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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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FBC
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boston university school of management finance professor. and mark, i want to quote you. you said basically this is an exessential threat, quote, one quote, to global commerce. not only you don't like it you say it goes against the principle of sovereign wealth and should basically be completely afraid of the currency. why do you say that? >> right. i wouldn't call it rat poison. you need to be concerned. we've been told for the l.a. year about the benefits of bitcoin. now it's coming out that bitcoin with that comes lot of risks. we saw in the last two weeks that dramatically market shift in russia declared it illegal we saw market move dramatically which push the amount exchange per one transaction from all the way over 700 to 102. you have a regulator in place. you have a safety net in place. bitcoin doesn't have that. that's been one of the biggest, you know, frankly, knocks against bitcoin. there's no protection in place. what if the was to come along and said we'll be the regulator of bitcoin. we'll agree to be the person. the backstop. do you think it would legitim
boston university school of management finance professor. and mark, i want to quote you. you said basically this is an exessential threat, quote, one quote, to global commerce. not only you don't like it you say it goes against the principle of sovereign wealth and should basically be completely afraid of the currency. why do you say that? >> right. i wouldn't call it rat poison. you need to be concerned. we've been told for the l.a. year about the benefits of bitcoin. now it's coming out...
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a neuropathologist at boston university was a huge football fan. and they were trying to tell the nfl that this was a problem. and in response, the nfl attacked those people, tried to discredit them. >> stephen: that's not entirely true. the nfl took action. they've changed the rules. they've created this fund with $765 million to take care of the players' health needs. why are you saying they are in denial? >>ic it's interesting. when you look at the way the league has dealt with this over times, there is certainly a move they've made, but when the commissioner is asked, is there a connection between football and brain damage, he says the same thing he said four years ago when he got hammered before congress, we'll let the medical people decide that. the medical people already decided that. >> you get your medical people, i'll get my medical poom. >> that's sot of what they did. that's exactly what they did. >> stephen: okay, isn't there a point at which we make things too safe? all sport are dangerous on a certain level, aren't we? you didn't see
a neuropathologist at boston university was a huge football fan. and they were trying to tell the nfl that this was a problem. and in response, the nfl attacked those people, tried to discredit them. >> stephen: that's not entirely true. the nfl took action. they've changed the rules. they've created this fund with $765 million to take care of the players' health needs. why are you saying they are in denial? >>ic it's interesting. when you look at the way the league has dealt with...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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and the boston university group that was featureed so prominently in "league of denial." their definition of cte is so elastic to guarantee they're going to find what they're looking for. there's a condition that naturally occurs in human beings that 97% of old people get in their brain, and that condition is being used to determine whether someone had cte or not. doesn't have anything to do with traumatic. so why is it being used as a determinant or whether someone has cte? that's one of the criticisms of the bu group. to me, one of the great things about science is that even if you're not the person doing the initial study, if it's science, the findings can be replicated elsewhere, and no one has been able to replicate this amazing percentage of football players found with. cte this bu group has done. they're fining it in every case and other groups find it in 50% of the case. all with selection bias, going after brains they think to have been brain-damaged. and other groups not fining it to that level and that's something that should set off a red flag and has set off
and the boston university group that was featureed so prominently in "league of denial." their definition of cte is so elastic to guarantee they're going to find what they're looking for. there's a condition that naturally occurs in human beings that 97% of old people get in their brain, and that condition is being used to determine whether someone had cte or not. doesn't have anything to do with traumatic. so why is it being used as a determinant or whether someone has cte? that's...
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Feb 9, 2014
02/14
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KPIX
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a profound gentleman who was at boston university. i think he was the first african-american to really be the dean of a chapel. >> that's right. >> and not only a good thinker, but a speaker beyond reproach. he had a style that was unique, and he could engage you. he could inspire you. and his language was so fluid, and so deep. it just grabbed every piece of your being. he is now my hero. >> okay. okay. you know there's dozens of people who have gotten their doctorates on his theology. >> i can believe it. >> he's amazing. one of my favorite sayings isings, i used it in the dr. king address. it's put a saddle on your dreams before you ride it. >> he's a great mystic, and he helps me to get in touch with that essential essence of my being which is always spiritual for all of us. it's spiritual, and he zeros in right away. >> last year i talked about the marriages when you were here. there's the three marriages, you're married to your work, you're married to each other, you're married to yourself. how do you see that now looking back a
a profound gentleman who was at boston university. i think he was the first african-american to really be the dean of a chapel. >> that's right. >> and not only a good thinker, but a speaker beyond reproach. he had a style that was unique, and he could engage you. he could inspire you. and his language was so fluid, and so deep. it just grabbed every piece of your being. he is now my hero. >> okay. okay. you know there's dozens of people who have gotten their doctorates on his...
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Feb 12, 2014
02/14
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WGN
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college athletes are going to be >> north boston university believes the players who have brought this petition are in fact students first and foremost and are not employees. >> it is the age-old struggle of workers' rights in this case student-athletes versus management. 85 members of the football team have signed cards that they are hoping to form a union. school officials oppose the action saying the players are students and not the employees. therefore they are not eligible to unionize. >> can be an employee of the university and be a student. the football program takes time from these athletes that is what they are devoted to. the fact that there also students means they're not entitled to the protections of labor laws. >> it is the issue of the health consequences of football as a national issue. they should have a say. we just do not believe that is the proper way >> both sides are in front of the national labor relations board making their cases for and against union representation. the outcome could be monumental. opening the floodgates and drawing in schools everywhere. >> th
college athletes are going to be >> north boston university believes the players who have brought this petition are in fact students first and foremost and are not employees. >> it is the age-old struggle of workers' rights in this case student-athletes versus management. 85 members of the football team have signed cards that they are hoping to form a union. school officials oppose the action saying the players are students and not the employees. therefore they are not eligible to...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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KGO
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his brain donated to scientists at boston university, studying cte. today, doctors announcing the frontal lobe of his brain was badly damaged. riddled with the same mind-numbing disease that leds to dementia and depression. >> getting hit in the head hundreds of thousands of times is not a normal part of life. it does not happen outside of sports and abuse. >> reporter: it's this move, the header, that is so dangerous for youngsters. players typically head the ball up to 12 times in a single game. watch again. that black and white sphere, traveling up to 50 miles per hour. and while football players, are typically protected by a helmet, in soccer, there is nothing between skull and leather. >> headers as a youth, under the age of 14, should not happen. >> reporter: since the human brain doesn't develop until age 25, many doctors and even coaching clinics now advise parents against allowing header practice, until the age of 14. while closely monitoring their children for concussions. jim avila, abc news, washington. >>> and today, in washington, the pr
his brain donated to scientists at boston university, studying cte. today, doctors announcing the frontal lobe of his brain was badly damaged. riddled with the same mind-numbing disease that leds to dementia and depression. >> getting hit in the head hundreds of thousands of times is not a normal part of life. it does not happen outside of sports and abuse. >> reporter: it's this move, the header, that is so dangerous for youngsters. players typically head the ball up to 12 times in...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> it is the robin thick song that has students at boston university fired up. ♪ >> they have startedtition to ban the blurred line singer from performing at an arena on campus. they claim his hit song promotes sexual abuse. >> rape victims write down the things said to them before during and after a rape and they are astonishingly similar to the words used. >> a spokesman says they respect the beliefs of the students but the concert will go on as scheduled. they plan to protest the night of the contest if thicke takes the stage. >> some are saying the 21-year-old singer miley cyrus has gone too far. miley's team has been flooded with complaints and requests to cancel the rest of the racy tour with arenas even threatening to pull out the show. her management team working on an emergency plan to tone down the performance. >> the government is putting the media under the microscope. the study is meant to make sure the media is being fair. but is it going too far? we take a look from dc. >>> ainsley and heather it is could have a chilling effect from free speech. >> whenever i hear the g
. >> it is the robin thick song that has students at boston university fired up. ♪ >> they have startedtition to ban the blurred line singer from performing at an arena on campus. they claim his hit song promotes sexual abuse. >> rape victims write down the things said to them before during and after a rape and they are astonishingly similar to the words used. >> a spokesman says they respect the beliefs of the students but the concert will go on as scheduled. they...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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the humanists of boston university, aka, the most popular on campus, are saying thisy will cancel the upcoming concert of rob thin thicke. they say it is about having sex with women against their will. they said we work hard to avoid sensorship and respect differing views, but individuals may or may not choose to go to the concert. by the way, i won't be attending after what robin's dad did to me in a hot tub in 2003. it was a back rub, but it was a terrible back rub. >> it was more of what he didn't do. >> here is a preview of error bin -- of robin thicke's performance. >> he added the special effects. that's progress for him. >> will you be joining the protesters? >> i just want to ask for my money back. >> i am highly disappointed. i will stand up for the men this time. first of all, the song is not about pushing yourself on a woman. it is about a woman trying to figure out if she wants to be good or wants to be bad, what she wants to do. that's what the song is about. they took the whole song out of context to even begin with. robin thicke has to get my money back. i watched this
the humanists of boston university, aka, the most popular on campus, are saying thisy will cancel the upcoming concert of rob thin thicke. they say it is about having sex with women against their will. they said we work hard to avoid sensorship and respect differing views, but individuals may or may not choose to go to the concert. by the way, i won't be attending after what robin's dad did to me in a hot tub in 2003. it was a back rub, but it was a terrible back rub. >> it was more of...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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boston university, columbia, oxford, ucla, how many years? 30 years. >> caltech, university of texas, dartmouth, now teaching at stanford? >> i teach for stanford university in washington, a court on the presidency seminar. i looked at that picture. who is that handsome young fellow you had on camera? >> 23 years ago. what is your son do? >> he has earned a bachelors inree from berkeley, phd modern american political history from columbia. for twoe a speechwriter and a half years. currently he is a full-time faculty member for the university of california and washington. they have a big washington center on rhode island avenue. he teaches full-time for them. he published an excellent book on ronald reagan and he is finishing a book on franklin roosevelt's civil defense. >> where did you meet jerry? vexing california. have you been married to her? >> it will be 49 years. >> what did you do -- what did she do when you met her? >> she became a health policy analyst. she headed a nonprofit in los angeles in which medicare and medicaid -- when we
boston university, columbia, oxford, ucla, how many years? 30 years. >> caltech, university of texas, dartmouth, now teaching at stanford? >> i teach for stanford university in washington, a court on the presidency seminar. i looked at that picture. who is that handsome young fellow you had on camera? >> 23 years ago. what is your son do? >> he has earned a bachelors inree from berkeley, phd modern american political history from columbia. for twoe a speechwriter and a...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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a 2011 study cited in a boston university report shows 36% of high school sophomores in the u.s.aid they had been drunk in their lifetimes, compared with 4 7% in europe. and heavy alcohol use was more prevalent in 35 european nations than in the u.s. and there are 5 to 9% less deaths from vehicle accidents since the drinking age was raised. and now to your comments . . . you can read at the website. antonio back to you. >> thanks hermela. >>> pope benedict struggled to control major church scandals, so will pope francis succeed where others failed? and a crushing blow to the moon. >>> other nations with power >>> from priestly child abuse in the u.s. and other nations, to power struggles within the catholic church, crime and corruption at the vatican bank, pope francis has his hands full. a documentary looks at the scandals within the church that francis has had to try to manage since the took the job. mean while expectations for the new pope could not be higher. >> francis is the first pope not to ever have studied in roam, worked in rome, or spent significant time in rome. he's
a 2011 study cited in a boston university report shows 36% of high school sophomores in the u.s.aid they had been drunk in their lifetimes, compared with 4 7% in europe. and heavy alcohol use was more prevalent in 35 european nations than in the u.s. and there are 5 to 9% less deaths from vehicle accidents since the drinking age was raised. and now to your comments . . . you can read at the website. antonio back to you. >> thanks hermela. >>> pope benedict struggled to control...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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humorists from boston university are petitioning to cancel the upcoming robin thicke concert.re saying the song "blurred lines" promotes a culture of women having sex against their will. university officials respond to do this statement. we work hard to avoid censorship, bias, or personal preferences and we respect differing views, but individuals may, or may not, choose to go to the concert. >> wi bi t by the way, i stopped going to concerts in 2003. here's a preview of robin thicke's performance. wow! he added special effects, nick. you don't know that, but that's progress for him. all right, sonnie. will you be joining the protesters? >> no, i just want to ask robin thicke for my money back that i bought his cd with because it wasn't worth it. i'm highly disappointed. i'm going to stand up for the men this time. first of all, the song isn't about pushing yourself on a woman. it's about a woman trying to figure out whether she wants to be good or she wants to be bad, what she wants to do. that's what the song is about. so they took the whole song out of context to begin with
humorists from boston university are petitioning to cancel the upcoming robin thicke concert.re saying the song "blurred lines" promotes a culture of women having sex against their will. university officials respond to do this statement. we work hard to avoid censorship, bias, or personal preferences and we respect differing views, but individuals may, or may not, choose to go to the concert. >> wi bi t by the way, i stopped going to concerts in 2003. here's a preview of robin...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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KGO
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his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte.getting hit in the head hundreds of thousands of times is not a normal part of life. it does not happen outside of sports and abuse. >> reporter: it's this move, the header, that's so dangerous for youngsters. players typically head the ball up to 12 times in a single game. watch again. that black and white sphere traveling up to 50 miles an hour. while football players are typically protected by a helmet, in soccer there is nothing between skull and leather. >> headers, as a youth, under age 14, should not happen. >> reporter: since the human brain doesn't develop until age 25, many doctors and even coaching clinics now advise parents against allowing header practice until the age of 14. while closely monitoring their children for concussions. jim avila, abc news, washington. >>> now the blast of bitter cold air in the u.s. subzero temperatures now blamed for the death of a little girl. the 6-year-old was found dead at her northern minnesota apartment building after her mother called
his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte.getting hit in the head hundreds of thousands of times is not a normal part of life. it does not happen outside of sports and abuse. >> reporter: it's this move, the header, that's so dangerous for youngsters. players typically head the ball up to 12 times in a single game. watch again. that black and white sphere traveling up to 50 miles an hour. while football players are typically protected by a helmet, in soccer there...
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Feb 25, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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a 2011 study cited in the boston university report shows 36% of high school sophomores in the u.s. said they had been drunk in their lifetimes compared with 47% in europe. and heavy colorado chews was more prev leapt in 35 european nations than in the u.s. other studies showed there were 5 to 9% drivers 18 to 20 after the national drinking age in the u.s. was raised from 18 to 21 years old in 1988. now, to your reaction. damon is skeptical. he says, i doubt 21 saves lives. many drink illegally before then if they want. moreover, illegal drug use is still high. kyle thinks pot is the answer. he says, herb is the healing of the nation. alcohol is a destruction. you can read more at the website. america.aljazeera.com. back to you thanks, hermella. >> straight ahead, pope benedict struggled to control church skimmingss. what you are by working through their flu. a crushing blow. innovation changes our lives. taking the impossible from lab to light on it. echknow, our scientists bring awe sneak peek. techknow - ideas, invention, life. on al jazeera america while you were asleep news was
a 2011 study cited in the boston university report shows 36% of high school sophomores in the u.s. said they had been drunk in their lifetimes compared with 47% in europe. and heavy colorado chews was more prev leapt in 35 european nations than in the u.s. other studies showed there were 5 to 9% drivers 18 to 20 after the national drinking age in the u.s. was raised from 18 to 21 years old in 1988. now, to your reaction. damon is skeptical. he says, i doubt 21 saves lives. many drink illegally...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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FBC
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we have a guest coming up joining me from boston university. here is what he says.e, this is the threat to global commerce. he said, look, you do not want to trust something like bitcoin. the constitution was based on searchty. what drives nations around the world and currently around the world. that's a safety that we should have in a bitcoin is definitely nothing but safety. and also we may have heard about this. but the founder of -- well, you know, arrested for things he was doing somewhat illegally, obviously. it got hacked hit the accounts cleaned out completely millions of dollars worth of bitcoin. you want to put dollars in to bitcoins. that's the debate that is coming up. on "count down to the closing bell." >> i'm glad you're doing it. there were a ton stories in different news outlet about ponzi scheme and bitcoin. it will be good to get through the clutter and the reality of the threat or the investment opportunity. it's good you're going. thank you. >> you bet. >>> up next before you head out on the family road trip. you may want to consider trading in
we have a guest coming up joining me from boston university. here is what he says.e, this is the threat to global commerce. he said, look, you do not want to trust something like bitcoin. the constitution was based on searchty. what drives nations around the world and currently around the world. that's a safety that we should have in a bitcoin is definitely nothing but safety. and also we may have heard about this. but the founder of -- well, you know, arrested for things he was doing somewhat...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN
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boston university, klum by yarks oxford, ucla for how many years? >> 30 years. >> on campus and online? >> cal tech, university of texas. dartmouth. and now you're teaching in stanford. >> i teach a course on the presidency, a seminar. i looked a that picture, who is that handsome young fellow you had on camera there. >> it's 23 years ago. >> son, matt, what's he duh do? >> -- what does he do? >> he has masters from berkley. p.h.d. from morn american history from columbia. was ame a speech writer, the richard gephardt's writer. they have a big washington center on rhode island avenue and he teaches full-time for that. he published an excellent book on ronald reagan call "the right moment" and he's finish " book "eat war, sleep war, in. >> where did you meet jerry dalleck? > in 1944. >> what did she do when you met her? advocate for medicaid. we moved to washington for families for u.s.a. heading their policy department. and then she went to the institute in georgetown where they did a health policy analysis. so she had a long career in the health pol
boston university, klum by yarks oxford, ucla for how many years? >> 30 years. >> on campus and online? >> cal tech, university of texas. dartmouth. and now you're teaching in stanford. >> i teach a course on the presidency, a seminar. i looked a that picture, who is that handsome young fellow you had on camera there. >> it's 23 years ago. >> son, matt, what's he duh do? >> -- what does he do? >> he has masters from berkley. p.h.d. from morn...
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Feb 4, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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according to a provocative article: for more, i'm joined by professor of international relations at boston university and author of many books. great to have you with us. in the article, you say the u.s. military is second to none with it comes to skills and gadgets, but struggles to finish the job. where did this start? >> well, i think that the problem has many aspects, but i think the most important and probably the most difficult for americans to reckon with is that military power is an inappropriate instrument to deal with the conditions that exist in places like afghanistan and iraq. we came out of the cold war, united states came out of the cold war having convinced itself that military power was sort of an all purpose tool. i think in many respects, operation desert storm back in 1991 seemed to affirm that conclusion. all of our experience since, whether you're talking somalia or the post 9/11 wars tell as different story. we're using the wrong tool to solve the problem. >> let's talk about afghanistan. should we have not gone in after 9/11? >> no, i think we needed to in the sense that if yo
according to a provocative article: for more, i'm joined by professor of international relations at boston university and author of many books. great to have you with us. in the article, you say the u.s. military is second to none with it comes to skills and gadgets, but struggles to finish the job. where did this start? >> well, i think that the problem has many aspects, but i think the most important and probably the most difficult for americans to reckon with is that military power is...
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Feb 3, 2014
02/14
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we reached out to a doctor at boston university, a woman who was a prosecutor, and they did yeoman's work for us educating senior leadership about the nature of this. one thing we learned that the fbi had already known was this was, as they called it, the most underreported crime in america. the number was 5% or something. is not big%, it enough, that's the answer. one of the mantras to begin with was we need more reports. we suspect it's happening. we don't know how big it is. it's bigger than we think it is. we really need more reports. we worked on it pretty hard for a long time. recently, there was this report that came out from the services that had a vastly increased number of reports of sexual assault. some people took that to think it is worse than we thought it was. you were worse than we thought you were. but some of us took it as saying this means that people have increased confidence in the chain of command to deal with this so they are coming forward in bigger numbers than they had in the past. i guess you can -- your glass can be half empty or half-full full on that one
we reached out to a doctor at boston university, a woman who was a prosecutor, and they did yeoman's work for us educating senior leadership about the nature of this. one thing we learned that the fbi had already known was this was, as they called it, the most underreported crime in america. the number was 5% or something. is not big%, it enough, that's the answer. one of the mantras to begin with was we need more reports. we suspect it's happening. we don't know how big it is. it's bigger than...
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Feb 14, 2014
02/14
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BLOOMBERG
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a professor from boston university joins us. chief security officer of black chain joins us and our resident expert, matt miller. matt, you personally have knowledge of how the attack feels. remember this moment? >> adam, here you go. trish. private key on the inside that you can access and load into your wallet, if you have a block chain wallet or going based wallet. >> this is what i put on my phone so that when i want to go buy or sell or whatever, i put this on the computer, the computer reads it and knows to debit my account. >> exactly. >> backup for a second. some viewers don't know this. people actually took that money from his bitcoin that you gave him. they stole it. >> to be fair, we expose the most -- it is like giving someone your credit card number or the back of your credit card number. it is a big no-no, and only a bitcoin total newbie with do that. we only lost about 0.02 bitcoin, but it was a good lesson. >> this is the issue that is part of all this. it seems like it going, like anything else up there, can get
a professor from boston university joins us. chief security officer of black chain joins us and our resident expert, matt miller. matt, you personally have knowledge of how the attack feels. remember this moment? >> adam, here you go. trish. private key on the inside that you can access and load into your wallet, if you have a block chain wallet or going based wallet. >> this is what i put on my phone so that when i want to go buy or sell or whatever, i put this on the computer, the...
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638
Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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KGO
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his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte and those doctors made a startlingvery. the 29-year-old is the first soccer player found to have cte, the frontal lobe of his brain badly damaged, the same mind-numbing disease that leads to dementia and depression. >> soccer is a great sport. and it's not something that we should all steer away from. i'm saying that concussions and constant headers as a youth, under the age of 14, should not happen. >> reporter: we reached out to the youth soccer federation but we received no comment. although most coaches have cut back on header practice till high school, but doctors are saying that's not enough. lara. >> it can hurt. i mean and my little girl i know does it. >> an important thing. for youth football, for youth soccer when the brains are still growing and all that extra room in the cranium, you need to back off. you definitely need to back off. >> good advice. >>> hey, we want to get back out to los angeles. robin roberts at the dolby theatre where the oscars will take place. she has the only camera allowed inside th
his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte and those doctors made a startlingvery. the 29-year-old is the first soccer player found to have cte, the frontal lobe of his brain badly damaged, the same mind-numbing disease that leads to dementia and depression. >> soccer is a great sport. and it's not something that we should all steer away from. i'm saying that concussions and constant headers as a youth, under the age of 14, should not happen. >> reporter: we...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> yes, i was speaking two nights ago in boston at northeastern university, talking about my cigarette, and -- and talking about how this is great, and it's not smoking and as i put it down an individual had to walk out and take it from me, along with my glass of wine. >> you're kidding. >> because smoking is illegal on campus. >> you had wine. >> and they considered it smoking which is actually -- this is vapor, people. this is like a nicorette gum, like a patch. it's nothing. >> wait, why were you giving a speech smoking and drinking at the same time? >> prop comedy. >> i guess so. relaxing, it's what i do. >> look what you just did to dana. >> but it doesn't bother me. >> it's water vapor. >> when congress introduces a bill and it's all partisan like that, it -- you have to follow the money. where does it lead to? who is actually giving them the contributions, bob? i mean, it has to be coming from somewhere. you could actually ride in a car with your dad smoking vaping that with the windows rolled up and it would never bother your delicate sinuses. >> it would bother my hair. it wou
. >> yes, i was speaking two nights ago in boston at northeastern university, talking about my cigarette, and -- and talking about how this is great, and it's not smoking and as i put it down an individual had to walk out and take it from me, along with my glass of wine. >> you're kidding. >> because smoking is illegal on campus. >> you had wine. >> and they considered it smoking which is actually -- this is vapor, people. this is like a nicorette gum, like a...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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a very clear message from university of boston students, why they want robin thick banned from performingr school. >> did you get lucky last night? get the tickets out. we have the numbers for the $425 million jackpot. "fox & friends first" starts right now. ♪ >> first album i ever got. >> it's a good one. >> you are watching "fox & friends first" on this thursday morning. i am heather childers. before there were tv cameras. it is a brand new warning for travelers this morning. >> marianne rafferty is here with what we need to know. >> it is aimed at international flights coming into the u.s. from overseas. they are warning airlines to be extra cautious. they are asking them to expand the use of flobing which picks up extra residue. >> it comes from the nsa, usually an intercept of perhaps a cell phone conversation. they are saying they have credible intelligence but there's no specific threat to any region or airport. while it is not said to be connected to the olympics it raises eyebrows. >> there has been more chatter to begin with because of the olympics. now what you are seeing is no
a very clear message from university of boston students, why they want robin thick banned from performingr school. >> did you get lucky last night? get the tickets out. we have the numbers for the $425 million jackpot. "fox & friends first" starts right now. ♪ >> first album i ever got. >> it's a good one. >> you are watching "fox & friends first" on this thursday morning. i am heather childers. before there were tv cameras. it is a brand...
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Feb 20, 2014
02/14
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an years ago, we cosponsored event with george mason university and boston college, which brought together2000 ,eligious leaders and scholars all of whom who had been invited. during the conference, developed a policy against violence. when this was aired on the radio, the names of the local actors had been omitted, but many of the civil society groups ,hat we met with still decided because of the authoritative weight of the speakers associated with it. while many faith-based networks we met with were hesitant to engage with foreign governments directly, they requested that organizations like worde engage them. finally, we found involving local civil society organizations in peace building tends to be successful once we foster trust building and have met the basic needs of the community. even simple roads and wells, which we have invested quite a bit of money in, can be relatively inexpensive, and can go a long way to buy community support. there are several challenges that civil society activist continuously highlighted in the research. security has prevented project implementation and mo
an years ago, we cosponsored event with george mason university and boston college, which brought together2000 ,eligious leaders and scholars all of whom who had been invited. during the conference, developed a policy against violence. when this was aired on the radio, the names of the local actors had been omitted, but many of the civil society groups ,hat we met with still decided because of the authoritative weight of the speakers associated with it. while many faith-based networks we met...
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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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i was in boston going to northeastern university. i was just trying to meet new people. yammish, people are arguing over broncos or seahawks and arguing, the super bowl is in new jersey, not really new york -- all these other story lines we see. this isn't one we see, but why is it? new york and the super bowl are such prime targets for this type of activity. >> i should say when i talk to the experts they say the reason why you have this big influx is you have anyplace that you have a large grouping of men -- usually men that are drinking and partying and maybe up to reckless behavior, may be willing to do things that they wouldn't do in their normal, everyday lives. you have people that will come in and try to capitalize on that. so in some cases, you'll have traffickers come in and bring in these girls trying to capitalize on that. >> is there any way to keep up, any way to really monitor how much of this comes into an area -- we've all heard stories of -- frankly, nba all-star weekend, things like that, hear those stories. but do they have data, do they have informat
i was in boston going to northeastern university. i was just trying to meet new people. yammish, people are arguing over broncos or seahawks and arguing, the super bowl is in new jersey, not really new york -- all these other story lines we see. this isn't one we see, but why is it? new york and the super bowl are such prime targets for this type of activity. >> i should say when i talk to the experts they say the reason why you have this big influx is you have anyplace that you have a...
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university. abc's devon dwyer has the latest from boston.g, devon. >> reporter: good morning, john and marci. this snowstorm was a gigantic headache for travelers from new york to boston to the west coast. more than 3,000 flights cancelled and hundreds of accidents on the roads. the big dig-out has begun. from topeka to philly and boston, the second winter storm to hit this week, created mammoth mess of frost and nerves. >> this is the worst i've experienced. i think this is the worst weather i've been in. i've been in cold, but this is really cold and hard to walk in. you can't see. and my face hurts. >> reporter: the icy conditions considered treacherous across more than 20 states. this chain-reaction crash shut down lanes on i-94. >> today has been one of the worst days through the winter season. >> reporter: from virginia north to pennsylvania, tree limbs and power lines becoming a dangerous combination when they snap and fall. >> little branches hit me in the shoulder and the big part of the branch missed me. >> reporter: more than half
university. abc's devon dwyer has the latest from boston.g, devon. >> reporter: good morning, john and marci. this snowstorm was a gigantic headache for travelers from new york to boston to the west coast. more than 3,000 flights cancelled and hundreds of accidents on the roads. the big dig-out has begun. from topeka to philly and boston, the second winter storm to hit this week, created mammoth mess of frost and nerves. >> this is the worst i've experienced. i think this is the...
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Feb 26, 2014
02/14
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university named after allen whom we love and copics then comes ongoing construction the parties intend to cooperate in the implementation of innovative energy efficient environmentally friendly technologies as boston scientific research. for example in the lascivious institute of the physics named after the scoop in line saying whoa said the scientific expertise in this year with domestic experts. mumbai. research work will be carried out on the basis of the region national university names of the old glove. we also plan implementation of pickle houses which will be realized for the development of a dual system of education. all decisions in the framework of the number of them will be implemented. all projects will be certified for the compliance with international environmental standards. according to watson a famous pianist and music teacher valerie gets its key came to us tonight and honored artist of russia will hold master classes for young cousin musicians during five days. the young piano players are playing for a major event the international competition for young pianist which will be held in austin i made this year. last year the competition was held for the first time in more than one h
university named after allen whom we love and copics then comes ongoing construction the parties intend to cooperate in the implementation of innovative energy efficient environmentally friendly technologies as boston scientific research. for example in the lascivious institute of the physics named after the scoop in line saying whoa said the scientific expertise in this year with domestic experts. mumbai. research work will be carried out on the basis of the region national university names of...
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Feb 26, 2014
02/14
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university named after allen whom we love and kazakhstan comes on green construction the parties intend to cooperate in the implementation of innovative energy efficient environmentally friendly technologies as boston scientific research. for example in the lascivious institute of physics named after the scoop in line saying whoa said the scientific expertise in this year with domestic experts. mumbai. research work will be carried out on the bases of the region national university names of the old glove. we also plan implementation of pickle houses which will be realized for the development of a dual system of education. all decisions in the framework of the memorandum will be implemented. all projects will be certified for the compliance with international environmental standards. according to watson a famous pianist and music teacher valerie gets its key came to us tonight and i'm an artist of russia will hold master classes for young cousin musicians during five days. the young piano players are playing for a major event the international competition for young pianist which will be held in austin i made this year. last year the competition was held for the first time in more than one hundred th
university named after allen whom we love and kazakhstan comes on green construction the parties intend to cooperate in the implementation of innovative energy efficient environmentally friendly technologies as boston scientific research. for example in the lascivious institute of physics named after the scoop in line saying whoa said the scientific expertise in this year with domestic experts. mumbai. research work will be carried out on the bases of the region national university names of the...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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boston globe." shepard, 22 a first-year student at the university of wyoming paid dearly allegedly for trusting to strangers enough at the fireside lounge to tell them he is gay. what followed was an atrocity that forced the stun community of laramie to painfully confront the festering evil of anti-gay hatred as the nation and its lawmakers watched. this is "the denver post." police investigators turned up the following sequence of alleged events, sometime tuesday night shepard met henderson and mckinney while at the fireside bar and lounge. shepard told them he was gay. they invited him to leave with them. all three of them got into mckinney's fathers pickup in the attack again. "newsweek". hungry for cash, perhaps riled by shepherd's trust in the admission that he was gay they drove to the edge of town police say pistol whipped him until his skull collapsed and then left him like a fallen scarecrow or savior to the bottom of the crosshatched fence. that was "newsweek". this is the "washington post." albany county sheriff gary polls who suggested the beating was being investigated as a hate crime said the
boston globe." shepard, 22 a first-year student at the university of wyoming paid dearly allegedly for trusting to strangers enough at the fireside lounge to tell them he is gay. what followed was an atrocity that forced the stun community of laramie to painfully confront the festering evil of anti-gay hatred as the nation and its lawmakers watched. this is "the denver post." police investigators turned up the following sequence of alleged events, sometime tuesday night shepard...
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Feb 8, 2014
02/14
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but two boston patients whom doctors thought were cured had the virus return. none of those cases has led to a universal treatment. and so in december, the white house and the national institutes of health endorsed a full-fledged research program towards finding a cure. >> we're going to redirect $100 million into this project to develop a new generation of therapies. >> reporter: for mccune and his team, the key task today is finding the virus. he knows that anti-retroviral drugs keep the patient alive, and kill much of the h.i.v.. but invariably some virus remains hidden and causes the patients health to decline. >> what we don't know is where in the human body it lives. >> reporter: researchers in mccunes labs and elsewhere study tissue taken from clinical subjects to look at places they think the virus may be hiding. >> it's often organs, organs like the intestinal track, the spleen, the liver, the brain and elsewhere. we want to know which cells it lives in, whether it be dormant or latent, or actively replicating or spreading. some drugs for instance go to the spleen very easily but don't go to th
but two boston patients whom doctors thought were cured had the virus return. none of those cases has led to a universal treatment. and so in december, the white house and the national institutes of health endorsed a full-fledged research program towards finding a cure. >> we're going to redirect $100 million into this project to develop a new generation of therapies. >> reporter: for mccune and his team, the key task today is finding the virus. he knows that anti-retroviral drugs...
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Feb 6, 2014
02/14
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universities there and highly skilled workers. they looked at the top ten housing hubs in tech markets, which include austin, d.c., the boston area.at asking prices in those are up over 13% you've over year officer average versus the 11.4% gained nationally, but those markets had steeper price declines during the housing crash and now fewer foreclosures than the national average. when you account for that, he says it's a wash. affordability is awful in san francisco, just 14% of home there's considered affordable, but that's not tech. it's lack of construction. big restrictions on new construction. raleigh and austin have nearly ten times the home building and are far more affordable. lots nor online. realtycheck realtycheck.cn realtycheck.cnbc.com. >>> a terrible winter here. the east coast battles snow, a major drought out west having a devastating impact. jane wells has more from los angeles. >> what happened to the jun what is this? water falling from the sky today. not enough, but still, is the sky going to fall when it comes to inflation and food prices? one economist says -- don't have a cow. we'll talk about that, next. wh
universities there and highly skilled workers. they looked at the top ten housing hubs in tech markets, which include austin, d.c., the boston area.at asking prices in those are up over 13% you've over year officer average versus the 11.4% gained nationally, but those markets had steeper price declines during the housing crash and now fewer foreclosures than the national average. when you account for that, he says it's a wash. affordability is awful in san francisco, just 14% of home there's...
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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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boston, and one of the speakers was a, i think, fairly prominent israeli demographer. and one of the things he indicated is that by sort of looking at things like kids registers for a university education overseas, people selling their properties, transferring their bank accounts, his estimate was that because of this dynamic that you describe, he estimates 1.5 million israeli jews have left the place in the last five, ten years or so. did you pick up on any of that kind of undercurrent of discussion among the more decent israelis who are outraged of what's going on, and they're just leave anything masses? >> yeah, thanks for that. that's a great question. the last chapter of my book, which is called "the exodus party," is dedicated to that question and to the israelis who have left. i did a talk at university of pennsylvania with ian lustick who is one of the leading analysts of of israeli demographics. and i cited a figure of about one million israelis who are living abroad which is about 14% of the population. higher percentage than maybe of the population of mexico or sri lanka, and he put the figure at closer to 600,000. it's hard to determine, and either way that's a ve
boston, and one of the speakers was a, i think, fairly prominent israeli demographer. and one of the things he indicated is that by sort of looking at things like kids registers for a university education overseas, people selling their properties, transferring their bank accounts, his estimate was that because of this dynamic that you describe, he estimates 1.5 million israeli jews have left the place in the last five, ten years or so. did you pick up on any of that kind of undercurrent of...
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Feb 11, 2014
02/14
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universal love fest. >> host: you write in your book behind-the-scenes how she organizes staff she has had some turnover in the years she has been in the white house issues a better boston and first lady. she likes to be in charge and does not like heard time to be wasted and as forcefully and intimidating. >> i don't think that would surprise anybody. we don't see that person a lot but she does have a forceful and charismatic personality. also when she was in high school she was terrified of public speaking it had to work up the courage for she was running for office. she has really grown into that role to be so comfortable to have fun and give speeches. she found the spotlight in this very comfortable. >> host: let's take a call from texas. >> caller: how are you? i have two questions. which first lady do you think michelle obama is most similar to? tuned second if you could arrange for michelle to be with any other first lady which one would it be? >> host: great questions as we close out the program and the series. >> she is compared to hillary clinton she is compared to jackie onassis is the glamour and the arts a unharnessing of culture i would make more of a comp
universal love fest. >> host: you write in your book behind-the-scenes how she organizes staff she has had some turnover in the years she has been in the white house issues a better boston and first lady. she likes to be in charge and does not like heard time to be wasted and as forcefully and intimidating. >> i don't think that would surprise anybody. we don't see that person a lot but she does have a forceful and charismatic personality. also when she was in high school she was...
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Feb 28, 2014
02/14
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his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte and those doctors made a startlingvery. the 29-year-old is the first soccer player found to have cte, the frontal lobe of his brain badly damaged, the same mind-numberimind mind-numbing disease that leads to dementia and depression. >> i'm saying that concussions and constant headers as a youth under the age of 14 should not happen. >> reporter: we reached out to the youth soccer fed indication but received no comment although most coaches will verizon cut back on header practice till high school but docrsrential vog during the oscars tied for best picture between relief grandfather and "12 years a slave" so this could be a tie. it could go right down to who lists these movies as second or third on their preferential ballot so this is a nail biter. >> all right, chris, good to be out here with you. another check of the weather, ginger zee, the other big story is the rain. she is 30 miles east in glendora, california, with the latest on the snow for the midwest and northeast, as well. ginger. >> right. that's the thing,
his brain donated to scientists at boston university studying cte and those doctors made a startlingvery. the 29-year-old is the first soccer player found to have cte, the frontal lobe of his brain badly damaged, the same mind-numberimind mind-numbing disease that leads to dementia and depression. >> i'm saying that concussions and constant headers as a youth under the age of 14 should not happen. >> reporter: we reached out to the youth soccer fed indication but received no comment...