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Jun 26, 2014
06/14
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. >> then growing more than ivy at yale university. >> we've got our squash field over there on the left. and coming up over here is where we grow all of our salad mixes. >> the sustainable food project from an ivy league campus. >> and talk about taking things into your own hands. >> half and half, yeah, that's perfect.
. >> then growing more than ivy at yale university. >> we've got our squash field over there on the left. and coming up over here is where we grow all of our salad mixes. >> the sustainable food project from an ivy league campus. >> and talk about taking things into your own hands. >> half and half, yeah, that's perfect.
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dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) (cheers and applause) ♪ ♪ ♪fame, makes a man take things over♪ ♪fame, lets him loose, hard to swallow♪ ♪fame, puts you there where things are hollow♪ the evolution of luxury continues. the next generation 2015 escalade. ♪fame what art thou drinking isaac? giveth me a redd's apple ale! gravity! what's that? i have no idea. redd's apple ale. crisp like an apple. brewed like an ale. >> stephen: welcome back, everybody! folks, i don't know about you, folks, but i for one grew up in a time when the genders were clearly defined. one was the breadwinner, pant-wearer and channel-changer-haver. the other was the nurturer, emotion-haver, and was triangle-shaped. (laughter) but now men are becoming women, women are becoming men, and my inbox is becoming full of your angry letters every time i talk about it. i know. i know. i'm cis-hetero nazie scum. i accept your judgment. but now the trans-genders are trans-forming a new segment of america. >> medicare patients may now apply t
dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) (cheers and applause) ♪ ♪ ♪fame, makes a man take things over♪ ♪fame, lets him loose, hard to swallow♪ ♪fame, puts you there where things are hollow♪ the evolution of luxury continues. the next generation 2015 escalade. ♪fame what art thou drinking isaac? giveth me a redd's apple ale! gravity! what's that? i have no idea. redd's apple ale. crisp like an apple....
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Jun 30, 2014
06/14
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: she is off and away to yale university this fall. carlene says her foster mother, who raised her, was the one who put her on the path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be number one. she really has redirected my whole entire life. >> reporter: carlene was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemployed and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl who was basically being raised by her siblings. her parents would leave the children alone for days. >> one day, me and my brothers and sisters were eating cereal, and we ran out of milk and my brother went into the kitchen and got ice cubes and put it into the cartons. shook it up and melted the ice. he says ice cubes make more milk. >> reporter: they ended up in a homeless shelter in richmond. that's when child protective services took the kids away from their parents and placed them in different foster homes. carlene was five. >> someone overheard my mother say that she wante
. >> reporter: she is off and away to yale university this fall. carlene says her foster mother, who raised her, was the one who put her on the path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be number one. she really has redirected my whole entire life. >> reporter: carlene was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemployed and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl...
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dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) ♪ [ male announcer ] you know that guy that witnessed that thing he shouldn't have and got put in that program you're not supposed to know about? he gets to go away for a while to a place we can't talk about and eat velveeta shells & cheese. liquid gold. eat like that guy you know. (vo)cars for crash survival,ning subaru has developed our most revolutionary feature yet. a car that can see trouble... ...and stop itself to avoid it. when the insurance institute for highway safety tested front crash prevention nobody beat subaru models with eyesight. not honda. not ford or any other brand. subaru eyesight. an extra set of eyes, every time you drive. >> stephen: welcome back, everybody! folks, i don't know about you, folks, but i for one grew up in a time when the genders were clearly defined. one was the breadwinner, pant-wearer and channel-changer-haver. the other was the nurturer, emotion-haver, and was triangle-shaped. (laughter) but now men are becoming women, women
dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) ♪ [ male announcer ] you know that guy that witnessed that thing he shouldn't have and got put in that program you're not supposed to know about? he gets to go away for a while to a place we can't talk about and eat velveeta shells & cheese. liquid gold. eat like that guy you know. (vo)cars for crash survival,ning subaru has developed our most revolutionary feature yet. a car...
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dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) ♪ [ male announcer ] ode to the subway melt. melt your hunger away with hot gooey cheese covering smoky bacon, tender ham, turkey, and crisp veggies on a foundation of freshly baked bread. your appetite just wrote a check only a sandwich of this magnitude can cash. the one and only subway melt. not just any sandwich, a massive, mucho, munchable, mouthwatering melt of a sandwich. subway. eat fresh. mouthwatering melt of a sandwich. it takes place in anhaha, cleveland... i love it babe. i'm not your babe. you weren't saying that this morning, when you're like... mmmmm mmmm mmm alright we're done. break up with lingering food. (ding!) mmmmm mmmm for that just brushed clean feeling... ♪ eat, drink, chew orbit ♪ yeah, girl ♪ you know, i've been thinking about us ♪ ♪ and, uh, i just can't fight it anymore ♪ ♪ it's bundle time ♪ bundle ♪ mm, feel those savings, baby and that's how a home and auto bundle is made. better he learns it here than on the streets. the miracle of b
dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back!eers and applause) ♪ [ male announcer ] ode to the subway melt. melt your hunger away with hot gooey cheese covering smoky bacon, tender ham, turkey, and crisp veggies on a foundation of freshly baked bread. your appetite just wrote a check only a sandwich of this magnitude can cash. the one and only subway melt. not just any sandwich, a massive, mucho, munchable, mouthwatering melt of a sandwich....
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Jun 8, 2014
06/14
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WHYY
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. >> reporter: for "religion and ethics newsweekly," i'm judy valente at yale university's institute music. >>> on our calendar this week -- sunday is pentecost, when christians celebrate god's gift of the holy spirit to the church. according to the new testament, the holy spirit came to jesus' followers in the form of tongues of fire. pentecost is also known as the birthday of the church. and last week jews celebrated the festival of shavuot, honoring god's gift of the torah to moses. we visited the sixth and i historic synagogue in washington, d.c. and talked with rabbi shira stutman. >> the shavuot holiday is actually one of the more important holidays in the jewish tradition, and it basically has two reasons for being. the original reason comes outof the israelite people being an agricultural people a few thousand years ago in the land that we now call israel. the israelites would bring the bikkurim, the first fruits, the first offerings, of their harvest up to the temple as an offering to god, as a way of saying thank you and in hopes of a good harvest. after the temple was dest
. >> reporter: for "religion and ethics newsweekly," i'm judy valente at yale university's institute music. >>> on our calendar this week -- sunday is pentecost, when christians celebrate god's gift of the holy spirit to the church. according to the new testament, the holy spirit came to jesus' followers in the form of tongues of fire. pentecost is also known as the birthday of the church. and last week jews celebrated the festival of shavuot, honoring god's gift of the...
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dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back! (cheers and applause) ♪ well, we're peanut butter and chocolate. we're perfect together. he says when something's good, why change it? what if you were to try something different? [ chocolate laughs ] [ male announcer ] it's a whole new way to love peanut butter & chocolate. smooth and crunchy butterfinger peanut butter cups. was killed june 28,2005terfinger in afghanistan. my husband's death was the hardest thing i've ever faced. the special operations warrior foundation stepped in to help. now you can help, too. purchase new cherry 5-hour energy now through july thirty-first and a portion of each sale benefits special operations warrior foundation to help families of fallen heroes. i will always miss my dad, but thanks to special operations warrior foundation i will never feel alone. ♪ listen up, thunder dragons, it's time to get a hotel. hey, razor. check this out. we can save big with priceline express deals. hey you know what man, these guys aint no dragons. they're cool. these d
dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back! (cheers and applause) ♪ well, we're peanut butter and chocolate. we're perfect together. he says when something's good, why change it? what if you were to try something different? [ chocolate laughs ] [ male announcer ] it's a whole new way to love peanut butter & chocolate. smooth and crunchy butterfinger peanut butter cups. was killed june 28,2005terfinger in afghanistan. my husband's death...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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CNNW
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but luckily the research team at the university of michigan, go blue, and yale university has createde you type in your current location and your destination and the app gives you a schedule of exposure to light to reset your internal clock the most efficient way. for example, if you are traveling from new york to london the app might suggest a regimen that looks something like this. one of the ph.d. students who designed the app said their schedule takes what could be five or six days of adjusting down to just two. good app for me. maybe a good app for you. >>> that's all the time we've got for "sg md" today. time now, though, to get you back in the "cnn newsroom" with deborah feyerick. >>> hello, everyone, you are in the "cnn newsroom." i'm deborah feyerick, in today for don lemon. >>> iraq is quickly coming apart. ethnic and political fighting which never really stopped when coalition combat troops left, well, it's flaming up again, and now something new, a brutal, ambitious
but luckily the research team at the university of michigan, go blue, and yale university has createde you type in your current location and your destination and the app gives you a schedule of exposure to light to reset your internal clock the most efficient way. for example, if you are traveling from new york to london the app might suggest a regimen that looks something like this. one of the ph.d. students who designed the app said their schedule takes what could be five or six days of...
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Jun 22, 2014
06/14
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CNNW
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but luckily a research team at the university of michigan -- go blue -- and yale university has developedthat loads this complex jet lag conquering model right into your smartphone. type in your current location and your destination and the app gives you a scheduled expo slur to light to reset your internal clock the most efficient way. if you're traveling from new york to london, the app might suggest a regimen that looks something like it this. one of the ph.d students who designed the app says their schedule takes what could be five or six days of adjusting down to just two. good app for me, maybe a good app for you. that's all the time we've got for sgmb today. "new day" starts right now. >>> rise and shine. it is sunday and we've been waiting for you. i'm christi paul. >> i'm victor blackwell. it is "new day" sunday. >>> we are starting with islamist militants tightening their grip on iraq. >> four towns include a critical gateway. this is a map for a better gauge leer. they also flank a highway that connects syria to baghdad. that's an asset that could aid any effort by militants to
but luckily a research team at the university of michigan -- go blue -- and yale university has developedthat loads this complex jet lag conquering model right into your smartphone. type in your current location and your destination and the app gives you a scheduled expo slur to light to reset your internal clock the most efficient way. if you're traveling from new york to london, the app might suggest a regimen that looks something like it this. one of the ph.d students who designed the app...
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dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back! (cheers and applause) ♪ ♪ boring! yeah! ♪ if you want to see old faithful ♪ ♪ don't be such a couch potato ♪ ♪ yeah just go check out the thing for yourself ♪ highlander! ♪ we ain't got no room for boring ♪ ♪ ferdy gerdy ferdy ger boom! [ cluck, cluck ] ♪ no, we ain't got no room ♪ for boring ♪ for boring, we ain't got no room ♪ ahh! [ male announcer ] the 2014 highlander. toyota. let's go places. [ male announcer ] the 2014 highlander. hey you won't believe how much good stuff is in the pizza hut dinner box and you won't believe the price. t a pizza, 5 breadsticks, and 10 cinnamon sticks that's 17 bucks worth of food! for $8.99 when you carry out. but ycan believe it, because i'm telling you it's true. and i'm a celebrity! can i help you? we just wanted to find out about your family plan. sure, you get 10 gigs of data to share with unlimited talk and xt. and for a family of four, that's $160 dollars a month. sounds great. sounds like a slam dunk. oh you a basketball fan? yeah, i play
dan, thank you so much for joining me (applause) dan esty, yale university! we'll be right back! (cheers and applause) ♪ ♪ boring! yeah! ♪ if you want to see old faithful ♪ ♪ don't be such a couch potato ♪ ♪ yeah just go check out the thing for yourself ♪ highlander! ♪ we ain't got no room for boring ♪ ♪ ferdy gerdy ferdy ger boom! [ cluck, cluck ] ♪ no, we ain't got no room ♪ for boring ♪ for boring, we ain't got no room ♪ ahh! [ male announcer ] the 2014...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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. >> images captured for all time in a book just published by yale university press. >> that's great.y god. >> look at those two characters. he humanizes them when i was looking again at the photograph of kite, a tear came to my eye. those were very difficult days for gay people. there was the amount of oppression that we faced everywhere was tremendous. >> you have to put it into a historical context. >> fisher was a photography critic for art week and art form and the author of two books on gay culture. >> we have a lot of people in our period doing documentation of what was happening in the gay movement, but anthony's work goes beyond documentation. it's art. >> over time, gay imagery and the arts evolved in response to events shaping the gay community with photographers like nan golden and kathryn oppy and peter. >> without the aids epidemic totally informed and generated powerful imagery and very important artists who had aids and i think specifically david. >> images by young photographers reflect a new found freedom in lgbt life. >> but it's freedom that came at a cost. >> a pr
. >> images captured for all time in a book just published by yale university press. >> that's great.y god. >> look at those two characters. he humanizes them when i was looking again at the photograph of kite, a tear came to my eye. those were very difficult days for gay people. there was the amount of oppression that we faced everywhere was tremendous. >> you have to put it into a historical context. >> fisher was a photography critic for art week and art form...
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Jun 17, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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steven roche is a senior fellow at the yale university. chairman at morgan stanley asia, and he is the author of unbalanced the codependency of america and china. steven published an opinion piece titled how to ride the next wave of chinese growth last week in "the wall street journal" which joe alluded to. before we get to that stephen i'm hoping you can tell us a little bit about china and iraq. it turns out that they are one of the biggest players there in the oil fields. they get a significant amount of their oil. what does this mean for them? >> well, put in perspective, becky, i mean china is still the largest codependent economy in the world. 70% of its fuel comes from coal. so, if oil prices go up a lot or if they lose an iranian source of oil it doesn't deal the devastating blow to the chinese economy that more oil dependent nations could deal. nevertheless, china needs fuel at the margin. they do have influence in iraq. they're not about to intervene in the military problems that are emerging there. but certainly they're expressi
steven roche is a senior fellow at the yale university. chairman at morgan stanley asia, and he is the author of unbalanced the codependency of america and china. steven published an opinion piece titled how to ride the next wave of chinese growth last week in "the wall street journal" which joe alluded to. before we get to that stephen i'm hoping you can tell us a little bit about china and iraq. it turns out that they are one of the biggest players there in the oil fields. they get...
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Jun 14, 2014
06/14
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he set his sights on yale university. >> i was really excited. i really got into yale.reporter: leonard's story has attracted attention across the state. he's even earned an official accommodation from the louisiana state legislature and a prestigious scholarship. during a recent ceremony the new orleans council called him an example for the entire city. what do you think of your accomplish mnltss? do you ever take it all in? >> if i do i freak out a little bit. i still have to go to school and excel, you know. this is going to be difficult. it's yale university. >> and it's the latest masterpiece from this accomplished artist who changed his life with determination and a paintbrush. for "cbs this morning: saturday," brandon scott, new orleans. >> terrific. he's only 18 a lot of growing still to do. congratulations. >> he's a student where you want to see what happens next. best of luck to him. >>> up next, the best of summer tv. >> revere rode on his horse then bringing this message to the patriots. revere was also british. >> he was sneaky. he was a snitch. >> he was
he set his sights on yale university. >> i was really excited. i really got into yale.reporter: leonard's story has attracted attention across the state. he's even earned an official accommodation from the louisiana state legislature and a prestigious scholarship. during a recent ceremony the new orleans council called him an example for the entire city. what do you think of your accomplish mnltss? do you ever take it all in? >> if i do i freak out a little bit. i still have to go...
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Jun 28, 2014
06/14
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. >> she's off and away to yale university this fall. she said her foster mom who raised her was the one who put her on the path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be number one. she has directed my whole entire life. >> she was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemploymented and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl who is being raised by her siblings. >> one day we were eating cereal and ran out of milk and my brother got ice cubes and shook it up. i was like why are you doing that? he said it makes more milk. >> they ended up in homeless shelter in richmond. that's when cps took the kids away from their mom and placed them in different foster homes. she was 5. >> someone over heard my mom say she wanted to kill herself and her children. it became too much for her. i've mefr got -- i've never gotten the chance to ask her if it's truthful or not. >> she used to have supervised visits with her mom. >> i think it has to
. >> she's off and away to yale university this fall. she said her foster mom who raised her was the one who put her on the path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be number one. she has directed my whole entire life. >> she was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemploymented and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl who is being raised by her siblings....
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Jun 30, 2014
06/14
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he is a graduate of the bronx high school of science and yale university. in 1960, after he completed his military service, he became a reporter for the new york herald tribune. in 1962, he was assigned to the washington bureau. in 1963, he became the chief congressional correspondent. cityg grown up in new york and read the new york herald tribune, i always lamented when the herald tribune bolted as a newspaper, went out of business in 1966. but his career continued. he worked for newsweek and reported for the washington post. he then came to capitol hill, where he worked for senator hugh scott. he was the press secretary for senator jacob gavin's. and then he went back to journalism. he went to "the national journal." more recently, we are familiar with him because he was the managing editor of "the hill" newspaper and in 2006, he joined politico. that is quite a resume. our other guest today is roger mudd who was born right here in washington d.c. he took a masters degree at the university of carolina in history. he was studying the relationship of the p
he is a graduate of the bronx high school of science and yale university. in 1960, after he completed his military service, he became a reporter for the new york herald tribune. in 1962, he was assigned to the washington bureau. in 1963, he became the chief congressional correspondent. cityg grown up in new york and read the new york herald tribune, i always lamented when the herald tribune bolted as a newspaper, went out of business in 1966. but his career continued. he worked for newsweek and...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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scientist at yale university made amazing discovery for people suffering from the skin disorder.ured the very visible symptoms of the disease using fda approved arthritis medicine. 25-year-old had no hair on his body. also had red scaley patches caused by so rise. scientists put him on a common rheumatoid arthritis drug for 8 most. not only did hair grow on the scalp it also grew all over his body including eyebrow and eyelashes and his scaley patches disappeared. researchers believe the drug stopped his immune system from attacking his hair follicle. >> video shot by a drone shows 24 million dollar yacht going up in flames in southern california. it was dry dock at chula vista ship fard thursday when welder torch shot off spark. flames spread to the 110 foot boat. look at this thing. ship captain nearby saw the smoke and sent in his drone equipped with go pro camera to check it out and this is the video he got. the owner of the yacht ceo of mike chip company spent 5 years building it. he got to enjoy it for three years before yesterday fire and says it was well worth the cost to
scientist at yale university made amazing discovery for people suffering from the skin disorder.ured the very visible symptoms of the disease using fda approved arthritis medicine. 25-year-old had no hair on his body. also had red scaley patches caused by so rise. scientists put him on a common rheumatoid arthritis drug for 8 most. not only did hair grow on the scalp it also grew all over his body including eyebrow and eyelashes and his scaley patches disappeared. researchers believe the drug...
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Jun 14, 2014
06/14
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she has served as visiting professor and scholar at yale, university of pennsylvania, nyu, and university of vienna. her current research centers on the law of the frontier 1800 to 1857. she uses, in her work, the most marvelous electronic tools. her next book titled "redemption songs" is based on a discovery in which she participated, the discovery of nearly 300 freedom suits brought by slaves in the st. louis court. professor vandervelde was the awardee of the prestigious guggenheim award for constitutional law. in 2011 and 2012, she was a visiting scholar at the american law foundation. during that time, she convened a meeting of experts on the american law institute's proposed restatement of employment law. her works in progress include the narrative of 19th century american law, the significance of slavery, and its abolition for the loss of employment. -- the law of employment. she is a graduate of the university of wisconsin law school where she had a near-perfect academic record. before beginning her law teaching career, she served as senior law clerk to an iowa district judge. i i
she has served as visiting professor and scholar at yale, university of pennsylvania, nyu, and university of vienna. her current research centers on the law of the frontier 1800 to 1857. she uses, in her work, the most marvelous electronic tools. her next book titled "redemption songs" is based on a discovery in which she participated, the discovery of nearly 300 freedom suits brought by slaves in the st. louis court. professor vandervelde was the awardee of the prestigious guggenheim...
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Jun 28, 2014
06/14
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. >> she's off to yale university this fall. says her foster mom put her on that path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be. she really has redirected my whole entire life. >> reporter: carleen was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemployed and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl who was basically being raised by her siblings. her parents would leave the children alone for days. >> one day, me and my brothers and sisters were eating cereal and we ran out of milk and my brother went into the kitchen and got ice cubes and put it into the cartons and shook it up, melted the ice and i was like, why are you doing that? he told me, you know, ice cubes make the more milk. >> reporter: they ended in a homeless shelter in richmond. that's when child protective services took the kids away from their mother and placed them in different foster homes. carlene was five. >> someone overheard my mother say that she wanted
. >> she's off to yale university this fall. says her foster mom put her on that path. >> telling me that education was number one and always will be. she really has redirected my whole entire life. >> reporter: carleen was the youngest of five children living in west oakland before they were evicted. her parents were both deaf, unemployed and substance abusers. the pictures show a smiling little girl who was basically being raised by her siblings. her parents would leave the...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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KYW
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so it will be difficult to yale university. >> help change the course of his live, and he'll use it toe the next chapter. >>> brandon scott,cbs news, new orleans. >> jigs love seeing stories like that. >> he is quite an artist! i can't think anybody could teach him anything more about art than what he already knows. >> a-plus with that at that time edge for sure. >> natural talent. looking right now, crowded boardwalk, getting increasingly crowded probably nothing compared to how it will be later on this afternoon. everybody out there enjoying it, ideal weekend, the weather continues in just beautiful note. i want to take you out now to kutztown, beautiful view temperatures warming up, skies will blue, things look lovely out there, storm scan3, nothing. friday, so active, hail, thunder, lightning, oh, it was a mess. >> love to have it over the week edger seen it over the weekends, lover to keep the streak going. so storm scan3, no problems whatsoever. the temperatures no problems whatsoever. this is comfortable, feel iron house up, open the windows, let the cool air in, enjoy it all da
so it will be difficult to yale university. >> help change the course of his live, and he'll use it toe the next chapter. >>> brandon scott,cbs news, new orleans. >> jigs love seeing stories like that. >> he is quite an artist! i can't think anybody could teach him anything more about art than what he already knows. >> a-plus with that at that time edge for sure. >> natural talent. looking right now, crowded boardwalk, getting increasingly crowded probably...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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i have to go to school annex sell, so this will be difficult, to yale university. >> leopard asker paintd change the course of his life. he'll use it to create the next chapter. brandon scott, us news, new orleans. >> i just love seeing stories like that, it is 7:37. as we celebrate dad today, president barack obama addresses the importance of ac father in his weekly address. listen. >> i know how important it is to have a dad in your life because i grew up without my father around. i felt the weight of his absence. so for michelle, our girls, i try every day to be the husband and father my family didn't have when i was young. and every chance i get, i encourage fathers to get more involved in their children's lives. because what makes you a man isn't the ability to have a child, it is the courage to raise one. >> now, some other celebrity dads share how fatherhood changed their lives. >> well ac father changed me because i don't have any drive or ambition or anything, i problem bring would have been a homeless -- but when i had kids, i panic, so i went to work, thank good for my kids, i
i have to go to school annex sell, so this will be difficult, to yale university. >> leopard asker paintd change the course of his life. he'll use it to create the next chapter. brandon scott, us news, new orleans. >> i just love seeing stories like that, it is 7:37. as we celebrate dad today, president barack obama addresses the importance of ac father in his weekly address. listen. >> i know how important it is to have a dad in your life because i grew up without my father...
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Jun 1, 2014
06/14
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CSPAN
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kerry spoke asn graduate that yale universities class day. struggles oft the the 1960's generation and urged the graduates to keep faith in the government's ability to break gridlock. this is 30 minutes. minutes. [applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. thank you, thank you, thank you. i think winston churchill said who give aly people standing ovation are the ones who are wanting to -- their underwear. [laughter] members, parents, siblings who came here under the false impression that there , and someree food dan, wherever you are, probably at a fire hydrant somewhere, members of the 2013 ncaa champion ice hockey team -- [applause] distinguished guests and graduates of the 2014, i really am privileged to be able to be here and share the celebration of the celebration of this day with you, especially 48 years after standing up right here as a very intimidated senior, wondering what i was going to say. you are graduating today as the most diverse class in yale's long history. or as they call it in the nba, donald ste
kerry spoke asn graduate that yale universities class day. struggles oft the the 1960's generation and urged the graduates to keep faith in the government's ability to break gridlock. this is 30 minutes. minutes. [applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. thank you, thank you, thank you. i think winston churchill said who give aly people standing ovation are the ones who are wanting to -- their underwear. [laughter] members, parents, siblings who came here under...
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Jun 19, 2014
06/14
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he attended yale university from which he graduated with honors. his 21 year career in journalism began at the miami herald and moved to time he -- time magazine and was posted to the moscow bureau and 1990 and in 1993 came to . . >> in order to deflect some of the questioning elsewhere, it's also frequently true that a lot of the important work and policy development and implementation that happens in the executive branch happens in the agencies eerie the spotlight is on the white house, but that's not the only game in town. i should just go to questions. it's early for me to be speaking, so if you have a long-winded question, please raise your hand. >> you told charlie rose that you good white house reporters know 15% am a 20% of what's going on and because they can reasonably extrapolate beyond that. looking back at your experience, does the area of press ignorance fall into any pattern? or is the ignorance random? >> i tried to explain is that conversation continued that i did not mean this as a hit on reporters or the suggestion that they were
he attended yale university from which he graduated with honors. his 21 year career in journalism began at the miami herald and moved to time he -- time magazine and was posted to the moscow bureau and 1990 and in 1993 came to . . >> in order to deflect some of the questioning elsewhere, it's also frequently true that a lot of the important work and policy development and implementation that happens in the executive branch happens in the agencies eerie the spotlight is on the white house,...
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Jun 20, 2014
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kyle's doctor at yale university decided to give it a try. and eight months later, voila.yle, who's 25, started losing hair all over his body at age 2 because of an unusual form of alopecia. >> the neighborhood kids, school, just jokes. rogaine comments. one thing i did get when i was completely bald is called a skinhead. which i found very offensive. >> reporter: but now, even his eyelashes and eyebrows are back. 6.5 million people have a skin disease like kyle's. his doctor says the drug may one day help them, too. but what about the tens of millions of men who've just gone bald as they've gotten older? the doctor doesn't think the drug will help them, but he does think it's worth doing a study to find out. the drug can have serious side effects. kyle hasn't had any, and he's enjoying his new head of hair. >> i've always wanted an '80s hockey mullet. so maybe going towards that. >> oh, my gosh. i love him. >> i had to look up what an '80s hockey mullet was. >> i can only imagine. >> i wanted to talk a little bit about why would an arthritis drug do this. >> connect the d
kyle's doctor at yale university decided to give it a try. and eight months later, voila.yle, who's 25, started losing hair all over his body at age 2 because of an unusual form of alopecia. >> the neighborhood kids, school, just jokes. rogaine comments. one thing i did get when i was completely bald is called a skinhead. which i found very offensive. >> reporter: but now, even his eyelashes and eyebrows are back. 6.5 million people have a skin disease like kyle's. his doctor says...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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i specially have to go to school annex sell, so it will be difficult to yale university. >> leonard's paint brush helped change the course of his life. and he'll use it to create the next chapter. brandon scott, cbs news, new orleans. >>> amazing what resilience can do. 6:20 right now. water fight is shaping up at one of the worlds' natural wonders. for more than a century one company has made its business bringing tourists as close as possible to the fault. but getting some competition. how it could change niagara falls. that story coming up. >>> also the town that's buzzing over the newest residents. we'll explain next. male announcer: during the 150th anniversary of the war between the states. order our civil war trails guides at visitmaryland.org and download our new civil war mobile app. maryland. land of history. i'm the proud dad ofawesome, messy kids. they get stains like you wouldn't believe. this new tide ultra stain release and zap! cap helps me get out pretty much any stain. can i help? aww. just kidding. [ female announcer ] new tide ultra stain release helps remove 99% o
i specially have to go to school annex sell, so it will be difficult to yale university. >> leonard's paint brush helped change the course of his life. and he'll use it to create the next chapter. brandon scott, cbs news, new orleans. >>> amazing what resilience can do. 6:20 right now. water fight is shaping up at one of the worlds' natural wonders. for more than a century one company has made its business bringing tourists as close as possible to the fault. but getting some...
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Jun 1, 2014
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the president of yale university made it clear what he thought of tammany's voters. >> none -- the massive city proletarians ought to be excluded from the polls. >> tammany had a very different view of democracy. tammany encouraged people to vote, a lot. [laughter] sometimes more than once. tammany's boss so loathed the democratic process that he voted not once, not twice, but 17 times in 1865. the heart of the tammany's power, the individuals in each of the city's assemblage districts who are responsible for getting out the vote and knowing the personal stories and problems of the thousands who live in the district. those leaders in turn relied on lesser tammany operatives who were in charge of a single block election district were he tenement house. one of those election district was a woman by the name of barbara porges. barbara porges became a tammany district leader in the early 20th century, for those of you keeping score at home, yes, that means she was a tammany district leader two decades before she had the right to vote. now, county was not necessarily ahead of its time on the qu
the president of yale university made it clear what he thought of tammany's voters. >> none -- the massive city proletarians ought to be excluded from the polls. >> tammany had a very different view of democracy. tammany encouraged people to vote, a lot. [laughter] sometimes more than once. tammany's boss so loathed the democratic process that he voted not once, not twice, but 17 times in 1865. the heart of the tammany's power, the individuals in each of the city's assemblage...
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Jun 18, 2014
06/14
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she received a degree from yale college and a jd from columbia university school of law. we will need swear in the nominees. please raise and raise your right hand. do you swear or affirm that the testimony that you are about to give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth so help you god? do you agree to appear and testify before any duly constituted committee of the senate? please be seated. each of your written statements will be made part of the record. before you begin your statement, i invite each of you to introduce your family and friends in attendance. mayor castro, please proceed. >> thank you. i am fortunate to be here today with my wife, erica, and i know that my brother joaquin is i think on his way. you will have to forgive him. he was the second borp twin so sometimes he's late. i'm also very fortunate to be here with some of the hud staff that has helped with briefings and so forth. very appreciative of their work. thank you for having me. i look forward to the hearing. thank you chairman johnson. ranking member crapo and members of the co
she received a degree from yale college and a jd from columbia university school of law. we will need swear in the nominees. please raise and raise your right hand. do you swear or affirm that the testimony that you are about to give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth so help you god? do you agree to appear and testify before any duly constituted committee of the senate? please be seated. each of your written statements will be made part of the record. before you begin...
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Jun 15, 2014
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york times" which said king was being released to go up to deliver the commencement address at yale universityact he did on june 15th, the next day. but he was in jail until the 13th. springfield college on the 14th. >> great story, great history and great speech as well he gave there. good to meet you. thanks so much for being here. >> thank you. >>> we're going to turn back to iraq, where there have been plenty of developments there. new turmoil in the next hour. looking at the effects of the iraq war through the eyes of one veteran, in a special wounded warriors documentary. our vegetas every day? when i can. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. two full servings of vegetables for only 50 delicious calories. two full servings of vegetables predibut, manufacturings a prettin the united states do. means advanced technology. we learned that technology allows us to be craft oriented. no one's losing their job. there's no beer robot that has suddenly chased them out. the technology is actually creating new jobs. siemens designed and built the right tools and resources to get the job don
york times" which said king was being released to go up to deliver the commencement address at yale universityact he did on june 15th, the next day. but he was in jail until the 13th. springfield college on the 14th. >> great story, great history and great speech as well he gave there. good to meet you. thanks so much for being here. >> thank you. >>> we're going to turn back to iraq, where there have been plenty of developments there. new turmoil in the next hour....
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Jun 8, 2014
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he's been honored by yale university received guggenheim awards, he's been a fellow at stanford, and his book, "lost rough fete," was named a national book award finalist. so john, this is a collection of essays rather than a single historical study. so can you give us some sense of the range and scope of what these essays cover? >> sure. i think what i try more than anything else to do in these essays is to connect history to lgbt issues in the present moment, to take advantage of the fact that there's been more than 50 years now of struggling for equality, struggling for change around sexual identity. and to use the insights of history to give us a better sense of what's going on now and what alternatives there might be and things like that. so i move back and forth between past and present. >> so the title of the book, "in a new century," evokes the sense of change, of something new. in what ways would you say that the 21st century has represented a break with the past? >> a number of different ways. one is, and i have to say i've noticed this tremendously in the terms of my stude
he's been honored by yale university received guggenheim awards, he's been a fellow at stanford, and his book, "lost rough fete," was named a national book award finalist. so john, this is a collection of essays rather than a single historical study. so can you give us some sense of the range and scope of what these essays cover? >> sure. i think what i try more than anything else to do in these essays is to connect history to lgbt issues in the present moment, to take advantage...
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Jun 28, 2014
06/14
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erin carmon, akhil from yale university. michelle, who is a clinic escort be a defense organizer.re. >> thank you for having us. >> i have many feelings. this a unanimous decision. i have enough respect left for the court that it makes me presume this must have been legally the right decision. >> well, i have some questions. here is the good news. they love the first amendment. >> well, that's good. everyone does and the first amendment has never been so strongly protected. the bad news is all you have to do sometimes is call it the first amendment and all sorts of other things start creeping in. so free marketeers, well, we have a first amendment right to say all sorts of things about our product and you can't restrict us. they called themselves counselors rather than protesters and here is the third point, this is the sidewalk and the court thinks sidewalks are spaces for public conversation. now here's what can be done to push back because there's another thing this court respects, private property. so one possibility would be to actually sell the sidewalk in a 35-foot zone to
erin carmon, akhil from yale university. michelle, who is a clinic escort be a defense organizer.re. >> thank you for having us. >> i have many feelings. this a unanimous decision. i have enough respect left for the court that it makes me presume this must have been legally the right decision. >> well, i have some questions. here is the good news. they love the first amendment. >> well, that's good. everyone does and the first amendment has never been so strongly...
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Jun 18, 2014
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and also i'm on the faculty at yale university where i teach courses on diplomacy and national security. but to the point about oil, and this is something that the caller might be interested in knowing, i discussed the issue of oil a number of times with president bush when he was president, and i think he bent over backwards to try and demonstrate that oil was not the factor driving our policy towards iraq. and it isn't to this very day. this has to do with the makeup of the middle east. of the political coloration of the middle east. the stability of the middle east. but certainly i've never felt particularly like i was a shield for the oil companies. >> let's go to jonathan in winter park, florida, for republicans. good morning. >> caller: good morning. >> go ahead, jonathan. >> caller: i think that iraq presents a greater threat to the united states' security today than it did when we went in originally. and if that's the case, then shouldn't we be going back there in greater numbers than we originally went in with? >> i think certainly if isis succeeds in taking over iraq, that wou
and also i'm on the faculty at yale university where i teach courses on diplomacy and national security. but to the point about oil, and this is something that the caller might be interested in knowing, i discussed the issue of oil a number of times with president bush when he was president, and i think he bent over backwards to try and demonstrate that oil was not the factor driving our policy towards iraq. and it isn't to this very day. this has to do with the makeup of the middle east. of...
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Jun 20, 2014
06/14
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kyle's doctor at yale university decided to give it a try, and eight months later, voila.his body at age 2 because of an unusual form of alopecia. >> neighbor kids, school, just jokes, row gain comments. one thing i did get when i was completely bald is called a skinhead which i found very offensive. >> but now even his eyelashes and eyebrows are back. 6.5 million people have a skin disease like kyle's. his doctor says the drug may one day help them, too, but what about the tens of millions of men who have gone bald as they have gotten older? the doctor doesn't think the drug will help them but thinks it's worth doing a study. the drug can have serious side effects. kyle hasn't had any and has enjoyed his new head of hair. >> always wanted an '80s hockey mullet so maybe going towards that. >> why would a drug for arthritis help grow hair? researchers think rheumatoid arthritis and the kind of condition kyle has are both related to the immune system. kyle's doctors hope at some point he can stop because it has side effects and it's really expensive. chris and kate? >> reall
kyle's doctor at yale university decided to give it a try, and eight months later, voila.his body at age 2 because of an unusual form of alopecia. >> neighbor kids, school, just jokes, row gain comments. one thing i did get when i was completely bald is called a skinhead which i found very offensive. >> but now even his eyelashes and eyebrows are back. 6.5 million people have a skin disease like kyle's. his doctor says the drug may one day help them, too, but what about the tens of...
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Jun 23, 2014
06/14
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kyle and the senior author of that yale university study, dr. bret king, join me now. want to start with you. you were how old when you remember having hair the last time? >> on my head, i would say probably between the ages of 20 to 22 or 23. >> okay. and when you heard about this trial, were you nervous? >> no. i wouldn't say nervous would be the exact word. maybe more excited and hopeful. >> so when you saw the hair coming back, you're 25 now. >> yes. >> you saw hair coming back after how long? >> about two years. it started coming back sooner, but i'd say by december it was a full head of hair came back. >> we're looking at you now. this is the before picture. >> yes. that was last summer. >> is it emotional for you? >> yeah. it's pretty great, especially to have your high brows and eye lashes back. >> look at this now. we heard this story and to be able to see you and such success with this treatment. dr. king, you're using an arthritis drug to then treat alopecia. how does it work? >> in this set of conditions, there is a distress signal that the hairs are sendin
kyle and the senior author of that yale university study, dr. bret king, join me now. want to start with you. you were how old when you remember having hair the last time? >> on my head, i would say probably between the ages of 20 to 22 or 23. >> okay. and when you heard about this trial, were you nervous? >> no. i wouldn't say nervous would be the exact word. maybe more excited and hopeful. >> so when you saw the hair coming back, you're 25 now. >> yes. >>...
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Jun 16, 2014
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let's talk to peter shuck, professor emeritus at yale university and author of "why government failsmorning to you, peter. okay, so why does government fail so often? >> there are a lot of reasons. their incentives create the wrong incentives for people to do things. the v.a., for example. the idea to raise the numbers rather than to serve people well and on time. sometimes programs are designed to fail. the farm subsidies program, for example, everybody knows the money is going to the wrong people but they have very strong interests in washington that are well protected. sometimes the programs are, they create moral hazard. the student loan programs are a perfect example. delinquency rates are extremely high. it is obvious the people receiving these loans often have no assets and very poor earning future, but the government wants to get that money out. >> and they keep doing it. you say there have been some successes. you like the g.i. bill. you like the interstate highway system when we started building the big roads that connected us together. you liked welfare reform. but there a
let's talk to peter shuck, professor emeritus at yale university and author of "why government failsmorning to you, peter. okay, so why does government fail so often? >> there are a lot of reasons. their incentives create the wrong incentives for people to do things. the v.a., for example. the idea to raise the numbers rather than to serve people well and on time. sometimes programs are designed to fail. the farm subsidies program, for example, everybody knows the money is going to...
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Jun 4, 2014
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. >>> yale university holding its 77th ceo summit today in new york where some of the best and brightestnds have come together to tackle key issues. joining us now, jeff sonnenfeld. with us gerry lopez, the company i was referring to, ceo of amc entertainment. you may be blacked out in china right now during this conversation. >> we can talk about any topic you have in mine. we wouldn't be in china, our parent company is based there. they're on their own chain of cinemas. we operate quite independently of them on a day-to-day basis. >> amc is a great model on how global commerce can transcend frictions and diplomacy. this is a great example of cross-border investment. it's been a win/win/win. >> thank you. yes, absolutely. >>> i want to talk to gerry as a barometer, if you will, of consumer sentiment and where we're going in the economy. i noticed, gerry, that the price for tickets, movie tickets in this country has moved down, not up, in the past quarter. it went from $8.35 to $7.96. that feels like a first, excuse my ignorance because i don't follow it enough. is that new? >> it's actu
. >>> yale university holding its 77th ceo summit today in new york where some of the best and brightestnds have come together to tackle key issues. joining us now, jeff sonnenfeld. with us gerry lopez, the company i was referring to, ceo of amc entertainment. you may be blacked out in china right now during this conversation. >> we can talk about any topic you have in mine. we wouldn't be in china, our parent company is based there. they're on their own chain of cinemas. we...
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Jun 16, 2014
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doris, could you -- >> well, except that they had been 30 or 40 years of work at howard university, yale, pennsylvania, and the law schools had basically patterned, fashioned the path to freedom. and there was probably more tension between martin luther king and thurgood marshall than there was between martin luther king and lyndon johnson because thurgood marshall did not -- he felt very uncomfortable with us breaking the law. the concept of civil disobedience was not something he adhered to. but actually, the first time i read an article about civil disobedience was written by harris wofford in the howard university law review. and i always thought he was black. [laughter] >> you know, but it's that famous exchange between roy wilkins and dr. king about wilkins demanding to know just what have you desegregated, martin, and he said maybe only a few human hearts. and apparently one of the hearts was john kennedy in the spring of 1963. >> i would like to say he was moved by dr. king's words and example in the movement, but the fact of the matter is after birmingham the demonstrations spre
doris, could you -- >> well, except that they had been 30 or 40 years of work at howard university, yale, pennsylvania, and the law schools had basically patterned, fashioned the path to freedom. and there was probably more tension between martin luther king and thurgood marshall than there was between martin luther king and lyndon johnson because thurgood marshall did not -- he felt very uncomfortable with us breaking the law. the concept of civil disobedience was not something he...
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Jun 17, 2014
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with a company that advises american companies, doing business abroad, and i'm on the faculty at yale university where i teach versus on diplomacy and national security. andto the point about oil, this is something the caller might be interested in knowing, i discussed the issue of oil a number of times with president bush when he was president, and i think he bent over backwards to try to demonstrate that oil was not the factor driving our policy towards iraq. it is into this very day -- it isn't to this very day. this has to do with the makeup of the middle east, the political cal - -- certainly, i never thought i was a shill for the oil companies. >> let's go to john waiting on our line or republican. john and, good morning. caller: good morning. presents a greater threats united states security today than it did and we were in originally. if that is the case, shouldn't we going back there in greater numbers than we originally went in there? isis: certainly, if exceeds in taking over iraq, that would represent a very serious threat indeed. chanceould be a good there would be the next 9/11 or
with a company that advises american companies, doing business abroad, and i'm on the faculty at yale university where i teach versus on diplomacy and national security. andto the point about oil, this is something the caller might be interested in knowing, i discussed the issue of oil a number of times with president bush when he was president, and i think he bent over backwards to try to demonstrate that oil was not the factor driving our policy towards iraq. it is into this very day -- it...
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Jun 23, 2014
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wield in from yale yuft university next on cnbc. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] if you can't stand the heat,enz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off. ♪ means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions are always calm during a storm. so if your business deals with the unexpected, hp big data and cloud solutions make sure you always know what's coming - and are ready for it. make it matter. the numbers are impressive.y to new york state. over 400,000 new private sector jobs... making new york state number two in the nation in new private sector job creation... with 10 regional development strategies to fit your business needs. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york... with the state creating dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. become the next business to discover the new new york. [ male announcer ] see if your business qualifies. could help
wield in from yale yuft university next on cnbc. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] if you can't stand the heat,enz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off. ♪ means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions are always calm during a storm. so if your business deals with the unexpected, hp big data and cloud...
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Jun 7, 2014
06/14
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he's been honored by yale university, received guggenheim awards, he's been a fellow at stanford, andis book, "lost rough fete," was named a national book award finalist. so, john, this is a collection of essays rather than a single historical study. so can you give us some sense of the range and scope of what these essays cover? >> sure. i think what i try more than anything else to do in these essays is to connect history to lgbt issues in the present moment, to take advantage of the fact that there's been more than 50 years now of struggling for equality, struggling for change around sexual identity. and to use the insights of history to give us a better sense of what's going on now and what alternatives there might be and things like that. so i move back and forth between past and present. >> so the title of the book, "in a new century," evokes the sense of change, of something new. in what ways would you say that the 21st century has represented a break with the past? >> a number of different ways. one is, and i have to say i've noticed this tremendously in the terms of my studen
he's been honored by yale university, received guggenheim awards, he's been a fellow at stanford, andis book, "lost rough fete," was named a national book award finalist. so, john, this is a collection of essays rather than a single historical study. so can you give us some sense of the range and scope of what these essays cover? >> sure. i think what i try more than anything else to do in these essays is to connect history to lgbt issues in the present moment, to take advantage...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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wage grated with honors in high school and received a degree in psychology at yale and earned a medical degree at the university of michigan. at 33, he became the youngest doctor to head the mayo hospital. and he created a scholarship program for kids 4-11. his prayer [breakfast speech formed the the title of book "one nation: what we can do to save america's future." please join me in a warm welcome to the national press club for dr. benjamin carson. [ applause ] >> thank you. thank you so much. candy and i are honored to be here. i am going to tell you at the end of the talk why i think the press is so important and what their role is in a free society. but first of all, let me tell you that i am so grateful that i was born in this country which is still a land of dreams. my dream as a youngster was to be a doctor. you know, i loved anything that had to do with the medicine. all of that stuff i could not get enough of that. i even liked going to the doctor's office so it tells you i was a strange kid. but, you know, there were a lot of problems along the way. my parents got divorced early on, my father discov
wage grated with honors in high school and received a degree in psychology at yale and earned a medical degree at the university of michigan. at 33, he became the youngest doctor to head the mayo hospital. and he created a scholarship program for kids 4-11. his prayer [breakfast speech formed the the title of book "one nation: what we can do to save america's future." please join me in a warm welcome to the national press club for dr. benjamin carson. [ applause ] >> thank you....
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Jun 1, 2014
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university's class day. this year, he delivered the annual class they lecture during yale's commencement weekend. he stroke about the struggles of the 1960's generation and he urged the graduates to keep faith in the government possibility to break gridlock. this is 30 minutes. [applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. thank you, thank you, thank you. i think winston churchill said who give aly people standing ovation are the ones who are wanting to -- their underwear. [laughter] members, parents, siblings who came here under the false impression that there , and someree food dan, wherever you are, probably at a fire hydrant somewhere, members of the 2013 ncaa champion ice hockey team -- [applause] distinguished guests and graduates of the 2014, i really am privileged to be able to be here and share the celebration of the celebration of this day with you, especially 48 years after standing up right here as a very intimidated senior, wondering what i was going to say. you are graduating today as the most diverse class in yale's long history. or as they call it in the nba,
university's class day. this year, he delivered the annual class they lecture during yale's commencement weekend. he stroke about the struggles of the 1960's generation and he urged the graduates to keep faith in the government possibility to break gridlock. this is 30 minutes. [applause] >> thank you. thank you. thank you very much. thank you. thank you, thank you, thank you. i think winston churchill said who give aly people standing ovation are the ones who are wanting to -- their...
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harvard they come from yale they come from princeton from the old families and that's kind of their private domain as they see it george herbert walker bush skull and bones you know university james lilley skull and bones you know university cia and bastard in beijing during tenement square where he. by likely accounts orchestrated the town of uprising against the government they think they're very intelligent people but in reality they're extremely stupid people and i want to make a point about this for listeners why do i say stupid they're not an educated they have degrees a say from the so all elite universities they're stupid in a human sense that they think that they can kill people in odessa as an op as an operation they caught ox. well this is extremely stupid in the long run because they block out the interconnectedness of everything in the world really they're incapable mentally because of their literally psychopathic personality where they have been trained and. developed to block out any human emotions they are incapable of seeing these connections so what's mean in ukraine is going to have consequences for them for their. next of kin for their friends or all bey
harvard they come from yale they come from princeton from the old families and that's kind of their private domain as they see it george herbert walker bush skull and bones you know university james lilley skull and bones you know university cia and bastard in beijing during tenement square where he. by likely accounts orchestrated the town of uprising against the government they think they're very intelligent people but in reality they're extremely stupid people and i want to make a point...
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grew up in a great family and when i started acting i was at the university of michigan and at that time you know meryl streep had gone to yale miles i guess what there was a kid from university of michigan we did shows with bill armstrong who had just gotten in yale and he came back to visit us and my compiled piper he said this is the best school. oh in the country best acting school and he said to me and particular david you should apply a thing to get out of my what so i went to visit i applied and bam we seem and i was thinking about it you know i never studied voice i would just say i mean something i like but i wanted to be a serious actor you know it was equal to his work it was for me it was whether they do that it was special it was a very intensive totally artistic environment so in three years i did thirty three. productions all day on my eating drinking sleeping the steeler arts and that was really an awesome experience you met keenan ivory when wins at an open mike like this that had the improv when i was a hale you went down to them by get it done stand up no i don't even know why i went down there and i stayed
grew up in a great family and when i started acting i was at the university of michigan and at that time you know meryl streep had gone to yale miles i guess what there was a kid from university of michigan we did shows with bill armstrong who had just gotten in yale and he came back to visit us and my compiled piper he said this is the best school. oh in the country best acting school and he said to me and particular david you should apply a thing to get out of my what so i went to visit i...
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Jun 24, 2014
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big corporation, and prestigious university endowments may have abandoned ship a little too soon. they were looking at some of the biggest, you know, harvard, yale, stanford. >> your alma mater. melissa: yes. switching out, trading out of stocks and into alternative invests before the big run-up. maybe not a great idea. or smart. >> what happened in the last five years really mystified a lot of really smart people. i was at a panel discussion with kyle bass, predicted financial crisis. he was talking about how like the fed is inflating the economy, blah, blah. i sat there, you know you missed the run-up. we went from six to i think at the time when i was interviewing him or did the panel to 11. guess where we are now? 16. melissa: yeah. >> you can actively managed fund can not beat this market. when you have, don't put your money in a hedge fund. >> you want pension funds missing some of the upside from a roaring stock market rally because i don't want it that deep into stocks because their obligations look more like bonds. you want them buying, what they really should do is get away from -- >> how bull at upside? easiest way to make money in la
big corporation, and prestigious university endowments may have abandoned ship a little too soon. they were looking at some of the biggest, you know, harvard, yale, stanford. >> your alma mater. melissa: yes. switching out, trading out of stocks and into alternative invests before the big run-up. maybe not a great idea. or smart. >> what happened in the last five years really mystified a lot of really smart people. i was at a panel discussion with kyle bass, predicted financial...