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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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do you think that that is going to be the next front in the debate over school textbooks?of the same strategy. there are folks who sit on the state board of education in texas and on the panels they appointed to review these material that say deny the existence of global warming and climate change, just like they do evolution. their tactics are the same. get those discredited ideas into textbooks so the next generation of students learn them. but in texas, citizens, educators are not letting this happen. they're speaking out against this and in favor of good science. >> ryan valentine, thanks for coming on. >> thanks for having me. >> today's tweet of the day comes from chuck todd. the last thing blackberry needed, the last folks who actually used the device have just been furloughed today due to the government shutdown. side: when the storms are this powerful, the batteries had better be powerful, too. introducing duracell quantum. only duracell quantum has a hi-density core. and that means more fuel, more power, more performance than the next leading brand. so, whether y
do you think that that is going to be the next front in the debate over school textbooks?of the same strategy. there are folks who sit on the state board of education in texas and on the panels they appointed to review these material that say deny the existence of global warming and climate change, just like they do evolution. their tactics are the same. get those discredited ideas into textbooks so the next generation of students learn them. but in texas, citizens, educators are not letting...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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KGO
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textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead. nobody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames.
textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead. nobody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames.
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Oct 6, 2013
10/13
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MSNBC
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so for the students in the audience, lighter textbooks that focus on important stuff, would that appealuse we had a teenagers in the audience, i saw a few eyes rolling. so some people thinking that common core is different. it emerges from your own experience of bar mitzvzvamitzv. and the idea that young people can be asked to do very difficult, analytic task. >> the common core at its heart is based on evidence from high-performing countries, but all of us are informed by our personal experience. and i was moved by the last panel, where i think it was noah who said, people get confused, that they should respect people just because they're older. and one thing wonderful about a bar mitzvah, as a very young person, 13 years of age, sits in front of their peers and loved ones and reads a shared text and everyone can criticism. because they're all reading the same thing. and the student shows at that moment or the young person their command of that text, they reflect on what it might mean, they use evidence from it to develop an idea. that's a very demanding idea for a young person in fron
so for the students in the audience, lighter textbooks that focus on important stuff, would that appealuse we had a teenagers in the audience, i saw a few eyes rolling. so some people thinking that common core is different. it emerges from your own experience of bar mitzvzvamitzv. and the idea that young people can be asked to do very difficult, analytic task. >> the common core at its heart is based on evidence from high-performing countries, but all of us are informed by our personal...
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Oct 29, 2013
10/13
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LINKTV
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you saw the example in the textbook. if i pass these waves through a picket fence, maybe the picket fence can filter them out. it turns out, if i have a picket fence where the fence stakes are all vertical, i have vertical openings. and i shake my rope, and it goes right through the opening. it's like the opening weren't there, the shake goes right on through and the wave travels. that's easy to see. it is very conceptual. if i take the rope and shake it sideways however, it can't--the vibration can't get through the fence. and so what the fence does is it blocks it. and so that's a filter. and i have over here such a thing. here's a polarization filter, okay? and that's what this is. this will allow light to vibrate through going only one way, not another way. i don't know what the plane of this is. i can't see. but the-- and let's suppose it's like this. i have microscopic picket fences like that. i have in the back here a piece of white material that would diffuse light, so that when i shine light through it, it won't
you saw the example in the textbook. if i pass these waves through a picket fence, maybe the picket fence can filter them out. it turns out, if i have a picket fence where the fence stakes are all vertical, i have vertical openings. and i shake my rope, and it goes right through the opening. it's like the opening weren't there, the shake goes right on through and the wave travels. that's easy to see. it is very conceptual. if i take the rope and shake it sideways however, it can't--the...
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Oct 31, 2013
10/13
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ALJAZAM
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that and if you don't like your ideas, if you don't like to take chances with ideas you should read textbooks, i think, that's more appropriate. >> perfect time to take a quick break. when we come back i'm going to ask malcolm gladwell how he became that guy who enjoys >> audiences are intelligent and they know that their needs are not being met by american tv news today. >> entire media culture is driven by something that's very very fast... >> there has been a lack of fact based, in depth, serious journalism, and we fill that void... >> there is a huge opportunity for al jazeera america to change the way people look at news. >> we just don't parachute in on a story...quickly talk to a couple of experts and leave... >> one producer may spend 3 or 4 months, digging into a single story... >> at al jazeera, there are resources to alow us as journalists to go in depth and produce the kind of films... the people that you don't see anywhere else on television. >> we intend to reach out to the people who aren't being heard. >>we wanna see the people who are actually effected by the news of the day.
that and if you don't like your ideas, if you don't like to take chances with ideas you should read textbooks, i think, that's more appropriate. >> perfect time to take a quick break. when we come back i'm going to ask malcolm gladwell how he became that guy who enjoys >> audiences are intelligent and they know that their needs are not being met by american tv news today. >> entire media culture is driven by something that's very very fast... >> there has been a lack of...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ >>> we all know how the textbook drug sting goes.d bomb, lights go on, people come out of the woodwork and the guy is busts. in florida they making millions off of it. the cops aren't the buyers, they are instead of sellers of dope. and at least one key low of real cocaine is a part of the deal. that's how they're luring big drug dealers into their quiet peaceful little town. and the best part is the cops get to keep everything they bring with them. the watches, cell phones, anything of value, they have to forfeit it. those cops have brought in almost $6 million in the operation in just 2011 and 2012. and it's all perfectly legal. how on earth can they get about it. megan, when i read this the first thing i thought this sounds like textbook entrapment but it isn't necessarily. how is it legal? >> i think if you ask a lot of different attorneys, they will give you different opinions on whether exactly it is legal. i think one of the main problems is that the police offer cocaine for sale at bargain prices. they are offering deals to p
. ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ >>> we all know how the textbook drug sting goes.d bomb, lights go on, people come out of the woodwork and the guy is busts. in florida they making millions off of it. the cops aren't the buyers, they are instead of sellers of dope. and at least one key low of real cocaine is a part of the deal. that's how they're luring big drug dealers into their quiet peaceful little town. and the best part is the cops get to keep everything they bring with them....
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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WMAR
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. >> textbook to move, his car shows up and pull him out of there without any casualties or any of our casualties is the art. >> reporter: tonight they're being interrogated on the intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founder fathers of al qaeda. under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people. and an al qaeda computer and communications expert. with libi's capture, 12 of the 22 top terrorists identified by the u.s. after the 9/11 attacks have been killed o captured. >> of course that means ten are still at large. >> they're entire gating libi. what's the big secret. >> does he know where top al qaeda leaders are hiding right now and was he involved in any way or know anything about the attack on the benghazi u.s. consulate last year. >> thank you, brian ross. >>> now we head to washington and the government shutdown about to enter week two. tonight americans increasingly signaling they have had enough. the latest abc news "washington post" polls shows 70 percent of americans disapprove of how republicans in congress are handling
. >> textbook to move, his car shows up and pull him out of there without any casualties or any of our casualties is the art. >> reporter: tonight they're being interrogated on the intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founder fathers of al qaeda. under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people. and an al qaeda computer and communications expert. with libi's capture, 12 of the 22 top terrorists identified by the u.s. after the...
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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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ALJAZAM
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textbooks and fiction flourished. but today the interest in pick fiction seems to have waned.more chinese readers are going on-line because it's here that the new book, new writers and the literary debate can be found. but beijing literary blogger is pessimistic about the new generation. one o of the young authors that she blogs about is joh jiang fa. fangaz. she is very well known. two and a half million readers follow her microblog. at the age of 22 she has already written several books. she wrote her first one at the tender age of nine. today she studies journalism in beijing. she has her own column in the magazine "new weekly" where she also writes editorials. she is currently working on a new novel. she find herself unable to resist looking back. this young writer is trying to process the history of the people's republic of chinanat stand with your country, do you stand for your country? or do you want to take it down this evening? >> reporter: ankger in congress and part of the government starts to shut down. you are watching al jazeera live from doha and in the program
textbooks and fiction flourished. but today the interest in pick fiction seems to have waned.more chinese readers are going on-line because it's here that the new book, new writers and the literary debate can be found. but beijing literary blogger is pessimistic about the new generation. one o of the young authors that she blogs about is joh jiang fa. fangaz. she is very well known. two and a half million readers follow her microblog. at the age of 22 she has already written several books. she...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 4, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. >> reporter: first of all congratulations on the keen center. >> thank you. >> reporter: what was it like for you? >> it was rather weird, technically because one of my study in new york was taken entirely to japan. the furniture, the books. so i had a strange feeling in the present and the past. the one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> reporter: now thanks to your classes on all your books, i think that many foreign students, it's become much easier to study japanese literature. >> especially at universities where there was no person to teach japanese. nobody who was particularly interested in japanese. suddenly, there was a book that they could get a good idea what japanese literature was, like during the over 1500 years of its existence. >> reporter: keene's understanding of japan extends beyond japan to other areas of culture. he's interested in the japanese art of the puppet theater. he organized a performance so that those attending his lecture could experience first hand the appeal of the
it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. >> reporter: first of all congratulations on the keen center. >> thank you. >> reporter: what was it like for you? >> it was rather weird, technically because one of my study in new york was taken entirely to japan. the furniture, the books. so i had a strange feeling in the present and the past. the one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> reporter: now thanks to your classes...
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Oct 24, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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you wouldn't go to a physician if that physician he or shall el used a textbook from 1965. the same applies in this situation. we're using what we've learned over the past several decades. >>> do you agree with this? this is a wonderful happy land? this is the fantasy that -- >> van, c'mon, that footage is from decades ago in canada at a facility . >>> they've learned a lot about husbandry, and techniques, but the killer whales still die at the same rate as the t 1200 .. we constantly monitor the web so if any of your personal information is misused, we're on it. ♪ ow. [ male announcer ] call 1-800-lifelock or go to lifelock.com today. [ male announcer ] call 1-800-lifelock life with crohn's disease ois a daily game of "what if's". what if my abdominal pain and cramps come back? what if the plane gets delayed? what if i can't hide my symptoms? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to your doctor and visit crohnsandcolit
you wouldn't go to a physician if that physician he or shall el used a textbook from 1965. the same applies in this situation. we're using what we've learned over the past several decades. >>> do you agree with this? this is a wonderful happy land? this is the fantasy that -- >> van, c'mon, that footage is from decades ago in canada at a facility . >>> they've learned a lot about husbandry, and techniques, but the killer whales still die at the same rate as the t 1200 .....
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Oct 28, 2013
10/13
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ALJAZAM
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that and if you don't like your ideas, if you don't like to take chances with ideas you should read textbooks, i think, that's more appropriate. >> perfect time to take a quick break. when we come back i'm going to ask malcolm gladwell how he became that guy who enjoys playing with ideas. >> we find the fault lines that run through communities. >> the shooting happened about 30 minutes ago. >> companies... >> the remains of the fire are still everywhere here. >> the powers that be at home and around the world... >> not only do they not get compensation but you don't even have to explain why? >> well thats exactly what i said. >> we question authority. >> so you said we could get access... >> that's enough! >> ... and those affected. >> investigative journalism at it's toughest. >> welcome back to talk to al jazeera. i'm talking to malcolm gladwell, author of his latest book david and goliath. we discussed how you like to be someone who plays with yrdz. a number of the critics of this latest book, that you're taking scholarly findings and you're trying to fit the narrative that you've agreed o
that and if you don't like your ideas, if you don't like to take chances with ideas you should read textbooks, i think, that's more appropriate. >> perfect time to take a quick break. when we come back i'm going to ask malcolm gladwell how he became that guy who enjoys playing with ideas. >> we find the fault lines that run through communities. >> the shooting happened about 30 minutes ago. >> companies... >> the remains of the fire are still everywhere here....
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Oct 14, 2013
10/13
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LINKTV
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it came from and went back into textbooks as the greatest success in modern fiscal policy.came into an economy without inflation. the federal reserve was able to cooperate and accommodate this stimulus to purchasing power, and it worked like a charm. walter heller left the council in 1964. by 1985, the man in this office rejected the idea that the government could fine-tune the economy. we cannot do it now, and we couldn't do it then. some of my predecessors believed they could. so far as the reagan administration is concerned, we recognize that. we try not to fine-tune because it would be a road toward disaster. what happened between the sixties and the eighties? the seventies happened bad years for theory and practice of macro-economics. monthly fine-tuning of monetary policy created havoc in the economy as martin feldstein explains. i think the 1970s, in particular, was a decade in which monetary policy pursued the wrong goals, was based on the wrong premises, and got us into terrible trouble. it was money's excessive growth more than anything else, that brought us to th
it came from and went back into textbooks as the greatest success in modern fiscal policy.came into an economy without inflation. the federal reserve was able to cooperate and accommodate this stimulus to purchasing power, and it worked like a charm. walter heller left the council in 1964. by 1985, the man in this office rejected the idea that the government could fine-tune the economy. we cannot do it now, and we couldn't do it then. some of my predecessors believed they could. so far as the...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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. >> a doctor is using his own life experience to teach kids something they cannot learn in a textbook. >> are you guys crazy? >> yeah. >> he is. i'm not. >> it may take a certain kind of crazy to do what this couple does. giving up a good chunk of their lives and their home to help a certain type of animal. >> it is one little part of the world that we try to help. here's nbc bay area's garvin thomas. >> good evening. welcome to the broadcast. we begin tonight's bay area proud special at the end. the end that is, of chemotherapy for a cancer patient, their last treatment they have likely been looking forward to for months, if not years. at stanford's cancer center, patients look forward to it for more than one reason. it is not enough for the staff to save your life. they want to entertain you as wel every two weeks -- >> a 12:40. >> reporter: maureen callie has a standing appointment to sit. for three hours. or however long it takes that day for her chemotherapy drug to go from bag to bodymç:pñ and ge work getting rid of whatever may be left ofs8÷ñr her breast canc. maureen has been
. >> a doctor is using his own life experience to teach kids something they cannot learn in a textbook. >> are you guys crazy? >> yeah. >> he is. i'm not. >> it may take a certain kind of crazy to do what this couple does. giving up a good chunk of their lives and their home to help a certain type of animal. >> it is one little part of the world that we try to help. here's nbc bay area's garvin thomas. >> good evening. welcome to the broadcast. we begin...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. first of all, congratulations on the opening of the king center. >> thank you. >> what was it like for you? >> it was kind of weird, particularly because one of my studies in new york was taken entirely to kashawazaki, the furniture, the rugs, the pictures on the wall. so i had this strange connection with the present and the past. one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> now, thanks to classes on all your books, i think for many foreign students it's become easier to study japanese literature. >> especially at universities where there was no professor to teach japanese, nobody who was particularly interested in japanese. suddenly there was a book that they could get a good idea what japanese literature was like during the -- over 1500 years. >> keane's understanding of japan extends beyond literature to many areas of culture. he's particularly enthusiastic about the japanese theater known as jo-li. he organized a performance of jodeli so that those attendin
it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. first of all, congratulations on the opening of the king center. >> thank you. >> what was it like for you? >> it was kind of weird, particularly because one of my studies in new york was taken entirely to kashawazaki, the furniture, the rugs, the pictures on the wall. so i had this strange connection with the present and the past. one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> now,...
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Oct 9, 2013
10/13
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KCSM
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office as cash and to buy textbooks for children. about 530,000 palestinians have been living as refugees in syria before the civil war began. at least 50,000 of them have been forced to relocate within the country or move to lebanon and elsewhere. >>> every year police in japan deal with thousands of reported cases of stalking. authorities in tokyo believe the latest one led to a murder hours after they found out about it. 18-year-old suzuki and her parents visited police to tell them that she had twice spotted her ex-boyfriend near her home. a short time later she was stabbed to death. police have arrested 21-year-old charles thomas ikanaga on suspicion of carrying out the crime. they say he and suzuki were in a relationship that ended about six months ago. they say thell phone but couldn't get through. they left a message asking him to call back. they then asked suzuki to bring letters and e-mails from ikanaga so they could handle the matter as a criminal case. last year police in japan received 20,000 reports of stalking. >>> dis
office as cash and to buy textbooks for children. about 530,000 palestinians have been living as refugees in syria before the civil war began. at least 50,000 of them have been forced to relocate within the country or move to lebanon and elsewhere. >>> every year police in japan deal with thousands of reported cases of stalking. authorities in tokyo believe the latest one led to a murder hours after they found out about it. 18-year-old suzuki and her parents visited police to tell them...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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KGO
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textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead. nobody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames. the punt is muffed. takes the shoot from morris, it's recovered in the end zone. that's a touchdown. after seven games the niners are 5-2 jim harbaugh afterwards. doesn't get any bigger than game seven. >> this was a big game. treating it like the biggest game of the season, because it was our next game. like game seven of the world series, game seven of the stanley cup. next game is game eight and we'll treat it the same. >> only the niners have nine more regular season games. >>> mike shumann is in nashville with vernon davis and the niners. tonight, mike's one-on-one
textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead. nobody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames. the punt...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 10, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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that ben bernanke wrote the first half of the textbook about modern monetary policy how you build your balance sheet metal over $3 trillion to fight recession and subsequent slow recovery. she's going to know how to find in the second half of the textbook how do you safely exit from that policy. >> rose: how long do you think it will take her to exit from that policy. >> i think that depends a lot on the economy. we know at the september meetig some people were already started exiting and she and ben bernanke were not. if you look at what happened since then, the chaos in washington, the fiscal grid lock the showdown over the debt ceiling looks like that was a pretty wise decision. i don't think she'll rush to the exit. i wouldn't be surprised if she'll be the one who gets to make the first move. and i suspect it will be very well telegraphed and explained because one thing they've learned at the federal reserve as hard as they try they have not explained themselves very well. >> rose: david, what would you add to this selection of janet yellen which we all expected after larry summers
that ben bernanke wrote the first half of the textbook about modern monetary policy how you build your balance sheet metal over $3 trillion to fight recession and subsequent slow recovery. she's going to know how to find in the second half of the textbook how do you safely exit from that policy. >> rose: how long do you think it will take her to exit from that policy. >> i think that depends a lot on the economy. we know at the september meetig some people were already started...
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143
Oct 7, 2013
10/13
by
KCSM
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eye 143
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it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. >> first of all, congratulationses onhe opening of the keene center. >> thank you. >> what was it like, for you? >> well, it was rather weird. particularly because one of my studies in new york was taken entirely to kashiwazaki. the furniture, rugs, sports on the wall. i had the present and the past. and the one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> now thankour classes on all your books. i think that to many foreign students it's become much easier to study japanese literature. >> especially at universities where there was no person to teach japanese, nobody who was particularly interested in japanese. suddenly there was a way to get a good idea of what japanese literature was like during the over 1,500 years of its existence. [ applause ] >> reporter: keene's understanding of japan extends beyond literature to many areas of culture. he's particularly enthusiastic about the japanese art of the puppet theater. [ speaking native language ] >> reporter: he organized a performance so that those atte
it's now used around the world as a key textbook in the field. >> first of all, congratulationses onhe opening of the keene center. >> thank you. >> what was it like, for you? >> well, it was rather weird. particularly because one of my studies in new york was taken entirely to kashiwazaki. the furniture, rugs, sports on the wall. i had the present and the past. and the one thing they couldn't send from new york was the hudson river. >> now thankour classes on all...
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Oct 30, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN2
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states senate or if united states senators were given a textbook of the type of person to confirm, this would be the golden standard right here. we shouldn't even be having this debate as she should have been confirmed unanimously weeks ago. she's the kind of nominee we should support because hers is a great american story of dedication, diligence, patriotism, and extraordinary professional ability. so i hope nobody is going to get involved in partisan politics and choose to filibuster. she deserves to be confirmed. i might say incidentally in the same seat, the same seat on the court when a republican president nominated a man named john roberts to that seat, came here on the senate floor, as i recall, all democrats and all republicans supported him. for the d.c. circuit. for the seat that she's been nominated for. it was -- he was supported not because the democrats agreed with him philosophically on all issues but we knew he was highly qualified so he was confirmed to that seat. i don't think it's any stretch to say she's just as qualified. the same seat, the only difference is, it's
states senate or if united states senators were given a textbook of the type of person to confirm, this would be the golden standard right here. we shouldn't even be having this debate as she should have been confirmed unanimously weeks ago. she's the kind of nominee we should support because hers is a great american story of dedication, diligence, patriotism, and extraordinary professional ability. so i hope nobody is going to get involved in partisan politics and choose to filibuster. she...
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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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KQEH
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. >> really, i counted the number of apple products we have in the house, all the textbooks are on apple. i guess they deserve it. anyway, thank you for watching, i'm sue herera, susie is back tomorrow. >> and i'm tyler mathisen, have a great everything, everybody, and we'll see you back here on october first. >>> nightly business report has been brought to you by. >> street.com, interactive multi-media tools for an ever changing world. our dividend stock adviser guides and helps generate during a period of low interest rates. we are the street.com.
. >> really, i counted the number of apple products we have in the house, all the textbooks are on apple. i guess they deserve it. anyway, thank you for watching, i'm sue herera, susie is back tomorrow. >> and i'm tyler mathisen, have a great everything, everybody, and we'll see you back here on october first. >>> nightly business report has been brought to you by. >> street.com, interactive multi-media tools for an ever changing world. our dividend stock adviser...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 76
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en we stted the clinic i'72, there was no definition, and patients are our textbook my fst surpris s having a young, healthy athletic coach of 34 who presented "i not interested in sex. "i've t erections. "i've gono problem compleng the act hen we do t together which twice a year. i just he othethingso do." this wasn't even dined at the time. i just called them dds--dire disorders, which means that the whole welength of thinking about sex engh to feel sexual was ssing, that there were other priorities in the mind of the individual. what causes a desire disorder? the way jan tells their story, it was mel's snoring, but she knows something more serious was going on. i must have been going through some difficult times of my own at that time, because married to somebody for over 2o years, i certainly would have heard m snore at some point those first 19 years. we then had to deal with anger, which is a big wall that builds up like brick-by-brick sentment between couples. there's hot anger in the bedroom if couples say nasty things to each other, and there's anger if you didn't do anythin
en we stted the clinic i'72, there was no definition, and patients are our textbook my fst surpris s having a young, healthy athletic coach of 34 who presented "i not interested in sex. "i've t erections. "i've gono problem compleng the act hen we do t together which twice a year. i just he othethingso do." this wasn't even dined at the time. i just called them dds--dire disorders, which means that the whole welength of thinking about sex engh to feel sexual was ssing, that...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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KOFY
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textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead.obody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames. the punt is muffed. takes the shoot from morris, it's recovered in the end zone. that's a touchdown. after seven games the niners are 5-2 jim harbaugh afterwards. doesn't get any bigger than game seven. >> this was a big game. treating it like the biggest game of the season, because it was our next game. like game seven of the world series, game seven of the stanley cup. next game is game eight and we'll treat it the same. >> only the niners have nine more regular season games. >>> mike shumann is in nashville with vernon davis and the niners. tonight, mike's one-on-one c
textbook block from bruce miller. kaepernick, untouched, the lead.obody had it bitter than those fans. locker going development brock, out in biting. third pick of the season forbreak. the turnover leading to points, gore, leaning on the goal line. then they're kaepernicking, that means life is good. vern davis, career high, 180 yards, tennessee, four receptions today. down at the four, three plays later, gore over the line. all three phases working, offense, defense, special tames. the punt is...
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Oct 28, 2013
10/13
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KCSM
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the incident is written about in turkish school textbooks. in 2008, turkish president visited to pay his respects. turkish underwater archaeologists have been salvages items from the wreckage for the last ten years. >> my main and only goal is to bring back the memories of those soldiers who gave their lives for our countries, turkey and japan. >> reporter: he and his team dive to explore the wreckage. one of their largest finds was a cooking pan nearly one meter wide. team members carefully clean each item. on this day, a group of high school students came to help. >> translator: i hope i can continue to the friendship between japan and turkey. >> jonathan and his family have come to known koshimoto as their second home. he hopes this tragedy will help their bond grow even stronger. >> so we're going to continue, continue as long as we can to tell the story to japanese people, to the turkish people, to the whole world. >> reporter: he says he will keep entering the seabed as long as there is something to salvage. >>> the world's top wheelcha
the incident is written about in turkish school textbooks. in 2008, turkish president visited to pay his respects. turkish underwater archaeologists have been salvages items from the wreckage for the last ten years. >> my main and only goal is to bring back the memories of those soldiers who gave their lives for our countries, turkey and japan. >> reporter: he and his team dive to explore the wreckage. one of their largest finds was a cooking pan nearly one meter wide. team members...
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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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KQED
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. >> really, i counted the number of apple products we have in the house, all the textbooks are on apple. i guess they deserve it. anyway, thank you for watching, i'm sue herera, susie is back tomorrow. >> and i'm tyler mathisen, have a great everything, everybody, and we'll see you back here on october first. >>> nightly business report has been brought to you by. >> street.com, interactive multi-media tools for an ever changing world. our dividend stock adviser guides and helps generate during a period of low interest rates. a period of low interest rates. we are the street.com. >> welcome to "film school shorts," a showcase of the most exciting new talent from across the country. experience the future of film, next on "film school shorts." "film school shorts" is made possible by a grant from maurice kanbar. celebrating the vitality and power of the moving image. and by the members of kqed. >> boy: the neighborhood i live in is... mostly clean. a lot of gangs tagged up all over. half of the street is all poor, and in the middle of both streets,
. >> really, i counted the number of apple products we have in the house, all the textbooks are on apple. i guess they deserve it. anyway, thank you for watching, i'm sue herera, susie is back tomorrow. >> and i'm tyler mathisen, have a great everything, everybody, and we'll see you back here on october first. >>> nightly business report has been brought to you by. >> street.com, interactive multi-media tools for an ever changing world. our dividend stock adviser...
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Oct 27, 2013
10/13
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ALJAZAM
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people were using in day-to-day life as opposed to facts and figures and names of famous people in a textbook>> they are hoping the collection of artifacts will be made into a historical exhibit. >> this part of manhattan has been a mix of the old and the new because historic buildings alongside shiny high-rises. over the last 10 years, people have slowly been moving back to the neighborhoods, a reminder of how life used to be a few feet below. cath turner, al jazeera, new york. >> history there. thank you for watching al jazeera america. i am richelle carry. "listening post" is up in connection. get updates on our website throughout the day at aljazeera.com. thank you for your time.
people were using in day-to-day life as opposed to facts and figures and names of famous people in a textbook>> they are hoping the collection of artifacts will be made into a historical exhibit. >> this part of manhattan has been a mix of the old and the new because historic buildings alongside shiny high-rises. over the last 10 years, people have slowly been moving back to the neighborhoods, a reminder of how life used to be a few feet below. cath turner, al jazeera, new york....
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Oct 25, 2013
10/13
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WBFF
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. - you know, darryl, this is textbook assistant regional manager stuff here, and i feel like i'm doingl the heavy lifting. i'm coming up with all the ideas here. - i'm going for a walk. - okay. - good... good, and-- [thuds] - you doing all right, man? - i'm done. i gotta get out of here. - yeah. not the easiest day to be assistant regional manager. - it's not just today, it's every day. seems like the better title i have, the stupider my job gets. - aw, come on, it can always get better, right? - hmm. yeah, right. - no, i'm serious. there's always something better. - like what? - like, hypothetically, if i said that there was another job that you and i could both have. - what kind of job? - something cool, like sports marketing, or-- does that sound like something you'd be into? - hell yeah. - right? - that sounds awesom - okay, but wait. what if i told you that it was in philly? so you'd have to-- - i love philly. - right? - it's not even a thought-- - not even a thought. it's not even that far away, i could still commute--exactly. exactly. all right. - what? wait, wait, wait. so what
. - you know, darryl, this is textbook assistant regional manager stuff here, and i feel like i'm doingl the heavy lifting. i'm coming up with all the ideas here. - i'm going for a walk. - okay. - good... good, and-- [thuds] - you doing all right, man? - i'm done. i gotta get out of here. - yeah. not the easiest day to be assistant regional manager. - it's not just today, it's every day. seems like the better title i have, the stupider my job gets. - aw, come on, it can always get better,...
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Oct 25, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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you wouldn't go to a physician if that physician he or shall el used a textbook from 1965. same applies in this situation. we're using what we've learned over the past several decades. and i'm happy to say that with positive reinforcement we're teaching the willing participants. animals are learning to give blood voluntarily. >> you're saying the animals are not trapped in cages all night that they can't get out of, which is what the film suggests. >> do you agree with this? this is a wonderful happy land? this is the fantasy that -- >> but van, c' mon, that footage is from decades ago at canada facility. >> and this is just about mortality. the killer whales still die at the same rate that they did in the '70s. they die from mosquitos that land on their back because they're on the the surface. one was found with a buoy in his stomach. six have died during a pregnancy or as a result of giving birth. so these are abhorrent. the fact they haven't been able to improve and keep the animals alive longer suggests something is wrong. >> excuse me, mr. speaker, but there are thousa
you wouldn't go to a physician if that physician he or shall el used a textbook from 1965. same applies in this situation. we're using what we've learned over the past several decades. and i'm happy to say that with positive reinforcement we're teaching the willing participants. animals are learning to give blood voluntarily. >> you're saying the animals are not trapped in cages all night that they can't get out of, which is what the film suggests. >> do you agree with this? this is...
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Oct 26, 2013
10/13
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WETA
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. >> for example, my courses in computer security, we don't have textbooks. everything's so new we have to look at websites, we have to look at the latest from conferences, and really teach from that. every year it's a significant update. >> is it ever the case that you actually have a student discover something that nobody knew about in the middle of the semester? >> oh, that's actually a course requirement. one of the things we ask students to do is go out and find a vulnerability that no one else has found, figure out if it's exploitable, and then report it ethically. >> which means what? >> they're going and finding something they could use to break into someone's computer and then they go tell the programmer, look, here is a flaw, fix it. >> reporter: all those flaws that carnegie mellon's undergraduates find don't necessarily mean the software on your ppc or behind your bank's website is badly written. almost every piece of software has vulnerabilities that can be exploited from outside. and when a machine's connected to the internet it's almost impossi
. >> for example, my courses in computer security, we don't have textbooks. everything's so new we have to look at websites, we have to look at the latest from conferences, and really teach from that. every year it's a significant update. >> is it ever the case that you actually have a student discover something that nobody knew about in the middle of the semester? >> oh, that's actually a course requirement. one of the things we ask students to do is go out and find a...
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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WJLA
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. >> textbook to move, his car shows up and pull him out of there without any casualties or any of our own casualties is the art. >> reporter: tonight they're being interrogated on the intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founder fathers of al qaeda. under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people. and an al qaeda computer and communications expert. with libi's capture, 12 of the 22 top terrorists identified by the u.s. after the 9/11 attacks have been killed or captured. >> of course that means ten are still at large. >> they're entire gating libi. what's the big secret. >> does he know where top al qaeda leaders are hiding right now and was he involved in any way or know anything about the attack on the benghazi u.s. consulate last year. >> thank you, brian ross. >>> now we head to washington and the government shutdown about to enter week two. tonight americans increasingly signaling they have had enough. the latest abc news "washington post" polls shows 70 percent of americans disapprove of how republicans in congress are han
. >> textbook to move, his car shows up and pull him out of there without any casualties or any of our own casualties is the art. >> reporter: tonight they're being interrogated on the intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founder fathers of al qaeda. under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people. and an al qaeda computer and communications expert. with libi's capture, 12 of the 22 top terrorists identified by the u.s. after...
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Oct 31, 2013
10/13
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KQED
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the launch on those trucks has been near textbook perfect.ks have helped gm hold onto the lead as the number one auto maker in the u.s. ahead of ford, toyota and chrysler. meanwhile, gm reported a 60% drop in earnings over saws and cut losses in europe and sales in china remain strong and gm holding $26 billion, investors are asking when the auto maker will run tom money to shareholders with a dividend. >> priority number one is reinvest in the business,ç priority number two is to maintain and strengthen the balance sheet which we've been continuing to do including avkttiveties through the quarter and priority three again red returns to the shareholders and we'll evaluate that over time. >> reporter: today's earnings pushed shares close to the highest price since the ipo in 2009. with the u.s. treasury scheduled to sale the remaining steak in general motors over the next couple months, gm is hoping the stigma of being bailed out by uncle sam will fade away and with it, any doubts the new gm will repeat the same mistakes that led the old gm t
the launch on those trucks has been near textbook perfect.ks have helped gm hold onto the lead as the number one auto maker in the u.s. ahead of ford, toyota and chrysler. meanwhile, gm reported a 60% drop in earnings over saws and cut losses in europe and sales in china remain strong and gm holding $26 billion, investors are asking when the auto maker will run tom money to shareholders with a dividend. >> priority number one is reinvest in the business,ç priority number two is to...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 31, 2013
10/13
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SFGTV2
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we'll see less textbooks and more digital learning and with that we are promoting a digital literacy policy which deals with a number of issues and i'm going to go back and look at the draft policy to see how well it deals with the kind of issues rob and your family have dealt with in terms of using the internet safely and being aware of the harm you can do to yourself and to others by the way digital news can get around. >> assemblyman. >> thank you very much. i'm very, very heartened. this was an issue that's been in the closet for too long. i think high profile nationally now as well and we have super stars involved, lady gaga, myself, but you got to reach young people. usually peers are the best, i think, in terms of communicating things and then absolutely the parents. let's keep working, i'm only as good as the information i have and so we want to do the most effective long-lasting legislation. you know what happens sometimes, something is written in law but the attitudes don't change. so that is the human part, that is the part that should have consequences and not be ignored.
we'll see less textbooks and more digital learning and with that we are promoting a digital literacy policy which deals with a number of issues and i'm going to go back and look at the draft policy to see how well it deals with the kind of issues rob and your family have dealt with in terms of using the internet safely and being aware of the harm you can do to yourself and to others by the way digital news can get around. >> assemblyman. >> thank you very much. i'm very, very...
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Oct 23, 2013
10/13
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KPIX
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they're replacing textbooks in some schools and cash registers in stores. alex matthews just opened this juice bar in los angeles and installed ipads both for the look and the cost. how much would a regular cash register system cost you? >> it would have been about $30,000. whereas our system costs around $12,000. >> reporter: less expensive tablets mainly run on google's android platform, are now taking a bite out of apple. two years another the ipad made up 65% of the tablet market versus 30% for android. by the end of this year, android is expected to have 50% market share, the ipad falling to 49%. microsoft's surface tablet is a bit player at best. >> oh, snap. you have a real keyboard, too. >> reporter: but in new ads, microsoft is playing hardball, accusing apple of form over function. >> do you still think i'm pretty? >> reporter: it may be a cheap shot, but then again, this is war. ben tracy, cbs news, san francisco. >> pelley: now, we want to bring you up to date on our lead story from last night. the police in sparks, nevada, are telling us now th
they're replacing textbooks in some schools and cash registers in stores. alex matthews just opened this juice bar in los angeles and installed ipads both for the look and the cost. how much would a regular cash register system cost you? >> it would have been about $30,000. whereas our system costs around $12,000. >> reporter: less expensive tablets mainly run on google's android platform, are now taking a bite out of apple. two years another the ipad made up 65% of the tablet...
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. >> it's textbook. to move and get him at the precise time his car shows up, pull him out and get out of there without any casualties or any of our own casualties is really the art. >> reporter: tonight al libi is being interrogated on the uss san antonio somewhere in the mediterranean, a potential intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founding fathers of al qaeda, under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people, and an al qaeda computer and communications expert. with al libi's capture, 12 of the 22 top terrorists identified by the u.s. after the 9/11 attacks have been killed or captured. >> of course that means ten are still at large. >> they're interrogating al libi. what's the biggest secret they think he holds? >> reporter: three big things -- are there more attacks planned against u.s. interesting anywhere in the world, does he know where top al qaeda leaders are hiding right now, and was he involved in any way or know anything about the atta
. >> it's textbook. to move and get him at the precise time his car shows up, pull him out and get out of there without any casualties or any of our own casualties is really the art. >> reporter: tonight al libi is being interrogated on the uss san antonio somewhere in the mediterranean, a potential intelligence gold mine if he talks. he's one of the founding fathers of al qaeda, under indictment for the 1998 deadly bombing of two u.s. embassies that killed 224 people, and an al...
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Oct 19, 2013
10/13
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KPIX
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7-day graphic >> pelley: sometimes the best treatment for what ails you is not found in medical textbooksy health insurance, and is available without a prescription. it's an over-the-counter cup of kindness. steve hartman met a man who serves it up "on the road." >> reporter: it all began with a coffee craving. >> i think i got another coffee. >> reporter: it all began with the tall cream and sugar haired guy named dan dewey. and this urge he got back in 2006 for a grande black bold roast. the starbucks was just down the road from st. joseph mercy hospital where his dad was getting a chemotreatment. dan was sitting with his dad and other patients when dan announced, "anyonement a coffee? i'm buying." a pumpkin caramel. >> reporter: seven years have passed. >> coffee and cove with cream. >> reporter: his dad beat his cancer and stopped coming here long ago, so why, then, is dan still taking orders? >> nurse ratchet will have the usual. it's the best job i ever had it and i have to pay to do it. somebody says can you ford na? i go, no, but i never had any money anyway. why not share it. >>
7-day graphic >> pelley: sometimes the best treatment for what ails you is not found in medical textbooksy health insurance, and is available without a prescription. it's an over-the-counter cup of kindness. steve hartman met a man who serves it up "on the road." >> reporter: it all began with a coffee craving. >> i think i got another coffee. >> reporter: it all began with the tall cream and sugar haired guy named dan dewey. and this urge he got back in 2006...