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Mar 6, 2015
03/15
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ALJAZAM
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not your adjunct sidekick. for those of you at home, we want you to be a part of the show. >> university professors with masters and ph.d.'s not the typical example of someone struggling to pay bills or put food on the table. a event report from congress found most adjunct or nontenure track professors are making a median salary of 22,000 which is about what a fast food worker makes. >> some of the obstacles i face as an adjunct professor is compensation. i make below the poverty line living in california. teaching full time course load. and because of this the financial difficulties i'm unable to pay rent on my own. so i'm forced to live at home with my parents. there was a time when i had office space. i don't really have that anymore. and so now i just kind of have fallen back on coffee shop a couple of blocks up the street. >> i teach three different universities. i spend about 13 hours every week in the car. and i could be using that time to you know, to spend time with my students. >> and of course the in
not your adjunct sidekick. for those of you at home, we want you to be a part of the show. >> university professors with masters and ph.d.'s not the typical example of someone struggling to pay bills or put food on the table. a event report from congress found most adjunct or nontenure track professors are making a median salary of 22,000 which is about what a fast food worker makes. >> some of the obstacles i face as an adjunct professor is compensation. i make below the poverty...
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Mar 2, 2015
03/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
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the challenge is making sure no one is switched off >>> adjunct college professors walked off the job calling attention to low wages and a lack of job security in higher education, most have little to no benefit and little hope of a full-time job. >> when 39-year-old darren brown became a university professor, they never imagined they would go to such a low. >> i envisioned i would climb the ladder. as you can see i did not. i'm in my parent's basement. >> as a part-time adjunct professor in the bay area earning as little as $1,100 a month, he couldn't make enough. he hoped for a full-time tenured professorship. by 2009 ranks had swelled to 50% of faculty. in ohio adjunct english professor was a month away from the start of classes at a community college before she learnt whether she learnt the cows she was contracted to teach would go ahead. fed up she banded with other professors to form a majority and raise awareness of issues through campaigns, like scarlet aids wearing them on campus to prod students to ask questions. questions with important implications, especially giving the s
the challenge is making sure no one is switched off >>> adjunct college professors walked off the job calling attention to low wages and a lack of job security in higher education, most have little to no benefit and little hope of a full-time job. >> when 39-year-old darren brown became a university professor, they never imagined they would go to such a low. >> i envisioned i would climb the ladder. as you can see i did not. i'm in my parent's basement. >> as a...
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Mar 8, 2015
03/15
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WJLA
tv
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headed, alan shay, ceo and president baltitimore-based tech company, and cyber r security expert adjunct professor atw iverty. welcome to you both. wewe could do a half hourur show evy we talng aut thehe business of cyber security. we only get s six minutes today.. alan, i'm going to start with you. you have been looking g at small businesses. you love work that raytheo -- you ve work that rayeon and sprint. at is the biggest mistakes small businesses are getting it wrong? >> the biggestistake is they are counting on oror expecting the government or the larger industry to solve the problem and that's just not happening.. there are things they can do proactively to start to address cyber security at a small busineness or consumer level. >>>>onal big businesses, you worked att helansecurity, r big cyber companieses. now you are a consultanlooking at bignd small. from the big company perspective, what is the biggest mistake they are still making? they are getting hacked right and left. >> one of the mistakes they're makingng is thinking ciber is an industry. thatat's not t our industry. we
headed, alan shay, ceo and president baltitimore-based tech company, and cyber r security expert adjunct professor atw iverty. welcome to you both. wewe could do a half hourur show evy we talng aut thehe business of cyber security. we only get s six minutes today.. alan, i'm going to start with you. you have been looking g at small businesses. you love work that raytheo -- you ve work that rayeon and sprint. at is the biggest mistakes small businesses are getting it wrong? >> the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 1, 2015
03/15
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SFGTV
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she currently serves as an adjunct professor of law at casey's university of law and san francisco school of law. judge jackson has supported the work of aspiring law students throughout the yooers. she truly embodies living history. thank you for being here and it's a privilege to be able to honor you this black history seen. thank you. [applause] >> thank you madam president as well as supervisor cohen for nominating me. and all supervisors. it is like old home week. i grew up here. i remember as a little girl seeing law here. i remember the days when union court used to be here at city hall and seeing -- just one slight correction. there were other african american judges, i was the first african american woman appointed here in superior court. i had the opportunity to seeing judge kennedy and i've seen our former mayor willie brown argue a few cases as well as the late mayor. if you haven't realized, i am i san francisco. i remember where i would go get my shoes and the cap well at christmas. i remember we would go down there and get our chicken and drive to louisiana to see my relati
she currently serves as an adjunct professor of law at casey's university of law and san francisco school of law. judge jackson has supported the work of aspiring law students throughout the yooers. she truly embodies living history. thank you for being here and it's a privilege to be able to honor you this black history seen. thank you. [applause] >> thank you madam president as well as supervisor cohen for nominating me. and all supervisors. it is like old home week. i grew up here. i...
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Mar 2, 2015
03/15
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BLOOMBERG
tv
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it is an adjunct memento for regulation in order to let the consolidation play.hile keeping players and competition in the middle of investment in europe. >> where do you see investment in europe picking up the most? >> listening to all of germany and the u.k. with the new consolidation and big plans and italy with telecom italian. you listen to what the companies have announced and they all say they want to increase investment. the first to claim that was a vodafone and you listen to telecom italia and they all have said we are going to step up and raise the level of investment. >> how much you have currently and where are you aiming? >> more market share. the core network had the biggest player and most operations are going to invest in the premise to really bring this to the houses and we have many investments to focus the committee on and i said we will play. the good news is that it is coming to us and we are greedy with market share. >> it has been wonderful to speak to you. the ingredient with the market share when it comes to providing the one trillion de
it is an adjunct memento for regulation in order to let the consolidation play.hile keeping players and competition in the middle of investment in europe. >> where do you see investment in europe picking up the most? >> listening to all of germany and the u.k. with the new consolidation and big plans and italy with telecom italian. you listen to what the companies have announced and they all say they want to increase investment. the first to claim that was a vodafone and you listen...
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Mar 28, 2015
03/15
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WCAU
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for years vice president joe biden was an adjunct professor at the school. >>> i'm jesse gary live inhiladelphia. massive four-alarm warehouse fire just placed under control by the philadelphia fire department but the flames continue to burn. i'll update this story coming up after the break. >>> and you're waking up to some wind, also some very cold temperatures, right around 36 degrees in philadelphia. many spots below freezing this morning. a live look outside. you can see the wind whipping the flags flying around. we'll talk about the cold today and a warmup during your workweek. that's straight ahead. >>> nbc 10 breaking news. >> nbc 10 is staying on top of breaking news firefighters battle flames at a north philadelphia warehouse that have been burning for nearly four hours. we'll have an update on their firsts to keepu$e fire from spreading. that's all coming up in a live report. >>> a montgomery county high school finds itself in the middle of a scandal. how nude pictures of female students made their way online. >>> the calendar says spring but the thermometer is reading winte
for years vice president joe biden was an adjunct professor at the school. >>> i'm jesse gary live inhiladelphia. massive four-alarm warehouse fire just placed under control by the philadelphia fire department but the flames continue to burn. i'll update this story coming up after the break. >>> and you're waking up to some wind, also some very cold temperatures, right around 36 degrees in philadelphia. many spots below freezing this morning. a live look outside. you can see...
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Mar 12, 2015
03/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
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let's talk about the big picture with matthew hughie, a adjunct professor at the university of connecticut. he's in hartford tonight. do you think these are the right move professor? >> i think they're the right move a step in the right direction but i think we need to back up from that for just a second. look at the larger structural issue. this is not just about ferguson, but about many towns that are hypersegregated. maybe moving, removing some of the personnel might help just a little bit. but i think if we stick to that type of conversation we're going to fall into a type of discourse that i like to call the good, the bad and the ugly. we think that these people are somehow the bad apples that really don't spoil the good bunch and we miss the overall ugly structure of racism in the united states that haitian gone away that we're still living -- that hasn't gone away that we're still living with. >> how do you fix racism? >> i think you need to look at what are the causes for of this. white supremacy legacy of that and continued practices of that. one which the former guest was speakin
let's talk about the big picture with matthew hughie, a adjunct professor at the university of connecticut. he's in hartford tonight. do you think these are the right move professor? >> i think they're the right move a step in the right direction but i think we need to back up from that for just a second. look at the larger structural issue. this is not just about ferguson, but about many towns that are hypersegregated. maybe moving, removing some of the personnel might help just a little...
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Mar 16, 2015
03/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
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let's welcome an adjunct professor at the columbian school of international averages. and eric farmworth, vice president of the council of americas. great to have you here. >> great to be here. >> thank you. >> what do you make of the special powers given to mooud rur? >> -- nicolas maduro? >> first of all, it's unclear why he'd need them. he had a strong majority. it's not clear what he needs them for, he's trying to drum of expectation and fear, so they can consolidate power. he's done this for the last year, and chavez's predecessor was doing it for several years before that it's part of a large pattern. >> what do you make of the military drills to show power? >> it's show. let's be honest. what he's protesting about is the yanking of seven visas, of poem involved in the -- people involved in the human rights abuses. there's no talk of uninvasion. does it merit responses. it's bluster in an total to distralent the situation. >>> president obama -- distract the situation. >> president obama used the word threat, what do you make of the words. do you think venezuela
let's welcome an adjunct professor at the columbian school of international averages. and eric farmworth, vice president of the council of americas. great to have you here. >> great to be here. >> thank you. >> what do you make of the special powers given to mooud rur? >> -- nicolas maduro? >> first of all, it's unclear why he'd need them. he had a strong majority. it's not clear what he needs them for, he's trying to drum of expectation and fear, so they can...
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Mar 26, 2015
03/15
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ALJAZAM
tv
eye 76
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. >>> christopher swift is an adjunct professor at george town university. and he joins us from washington d.c. professor swift, thank you for being here tonight. >> it's good to be with you michael. american officials including special operations advisers left yemen well before the saudi airstrikes, and how important is it to the u.s.-led operations in yemen? >> well, it's important because the absence of a presence in yemen means that it's difficult to manage relationships politically, and it's difficult to execute military operations, and it's difficult to collect the kind of intelligence from the ground that would give us a better understanding of who is involved in the multisided war in yemen but there's a question of how useful such people would be in the middle of such a war and right now things in yemen are deteriorating so quickly that it's not clear whether having u.s. personnel on the ground in the middle of it would make a distance in policy making. >> you mentioned in yemen there are reports that they looted the documents and how likely is it th
. >>> christopher swift is an adjunct professor at george town university. and he joins us from washington d.c. professor swift, thank you for being here tonight. >> it's good to be with you michael. american officials including special operations advisers left yemen well before the saudi airstrikes, and how important is it to the u.s.-led operations in yemen? >> well, it's important because the absence of a presence in yemen means that it's difficult to manage...
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Mar 1, 2015
03/15
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FOXNEWSW
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ed judith miller is adjunct fellow fellow. a fox news contributor. former world chess champion is chairman of the new york based human rights foundation. a writer and political activist who has been thrown in jail by putin. good to good to see everybody. thank you so much for joining us. gary, let me gary, let me kick it off with you. i'm thrilled you're here to talk about an important event that happened over the weekend. murder in russia. how do you see? >> it was in 2004 and i couldn't believe i had ears when i heard the news. i was shattered. the man was full of life. he was fighting putin to the last hour of his life. he an interview 40 minutes before he was killed, and he called putin the greatest mistake of the presidency. he was about to release new report on ukraine proving that russian troops participated in the aggressive actions in ukraine. >> so do you think that was one of the catalysts or was putin trying to take him down and kill him or get him killed for a long time? >> we can't prove that putin was giving an order to eliminate the c
ed judith miller is adjunct fellow fellow. a fox news contributor. former world chess champion is chairman of the new york based human rights foundation. a writer and political activist who has been thrown in jail by putin. good to good to see everybody. thank you so much for joining us. gary, let me gary, let me kick it off with you. i'm thrilled you're here to talk about an important event that happened over the weekend. murder in russia. how do you see? >> it was in 2004 and i couldn't...
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612
Mar 27, 2015
03/15
by
WCAU
tv
eye 612
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for years vice president joe biden was an adjunct professor at the school. >>> today philadelphia city council members learned what's being done to help school children with disabilities. they got briefed from 19 different service providers for the disabled. they countered with the public center law center. >>> american history on display today for some german exchange students. 23 students and two teachers toured the battle ship "new jersey" this afternoon. earlier today they learned about county government. it's part of an exchange program with collingswood high school. the students will also visit new york and washington. collingswood students will travel to germany this summer. >>> more developments from new york city. >> a gas explosion leveled apartment buildings and touched off an inferno. next the search for victims still not found and what the city's mayor is saying about the cause. >>> plus this -- >> jersey shore firefighters housed in a trailer. 2 1/2 years after superstorm sandy flooded their firehouse and some believe it's making them sick. >> to me it's an embarrassment
for years vice president joe biden was an adjunct professor at the school. >>> today philadelphia city council members learned what's being done to help school children with disabilities. they got briefed from 19 different service providers for the disabled. they countered with the public center law center. >>> american history on display today for some german exchange students. 23 students and two teachers toured the battle ship "new jersey" this afternoon. earlier...
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Mar 1, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 108
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co-editor of the documentary history of the first federal congress of george washington university and adjunct professor of history there. the author of several articles in "washington history" magazine and two books, one called "the creation of washington, d.c.," which goes into all of this in much greater detail and the biography of peter charles l'enfant, which is available for anybody who wishes to learn more about this brilliant, creative individual. >> thank you so much. [applause] >> we're going to take a brief rake. if you are as cold as i am, you might want to get your coat. we have a couple of minutes to that before john richardson takes the stage. thank you very much. >> tonight at 6:30 eastern p.m., as to -- espionage historians talk about leasing the atom bomb to the soviets in the 1960's. they will discuss the couple's devotion to the communist cause him of the role of anti-semitism in their prosecution under contract -- and their prosecution and controversial execution. >> next weekend marks the 50th anniversary of what he sunday, when voting rights advocates on a march from sel
co-editor of the documentary history of the first federal congress of george washington university and adjunct professor of history there. the author of several articles in "washington history" magazine and two books, one called "the creation of washington, d.c.," which goes into all of this in much greater detail and the biography of peter charles l'enfant, which is available for anybody who wishes to learn more about this brilliant, creative individual. >> thank you...
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Mar 15, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN
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these relationships are an essential adjunct to diplomacy. and by working with some of these services in building their capabilities, we have helped them become better prepared to tackle the challenges that threaten us all. cia's role in enhancing the capacity of our foreign partners is part of a team effort across our government. just as the defense department helps train foreign militaries and the justice department assists in developing criminal justice systems, cia works with many of our liaison services to build their skills, tradecraft and technology. to be sure, if we are to work with a broad range of services around the globe, we must also focus on enhancing professionalism and commitment to the ethics of intelligence. we advocate core principles and practices that are indispensable to any intelligence agency, like shunning involvement in the political process, maintaining strict independence and objectivity, and adhering to international norms. with cia's support, i have seen counterparts develop into sophisticated and effective part
these relationships are an essential adjunct to diplomacy. and by working with some of these services in building their capabilities, we have helped them become better prepared to tackle the challenges that threaten us all. cia's role in enhancing the capacity of our foreign partners is part of a team effort across our government. just as the defense department helps train foreign militaries and the justice department assists in developing criminal justice systems, cia works with many of our...
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Mar 4, 2015
03/15
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WCAU
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panelists from adjunct professors to fast food workers talked about the impact of low wages on their families and communities. >> i'm doing to go to chuck e cheese and i have to say no because i can't afford it. do you know what that feels like? it feels inadequate as a father. >> councilmen johnson introduced legislation in november to hold hearings on the minimum wage. pennsylvania has the lowest minimum wage of our three states at $7.25. delaware will increase june from to $8.25. new jersey's minimum is the highest, $8.38 an hour. >>> pennsylvania's death penalty debate is heating up in harrisburg. prosecutors and republican lawmakers are speaking out against governor wolf's moratorium on executions. the group criticized the decision at this news conference in the capitol rotunda today. governor wolf halted executions last month. he says the state's death penalty system is error-prone and expensive. he's issuing reprieve while a legislative panel studies the issue. philadelphia's archbishop is among those applauding governor's decision. expressing optimism the governor will be abl
panelists from adjunct professors to fast food workers talked about the impact of low wages on their families and communities. >> i'm doing to go to chuck e cheese and i have to say no because i can't afford it. do you know what that feels like? it feels inadequate as a father. >> councilmen johnson introduced legislation in november to hold hearings on the minimum wage. pennsylvania has the lowest minimum wage of our three states at $7.25. delaware will increase june from to $8.25....
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Mar 18, 2015
03/15
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FOXNEWSW
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and adjunct professor of media studies at the newsschool.on this, unintended consequences explains the rise of isis. >> apparently. how about libya, where he didn't aim and shot. we've got chaos, and isis in libya. a red line in syria. this is completely hypocritical. the consequences of isis today were brought about by a failure to follow through on a surge that fundamentally transformed iraq. i went twice to iraq to report what was happening on the ground. al qaeda in iraq had been defeated. we were em bowledening a new iraqi government to create a new opportunity in iraq. he wouldn't follow through on hard-earned gains that the war fighters got us on the ground in iraq. >> is that not true? we talked about this a moment ago. vice president biden said iraq would go down as one of the great success stories of the obama administration. things were stable there, i guess for lack of a better word. and isis was not anything like it is now. and then we pulled all our troops. >> right. isis was -- the president was trying to say that sunnis becam
and adjunct professor of media studies at the newsschool.on this, unintended consequences explains the rise of isis. >> apparently. how about libya, where he didn't aim and shot. we've got chaos, and isis in libya. a red line in syria. this is completely hypocritical. the consequences of isis today were brought about by a failure to follow through on a surge that fundamentally transformed iraq. i went twice to iraq to report what was happening on the ground. al qaeda in iraq had been...
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90
Mar 12, 2015
03/15
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LINKTV
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i wrote a blog piece stating that as an adjunct professor have a as a civil rights professor, and as 22-year-old with is a college senior, i understand that the first input to say we are going to get rid of this we are going to get rid of this chapter and we are going to get rid of the students, we're going to ask tellexpell them. i would have wanted president boren to take a step back and say we get kids on a college campus who are not fully formed adults, and it is our response police to go a little bit farther. what the students did, what they are chanting is discussing, but it cannot be only them, as rashid: said. we have got to heal and educate our campus on racism and that campus includes the entire community, the students, the faculty, the staff, and even those students, even those students who made those disgusting chants because expelling them, sending them into the world not understanding fully how to be antiracist does not do anything for society, but he could lift up that university and that campus to understand how to grow better people. and that is what i wanted to -- a
i wrote a blog piece stating that as an adjunct professor have a as a civil rights professor, and as 22-year-old with is a college senior, i understand that the first input to say we are going to get rid of this we are going to get rid of this chapter and we are going to get rid of the students, we're going to ask tellexpell them. i would have wanted president boren to take a step back and say we get kids on a college campus who are not fully formed adults, and it is our response police to go a...
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Mar 29, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN3
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. >> i'm retired from the foreign policy yurok receipt and i teach adjunct at gw. they colluded with the truman administration and support for european empires and received a few pieces of civil rights tokens. i just wanted to know, how does that fit in -- is it 1948 the word truman desegregated? that is not have been, how does that relate? carol: please note that i cannot say it was a token. that is what the literature says. in exchange for getting the degraded -- desegregation order for the military and the federal bureaucracy, as well as several reads -- briefs that what this says is that the naacp hopped on the truman bandwagon. in exchange, you are putting this organization with or hundred thousand -- 400,000 dues -paying members with an organization that is fully backing european powers. i found that narrative to be too flat. i found it to be erroneous because it did not withstand evidentiary scrutiny. how i came -- and finishing up to my first book. when you are finishing that first book you go back into the archives to make sure you have every document. as
. >> i'm retired from the foreign policy yurok receipt and i teach adjunct at gw. they colluded with the truman administration and support for european empires and received a few pieces of civil rights tokens. i just wanted to know, how does that fit in -- is it 1948 the word truman desegregated? that is not have been, how does that relate? carol: please note that i cannot say it was a token. that is what the literature says. in exchange for getting the degraded -- desegregation order for...
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491
Mar 11, 2015
03/15
by
WGN
tv
eye 491
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. >> i see this as an adjunct or as a device that assists in reducing the muscle spasm, and i think it's one of the several things that we can do to help our back pain patients. >> the great thing about this belt is that patients with chronic back pain can wear this belt and feel that they can get their life back again. >> you know, dr. ho, i have a weak back. but with your belt on, my back is feeling much stronger. why is that? >> well, john, your back is stronger for two reasons. it's less painful. with less pain, the muscles can relax and become stronger. and it's more stable because my belt will hold your midsection together so your core is stronger. now, having a strong core and a stable back is important for your work. recently, a team of paramedics tested my belt, and here's what they discovered. >> having the belt just made me feel so much more confident about being able to lift without having pain. >> i find it forces you to stay in the right position. i have a tendency to do a little bit of a hunch as i kind of go to reach over. and this doesn't allow me to do that. it's kind o
. >> i see this as an adjunct or as a device that assists in reducing the muscle spasm, and i think it's one of the several things that we can do to help our back pain patients. >> the great thing about this belt is that patients with chronic back pain can wear this belt and feel that they can get their life back again. >> you know, dr. ho, i have a weak back. but with your belt on, my back is feeling much stronger. why is that? >> well, john, your back is stronger for...
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215
Mar 29, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 215
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if you take the latter one profit motive, exploitation as a necessary adjunct to the profit motive, youre pre--- your pre-capitalist people are non-capitalists. but boy, are they exploiting and trying to get rich. other ways historians have tried to distinguish capitalism you can tell capitalist system where everyone is profit maximizing which comes very close to explaining. so that his farmers whose primary drive is to make as much money as possible so they can save it up or buy things, those are capitalist farmers. whereas farmers who put feeding their families before buying things, farmers who decide to plant a field of corn because we can eat the corn rather than put it in cotton and make the capitalist calculation it is -- it makes more sense to put it in cotton because we can sell the cotton for more money that would enable us to buy corn and have some left over, those are -- those farmers are -- the ones who decide to plant the field and eat corn are practicing what has sometimes been called safety first agriculture. they are not capitalist. the ones willing to go where the money
if you take the latter one profit motive, exploitation as a necessary adjunct to the profit motive, youre pre--- your pre-capitalist people are non-capitalists. but boy, are they exploiting and trying to get rich. other ways historians have tried to distinguish capitalism you can tell capitalist system where everyone is profit maximizing which comes very close to explaining. so that his farmers whose primary drive is to make as much money as possible so they can save it up or buy things, those...
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Mar 1, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN3
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ronald raydosh, the senior adjunct fellow at the hudson institute. he has written widely about the rosenberg case. including a book he co-authored with joyce milton called the rosenberg file. stephen is the senior washington editor for bio century.com and the author of engineering communism, how to american spies founded the soviet silica and valley. he has published several major articles on the rosenberg case. alan horn bloom. he is the author of the invisible harry gold. the man who gave the soviets the atom bomb. at the far end to my right, i colleague mark kramer. the director of cold war studies at harvard. i would like to start, if you don't mind, with the history of the rosenberg case. and as professor claire should talk to us. >> john haynes, we have co-authored so many books we can't remember who writes what. john will offer a brief pre-seed of the biography of the case. i would like to take a minute and mention something i don't think will be addressed directly by any of my colleagues. i am fascinated by what the rosenberg case illustrates
ronald raydosh, the senior adjunct fellow at the hudson institute. he has written widely about the rosenberg case. including a book he co-authored with joyce milton called the rosenberg file. stephen is the senior washington editor for bio century.com and the author of engineering communism, how to american spies founded the soviet silica and valley. he has published several major articles on the rosenberg case. alan horn bloom. he is the author of the invisible harry gold. the man who gave the...
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Mar 14, 2015
03/15
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CSPAN
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these relationships are an essential adjunct to diplomacy. and by working with some of these services in building their capabilities, we have helped them become better prepared to tackle the challenges that threaten us all. cia's role in enhancing the capacity of our foreign partners is part of a team effort across our government. just as the defense department helps train foreign militaries and the justice department assists in developing criminal justice systems, cia works with many of our liaison services to build their skills, tradecraft and technology. to be sure, if we are to work with a broad range of services around the globe, we must also focus on enhancing professionalism and commitment to the ethics of intelligence. we advocate core principles and practices that are indispensable to any intelligence agency, like shunning involvement in the political process, maintaining strict independence and objectivity, and adhering to international norms. with cia's support, i have seen counterparts develop into sophisticated and effective part
these relationships are an essential adjunct to diplomacy. and by working with some of these services in building their capabilities, we have helped them become better prepared to tackle the challenges that threaten us all. cia's role in enhancing the capacity of our foreign partners is part of a team effort across our government. just as the defense department helps train foreign militaries and the justice department assists in developing criminal justice systems, cia works with many of our...
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25
Mar 9, 2015
03/15
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case, being sabrina corlette from the center on health insurance reforms, and in her spare time, an adjunct at georgetown university's health policy institute. emphasizing protective for consumers. we have asked her to share with us her observations on requirements that jen mentioned that individuals have coverage and subsidies to make it more affordable. sabrina. >> thank you. as ed mentioned, i will talk about the three pillars of -- three essential legs. the responsibility requirement or mandate. and the financial assistance available for people to buy the private coverage and make it more affordable. first, the insurance market reforms. generally, when you look at polling on these reforms, as taken individually, they tend to be very popular and very popular across the political spectrum. they were implemented in two primary phases, the first phase was implemented just a few months after the law was enacted in 2010. it included as we but reforms that include -- a suite of reforms that include allowing young adult up to age 26 to stay on their parents policies. a ban on lifetime and annua
case, being sabrina corlette from the center on health insurance reforms, and in her spare time, an adjunct at georgetown university's health policy institute. emphasizing protective for consumers. we have asked her to share with us her observations on requirements that jen mentioned that individuals have coverage and subsidies to make it more affordable. sabrina. >> thank you. as ed mentioned, i will talk about the three pillars of -- three essential legs. the responsibility requirement...
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Mar 6, 2015
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. >> i am senior scholar at an academy help adjunct member at george washington. they were available to cover people who were not insured for qualified health centers and disproportionate share payments to hospitals. i believe those were reduced or cut off in the aca because the presumption was everybody would be covered. i was suffering that the status was and what is happening in the state and if they are reduced, what is happening in the state they still have uninsured. >> well, currently, the disproportionate share hospital payment is scheduled to be reduced, but reduction had not yet gone into place and the administration is charged with trying to develop a formula for how they would be reduced over time. clearly those provisions were put into the lot with the expectation that all states would be expanded by medicaid pro-program and now that it remains a state choice that kind of provision a little bit down the road being fixed or looked at. the availability of community-based services in the community health centers on a free 30 program as you mentioned with
. >> i am senior scholar at an academy help adjunct member at george washington. they were available to cover people who were not insured for qualified health centers and disproportionate share payments to hospitals. i believe those were reduced or cut off in the aca because the presumption was everybody would be covered. i was suffering that the status was and what is happening in the state and if they are reduced, what is happening in the state they still have uninsured. >> well,...
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Mar 7, 2015
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case, being sabrina corlette from the center on health insurance reforms, and in her spare time, an adjunctt georgetown university's health policy institute. emphasizing protective for consumers. we have asked her to share with us her observations on requirements that jen mentioned that individuals have coverage and subsidies to make it more affordable. sabrina. >> thank you. as ed mentioned, i will talk about the three pillars of -- three essential legs. the responsibility requirement or mandate. and the financial assistance available for people to buy the private coverage and make it more affordable. first, the insurance market reforms. generally, when you look at polling on these reforms, as taken individually, they tend to be very popular and very popular across the political spectrum. they were implemented in two primary phases, the first phase was implemented just a few months after the law was enacted in 2010. it included as we but reforms that include -- a suite of reforms that include allowing young adult up to age 26 to stay on their parents policies. a ban on lifetime and annual
case, being sabrina corlette from the center on health insurance reforms, and in her spare time, an adjunctt georgetown university's health policy institute. emphasizing protective for consumers. we have asked her to share with us her observations on requirements that jen mentioned that individuals have coverage and subsidies to make it more affordable. sabrina. >> thank you. as ed mentioned, i will talk about the three pillars of -- three essential legs. the responsibility requirement or...
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Mar 16, 2015
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this is a very important adjunct, really, a center of support and education that helps educate school food service folks from across the country. mississippi itself, the state agency in mississippi gets it that it is important for us to promote and support healthy meals, because kids learn better . there's lots of research on that front. especially these days -- i mentioned at the outset, there are 14 million american students who have breakfast at school each day. that alone, as we often hear, is the most important meal of the day, can make a difference. i have heard it from classroom teachers principals, fewer kids missing school days, fewer kids complaining of headaches stomach aches, being disruptive in class, all associated with healthy meals. when she went down that list of today's menu, we encourage schools, by the way, to put their menus on the web so that parents and grandparents, as he was able to, can take a look at what kids are having that weaker that day. -- that week for that day. i'm confident that the meals provided in schools unquestionably are better than they were
this is a very important adjunct, really, a center of support and education that helps educate school food service folks from across the country. mississippi itself, the state agency in mississippi gets it that it is important for us to promote and support healthy meals, because kids learn better . there's lots of research on that front. especially these days -- i mentioned at the outset, there are 14 million american students who have breakfast at school each day. that alone, as we often hear,...
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Mar 19, 2015
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and all of you are all welcome to come and be adjuncts at fordham. >> well thank you. unpaid.. >>> coming up the ceo of msg leaves for sotheby's. we're going to ask mario gabelli about the move and what it means for msg and more. and in a bit, boone pickens joins us to discuss the reentscent price moves in black gold. and how he wants to fix america's energy problems. we'll be right back. organic food stocks schwab can help. with a trading specialist just a tap away. what's on your mind lisa? i'd like to talk about a trade idea. let's hear it. [ male announcer ] see how schwab can help light a way forward. so you can make your move wherever you are. and start working on your next big idea. ♪ ♪ boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is floods do happen. protect what matters. call the number on your screen or visit the website to learn more. no
and all of you are all welcome to come and be adjuncts at fordham. >> well thank you. unpaid.. >>> coming up the ceo of msg leaves for sotheby's. we're going to ask mario gabelli about the move and what it means for msg and more. and in a bit, boone pickens joins us to discuss the reentscent price moves in black gold. and how he wants to fix america's energy problems. we'll be right back. organic food stocks schwab can help. with a trading specialist just a tap away. what's on...
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Mar 16, 2015
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this is a very important adjunct, really, a center of support and education that helps educate schoolood service folks from across the country. mississippi itself, the state agency in mississippi gets it that it is important for us to promote and support healthy meals, because kids learn better . there's lots of research on that front. especially these days -- i mentioned at the outset, there are 14 million american students who have breakfast at school each day. that alone, as we often hear, is the most important meal of the day, can make a difference. i have heard it from classroom teachers principals, fewer kids missing school days, fewer kids complaining of headaches stomach aches, being disruptive in class, all associated with healthy meals. when she went down that list of today's menu, we encourage schools, by the way, to put their menus on the web so that parents and grandparents, as he was able to, can take a look at what kids are having that weaker that day. -- that week for that day. i'm confident that the meals provided in schools unquestionably are better than they were ye
this is a very important adjunct, really, a center of support and education that helps educate schoolood service folks from across the country. mississippi itself, the state agency in mississippi gets it that it is important for us to promote and support healthy meals, because kids learn better . there's lots of research on that front. especially these days -- i mentioned at the outset, there are 14 million american students who have breakfast at school each day. that alone, as we often hear,...