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Mar 22, 2013
03/13
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CNBC
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david horowitz will weigh in.ll business may be bracing obama care making some companies less profitable once the law takes full impact. in fact "new york times" did a case study today on baked in the sun, a california bakery. the company could lose a staggering 65% of its annual profits all because of obama care. so, here with us, rachel shine is the owner of baked in the sun. our panel is still with us. miss shine thank you very much for coming on. 65%. how you going to stay in business? >> i hope we can. it's a matter of weighing our options and figuring out what the best thing to do is. i mean frankly our employees need health care. they work very hard. they should have. they need to be able to have health care for their families. the question is whether or not my business model was designed to be able to support that. we exist in an industry where the margins are very slim and we've been very lucky to be able to grow our business so that we are the size that we are. most of our competitors are much smaller. t
david horowitz will weigh in.ll business may be bracing obama care making some companies less profitable once the law takes full impact. in fact "new york times" did a case study today on baked in the sun, a california bakery. the company could lose a staggering 65% of its annual profits all because of obama care. so, here with us, rachel shine is the owner of baked in the sun. our panel is still with us. miss shine thank you very much for coming on. 65%. how you going to stay in...
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Mar 24, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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his chief opponent was tom horowitz. [laughter] his equal in intellectual precausety and in love of a good fight. the impromptu discussions often ended in shouting matches between two. a hot topic was cuba and its leader, or fidel castro, who had come to power in 1959. most students saw castro as a romantic revolutionary who was bringing economic and social justice to his people. elliot viewed him as just another standard issue communist dictator. [laughter] angela davis, my third protagonist, was in the class of 1961. that class included robert deniro for a time, his parents were artists that lived in the village, and kathy pew doone who later became involved in the 1981 -- she took part in the 1981 brinks robbery in which a guard and two policemen were killed and served many years in prison for that. angela grew up in birmingham, alabama, at the height of jim crow, and to escape from the wretched, segregated school system, she entered ei in her junior year on a scholarship from the american friends' service committee.
his chief opponent was tom horowitz. [laughter] his equal in intellectual precausety and in love of a good fight. the impromptu discussions often ended in shouting matches between two. a hot topic was cuba and its leader, or fidel castro, who had come to power in 1959. most students saw castro as a romantic revolutionary who was bringing economic and social justice to his people. elliot viewed him as just another standard issue communist dictator. [laughter] angela davis, my third protagonist,...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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fruit that billie holiday wrote so it was a group of talent there to be a so, the parents of tom horowitz who is one of my protagonists, his parents were among that group. leo was a documentarian. of a sort of radical strike, and his mother was a principal in the dance group. so i will read you a little bit about him. >> as a young man, she looked at his parents' wild ride through the depression affinity with his liquid brown eyes and full lips and his brown hair brushed into submission and parted on the side, the stubborn to youngster who like his father couldn't bear to concede the point. in some ways he was a typical child in the 50's. he owned a leather jacket with fringe and the daniel boone had to the tail around the back said his mother. and he had the biggest collection of toy guns of every sort. when i spoke to my analyst about it, he said let him have them. he won't want to have any more of them when he grows up. but the death of the rosenbergs was an ongoing on spoken terror that predated his childhood. one day he summoned the courage to approach the subject with his father. co
fruit that billie holiday wrote so it was a group of talent there to be a so, the parents of tom horowitz who is one of my protagonists, his parents were among that group. leo was a documentarian. of a sort of radical strike, and his mother was a principal in the dance group. so i will read you a little bit about him. >> as a young man, she looked at his parents' wild ride through the depression affinity with his liquid brown eyes and full lips and his brown hair brushed into submission...
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Mar 31, 2013
03/13
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MSNBCW
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. >> reporter: first up, lawon and horowitz put their existing customers first. >> we've always feltwe've grown a tremendous loyalty to the people who have been with us since we've grown. >> and production is always paced. >> we make the world's largest gummi bears, we make them for demand. if demand diminishes then in all likelihood the world's largest gummy worm needs more attention. >> they have also learned to say not now to certain customers. >> you can't say. just because you can do it doesn't mean you should. >> reporter: just because a client may be told not now, it doesn't mean they will never get their gummies. >> we're really pleased that for the most part, and we've had some of the people that we've said no to who are now our customers so we've come back around and picked them up. they are at the front of the line, you know. we're always looking to make sure that we can bring the next one in. >> another key part of lawson and horowitz's strategy is not taking money from investors. >> just a comfort zone. something that i'm comfortable with. it would have been easy to go o
. >> reporter: first up, lawon and horowitz put their existing customers first. >> we've always feltwe've grown a tremendous loyalty to the people who have been with us since we've grown. >> and production is always paced. >> we make the world's largest gummi bears, we make them for demand. if demand diminishes then in all likelihood the world's largest gummy worm needs more attention. >> they have also learned to say not now to certain customers. >> you...
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Mar 11, 2013
03/13
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me," you were interviewed by horowitz. this shows a different side of jody williams. >> sure. >> the report cannot be considered comprehensive, objective, authentic, and accurate and suffers from the lack of credibility. >> my last point is on credibility, it's not about ours, it's ability yours. the world hung its head in shame and said never again, too many of us have lost hope that never again seems to have no applicability whatsoever in darfur. when will the world hang its head in shame again and our job is to attempt to try to alleviate the suffering of the people of darfur who are being raped, pillaged, and burned while political wrangling goes on here in the hallowed halls of the united nations. thank you. >> there are 20 or 30 recommendations and one was implemented. not a great batting average. >> correct. the reason they send one is not because they particularly care about the report or tar fur they did it because they have to show the council does something or it won't continue to exist. >> horowitz's take wasn'
me," you were interviewed by horowitz. this shows a different side of jody williams. >> sure. >> the report cannot be considered comprehensive, objective, authentic, and accurate and suffers from the lack of credibility. >> my last point is on credibility, it's not about ours, it's ability yours. the world hung its head in shame and said never again, too many of us have lost hope that never again seems to have no applicability whatsoever in darfur. when will the world...
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Mar 16, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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duncan and at one point i was presenting to the adviser's fee of a fellowship i had including alex horowitz which came afterwards and he thought that was a stupid idea because people and experiences in new orleans were so compelling and interesting on their own so i settled on the idea of structuring the book around three schools with one person pre-eminence in each, lori, aiden and gerald win all of whom i met at different times in different ways. since writing this book was a journey for me i wanted to talk about what i learned over the course of reporting and writing it apart from the fact that it would make a terrible feature. the first is what do i feel extremists and absolutist on both part of the conversation form other issues dominate the debate but their voices don't really capture needs and desires of those attending and working in the schools and i covered education for long enough when i started working on the book to some degree. i was amazed the extent to which ideals and aspirations of many families and front-line educators eluded the talking points to throw boxes on this iss
duncan and at one point i was presenting to the adviser's fee of a fellowship i had including alex horowitz which came afterwards and he thought that was a stupid idea because people and experiences in new orleans were so compelling and interesting on their own so i settled on the idea of structuring the book around three schools with one person pre-eminence in each, lori, aiden and gerald win all of whom i met at different times in different ways. since writing this book was a journey for me i...
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Mar 28, 2013
03/13
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KNTV
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the king of the accidental phone call. >> reporter: for the last 34 years, jay horowitz has made histhe phone calls his pocket makes that are getting all the attention. >> hello? jay? you there? >> reporter: butt dials to dozens of victims, like jay baxter. >> his name pops up at 4:00 in the morning and you give him a call back when you wake up and he has no idea he's called you. >> i've been butt dialed probably around close to 150 times. >> reporter: ike davis says the calls keep coming even after the first pitch. >> why are you calling me during the game. you see me on the field. >> i said, ike, i have no explanation. >> i keep it in my front pocket, i jiggle it and there you go. >> reporter: at night, he says he has no one to blame but himself. >> i sleep with my phone and a lot of times i accidentally call somebody. >> reporter: all of which begs the obvious question. >> why don't you lock your phone? >> because i'd have to unlock it. >> reporter: players are threatening to strike. >> i'm not going to answer it anymore. i'm over it. >> i think we should all start calling him at
the king of the accidental phone call. >> reporter: for the last 34 years, jay horowitz has made histhe phone calls his pocket makes that are getting all the attention. >> hello? jay? you there? >> reporter: butt dials to dozens of victims, like jay baxter. >> his name pops up at 4:00 in the morning and you give him a call back when you wake up and he has no idea he's called you. >> i've been butt dialed probably around close to 150 times. >> reporter: ike...
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Mar 19, 2013
03/13
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FOXNEWSW
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and number two that the ig the at the department of justice, horowitz, was unhappy, my word, with someony before the commission on the new black panther party. i didn't say he lied, he said we did not find the president intentionally misled the commission. and before the commission we believe they should have brought forth more details. i thought that's why you didn't like him-- not like him, but be labor secretary. >> he was asked point blank did political appointees help make this decision. he said no. in fact exactly the contrary is true and the judge in his opinion pointed that out. so i think the judge may not want to use the word lie. i think that's very, he very striking and serious. >> greta: is there anything he can do that you would change your mind about blocking his appointment? >> let me be clear, i said today that i would block consideration of the nomination until at least i get an answer, a straight forward full answer to the basic questions i've posed. i posed them in a letter november 15th, 2011. >> greta: what makes you think you're going to get them now. he hasn't--
and number two that the ig the at the department of justice, horowitz, was unhappy, my word, with someony before the commission on the new black panther party. i didn't say he lied, he said we did not find the president intentionally misled the commission. and before the commission we believe they should have brought forth more details. i thought that's why you didn't like him-- not like him, but be labor secretary. >> he was asked point blank did political appointees help make this...
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Mar 13, 2013
03/13
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FBC
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todd horowitz in the pits of the cme and our market panel, peter kenny, and george antopolus. i want to start with todd at the cme. give us a sense whether it is now business as usual for whether the records continue to excite or concern? you tell me emotion there. >> hi, liz, hi david. what is going on right now, we're getting very narrow ranges again. the market is pricing to perfection. this is ho hum. we escaped another record high. as far as traders are concerned they're looking for every opportunity to take the chance to sell here. each sell is met by buyers. we pushed the market to new highs again. as far as the overall action here it is very subdued now. ho hum, a new high. we'll see what goes on tomorrow. david: here is the overall question though, todd, just to put a fine point on it. are you taking a greater risk now when you buy a stock thinking it will go higher instead of holding onto cash waiting for a dip? >> i think now you have to observe the market and stay out. i don't think you want to put in new money here becauue i think we're much closer to a temporary
todd horowitz in the pits of the cme and our market panel, peter kenny, and george antopolus. i want to start with todd at the cme. give us a sense whether it is now business as usual for whether the records continue to excite or concern? you tell me emotion there. >> hi, liz, hi david. what is going on right now, we're getting very narrow ranges again. the market is pricing to perfection. this is ho hum. we escaped another record high. as far as traders are concerned they're looking for...
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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with timothy egan on the photography of edward curtis and katherine power's and barbara madison horowitz on what animals can teach us about health and healing and tomorrow live starting at 1:00 eastern, afghanistan, followed at 2:30 by erik larsen on social security, panels and authors from the tucson festival of books, part of book tea on c-span2. you're watching c-span2 with politics and public affairs weekdays featuring live coverage of the u.s. senate. weeknights what the public policy events and every weekend the latest nonfiction authors and books on booktv. you can see past programs and get scandals on our web site and you can join in a conversation on social media sites. >> at a summit on childhood obesity, first lady michelle obama, mayor cory booker and eli manning talked about how the private sector could encourage children to adopt healthy habits. this is posted by the partnership for a healthier america in washington d.c.. >> how is everybody doing? hello! i am going to run a mile you got me so excited. i am never going to get invited back because i am about to tell you guys
with timothy egan on the photography of edward curtis and katherine power's and barbara madison horowitz on what animals can teach us about health and healing and tomorrow live starting at 1:00 eastern, afghanistan, followed at 2:30 by erik larsen on social security, panels and authors from the tucson festival of books, part of book tea on c-span2. you're watching c-span2 with politics and public affairs weekdays featuring live coverage of the u.s. senate. weeknights what the public policy...
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 169
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navy seals and katherine power's and barbara madison horowitz discuss case studies of sick animals andow they can help with human suffering. a panel on the alamo will conclude our coverage from the festival. we will be back in 30 minutes for more from the fifth annual tucson festival of books. >> here is a look at some books being published this week. activist and nobel peace prize winner jodie williams recount her life and work in my name is judy williams:the vermont girl's winding path to the new york peace prize. in saving justice, watergate, saturday night massacre and other adventures of the solicitor general, robert bork reminds us firsthand accounts of the collapse of the nixon administration. a professor of modern arab studies at columbia university analyzeds the united states's role in the conflict between israel and palestine in brokers of the feat:how the u.s. has undermined peace in the middle east. former governor of nevada of bob miller recounts his life in some of a gambling man:my journey from a casino family to the governor's mansion. in young titan:the making of winst
navy seals and katherine power's and barbara madison horowitz discuss case studies of sick animals andow they can help with human suffering. a panel on the alamo will conclude our coverage from the festival. we will be back in 30 minutes for more from the fifth annual tucson festival of books. >> here is a look at some books being published this week. activist and nobel peace prize winner jodie williams recount her life and work in my name is judy williams:the vermont girl's winding path...
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Mar 11, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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so doc preceded me as scott horowitz preceded me as well as a couple others, but i was the last one.had the constellation program, i had then-space launch system at o rye on -- orion and some technology efforts. so that's my experience. so all of this experience then does relate to where we are today, and i'm going to talk just a bit about that. um, i want to play a film, short film. scott showed a little bit of it earlier. this is miraculous. there are a lot of things that were miraculous about entire effort including all the people involved. but this piece of film, as i remember, was found lying on the ground by itself not in a camera, but the film itself. see if it goes. >> and don't forget about the stuff on page 3-44. >> we're checking out. we've got -- [inaudible] working through the rest of it as well. thanks. >> sounds good. >> columbia, houston. so rick, we'll take another item. 27, please. >> oh, shoot. >> looks good. where did you miss that? >> i went back to -- [inaudible] >> oh, oh, oh. >> thanks for that, houston. [inaudible] >> i didn't know that was a problem, rick. >
so doc preceded me as scott horowitz preceded me as well as a couple others, but i was the last one.had the constellation program, i had then-space launch system at o rye on -- orion and some technology efforts. so that's my experience. so all of this experience then does relate to where we are today, and i'm going to talk just a bit about that. um, i want to play a film, short film. scott showed a little bit of it earlier. this is miraculous. there are a lot of things that were miraculous...
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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. >> i've always wanted to be scott horowitz for just a little while. >> it had a profound effect on all of us. it's an experience you that have gone and bush in many ways you never had, but you understand how it did affect you and what you did learn from it for the next two years, return to flight efforts in trying to implement recommendations and understanding how to implement technical authority in all of those things was tremendously difficult, but we kept her head down and we came out with a pretty good plan on how to do that employ a number of flights after successfully. >> dave and i go back a long way. when we first met you are working on columbia because it was my first right to space on sts 75 and you manage to get it to fly. so we go back a long way. that morning i see morning mycenae pointed out, we'll look at things through different lens. i plan my morning run to come in before landing. i came in the door and was greeted at my wife pretty much in hysterics and her six-year-old daughter on the couch looking not to seem like many people across the country. it didn't take
. >> i've always wanted to be scott horowitz for just a little while. >> it had a profound effect on all of us. it's an experience you that have gone and bush in many ways you never had, but you understand how it did affect you and what you did learn from it for the next two years, return to flight efforts in trying to implement recommendations and understanding how to implement technical authority in all of those things was tremendously difficult, but we kept her head down and we...
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Mar 12, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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horowitz about in this field for talking to the station i remember the first time i talk to astronautson station including sox, the whole attitude was we are here for you, anything we can do, leave this on orbit one year, don't worry about us. take care of columbia that is the attitude i saw across the board even with the shuttle program and the recovery team. interestingly we were part of the recovery team to say it was not plean
horowitz about in this field for talking to the station i remember the first time i talk to astronautson station including sox, the whole attitude was we are here for you, anything we can do, leave this on orbit one year, don't worry about us. take care of columbia that is the attitude i saw across the board even with the shuttle program and the recovery team. interestingly we were part of the recovery team to say it was not plean
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 189
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timothy egan on the photography of curtis, and barbara horowitz on health and healing. tomorrow live starting at 1:00 eastern, afghanistan followed at 2:birdy by eric larsen on social security. panels and office from the tucson festival of books, part of booktv on c-span2. >> that should make you encouraged about the power of probability and statistics in general. now i am going to make you scared. this is the end of the book, a question, of the questions i went to earlier. who gets to know what about you? last summer we hired a new baby sitter. when she arrived in the house i began to explain family background, i was a professor and my wife was a teacher, she cut me off and said oh, a i know. i google you. i was simultaneously relieved that i did not have to finish my spiel and mildly alarmed by how much of my life could be cobbled together, short internet search. our capacity to gather and analyze huge quantities of data, things are referred to earlier, the marriage of digital information with cheap computing power and the internet is unique in human history. we are g
timothy egan on the photography of curtis, and barbara horowitz on health and healing. tomorrow live starting at 1:00 eastern, afghanistan followed at 2:birdy by eric larsen on social security. panels and office from the tucson festival of books, part of booktv on c-span2. >> that should make you encouraged about the power of probability and statistics in general. now i am going to make you scared. this is the end of the book, a question, of the questions i went to earlier. who gets to...
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Mar 8, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 145
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these are the programs that followed to be the next programs in human space flight, so as scott horowitz preceded me and a couple others but i was the last one and so i had the consolation program. i had then the space launch system and zero ryan had human research program and some technology efforts. that's my experience. all of this experience relates to where we are today and i'm going to talk a little about that. i'm going to play a short film. scott showed a little of it earlier. this is a miraculous -- there were a lot of things miraculous about this effort including all the people involved. but this piece of the film as i remember was found lying on the ground by itself, not in a camera, but the film itself. let's see if it goes. >> don't forget about [inaudible] >> we are checking it out. >> sounds good. colombia houston will take another item 27, please. >> [inaudible] it might be. we see it out to the front. >> it's kind of dull. >> will be obvious when the time comes. >> [inaudible] >> don't do that. go ahead and make sure you check your seat pressure. >> i will leave it there
these are the programs that followed to be the next programs in human space flight, so as scott horowitz preceded me and a couple others but i was the last one and so i had the consolation program. i had then the space launch system and zero ryan had human research program and some technology efforts. that's my experience. all of this experience relates to where we are today and i'm going to talk a little about that. i'm going to play a short film. scott showed a little of it earlier. this is a...