SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
200
200
Jan 4, 2011
01/11
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 200
favorite 0
quote 0
two schools are carver and paul revere. i have four other schools. we are leveraging professional development so if those schools have professional development they conducted in a way that the other schools can send teachers or principals to professional development. partners and school innovation is working with them, but we are networking so they can do it, but we find they need additional resources, although i do have a wonderful team there is very powerful in doing some interventions and professional development. >> is that what is the mission came to hire, or is it that they were developed differently? >> the powerpoint presentations were developed differently. however, i have two coaches her school but not coaches from the grant, and i did not include that in the grant. the district does have seven schools, so they get two coaches, english, two masked, survey and up with seven times do -- two omath, so they end up with seven times. >> how does a community outreach happen? >> i think it is a great, but when you only have seven of them funded by
two schools are carver and paul revere. i have four other schools. we are leveraging professional development so if those schools have professional development they conducted in a way that the other schools can send teachers or principals to professional development. partners and school innovation is working with them, but we are networking so they can do it, but we find they need additional resources, although i do have a wonderful team there is very powerful in doing some interventions and...
317
317
Jan 25, 2011
01/11
by
KGO
tv
eye 317
favorite 0
quote 0
revolution, so we look back tonight at how a little boy who gorged on cake and cookies grew up to be the paul revere explains. >> reporter: you could call him the original thigh master. he was working it decades before jane fonda's workout, losing it generations before "the biggest loser." the waist, the hips. >> reporter: jack lalanne created a fitness industry in a country that had odd ideas about being fit. >> shape up and live. >> reporter: when he opened his first gym in 1936, this is what people thought about lifting weights. >> you'd lose your sex drive, you'd get hemorrhoids, have heart attacks. that's what they thought about exercise. >> reporter: once a pale and pimply kid, he discovered fitness at age 15. >> my whole life changed. >> reporter: he invented many of the weight machines we use today, the juice machines we use today, and when he went on tv in the '50s with "the jack lalanne show" -- >> one, two. >> reporter: -- with that crazy enthusiasm and crazier jumpsuit, he inspired millions including someone who's no slouch in the health department, arnold schwarzenegger. we called him t
revolution, so we look back tonight at how a little boy who gorged on cake and cookies grew up to be the paul revere explains. >> reporter: you could call him the original thigh master. he was working it decades before jane fonda's workout, losing it generations before "the biggest loser." the waist, the hips. >> reporter: jack lalanne created a fitness industry in a country that had odd ideas about being fit. >> shape up and live. >> reporter: when he opened...
162
162
Jan 26, 2011
01/11
by
KRCB
tv
eye 162
favorite 0
quote 0
sort of a little bit of a paul revere sound to his speech. but, you know, straightforward. serious.e did not present his own proposals, a plan, as he was speaking for the party. he is of course the architect of the republican... the principal republican budget- cutting proposal. >> lehrer: is that the way to read that, michael, this was paul ryan speaking for the republican party. this wasn't just paul ryan's view of what should be done. >> yes, he didn't go into the details of his own budget blueprint. that comes next. i strongly agree with mark. i think this was a tough, serious little speech. it was very philosophic. he kept talking about limited government. he seemed to imply that this was at stake, that the principle of limited government was at stake given these decisions on the deficit. i think that would appeal to tea party people not just to republican mainstream. i think that it's reagan-like in a certain way. reagan made similar arguments. a philosophic contrast. i'm not sure where america is. you know, after the last election it looked like they were ready for this kind
sort of a little bit of a paul revere sound to his speech. but, you know, straightforward. serious.e did not present his own proposals, a plan, as he was speaking for the party. he is of course the architect of the republican... the principal republican budget- cutting proposal. >> lehrer: is that the way to read that, michael, this was paul ryan speaking for the republican party. this wasn't just paul ryan's view of what should be done. >> yes, he didn't go into the details of his...
239
239
Jan 9, 2011
01/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 239
favorite 0
quote 0
called to work but now called toronto and they have their own patriotic figures, the equivalent of paul revere now famous for a lot of chocolates'. but what i want to do in this book is not to try to promote patriotism on either side of the border. i think patriotism is fine on both sides of the border but that is not my goal in the book. the book is to attend something i call a border history so as to look at people who experience war along the border experience being invaded and occupied by armies from both side. it's about the relationship of soldiers with civilians, which i think is much more significant than we ordinarily think of when we think about military history. we tend to talk about the army is all very important, but we forget the kind of civilian context in which they must operate because the civilians are essentials in sources of support and food, sources potentially of the trail. the book focuses on the border lens that extends on the east montreal that the st. lawrence river to the great lakes to detroit. this is the theater for most of the fighting in the war. it is the prima
called to work but now called toronto and they have their own patriotic figures, the equivalent of paul revere now famous for a lot of chocolates'. but what i want to do in this book is not to try to promote patriotism on either side of the border. i think patriotism is fine on both sides of the border but that is not my goal in the book. the book is to attend something i call a border history so as to look at people who experience war along the border experience being invaded and occupied by...
118
118
Jan 9, 2011
01/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
he does a portrait of paul revere one day, and another day he does a portrait of the british commander in boston. and there's a wonderful little story. before the revolution in a riot against the existing governor whose name is bernard, the riot spills out into the halls of harvard, and there's a portrait of bernard in one of the halls. and one of the rebels gets on somebody's shoulders, i guess, and he cuts the section out of the portrait that would have been where the heart was if it had been a human being, and he holds it up and says i've take bernard's heart. well, copley shows up, and he repairs it and from then on he's a marked man. and he leaves the country before the rev hughes starts -- revolution starts and becomes a member of what was called the loyalist club this london. in london. >> thomas allen is the author of several books including "remember valley forge." for more information about the author and his new book, visit tories fighting for the kingdom. >> coming up, kwame anthony appiah argues that more be revolutions from the dehides of duels to solve personal arguments
he does a portrait of paul revere one day, and another day he does a portrait of the british commander in boston. and there's a wonderful little story. before the revolution in a riot against the existing governor whose name is bernard, the riot spills out into the halls of harvard, and there's a portrait of bernard in one of the halls. and one of the rebels gets on somebody's shoulders, i guess, and he cuts the section out of the portrait that would have been where the heart was if it had been...
236
236
Jan 26, 2011
01/11
by
KRCB
tv
eye 236
favorite 0
quote 1
sort of a little bit of a paul revere sound to his speech. but, you know, straightforward. serious. did not present his own proposals, a plan, as he was speaking for the party. he is of course the architect of the republican... the principal republican budget- cutting proposal. >> lehrer: is that the way to read that, michael, this was paul ryan speaking for the republican party. this wasn't just paul ryan's view of what should be done. >> yes, he didn't go into the details of his own budget blurint. that comes next. i strongly agree with mark. i think this was a tough, serious little speech. it was very philosophic. he kept talking about limited government. he seemed to imply that this was at stake, that the principle of limited government was at stake given these decisions on the deficit. i think that would appeal to tea party people not just to republican mainstream. i think that it's reagan-like in a certain way. reagan made similar arguments. a philosophic contrast. i'm not sure where america is. you know, after the last election it looked like they were ready for this kind of
sort of a little bit of a paul revere sound to his speech. but, you know, straightforward. serious. did not present his own proposals, a plan, as he was speaking for the party. he is of course the architect of the republican... the principal republican budget- cutting proposal. >> lehrer: is that the way to read that, michael, this was paul ryan speaking for the republican party. this wasn't just paul ryan's view of what should be done. >> yes, he didn't go into the details of his...
317
317
Jan 15, 2011
01/11
by
KPIX
tv
eye 317
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: john paul will beat the previous beatification record, set by mother teresa, by 15 days. the fast track to beatification is the result of the reverenceany catholics still feel for john paul. but it's also being played out at a time of acute embarrassment for the church over its continuing child abuse scandal. some say there's a connection, that the road towards sainthood is being traveled too quickly. especially for a pope who was in office for 27 years while many of the abuses took place. >> how can you want to honor someone as a saint who may have allowed innocent children to be harmed? i don't know how you can do that. >> reporter: with one miracle accepted and beatification conferred, john paul still requires agreement on a second miracle before sainthood can follow. but a pope who made history in so many ways isn't finished yet. mark phillips, cbs news, london. >> couric: still ahead on the "cbs evening news," they made television history 40 years ago this week. but up next, the state that just raised income taxes 66%. [ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends
. >> reporter: john paul will beat the previous beatification record, set by mother teresa, by 15 days. the fast track to beatification is the result of the reverenceany catholics still feel for john paul. but it's also being played out at a time of acute embarrassment for the church over its continuing child abuse scandal. some say there's a connection, that the road towards sainthood is being traveled too quickly. especially for a pope who was in office for 27 years while many of the...