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Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN
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frustratione of particularly in big cities is we spend a lot of time trying to keep young people aliveore partners. we need people in it more consistently in order for us to win this fight against gun violence in the country. ♪ the second amendment is the right to bear arms. we must find a way to balance the second amendment while finding ways to keep our country safe. some people are working every day to find ways to do this. >> so frequently after these incidents, there is a movement to pass mark on laws. -- to pass more gun laws. would it have made a difference? cases, thehese individual pass background checks. time and again we have seen that background checks cannot stop these people all the time. passing more gun laws is not the solution. ♪ although mental health issues are mentioned with gun violence, it would be unfair to blame mentally health individuals as the only cause. resources invest more into those individuals. >> most of the mentally health individuals who are affected do not account for these incidences. sometimes people ask me what is the one thing that we should do.
frustratione of particularly in big cities is we spend a lot of time trying to keep young people aliveore partners. we need people in it more consistently in order for us to win this fight against gun violence in the country. ♪ the second amendment is the right to bear arms. we must find a way to balance the second amendment while finding ways to keep our country safe. some people are working every day to find ways to do this. >> so frequently after these incidents, there is a movement...
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Apr 23, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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i suppose it's like any big city, but london seems to have that quality. hink partly it is because we've got the city of london. and it is always renewing itself, following up new buildings, old ones come tumbling down. and people are very energised, very driven, they hurtle about. even where i live in southeast london, on the main street, a sort of hurtling that goes on. this is the london that you love. the london i love is very much the modern city, but the city with all its echoes of dickensian times, through old industrial buildings. they are venetian, they are neo—byza ntine, they are neo—gothic, theyjust send me into rapture. i assume you love dickens? do you know, i have a lot of trouble with dickens. i find him a very difficult writer to read. that's interesting, why? partly, it's the carnivalesque, elaborate baroque prose. partly, it's the length of the novel. to my shame. partly, it's his absolute incapacity to create interesting women characters who aren't just sugar dolls. well, there we are, we'll get some letters about that. but there is that
i suppose it's like any big city, but london seems to have that quality. hink partly it is because we've got the city of london. and it is always renewing itself, following up new buildings, old ones come tumbling down. and people are very energised, very driven, they hurtle about. even where i live in southeast london, on the main street, a sort of hurtling that goes on. this is the london that you love. the london i love is very much the modern city, but the city with all its echoes of...
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Apr 16, 2017
04/17
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BLOOMBERG
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, going to my head bright lights, big city, going to my head i don't care, no, that you don't care, no we'll, you're gonna know my name, yeah well you're gonna know my name, yeah yeah ♪ ♪ jonathan: from new york city to our viewers worldwide, i am jonathan ferro. 30 minutes dedicated to fixed income, this is "bloomberg real yield." ♪ jonathan: coming up, a left-wing candidate you've probably never heard of spooks investors one week away from the french election. the president has a message for the bond bears. he likes low rates. treasuries rallied for a fifth straight week. yields drop to 2017 lows. the fixed income trading revival continues to drive earnings on wall street but muted loan growth raises concerns about the economy. we start with a big issue, why the left-wing candidate in france is spooking the bond market. >> mr. melenchon.
, going to my head bright lights, big city, going to my head i don't care, no, that you don't care, no we'll, you're gonna know my name, yeah well you're gonna know my name, yeah yeah ♪ ♪ jonathan: from new york city to our viewers worldwide, i am jonathan ferro. 30 minutes dedicated to fixed income, this is "bloomberg real yield." ♪ jonathan: coming up, a left-wing candidate you've probably never heard of spooks investors one week away from the french election. the president...
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Apr 16, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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in some of the big cities, the three largest cities, including istanbul and ankara, the no votes werethe wider picture suggests a narrow vote at the moment, still in favour of yes. let's bring in salim guerin. she is therefore is in istanbul. what is the picture as far as you seeit? well, the official state news agency has been reporting that over 97% of the ballot boxes have been opened, and the latest numbers are, the yes campaign stands at 51.4, and no stands at 48.6. if the official results are like this, then the turkish nation will have said yes to the proposed constitutional changes. what will happen then? president recep tayyip erdogan will have enhanced executive powers, the parliamentary system in this country will be replaced by a presidential system. the president will be able to appoint his vice president, top judges, he will be able to draft the budget, he will be able to dismiss the parliament, he will have extensive powers. the post of prime minister will be abolished. the no campaigners were saying that if these proposed constitutional changes went through, there was
in some of the big cities, the three largest cities, including istanbul and ankara, the no votes werethe wider picture suggests a narrow vote at the moment, still in favour of yes. let's bring in salim guerin. she is therefore is in istanbul. what is the picture as far as you seeit? well, the official state news agency has been reporting that over 97% of the ballot boxes have been opened, and the latest numbers are, the yes campaign stands at 51.4, and no stands at 48.6. if the official results...
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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WCAU
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he wants a big city candidate because he says despite the suz it has big city problems in terms of violence, guns and drugs. >>> jurors in the murder trial will go to the area where a 3-year-old boy's body was found. today a judge made the tentive ruling at a pretrial hearing. he's accused of killing the 3-year-old son in 2015. and then reporting him missing. not far from the home. . jury selection begins tomorrow. >>> prosecutors say hurting another kept a journal on the run. a trooper testified a about the journal that eric frein's trial today. in it frein asked for mercy and described bringing into a home and stealing food. frein is accused of kill iing a state trooper and wounding another. then leading police on a manhunt for more than six weeks. frein could face the death penalty. >>> a man is facing charges forening to bomb a courthouse. the district attorney says joseph sent a letter to the court hours saying a truck carrying explosives would go off april 17th. he admitted to seasoneding a letter from the jail where he's an inmate. he's also been charged in a previous bomb threat in
he wants a big city candidate because he says despite the suz it has big city problems in terms of violence, guns and drugs. >>> jurors in the murder trial will go to the area where a 3-year-old boy's body was found. today a judge made the tentive ruling at a pretrial hearing. he's accused of killing the 3-year-old son in 2015. and then reporting him missing. not far from the home. . jury selection begins tomorrow. >>> prosecutors say hurting another kept a journal on the run....
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Apr 16, 2017
04/17
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BLOOMBERG
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going to my head bright lights big city my headg to i don't care no don't care, babe ♪ get lost in this enough of a different person can't found someone else i know this ain't right cause it's all in my head bright lights in the city going to my head bright lights in the city going to my head bright lights big city going to my head bright lights big city going to my head i don't care now uz you don't care no ♪ ♪ you're gonna know my name but you're gonna know my name yeah but you're gonna know my name yeah yeah ♪ ♪ ♪ oliver: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i am oliver renick. you from the at newzine's headquarters in york. the satirical newspaper striking fear in the hearts of french politicians. what the maker of post-it notes is doing for government issued ankle bracelets. finally, the most expensive mistake for the u.s. military. ♪ carol: we are here with megan murphy, editor-in-chief of "bloomberg businessweek." so much this week.
going to my head bright lights big city my headg to i don't care no don't care, babe ♪ get lost in this enough of a different person can't found someone else i know this ain't right cause it's all in my head bright lights in the city going to my head bright lights in the city going to my head bright lights big city going to my head bright lights big city going to my head i don't care now uz you don't care no ♪ ♪ you're gonna know my name but you're gonna know my name yeah but you're gonna...
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Apr 29, 2017
04/17
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FBC
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he was just determined to succeed. >> in 1953, the teenage entrepreneur heads to the big city, tulsa,a simple philosophy. >> it was "you never know how far a toad'll jump until you punch it." what it really meant was "you can't just sit back and hope things happen. you gotta go after it." and he was definitely one to punch the toad. >> like when he starts his own drilling company, then goes on to manufacture machine parts for aerospace and military applications. along the way, elmer gets married and starts a family. as soon as he's old enough, son john joins him in the business. signs of his dad's obsession are everywhere. john just doesn't yet see them. >> my first job was cutting weeds. and i remember a lot of the stuff that's still here back in the '70s. having grown up with all this stuff, i really never thought of it as being as crazy as it was. >> no kidding. after all, business is booming. by the late 1970s, elmer's company has 150 employees. and his family's growing, too. four kids and then a brood of grandkids, including john's daughter, kristen, a chip off the ol' block, who
he was just determined to succeed. >> in 1953, the teenage entrepreneur heads to the big city, tulsa,a simple philosophy. >> it was "you never know how far a toad'll jump until you punch it." what it really meant was "you can't just sit back and hope things happen. you gotta go after it." and he was definitely one to punch the toad. >> like when he starts his own drilling company, then goes on to manufacture machine parts for aerospace and military...
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110
Apr 24, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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now a bbc team has made it to al bab — islamic state's last big city outside of raqqa. s. this is the city of al bab in northern aleppo. here, the victory belongs to the free syrian army, and defeat to the so—called islamic state. everyone has a foreign backer here. for some it's russia or america. for this division it's turkey. this is hallowed ground for the islamic state. this tiny village, dabiq, was a beacon, drawing in foreign fighters from across the globe. dabiq was a great symbol for the islamic state group. it was here that the prophet muhammad said that muslims would defeat the romans. this is also the spot where britain's "jihadi john" murdered the american aid worker peter kassig. is were right about one thing, though. this is a place of reckoning, but it's the place of their defeat and they've now been driven more than 100 kilometres from here. and these days they don't make much mention of dabiq. to the south of al bab, the free syrian army face a different enemy. the syrian regime. there's a truce on these lines. the regime are only 150 metres away. and n
now a bbc team has made it to al bab — islamic state's last big city outside of raqqa. s. this is the city of al bab in northern aleppo. here, the victory belongs to the free syrian army, and defeat to the so—called islamic state. everyone has a foreign backer here. for some it's russia or america. for this division it's turkey. this is hallowed ground for the islamic state. this tiny village, dabiq, was a beacon, drawing in foreign fighters from across the globe. dabiq was a great symbol...
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Apr 1, 2017
04/17
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KQED
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and blues from the man called "the chosen one" guitarist gary clark ♪ bright lights big city callingo my head ♪ bright lights big city calling to my head ♪ >> rose: we will have those stories and more on what happened and what might happen. >> rose: funding for "charlie rose" has been provided by the following: >> rose: and so you began how? is it luck at all or is it something else? >> you gotta have your 10,000 hours. >> rose: what's the object lesson here? >> you don't have to be "wonder woman." >> rose: tell me the significance of the moment. >> rose: this was the week the senate intelligence committee began hearings on russia's influence on the 2016 election. the united kingdom formally gave notice that it is leaving the european union. and south carolina, u.n.c., gonzaga, and oregon advance to the final four of the n.c.a.a. men's basketball tournament. here are the sights and sounds of the past seven days. >> in russia, massive antigovernment protests in cities from coast to coast. >> the search is on for anyone connected to a deadly shooting in cincinnati. >> brexit finally be
and blues from the man called "the chosen one" guitarist gary clark ♪ bright lights big city callingo my head ♪ bright lights big city calling to my head ♪ >> rose: we will have those stories and more on what happened and what might happen. >> rose: funding for "charlie rose" has been provided by the following: >> rose: and so you began how? is it luck at all or is it something else? >> you gotta have your 10,000 hours. >> rose: what's the...
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51
Apr 23, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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we must point out this result does not include votes from the big cities where the polls close lateral result might be different. before i let you go, you are not giving in yet. he is saying, let's wait till you get the final result. yes. considering the amount of voters in the big cities and the voters who are more inclined to vote for jean—luc melenchon. he can still hope to be number three. to go on to the previous debate we had, for us, macron, the danger is that he is their hairto macron, the danger is that he is their hair to president francois hollande's austerity. we have been accused of being radicalfar left. i do not consider myself to be a radical, i am a true socialist, in a way. let's go to the jean-luc melenchon camp and sewer happens with the rest of that camp. let's have a look at the projection results. the centrist emmanuel macron is on 23.8%. a slight reversal in the results. marine le pen on 2i.7%. francois fillon is on i9.8% pen on 2i.7%. francois fillon is on 19.8% and jean—luc melenchon, the far left candidate on i9.2%. the real sorry story of the evening is th
we must point out this result does not include votes from the big cities where the polls close lateral result might be different. before i let you go, you are not giving in yet. he is saying, let's wait till you get the final result. yes. considering the amount of voters in the big cities and the voters who are more inclined to vote for jean—luc melenchon. he can still hope to be number three. to go on to the previous debate we had, for us, macron, the danger is that he is their hairto...
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Apr 8, 2017
04/17
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KCSM
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they stay calm and carry on in big cities around the world. sarah: thank you for your reporting.eevil had to some news -- we will head to some news out of the united states because they are not ruling out airstrikes in syria to the u.s. ambassador to the u.n. nikki haley. she said washington was prepared to do more and hopes it will not be necessary. president trump ordered the stripes on the syrian air base following the nerve gas attack on a rebel town earlier this week. the assad regime has been blamed, which killed dozens of civilians. here is a look at factors that went into washington's decision. look. reporter: america's first direct attack on the syrian government is the start of the civil war more than 50, crock -- civil war. more than 50 tomahawk missiles launched from the mediterranean. their target was this air base. it was in response to a chemical attack widely blamed on the syrian regime that killed dozens of people in the idlib province. the horror and american response prompted strong words in the united nations security council. >> the united states took a very
they stay calm and carry on in big cities around the world. sarah: thank you for your reporting.eevil had to some news -- we will head to some news out of the united states because they are not ruling out airstrikes in syria to the u.s. ambassador to the u.n. nikki haley. she said washington was prepared to do more and hopes it will not be necessary. president trump ordered the stripes on the syrian air base following the nerve gas attack on a rebel town earlier this week. the assad regime has...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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|j visible is the security presence in paris another big cities? i visit paris another big cities?this was as big as i have seen security. this was as big as i have seen for some time. when i came a couple of months ago, security was not noticeable. i remember seeing soldiers in camouflage uniforms, making a note to myself that that was not even strange, to see soldiers dressed as they were in war zone. the people of paris have got used to seeing such a security presence. it might be very different a few years ago when the security situation was not scary, but now they have got used to sing notjust police officers but soldiers on the streets and particularly among the main boulevard of the champs elysees. we are still looking at these live pictures, police vans and ca rs these live pictures, police vans and cars coming and going around the arc de triomphe. there is other traffic managing to get through. we can see ca rs managing to get through. we can see cars and coaches. but it is much quieter in terms of people and pedestrians out on the street because this area has been evacuat
|j visible is the security presence in paris another big cities? i visit paris another big cities?this was as big as i have seen security. this was as big as i have seen for some time. when i came a couple of months ago, security was not noticeable. i remember seeing soldiers in camouflage uniforms, making a note to myself that that was not even strange, to see soldiers dressed as they were in war zone. the people of paris have got used to seeing such a security presence. it might be very...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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KCSM
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eye 55
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these young people also left their rural villages for an exciting life in the big city. he believes in giving everyone as many opportunities as possible. as he knows all too well only a handful will the cost of a haircut depends on the hairstylist's skills. the difference between the highest and lowest is for than fourfold and customers take this into account when requesting stylists. the stores have a responsibility to pay trainees, but after that stylists will only get a small base salary untles less they receive requests. only two stylists including the owner have obtained the highest rank among all three of his salons. on days when he works as a stylist, his appointments fill up quickly and there's always a waiting list. he is highly skilled as well as considerate and a natural at entertaining customers. one employee has asked for time off saying that he wants to return home. he joined the company just six months ago, but several days ago he suddenly made his ahead of his three-month break, he says fair we wirewell to eac coworkers and leaves. according to the owner,
these young people also left their rural villages for an exciting life in the big city. he believes in giving everyone as many opportunities as possible. as he knows all too well only a handful will the cost of a haircut depends on the hairstylist's skills. the difference between the highest and lowest is for than fourfold and customers take this into account when requesting stylists. the stores have a responsibility to pay trainees, but after that stylists will only get a small base salary...
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198
Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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FOXNEWSW
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cheryl: take one guess on which big city it is, new york city bill de blasio announcing they want to take one pack of cigarettes which is 10.50 up to $13 a pack. he talked about the dangers of smoking and why he's making the decision yesterday, listen. >> big tobacco is public enemy number one when it comes to public head. we have a lot more we have to do. what we are going to do now is move forward on a plan that will hit tobacco hard on many different fronts. cheryl: critics of de blasio saying it's nothing about skirting around the issue. you go get at other places and bring it across state lines, different things will be in play here. banning pharmacy sales completely, residential buildings are going to have to come up with their own policies and reduce the number of retailers in the cities that sell cigarettes. abby: i'm loving this news, if you ride amtrak dunk kin doughnuts will be on your ride. cheryl: dunkin doughnuts will be selling and all the weary travelers between new york, boston and dc are going to have a little bit of a treat. this is an exposure for dunkin, they don
cheryl: take one guess on which big city it is, new york city bill de blasio announcing they want to take one pack of cigarettes which is 10.50 up to $13 a pack. he talked about the dangers of smoking and why he's making the decision yesterday, listen. >> big tobacco is public enemy number one when it comes to public head. we have a lot more we have to do. what we are going to do now is move forward on a plan that will hit tobacco hard on many different fronts. cheryl: critics of de...
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Apr 22, 2017
04/17
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MSNBCW
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and the reason i'd always say that to them, it's easier to get on radio, especially in a big city when you might have a dozen congressional districts in a city like new york or philadelphia but you can get on radio. and the other reason you can get on radio with an actuality or beep or whatever, a little statement on tape-s because they have to refresh every two hours. so that idea, if you listen to t.o.p. in washington or w.o.r. in new york, or any of those active news stations, there's been a killing in canarsie, blah, blah, blah, something in brooklyn, that kind of bouncing around ping-pong kind of news thing is exactly what trump thinks like. he's peripatetic. trump's always thinking every couple seconds, every second is a new second, forget the last second. today he was saying a ridiculous standard, 100 days. ridiculous standard. well, all through the campaign he was saying i'm going to do something in 100 days. very -- but nobody remembers that. you have to keep showing the tape with him. it's peripatetic. but the strength of that is we have to cover it. because every time trump
and the reason i'd always say that to them, it's easier to get on radio, especially in a big city when you might have a dozen congressional districts in a city like new york or philadelphia but you can get on radio. and the other reason you can get on radio with an actuality or beep or whatever, a little statement on tape-s because they have to refresh every two hours. so that idea, if you listen to t.o.p. in washington or w.o.r. in new york, or any of those active news stations, there's been a...
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Apr 29, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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as well as big cities and everywhere. in the book you talk about what i consider a very fateful difference between southern and northern evangelicalism. could you say a word about that? >> the south was a rather isolated at the time. it was a rural community, very few towns, much less big cities. unless you think of containers plantations and slave owners. the north was a good deal more, top and cosmopolitan. it always had been. it always had catholics and jews and intellectuals that the south did not. when there was this break between the two over slavery with the large denominations splitting apart on geographic lines, it didn't really heal for long after the civil war. the south began to develop its own kind of religion where as the north began to be more and more diverse, diverse ideas from europe and so on. of course, in the 1880s the arrival of darwinian evolution leaked into the general populace and the higher criticism of the bible. that of course affected the clergy a good deal. so a divide starts to open between
as well as big cities and everywhere. in the book you talk about what i consider a very fateful difference between southern and northern evangelicalism. could you say a word about that? >> the south was a rather isolated at the time. it was a rural community, very few towns, much less big cities. unless you think of containers plantations and slave owners. the north was a good deal more, top and cosmopolitan. it always had been. it always had catholics and jews and intellectuals that the...
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70
Apr 23, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 70
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city. last year there were 300. thing about another metric reduced by that. harvard admissions, car wrecks, poverty. it is a two-act story. 1996, 1992 increase in crime across all category and big and small cities across the country crime increases show up in every category. and starting in 1992 the trend reverses and goes away everywhere and the cause for that, the basic story of what happened there is incredibly poorly understood. ultimately, i think the best cases i have read is it was multi factor. there is a demographic component, the drug war and structure of the drug market particularly the introduction of crack cocaine, there is a story about incarceration which in the beginning did reduce crime rate, there is a story about lead and the prevalence of lead for the period of time that produced a cohort that was committing the most crimes. but the fact of the matter is we don't have a great handle and comprehensive view. so the people that think they have figured it out which are police departments in major cities who lived through it. i say this with tremendous respect because if you oversaw a crime like that you would think you have unlocked something profound. there is
city. last year there were 300. thing about another metric reduced by that. harvard admissions, car wrecks, poverty. it is a two-act story. 1996, 1992 increase in crime across all category and big and small cities across the country crime increases show up in every category. and starting in 1992 the trend reverses and goes away everywhere and the cause for that, the basic story of what happened there is incredibly poorly understood. ultimately, i think the best cases i have read is it was multi...
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39
Apr 25, 2017
04/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 39
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these are the temperatures to expect if you live in the middle of our big towns and cities.e looking at lows of minus six or minus seven, a widespread frost. but some subtle changes into wednesday. this ridge of high pressure begins to build its way in from the west, and that will cut off the worst, if you like, of that biting northerly wind, so maybe not as chilly on wednesday. still some showers, but most of these across eastern areas. some sunshine, as well, but thicker cloud starting to roll into northern ireland and western scotland. a few spots of rain. it will mostly be rain, because temperatures will be creeping upwards. 10 degrees in stornoway. and that is the story for the end of the week, the cold air slowly but surely being eroded by some milder air pushing in from the atlantic. so we can expect those temperatures to begin to creep upwards through thursday and friday. there will be fewer showers, often a lot of cloud, but those temperatures returning to something closer to what we would expect at this time of year. this is bbc news — broadcasting to our viewers i
these are the temperatures to expect if you live in the middle of our big towns and cities.e looking at lows of minus six or minus seven, a widespread frost. but some subtle changes into wednesday. this ridge of high pressure begins to build its way in from the west, and that will cut off the worst, if you like, of that biting northerly wind, so maybe not as chilly on wednesday. still some showers, but most of these across eastern areas. some sunshine, as well, but thicker cloud starting to...
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36
Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 36
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i grew up in big cities with no stars. i got in through physics. it's a gateway drug for strong me. you think wow i can apply physics to the universe and that's cool. that's how i did it. >> what's the connection between the university of arizona and astronomy? >> were big astronomy department. were on the way out of making the word world's biggest telescope on a football stadium. it's a big business here. astronomy and optics and related industries are worth about one quarter of a billion dollars of year. we have a space nations in big telescopes and research. it is a buzzing place for astronomy. >> before we get into the book beyond future, can he go back to football field, was that about? >> guest: telescope building had reached a limit. was built around the second world war, it was not exceeded for decades. so there was an obstacle because big mirrors are expensive and heavy and hard to move around and keep accurately shaped. one of my colleagues recently retired and invented a way of making nears large, thin, and very accurate. the trick, the secret is to put the glass blocks i
i grew up in big cities with no stars. i got in through physics. it's a gateway drug for strong me. you think wow i can apply physics to the universe and that's cool. that's how i did it. >> what's the connection between the university of arizona and astronomy? >> were big astronomy department. were on the way out of making the word world's biggest telescope on a football stadium. it's a big business here. astronomy and optics and related industries are worth about one quarter of a...
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103
Apr 19, 2017
04/17
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MSNBCW
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eye 103
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so in all 18 million people, mostly because we're including big cities like kansas city and chicago inthis, and your threat in chicago looks to be pretty late. so here is the timing of everything. this is as we go through this morning, we watch rain through the dakotas and then the thunderstorms break out. but items late today. kansas city the storms heading towards you. and then for chicago, looks like two rounds of storm, one overnight and one with a front early the morning. so maybe one or two tornados will be the worst of it. so today's forecast, 80 in oklahoma city, look at st. louis, 86 degrees. chicago, you're on the cool side of the front, 65. and it's much cooler today boston to new york, we have the marine influence, winds off the cold ocean waters and that's why it will only be in the low 50s compared to the warm day yesterday. atlanta looking okay at 82. so again, not a severe weather outbreak, but enough to pay attention. kansas city, chicago, and everywhere in between. >> do you have humidity in the midwest and south or not so much yet? >> not much yet. still comfortable.
so in all 18 million people, mostly because we're including big cities like kansas city and chicago inthis, and your threat in chicago looks to be pretty late. so here is the timing of everything. this is as we go through this morning, we watch rain through the dakotas and then the thunderstorms break out. but items late today. kansas city the storms heading towards you. and then for chicago, looks like two rounds of storm, one overnight and one with a front early the morning. so maybe one or...
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81
Apr 10, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 81
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>> either those little kids that had a telescope but i grew up in big cities so i got in through physics that is the gateway drug for astronomy then you realize i can apply that to the universal you look at our words. >> what is the of connection >> we are a big astronomy department moderate to making the world's biggest telescope the span of a phobos' diem it is big business year astronomy and optics is worth about one-quarter billion dollars per year. we'll have big telescopes and research is the place for astronomy. >> host: before we get into a bear rest talk about the football field and spinning your. >> is seen to it had rigid 11 around world were to end it was not exceeded over decades because the big mirrors are expensive and heavy and hard to keep accurate shapes of one of my colleagues from recently retired invented this way to make them years large and very accurate the way you do it, the trick is to put of glass blocks turn liquid then is really really large headlight and not expensive. >> and the connection to the football field at the time that is where was big enough space
>> either those little kids that had a telescope but i grew up in big cities so i got in through physics that is the gateway drug for astronomy then you realize i can apply that to the universal you look at our words. >> what is the of connection >> we are a big astronomy department moderate to making the world's biggest telescope the span of a phobos' diem it is big business year astronomy and optics is worth about one-quarter billion dollars per year. we'll have big...
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Apr 22, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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new york and big cities when the citizens decided that the manure was too big a problem to tolerate?hey got other jobs. they did other things. my grandfather went into world war senii horse, but 20 years l, no one conducted warfare on a horse. i was at boeing this year. a guy who was a bricklayer now lays wire bundles on high-tech aircraft. he uses the same skills he had, pattern recognition, working carefully with his hands, anticipating where parts have to go to fit things together torque do a new job in a new industry and makes a better living than he used to. we have to enable this. this is in the best interest. that's why we had this march this week. the president's proposal cuts the epa's budget by more than 30%. suggesting that epa could redao us it's staff by 20%. the plan including discontinuing funding, international climate change programs, climate change research and partnership programs. what do you see as the impact of this? >> well, it sounds very bad for the world. by the way, just remind everybody, politically this may not work out. it may backfire. you can't unilate
new york and big cities when the citizens decided that the manure was too big a problem to tolerate?hey got other jobs. they did other things. my grandfather went into world war senii horse, but 20 years l, no one conducted warfare on a horse. i was at boeing this year. a guy who was a bricklayer now lays wire bundles on high-tech aircraft. he uses the same skills he had, pattern recognition, working carefully with his hands, anticipating where parts have to go to fit things together torque do...
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Apr 6, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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the indian prime minister's cash ban has already brought down property prices by up to 20% in the big citiesovide a home for every indian by 2022, for which 50 million new homes will have to be built. up the real estate sector will be crucial to making those new homes available and affordable. bbc news, delhi. a quick look at the markets. the nikkei average of japan has look at the markets. the nikkei average ofjapan has opened at look at the markets. the nikkei average of japan has opened at its lowest numbers since mid—january, essentially. down almost i%. really, investors are paying attention to the federal reserve minutes i told you about earlier that led to a decline of us stocks. again, a decline of us stocks. again, a decline in asia as well. the all ordinaries in australia are currently flat to be that is it for the asia business report. thank you for watching. —— flat. you are watching bbc news. the headlines. myanmar‘s de facto leader, aung san su kyi, has spoken to the bbc, defending her record over atrocities against the rohingya minority. president trump has called the deadly g
the indian prime minister's cash ban has already brought down property prices by up to 20% in the big citiesovide a home for every indian by 2022, for which 50 million new homes will have to be built. up the real estate sector will be crucial to making those new homes available and affordable. bbc news, delhi. a quick look at the markets. the nikkei average of japan has look at the markets. the nikkei average ofjapan has opened at look at the markets. the nikkei average of japan has opened at...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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from political big beast to big city editor, and the greenest hack in the newsroom.n. george osborne told me today he will use his new role to fight for his liberal conservative views against any harsher vision of brexit. myjob as editor of the evening standard is to speak for london, speak for my readers, speak for this country and its future. our country's got some big decisions to make now about the kind of britain we want to be. and those values of openness, tolerance, diversity and enterprise, they are the values that i hold dear. they are the ones i fought for in government as chancellor, fought for in parliament as the mp for tatton and now i'm going to fight for them in that editor's chair at the evening standard. strategist in a hard hat, visionary in hi—vis, out to build tory support in areas off—limits since margaret thatcher. close to david cameron, they rose and fell together over brexit. theresa may, not he, moved from the wings to centre stage. can being an editor ever compensate for never being prime minister? the exciting thing is not how you engage
from political big beast to big city editor, and the greenest hack in the newsroom.n. george osborne told me today he will use his new role to fight for his liberal conservative views against any harsher vision of brexit. myjob as editor of the evening standard is to speak for london, speak for my readers, speak for this country and its future. our country's got some big decisions to make now about the kind of britain we want to be. and those values of openness, tolerance, diversity and...
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Apr 4, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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it is eight important point for big cities. —— an important point.'s foreign minister has said the brexit timeline is unrealistic. do you think being pessimistic? no, i think it is going to take a long time. negotiations, when you have one party to one party, it takes much longer than you always think. here you have the european union, which is effectively 27 parties or negotiating. they are also negotiating. they are also negotiating about how they negotiate. i think britain wants to negotiate. i think britain wants to negotiate new terms of the withdrawal and what they will get, the eu wants to negotiate the terms of withdrawal first. so i think it is going to take time. he actually arrives in the uk today, and he has given this exclusive interview with the independent, he meets with the foreign minister boris johnson. the independent, he meets with the foreign minister borisjohnson. he is also reiterating the german line, the line from angela merkel, that we will not negotiate the divorce in the same breath as a trade deal. the divorce settlement
it is eight important point for big cities. —— an important point.'s foreign minister has said the brexit timeline is unrealistic. do you think being pessimistic? no, i think it is going to take a long time. negotiations, when you have one party to one party, it takes much longer than you always think. here you have the european union, which is effectively 27 parties or negotiating. they are also negotiating. they are also negotiating about how they negotiate. i think britain wants to...
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Apr 13, 2017
04/17
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FBC
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his southwest paintings are a hit with his wealthy, big-city patrons. >> higgins makes most of his moneynding paintings from taos to chicago and new york. >> his work becomes even more popular after his death in 1949. back in upstate new york, appraiser david mapes shares the news with don camp. that painting he was ready to toss in a dumpster is a big deal. >> it's an unknown painting. it just popped up, and here it is. i said to him, "this is a very valuable painting," and he said, "how valuable?" i said, "well, it's going to sell for over $100,000." >> i was amazed. >> that's a good number. >> [ chuckles ] yes. >> what did you think would happen? >> i had no idea. i was just glad that they were out of the house. [ both laugh ] >> keep in mind, don and phyllis are busy clearing out their house for the move to denver. n esn't think twice about leaving both pntings wh his eager new acquaintance. >> he wasn't counting on it being worth anything, so it's gonna be christmas, whatever it brings. >> but before david can put a painting that he hopes is worth six figures on the market, discrimi
his southwest paintings are a hit with his wealthy, big-city patrons. >> higgins makes most of his moneynding paintings from taos to chicago and new york. >> his work becomes even more popular after his death in 1949. back in upstate new york, appraiser david mapes shares the news with don camp. that painting he was ready to toss in a dumpster is a big deal. >> it's an unknown painting. it just popped up, and here it is. i said to him, "this is a very valuable...
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50
Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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only si.4% and for the first time in its history the ruling party did not win in any of the big three citieshen then prime minister recep tayyip erdogan was up his first election, what striking then, was the ache party was trying to convince a lot of people, particularly people in the big cities, those who looked a bit more towards europe in their outlook, was that it was a party and recep tayyip erdogan was a man who could embrace european values and the islamic tradition of the old 0ttoman the islamic tradition of the old ottoman empire, that he could fuse the more historic past with the more modern version. it now seems that he doesn't feel the need to do that. yes, and turkey seems to be distancing itself further away from europe. turkey began official negotiations with the eu when recep tayyip erdogan was prime minister. more than a decade ago. yes. in 2005. but it stopped. that is going nowhere. recep tayyip erdogan raised theissue nowhere. recep tayyip erdogan raised the issue of two more referendums, but the introduction of the death penalty, which is a red line for the european unio
only si.4% and for the first time in its history the ruling party did not win in any of the big three citieshen then prime minister recep tayyip erdogan was up his first election, what striking then, was the ache party was trying to convince a lot of people, particularly people in the big cities, those who looked a bit more towards europe in their outlook, was that it was a party and recep tayyip erdogan was a man who could embrace european values and the islamic tradition of the old 0ttoman...
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Apr 23, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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and as people struggle to find jobs in the big cities, here in the countryside the situation is evenleaker. i've seen all around the world how tourism can help to preserve cultures. but there's also something special that's lost the moment the first tourist buses arrive. hopefully the people of palencia get the tourist numbers they richly deserve. but also fight hard to protect the authenticity of their medieval culture, of which, as i've discovered, they are justly proud. still to come on the travel show, we are snapping up guilty pleasures in new orleans. and i'm falling a little bit in love with a big dog that thinks it's a wolf. the travel show, your essential guide, wherever you are headed. hello, i'm michelle jana chan, your global guide, with top tips on the world's best events in the coming months. we're starting in the us at the new orleans jazz and heritage festival, orjazz fest, begins april 28, which, in spite of its name will be a hub of blues, r&b, gospel, folk, latin, rock, rap, country and bluegrass. this year there'll be a cuban theme with a conga los hoyos dance par
and as people struggle to find jobs in the big cities, here in the countryside the situation is evenleaker. i've seen all around the world how tourism can help to preserve cultures. but there's also something special that's lost the moment the first tourist buses arrive. hopefully the people of palencia get the tourist numbers they richly deserve. but also fight hard to protect the authenticity of their medieval culture, of which, as i've discovered, they are justly proud. still to come on the...
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Apr 9, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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it isn't a city but a borough aborough. what is the big deal? what i try to show in the book is brooklyn is a microcosm for the changes that have been ruling our politics and the politics of western europe. over the past 30-40 years, advanced economies like that of the united states have been shifting away from manufacturing or to put it crudely making stuff, toward knowledge, information, or again to be crude thinking about stuff. new york city was already becoming the u.s. capital of the economy by the 1960s as corporations centralized and moved their headquarters to downtown and midtown. 59% of the new york city labor force was in white collar occupations. this gave new york a competitive advantage over other fading industrial cities. most of the white collar people were predominantly men who remember working downtown took to train like rob pea tree played by dick vandyke the fictional husband of laura pea tree played by mary tyler moore who i wanted to mention. but a few of the workers, especially the creative ones, started working in brown
it isn't a city but a borough aborough. what is the big deal? what i try to show in the book is brooklyn is a microcosm for the changes that have been ruling our politics and the politics of western europe. over the past 30-40 years, advanced economies like that of the united states have been shifting away from manufacturing or to put it crudely making stuff, toward knowledge, information, or again to be crude thinking about stuff. new york city was already becoming the u.s. capital of the...
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Apr 2, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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, a classic move from the village to the big city. where they are certainly earning money of the kind they could have only prints he dreamed of. so not only have a lifted up a statistical level of poverty, they're almost any kind of world bank estimates that are normal income group. but their life is suffered a dramatic collapse in actual living standards. the fact that their living in a horribly polluted city, and islam. whatever money they're making is not not entitle them to anything more than a roof above their head. and sometimes they have to sleep in the open if they are doing jobs like that, taxi driving things like that. people simply sleep in the open, a tarp for the roof. so that kind of existence where you're making money but you can't afford come you're working 14 hours a day, you can't afford to have your family, h you can't afford to start a family, you are away from your parents. i've seen people recoil from their experience and come back and retreat, go below the poverty line again because a whole lot of things that we
, a classic move from the village to the big city. where they are certainly earning money of the kind they could have only prints he dreamed of. so not only have a lifted up a statistical level of poverty, they're almost any kind of world bank estimates that are normal income group. but their life is suffered a dramatic collapse in actual living standards. the fact that their living in a horribly polluted city, and islam. whatever money they're making is not not entitle them to anything more...
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Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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LINKTV
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. >> maria moved here with her family to get away from the big city. we know every tree in this forest. we have lakes, walking trails. people come with their kids and dogs. it is important to us. >> more than 20 kilometers northeast of red square. beauty, sees as property d developers cscs opportunity.y. there are plans to build 30 high-rise buildings in the area. activistsfellow launched a campaign to stop this development. they say building has begun anyway. says cases like this are increasingly common in russia because developers benefit from loopholes in the law. this is clear beneficial for the construction companies, as well as the local and regional authorities. even if we rule out the corruption factor, this money still goes to the government's budget. >> officials say more housing is needed and the city center is often overcrowded and expensive. our main goal-- is not to build over the largest possible area but to resolve issues such as relocating people from rundown housing. growingw has a population of 12 million. in 2016, 9 million square m
. >> maria moved here with her family to get away from the big city. we know every tree in this forest. we have lakes, walking trails. people come with their kids and dogs. it is important to us. >> more than 20 kilometers northeast of red square. beauty, sees as property d developers cscs opportunity.y. there are plans to build 30 high-rise buildings in the area. activistsfellow launched a campaign to stop this development. they say building has begun anyway. says cases like this...
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Apr 21, 2017
04/17
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KCSM
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this was probably a criminal act as they do happen in all big cities all over the world. pressure is a less to go out tonight. what we have at the same time tonight is the long string of the last statements of all the 11 candidates for the french election, the first round which will take place on sunday. we could expect some sort of an immediate reaction there. looking into those discussions and statements, everyone has been cautious in trying to not directly say something that will not turn out to be true. it is still possible that we might see some first reactions later because francois fillon, the conservative candidate, he's expected to speak to the french public around midnight. we will see whether he will have something to say. sarah: we are learning that the second police officer on the scene has a died. that means it to police officers -- that means two police officer shot and killed on the champs-elysees. a quick recap of what we know this hour. two police officers have been killed in paris. thanks for watching. our coverage continues at the top of hour. óóññ >>
this was probably a criminal act as they do happen in all big cities all over the world. pressure is a less to go out tonight. what we have at the same time tonight is the long string of the last statements of all the 11 candidates for the french election, the first round which will take place on sunday. we could expect some sort of an immediate reaction there. looking into those discussions and statements, everyone has been cautious in trying to not directly say something that will not turn...
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from big cities to small towns, we are all at risk. >> i logged onto my bank account and found that iade no sense, and it made me feel helpless. i could not believe that somebody would steal my tax refund. it made me angry. >> i started getting phone calls from credit collection companies. "you've opened an account here, and here, and here." they wanted payment. payment for things that i did not do. >> announcer: identity theft is the fastest growing crime in america. what does that mean to you? find out as we take an inside look at identity theft with lifelock. now, here's tom jourden. >> today's technology makes identity theft easier and easier.
from big cities to small towns, we are all at risk. >> i logged onto my bank account and found that iade no sense, and it made me feel helpless. i could not believe that somebody would steal my tax refund. it made me angry. >> i started getting phone calls from credit collection companies. "you've opened an account here, and here, and here." they wanted payment. payment for things that i did not do. >> announcer: identity theft is the fastest growing crime in...
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Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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LINKTV
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moved here with her family to get away from the big city. >> we locals know every tree in this forest. have lakes, walking trails. it's a place for relaxation and clean air. it's important to us. or than 20 kilometers northeast of red square, maria is surrounded by forest. what she sees as beauty property developers see as s an opportunity. there are plans to build 30 high-rise buildings in the area. activistsfellow launched a campaign to stop this development. they say building has begun anyway. greenpeace says cases like this are increasingly common in russia because developers benefit from loopholes in the law. >> it's clear this is beneficial for the construction companies as well as local and regional authorities because even if we rule out the corruption factor the money still goes to the government's budget. officials say more housing is needed and the city center is often overcrowded and expensive. to resolve goal is issues such as relocating people from rundown housing. moscow has a growing population of around 12 million. in 2016 9 million square meters of residential proper
moved here with her family to get away from the big city. >> we locals know every tree in this forest. have lakes, walking trails. it's a place for relaxation and clean air. it's important to us. or than 20 kilometers northeast of red square, maria is surrounded by forest. what she sees as beauty property developers see as s an opportunity. there are plans to build 30 high-rise buildings in the area. activistsfellow launched a campaign to stop this development. they say building has begun...
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Apr 22, 2017
04/17
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KTVU
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rob, thank you. >> san francisco wasn't the only big-city to have power problems. power went out at a subway station at about 7:30 and wasn't restored until 12, 45. one of the electrical lines triggered the outage. there's no link at all to the outage in san francisco. >>> according to matteo county approved a $90 million settlement of a lawsuit filed by pg&e shareholders over the san bruno pipeline disaster. shareholders blamed the blast on corporate mismanagement of pg&e. the explosion and fire in 2010 killed a people and injured dozens of others and destroyed 38 homes. the lead attorney says the amount of the settlement is less important than the changes to the corporate culture and safety. >> what was important are the corporate governance changes, the changes to the structure in which decisions are made by the board that deal with safety and risk management. >> pg&e had no comment on the settlement which ends seven years of legal battles. >> the construction company implicated in the balcony collapse lost his license. segue construction built the library garde
rob, thank you. >> san francisco wasn't the only big-city to have power problems. power went out at a subway station at about 7:30 and wasn't restored until 12, 45. one of the electrical lines triggered the outage. there's no link at all to the outage in san francisco. >>> according to matteo county approved a $90 million settlement of a lawsuit filed by pg&e shareholders over the san bruno pipeline disaster. shareholders blamed the blast on corporate mismanagement of...
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Apr 14, 2017
04/17
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WCAU
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morning. >> reporter: big mama, a 7-year-old female horse, decided today was the day to explore the big city i never see the horse do that. >> reporter: lonny sullivan feeding her at the riding club when big mama took a big leap out the front door, i looked out. she was coming. so i jumped. hit me. i fell down. i said, wow! >> reporter: philadelphia police in hot pursuit from strawberry maengs all the way to fish town. she was finally corralled near the sugar house casino. >> how did she end up all the way over there? >> reporter: owner thinks she went there since they rescued her from a casino racetrack a few years back. >> she suffered an injury to her rear leg. we rescued and gave her a better life. they were going to send her to the killers. >> i saw her running around. >> reporter: this man saw the police chase on tv and brought her son to see up close. >> my son loves animals. >> reporter: big mama back on her north philly farm may be plotting her next adventure around town. for nbc 10 news. >>> we have video from bucks county showing crime definitely does not pay. check it out. guy ri
morning. >> reporter: big mama, a 7-year-old female horse, decided today was the day to explore the big city i never see the horse do that. >> reporter: lonny sullivan feeding her at the riding club when big mama took a big leap out the front door, i looked out. she was coming. so i jumped. hit me. i fell down. i said, wow! >> reporter: philadelphia police in hot pursuit from strawberry maengs all the way to fish town. she was finally corralled near the sugar house casino....
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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WPVI
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the mayor says that wilmington may be small but has big city crime problems. tracy will make $160,000 a year, that is $43 more than cummings. >>> the potentially life saving drug, narcan will be stocked at pennsylvania state parks. mayor tom wolf made the announcement in lewisbury, york county. more than 100 employees will be trained and equipped with narcan and this reverses the effect of opioid overdoses. >>> new jersey governor, chris christie was in trenton hoping to cut the ribbon for a new edition to trenton community college. the annex features state of the art projects for education and he says it's an important investment keeping students in the state for their education and in the state for jobs. >>> 48 people from 31 countries are now citizens of the united states. they took the only of allegiance today at princeton university. the new citizens include two professors and one student from princeton university. last year more than 40,000 new citizens were naturalized in the state of new jersey. >>> coming up on "action news" tonight. following in her
the mayor says that wilmington may be small but has big city crime problems. tracy will make $160,000 a year, that is $43 more than cummings. >>> the potentially life saving drug, narcan will be stocked at pennsylvania state parks. mayor tom wolf made the announcement in lewisbury, york county. more than 100 employees will be trained and equipped with narcan and this reverses the effect of opioid overdoses. >>> new jersey governor, chris christie was in trenton hoping to cut...
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Apr 2, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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one example may be sort of a big city or elitist reaction to president trump versus voters in other parts >> a lot of people who are just sick of politics as it was and they wanted to see something different and knew they were going to get something digit with donald trump. i want to read you from the art of the deal from donald trump. ed you can't con people not for long. you can create excitement and wonderful promotion and all kind of press and if you don't deliver the goods, people will ooeve eventually catch pop is tax reform going to be president trump delivering the goods? does he have to get a "w," a win here pretty soon? >> you wonder how much people in the focus group will care about tax reform or he is doing more to please the traditional republican base, to please donors more so than to please the people that we are hearing from in the focus group what i think is the most interesting story when we hear from those voters that allison was interviewing or when we hear from the viewers probably of this program, the people who do not care as much about seeing a reform of the tax co
one example may be sort of a big city or elitist reaction to president trump versus voters in other parts >> a lot of people who are just sick of politics as it was and they wanted to see something different and knew they were going to get something digit with donald trump. i want to read you from the art of the deal from donald trump. ed you can't con people not for long. you can create excitement and wonderful promotion and all kind of press and if you don't deliver the goods, people...
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87
Apr 22, 2017
04/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 87
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i suppose it‘s like any big city, but london seems to have that quality. much the modern city, but the city with all its echoes of dickensian times, through old industrial buildings. they are venetian, they are neo—byza ntine, they are neo—gothic, theyjust send me into rapture. i assume you love dickens? do you know, i have a lot of trouble with dickens. i find him a very difficult writer to read. that‘s interesting, why? partly, it‘s the carnivalesque, elaborate baroque prose. partly, it‘s the length of the novel. to my shame. partly, it‘s the length of the novels. to my shame. partly, it‘s his absolute incapacity to create interesting women characters who aren‘t just sugar dolls. well, there we are, we‘ll get some letters about that. but there is that wonderful capture of a life that is, i suppose, now people would talk about it as being magic realism. you know, spontaneous combustion, all the things that happen, there‘s a kind of life that takes us out of the here and now with wonderful leaps of the imagination. that, i suspect to you, must be exciting.
i suppose it‘s like any big city, but london seems to have that quality. much the modern city, but the city with all its echoes of dickensian times, through old industrial buildings. they are venetian, they are neo—byza ntine, they are neo—gothic, theyjust send me into rapture. i assume you love dickens? do you know, i have a lot of trouble with dickens. i find him a very difficult writer to read. that‘s interesting, why? partly, it‘s the carnivalesque, elaborate baroque prose....
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60
Apr 24, 2017
04/17
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 60
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people in big cities have a different life from people living in smaller cities.nting the people who are not connected with smaller cities, macron is more people in big cities, working for international companies. it is hard to reconcile. have rural france who wants to insert in the economy. francine: thank you very much. i will hand it back to you. we will be live in paris throughout the day. anna: thank you, francine lacqua will be there for the whole day. lots from paris as we got reaction from a stunning night in french politics. look out for reaction in the markets as well. ♪ juliette: monday morning, good morning. welcome to bloomberg markets. first trade of the cash session coming up very shortly -- looks like it will be a big one. i am guy johnson in berlin, matt miller in berlin. what are we watching? the establishment crashes out in france. polls point to a macron presidency, but can he unite a divided country? rally on. the euro jumps looks set to surge.
people in big cities have a different life from people living in smaller cities.nting the people who are not connected with smaller cities, macron is more people in big cities, working for international companies. it is hard to reconcile. have rural france who wants to insert in the economy. francine: thank you very much. i will hand it back to you. we will be live in paris throughout the day. anna: thank you, francine lacqua will be there for the whole day. lots from paris as we got reaction...
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Apr 28, 2017
04/17
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LINKTV
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. >> big cities like -- have better jobs. i could have commuted even further if i had my driver's license. as it is without a license, i'm limited. >> getting a license on average costs over 1,000 euros in france. the chances of fail for the test is higher and it can be a vicious cycle for young job seekers. >> you can't get to the jobs. so you're not hired. you don't have a job, you don't have the money to pay for a license or a car. so it's pretty costingly. >> programs to help young people pay for lessons do exist. that's how this woman got her license. she says getting the state financing was a lucky break. >> since i received my license, i've been able to get a job to be free, to go where i want without the help of my apartments. it's really a necessity. >> after months of unemployment, she's now a waitress. but getting to work remains a challenge for many. nearly half of french youths said they had to turn down a job or schooling because they couldn't get there. molly: we're going to stay in france to talk about some ne
. >> big cities like -- have better jobs. i could have commuted even further if i had my driver's license. as it is without a license, i'm limited. >> getting a license on average costs over 1,000 euros in france. the chances of fail for the test is higher and it can be a vicious cycle for young job seekers. >> you can't get to the jobs. so you're not hired. you don't have a job, you don't have the money to pay for a license or a car. so it's pretty costingly. >>...
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Apr 14, 2017
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it wouldn't be appropriate to use it in a big city center because you would level the city and cause a lot of civilian casualties. >> across the globe in north korea, the vice foreign minister is warning the u.s. against provoking north korea militarily. he's blaming president trump for escalating tensions in the region through tweets and expanded military exercises in the korean peninsula. in an interview he told the associated press, "we will go to war if they choose." that north korean official adds that so long as military exercises between the u.s. and south korea continue, they intend to carry forward with their national defense which includes nuclear arms build-up. reporting live, pamela osborne, nbc10 news. >> thank you. >>> meanwhile, the pentagon admitted yesterday that a u.s.-led coalition strike against isis accidentally killed syrian rebel forces fighting against the ruling regime. 18 rebels were killed in the friendly fire attack. the pentagon offered condolences to the victims and their families. >>> next week, the employees held hostage at a prison in smyrna, new cast
it wouldn't be appropriate to use it in a big city center because you would level the city and cause a lot of civilian casualties. >> across the globe in north korea, the vice foreign minister is warning the u.s. against provoking north korea militarily. he's blaming president trump for escalating tensions in the region through tweets and expanded military exercises in the korean peninsula. in an interview he told the associated press, "we will go to war if they choose." that...