SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
82
82
Jul 3, 2012
07/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. clark, what is trauma-informed care? well, listening to dr. harris and dr. gillece, but the most important thing is care that takes into consideration the traumatic experiences that a person may have had. it is care that recognizes that trauma is a very real possibility. when you take a look at the statistics and you find a lot of people who present for treatment, whether it's traditional mental health treatment or substance abuse treatment or a combination, or people who enter the criminal justice system, a significant number have had traumatic experiences. so, if we're going to intervene in a positive way, we have to take into consideration, and the very strategies that allow us to take into consideration. but the most important part of it is the beginning, acknowledging the trauma that could have happened in that person's life. and dr. gillece, how do we screen for that? well, i think when you do trauma-informed care, i think what's really important too is to create environments of care that do no more harm. there are many different screenings that we can
dr. clark, what is trauma-informed care? well, listening to dr. harris and dr. gillece, but the most important thing is care that takes into consideration the traumatic experiences that a person may have had. it is care that recognizes that trauma is a very real possibility. when you take a look at the statistics and you find a lot of people who present for treatment, whether it's traditional mental health treatment or substance abuse treatment or a combination, or people who enter the criminal...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
104
104
Jul 3, 2012
07/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 104
favorite 0
quote 0
and dr. harris, is that typical? is that a typical scenario of some of the folks that experience trauma? well, i think what happens is that trauma breaks out of the normal expected life trajectory, and you're kind of going along and you don't expect the men who come to your house to rape you. you don't expect your mother to go out on a drunk binge and leave you alone. what you think is "normal life" just doesn't happen to you. so you adapt. and you adapt by drinking. you adapt by getting into relationships that may be destructive. you adapt by finding some way to physically or psychologically run away. and dr. clark, this happens, i suspect that because of this dynamic there are an awful lot of people, and we're going to get back to miss cain's experience that end up in our jail systems, that end up in our justice system. is that correct? that is true. there are a lot of people as a result, as miss cain indicated. you start using drugs that are illegal, and as a result of that you wind up get
and dr. harris, is that typical? is that a typical scenario of some of the folks that experience trauma? well, i think what happens is that trauma breaks out of the normal expected life trajectory, and you're kind of going along and you don't expect the men who come to your house to rape you. you don't expect your mother to go out on a drunk binge and leave you alone. what you think is "normal life" just doesn't happen to you. so you adapt. and you adapt by drinking. you adapt by...
158
158
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 158
favorite 0
quote 0
you spoke before dr. king. >> i spoke no. 6. dr. king was the last speaker, no. 10.olph introduced man and said, "i present you, young john lewis." alec to my right and saw many other young people. they were cheering me on. left.ed to myselmy i said to myself, this is separate i must do my best and that is what i tried to do. when was working on the speech, i was reading a copy of "the new york times. i saw a group of young black women in southern africa carrying signs saying "one-man, one-vote." i started my speech, "one-man, one-vote is the african cry and it must be hours, to." that became the rallying cry for many students. >> and yet you had to change that speech that you gave on that day. >> i was asked to change the speech. some thought it was too radical. , to militant. i thought it was a speech for the occasion that represented the people we were working with. some people did not like the use of the word "revolution." randolph came to my rescue and said, there's got anything wrong with the use of "revolution." i use it myself some time. there's nothing wrong
you spoke before dr. king. >> i spoke no. 6. dr. king was the last speaker, no. 10.olph introduced man and said, "i present you, young john lewis." alec to my right and saw many other young people. they were cheering me on. left.ed to myselmy i said to myself, this is separate i must do my best and that is what i tried to do. when was working on the speech, i was reading a copy of "the new york times. i saw a group of young black women in southern africa carrying signs...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
89
89
Jul 16, 2012
07/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. h. wesley clark, director, center for substance abuse treatment, substance abuse and mental health services administration, u.s. department of health and human services, rockville, maryland; dr. thomas mclellan, director, center for substance abuse solutions, philadelphia, pennsylvania; dr. alexandre laudet, director, center for the study of addictions and recovery, national development and research institutes, incorporated, new york, new york; dr. candace peterson, associate scientist, evaluation shared service, university of wisconsin population health institute, madison, wisconsin. dr. clark, what does research to practice mean and what does it mean for a methodology or a practice to be evidence-based? research to practice is a concept that captures the evolvement in the research community with regard to various aspects of, in this case, substance abuse or mental health care in an effort to increase the ability to positively affect the individual who's affected by it. so, evidence-
dr. h. wesley clark, director, center for substance abuse treatment, substance abuse and mental health services administration, u.s. department of health and human services, rockville, maryland; dr. thomas mclellan, director, center for substance abuse solutions, philadelphia, pennsylvania; dr. alexandre laudet, director, center for the study of addictions and recovery, national development and research institutes, incorporated, new york, new york; dr. candace peterson, associate scientist,...
193
193
Jul 7, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 193
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. bernard edward powers junior. he graduated from saint peter minnesota. further studsber s s further studsber s tud s studi served as behavioral sciences soo coordinator from 1977 to 1978. he was employed at northeastern university where he served as department chair. he has been employed as professor of history teaching courses in united states and african-american history. has he been directory as african-american history and is currently chairman of that department. he has presented nuk rumerous ps and has served as manuscript referee and including the journal of american history, the georgia historical and is the author of black charlestonians which was chosen as one of the outstanding books in 1995. and was published in the fall of 1996. please join me in welcoming dr. powers. two his right, is doctor steven r wise. dr. wise received his bachelor's degree and masters degree from bowling green state university. he was drawn to the university of south carolina to study under noted c
dr. bernard edward powers junior. he graduated from saint peter minnesota. further studsber s s further studsber s tud s studi served as behavioral sciences soo coordinator from 1977 to 1978. he was employed at northeastern university where he served as department chair. he has been employed as professor of history teaching courses in united states and african-american history. has he been directory as african-american history and is currently chairman of that department. he has presented nuk...
298
298
Jul 7, 2012
07/12
by
KRCB
tv
eye 298
favorite 0
quote 0
dr.ames lupski is a man with a mission as a pediatrician at baylor college of medicine in houston, dr. lupski has devoted much of his medical career to researching and treating children with rare diseases. >> t patients at i mainly see in the clinic are children and families in which a genetic disease will be evident for children often we will also be referred when there is either some kind of a development delay, when the child is not developing like one would expect. this could include speech delay, motor delay, other forms of delay. >> for parents, the first hurdle is diagnosis. which is difficult, because rare diseases are harder to diagnose. the second hurdle is treatment. few exist because drug companies devote scarce research resources to producing drugs for more common diseases. that so they can sell the drugs to a larger market and make back the large costs of research and development. the same is true of government research grants, but for different reasons. the government wants
dr.ames lupski is a man with a mission as a pediatrician at baylor college of medicine in houston, dr. lupski has devoted much of his medical career to researching and treating children with rare diseases. >> t patients at i mainly see in the clinic are children and families in which a genetic disease will be evident for children often we will also be referred when there is either some kind of a development delay, when the child is not developing like one would expect. this could include...
259
259
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
by
KGO
tv
eye 259
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. oz is my man. dr. oz. >> you can see more of dr.z and the other top surgeons and staffers who take us into the world of cutting-edge medicine on "new york med" a great looking series. tomorrow night, 10:00 here on abc. >>> just gaahead, it's the fina installment of the smash hit batman trilogy. we take you behind the scenes of the "the dark knight rises." has helped fund economic and environmental recovery. long-term, bp's made a five hundred million dollar commitment to support scientists studying the environment. and the gulf is open for business - the beaches are beautiful, the seafood is delicious. last year, many areas even reported record tourism seasons. the progress continues... but that doesn't mean our job is done. we're still committed to seeing this through. because vitamin d3 helps bones absorb calcium, caltrate's double the d. it now has more than any other brand to help maximize calcium absorption. so caltrate women can move the world. >>> okay. do you like batman? do you love a good old-fashioned summer blockbuster?
dr. oz is my man. dr. oz. >> you can see more of dr.z and the other top surgeons and staffers who take us into the world of cutting-edge medicine on "new york med" a great looking series. tomorrow night, 10:00 here on abc. >>> just gaahead, it's the fina installment of the smash hit batman trilogy. we take you behind the scenes of the "the dark knight rises." has helped fund economic and environmental recovery. long-term, bp's made a five hundred million...
116
116
Jul 8, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
because, joining us this morning, dr.avid samadi, the vice chairman of the department of urology, chief of robotics at the mount sinai. >> eric: and dr. marc siegel, author of "the infer pulner pul unlocking the secrets of health... >> jamie: i want to unlock some secrets. >> eric: researchers are developing the first of its kind injection they say could save the lives of people who cannot breathe. an injection, that delivers oxygen directly into the bloodstream. dr. samadi, what is it about. >> it is very very, handy. we have a lot of patients out there with airway obstructions and may have asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia or like, in the field of trauma, you may have a real obstruction and what is the first rule of medicine, eric, get access to airways and what we do is intubate the patient and the ventilation machine is going to breathe for the patient. now, what this technology is, which is really, really smart, what they've done is they've created the oxygen bubbles and, you can actually inject it into the blood, direct
because, joining us this morning, dr.avid samadi, the vice chairman of the department of urology, chief of robotics at the mount sinai. >> eric: and dr. marc siegel, author of "the infer pulner pul unlocking the secrets of health... >> jamie: i want to unlock some secrets. >> eric: researchers are developing the first of its kind injection they say could save the lives of people who cannot breathe. an injection, that delivers oxygen directly into the bloodstream. dr....
152
152
Jul 7, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 152
favorite 0
quote 0
to his right is dr. w. marvin delaney, dr. delaney is the former research director at the college of charleston. currently he is an associate professor and chair of the history department of the university of texas at arlington. he teaches american history, african-american history, and the history of american public rights movement. he is a graduate of central state university in ohio where he earned his bachelor of arts degree in history. he earned his masser of arts and dr. of philosophy degrees in american and african-american history in ohio state university in columbus, ohio. he has published several books including black police in america, essays on the american civil rights movement and born to serve. he is currently completing a book on african-americans in dallas, a social and political history for texas a&m university press. among his research interests are police history, criminal justice history and the history of the american civil rights movement. he also combines the traditional roll of a professor of public hi
to his right is dr. w. marvin delaney, dr. delaney is the former research director at the college of charleston. currently he is an associate professor and chair of the history department of the university of texas at arlington. he teaches american history, african-american history, and the history of american public rights movement. he is a graduate of central state university in ohio where he earned his bachelor of arts degree in history. he earned his masser of arts and dr. of philosophy...
378
378
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
WNUV
tv
eye 378
favorite 0
quote 0
dr.same issues plaguing us today. has anything really changed? have african-americans become too complacent? is it time to resurrect the movement? >> we will not rest, we will not stop. we will not forget. >> we brought together a panel of leaders. the president and ceo of the national urban league. dr. jamal bryant, pastor of the empowerment temple in baltimore, and dr. eric dyson, sociology professor. we asked the question -- are we in the midst of a moment or a movement? >> i hope it's a movement, i hope it will ignite a greater degree, whether it's voter i.d., whether it's racial profiling and sometimes unfair police tactics. all the way across the board. we are up against a right wing resurgence in this nation. we have got to recognize that there's an element there that wants to repeal the 20th century, turn the nation back to the 1890s and i think we have a duty and a responsibility to educate and inspire and motivate people to push back and resist this yesterday vision of america a
dr.same issues plaguing us today. has anything really changed? have african-americans become too complacent? is it time to resurrect the movement? >> we will not rest, we will not stop. we will not forget. >> we brought together a panel of leaders. the president and ceo of the national urban league. dr. jamal bryant, pastor of the empowerment temple in baltimore, and dr. eric dyson, sociology professor. we asked the question -- are we in the midst of a moment or a movement? >>...
78
78
Jul 22, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. siegel is every community in our nation prepared for this? how do you know there is this type of level-one trauma center to go to where you live. >> that is a great question and the key area is triage and david has been describing what triage is about and from the moment an emergency responder sees you, they think, triage, how bad are you and where is the best medical center and i work at bellview, in the e.r., a number one trauma center and in colorado, where they are, that is one of the top trauma centers and they are thinking, do they need university of colorado, swedish hospital, another one and can they be treated locally and they get them to the top center and triage them, in terms of who is the sickest? who needs intravenous lines right away? who needs blood? and who needs to go to the or? and if they have gunshot wounds, the wound has to be debrided and you have to get the dead tissue out of there and the wound cleaned up and you have to get them on antibiotics. the biggest ri
dr. siegel is every community in our nation prepared for this? how do you know there is this type of level-one trauma center to go to where you live. >> that is a great question and the key area is triage and david has been describing what triage is about and from the moment an emergency responder sees you, they think, triage, how bad are you and where is the best medical center and i work at bellview, in the e.r., a number one trauma center and in colorado, where they are, that is one of...
190
190
Jul 13, 2012
07/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 190
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. jill stein. also, her newly announced running mate, cheri honkala. >> i am thrilled to be running on the ticket for vice- president of the united states of america with jill stein. we will also look at the green party internationally. all of that and more coming up. this is "democracy now!," democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. forces loyal to syrian president bashar al-assad are being accused of a new massacre, with more than 150 civilians reportedly killed in the province of hama. the killings reportedly occurred in the village name to tremseh, with some reports saying up to two other 20 people died. it would be the worst attack inside syria since pro- government forces were accused of killing more than 100 civilians in houla in may. the reported new massacre has boosted calls for the united nations security council to pass a binding measure in syria threatening new sanctions and potential military action under chapter seven of the u.n. charter. speaking duri
dr. jill stein. also, her newly announced running mate, cheri honkala. >> i am thrilled to be running on the ticket for vice- president of the united states of america with jill stein. we will also look at the green party internationally. all of that and more coming up. this is "democracy now!," democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. forces loyal to syrian president bashar al-assad are being accused of a new massacre, with more than 150 civilians reportedly...
1,013
1.0K
Jul 1, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 1,013
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. marc siegel associate professor of medicine at langone medical center and the author of the book "the inner pulse." unlocking the secret of sickness. >> jamie: keeping us healthy, too and dr. david samadi, the vice chairman of the department of urology, chief of robotics at the mt. sinai medical center. great to see you. let's get healthy. the first topic is important for so many folks. a startling reality affecting 1 in 8 american couples. and it is infertility and health experts now raise red flags about the diagnosis, specifically for women believe it or not in their 20s, doctor, tell us, why women in their 20s. >> actually when people are at the age of 40, 67% of them can still have children which is amazing and 45, goes town to 15%, and we are tending to overlook young women as you said, jamie and it turns out that 11% of women under the age of 30, can't conceive. they tried for a year, that is the definition, if you try for a year and are not able to have a baby then it is desig
dr. marc siegel associate professor of medicine at langone medical center and the author of the book "the inner pulse." unlocking the secret of sickness. >> jamie: keeping us healthy, too and dr. david samadi, the vice chairman of the department of urology, chief of robotics at the mt. sinai medical center. great to see you. let's get healthy. the first topic is important for so many folks. a startling reality affecting 1 in 8 american couples. and it is infertility and health...
74
74
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
the author of inside the criminal mind and dr. john sharp professor of psychiatry at the escaped i esteemed harvl school. i know you cannot diagnose from afar. this guy he is a cop. most guys would be depressed. they would be fearful. they would be frightened. this guy is confident. he is engaged. he is also exuberant. i will start with you, what do you see, what does this tell you? >> i think this is fairly typical. it is the super optimism that i have seen in so many offenders whom i have interviewed. they are certain they are going to get away with the crime before they commit it. they are even more certain as they commit it and even after the fact. now, in this case mr. peterson whom, of course, i have not interviewed but he was a policeman for over two decades so he knows the system. he knows it inside out. he has appeared on numerous television programs. and he has become something of a celebrity and you know what, so far he has gotten away with all of it. so the super optimism is fortified. >> judge jeanine: when you talk a
the author of inside the criminal mind and dr. john sharp professor of psychiatry at the escaped i esteemed harvl school. i know you cannot diagnose from afar. this guy he is a cop. most guys would be depressed. they would be fearful. they would be frightened. this guy is confident. he is engaged. he is also exuberant. i will start with you, what do you see, what does this tell you? >> i think this is fairly typical. it is the super optimism that i have seen in so many offenders whom i...
125
125
Jul 31, 2012
07/12
by
WETA
tv
eye 125
favorite 0
quote 0
tavis: dr.nissan made this point earlier, and it is so clearly the case, the link between poverty and bad health. that is been well documented for a long time now. to your point, dr. gillinov. >> , i know too many parents, i see them all the time we are in a nice studio now up in the hollywood area of los angeles, but i work, my office building is in south central los angeles, so i see this all the time and i am certainly around poor people and people of color all the time in what i do, and i choose to be there, so i am not chagrined by that. but i see this all the time. i was at a restaurant the other night and i saw this happen, where people who happen to be poor already are parenting kids who they wish they could do more for anyway. they wish they could do more for them, they wish they could provide more for them you know where i am going with this so that so often, parents do not like to tell their kids no. they do not want to deny them a trip to mcdonald's, and i am not trying to bash mcdon
tavis: dr.nissan made this point earlier, and it is so clearly the case, the link between poverty and bad health. that is been well documented for a long time now. to your point, dr. gillinov. >> , i know too many parents, i see them all the time we are in a nice studio now up in the hollywood area of los angeles, but i work, my office building is in south central los angeles, so i see this all the time and i am certainly around poor people and people of color all the time in what i do,...
190
190
Jul 27, 2012
07/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 190
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. jeffrey laurence and was stephen lewis, the former u.n. secretary general special envoy for hiv/aids in africa, now co-director of aids- free world. we will be joined by the rev. canon gideon byamugisha of uganda, the first african religious leader to openly declare his hiv-positive status. >> knowing that your positive, they're going to shame you, discriminate against u.s. and so forth, so people shy away. >> all of that and more coming up. this is "democracy now!," democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. samangan of forces are continuing their bombardment of the city of aleppo ahead of a widely expected all-out assault to uproot rebel fighters. hundreds of troops are said to have massed on the city's outskirts as syrian gunships pound several neighborhoods. rebel forces have launched attacks on army checkpoints around the city. a number of people were reported dead in clashes on thursday, the exact amount is impossible to verify. in washington, state department
dr. jeffrey laurence and was stephen lewis, the former u.n. secretary general special envoy for hiv/aids in africa, now co-director of aids- free world. we will be joined by the rev. canon gideon byamugisha of uganda, the first african religious leader to openly declare his hiv-positive status. >> knowing that your positive, they're going to shame you, discriminate against u.s. and so forth, so people shy away. >> all of that and more coming up. this is "democracy now!,"...
175
175
Jul 20, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 175
favorite 0
quote 0
next we'll hear from dr. stephen dr. stephen -- stephen leath friend my alma mater, iowa state university. he took the reins where he spent many years as a faculty member, research program later in high-level administrative with university of north carolina system in the carolina state university. he currently serves on the iowa stand advisory council is a member of the greater des moines committee capital crossers implementation committee. i know the entire isu community is excited about dr. leath's arrival of shows gross signs for great things for isu in the state of iowa. since he spent so much of his life in north carolina but yield to my good friend senator from north carolina for purposes of recognition. >> mr. chairman, thank you. it's tough when you take the chairman's witness and asked to recognize him introduce him, but let me say to my colleague, steve leath has a remarkable record within the north carolina university system. not only has he served in numerous capacities in his field of agriculture. steve led
next we'll hear from dr. stephen dr. stephen -- stephen leath friend my alma mater, iowa state university. he took the reins where he spent many years as a faculty member, research program later in high-level administrative with university of north carolina system in the carolina state university. he currently serves on the iowa stand advisory council is a member of the greater des moines committee capital crossers implementation committee. i know the entire isu community is excited about dr....
62
62
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. siegel? >> well, let me wade into it this way, 10% of kids hoof high cholesterol and 1/3 are overweight or obese and studies over the past few years have shown they are building up fatty streaks in their arteries, feeding the heart beginning at very, very young ages and there was another study that showed that overweight kids with high cholesterol build up plaque in their carotid arteries and this is a huge problem and i think knowledge is power but, you know, guidelines make me nervous. the war back and forth about when it should be done and to whom is really the question. i think any overweight child, any child with a family history of high cholesterol, any child that we think could have a risk factor for high cholesterol, should be checked at a very early age. they are saying 9 years old and i'm fine with 9 years old but, not for every child in the united states. you know why? kids get very nervous going to the pediatrician and you start doing blood tests on them and they will not want to
dr. siegel? >> well, let me wade into it this way, 10% of kids hoof high cholesterol and 1/3 are overweight or obese and studies over the past few years have shown they are building up fatty streaks in their arteries, feeding the heart beginning at very, very young ages and there was another study that showed that overweight kids with high cholesterol build up plaque in their carotid arteries and this is a huge problem and i think knowledge is power but, you know, guidelines make me...
150
150
Jul 30, 2012
07/12
by
WMAR
tv
eye 150
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. renee foose is the new superintendent of howard county. >> find out the number one mistake hornses -- owners make. >>> the u.s. team looks to take home the gold in several events. here's tom rivers with the latest from london. >> reporter: it was back into the pool for america's men and women. missy franklin captured her first medal in the back stroke and the olympic record for the man. in the 200 free style favorite, ryan lochte disapointed. for team usa it was not in the cards. china captured the gold. great britain got a bronze. it's london. it's the olympics and perhaps there's nothing more entertaining than the iconic sport of royal watching. today the duke and duchess of cambridge, and the qoon's granddaughters. phillips, who made a debut in the dressage complained of the difficult portion, as only as the british can put it -- in very good time. tennis. venus william beat italy. sister serena also advanced. andy roddick moved forward. roger federer had no problem advancing and a
dr. renee foose is the new superintendent of howard county. >> find out the number one mistake hornses -- owners make. >>> the u.s. team looks to take home the gold in several events. here's tom rivers with the latest from london. >> reporter: it was back into the pool for america's men and women. missy franklin captured her first medal in the back stroke and the olympic record for the man. in the 200 free style favorite, ryan lochte disapointed. for team usa it was not in...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
67
67
Jul 9, 2012
07/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. clark, let's go back and talk a little bit more about the whole issue of the parity legislation versus what the aca brings forward. there was already some stipulations that had to be adhered to by the healthcare service delivery system that dealt with substance use disorders as well as mental health illnesses. well, one of the most important things for us to keep in mind is that both the affordable care act and the parity act embraced the notion of dealing with mental health and substance abuse services, but also recognizing that cost is an issue. the advantage of evidence-based practices or the promise of evidence-based practices is that we'll be able to produce acceptable outcomes at reasonable cost. and what we have to do is promote those strategies to service delivery systems, whether it's the integrated system or whether it's the specialty delivery system or it's the primary care system. so that's the conundrum of the research community and the services communities, to making sur
dr. clark, let's go back and talk a little bit more about the whole issue of the parity legislation versus what the aca brings forward. there was already some stipulations that had to be adhered to by the healthcare service delivery system that dealt with substance use disorders as well as mental health illnesses. well, one of the most important things for us to keep in mind is that both the affordable care act and the parity act embraced the notion of dealing with mental health and substance...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
92
92
Jul 15, 2012
07/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
congratulations to dr. kim, and special thanks to our other nominees.re like to thank everybody for all of their hard work for their time in coordinating and organizing the awards process. please could give them a round of applause -- please give them a round of applause. [applause] are your stomachs growling? there is a reception, catered by some of the best agent pacific -- asian pacific ches. at this time, i would like to bring up chris, the owner and chef to speak on behalf of all of tonight's chefs. that is a little nervous. i have been speaking to him backstage. give him a really warm welcome, and make him feel really welcome. [applause] >> good evening. thank you. i had a chance to talk to her this evening, backstage. i have to say, does anybody watched "eye on the bay"? she is great. she is one of the best newscasters out right now. anyway, we are very honored tonight to celebrate this heritage, apa heritage and the celebrations of tonight, the nation's chaffs -- the asian chefs. over here, i have a great chef who has worked to get this event to
congratulations to dr. kim, and special thanks to our other nominees.re like to thank everybody for all of their hard work for their time in coordinating and organizing the awards process. please could give them a round of applause -- please give them a round of applause. [applause] are your stomachs growling? there is a reception, catered by some of the best agent pacific -- asian pacific ches. at this time, i would like to bring up chris, the owner and chef to speak on behalf of all of...
243
243
Jul 12, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 243
favorite 0
quote 1
dr. king said, our efforts turned to ashes and our sun rises into darkest night unless his spirit pervades our lives we found out when g.k. chesterton called cures that don't cure, blessings that don't bless and solutions that don't solve, end of quote. of all that you bring to the work of today's civil rights cause, no advantage counts for more than this abiding confidence in the name above every name. against cruelty, arrogance, and all the foolishness of man, this spirit has carried the naacp to many victories. more still are up ahead. so many victories are ahead. and with each one of them we will be a better nation. thank you so much and go bless every one of you. thank you. thank you. [ applause ] >>> follow c-span's road to the white house coverage is available on our website cspan.org/campaign2012. in the candidates on the issues section you can see speeches from president obama and mitt romney on major issues like the economy, the deficit and national security and health care. we'
dr. king said, our efforts turned to ashes and our sun rises into darkest night unless his spirit pervades our lives we found out when g.k. chesterton called cures that don't cure, blessings that don't bless and solutions that don't solve, end of quote. of all that you bring to the work of today's civil rights cause, no advantage counts for more than this abiding confidence in the name above every name. against cruelty, arrogance, and all the foolishness of man, this spirit has carried the...
91
91
Jul 18, 2012
07/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
dr.hael mckubre continues his research. [ticking] coming up, trying to uncover secrets of the universe. >> this is the pipe where the particles come through. >> 40 million times a second. bunches of protons collide in the center of this barrel section, and they reproduce conditions that haven't existed since a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang. >> we go inside the collider when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. [ticking] [ male announcer ] we got a real mom and the family car to do an experiment. we put a week of her family's smelly stuff all in at once to prove that febreze car vent clips could eliminate the odor. then we brought her family to our test facility to see if it worked. [ woman ] take a deep breath, tell me what you smell. something fresh. a beach. a clean house. my new car. [ woman ] go ahead and take your blindfolds off. oh!! hahahaha!!! look at all this garbage!!! [ male announcer ] febreze car. eliminates odors for continuous freshness, so you can breathe happy. thes
dr.hael mckubre continues his research. [ticking] coming up, trying to uncover secrets of the universe. >> this is the pipe where the particles come through. >> 40 million times a second. bunches of protons collide in the center of this barrel section, and they reproduce conditions that haven't existed since a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang. >> we go inside the collider when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. [ticking] [ male announcer ] we got a real mom and the family...
176
176
Jul 4, 2012
07/12
by
CURRENT
tv
eye 176
favorite 0
quote 0
dr.e. thank you both for your time this evening. katie, let me begin with you. quickly, tell us what did they do that evoked this rather massive complaint against them? >> well, there's a lot of stuff in here. but some of the main portions are about these anti-depressant drugs paxil and wellbutrin and also about the diabetes drug avandia. what the prosecutors allege is that they market it, as you said just know, they marketed it for several different uses, everything from sexual dysfunction to weight loss, some of the drugses and that they supplied doctors with gifts and trips to jamaica and bermuda and to try to entice them to prescribe it. >> also suppressing the data that the downside, the risks of the prescription purposes were significant and dangerous. >> yeah. specifically with the drug paxil. what the prosecutors say is that they did clinical trials of paxil and looked at the use of the drug in adolescents and it didn't show good results and in fact, it showed -- it showed some si
dr.e. thank you both for your time this evening. katie, let me begin with you. quickly, tell us what did they do that evoked this rather massive complaint against them? >> well, there's a lot of stuff in here. but some of the main portions are about these anti-depressant drugs paxil and wellbutrin and also about the diabetes drug avandia. what the prosecutors allege is that they market it, as you said just know, they marketed it for several different uses, everything from sexual...
112
112
Jul 18, 2012
07/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
dr.ichael mckubre continues his research. [ticking] coming up, trying to uncover secrets of the universe. >> this is the pipe where the particles come through. >> 40 million times a second. bunches of protons collide in the center of this barrel section, and they reproduce conditions that haven't existed since a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang. >> we go inside the collider when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. [ticking] [ male announcer ] we did a febreze experiment with the azerbaijani wrestling team. ♪ can febreze air effects defeat the smelly air in their gym for good? [ man ] what can you smell? [ inhales deeply ] a lot of flowers. it's on the zingy side of floral. potpourri factory, maybe. you can take off your blindfolds now. oh my gosh. [ laughter ] [ male announcer ] success. victory over odors, for good, both here and in your home. febreze. breathe happy. in every way, shape, and form. it's my dream vehicle. on a day to day basis, i am not using gas. my round trip is appr
dr.ichael mckubre continues his research. [ticking] coming up, trying to uncover secrets of the universe. >> this is the pipe where the particles come through. >> 40 million times a second. bunches of protons collide in the center of this barrel section, and they reproduce conditions that haven't existed since a tiny fraction of a second after the big bang. >> we go inside the collider when 60 minutes on cnbc returns. [ticking] [ male announcer ] we did a febreze experiment...
166
166
Jul 21, 2012
07/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 166
favorite 0
quote 0
manny alvarez, good to see you dr. manny. as dr. manny was saying, anyone with children knows, they know how hard it can be for them when tragic events like this happen. we want to hear from you, how do you explain the tragedies, like the movie theater shooting we're talking about here to you shall children. get us on twitter anhqd krchc@r folbaum or arthel neville. both ways. and we'll explore this later in the show. >> rick: and coming up, the heart breaking details coming in, more about the lives lost in that shooting. we'll have a live report on the victims of the tragedy coming up next. okay, team! after age 40, we can start losing muscle -- 8% every 10 years. wow. wow. but you can help fight muscle loss with exercise and ensure muscle health. i've got revigor. what's revigor? it's the amino acid metabolite, hmb to help rebuild muscle and strength naturally lost over time. [ female announcer ] ensure muscle health has revigor and protein to help protect, preserve, and promote muscle health. keeps you from getting soft. [ major
manny alvarez, good to see you dr. manny. as dr. manny was saying, anyone with children knows, they know how hard it can be for them when tragic events like this happen. we want to hear from you, how do you explain the tragedies, like the movie theater shooting we're talking about here to you shall children. get us on twitter anhqd krchc@r folbaum or arthel neville. both ways. and we'll explore this later in the show. >> rick: and coming up, the heart breaking details coming in, more...