng 2, 2018

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Our top story this afternoon...

The First Daughter of the United States, Ivanka Trump, is somewhere over the Pacific Ocean

at this hour... flying to South Korea to attend the closing ceremony of the PyeongChang Winter

Olympics.

North Korea is sending another high level delegation to PyeongChang,... but the chances

of the U.S. and North Korean delegates meeting are said to be slim to none.

Our Blue House correspondent Hwang Hojun starts us off.

With the grand finale of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics just a couple of days away, Ivanka

Trump, the eldest daughter of U.S. President Donald Trump, will arrive in South Korea on

Friday, leading the U.S. delegation.

The delegation includes the White House press secretary, the commander of U.S. Forces Korea

and a U.S. senator.

A senior adviser to her father, Ivanka Trump is scheduled to dine with President Moon Jae-in

at the Blue House soon after she arrives.

Her meeting with President Moon is garnering much attention as she will likely be carrying

a personal message from President Trump that may mention the possibility of dialogue between

the U.S. and North Korea.

A high-level delegation from the North will once again head to the South on Sunday,....

also to attend the closing ceremony.

Kim Yong-chol,... the Vice Chair of the Workers' Party of Korea's central committee, will lead

the eight-member delegation.

Kim's visit to South Korea is stirring controversy because he's suspected of being the mastermind

of two deadly attacks on South Korea in 2010 - the sinking of the Cheonan warship, killing

46 South Korean soldiers,.... and the shelling of Yeonpyeong-do Island, killing four South

Koreans.

So, while their stays will overlap,... the prospects of them meeting, let alone having

direct contact, seems highly unlikely; especially as both the Blue House and the White House

have ruled it out.

Dialogue between the U.S. and North Korea was incorrectly anticipated by some during

the opening ceremony of the quadrennial event, in which U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's younger sister Kim Yo-jong attended.

It was later reported that a secret meeting between the U.S. and the North Koreans was

canceled by Pyongyang at the last minute.

On Thursday local time, Pence slammed Kim Yo-jong, while giving an address at the Conservative

Political Action Conference, saying, quote, "the sister of Kim Jong-un is a central pillar

of the most tyrannical and oppressive regime on the planet."

He was unapologetic on the fact that he stayed seated when the North Korean athletes entered

the stadium, saying the U.S. quote "doesn't stand with murderous dictatorships."

Hwang Hojun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> President Moon to dine with Ivanka Trump, meeting between U.S. and North Korean delegates unlikely - Duration: 2:30.

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Toby Dawson Won Bronze In Moguls For The U.S., Now He Coaches South Korean Team | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:44.

For more infomation >> Toby Dawson Won Bronze In Moguls For The U.S., Now He Coaches South Korean Team | NBC Nightly News - Duration: 2:44.

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Turkey Renames US Embassy Street After Syria Offensive - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Turkey Renames US Embassy Street After Syria Offensive - Duration: 0:59.

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US Teen Sentenced for Smuggling Bengal Tiger - Duration: 0:52.

For more infomation >> US Teen Sentenced for Smuggling Bengal Tiger - Duration: 0:52.

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Phnom Penh Crown FC Vs Asia Euro United 6-3- All Goals & Highlights ● 18/02/2018 HD - Duration: 7:44.

Phnom Penh Crown FC Vs Asia Euro United

For more infomation >> Phnom Penh Crown FC Vs Asia Euro United 6-3- All Goals & Highlights ● 18/02/2018 HD - Duration: 7:44.

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John Kerry Funneled MILLIONS from State Dept. to Daughter's Nonprofit, Now She's in BIG Trouble - Duration: 3:22.

John Kerry Funneled MILLIONS from State Dept. to Daughter's Nonprofit, Now She's in

BIG Trouble Former Secretary of State John Kerry secretly

funneled $9 million from the State Dept. to his daughter's nonprofit.

Here are the details…

From Daily Caller:

More than $9 million of Department of State money has been funneled through the Peace

Corps to a nonprofit foundation started and run by Secretary of State John Kerry's daughter,

documents obtained by The Daily Caller News Foundation show.

The Department of State funded a Peace Corps program created by Dr. Vanessa Kerry and officials

from both agencies, records show.

The Peace Corps then awarded the money without competition to a nonprofit Kerry created for

the program.

Initially, the Peace Corps awarded Kerry's group — now called Seed Global Health — with

a three-year contract worth $2 million of State Department money on Sept. 10, 2012,

documents show.

Her father was then the chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, which oversees

both the Department of State and the Peace Corps.

Seed secured a four-year extension in September 2015, again without competition.

This time, the Peace Corps gave the nonprofit $6.4 million provided by the Department of

State while John Kerry was secretary of state.

Now, a former official is set to cooperate in an investigation about the scheme.

From BizPac Review:

A former senior Peace Corps official agreed to cooperate with any law enforcement investigations

surrounding a scheme that funneled millions of Department of State dollars to a nonprofit

founded and run by former Secretary of State John Kerry's daughter, recently published

court documents show.

Warren "Buck" Buckingham agreed to cooperate as a condition of an agreement with the Washington,

D.C., U.S. Attorney's Office that would keep him from facing prosecution for a related

illegal lobbying charge, court documents filed Thursday and made public Tuesday show.

Also as part of the agreement, Buckingham admitted to the charge that he lobbied his

former Peace Corps colleagues to help his employer, Seed Global Health, secure a $6.4

million State Department-funded contract extension around September 2015.

Buckingham also helped Seed – a nonprofit founded and run by Kerry's daughter Vanessa

Kerry – secure it's original nearly $3 million contract, which was also funded with

State Department money, in September 2012.

Buckingham soon left the Peace Corps while under investigation for improperly hiring

an employee and subsequently sending the official lewd emails.

Officials from both agencies met with Vanessa and arranged the scheme that would funnel

State Department money to Seed through the Peace Corps, previous Daily Caller News Foundation

investigations show in detail.

Additionally, John Kerry's State Department hired Buckingham as a consultant soon after

the former Peace Corps official helped Vanessa's nonprofit secure its first contract.

For more infomation >> John Kerry Funneled MILLIONS from State Dept. to Daughter's Nonprofit, Now She's in BIG Trouble - Duration: 3:22.

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The U.S. Navy Received Advanced Technologies From An Alien Race, Book Claims - Duration: 5:26.

The U.S. Navy Received Advanced Technologies From An Alien Race, Book Claims

The U.S. Navy has in the past cooperated with an alien race to develop technology that can

be used to defend the planet against invasions from reptilian alien attacks.

by Elizabeth Gail

� William Tompkins, 2015 book Selected by Extraterrestrials is sadly, his last book

as Tompkins died in August of 2017.

But his book tells of a life that began with debriefing American spies embedded in Germany

for the Navy in San Diego as a teenager during WWII.

After the war ended Tompkins became an influential aerospace engineer with Douglas Aircraft , designing

spacecraft for the US Navy�s secret space program, �Solar Warden�, including a 2.5km

spacecraft carrier and a 1.4km spacecraft battle cruiser.

� The Navy spies brought back stories of the Nazis working with an extraterrestrial

race of Reptilians showing the Germans how to build anti-gravity spacecraft.

According to Tompkins� book, Reptilian aliens have attacked numerous planets, colonizing

and enslaving its inhabitants.

The US Navy countered by allying with a Nordic-looking extraterrestrial race to build its own secret

space fleet during the 1970�s, and deployed the Solar Warden fleet in the 1980�s.

�To learn all about William Tompkins, do read Selected By Extraterrestrials.

But keep in mind that was written by a 92 year old man who hadn�t written anything

for a long time.

For instance, when he refers to Admiral Rick Obotta, he means Admiral Rico Botta.

For excellent analysis of Tompkin�s work, read the wealth of ExoPolitics.org articles

by Dr Michael Salla, and also the 2017 book by Dr Salla on this very topic entitled The

US Navy�s Secret Space Program & Nordic Extraterrestrial Alliance.

A teenage Bill Tompkins

The U.S. Navy has in the past cooperated with an alien race to develop technology that can

be used to defend the planet against invasions from reptilian alien attacks.

This is according to claims made by William Tompkins, a U.S.-based writer, in his book

Selected by Extraterrestrials.

Having worked for the Navy as an aircraft designer during the �50s and �60s, he

apparently had access to highly classified information and bases that offered sufficient

evidence of the existence of an alien race that provided technological knowledge to the

human race.

William Tompkins

He was reportedly based at the San Diego�s Naval Air Station, and was during WW2 in contact

with Nazi Germany�s moles who worked in top secret aerospace facilities.

According to the book, U.S. spies in Germany discovered that the Germans had received sufficient

info on how to create antigravity aircraft, beam weapons, and more from reptilian aliens.

They apparently gave him this information so he could conquer the world.

Reptilian aliens, according to the book, attack numerous planets and aim to disrupt planetary

life, colonize, and enslave its inhabitants.

Meanwhile, another alien race, he dubs �The Nordics,� worked with the U.S. to counter

their rivals� advances.

His book features sketches of spacecraft he designed.

He personally came up with designs for five spaceships and dozens of support ships that

were created to fend off invading lizard aliens.

They include a 2.5km Naval Spacecraft Carrier and a 1.4km Naval Spacecraft Battle Cruiser.

The aforementioned ships were built decades later in the 1980s, but construction began

in the �70s.

According to his revelation, the project was under a highly classified program called Solar

Warden.

Apparently, wars with reptilian aliens were, and still are, very short-lived and The Nordics

had similar ships and equipment as the ones built for the Navy.

They were also involved in wars to protect our planet.

William apparently worked for the Douglas Aircraft Company for 12 years and joined the

company in 1951.

Douglas Aircraft had been contracted by the government to undertake various projects for

the Navy.

It was while there that he supposedly worked with The Nordics to create antigravity aircraft.

Tompkins� descriptive evidence has had conspiracy theorists citing it as additional evidence

that the U.S. government has been involved in a cover-up involving the existence of aliens,

as reported by the Daily Star (August 29, 2016).

For more infomation >> The U.S. Navy Received Advanced Technologies From An Alien Race, Book Claims - Duration: 5:26.

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Here's what made the U.S.-Canada women's Olympic hockey match so riveting - Duration: 5:49.

JUDY WOODRUFF: As we reported, U.S. Olympic athletes won several medals last night.

And, as William Brangham reports, probably none was more thrilling than when the women's

hockey team won the gold medal against archrival Canada.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: For the past two decades, the American team has been looking up enviously

at their rivals.

That finally changed last night with a game for the ages.

I spoke earlier to Christine Brennan of USA Today, who was watching the game in South

Korea.

She's also a commentator for CNN.

Christine, in your column, you wrote: "Wake up, America.

While you were sleeping, something magical happened last night."

Can you tell us a little bit about that game?

CHRISTINE BRENNAN, USA Today: Oh, my gosh, William.

This is one -- I have covered a lot of Olympics.

I have covered a lot of sports.

This is one of the greatest things I have ever seen.

U.S. women's hockey, they won the gold medal, beat Canada 3-2.

There's such a history between these two teams.

They're the two best teams in women's hockey in the world.

And every -- it seems like every four years they play each other for the gold medal.

U.S. won in 1988, and has never won another gold medal.

Canada's won all of them up until these Games, so a 20-year drought for the United States,

this buildup to this rivalry.

And the game lived up to the billing in every way you could possibly ask.

U.S. goes ahead 1-0.

Canada comes back, swarms back, takes a 2-1 lead.

The U.S. ties it right at the end, like six minutes to go.

Goes into overtime, 20 minutes of overtime, freewheeling, really interesting, fascinating

play, both sides.

Still tied.

Goes to shoot-outs.

After five of the shoot-out shots, each side, 5-3 each, still tied.

And they have to go to a sixth.

And that's where the USA wins it.

ANNOUNCER: The United States wins gold in PyeongChang!

CHRISTINE BRENNAN: And it was just riveting and fun to watch and great playing, and these

two teams who respect each other so much, who know each other so well, obviously, so

close proximity-wise, just Canada and the U.S.

And to have this game played at the most important moment of their lives, and then the U.S. wins,

and for the first time in 20 years, the U.S. wins an Olympic gold medal in women's ice

hockey, that's about as good as it gets.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: I understand many of these women say they were inspired by that last

win in 1998.

Did you hear that from that as well?

CHRISTINE BRENNAN: I sure did.

They talked to us in the interview area, the mix zone, afterwards.

And every one, to a woman, said that, that they were either trying to win it for some

of the older women, the veterans, including the Lamoureux twins.

Obviously, Jocelyne Lamoureux had that incredible shot.

If anyone hasn't seen it, find it, the last shoot-out goal that won it for the United

States, and then the great save by Maddie Rooney to stuff Canada, when they had their

chance to tie it back up again.

And so you had some of these older players who had three Olympics, and, of course, at

this point -- at that point, no gold and two silvers, very unsatisfying silvers to that

point.

And then you have the names that these young -- these women grew up with.

You know, they were their role models.

They were cheering for them back when they were playing in Nagano in '98, when these

women were little kids in their bedrooms and had posters of them up in their rooms.

And so, absolutely -- and we see this over and over again, William, in women's sports

that now we have a whole new generation of girls who grew up watching athletes play team

sports at a high level.

And the same exact scenario, really, for me as the 1999 women's World Cup in soccer, and

how that has translated to so many women being empowered and riveted by that game who have

now gone on to other great things in their lives 19 years later.

And it's terrific to see in this case the girls next door happen to be wearing hockey

skates, but it's that same story over and over again.

And the Olympics bring us those stories, those Title IX stories especially, involving women

and the girls who root for them.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: We tend to think of hockey as a largely male sport.

Is it becoming more popular with young women?

CHRISTINE BRENNAN: Yes, it absolutely is.

Now, obviously, it's a northern sport, and it's always been very popular in the Boston

area, in Minnesota and Wisconsin, the great high school programs there, the great college

programs there.

And then, of course, Canada, they're so good at it as well.

But I was just looking this up, and over the last decade, a 25 percent increase in participation,

according to USA Hockey, for girls and women, and especially from 18 and under.

So, these youth programs, they're starting.

I know this.

I grew up, my brother played hockey.

We grew up in Toledo, Ohio, not far from Detroit, and I think I would have played hockey if

it had been available back then.

And I had plenty of sports to play, so I never, ever had a chance.

There was no girls hockey back then.

And now there is girls hockey.

And there are girls playing throughout the Midwest, Great Lakes states, obviously the

Northern Midwest, and then, of course, in New England especially.

And I think something like this, the way this game was played, the attention to it, and

I actually think, William, the fact that it was overnight -- I know -- I heard from a

lot of people who stayed up and watched it.

East Coast, you had to stay up pretty late, obviously.

In the West Coast, it wasn't so bad.

But I think people, waking up to this news that something great happened and watching

the highlights, even if it's just a few seconds of the shoot-out, I think this is going to

have a nice impact.

And I think these kind of touchstone moments really do occur, where the Olympics bring,

in this case, girls to a sport that they otherwise might not have even thought of trying.

WILLIAM BRANGHAM: All right, Christine Brennan of USA Today, thanks so much.

CHRISTINE BRENNAN: William, my pleasure.

Thank you.

For more infomation >> Here's what made the U.S.-Canada women's Olympic hockey match so riveting - Duration: 5:49.

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Proud US Olympians Get Nasty Surprise For Winning Gold After Anti-American Athletes Lose Miserably - Duration: 5:38.

Proud US Olympians Get Nasty Surprise For Winning Gold After Anti-American Athletes

Lose Miserably The USA women's hockey team just defeated

Canada's women's hockey team in a thrilling shootout, finally claiming the gold medal

for the USA.

It was an exciting event that saw so many happy people cheering for the Americans.

However, there was one athlete from the Canadian women's hockey team who showed the most

significant display of unsportsmanlike behavior that one could imagine.

It was rightfully disrespectful and not something that should be done in Olympic sporting events

or presentations.

The Canadian team lost in the last minute shootout after a 2-2 tie to the United States

in the women's hockey final.

This gave the gold medal to the US team for the first time.

Canadian Jocelyne Larocque was so upset about this loss that the moment she was given the

silver medal she took it off, while she was still on the podium and in front of the whole

world.

Millions witnessed her disrespect for the second place silver medal and also the disrespect

for the American team.

The response was not very good.

No one wants to win second, but everyone takes their Olympic loss with honor and respect.

Sadly, that wasn't the case when the American women's hockey team scored the game-winning

goal and received the first place gold medal.

Later in an interview, she said it's frustrating because she worked so hard to get the gold

but instead she ended up with the silver.

That's the way sports and competition works.

What's even worse is the fact that when she makes a scene like that, then it loses

all value for that silver medal her team just won.

She lost all the blood, sweat and tears they all put in practice all those years.

No one will ever remember the US win, or the Candian second place finishes anymore, all

they will remember is the fact that one of the players on the Canadian team was disrespectful

on worldwide tv and brought her team and whole country down by acting this way.

Via The Chicago Tribune:

"Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson skated slowly back and forth toward the net, showing forehand,

then leaning quickly to the left to fake a backhand that pulled Canadian goalie Shannon

Szabados out of the crease.

On the sport's biggest stage, against the Americans' greatest rival, with all her

teammates leaning eagerly over the boards watching her every move, the three-time Olympian

came back to her forehand to finish off a dazzling, triple-deke move by sliding the

puck into the net past the outstretched glove of Szabados for the deciding goal in the sixth

round of a shootout thriller.

"I knew when that went in that Maddie was going to stop the next one," Lamoureux-Davidson

said.

That would be 20-year-old goalie Maddie Rooney, who stuffed the last two Canadian shooters

to wrap up a 3-2 victory Thursday that snapped the Americans' 20-year gold medal drought

and ended Canada's bid for a fifth straight title in the first shootout in an Olympic

women's final.

The Americans piled over the boards, throwing gloves in the air before piling on top of

Rooney on the ice — 20 years after their last gold medal in women's hockey and 38

years to the day after the men's famous "Miracle on Ice" victory over the Soviet

team in group play at Lake Placid.

"Joy's the only word that comes to mind," said Gigi Marvin, a three-time Olympian and

at 30 the oldest American on the roster.

This victory capped a year that started with the Americans threatening a boycott of the

world championships to secure more money and the same kind of treatment that USA Hockey

gives to the men's team.

"They should make a movie on it," forward Hilary Knight said.

"We had all the drama and everything.

It's sort of a storybook ending to an incredible series of accomplishments."

Nothing was more incredible than the move by Lamoureux-Davidson, who decided to use

the deke called "Oops, I did it again " — something she had practiced uncounted times in practice,

skating around tires set up on open ice to mimic defenders.

"I'm just thrilled beyond words," the beaming Lamoureux-Davidson said with a U.S.

flag draped around her shoulders and gold hanging on her chest.

"I've butchered it a thousand times, just ran into tires, tripped over tires just working

on my hands.

Just glad it worked out this time."

Her twin, Monique Lamoureux-Morando , said coach Peter Elander, now at Ohio State, had

taught the sisters the shootout move when the three were at the University of North

Dakota.

"Not everyone can take the pressure like that, and she took it like a champ," she

said.

Marvin and Amanda Kessel also scored in the shootout, another nail-biter ending four years

after Canada won its fourth-straight gold medal in Sochi after rallying to stun the

Americans in overtime."It's not like she has never won gold before.

The Canadian team has won the gold for the past four Olympics.

Maybe her best bet would have just been to just suck it up, say it was not your day,

and go back into the locker room to throw a tantrum.

Instead, this video clip will be used for generations to show future athletes what you

don't do on worldwide television.

Maybe now the Olympics will have to incorporate a mandatory sportsmanship etiquette course

before being allowed to compete in the Olympic games, don't you agree?

For more infomation >> Proud US Olympians Get Nasty Surprise For Winning Gold After Anti-American Athletes Lose Miserably - Duration: 5:38.

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Trish Regan: Huge opportunity for US to go after China - Duration: 1:25.

For more infomation >> Trish Regan: Huge opportunity for US to go after China - Duration: 1:25.

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Trump touts 'blazing' US economy at CPAC - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Trump touts 'blazing' US economy at CPAC - Duration: 1:55.

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President Moon to dine with Ivanka Trump, meeting between U.S. and North Korean - Duration: 2:27.

The First Daughter of the United States, Ivanka Trump set to arrive here around 4:30 p.m.

Korea time.... and she's coming here with a U.S. delegation to attend the closing ceremony

of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.

Meanwhile...

North Korea is sending another high level delegation to PyeongChang,... but the chances

of the U.S. and North Korean delegates meeting are said to be slim to none.

Our Blue House correspondent Hwang Hojun has more.

With the grand finale of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics just a couple of days away, Ivanka

Trump, the eldest daughter of U.S. President Donald Trump, will arrive in South Korea on

Friday, leading the U.S. delegation.

The delegation includes the White House press secretary, the commander of U.S. Forces Korea

and a U.S. senator.

A senior adviser to her father, Ivanka Trump is scheduled to dine with President Moon Jae-in

at the Blue House soon after she arrives.

Her meeting with President Moon is garnering much attention as she will likely be carrying

a personal message from President Trump that may mention the possibility of dialogue between

the U.S. and North Korea.

A high-level delegation from the North will once again head to the South on Sunday,....

also to attend the closing ceremony.

Kim Yong-chol,... the Vice Chair of the Workers' Party of Korea's central committee, will lead

the eight-member delegation.

Kim's visit to South Korea is stirring controversy because he's suspected of being the mastermind

of two deadly attacks on South Korea in 2010 - the sinking of the Cheonan warship, killing

46 South Korean soldiers,.... and the shelling of Yeonpyeong-do Island, killing four South

Koreans.

So, while their stays will overlap,... the prospects of them meeting, let alone having

direct contact, seems highly unlikely; especially as both the Blue House and the White House

have ruled it out.

Dialogue between the U.S. and North Korea was incorrectly anticipated by some during

the opening ceremony of the quadrennial event, in which U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's younger sister Kim Yo-jong attended.

It was later reported that a secret meeting between the U.S. and the North Koreans was

canceled by Pyongyang at the last minute.

On Thursday local time, Pence slammed Kim Yo-jong, while giving an address at the Conservative

Political Action Conference, saying, quote, "the sister of Kim Jong-un is a central pillar

of the most tyrannical and oppressive regime on the planet."

He was unapologetic on the fact that he stayed seated when the North Korean athletes entered

the stadium, saying the U.S. quote "doesn't stand with murderous dictatorships."

Hwang Hojun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> President Moon to dine with Ivanka Trump, meeting between U.S. and North Korean - Duration: 2:27.

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Ivanka Trump arrives in S. Korea to head U.S. delegation for PyeongChang closing ceremony - Duration: 2:08.

America's first daughter will be leading Washington's delegation for the closing ceremony of the

Winter games.

Although the White House said Ivanka Trump is here just to show support for team USA,

many wonder if she brings with her a message from her father to President Moon Jae-in.

Kwon Jang-ho has our top story.

Arriving at Incheon International Airport on a commercial Korean Air flight from Washington

on Friday afternoon, the U.S. first daughter made a short statement to the press, thanking

the South Korean people for their warm welcome.

"We're very, very excited to attend the 2018 Winter Olympic Games to cheer for Team USA,

and to reaffirm our strong and enduring commitment with the people of the Republic of Korea."

With that, she made her way to Seoul to get ready for a dinner hosted by President Moon

Jae-in at the Blue House.

On Saturday she will head to Pyeongchang, where she is expected to attend several Olympic

events over the weekend to watch the U.S. athletes compete.

There had been speculation that she would make time to meet with North Korean defectors,

like Vice President Mike Pence did during his visit for the opening ceremony.

White House officials denied such claims, reiterating the main purpose of her visit

was to highlight Team USA's achievements, as well as show support for South Korea.

Officials also denied that there are any plans for the first daughter to meet with the North

Korean delegation, which is arriving on Sunday.

But the last minute inclusion to the U.S. delegation of Allison Hooker, a National Security

Council official specializing in Korean affairs, has caused speculation that a meeting between

representatives from the two sides could still occur.

Ivanka Trump herself could still run into the North Koreans at the closing ceremony,

if they find themselves in similar seats to the opening ceremony.

Vice President Pence was seated one row in front of the North Koreans.

He spent most of the time largely ignoring them, and he also refused to stand when the

unified Korean team made their entrance.

Focus will be on whether the first daughter will give a similarly frosty response or extend

a hand to the regime.

Kwon Jang-ho, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Ivanka Trump arrives in S. Korea to head U.S. delegation for PyeongChang closing ceremony - Duration: 2:08.

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Proud US Olympians Get Nasty Surprise For Winning Gold After Anti American Athletes Lose Miserably - Duration: 5:36.

For more infomation >> Proud US Olympians Get Nasty Surprise For Winning Gold After Anti American Athletes Lose Miserably - Duration: 5:36.

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Why Melania Trump's Parents Obtain Green Cards, permanent residency in the United States? - Duration: 5:10.

For more infomation >> Why Melania Trump's Parents Obtain Green Cards, permanent residency in the United States? - Duration: 5:10.

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South Korean President hosts U.S. delegation led by Ivanka Trump at the Blue House - Duration: 2:55.

The visiting White House senior adviser is now at the nation's presidential office...

the first stop of her four day South Korea trip.

Let's go live to our chief Cheongwadae correspondent Moon Connyoung.

Connyoung, what's the latest.

Well, Ivanka Trump, the first daughter of the United States has officially kicked off

a highly anticipated trip here in South Korea... only

two weeks after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un sent his sister here on a mission... which

by some has been seen as an attempt to undermine Seoul's alliance with Washington.

Her official mission is to lead an American delegation to the Closing Ceremony of the

PyeongChang Winter Olympics which will be held on Sunday.

But, the first stop of her four-day visit to South Korea began here at the presidential

Blue House... with the South Korean president treating America's first daughter and the

senior White House adviser to a Blue House dinner.

They're going all out to make sure Ivanka receives due treatment.

They have been extra cautious in selecting the menu to accommodate her Kosher diet.

So, they're staying away from meat and shellfish.

Do we expect any politics or diplomacy from the U.S. delegation led by Ivanka Trump?

White House officials, including Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the White House press secretary traveling

with Ivanka, has been trying to play down any political or diplomatic role of the first

daughter... saying the purpose of Ms. Trump's visit is strictly sports and Olympics-related.

But, Ivanka's mere presence at an event along with the North Korean delegation - the closing

ceremony of the PyeongChang Olympics on Sunday is one - is bound to generate intense interest.

Although U.S. officials have repeatedly denied any planned meeting between Ms. Trump and

the North Korean delegation headed by Kim Yong-chol, a former spy chief who has been

widely blamed for the 2010 sinking of a South Korean warship... many here in South Korea

and well around the world will keep a close eye on the first daughter's every move...

as analysts have said Ivanka's chief task will be shoring up diplomatic relations with

South Korea.

And, tonight here at the Blue House... we will be watching for any signs or message

the well-trusted adviser to her father, President Donald Trump, has traveled with... as she

sets foot here in South Korea's Blue House only two weeks after Kim Yo-jong, the sister

of the North Korean leader, delivered a surprise offer of invitation to President Moon to visit

North Korea for an inter-Korean summit.

What's for sure is that the Korean peninsula will be the hot spot for global diplomacy

in the next few days, Daniel.

For more infomation >> South Korean President hosts U.S. delegation led by Ivanka Trump at the Blue House - Duration: 2:55.

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GM headquarters to delay collecting about US$650 mil. in loans to GM Korea - Duration: 1:54.

Seoul's government met for talks with officials of General Motors on the plans to shut down

a plant in the nation.

Following negotiations on how to revive the company in crisis,... the auto giant's HQ

in Detroit decided to delay the maturity date on the money lent to GM Korea, until it completes

due diligence on the Korean subsidiary.

Park Ji-won gets us up to speed with the developments.

U.S. automaker General Motors headquartered in Detroit decided to delay the collection

of nearly 6-hundred-fifty million U.S. dollars that were lent to its Korean unit.

The money is only a fraction of a total of some two-point-seven billion dollars that

GM Korea received in loans from its parent company and other GM subsidiaries.

The U.S. automaker has also decided to withdraw its initial request to use its GM Korea factory

in Bupyeong as collateral for the delay of collecting the debt.

The decision comes as negotiations are ongoing between the company and the Korean government

on a turnaround plan.

While this decision would seem to lessen the tension caused by the shutdown announcement

of GM Korea's assembly plant in Gunsan, about 270 kilometers south of Seoul, the U.S. automaker

is demanding a more active financial and systematic support from the Korean government for its

local subsidiary.

However,... the Korean government has stressed that the U.S. company should first present

a clear blueprint stating feasible long-term goals and effective plans that guarantee commitment

to continue operating in the country.

The U.S. automaker will decide on the fate of its plant in Gunsan,... after having more

discussions with the Korean government and GM Korea's labor union.

Park Ji-won, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> GM headquarters to delay collecting about US$650 mil. in loans to GM Korea - Duration: 1:54.

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Flip Lang Ep. 6 | A US newscaster asked Ferdinand Marcos about Imelda's shoes! - Duration: 4:31.

How do we connect the Iran hostage crisis,

broadcast journalist David Brinkley,

the EDSA People Power Revolution,

January 19, and the province of Nueva Ecija?

On November 4, 1979, a group of Iranian students

took over 60 American hostages

at the US Embassy at Tehran, Iran.

This was in supposed retaliation from America's allowing

the deposed Shah of Iran sanctuary.

Some say that the hostage taking was about more than

the Shah's medical care.

It was a dramatic way for the student revolutionaries

to declare a break with Iran's past

and an end to American intervention in its internal affair.

It was also a way to raise the intra and international profile

of the revolution's leader,

the anti-American cleric Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.

The students set their hostages free on January 21, 1981,

or 444 days after the crisis began

and just hours after President Ronald Reagan

delivered his inaugural address.

Many historians believe that that hostage crisis cost

Jimmy Carter a second term as president of the United States.

Now going back to the story,

everyday there were regular news updates in the US media.

Once such update, over the 444-day ordeal,

evolved into a daily evening news program called

Nightline with Ted Koppel.

Let's leave that story aside for a moment

and talk about a man named Ninoy Aquino.

Benigno Simeon "Ninoy" Aquino

was the husband of the future president of the Philippines,

Corazon Aquino.

He was known to have formed the leadership

of the opposition toward Ferdinand Marcos

who was then president of the Philippines.

It was past 1 PM on August 21, 1983

when the plane he was in arrived

in the Manila International Airport, which is now known as

the Ninoy Aquino International Airport.

There were over 1,000 armed soldiers and police officers

in Manila that were assigned by the government

to provide security for Aquino's arrival.

However,

sometime between him exiting the plane

and boarding the vehicle provided for him,

gunshots were heard.

After the gunshots stopped,

they found Aquino dead on the tarmac.

A few years later after the murder of Ninoy Aquino,

Koppel was one of the American journalists

who kept badgering Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos

about all the political problems he faced

and asking if he still had US support.

When people heard I was coming out

to do an interview with you,

you know what most people are interested in?

Mm?

[Koppel] Your wife's 3,000 pairs of shoes.

How many shoes—

- [Koppel] How many shoes— - Can you wear

on 20 years?

[Koppel] Exactly, how many can you?

Well...

To quell the complaints, Marcos agreed to an interview

on This Week with David Brinkley.

Instead, he announced snap elections for 1986,

a year before his latest term officially ended.

The allegations of massive cheating and a series of protests

culminated in what is now known worldwide

as the EDSA People Power revolution.

Now the EDSA Revolution in 1986 was a highlight

for Philippine democracy

and was praised worldwide as a successful,

bloodless revolution.

The revolution showed the successful efforts to oust

a tyrant via demonstration

without violence and bloodshed.

Why a "revolution" you ask?

Well, it was a result of the long,

supposed suppressed freedom by the Marcos government.

Now EDSA, the venue for the revolution,

or Epifanio de los Santos Avenue,

was originally supposed to be named

Disinuwebe de Junio, or the 19th of June,

or Ramon Magsaysay.

Instead, it was named after one of the most intelligent

Filipinos of all time.

Who was Epifanio de los Santos y Cristobal?

A historian,

scholar,

painter, and all-around genius,

and also governor of the province of Nueva Ecija.

And that's Flip Lang, where we connect the dots

from every when and every where

and bring it home to the Philippines.

I'm Bill Velasco

and you're not.

For more infomation >> Flip Lang Ep. 6 | A US newscaster asked Ferdinand Marcos about Imelda's shoes! - Duration: 4:31.

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Migrant Workers in the U.S.: Harvesting Food, Building Healthy Communities - Duration: 15:28.

[music]

I was coming and going

and coming and going.

I came here,

but before I went to Carolina, to Florida, to California.

We came from the other places and here is where we work.

Picking fruit.

Sometimes this three months

is the longest they are anywhere during the year.

[music]

Let's go here and go here if they're hiring,

if they're hiring we can all go as a family.

Like we all stay together.

[music]

In Mexico you do many jobs.

Mason, field hand.

The jobs were harder and they paid less.

[music]

I came because my niece was going to be born.

My brother was here.

He was working on the roads and trimming trees.

I was 13 and I was here with my mom.

My sister and my brother-in-law, like,

they were good and they were stabilized and everything.

It was hard for my mom to have us

but not her.

I was almost eight months pregnant

and I was scared

because I had just moved and about to deliver my baby.

It's difficult when you come over,

when you don't know people and when you don't have anything.

Because I have gone through a time

when I didn't have anything.

Most of them don't know English so

that is a big barrier for them

to be able to communicate with people

because they don't know the language.

They stay in small groups.

Nobody knows they're there

except the growers, you know the people that hire them.

I believe most providers are ignorant

to how it really is for the migrant farmworkers,

but once you learn about what they're going through,

you tend to make adjustments.

[music]

We have a worker or worker and family

in the fall for the apple and peach season.

Usually at that point they go either to Florida or Texas

to get themselves established

where they're going to be for citrus.

They may go back to Mexico

in the very cold weather or around Christmas

especially if they have kids in school,

they probably won't stay for very long in Mexico

maybe two or three weeks and then come back

and then start a northward progression

usually to Georgia, to do onions.

Some of them will split into different locations.

And those folks, those workers and families

will probably be in three to four different locations

in the United States.

It's a circuit of several different locations

and so it's not that they know

exactly where they're going to go.

Well I think family means everything.

And even through difficult times

we stay close like,

that's just who we are.

We're like a close family.

It's hard for us to be away.

[music]

We do a lot of different jobs.

Mainly rural work.

In the fields, all the time I was in the fields.

From working in Florida I came here.

Someone invited me.

In Florida, all those sacks were full, heavy,

and all scratched up.

The trees had thorns, so I came here.

Trees here don't have thorns.

So I can pick more and get hurt less.

Less scratches and make more money.

I liked it and I continued year after year

and I met the other workers

and my bosses and I stayed and here I am.

Me and my two sisters, we work in the line.

[noise]

We work Monday through Friday is from

6:00 in the morning to 5:30

and on Saturdays it's from

6:00 in the morning till like 3:00 in the afternoon.

My two brother-in-laws,

they drive a tractor at the field.

And my husband, he's in the field walking.

I have been driving a truck for 10 years.

To drive it means to carry boxes, full of fruit,

take out empty boxes to workers as needed

and bring them in for packaging, full.

But before I started driving the truck

I used to work at the orchard,

to maintain the orchard.

Pruning, whatever they needed.

I would help them to pick peach

and then after the peaches there were apples.

Whatever required picking.

And then the harvest.

And then there was driving the tractor,

and then the truck

and when I finished with the truck

it was all over and we would start again.

[music]

Their family for generations

have been farmworkers.

Most of them in Mexico,

that's what their great-great grandparents did,

they've all done outside farm work.

They're working when it's really hot.

They're working in October when it's starting to get cool,

down to 40 degrees in the daytime.

Heat is definitely a factor.

They're looking up into trees

into the sky into the sun

wearing a long sleeve shirt because

they're right up in the middle of them.

[music]

Building trust with migratory people

and people who are in very rural settings

is important because often they don't know

where they are,

and they don't know how they're going to get somewhere,

they don't know who's going to help them.

So you want them to trust you,

but you have to get it going pretty fast.

We try to be there on the

day that we know the crew's coming.

Hosting some sort of gathering space

for people to come and learn about the resources

that are available to them.

Inherently there's a power dynamic

between us as social service providers and

people who are here in need of services.

And so I think anything that we can do to kind of

level the playing field a little bit more

helps us build connections and

helps them feel a lot of trust for us.

In the work that we do we'll sometimes bring providers

from some of the local clinics with us when we go out to the labor camps and

meet people and I think that helps with kind of initiating

that process of building trust and building

the awareness of how one can access healthcare

So if you're there with food and with things to welcome them,

I mean they're usually very happy to see people.

You see that starts to become a bond and then like

seeing guys year after year, it's like

not like just a person you normally see, it's more like

oh look, that's Suzanne or oh look, that's Kaylie.

I think as soon as you

open that window you interact with them.

Even that, "hola" you know there like,

well, she speaks my language,

she's someone I can talk to, she's someone I can communicate with.

It's always that reassurance to them to know that

they have someone that they can speak to.

[Live Well, buenos tardes]

Interpreting in the clinic environment

it definitely goes both ways.

They have questions for the provider,

provider has questions for them,

and so just getting that information across to both parties

is definitely very important.

Having Yesseniau there,

the patient then becomes much more accepting

and that's why Yesseniau is so crucial

because she's part of their population, they trust her.

It goes a long way and it builds that trust.

It's the link that's so important for me to the patient.

Sometimes they come to us,

but a lot of times we go to the packing sheds.

We'll ask to see if anybody needs daycare for their children.

We try to provide not just the basic needs, but also,

we try to help the families to better themselves,

to do stuff that's gonna help them get a better life.

I don't see that in other places, and

I do think it's like really, really helpful.

[music]

Well, for pickers, I think the biggest danger is falling.

If the basket's half-full or more,

they could have, you know, 60 to 80 pounds.

And they're up and down, up and down, up and down.

I think for the packing shed,

you're standing in the same position for a very long time

and you're doing the same repetitive motions

with your hands, with your wrists, with your elbow.

A pretty common issue that we run into

is an eye issue called Pterygium.

Your muscle starts to harden,

and so that requires eye surgery.

I myself am a Lion Club member.

So I went through the Lions Club

and asked for them for a donation for this gentlemen

and they picked up the bill for him to go in

and have his eyes corrected.

Either weekends or extended hours are crucial to the population

because getting off of work isn't like what

most of us are accustomed to

and then when they get in I can't do the typical dental appointment

which we call a limited exam or emergency exam

where I'll go in and tell them what's wrong and then usually it's,

we'll get you in next week.

Getting off of work is very difficult for them.

They're not allowed to leave and sometimes the hours they work,

they can't give them up.

So having that time when it's after work,

which would basically be that 6:00 to 6:30 range

is really important to them.

And especially with the migrant population,

once I learned what they go through

your ability to become empathetic and get more companionate to their cause

and then you find yourself really wanting to help even more.

So I always try and look at it through that lens, like what if I were this person,

knowing what I know now, it really changes your decisions

and I know they appreciate it.

If I go to the doctor I have to tell the boss.

I have to tell the person in charge a day ahead and the time.

It's a bit difficult because production is every day... the same.

So, the only thing I ask them is to make the appointment late,

so they can be with me at work and then go see the doctor.

Everything about their lives is uncertain.

So healthcare is a huge one.

If you have a physical heath issue, a chronic disease.

If you're doing something that needs any sort of consistency or repeat visits;

we see people with chronic diseases that arrive

who have been three, to four, to five months

without the medication for it.

They know what they have, they know what they need,

but they haven't been any place where they could access it.

And so those things that need consistent follow up

are really, really hard for people that are constantly on the move.

[music]

Here, the people help me because you helped me.

And they treated me well.

To look for a doctor and to go to many appointments.

They scheduled the appointments with the doctor that does not charge a lot of money.

Because if you go somewhere else you will be paying more,

but with this program, they charge you less,

for medication and for appointments, for the dentist, the eye doctor, and the family clinic.

For me it is a good help what your program has given us,

medical care for your health has helped us a lot,

and of course childcare.

I think it is a good and safe place.

Your project had helped me with the school.

Your staff helped me to enroll my kids, also to translate

because I don's know English.

I think that the most important thing for people

who move and have kids is childcare.

because in order to be able to work you need care of your kids.

It's difficult when you come over,

when you don't know people and when you don't have anything.

We came over here because my husband

knows people and he knows your program

and we know people that will help us if we need it.

We know that this program will help us.

I feel good, I feel happy because of your support,

because when I come here I go see you and I'm thankful.

I rely on your help. I trust you and I know I have your help.

[music]

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