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May 27, 2025 34 mins

Failing schools, FBI opening unsolved cases and Harvard money to trade schools.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
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We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
On two three starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in this together. This is your morning show with Michael Giljornan.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
You're listening to the best of Michael del Jorno on
your morning show. It's the best we can find. No,
every time I open the mic, it's best up, very incliting.
I heard some of those liners. Seven minutes after the
hour we are live. You are looking live at Tuesday
made the twenty seventh year of Our Lord, twenty twenty

(00:58):
five on the erin stream live on your iHeartRadio app.
This show belongs to you, and it's our pleasure and
our honor to be up in serving you. Jeffrey's got
the sound, Red's keeping an eye on the content. The
FBI is reopening probes into a number of high profile
unsolved mysteries, including the cocaine found at the White House.
This is interesting because, you know, for me, I'm thinking

(01:21):
Clan Podesta, you know, who was really running the White House.
There are a lot of suggestions or a lot of
arrows that kind of point to Jill and Hunter, or
at least that's the ones that Jake Tapper in his
book is trying to serve up. Well, maybe Hunter was

(01:46):
there more than we thought. That's why the cocaine was there.
There were some the pointed fingers that the cocaine may
have belonged to the Vice president. Hey, maybe we'll find
out what the new cash patel. FBI US Special Envoy
Steve Whitkoff says a ceasefire hostage is on the table
and he's urging ammas to accept it. President Trump is
thinking about taking Harvard's money. I think this should be

(02:06):
our question of the day for the Talk back Line,
And I want to put in perspective with a new
poll that's out on high school graduates and our perception
of how public education is preparing students for the Remember
what the job of K through twelve common education is
to prepare young boys and girls. And they can even

(02:29):
figure out which is which, to prepare young boys and
girls to be men and women ready for the workforce
or prepared for higher education. It's a pretty simple scoreboard
to look at, and you don't need a poll to
suggest that it's true. They are not, but the perception

(02:53):
is they're not prepared for the workforce. Especially having said that,
maybe taking that hot money and giving it to a
trade school that will prepare them for the workforce is
a good idea and a good band aid and fix
and three more inmates? All right, so what are we at?
We got two outstanding right from the New Orleans escape.
Yeah there's two. What's the furthest one away beton Rouge.

(03:16):
They didn't get very far, did they? I think Texas?
Oh yeah, one did get to Texas. Yeah, nobody went east.
Nobody went north. They lose. He had a boat and bread. Shit.
They didn't want to get too far away from some
of the tasty cats of rolls, if you know what
I mean. So you get two more though the ones

(03:37):
caught in the French Quarter. I mean they didn't get
too far at all. Well, no, they don't get a hurricane,
and how about my thunder. You're gonna notice I'm in
a good mood. I couldn't stay up. I had to
roll over at halftime, but I had my fingers crossed
in my sleep, and I woke up ecstatic. SGA with
a career high playoff amount of forty points and take

(04:01):
care of business. Thunderwin by two six. They can end
it all tomorrow night in Okay, seeing all right? Um,
you would think having time off for Memorial Day, I
would have slept, you would think. But on my Apple iPhone,

(04:22):
my morning alarm is set to Monday through Friday. Guess
what yesterday was. Yesterday would have been a Monday. So
we've had a bad bout with diarrhea, our English shepherd,
not me, the English shepherd, thank you well. We took
him to the vet on Saturday morning. They ran tested
and see anything. So they gave us some diarrhea medication

(04:45):
to keep an eye and they don't get it. Once
he stops, don't keep giving it to him, or then
he get constipated. Then we've been feeding him. He's actually
been eating better than us all weekend, getting homemade chicken
and rice meals. But this will not stop. And so
first my alarm goes off at three forty five, unbenounced
to me, my wife had been up all night with
him going in and out. I then finally almost fall asleep,

(05:09):
and then I start hearing barking, So I thought, well,
I don't want to I don't disturb my wife's birthday.
So I go let them out. Then I come back,
I can't fall asleep again, and finally I just enjoyed
the best of which I thought. You did a trit
for job. Thank you very much, thank you. So yeah,
the one day off, I didn't get to sleep, but
I did get my cup of coffee. I did go
out on my sacred deck. I did thank Almighty God

(05:31):
for the people he sent, as George Patten would say,
and for the sacrifice they made, and for those who
still miss and a grateful nation that is forever in
their debt. And I hope you had a wonderful Memorial
Day for me. About five things jump out today, and

(05:52):
a lot of them have to do with the Democrats.
And again I try so hard not to play that. Look,
as far as I'm concerned, if we could get be
on Republican a Democrat, and all return to be Americans.
I mean, obviously I would prefer a moral self governed
for it by the people. But come on, let's take

(06:14):
them one at a time. But the Democrats, they're not
having a very good morning, all right. So first you
have the Atlantic. We always make this distinction because there's
bias everywhere in journalism's dead, But the Atlantic, Oh, that's
the high tower used to be in the old days.
You could control the narrative of a nation because no matter,

(06:36):
I don't even know how many radio stations there are, No,
there's probably more than that, right, eight hundred AMS, over
a thousand fms. I don't even know if is that
Moody ever counted. Probably more than that, right, somebody google
that would be an interesting one. But there was a
great way to control all of them, the Associated Press

(06:56):
and the UPI because where did every radio station, whether
AM or FM, small town, big town, major market, where
were they getting their news? There was no witernet. You
got it off the wire. So obviously if there was
bias at the AP, it was more than just a
bias at the AP. It went to everything radio and

(07:17):
television that used it to report. And that's kind of
what's left now with the Atlantic. That's where NBC comcasts
take their cues. That's where Disney, ABC takes its cues.
That's where CNN and MSNBC all take their cues. Oh,
we were way off. What is it like tens of thousand?
Says in twenty twenty three there were forty four hundred

(07:39):
forty four licensed AM stations, six thousand, six hundred and
sixty three ten thousand FM stations, so ten thousand total.
There's a lot of radio stations. Is I'm seeing fifteen thousand? Well,
I'm saying yeah, on them down, it says the significantly
higher FCC database listing fifteen thousand, three ninety three license
for radio stations. So ironically, fifteen thousand stations and there's

(08:04):
only one hundred employees we're running at all, most of
them empty, but they're out there. The cumulus ones are
dark in sub cities. Crazy, but yeah, that's how you
would control things. Now, you know the Atlantic they take
their because so does the intelligency at the university level
as well. So when the Atlantic says something, you really

(08:24):
got to pay attention. And what's their headline? A Democrat
Party civil war is coming coming. To quote the movie Twister,
HiT's already. It's almost over. They're just now getting around
that the Civil war is coming. Not to be outdone.
The Wall Street Journal's headline this morning is Ronnie Manuel

(08:47):
kind of teasing he may run for president? Are you serious?
The Wall Street Journal hasn't figured out. Not only is
AOC the air apparent to Bernie Sanders, and she will
get off to the early quickest largest lead in the
primary process for the twenty twenty eight nomination. The DNC

(09:08):
will have to step in and block it, as they
did in twenty sixteen with Hillary, twenty twenty with Joe Biden,
in twenty twenty four with Kamala Harris. And that's their block.
It's probably Wes Moore with him. Romney Manuel, Is this
the Wall Street Church just trying to going to ease
the name into your vernacular so that it's a little

(09:30):
bit more like, Oh, thank god rom came to the
to the rescue. You know, a former chief of staff
of Obama, Obama Land and murder capital of the world,
marriage from Chicago. Yeah, that's that's their guy. That's the

(09:50):
next Joe Biden, that's the next Hillary Clinton. Wall Street
Journal just getting around to telling you about it. I
loved this one too, And I guess this falls under
the Democrats. We've made the statement, and I would stand by.
I don't even this one's so kind of like a
self evident truth. It's so apparent. Do we really need

(10:11):
to discuss it? So Richard Nixon was a good president
who did a really dumb thing after some of his
aides did a really monumental stupid thing and trying to
cover up the break in, but you still had a
competent president at his desk. So we keep talking about

(10:37):
this may be the greatest political hoax ever perpetrated on
the American people, well since COVID, but certainly more so
than Watergate. And so when Jake Tapper was at the question,
he had to reluctantly, well, perhaps this is actually worse

(10:58):
than what yeah, fake presidents see is far worse than
Watergate a cover up. And then you have the final
Democrat story, which is they're they're willing to spend any
amount of money to find the next Joe Rogan. You
can't buy the next Joe Rogan, can you we gonna do?
We can do American idol and look for the next talent.
Rogan is organic and that's the way it's gotta happen.

(11:20):
You you can't. Yeah, what are you gonna do. There's
no amount of money, there's no amount of celebrity that
can become them. They had Joe Rogan. Well that's actually
this is the best of Red. Well. Yeah, they they had,
They had Bobby, they had Tales, they had they had Trump.

(11:47):
They had Trump said, they had Sir I love what
he does that, Sir the Lincoln said, Sir Reagan. They
had Racan. Yeah, think about all they had. Wow, that's
just you know what, that's one of those this morning.
I gotta take a sip of coffee on that. Okay,
that's even a lot for me to digest. Well, and

(12:10):
they posthumously lost Kennedy. Jack would want me to let
you know I left right here in the crypt. But yeah,
but the notion that you're in search, just the search
for the next Joe Rogan is disqualifying. To Red's point,

(12:31):
it has to be authentic, organic. There's another lesson too,
that people forget the power of being first, and nobody
remembers second first person to complete a transatlantic flight. Come on, Timberg, Lindberg,

(12:52):
Charles Lindberg was what I was going to say the second,
not Charles Lindberg. That's what I was way, Amen, try
the veal. I'll be here all week. My son at
my wife's birthday dinner, looks at me and goes, why
won't you eat lamb? I said, because they're cute, you
will eat ugly animals. Well, no, but cows are used

(13:15):
to it. I believe Nick doesn't even sound like that.
Why do you do that? He used to it? He
was really little. He's forever that little voice. All right?
But who was the third transatlantic flight? Familiaire? You know?
Because why she was the first? Wars the power of
being first? What a fool's Errand to try to find

(13:39):
the next Joe Rogan and what they don't get it's
not the messenger, it's the failed message. Joe Rogan is
a true, open mind, free agent, fair guy. I don't
even think the Democrats remember how to play that way.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Choano.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Mary lou Redden was arrested for a dui at fifty seven.
Oh yeah, pretty impressive, though she blew a perfect ten.
It's not a fun subject, all right, Good morning. Twenty
seven minutes after they after just waking up. President Trump

(14:23):
is taking about taking Harvard's money and giving it to
trade schools. This is kind of, like, you know, one
of those little flippant remarks he makes, but wow, what
a brilliant idea. Mark Mayfield has the details.

Speaker 3 (14:36):
In a post on truth Social Monday morning, Trump said,
I am considering taking three billion dollars of grant money
away from a very anti semitic Harvard and giving it
to trade schools all across our land. In another post,
Trump also said the government is waiting for Harvard to
provide them with foreign student lists so they can determine
how many of them should not be let back into
the country. The Trump administration revoked Harvard's ability to enroll

(14:57):
foreign students, a move that was later temporarily blocked by
a federal judge. On Monday, Trump's said, have no fear
the government will in the end win.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
I'm Mark Mayfield. A new study has found a way
to identify depression and teenagers with a simple blood test.

Speaker 4 (15:11):
Canadian researchers from McGill University have pinpointed nine molecules in
blood that could help detect depression in teens earlier.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
The clinical study found.

Speaker 4 (15:21):
These molecules were elevated in teens diagnosed with depression, and
they can also predict how symptoms will change. The same
molecules were not linked to depression in adults. I'm Sarah
Lee Kessler.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
The unemployment rate maybe near a fifty year low, the
new report shows the functional employment rate is actually much higher.
Demi Trichio reports.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
Ludwig Institute for Shared Economic Prosperity looked at unemployed workers,
people who can't find full time employment, and people stuck
in jobs where they can barely afford to live. Using
those metrics, the report estimates the true unemployment rate is
around twenty four percent. That's compared to the four point
two percent most recently put out by the Labor Department.
I'm Tama Trihio.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
No, apparently we're going to complate conflate underemployment and unemployment
to try to find a negative story during the Trump administration.
Good work. Game four SGA with a career playoff high
of forty points led the Thunder and a squeak around
the road one tight six over the Tea Wolves. Thunder
now up three games to one. Game five coming up
tomorrow night in Oklahoma, sid Hey.

Speaker 6 (16:27):
This is Top Cop Kathy Henters and my morning show
is your Morning Show with Michael Dale Jiorno, Hey, It's
me Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
Friday from three to six Pacific, five to eighth Central,
and six to nine Eastern on great radio stations like
Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento or one oh four
nine The Patriot in Saint Louis and Impact Radio one
oh five nine and twelve fifty w h d Z
in Tampa, Florida. Shop you can join us live and

(17:01):
make us a part of your morning routine. In the meantime,
enjoy the podcast post Memorial Day. Tuesday made the twenty
seventh year of Our Lord twenty twenty five on the Aaron,
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. The FBI reopening some
probes to a number of high profile cases, including the
cocaine that was left in the White House? Was it Hunters?
Was it Kamala's? How did get there? Somebody should probably

(17:23):
investigate that sex trafficking trial of Sean Diddy Combs in
New York City is entering its third week. Three more
inmates who escaped from the New Orleans jail earlier this
month or back in custody. One was in the French quarter,
one was in Baton, Rugian, one was in Texas. I
think that's what they said this morning. So eight down,

(17:44):
two to go in the Thunder. With a two point
win last night on the road, they now have a
commanding three game to one lead in that Western Conference final,
returning to Oklahoma City tomorrow night. Good morning. What I
love most about this show you and we can't have
have your morning show without your voice. So use that
talkback button on the iHeartRadio app. No more waiting on

(18:05):
hold for the talk show host to answer. You instantly
press a button. It counts you down very professionally, three
two one, and then it gives you thirty seconds to
ask the question or make a comment. Our question of
the day is what do you think about? You know?
Donald Trump just riffs these things like you know or
are they or they just presented that way, goes off teleprompters,
we know what we should even have a tax on tips,

(18:29):
and then it becomes one of the more popular things
throughout the campaign. Well, the latest is I'm thinking about
taking half it's money and giving it to trade schools,
and I'm like, that's a brilliant idea. So our question
of the day is, do you agree with President Trump?
Does Harvard really should Harvard even be getting this money?
They got endowments, they've got they're not complying, and they've

(18:50):
got anti Semitism issues. Why are we funding it with
taxpayer dollars? Meanwhile, our kids are unprepared for the workforce.
He'll do birds of one stone. I think this might
be another one of those great ideas the president has
stumbled upon. What do you think in the talk tack?
Let us know? All right, let's start with John.

Speaker 7 (19:10):
Good morning, Michael. I would like to get your take
on something. I went to a church this weekend and
I noticed their flagpole did not have an American flag
on it, but it had the Christian flag once inside
the building and inside the sanctuary. Not one American flag
displayed anywhere. And I asked the pastor why not. He
said he didn't want to disrupt from the focus of

(19:31):
Christ on some other emblem.

Speaker 1 (19:33):
What do you think of that? Oh wow, what a
loaded question. Well, one the two shouldn't be a distraction
if we were still one nation under God, indivisible with
liberty and justice that comes from God, not man, as

(19:57):
we were intended. Next thing is, you know they're I
don't confuse and I cherish both. Trust me, I don't
confuse the place on earth that God chose, gifted and
purposed and life to me with the kingdom. I'll spend

(20:19):
eternity and a kingdom that has already begun. So that's
a tricky one. That's number one. Number two, I don't
you know I have? I have, I have. I don't
want to say this in a tense because it will
give away. But I have seen pastors who are remarkable pastors, shepherds, discipleers,

(20:49):
eloquent and anointed deliverers of God's word and application, who
don't know the first thing about America. So I really
don't look for a pastor for my civics. Even though
I find my faith in civics and history when I

(21:11):
study it, I really don't look for it. So I
have like about five or six different swirling thoughts when
you ask that question. I have been to churches where
the flag is flying high. I don't feel a sense
of Oh, praise God, I'm in the right place. That

(21:31):
almost feels, you know, but I because in Tennessee. I'm
going to say this and probably upset some people in Tennessee.
Sometimes they've kind of made a religion out of patriotism
and they go too far. Now, you may not be
exposed to that. I am. So I'm actually like the

(21:54):
pastor you're citing, I'm a little more protective of that.
I'm wondering, do you worship this flag or the Kingdom
to come that is here? Do you worship that pastor
or the Christ that would have been on that empty
cross you're seeing? So I will give you this John
question of the day. By far, wouldn't stop going to

(22:17):
that church because there's no American flag. I think it's
kind of more of a testimony of how much we
have separated God from country. That would be tragic. If
it's true, A flag should never distract you. In fact,
a real understanding of that flag and the history of
that flag and the republic for which it stands should

(22:38):
be very involved with your faith and specifically Christianity. I
don't think I did a very good job of answering that.
Let's move on quickly before somebody notices to Youngstown.

Speaker 8 (22:49):
Why are we funding Harvard with our tax dollars when
they have as much money in the bank as some
small countries. And yeah, other students are foreign students, So
why are we funding them when we could be giving
the money to our youth to go to trade schools.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Oh well, that's where I'm at. All I can say
is I completely agree with you, and I think the
President has stumbled on another genius idea. And I'll tell
you why what. John is back. John's back with it.
He just did he not like my answer. Well, I
think he's got another suggestion for you. Oh okay, back
to John.

Speaker 7 (23:27):
You know, Michael, diarrhea is hereditary.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
It runs in your teens. My dog doesn't wear jeans,
but he does have diarrhea. All right, Speaking of all
of this, I thought this was a great Rasmussen poll.
Now remember this is a poll. This is American people's opinion,

(23:53):
not a fact test scores, graduation rates, a focus group
with small business owners who are hiring people out of
high school, that would be fact. This is perception. I
think the two are probably pretty equal. I have often

(24:18):
just cut to the chase and said, if you're forty
five years old and you've got kids in school, they're
not reading the same textbooks you listen to. The curriculum
is not the same curriculum. We don't even teach history anymore, barely.
We don't teach civics at all. The textbooks have all

(24:42):
been rewritten. Kids aren't having the same experience. I'm sixty.
They're not having anything like the experience I My day
began with the prayer of Saint Francis, the Cisi, and
the pledge of Allegiance. I don't think any of my
kids experience that, let alone the courses, the curriculum in

(25:05):
class textbook. The experience is completely different. And we've gotten
away from education because we have gotten into socialization and indoctrination.
So kids, and it's not even working, by the way
for most, thank god. But yeah, they're pretty politically correct

(25:30):
when they graduate. But are they ready for the workforce?
Are they prepared for higher education? Have we dumbed down
results in common edging? I mean, it's hard to find
somebody that fails anymore. And then I don't know about
everybody's school. I can't speak blanketly, but I mean it's
like they don't even have summer school either. They have
a way of making it up before summer school to

(25:53):
see some extra things. Okay, you're through, and towards the end,
you know, they're like, whatever, we're going to pass you.
Nobody just wants to see you again. So you know
how we got here. But what's our perception? And this
is interesting because we talked before Memorial Day about graduation

(26:14):
and how interesting is that the kids, You know, we
always talk about life is best understood looking back, but
must be lived looking forward. Well, the kids are all
sitting in that chair of graduation and they're looking forward,
and it's scary. It's not. They don't know what college
is going to be like. They don't know if they
can cut it. They don't know if they're going to
get a break and be able to get a job.

(26:34):
They don't know if they're ever going to get a
promotion or a raise, or be able to keep a job.
Or it's scary. We're all sitting up in the stands
and we're looking back. Now. When I look back, I
don't see me, and I don't even see good fortune.
I see a god, a god that knew every hair
in my head. He went before me, with me and

(26:55):
after me, and all I did was see Kim he
took care of all the heavy lift. And I would
go back to that seven. I was seventeen when I graduated.
I would go back to that seventeen year old and say, relax, man,
it's faith. Kind of like, I don't know how you
guys struggle. If you ever struggle with like tithing when
bills are really tight, that's a tough call. But if
you really know God, I'll let go because he can

(27:16):
do anything. Do anything today, but it's hard looking forward.
This is kind of similar to that, and that we've
got parents raising kids, and you know they're watching their kids.
COVID was a great revealer. When all the kids were
on computers, I could not believe what I was hearing.

(27:40):
One these kids were fourteen, fifteen, sixteen years old and
they're being talked to like kindergarteners. Okay, kids. I couldn't
believe my ears. And there was like no level of
content in the hour long class. In fact, there were
several times and I wish my wife could come on
and and go through some of this with us. They

(28:02):
don't even teach. My poor wife got stuck almost teaching
for twelve years. They roll out the assignments in class
do all this other stuff that they don't dare want
on a test that can be proven. That's where they
spent their real time. That's the socialization and doctrination part.
And then when it comes to the actual course you

(28:23):
were in math, oh, we'll leave that up to your
parents to teach you, or you got to teach yourself.
So it's a massive failure and parents are looking and
watching their kids and seeing it. So now ras Musen
calls and they do a survey and thirty percent of

(28:45):
American adults think most high school graduates have the skills
needed to enter the workforce. The perception of failure is
jaw dropping. They think only three out of ten kids
have the skills they need to enter the workforce. That
was the number one job of common education. Prepare kids

(29:07):
to be citizens, prepare kids for the workforce, or prepare
kids the few that go on to higher education. I mean,
you're only failing at the essence of what you're supposed
to be. Although that's slightly up from last year. Last

(29:29):
year was twenty six percent. Fifty three percent now say
graduates do not have the skills. You know, we always
kick around this old expression, we don't fail because we
don't know what to do. We failed because we don't
do what we know. It was like when when Bobby

(29:49):
Kennedy was talking about the obesity and disease in our kids.
We know what's causing it. We know how we played
grow up and how they sit now. We know what
we ate with mom and dad both married in the
home and dinner, and we know how people eat process

(30:12):
foods today. I mean, we know what it is, but
are we gonna do it? Bottom line of this survey
is we all know public schools are failing. What we're
we gonna do about it? Likewise, only twenty nine percent
believe most high school graduates have the skills needed for college.
Do you realize the magnitude of the perceived failure I'm describing.

(30:41):
I mean, imagine if we were you know, you just
got out of a restaurant and we pulled everybody that
left the restaurant, and only three out of ten got
their meal. They're right out tasted, nobody's full three Only
three out of ten didn't leave hungry. I mean, I
just I can't even get my arms around this. So

(31:04):
the perception of the American people is fifty three percent
of graduates don't have the skills, so you'll get a job.
And just under fifty percent don't have the skills to
go to higher education. We have one big remedial future.

(31:27):
What an indictment, What a failure? But to answer Donald
Trump's question, Yeah, I don't think I'd be giving money
to Harvard. I think I would be doing what high
school failed to do. But junior I failed to do
what elementary failed to do. If our education system didn't
prepare them for the workforce, maybe Harvard's money and a

(31:47):
trade school will.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Trono so
called Big Beautiful Bill.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
After the House narrowly passed the massive spending and tax
cut measure a single vote, Scott Carr has more from Washington.

Speaker 9 (32:02):
Republicans in this Senate have promised to make changes to
the bill, though House Speaker Mike Johnson tells CNN State
of the Union he thinks that would be a bad idea.

Speaker 1 (32:11):
I have a very delicate balance here, a very delicate
equilibrium that we've reached over a long period of time,
and it's best not to meddle with it too much.

Speaker 9 (32:19):
Johnson says he takes issue with a congressional Budget Office
estimate saying almost eight million Americans will eventually lose their
healthcare coverage because it cuts to Medicaid included in the bill.
He claims many of those people are illegal immigrants or
able bodied young men who refuse to work, and that
they're committing fraud by enrolling in Medicaid. I'm Scott Carr

(32:41):
in Washington.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
President Trump later read that the tomb of the Unknown
Soldier during the one hundred and fifty seventh National Memorial
Day observation at Arlington National Cemetery.

Speaker 10 (32:57):
The President visited Arlington National Sumitary to mark Memorial Day.
It took part in a wathlaying ceremony at the tomb
of the Unknown Soldier. Before delivering remarks, Trump said, we
share in the sorrow with the families of fallen service
members and added those soldiers gave everything and asked for nothing.
I'm Lisa Carton.

Speaker 1 (33:17):
Give it any bowl of fruit, You'll always see me
go right for the chilled grapes. And today's National Grape
Day pre tennis with everything you need to know about
the juicy flavored fruit.

Speaker 11 (33:27):
There's no official ranking of flavors in this country, but
it's safe to say grape is up there in popularity.
It's in popsicles, lollipops, soda, juice, even jam. And for
good reason. The grape has been around for one hundred
and thirty million years. They were so rare at one
time they were actually used as currency. Ten thousand varieties,
thirteen hundred for wine alone, only one hundred calories a cup,

(33:50):
no pealing required. I'm pre tennis.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Choano

Speaker 9 (34:01):
Bay St
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