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115
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
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FOXNEWSW
tv
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bile is used by the body to help digest fat.n you eat a fatty meal the gallbladder squeezes out bile. if there are stones what can happen is the gallbladder tries to squeeze but it can't. >> nothing comes out. >> nothing comes out and people get abdominal pain every time they eat a fatty meal. >> what they do these days is take the gallbladder out. >> that's right and about 750,000 people every year in the united states get their gallbladder out. but there are other possibilities for ways to get rid of those gallstones. >> that are much simpler than surgery. >> surgery is not as bad as it used to be with the laproscopic techniques. >> but you want your gallbladder. >>s that a function. i'd rather have a gall blader that worked well than no gallbladd gallbladder. >> what do we do in terms of cleansing to help the gallbladder and help the liver to function better? >> the liver/gallbladder flush has been around for a while. >> what is it? explain it to us. >> there's a lot of variations on the proceed eyre but the bottom line the i
bile is used by the body to help digest fat.n you eat a fatty meal the gallbladder squeezes out bile. if there are stones what can happen is the gallbladder tries to squeeze but it can't. >> nothing comes out. >> nothing comes out and people get abdominal pain every time they eat a fatty meal. >> what they do these days is take the gallbladder out. >> that's right and about 750,000 people every year in the united states get their gallbladder out. but there are other...
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131
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
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FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 131
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most people don't know where it is in the body. an unelt healthy liver could be keeping you overweight. first up, lately a fight has raged between the experts who say we should work out long and hard and the experts who say five minutes a at a time is all we need. so i'm going to propose a truce. here is a third theory which i say i agree with, tony. tell us, first people say you work out really long and hard, and you get this hard body, and other people are saying five minutes at a time. i find if i work out five minutes at a time on a certain part of my body, i get better results. >> you do, because it's the work you do within those five minutes. most people rest and don't get their heart rate up. today we're doing something really simple that you can do every day for five minutes. it targets your quad, your gluts, your problem areas. >> show me, show me. especially butt, hips, my thighs. >> yes. >> why is it we have to give up our miniskirts when we become 40? it's like the legs go, tell me what i can do here. >> here's a piece
most people don't know where it is in the body. an unelt healthy liver could be keeping you overweight. first up, lately a fight has raged between the experts who say we should work out long and hard and the experts who say five minutes a at a time is all we need. so i'm going to propose a truce. here is a third theory which i say i agree with, tony. tell us, first people say you work out really long and hard, and you get this hard body, and other people are saying five minutes at a time. i...
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239
Nov 24, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 239
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another body.l like this is patrick's body here, you know. oh, my god. >> but if he is one of the three missing children, the chances are strong that he was 11-year-old patrick baltazar -- >> mrs. baltazar and her husband went to the funeral home to identify their child. >> they told me he had struggled, you know, for his life. and seeing the print -- the rope print across his neck. all the way around in the front. ♪ >> at patrick baltazar's funeral, she would insist on an open casket. >> i just wanted the world to see that this child could have been anybody's child. >> patrick's fifth grade classmates wrote a poem read at his funeral, this from local tv coverage that day. >> patrick baltazar, our school mate, you came to school though sometimes late, but you were never mean to anyone. you tried to help people and thought it was fun. then one night, one terrible night, you didn't come home, not even at daylight. something's happened to that boy, the people said, patrick is missing. is patrick dead?
another body.l like this is patrick's body here, you know. oh, my god. >> but if he is one of the three missing children, the chances are strong that he was 11-year-old patrick baltazar -- >> mrs. baltazar and her husband went to the funeral home to identify their child. >> they told me he had struggled, you know, for his life. and seeing the print -- the rope print across his neck. all the way around in the front. ♪ >> at patrick baltazar's funeral, she would insist...
95
95
Nov 10, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 95
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most people don't know where it was is in the body. do you? do you know an unhealthy liver could be causing you to be overweight? we explore several options to keep you healthy and fit. a lot have to do with the liver. >>> lately a fight has raged between experts who say we should work out long and hard and the experts who say five minutes at a time is all we need. i'm going to propose a truce. here we me is tony greco of greco lean and fit to propose a third theory which i say i agree with, tony. so tell us, what -- first people say you work out really long and hard, you get this hard body and others people are saying five minutes at a time. i find if i work out five minutes at a time on a certain part of my body, i get better results. >> you do, because it's the work you do within those five minutes. most people rest and don't get their heart rate up. today we're doing something really simple that you can do every day for five minutes. you'll target your quads, your gluts, your problem areas. >> he's going to tell us how to get rid of the ho
most people don't know where it was is in the body. do you? do you know an unhealthy liver could be causing you to be overweight? we explore several options to keep you healthy and fit. a lot have to do with the liver. >>> lately a fight has raged between experts who say we should work out long and hard and the experts who say five minutes at a time is all we need. i'm going to propose a truce. here we me is tony greco of greco lean and fit to propose a third theory which i say i agree...
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121
Nov 15, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 121
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of collecting the bodies. there is a lot to tell you about. increasing humanitarian assistance has been arriving in tacloban and elsewhere but piling up at airports. the problem now seems to be distributing it, getting it in trucks to get the aid out, to get it out safely, to get it out efficiently and to get it out to those who need it most. the needs are great. there are millions of people who are in need of assistance, food, and water and shelter. sometimes all three of those at once and it's not always just people in far away communities. this is sometimes people within, you know, half a mile or a few blocks from the airport in tacloban. they have not been getting assistance. people are living next to the bodies of their dead children, still nearly now a week since the storm. we have a lot of reporting tonight but first i want to go to tacloban, to nick paton walsh what is responding by. from what you're seeing on the ground and talking and hearing from officials, what is the latest on relief efforts there
of collecting the bodies. there is a lot to tell you about. increasing humanitarian assistance has been arriving in tacloban and elsewhere but piling up at airports. the problem now seems to be distributing it, getting it in trucks to get the aid out, to get it out safely, to get it out efficiently and to get it out to those who need it most. the needs are great. there are millions of people who are in need of assistance, food, and water and shelter. sometimes all three of those at once and...
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147
Nov 10, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 147
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it triggered the exhumation of arafat's body for testing. and it sparked a french murder inquiry. >> it's a very complicated case. it has politics, intelligence, conspiracies... >> in the search for the facts, we've faced fierce opposition. and we've been placed under close surveillance. >> are you following me? >> go to your room! but now, we have the final results. >> and our investigation answers a question that's haunted the middle east for nearly a decade: what killed yasser arafat? >> what we've got now is definitely a smoking gun... >> you revealed the crime of the century. >> when yasser arafat died in 2004, most palestinians thought it was murder. but when he was buried, so were the answers to their questions. today, the palestinian leadership insists yasser arafat was killed. >> the murder of arafat and it is a murder even though we don't yet know exactly who, where, when. he couldn't have shrunk and died without a substance that they could not identify. >> ever since president arafat died, in my heart i knew he was killed. >> ther
it triggered the exhumation of arafat's body for testing. and it sparked a french murder inquiry. >> it's a very complicated case. it has politics, intelligence, conspiracies... >> in the search for the facts, we've faced fierce opposition. and we've been placed under close surveillance. >> are you following me? >> go to your room! but now, we have the final results. >> and our investigation answers a question that's haunted the middle east for nearly a decade:...
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153
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 153
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she has found the body of her husband. and shows us the bodies of three of her children.he kids as best she can. now she searches for her three other children. she doesn't believe they survived the storm. >> where will you sleep tonight? >> here in the street. anywhere. i don't know where i go. >> in tacloban, there isn't anyplace to go. juanita martinez is living in a makeshift shelter. his daughter and dwife are covered with sacks nearby. juanita cooks some rice and noodles for his neighbors. one of the men tells us he wants to call his mother in manila. he's desperate to tell her that he survived but his wife and two other children are dead. we dial her number on our satellite phone. they're gone, all gone, he says. i don't know why this happened to me. he won't find answers here in tacloban. he'll only find loss, he'll only find misery. with so little help, that is just not going away. just about everybody you meet in neighborhoods around here seems to have lost somebody or is searching for somebody. i met more and more. even after shooting that, we met another woman
she has found the body of her husband. and shows us the bodies of three of her children.he kids as best she can. now she searches for her three other children. she doesn't believe they survived the storm. >> where will you sleep tonight? >> here in the street. anywhere. i don't know where i go. >> in tacloban, there isn't anyplace to go. juanita martinez is living in a makeshift shelter. his daughter and dwife are covered with sacks nearby. juanita cooks some rice and noodles...
4,824
4.8K
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
WBFF
tv
eye 4,824
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take your body to the next level with a mind-blowing, head-to-toe, body-sculpting workout.all you s hip hop abs workout calendar. it shows you which workout to do each day. no guesswork-- just have fun dancing for maximum ab-flattening results. and to accelerate your results, shaun personally created a step-by-step nutrition guide, fied with healthy foods, mes and recipes, all designed to help you lose weight and burn inches off your waist. it gets even better! you'll also get these three bonus gifts. bonus number one: hips, buns and thighs, to slim your hips, trim your thighs, and lift your booty, so you can get back into your skinny jeans fast. bonus number 2: shaun t's results on the run fast food guide. he shows you healthy food choices, so you can still get great abs even when you're on the go. and bonus number three: shaun t's also including his amazing 6-day slimdown program. so you can you lose up to three inches off your waist in just the first six days. >> in the first six days of hip hop abs, i've lost four pounds and thr inches off my waist without doing one cru
take your body to the next level with a mind-blowing, head-to-toe, body-sculpting workout.all you s hip hop abs workout calendar. it shows you which workout to do each day. no guesswork-- just have fun dancing for maximum ab-flattening results. and to accelerate your results, shaun personally created a step-by-step nutrition guide, fied with healthy foods, mes and recipes, all designed to help you lose weight and burn inches off your waist. it gets even better! you'll also get these three bonus...
1,239
1.2K
Nov 12, 2013
11/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 1,239
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.] >> ¿que tiene zumba exhilarate body shaping system que lo hace tan efectivo?ta cientificamente comprobado que los dvds zumba fitness queman hasta 1,000 calorias por sesion! y ni siquiera te das cuenta, es como estar en una fiesta donde estas sonriendo y sudando desde el principio hasta el final. estoy aqui con la estrella de zumba fitness kass martin, una de nuestras instructoras extraordinarias en los dvds exhilarate. kass, ¿que tan faciles hace zumba? >> zumba esta diseÑado para el exito. es facil, divertido, para todo edad o estado fisico. >> entonces no hay que tener experiencia en baile o en ejercicio. de verdad es para todos. >> ¿te muestre un paso? >> me encantaria. >> vamos, ¿te voy a mostrar la marcha merengue? asi... y ve de lado a lado, pon un poco de ritmo en tus pasos. >> whoo! >> el abdomen apretado y tonificado, no mas en el piso. muy bien! ahora vamos a agregarle un poco mas de ejercicio a esto. >> aqui vamos. >> movemos los brazos lado a lado, aqui vamos. estas ejercitando el torso, quemando calorias, vas a ver la definicion en tus brazos. >>
.] >> ¿que tiene zumba exhilarate body shaping system que lo hace tan efectivo?ta cientificamente comprobado que los dvds zumba fitness queman hasta 1,000 calorias por sesion! y ni siquiera te das cuenta, es como estar en una fiesta donde estas sonriendo y sudando desde el principio hasta el final. estoy aqui con la estrella de zumba fitness kass martin, una de nuestras instructoras extraordinarias en los dvds exhilarate. kass, ¿que tan faciles hace zumba? >> zumba esta diseÑado...
129
129
Nov 24, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 129
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do you want to put a synthetic drug in your body? today nutrition expert david wolf is back with tips on how you can naturally ease your seasonal sniffles. this is the quicksilver cash back card from capital one. it's not the "fumbling around with rotating categories" card. it's not the etting blindsided by limits" card. it's the no-game-playing, no-earning-limit-having, deep-bomb-throwing, give-me-the-ball-and-i'll-take- it-to-the-house, cash back card. this is the quicksilver cash card from capital one. unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, everywhere, every single day. so let me ask you... at's in your wallet? how do you react when you first see this? it looks kind of like a dancer? reality check: some 4g lte coverage maps don't really look like maps. seems like maybe... a bunch of berries. a witch-like shrew. this one feels more empty. i'm seeing america, but a lot of it is missing. what do you see here? clearly a picture of the united states. check the map. rizon's superfast 4g lte is the most reliable, and in morplaces th
do you want to put a synthetic drug in your body? today nutrition expert david wolf is back with tips on how you can naturally ease your seasonal sniffles. this is the quicksilver cash back card from capital one. it's not the "fumbling around with rotating categories" card. it's not the etting blindsided by limits" card. it's the no-game-playing, no-earning-limit-having, deep-bomb-throwing, give-me-the-ball-and-i'll-take- it-to-the-house, cash back card. this is the quicksilver...
95
95
Nov 3, 2013
11/13
by
KPIX
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
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he said that medicine needs a new philosophy to take into account body and soul. you can think of of ways that would have we would not be talking about an assembly line kind medicine that a lot of people complain about if you think of patients as persons, the whole idea that you can deal with problems very quickly or routinely or -- the patient is informed by an individual, spiritual soul and it has its own unique richness and internal life that needs to be addressed and respected and embraced. >> bottom line, is if you're treating a person, you have to treat the whole person includinged individual soul? >> that's correct. but as a physical, you have to be could go sure that you don't overstep what your role is. but you're aware that every illness is really a threat to the integrity of the body and the soul. and, therefore, it has repercussions on the spiritual and the physical. and sometimes you have to address it. but frequently there may be a dimension of involvement of the -- an eif he can of the illness -- the effect on the illness on the spiritual dimension
he said that medicine needs a new philosophy to take into account body and soul. you can think of of ways that would have we would not be talking about an assembly line kind medicine that a lot of people complain about if you think of patients as persons, the whole idea that you can deal with problems very quickly or routinely or -- the patient is informed by an individual, spiritual soul and it has its own unique richness and internal life that needs to be addressed and respected and embraced....
142
142
Nov 4, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 142
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but to make sure the body of law and policy comply with these minimum standards. this u.n. declaration asks each nation to implement these human rights standards in partnership with indigenous peoples to go forward arm in arm in consultation, in good faith with indigenous people to provide funding to indigenous people for technical assistance to go about implementing these standards. and i think that if we look around the world i think that we will see the rest of the world embarking on this implementation process. how was this declaration made? it was created in the u.n. human rights free-market through open and transparent process these. it wasn't negotiated by big spending lobbyists as we see in the dark corners of congress but in a fair and open in the light of day over and almost 30 year process as it moved step by step through the human rights remark, nations and diplomats commenting, refining, negotiating alongside indigenous peoples, pioneers to access the international realm for the first time in 200 years to participate in the violence of these standards. the work
but to make sure the body of law and policy comply with these minimum standards. this u.n. declaration asks each nation to implement these human rights standards in partnership with indigenous peoples to go forward arm in arm in consultation, in good faith with indigenous people to provide funding to indigenous people for technical assistance to go about implementing these standards. and i think that if we look around the world i think that we will see the rest of the world embarking on this...
101
101
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 101
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body. i will show you a sequence here. this is about 3000 basis -- dna bases. each of our cells has about 3 billion dna base pairs. what i'm showing you here is one millionth of the entire human genome. if i were to show you a picture like this one every second, it would take me 12 days to show you the entire human genome. that is the amount of information we are looking at when we try to sequence the whole human genome and is one of our major goals today, to provide whole sequences of humans and other animals, as well. that sequence allows us to understand more about our diseases.tions to with 90% accuracy, if i had your dna sequence i could predict your eyecolor. if we had a saliva or blood samples from a crime scene, we can predict certain physical traits with some degree of accuracy from the dna sequence. for a long time, the barrier to obtaining the sequences was cost. this slide shows you the cost of the first human genome, sequenced in 2000 three. the cost of the human genome project
body. i will show you a sequence here. this is about 3000 basis -- dna bases. each of our cells has about 3 billion dna base pairs. what i'm showing you here is one millionth of the entire human genome. if i were to show you a picture like this one every second, it would take me 12 days to show you the entire human genome. that is the amount of information we are looking at when we try to sequence the whole human genome and is one of our major goals today, to provide whole sequences of humans...
251
251
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 251
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she has found the body of her husband and shows us the bodies of three of her children.ed the kids as best she can. now she searches for her three other children. she doesn't believe they survived the storm. >> where will you sleep tonight? >> here in the street. anywhere. i don't know where i go. >> in tacloban, there isn't any place to go. juanita is living in a makeshift shelter. his wife gina and daughter are covered with sacks nearby. i really want somebody to collect their bodies, he says. i want to know where they're taken so i can light a candle for them. he cooks some rice and noodles for his neighbors. one of the men tells us he wants to call his mother in manila. he's desperate to tell her he and his daughter survived though his wife and two other children are dead. we dial her number on a satellite phone. >> they're gone, they're all gone, he says. >> i don't know why this happened to me. he won't find answers here in tacloban. you'll only find loss. you'll only find misery. with so little help that is just not going away. >> just about everybody you meet in
she has found the body of her husband and shows us the bodies of three of her children.ed the kids as best she can. now she searches for her three other children. she doesn't believe they survived the storm. >> where will you sleep tonight? >> here in the street. anywhere. i don't know where i go. >> in tacloban, there isn't any place to go. juanita is living in a makeshift shelter. his wife gina and daughter are covered with sacks nearby. i really want somebody to collect...
251
251
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 251
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for a body in motion.isit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. >>> fall and football they, of course, go hand in hand and despite the season that's been wrowgt with lawsuits and scandals according to a new cnn america's love for the nfl, well, it's as strong as ever. it's a whole different kind of game when it comes to our kids playing football, however, and with us is andy schultz from bleacher report and cnn sports. we've been talking about for a long time, what's interesting, though, it doesn't seem to affect the fans' love for the game. there was some polling data that showed 60% of the people don't view the nfl any less favorably. as a sports reporter, what is your sense? has this affected how you report? >> do you know what, it seems like no matter what the nfl, it's untouchable when it comes to these kind of scandals. these have been two of the worst pr years ever for the nfl with the concussion lawsuit, bounty-gate and two lock-out and aaron hernandez trial, yet the numbers are higher t
for a body in motion.isit celebrex.com and ask your doctor about celebrex. >>> fall and football they, of course, go hand in hand and despite the season that's been wrowgt with lawsuits and scandals according to a new cnn america's love for the nfl, well, it's as strong as ever. it's a whole different kind of game when it comes to our kids playing football, however, and with us is andy schultz from bleacher report and cnn sports. we've been talking about for a long time, what's...
246
246
Nov 23, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 246
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well, one athlete has found a simple way to clean the body inside and out. so anybody who knows me knows i love hockey, and in particular, hockey players. but not just any hockey players. i like smart, interesting hockey players. and that is just what i have here. i have a very smart and interesting hockey player, why don't we walk over to him and find out why he is so smart and so interesting. >> hi, how are you? >> in the meantime, stanley cup player, hockey player, obviously. and you do something very special to keep healthy and to detox, i have heard. because you like to drink beer. anyway, you like to detox in this. but tell us about your particular regime. >> well, i've been doing it for 30 years. >> what have you been doing? >> the cycle -- you see this is a clean, healthy -- the idea behind the infrared is the ceramic heating elements will open up your pores quicker than the electric one. and from the surface out, getting rid of the toxins, whether it is food or booze. i talked to aaron downey -- >> i have all of these stanley cup rings around me, i
well, one athlete has found a simple way to clean the body inside and out. so anybody who knows me knows i love hockey, and in particular, hockey players. but not just any hockey players. i like smart, interesting hockey players. and that is just what i have here. i have a very smart and interesting hockey player, why don't we walk over to him and find out why he is so smart and so interesting. >> hi, how are you? >> in the meantime, stanley cup player, hockey player, obviously. and...
246
246
Nov 12, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 246
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decomposing bodies are everywhere. people walking down the streets covering their faces because of the smell on the side of the road, in the water, under debris, in the water, bodies. more than 600,000 displaced after swaths of cities and towns were utterly destroyed. many still don't have any kind of communication or power making hunger grow. aid workers, meantime, have been trying to get in emergency supplies including food and water and desperately needed fuel. the problem is transportation is almost impossible, and they haven't been able to get that to anybody. tacloban, a city of a quarter million people is in utter disarray tonight. the airport is still closed. but it is one of the buildings still standing in that city. that's where our paula hancocks is out front tonight. i know it was difficult for you to get there, to get around. what's the latest? >> reporter: well, erin, it's been a fourth very miserable night since the storm for all the survivors. torrential rain is making a very bad situation even worse. m
decomposing bodies are everywhere. people walking down the streets covering their faces because of the smell on the side of the road, in the water, under debris, in the water, bodies. more than 600,000 displaced after swaths of cities and towns were utterly destroyed. many still don't have any kind of communication or power making hunger grow. aid workers, meantime, have been trying to get in emergency supplies including food and water and desperately needed fuel. the problem is transportation...
124
124
Nov 16, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 124
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a body by laying your hands on it. what do you do? >> i use hands to mall nip plate the tissue maybe in a i think that a sculpture was. i'm going into and moving the muscles and actually breaking some of the fascia structure. helping the muscles relate differently to each other and to the bones having the movement come back. rejanuviaating the tissue. combining what i do with my hands with acupuncture, very effective. >> you call yourself a reiki acupuncturist? >> yes did i premed and i realized through internship with a pathologist, the one who did all the autopsies at the morgue and i worked with him and helped the dissections and the autopsy procedures, realized. i wanted to be working with living tissue and people from an alternative approach rather than cutting into the body because i just saw that there was a different opportunity there. >> but that kind of training, did it teach you something about how the body relates internally and externally? >> yes. the path physiology has served me very well understanding h
a body by laying your hands on it. what do you do? >> i use hands to mall nip plate the tissue maybe in a i think that a sculpture was. i'm going into and moving the muscles and actually breaking some of the fascia structure. helping the muscles relate differently to each other and to the bones having the movement come back. rejanuviaating the tissue. combining what i do with my hands with acupuncture, very effective. >> you call yourself a reiki acupuncturist? >> yes did i...
125
125
Nov 24, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
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eye 125
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. >> you didn't throw a body? >> definitely not a body, no. >> his story. >> i crossed the bridge. i turned off briefly after i crossed the bridge at what i call a liquor store. >> williams said he pulled into the parking lot only to look up the phone number of a singer he was trying to locate at that hour. >> i turned back on the highway. i went to a starvin marvin store. i used the telephone and i came back. >> the call didn't go through. >> i got some recording this number is not in service. i said, this is a prank. >> this is the closest thing to an address he said he had for a singer he said was cheryl johnson. the fbi looked hard and could never find her. >> it says to me that cheryl johnson didn't exist and he made it up. >> williams says only after that call from a gas station did he turn around to cross back over the bridge again. police would stop him moments later. you said, i know this is about those boys, isn't it? >> correct. that's what i said. >> pretty damning statement, don't you think? >> no. i mean, the perception in atlanta was at the time kids were missing. an
. >> you didn't throw a body? >> definitely not a body, no. >> his story. >> i crossed the bridge. i turned off briefly after i crossed the bridge at what i call a liquor store. >> williams said he pulled into the parking lot only to look up the phone number of a singer he was trying to locate at that hour. >> i turned back on the highway. i went to a starvin marvin store. i used the telephone and i came back. >> the call didn't go through. >> i...
123
123
Nov 6, 2013
11/13
by
MSNBCW
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eye 123
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a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion.ng active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier. celebrex can be taken with or without food. and it's not a narcotic. you and your doctor should balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofen, naproxen and meloxicam have the same cardiovascular warning. they all may increase the chance of heart attack or stroke, which can lead to death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such as high blood pressure or when nsaids are taken for long periods. nsaids, like celebrex, increase the chance of serious skin or allergic reactions or stomach and intestine problems, such as bl
a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion.ng active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier....
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917
tv
eye 917
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is our body, are our bodies changing now. >> absolutely. >> stephen: because, you know, i thought evolutionvival of the fittest. >> well, to some extent it is, yes. so evolution is, occurs in multiple ways. one kind of evolution is that, natural selection what darwin wrote about, there is variation, some of the variations like you probably look a bit like your parents i imagine because you inherited genes from them. and then lots of siblings, some of you inherited different genes from your parents than other ones and some had more kids than others. and those of you who had genes that benefitted you in terms of having more offspring, are you going to pass those genes on preferentialally to the next generation so, that is natural selection. >> stephen: if you accept natural selection. >> exactly. >> stephen: because it is the theory of evolution and a assume that this book is on the pro theory side. >> absolutely. >> stephen: okay. a lot of books are against it, this is one-on-one side there are a lot againstxd it. >> at least i'm on the same side as the pope so it's okay. but anyway-- . >> s
is our body, are our bodies changing now. >> absolutely. >> stephen: because, you know, i thought evolutionvival of the fittest. >> well, to some extent it is, yes. so evolution is, occurs in multiple ways. one kind of evolution is that, natural selection what darwin wrote about, there is variation, some of the variations like you probably look a bit like your parents i imagine because you inherited genes from them. and then lots of siblings, some of you inherited different...
810
810
Nov 19, 2013
11/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 810
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, bury a body, unearth a body, dispose of a body. >> narrator: at walmart, she buys a roll of plastic rubber gloves, and a frappuccino. the next day, january 25th, smith and moore meet, and she hands over the handgun used to shoot shakespeare. it's a .38 caliber with a laser sight attached, registered in her name. she wants to make sure smith gets all her fingerprints off it. later that day, moore meets smith again to show him one more thing. she drives him to her home in plant city and takes him to the slab of concrete she paid to have poured a week after the lotto winner went missing. >> she got out of her truck, and she walked on top of the concrete with that iron piece of metal, and she said, "i'm gonna put this metal right where he's buried. >> narrator: confident he's got the killer, detective dave clark brings her in. she has another story to tell. she's caught the killer. it's her old buddy, greg smith. but her attempt to implicate him falls flat. >> everone of those meetings? >> mm-hmm. >> they've been recorded, dee dee. >> okay. >> now, the unfortunate thing is i think you k
, bury a body, unearth a body, dispose of a body. >> narrator: at walmart, she buys a roll of plastic rubber gloves, and a frappuccino. the next day, january 25th, smith and moore meet, and she hands over the handgun used to shoot shakespeare. it's a .38 caliber with a laser sight attached, registered in her name. she wants to make sure smith gets all her fingerprints off it. later that day, moore meets smith again to show him one more thing. she drives him to her home in plant city and...
160
160
Nov 7, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 160
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we provide the exact individualization that your body needs. before you invest in a mattress, discover the only bed clinically proven to relieve back pain and improve sleep quality. when we actually lower the sleep number setting to get the sleep number bed to conform to them, it's amazing the transition that you see with people. oh, that feels really good. it's hugging my body. they just look at you like you cured all the problems they've ever had. we hear it all the time: "i didn't know a bed could feel like this." oh yeah. during our veterans day sale, our queen mattress sets are now just $1299-our lowest price ever! save $400. plus special financing until 2015. the sleep number bed is more than just a mattress. you sleep on it, you'll understand. the extraordinary sleep number bed. costs about the same as an innerspring yet lasts twice as long. sale ends soon! only at one of our 425 sleep number stores nationwide. sleep number. comfort individualized. >>> breaking news tonight in the kendrick johnson case. newly released video from three do
we provide the exact individualization that your body needs. before you invest in a mattress, discover the only bed clinically proven to relieve back pain and improve sleep quality. when we actually lower the sleep number setting to get the sleep number bed to conform to them, it's amazing the transition that you see with people. oh, that feels really good. it's hugging my body. they just look at you like you cured all the problems they've ever had. we hear it all the time: "i didn't know...
108
108
Nov 5, 2013
11/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 108
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to get seven and given opposition strike in the body. as you should never speak again. often he wanted i'm not thrilled the dts that is likely to debut its ties to the u s funding the drone strike that killed friday by vegan cooking when i'm excellent at what see lawmakers also discussing a motion to block me to supply it time. and a cinema seat is set to meet army chief gen today scanning on monday that that cbc dawn newspaper said tennessee state was also attended the thing at the five ounces. the report said. after many trustee for over two years the nation's leading in some other washington the beginning to the patter of their abundance in our state's meeting with president back about a fortnight ago. mike tyson's changed once again pondering the canning offensive that ended on strike on friday the attack came a day after having seen she said talks are underway with some comment on the scene soon after assuming office the transition aides had won the mandate of the country's political spectrum and told them that love with the insurgents who have killed thousands of
to get seven and given opposition strike in the body. as you should never speak again. often he wanted i'm not thrilled the dts that is likely to debut its ties to the u s funding the drone strike that killed friday by vegan cooking when i'm excellent at what see lawmakers also discussing a motion to block me to supply it time. and a cinema seat is set to meet army chief gen today scanning on monday that that cbc dawn newspaper said tennessee state was also attended the thing at the five...
299
299
Nov 12, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 299
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quote 2
decomposing bodies are everywhere. people walking down the streets covering their faces because of the smell on the side of the road, in the fields, under debris, in the water, bodies. more than 600,000 displaced after swaths of cities and towns were utterly destroyed. many still don't have any kind of communication or power making hunger grow. aid workers have been trying to get in emergency supplies including food and water and desperately needed fuel. the problem is transportation is almost impossible, and they haven't been able to get that to anybody. tacloban, a city of a quarter million people are is in utter disarray tonight. the airport is still closed. but it is one of the buildings still standing in that city. that's your our paula hancocks is out front tonight. i know it was difficult for you to get there, to get around. what's the latest? >> reporter: well, erin, it's been a fourth very miserable night since the storm for all the survivors. torrential rain is making a very bad situation even worse. many peo
decomposing bodies are everywhere. people walking down the streets covering their faces because of the smell on the side of the road, in the fields, under debris, in the water, bodies. more than 600,000 displaced after swaths of cities and towns were utterly destroyed. many still don't have any kind of communication or power making hunger grow. aid workers have been trying to get in emergency supplies including food and water and desperately needed fuel. the problem is transportation is almost...
94
94
Nov 10, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 94
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and legislative bodies, what we are talking about here is a legislative meeting of a legislative body, and it would be -- it would be incongruous, as this court said in marsh, if congress could have legislative prayers and the states couldn't. it would be equally incongruous >> well, the essence of the argument is we've always done it this way, which has some -- some force to it. but it seems to me that your argument begins and ends there. >> no, your honor. i mean, as we -- as we said in our brief, the principles that undergird the establishment clause are equally consistent with the position we're advancing here. as the -- as your opinion in the county of allegheny case indicates, the fundamental -- the core of establishment clause concern is coercion or conduct that is so extreme that it leads to the establishment of a religion because it is putting the government squarely behind one faith to the exclusion of others, and that's clearly not not what's going on here. >> may i ask you about the individual plaintiffs here. what do we know about them? they obviously have appeared at pro
and legislative bodies, what we are talking about here is a legislative meeting of a legislative body, and it would be -- it would be incongruous, as this court said in marsh, if congress could have legislative prayers and the states couldn't. it would be equally incongruous >> well, the essence of the argument is we've always done it this way, which has some -- some force to it. but it seems to me that your argument begins and ends there. >> no, your honor. i mean, as we -- as we...
161
161
Nov 6, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 161
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had absorbed his decaying body. it rules out any outside contamination and they are determined that the body is that of arafat. this is a theory of poisoning person put forward last year and then they found that the blood and european stains were strongly contaminated. pplutonium. the samples were gathered when his body was unearthed in november of last year. three teams took 20 samples each. al jazeera has released the swiss team result. the russian team took samples amp being invited. and there is the team in france. the french results remain a secret but as they continue with the murder inquiry they now have new evidence, and the question is whether the palestinian authority shifts the case to the international court. then they'll finally see suspects throughout the trial and learn once and for all not only what killed yasser arafat, but who. >> let's talk about the widow of yasser arafat. let me ask you first of all, in his final days in paris did he have any idea that he had been poisoned? >> no, he looked very
had absorbed his decaying body. it rules out any outside contamination and they are determined that the body is that of arafat. this is a theory of poisoning person put forward last year and then they found that the blood and european stains were strongly contaminated. pplutonium. the samples were gathered when his body was unearthed in november of last year. three teams took 20 samples each. al jazeera has released the swiss team result. the russian team took samples amp being invited. and...
127
127
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 127
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and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> al jazeera america is the only news channel that brings you live news at the top of every hour. >> here are the headlines at this hour. >> only on al jazeera america. >> audiences are intelligent and they know that their >> a special america tonight report. guilty of a violent crime... >> desperate people do desperate things... >> but when is it too much time? >> i heard the word life, but i didn't understand that meant i was gonna die in prison... >> could a landmark ruling give him a second chance? >> my day will come... >> a controversial special report... >> i was completely re-traumatized by the fear of this offender... >> locked up for life america tonight 9 eastern, tonight, on al jazeera america. >> okay, i'm phil with lindsa
and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> al jazeera america is the only news channel that brings you live news at the top of every hour. >> here are the headlines at this hour. >> only on al jazeera america. >>...
117
117
Nov 17, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 117
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and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> while you were asleep, news was happening. >> here are the stories we're following. >> find out what happened and what to expect. >> international outrage. >> a day of political posturing. >> every morning from 5 to 9am al jazeera america brings you more us and global news than any other american news channel. >> tell us exactly what is behind this story. >> from more sources around the world. >> the situation has intensified here at the border. >> start every morning, every day, 5am to 9 eastern with al jazeera america. on august 20th, al jazeera america introduced >> okay, i'm phil with lindsay and costa, costa, what have you got going for us? >> let's take a look. 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled prosthetic army. he's t
and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> while you were asleep, news was happening. >> here are the stories we're following. >> find out what happened and what to expect. >> international outrage. >> a day of...
180
180
Nov 23, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 180
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. >> they are finding bodies in tanauan, and they are burying bodies in a mass grave. this is where medecins sans frontieres is putting up a new hospital. city hall, where there's a temporary hospital, is too damaged. >> there's waterfalling everywhere. no electricity. >> louise johnston is the field coordinate scror -- coordinator. >> we have an emergency room, we'll refer some on. there's a paediatric area for pregnant women and child birth. >> using tents that inflate, medecins sans frontieres can get a fully functioning hospital up in less than a day. >> in the courtyard of bethany hospital in down-tune tacloban, 12 miles up the coast from tanauan, they'll run an er and surgical center. >> we have been running all night. there are many that can't wait. >> medecins sans frontieres will stay here until tacloban rebuilds hospitals like bethany. given the scale of destruction, they probably won't leave soon. >> a third section of a supermarket collapsed today in lativia. there it goes. more than 50 people died in the original collapse yesterday. there were no new injur
. >> they are finding bodies in tanauan, and they are burying bodies in a mass grave. this is where medecins sans frontieres is putting up a new hospital. city hall, where there's a temporary hospital, is too damaged. >> there's waterfalling everywhere. no electricity. >> louise johnston is the field coordinate scror -- coordinator. >> we have an emergency room, we'll refer some on. there's a paediatric area for pregnant women and child birth. >> using tents that...
129
129
Nov 23, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 129
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quote 0
they are finding bodies, and trenches and mounds of dirt is where they were burying hundreds of bodies, but now they'll stop that. this is where medecins sans frontieres is putting up the new hospital because city hall where they set up the temporary hospital is too damaged. >> there's waterfalling, no electricity. we had the roof collapse. >> louise johnston is a field coordinator. >> we'll set up a hospital. we'll have a paid at rick ward and maternity section. there's no care for pregnant women and child birth. >> using tents that inmate in minutes a fully functional hospital is up and running in less than ta day. >> in the courtyard of the hospital in tacloban. 12 miles up the coast from tanauan, msf will run an er and surgical intake center. we have been working all night. people are it can wait. msf says they'll stay here until tacloban rebuilds hospitals like bethany. >> given the scale of the destruction. they won't be leaving any time soon. >> a third section of a supermarket collapsed in latvia. more than 50 died in the original collapse on thursday. the country's president c
they are finding bodies, and trenches and mounds of dirt is where they were burying hundreds of bodies, but now they'll stop that. this is where medecins sans frontieres is putting up the new hospital because city hall where they set up the temporary hospital is too damaged. >> there's waterfalling, no electricity. we had the roof collapse. >> louise johnston is a field coordinator. >> we'll set up a hospital. we'll have a paid at rick ward and maternity section. there's no...
269
269
Nov 16, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 269
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quote 1
there is still a lot of bodies, particularly bodies in debris that have not been collected. that grim task goes on and thankless work for the firefighters and others. i want to bring in damon maloney with doctors without boarders. he's in an organization that we worked with before. they have remarkable experience. in terms of the greatest needs, greatest priorities for you right now, what are they? >> anderson, at the moment i think it's a logistics problem at the moment. we're having trouble with access, electricity, fooder, water. it's really hard to help people if we don't have these things. we can't find transport. we can't find drivers. the population is basically leaving the city because it's really difficult to get any of these basic human rights. >> the -- we saw earlier in this bro broadcast that a man died essentially of a broken leg, infection spread of the broken leg. he died after being operated on. his wife was in a hospital downtown manually pumping air into his lungs because there was no one else, no nurses to give a hand. can people get care? because i saw a
there is still a lot of bodies, particularly bodies in debris that have not been collected. that grim task goes on and thankless work for the firefighters and others. i want to bring in damon maloney with doctors without boarders. he's in an organization that we worked with before. they have remarkable experience. in terms of the greatest needs, greatest priorities for you right now, what are they? >> anderson, at the moment i think it's a logistics problem at the moment. we're having...
89
89
Nov 21, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 89
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quote 0
-- which has taken place in this body. but before a senate majority assumes a power that no senate majority before us has assumed to change the rules at the will of the majority, before we do something that cannot easily be undone -- and we have now done it -- before we discard the uniqueness of this great institution, let us use the current rules and precedents of the senate to end the abuse of the filibuster. surely we owe that much to this great and unique institution. there was a conversation, which was a formal conversation, between the majority and the republican leaders just last january, and here's what the majority leader said. "in addition to the standing order," which is what we had adopted, "i will enforce existing rules to make the senate operate more efficiently. after reasonable notice, i will insist," he said, "that any senator who objects to consent requests or threatens to filibuster come to the floor and exercise his or her rights himself or herself. this will apply to all objectionobjections and unanimo
-- which has taken place in this body. but before a senate majority assumes a power that no senate majority before us has assumed to change the rules at the will of the majority, before we do something that cannot easily be undone -- and we have now done it -- before we discard the uniqueness of this great institution, let us use the current rules and precedents of the senate to end the abuse of the filibuster. surely we owe that much to this great and unique institution. there was a...
121
121
Nov 16, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 121
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quote 0
and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> audiences are intelligent and they know that their al jazeera investigates a man with many enimies... >> they told me they did not find anything... >> ...dies with no medical explanation... >> no liver cirrhosis... no traces of cancer... >> was he murdered? don't miss, what killed arafat? next and tomorrow the rivieting conclusion... >> one other thing points to this being an assassination... >> killing arafat tomorrow at 3pm et/12pm pt on al jazeera america >> okay, i'm phil with lindsay and costa, costa, what have you got going for us? >> let's take a look. 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled prosthetic army. he's trying to hit that $100,000 price point so more people can have access to prosthetics. >> where do you use your
and i'm used to bodies in trunks.first thought is you could take that out and have more room for luggage. >> you got to interview a very remarkable young man. >> 17 years old, he invented a mind-controlled bionic arm. kind of amazing. i can't wait to tell you about it when we get back. >> audiences are intelligent and they know that their al jazeera investigates a man with many enimies... >> they told me they did not find anything... >> ...dies with no medical...
1,705
1.7K
Nov 7, 2013
11/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 1,705
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tres estupendos regalos para ti, cuando pruebes nuestro nuevo exhilarate body shaping system. fitness. [♪...] >> estamos aqui en la convencion zumba fitness donde miles de fanaticos de zumba han viajado desde todo el mundo para celebrar su cambio de vida con zumba fitness. han perdido kilos de mas, aplanado y tonificado sus abdomenes, levantado sus gluteos, y han tonificado y adelgazado los muslos. han perdido centimetros en todo el cuerpo. se han vuelto mas saludables y sexys. >> un dia estaba viendo television y vi un infomercial de zumba fitness, que se veia muy divertido. compre los dvds y perdi 77 libras. pase de una talla 16 a una 6. ha cambiado mi vida completamente. tengo mas energia que nunca. >> los dvds de zumba fitness son divertidos, simples, son faciles de seguir y lo pasas bien. esta es mi foto antes, cuando pesaba 35 libras mas. pase de una talla 12 a una 4. tonifique mi cuerpo y tengo biceps y triceps. >> zumba fitness es tan facil! baje 75 libras. pase de una talla 18 a una 8. haces un excelente entrenamiento sin darte cuenta. [♪...] >> ¿que tiene zumba exhil
tres estupendos regalos para ti, cuando pruebes nuestro nuevo exhilarate body shaping system. fitness. [♪...] >> estamos aqui en la convencion zumba fitness donde miles de fanaticos de zumba han viajado desde todo el mundo para celebrar su cambio de vida con zumba fitness. han perdido kilos de mas, aplanado y tonificado sus abdomenes, levantado sus gluteos, y han tonificado y adelgazado los muslos. han perdido centimetros en todo el cuerpo. se han vuelto mas saludables y sexys. >>...
1,798
1.8K
Nov 10, 2013
11/13
by
WBFF
tv
eye 1,798
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quote 0
i' never felt this good, and i absolutely love my new body. t25, baby. >> with t25,ou get in,it it hard, and get it done -- no b.s., just results. annncert25 fas but you can't go from fat to f ernight. you get there in phases. your transformation begins with e alpha cye. start burning fat from your very first workout. >> a thiis alp a thiis your foundation and i need forte workou >> annncer: thenou move on to t beta roun where you cus on youcore and bld your s-pack. >> ba tas ito a whole ther level, and i really stted see l of denition in this area. this is ta, so i'moing a litt harder onou, and i nt you focus jusa lile b harder. come on. >> before 5, mworkt regimen would consist of a lot of looking at tv, saying, "wow, i should be working out." i just let myselgo since my 20s. i'd do oth programs. i'd ne insanit but it's t insanity. this is t25, something totally different. the combinatio of ves are diffent. everythi is differt.avto it's a monster. this one's a monster. you're gonna want touit, b there'gonna be ather exercise tgive whater bod
i' never felt this good, and i absolutely love my new body. t25, baby. >> with t25,ou get in,it it hard, and get it done -- no b.s., just results. annncert25 fas but you can't go from fat to f ernight. you get there in phases. your transformation begins with e alpha cye. start burning fat from your very first workout. >> a thiis alp a thiis your foundation and i need forte workou >> annncer: thenou move on to t beta roun where you cus on youcore and bld your s-pack. >>...
86
86
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 86
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and legislative bodies, what we are talking about here is a legislative meeting of a legislative body, and it would be -- it would be incongruous, as this court said in marsh, if congress could have legislative prayers and the states ouldn't. it would be equally incongruous >> well, the essence of the argument is we've always done it this way, which has some -- some force to it. but it seems to me that your argument begins and ends there. >> no, your honor. i mean, as we -- as we said in our brief, the principles that undergird the establishment clause are equally consistent with the position we're advancing here. as the -- as your opinion in the county of allegheny case indicates, the fundamental -- the core of establishment clause concern is coercion or conduct that is so extreme that it leads to the establishment of a religion because it is putting the government squarely behind one faith to the exclusion of others, and that's clearly not not what's going on here. >> may i ask you about the individual plaintiffs here. and what do we know about them? they obviously have appeared at
and legislative bodies, what we are talking about here is a legislative meeting of a legislative body, and it would be -- it would be incongruous, as this court said in marsh, if congress could have legislative prayers and the states ouldn't. it would be equally incongruous >> well, the essence of the argument is we've always done it this way, which has some -- some force to it. but it seems to me that your argument begins and ends there. >> no, your honor. i mean, as we -- as we...
336
336
Nov 17, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 336
favorite 0
quote 1
is it always wise to cut the body when it's injured? we always have to go for the most drastic measures first? when i fell and severely injured my shoulder and leg in a cement hole 8 feet deep, i couldn't walk. and there was no solution in sight because it was not getting any better, but cutting my shoulder to put it back together was not even an option i entertained because i had this woman's telephone number in my cell phone's speed dial. i opted for bare-handed surgery instead. i've asked elizabeth schultz to come on to enlighten us about this unbelievably effective way to deal with injuries. and she brought her patient, michael galvalini. elizabeth, you do not believe in cutting the body as a first option. you believe you can heal a body by laying your hands on it. what do you do? >> i use hands to manipulate the tissue maybe in a way that a sculptor would. i'm going into and moving the muscles and actually breaking some of the structure, helping the muscles relate to each other and to the bone and having the movement come back. i'm
is it always wise to cut the body when it's injured? we always have to go for the most drastic measures first? when i fell and severely injured my shoulder and leg in a cement hole 8 feet deep, i couldn't walk. and there was no solution in sight because it was not getting any better, but cutting my shoulder to put it back together was not even an option i entertained because i had this woman's telephone number in my cell phone's speed dial. i opted for bare-handed surgery instead. i've asked...
27
27
tv
eye 27
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to look at a body. why does someone can say this crime that he didn't do. you know has been so tired you know really like four hours sleep you know for three days and like. i try to go on or sleep you know. yes. it's very. prejudiced your mind also didn't go for it ok. if something happened with them. yes you're. one of. the ratio yes even when you're learning. something. anything religion is difficult for. the regime leaders gives them. yet. this form of questioning shows how an innocent man can be made to confess with no recourse whatsoever to violence psychology has thus become a powerful weapon in the hands of the police and frank was one of its deliberate victims. to prevent any possible excesses has given rise to a new kind of specialist the law expert. it's even inspired hollywood and its popular series lie to me because. certainly the small psychologist helps result crimes by observing body language and facial expressions it may be human nature so the truth is written for all of us. stand walters has been a lie expert for the past twenty five years.
to look at a body. why does someone can say this crime that he didn't do. you know has been so tired you know really like four hours sleep you know for three days and like. i try to go on or sleep you know. yes. it's very. prejudiced your mind also didn't go for it ok. if something happened with them. yes you're. one of. the ratio yes even when you're learning. something. anything religion is difficult for. the regime leaders gives them. yet. this form of questioning shows how an innocent man...
150
150
Nov 16, 2013
11/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 150
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quote 0
there's still a lot of bodies, particularly bodies in debris that have not yet been collected. that grim task goes on, and it is thankless work for all the fir firefighters and others who are doing in. i want to bring in damian maloney with doctors without border on the ground in tacloban. it's an organization we have worked with over the years. damian, what are the greatest priorities for you right now? >> anderson, at the moment i think it's a logistics problem at the moment. we're having trouble with access, with electricity, with food, with water. it's really hard to help people if we don't have any of these things. we can't find transport, can't find drivers. the population is basically leaving the city because it's really difficult to get any of these basic human rights. >> we saw earlier in this broadcast that a man died eceptionly of a broken leg, from an infection that spread as a result of that broken leg hch. he died yesterday after being operated on. his wife was in a hospital downtown manually trying to pump air into his lungs, because there was no one else, no nur
there's still a lot of bodies, particularly bodies in debris that have not yet been collected. that grim task goes on, and it is thankless work for all the fir firefighters and others who are doing in. i want to bring in damian maloney with doctors without border on the ground in tacloban. it's an organization we have worked with over the years. damian, what are the greatest priorities for you right now? >> anderson, at the moment i think it's a logistics problem at the moment. we're...