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he said a 16-year-old high school kid named albert brooks. >> albert einstein actually. >> yes. brooks at the time. >> yeah. >> it's odd that my dad's best friend is mel brooks and my best friend was albert brooks. two reiners. neither brooks is real brooks. mel brooks who is bernstein and albert who is einstein. mel kaminsky. excuse me. jim brooks is jim bernstein. >> all right already! >> jimmy: the babbling brooks. >> it made me feel good because he loved albert. and -- >> i lost my father when i was 11. and i met rob when i was 14. and you hear this, but it was literally true. carl was a second father to me. and it was a great second father because i didn't -- he didn't have any of the genetic issues. i could leave at 5:00, you know. and by the way, maybe this isn't the right time, but i never asked you this. i've always, you know, you're family always said like he was a second father. was anything left to me? [ laughter ] >> you know, albert, i'm sorry, but no. >> not that car? >> no, no. >> the car. >> you got enough from him. >> okay. >> jimmy: no heart what they say, the
he said a 16-year-old high school kid named albert brooks. >> albert einstein actually. >> yes. brooks at the time. >> yeah. >> it's odd that my dad's best friend is mel brooks and my best friend was albert brooks. two reiners. neither brooks is real brooks. mel brooks who is bernstein and albert who is einstein. mel kaminsky. excuse me. jim brooks is jim bernstein. >> all right already! >> jimmy: the babbling brooks. >> it made me feel good because he...
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Jun 2, 2024
06/24
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economist alexander sacks delivered an historic letter from albert einstein to franklin roosevelt at the white house. in the letter, the distinguished physicist described potential for an atomic weapon and warned that nuclear research was underway in germany. roosevelt responded to einstein's letter by authorizing the formation, a scientific committee to study whether an atomic weapon was feasible. later, he approved the creation of the manhattan, a top secret effort to build an atomic weapon. at a conference hyde park in september of 1944, fdr churchill agreed to keep the bomb project codenamed tube alloys secret from soviet leader joseph stalin. what neither was that russian spies were keeping informed about its progress. fdr was prepared to use weapons against both germany and japan but a bomb was not ready for testing until fdr death in germany surrender in july 45. president harry truman authorized the use of atomic bombs against japan in august were dropped on the japanese cities of hiroshima and nagasaki nagasaki. and. the most important legacy franklin roosevelt left the worl
economist alexander sacks delivered an historic letter from albert einstein to franklin roosevelt at the white house. in the letter, the distinguished physicist described potential for an atomic weapon and warned that nuclear research was underway in germany. roosevelt responded to einstein's letter by authorizing the formation, a scientific committee to study whether an atomic weapon was feasible. later, he approved the creation of the manhattan, a top secret effort to build an atomic weapon....
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Jun 17, 2024
06/24
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BLOOMBERG
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albert einstein said compounding is the eighth wonder of the world. i think you're going to get that continue reinvestment of income for a while. sonali: i don't pretend everything is rosy. i want to pay attention to what is starting to weaken in the credit spectrum. we're started to see defaults. >> you're are seeing the economy slow. the fed rate hikes is working. it is slowing the economy. but we are not envisioning a big spike in defaults. it is not like previous recessions where you see there's a big shock on the system. if you look across the different sectors we have seen, you have almost been enrolling recession were some businesses have been in a right for 30 years now, just coming out. and some industries are starting to see slowing and continuing going in. we do envision increased faults, increased downgrades. however, it is not armageddon in terms of a big spike of defaults. sonali: fairpoint. what he think about investors who are piling into riskier credits right now? do you think some might be aborting some of the risks out there? >> for
albert einstein said compounding is the eighth wonder of the world. i think you're going to get that continue reinvestment of income for a while. sonali: i don't pretend everything is rosy. i want to pay attention to what is starting to weaken in the credit spectrum. we're started to see defaults. >> you're are seeing the economy slow. the fed rate hikes is working. it is slowing the economy. but we are not envisioning a big spike in defaults. it is not like previous recessions where you...
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Jun 30, 2024
06/24
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KQED
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einstein academy, which is specifically for children with lgbtq backgrounds, or if you're special needsial needs schools that are starting up. the vast majority of the programs in voucher programs right now, about 15 of them are specifically set up for special needs families. and so what we're finding with choice programs in america is that pluralism is actually working. families are getting to choose options that are working for them, and that's the schools that they are choosing. it's not school choice by the schools. it's school choice by the parents. the last thing i would add is, you know, our traditional schools right now, they pick and choose by a situation called economic segregation. if you can afford a house, then you can choose. and we also know that there are tons of magnet schools. so the concept of choice in which schools choose is much more complex, but we know from school choice programs right now that families are choosing in over a million them, a million of them are doing so right now. john: people talk about school vouchers, money, going to religious schools as publi
einstein academy, which is specifically for children with lgbtq backgrounds, or if you're special needsial needs schools that are starting up. the vast majority of the programs in voucher programs right now, about 15 of them are specifically set up for special needs families. and so what we're finding with choice programs in america is that pluralism is actually working. families are getting to choose options that are working for them, and that's the schools that they are choosing. it's not...
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Jun 25, 2024
06/24
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BBCNEWS
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a letter signed by albert einstein is going up for auction — in which he warns that nazi germany mighto take action. it's expected to fetch as much as six million us dollars. the letter is being sold as part of a collection that belonged to the microsoft co—founder paul allen, who died in 2018. let's get more detail on the emperor and empress of japan being welcomed by king charles and camilla at the start of a three—day state visit to the uk. a short time ago — a banquet was held at buckingham palace our senior royal correspondent daniela relph reports. the centrepiece of any state visit, the grandeur and glitter of the state banquet. senior members of the royal family led the guest list, as the king tried out his japanese. welcome back to britain. earlier, there was a seven with ceremonial welcome for princess empress masako. that is unusual, and changes have had to be made to ensure political neutrality. this state visit was planned well before the election was called, having already been delayed due to the covid lockdown. there was no appetite for a further postponement. instead, a
a letter signed by albert einstein is going up for auction — in which he warns that nazi germany mighto take action. it's expected to fetch as much as six million us dollars. the letter is being sold as part of a collection that belonged to the microsoft co—founder paul allen, who died in 2018. let's get more detail on the emperor and empress of japan being welcomed by king charles and camilla at the start of a three—day state visit to the uk. a short time ago — a banquet was held at...
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einstein and on our end and etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing yeah, thanks for clapping, but i honestly, i think this is sort of, it's ought to be obvious. right? i mean one child is one child and, and this, this is not something that we need to need to argue about. but what puzzles me is supposing you say that actually think as a german jewish lives are more important than palestinian lives in jewish safety in germany. is more important than anything else i can sort of get behind that. what both the government and the media would like to do. above all is to protect the safety of jews in germany. i do not understand why people think one sided reporting of the conflict will do anything but reverberated and was found on twos in germa
einstein and on our end and etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing yeah, thanks for clapping, but i honestly, i think this is sort of, it's ought to be obvious. right? i mean one child is one child and, and...
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this jewish tradition includes people like albert einstein and on our end and etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me, it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing ya, thanks for clapping. but honestly, i think this is sort of its ought to be obvious. right? i mean one child is one child and, and this, this is not something that we need to need to argue about. but what puzzles me is supposing you say that actually think as a german jewish lives are more important than palestinian lives in jewish safety in germany. is more important than anything else i can sort of get behind that. what both the government and the media would like to do. above all is to protect the safety of jews in germany. i do not understand why people think so. one sided reporting of the conflict will do anything but reverberated and was down on jews in germany
this jewish tradition includes people like albert einstein and on our end and etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me, it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing ya, thanks for clapping. but honestly, i think this is sort of its ought to be obvious....
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this jewish tradition includes people like albert einstein and on our end to, etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me, it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing ya, thanks for clapping. but honestly, i think this is sort of its all to be obvious. right? i mean one child is one child and, and this, this is not something that we need to need to argue about. but what puzzles me is supposing you say that actually think as a german jewish lives are more important than palestinian lives in jewish safety in germany. is more important than anything else i can sort of get behind that. what both the government and the media would like to do. above all is to protect the safety of jews in germany. i do not understand why people think so. one sided reporting of the conflict will do anything but reverberated was down on choose in germany. th
this jewish tradition includes people like albert einstein and on our end to, etc, etc. people tend to think that jews are all nationalist and tribal list, which perhaps is the case in germany and in much in the state of israel. but it's very important to remember, this is not the case. so for me, it's a dead baby from my tribe is not a great or loss then a dead baby from a palestinian drop. but supposing ya, thanks for clapping. but honestly, i think this is sort of its all to be obvious....
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Jun 26, 2024
06/24
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FBC
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albert einstein says compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. one of the biggest mistakes or the biggest mistake young people make when it comes to managing their money? >> i would say just getting started as far as wanting to look at the numbers as we just heard from the video it is step 0 and takes a lot of empowerment because it's not tied to sports. this is not a requirement that's required in the united states and that is why people like myself creating platforms like this is where people are going and taking those initial steps. ashley: jen z likes to spend money on experiences. a different approach. is it hard to persuade this age group, you would love to go to thailand for a couple weeks, should save that money because it will accumulate. it's a hard argument to make when somebody is young. >> it is all about the balance. when you look at the charts you can see exactly from what i was talking about, when you are putting your money in our high yield savings account versus a traditional savings account people originally didn't have that $5
albert einstein says compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. one of the biggest mistakes or the biggest mistake young people make when it comes to managing their money? >> i would say just getting started as far as wanting to look at the numbers as we just heard from the video it is step 0 and takes a lot of empowerment because it's not tied to sports. this is not a requirement that's required in the united states and that is why people like myself creating platforms like...
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Jun 25, 2024
06/24
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KDTV
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a einstein.de medicina mÁs joven de todo el paÍs. su sueÑo es encontrar la cura del cÁncer. le decÍamos mucha suerte. asÍ nos despedimos. tenemos mÁs maÑana en "primer impacto". ( habla en ingles) presentadora: con lÁgrimas en sus ojos y acusÁndolas fuerza de la brecha, habla del allanamiento que realizaron en su residencia, la alcaldesa que tiene un momento te cuente cinco por ciento de crÍmenes, arrancamos con esto. .presentador: hoy comenzÓ el sueÑo para la selecciÓn colombiana la copa amÉrica 2024, profesor ernesto lorenzo 96 completados, y esa hinchada que vibra incluidas del Área de la bahÍa se dieron cita para enfrentar a los guaranÍes, el corazÓn de miles comenzÓ vibrar y tambiÉn en el Área de la bahÍa, un anÁlisis breve se ha enfrentado en cuarentena en ocasiones pecando un saldo a favor 22 victorias y ciento derrotas en nueve empates, en copas amÉricas aguado 11 veces, vamos hacer contacto con otro compaÑero, tambiÉn tiene la hinchada y tambiÉn. reportero: que tal dayana, muy buenas tar
a einstein.de medicina mÁs joven de todo el paÍs. su sueÑo es encontrar la cura del cÁncer. le decÍamos mucha suerte. asÍ nos despedimos. tenemos mÁs maÑana en "primer impacto". ( habla en ingles) presentadora: con lÁgrimas en sus ojos y acusÁndolas fuerza de la brecha, habla del allanamiento que realizaron en su residencia, la alcaldesa que tiene un momento te cuente cinco por ciento de crÍmenes, arrancamos con esto. .presentador: hoy comenzÓ el sueÑo para la selecciÓn...
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Jun 20, 2024
06/24
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RUSSIA1
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einstein was the smartest scientist who has existed since the big bang more than 13 billion years agoclude the topic of ufos in presidential elections. debate. debate revelations are picking up steam and this. this question may now deserve more credence than before because a group of scientific academics from wait for it harvard, yes, they have collectively suggested that not only could aliens exist, but that extraterrestrial beings could live underground on our planet, moon or even walking among people. there is access, but i talked to people about it, i even had meetings on this topic, there are very smart and respectable people, they say that there is something there. i definitely think that the question will be asked during the presidential debate because there are so many people who believe they have seen things in the sky or encountered aliens, i met a woman who swore she gave birth to an alien baby. the report from the anomaly analysis office is very detailed, specific and convincing, but now it’s 2024, it all started in the seventeenth, for 7 years now the news has been going
einstein was the smartest scientist who has existed since the big bang more than 13 billion years agoclude the topic of ufos in presidential elections. debate. debate revelations are picking up steam and this. this question may now deserve more credence than before because a group of scientific academics from wait for it harvard, yes, they have collectively suggested that not only could aliens exist, but that extraterrestrial beings could live underground on our planet, moon or even walking...
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Jun 20, 2024
06/24
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KGO
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and not only did fat albert einstein repeat himself -- [ laughter ] he also made a claim that indicateshat lying and dementia might be starting to team up. >> he confidently declared joan rivers voted for him when he ran for president. joan rivers died in 2014, she would not have been able to vote for donald trump. >> jimmy: so he's right, dead people are voting! [ laughter ] [ applause ] with her ouija board, i don't know. trump also seemed a bit confused about the fact that he wasn't actually the president anymore. >> he also seemed to think he still had some foreign policy powers. there was one day he told me he needed to go upstairs to deal with afghanistan, even though he clearly didn't. [ laughter ] >> he told you that while you were interviewing him at trump tower? he told you he needed to go upstairs to deal with afghanistan? >> with the quote, the afghanistan is how he referred to it. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: not "a" afghanistan, "the" afghanistan. that's got to be his code word for the toilet, right? [ laughter ] i gotta make the afghanistan! it's very scary to think that the gu
and not only did fat albert einstein repeat himself -- [ laughter ] he also made a claim that indicateshat lying and dementia might be starting to team up. >> he confidently declared joan rivers voted for him when he ran for president. joan rivers died in 2014, she would not have been able to vote for donald trump. >> jimmy: so he's right, dead people are voting! [ laughter ] [ applause ] with her ouija board, i don't know. trump also seemed a bit confused about the fact that he...
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Jun 7, 2024
06/24
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KPIX
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. >> i'm just amazed at the detail, the faces, albert einstein, sigmund freud. >> i didn't know i couldared her works with family and close friends, but that changed eight years ago when she met jody savin and her daughter, maya. >> the walls, the floors, everything is filled with these enormous tapestries, beautiful and historic. but the most shocking ones are testimonies of what she went through in the camps. >> reporter: as part of her bat mitzvah studies, maya asked to meet a holocaust survivor. savin, an author and filmmaker, and her daughter were in awe of her art and powerful story of survival. >> for me looking at trudy's art, it feels like she is holding up a lens to her life. it was like this completely eye-opening experience, this like visceral holocaust education, genocide education that i'd never had before. >> trudy was allowed to stay by her mother's side, which is very unusual because she learned at a very young age to be silent and invisible. >> oh, yes. i never said a word. oh, no. >> reporter: maya formed a friendship with trudy, convincing her that her work needed to
. >> i'm just amazed at the detail, the faces, albert einstein, sigmund freud. >> i didn't know i couldared her works with family and close friends, but that changed eight years ago when she met jody savin and her daughter, maya. >> the walls, the floors, everything is filled with these enormous tapestries, beautiful and historic. but the most shocking ones are testimonies of what she went through in the camps. >> reporter: as part of her bat mitzvah studies, maya asked...
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Jun 3, 2024
06/24
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CSPAN2
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einstein to a book for them.here's been something at the core of the fledgling publishing house that that created that they created and those are the until end this evening celebrating one of the greatest in history and embodying of the type of editor that made simon and schuster enduring the indomitable and energetic alice mayhew. with a raspy laugh, incisive mind and, her brutally honest margin. 40 years ago, when i was a young anonymous writer at time and friend evan thomas and i said, hey, let's a book. it was sort of like, hey let's put on the play. i've been covering the reagan caaign. and i noticed that when you went to rallies, you got the pamphlets people about the established ment about the council one rockefellers in, the bilderberg group al-sham ey were talking about, but evan was a preppy. and so i said, what is this establishment thing? so we spent a few days in a very tacky group house in sag harbor and came up with a complex that most editors would have totally dismissed as a book idea. a group bi
einstein to a book for them.here's been something at the core of the fledgling publishing house that that created that they created and those are the until end this evening celebrating one of the greatest in history and embodying of the type of editor that made simon and schuster enduring the indomitable and energetic alice mayhew. with a raspy laugh, incisive mind and, her brutally honest margin. 40 years ago, when i was a young anonymous writer at time and friend evan thomas and i said, hey,...
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Jun 9, 2024
06/24
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CSPAN3
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einstein to a book for them.here's been something at the core of the fledgling publishing house that that created that they created and those are the until end this evening celebrating one of the greatest in history and embodying of the type of editor that made simon and schuster enduring the indomitable and energetic alice mayhew. with a raspy laugh, incisive mind and, her brutally honest margin. 40 years ago, when i was a young anonymous writer at time magazine, my officemate and friend evan thomas and i said, hey, let's a book. it was sort of like, hey, let's put on the play. i've been covering the reagan campaign. and i noticed that when you went to rallies, you got the pamphlets people about the established ment about the council on foreign relations and the rockefellers in, the bilderberg group, al-sham louisiana i didn't know what they were talking about, but evan was a preppy. and so i said, what is this establishment thing? so we spent a few days in a very tacky group house in sag harbor and came up with
einstein to a book for them.here's been something at the core of the fledgling publishing house that that created that they created and those are the until end this evening celebrating one of the greatest in history and embodying of the type of editor that made simon and schuster enduring the indomitable and energetic alice mayhew. with a raspy laugh, incisive mind and, her brutally honest margin. 40 years ago, when i was a young anonymous writer at time magazine, my officemate and friend evan...