350
350
May 2, 2011
05/11
by
WUSA
tv
eye 350
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley?ne chirps) look, tell your boys... to look for a car with a white flag. buckley? -eppes, whatever happens, -(phone chirps) i know you and your brother were just trying to do your best. -i know... -(phone chirps) buckley! hey! buckley! give me what you've got. i'm going to put units in the area. (david sighs) -he's alive. -him, too. maddux's boys. guess he sold them out. all right, we've got buckley's phone. where's buckley? that's a lot of blood. -nikki: it's not theirs. -david: buckley said that maddux would dump him by the side of the road when he was done with him. he's been right about everything else. looks like he called it this time, too. ice breakers frost. a great tasting mint core, frosted in powerful cooling crystals. ice breakers frost. feel the frost. now you can brew over ice for delicious iced coffee or tea. hot or cold, keurig is the way to brew everyone's favorite cup in under a minute. choose. brew. enjoy. keurig. choose. brew. enjoy. david: what happened to buckley?
buckley?ne chirps) look, tell your boys... to look for a car with a white flag. buckley? -eppes, whatever happens, -(phone chirps) i know you and your brother were just trying to do your best. -i know... -(phone chirps) buckley! hey! buckley! give me what you've got. i'm going to put units in the area. (david sighs) -he's alive. -him, too. maddux's boys. guess he sold them out. all right, we've got buckley's phone. where's buckley? that's a lot of blood. -nikki: it's not theirs. -david: buckley...
206
206
May 7, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 206
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley as the ultimate outsider? [laughter] >> guest: well, buckley is a really interesting figure because he goes to yale in the late '40s he's at yale, and he would not have been an outsider most places in america, but he really feels very much that he is at yale because he believes that the liberal, liberalism of professors really dominates not just the campus, but the academic offerings, that there is a kind of intellectual orthodoxy at yale constructed by these liberal professors and that you really don't have much room to stray outside that. and he comes to school from a very conservative family, a family that half of it has roots in the deep south, and the other half not, but a very conservative, catholic, white family with very conservative politics. and so he brings those politics with him to yale and feels very much that he is a rebel against that yale ivy league, liberal culture. >> host: so we've been talking quite a bit now about the '50s. what's the effect of all this, this white redell bell onso to spe
buckley as the ultimate outsider? [laughter] >> guest: well, buckley is a really interesting figure because he goes to yale in the late '40s he's at yale, and he would not have been an outsider most places in america, but he really feels very much that he is at yale because he believes that the liberal, liberalism of professors really dominates not just the campus, but the academic offerings, that there is a kind of intellectual orthodoxy at yale constructed by these liberal professors...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
65
65
May 17, 2011
05/11
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
but buckley. -- bob bukclye. -- dr. bob buckley. i have that a psychiatrist for over two decades. they received a unit that seems to be a danger to themselves and others. you can stabilize them and transfer them for follow-up. those facilities are rapidly being a eliminated. the plan includes zero beds and a new procedural facility. they struggled under the crushing weight of the emergency unit that is graded for 18 patients. it is dangerous to patients and staff. saint luke's used to be the overflow valve. that is when there were acute patient beds. the psychiatric unit since 2005 last year, the relocated in the geriatric psyche and it. where they intend to close. thank you. president olague: if there is additional public comment on this item, please come to the microphone at this time. >> we have a physician on the way and he is stuck in traffic. >> we will have to close the public commentary. >> we can read for him. president olague: two minutes. it is fine to represent someone else. >> i am here to present the membership of the organizing committee, especially my colleagues ha
but buckley. -- bob bukclye. -- dr. bob buckley. i have that a psychiatrist for over two decades. they received a unit that seems to be a danger to themselves and others. you can stabilize them and transfer them for follow-up. those facilities are rapidly being a eliminated. the plan includes zero beds and a new procedural facility. they struggled under the crushing weight of the emergency unit that is graded for 18 patients. it is dangerous to patients and staff. saint luke's used to be the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
93
93
May 25, 2011
05/11
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
currently president is jean buckley, -- currently present is jean buckley, our financial adviser. we are here to answer your questions. geithne>> that is almost as excs the bond report. i do not have any speakers signed up for this. any comments from the board? >> i have a question. i am wondering how the proposed -- it may not be exactly related to this. the may revision high as head -- people are saying, if you are going to geithner $3 million more, but most of it is in the current -- going to get $3 million more, but most of it is in the current proposal to actually not do it across your deferral of $2.5 million, so have we considered dathat in our financial planning? at some point will you be able to tell us what the difference is in cash-flow related issues if the additional referral does not happen? we should probably say that the deferral is the state telling us they are going to pay money they owe us but not actually paying it until later in the year or now through cross year deferrals in the next year. he would like to be able to do that through some of your own financial
currently president is jean buckley, -- currently present is jean buckley, our financial adviser. we are here to answer your questions. geithne>> that is almost as excs the bond report. i do not have any speakers signed up for this. any comments from the board? >> i have a question. i am wondering how the proposed -- it may not be exactly related to this. the may revision high as head -- people are saying, if you are going to geithner $3 million more, but most of it is in the...
218
218
May 9, 2011
05/11
by
KPIX
tv
eye 218
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: the day the ipad was announced, patrick buckley had an idea for a custom made cover.at he didn't have was the expensive computerized wood cutting machine he needed to produce a prototype. they and scores of other budding entrepreneurs have become members of tech shop in menlo park, california. a place where do it yourselfers, inventors and dreamers. >> we believe that every kitchen should come with compressed air, electricity and a vice. >> reporter: mark hatch is tech shop ceo. >> most don't. you know, people get to come here and use ours. >> reporter: here's the drill. joining tech shop is a little like joining a health club, except here for $100 a month, instead of running on a treadmill, you get to run industrial strength machinery. >> we teach people in an afternoon how to make things. we have a lot of entrepreneurs. >> reporter: with the tools at tech shop bill hughes developed a way to cool computer servers that could save vast amounts of energy. >> this pulls all the heat to the server, from the server to the lid. >> reporter: for now his company, clustered sy
. >> reporter: the day the ipad was announced, patrick buckley had an idea for a custom made cover.at he didn't have was the expensive computerized wood cutting machine he needed to produce a prototype. they and scores of other budding entrepreneurs have become members of tech shop in menlo park, california. a place where do it yourselfers, inventors and dreamers. >> we believe that every kitchen should come with compressed air, electricity and a vice. >> reporter: mark hatch...
388
388
May 9, 2011
05/11
by
KPIX
tv
eye 388
favorite 0
quote 0
la cure, buckley and scores of other budding entrepreneurs have become members of tech shop in menloifornia, a place for do-it-youselfers, inventors and dreamers. >> we believe that every kitchen should come with compressed air, electricity and a vice. >> reporter: mark is tech shop c.e.o.. >> most don't, you know, people get to come here and use ours. >> here's the drill. joining tech shop say little like joining a health club except here for $100 a month, instead of running are on a treadmill you get to run industrial strength machinery. members have access to the latest in computer-assisted design and machine tools that would cost cay fortune to buy. >> we teach people in an afternoon how to make things. >> we have a lot of entrepreneurs. >> reporter: with the tools of tech shop phil hughs developed a way to cool computer servers that could save vast amounts of energy. >> this pulls out all the heat, from the server to the lid. >> reporter: for how his company cluster systems has its world headquarters at tech shop. but a partnership with emmerson, the huge appliance manufacturer
la cure, buckley and scores of other budding entrepreneurs have become members of tech shop in menloifornia, a place for do-it-youselfers, inventors and dreamers. >> we believe that every kitchen should come with compressed air, electricity and a vice. >> reporter: mark is tech shop c.e.o.. >> most don't, you know, people get to come here and use ours. >> here's the drill. joining tech shop say little like joining a health club except here for $100 a month, instead of...
32
32
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley on television sort of debating very intelligent with intelligently with michael corby dollar noam chomsky or someone like that and you actually hashed out a really good conservative ideas i mean i totally disagree with them about buckley was a racist and a warmonger to be quite so he quite frank but i think that he displayed himself in a very intelligent manner and he didn't engage in political like you know asking for birth certificates or purporting you know any sort of ridiculous and spears a period or hosting sarah palin and paying her after she said told people that obamacare was going to kill them i mean you can't have that kind in this country on a major network and not expect it par right for you just to be showing up and i think it's bad for the country and had a. long line of perhaps a conservative can't get your great talks news kicks off the back and they're accused of drifting further to the right but is make a lot of sense and then you know look i like but if you're on the left you say oh if you see race or not you're sort of you can be god he spoke and he sense
buckley on television sort of debating very intelligent with intelligently with michael corby dollar noam chomsky or someone like that and you actually hashed out a really good conservative ideas i mean i totally disagree with them about buckley was a racist and a warmonger to be quite so he quite frank but i think that he displayed himself in a very intelligent manner and he didn't engage in political like you know asking for birth certificates or purporting you know any sort of ridiculous and...
51
51
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 1
buckley of motivated barry goldwater it was and still today it is like most one of the most important books and and and kirk's worldview and that conservative worldview back then this in the fifty's kirk was predicting that within the next twenty or thirty years because of this growth of the middle class we've seen enormous social instability. and that that social instability would be a bad thing for america and sure if it happened is that the spark in the fifty's this is a fifty three ok price or what the markets move me right but that's right out of the anti-war the year before brown versus board of education and he basically predicted beach things and so in the seventy's you had people like william f. buckley jr and other conservatives thoughtful conservatives looking at what was going on and going oh my god this is incredible women are burning their pras you know kids are say hell no i'm not going to go to after a war that you've got african-americans are demanding their rights you know gays the stonewall riots that you know it's like this is things are out of hand here cities are
buckley of motivated barry goldwater it was and still today it is like most one of the most important books and and and kirk's worldview and that conservative worldview back then this in the fifty's kirk was predicting that within the next twenty or thirty years because of this growth of the middle class we've seen enormous social instability. and that that social instability would be a bad thing for america and sure if it happened is that the spark in the fifty's this is a fifty three ok price...
229
229
May 2, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 229
favorite 0
quote 0
jim buchanan we interview bille buckley and many others.me a mag centerpiece of "reason" magazine.time since then it has developed a bit more hip-hop version of the former self for there is emphasis on looking good and being reasonably clear and accurate but not much and death threat of a philosophical bent that was very important to us in the publication earlier is now rdrdly there. i have written 40 books they maybe have reviewed 120 years ago. they are not interested with this kind of approach to political issues any more. and frankly they don't publish and a things that i send them partly becauseor they have changed their approach they want to appeal to a mass audience andph philosophy has never been appealing to of mass audience. look what happens when socrates was a philosopher. >> host: william f. buckley is in your book one described as a great influence serve for you. in what way? >> . . don't we complain and there's a nice essay if you don't complain eventually you build up hatred and you blow and that's how other countries have t
jim buchanan we interview bille buckley and many others.me a mag centerpiece of "reason" magazine.time since then it has developed a bit more hip-hop version of the former self for there is emphasis on looking good and being reasonably clear and accurate but not much and death threat of a philosophical bent that was very important to us in the publication earlier is now rdrdly there. i have written 40 books they maybe have reviewed 120 years ago. they are not interested with this kind...
245
245
May 7, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 245
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley is the ultimate outsider? [laughter] >> bulkeley is an interesting figure because he goes to yale in the late 40's if he's at yale and he wouldn't have been an outsider most places in america. he believes the liberalism of professors really dominate not just the campus but the academic offerings of there's a kind of intellectual orthodoxy at yale constructed by these liberal professors and you don't have much room to stray outside of that and he comes to school from a very conservative family that half of it has troops in the deep south and the other not but a very conservative catholic white family with a very conservative politics and so he brings them with him and feels very much that he is a rebel against that i believe liberal culture. >> we've been talking quite a bit know about the 50's. what is the effect of this? this white rebellion? >> and begins to grow our of the 60's and people make the leap from being interested in people they see as different into imagining themselves as rebels or outsiders, to
buckley is the ultimate outsider? [laughter] >> bulkeley is an interesting figure because he goes to yale in the late 40's if he's at yale and he wouldn't have been an outsider most places in america. he believes the liberalism of professors really dominate not just the campus but the academic offerings of there's a kind of intellectual orthodoxy at yale constructed by these liberal professors and you don't have much room to stray outside of that and he comes to school from a very...
159
159
May 7, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 159
favorite 0
quote 0
anyway, buckley was also quite religious. he was a roman catholic.tholic when i was growing up until i was about 20, so we had some arguments about that. and he wasn't so much of an influence on me as somebody who showed me that with some tenacity and perseverance and you can get your ideas out there and have them considered. >> host: from north dakota, next question. >> caller: earlier in the program the professor said taxes are immoral and you would raise funds by putting a fee on contracts. to raise money for national defense and highways and big projects, are you suggesting this is a form of value added tax for that? >> let me answer in a more general political theoretical way. and this is it. try to deal with someone like a communist who is trying to bring about communism and ask him about these details. what would he do about this, about that, about the arts, about tennis? most of the people who are sketching, approach for political affairs, don't have answers to those questions. they will allow them to emerge but within the confines of basic p
anyway, buckley was also quite religious. he was a roman catholic.tholic when i was growing up until i was about 20, so we had some arguments about that. and he wasn't so much of an influence on me as somebody who showed me that with some tenacity and perseverance and you can get your ideas out there and have them considered. >> host: from north dakota, next question. >> caller: earlier in the program the professor said taxes are immoral and you would raise funds by putting a fee on...
270
270
May 29, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 270
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley award for excellence in journalism. and when the award is finished, and the evening just is beginning on the other side of this building, you will have a special performance by the outlaws. and so it's a good evening and for those of you who are eating free, should feel guilty now. let's begin, to present our first two awards is a man that needs no introduction, except you would not know who he was. neal borg is a radio announcer that is syndicated and he was a finalist for the 2002 network syndicated personality of the year, and that year he won the award for the radio and records magazine. he's the author of several books, about liberals and taxes, neither of which he likes. he's our first presenter, and this is a true story. i was doing a show about four months ago, and on his own program he started to whine. on 250 stations he was whining, why don't you invite me to go on your awards ceremony. the way that only neal can whine, you never invite me, and you don't have me. it was so embarrassing. i finally gave in, i h
buckley award for excellence in journalism. and when the award is finished, and the evening just is beginning on the other side of this building, you will have a special performance by the outlaws. and so it's a good evening and for those of you who are eating free, should feel guilty now. let's begin, to present our first two awards is a man that needs no introduction, except you would not know who he was. neal borg is a radio announcer that is syndicated and he was a finalist for the 2002...
185
185
May 1, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 185
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley and a man by the name of goldwater, if you remember him.o add your name to that list. i very much have enjoyed your philosophy. i was fortunate enough after i made my second fortune, i lost the first one, going to your country in budapest. and it was in '72 and was on my way to moscow to the world petroleum congress, and i was so -- it was so hurtful to see no smiles, no happiness when everybody got off the tram to go to work in their dull surroundings. thank god it's not that way again. and that that horrible thing called socialism is gone in that country. >> host: thank you, caller. let me ask you -- i'm sure you've been back to budapest? >> guest: yes, i have. and this caller actually reminds me of a trip that i took two years ago. i was at a conference in budapest and my mother at the time was living in austria so i decided to take a train the first three days that i was there to visit my mother. and the most amazing thing is that the train went through exactly where i went to when i escaped in 1953. nobody looked at my passport. nobody
buckley and a man by the name of goldwater, if you remember him.o add your name to that list. i very much have enjoyed your philosophy. i was fortunate enough after i made my second fortune, i lost the first one, going to your country in budapest. and it was in '72 and was on my way to moscow to the world petroleum congress, and i was so -- it was so hurtful to see no smiles, no happiness when everybody got off the tram to go to work in their dull surroundings. thank god it's not that way...
181
181
May 1, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 181
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley as the ultimate outsider. >> welman of very interesting fiutsire because he gusty yale.ate 40's. he is at yale. he would not have been an out ofd toer most places in ame, but he really feels very much that he is at yale because he believes that a liberal liberalism of professors really dominates not just the camk but the academic offerings. there is a kind of intellectual orthpeopoxy that is constructedy these liberal professors and that you really don't have manyh room to socay out dade. he comes to school from a very conservative family, a family that happee ani to have root ofn the deep south. the other half is not. a very conse amat yo h catholic, white family with a very conservative politics. so he brings those politics with him to yale and fee dao very mah that he is a rebel against that yale's ivy leautsie lraweral n rlture. >> we have been talking quite a bit now. white is the erolect of all of this, this white rpartiellion? >> well, it really begins to grow in thehis ily ts. people begin to make the leap from being interested in people they see as diferesrent o
buckley as the ultimate outsider. >> welman of very interesting fiutsire because he gusty yale.ate 40's. he is at yale. he would not have been an out ofd toer most places in ame, but he really feels very much that he is at yale because he believes that a liberal liberalism of professors really dominates not just the camk but the academic offerings. there is a kind of intellectual orthpeopoxy that is constructedy these liberal professors and that you really don't have manyh room to socay...
31
31
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley jr right and and you know kirk wrote the conservative mind if you want the bible of the conservative movement and if you think it's possible if the there's a bunch of guys sitting around going you know it would be a whole lot more stable if we didn't have that pesky middle class you know women burning bra's and students saying i won't go to war and an afro-american student and he writes an all out awful stuff that happened in the sixty's and seventy's and eighty's we could just do away with it all by just making everybody. it could be that i over the edge what i think it is really sort of what my take is i think it's a lot of guys and they are mostly men in really nice suits in boardrooms who have a sole focus which is i run a corporation and i have shareholders my goal is to maximize profit for my shareholders and you know the pay that goes to my workers if they're even here in the united states is that a priority and so the fact that only happens because politicians change the rules of the game to allow it to have a very true yeah and you know as we've seen over the last thirty for
buckley jr right and and you know kirk wrote the conservative mind if you want the bible of the conservative movement and if you think it's possible if the there's a bunch of guys sitting around going you know it would be a whole lot more stable if we didn't have that pesky middle class you know women burning bra's and students saying i won't go to war and an afro-american student and he writes an all out awful stuff that happened in the sixty's and seventy's and eighty's we could just do away...
91
91
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
actually hashed out a really good conservative ideas i mean i totally disagree with them i thought buckley was a racist not warmonger to be quite so you quite frank but i think that he is going off in a very intelligent manner and he didn't engage in foolishness like you know asking for birth certificates or purporting you know any sort of ridiculous and seriously theories or hosting sarah palin in paying her after she's told people that obamacare is going to kill them i mean you can't have that kind in this country in a major network and not expect it to be shored up and i think it's bad for the country and it came as one that i know. you can't catch a break. if you stick your feet further to write that isn't a lot of sense and then you look again like but if you're on the left you say ok if you raise your thoughts you can be but by god if you still think he senses you know this is not exactly a fair and balanced conversation if that's the point of attack you're going to come from you know look at this and here goes the rights that any opposing rights for black people like actual conversa
actually hashed out a really good conservative ideas i mean i totally disagree with them i thought buckley was a racist not warmonger to be quite so you quite frank but i think that he is going off in a very intelligent manner and he didn't engage in foolishness like you know asking for birth certificates or purporting you know any sort of ridiculous and seriously theories or hosting sarah palin in paying her after she's told people that obamacare is going to kill them i mean you can't have...
248
248
May 29, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 248
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley award for excellence in journalism.ry year there are innumerable trophies to be won by unaccomplished liberals in an industry that regularly banishes wised conservative thought for polite company. quite frankly, where they're all wars are concerned, you should never use the words journalism and excellence in the same sentence. when we produce reporters, update deliver ballots and impartiality. our commentators, met with devastating accuracy. our radio personalities crushed their opposition. on every level, our guys beat up their guys. our women can beat up their guys. [laughter] it just occurred to me. so we honor all of them. in 2007, our first winner was rush limbaugh. in 2008, the award was given to the dearly beloved [unintelligible] in 2009, the award for excellence in journalism was bestowed on the great britain hiett hume. in 2011, we turn to a long time intellectual leader of the conservative movement. what a powerhouse he is. his twice weekly column appears in over 500 newspapers nationwide, making him the most
buckley award for excellence in journalism.ry year there are innumerable trophies to be won by unaccomplished liberals in an industry that regularly banishes wised conservative thought for polite company. quite frankly, where they're all wars are concerned, you should never use the words journalism and excellence in the same sentence. when we produce reporters, update deliver ballots and impartiality. our commentators, met with devastating accuracy. our radio personalities crushed their...
191
191
May 31, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 191
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley award for excellence in journalism. why? year there are innumerable trofies to be won by with unaccomplished liberals in an industry that regularly banished wise conservative thought from polite company. quite frankly, where their awards are concerned, you should never use the words journalism and excellence in the same sentence. but we can. when we produce reporters who report to be devoted to balance and impartiality, they dev deliver just that. balance and impartiality. our commentators comment with devastating accuracy, our radio personalities crush their opposition, on every level our guys can beat up their guys. our women can beat up their guys. [applause] just occurred to me. and so we honor all of them. in 2007 our first winner was rush limbaugh. in 2008 the award was given to the late and dealer beloved and missed tony snow. in 2009 the award for excellence in journalism was bestowed on the great brit human and last year it went to the legendary stan evans. for 2011 we turn to another friend of the m.r.c.'s and a lo
buckley award for excellence in journalism. why? year there are innumerable trofies to be won by with unaccomplished liberals in an industry that regularly banished wise conservative thought from polite company. quite frankly, where their awards are concerned, you should never use the words journalism and excellence in the same sentence. but we can. when we produce reporters who report to be devoted to balance and impartiality, they dev deliver just that. balance and impartiality. our...
172
172
May 28, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley award for excellence in journalism and when all the awards are finished the evening is just beginning because on the other side of this beautiful and historic building, you'll have a special performance by the outlaws. so it's a good evening. and those of you who are eating here for free should start feeling guilty right about now. so let's begin. to present our first two awards is a man who needs no introduction except then you'd never know who he was. neal boortz is a radio talk veteran of over 40 years and can be heard on over 200 syndicated shows nationally for his show. he was a finalist for the 2002 marconi awards for network syndicated personality of the year and that won he won the award on the radio and records magazine. he's the author of several books about liberals and taxes, neither of which he likes. he is our first presenter because -- and this is a true story -- i was doing a show about three months ago, four months ago and on his own program he started to whine. on 250 station he stade wah, wah, why don't you invite me to go on your awards ceremony, the way only neal
buckley award for excellence in journalism and when all the awards are finished the evening is just beginning because on the other side of this beautiful and historic building, you'll have a special performance by the outlaws. so it's a good evening. and those of you who are eating here for free should start feeling guilty right about now. so let's begin. to present our first two awards is a man who needs no introduction except then you'd never know who he was. neal boortz is a radio talk...
195
195
May 19, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 195
favorite 0
quote 0
buckley, and the u.s.s. bainbridge for jobs very well done. my hope in the future is that we can have far more robust rules of engagement empowering commander rick and his fellow commanders to eliminate the threat of piracy. of course, this mission would be in the highest traditions of the united states navy and in the tradition of the jefferson administration that so ably handled this threat when it emerged in the early part of the 19th century. my only hope is in the coming administration review by secretary of state clinton that she adopts a more jeffersonian policy with regard to this threat and so that the sea lan lanes, which control 70% of the world's supply of oil, and so that the ransoms, one-third of whom are now being paid to terrorists that operate the largest terror training camps on earth, can be eliminated. and with that, madam president, i yield back and suggest the absence of a quorum. the presiding officer: the clerk will call the roll. quorum call: a senator: madam president? the presiding officer: the senator from west virg
buckley, and the u.s.s. bainbridge for jobs very well done. my hope in the future is that we can have far more robust rules of engagement empowering commander rick and his fellow commanders to eliminate the threat of piracy. of course, this mission would be in the highest traditions of the united states navy and in the tradition of the jefferson administration that so ably handled this threat when it emerged in the early part of the 19th century. my only hope is in the coming administration...
663
663
May 8, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 663
favorite 0
quote 0
i look more like the sisters of buckley. we didn't have any role models when i was growing up, other than a black woman with a big bag of laundry. we had basically people on one knee singing and then butterfly mcqueen saying i don't know nothing about babies from book on with the wind. that was our role model. there were no other role models for women. there were distinct gender roles when i was growing up. you never saw a man pushing a baby carriage. was the fifth gender roles. women stayed at home and men would bring home the bacon and women were expected to be cheerleaders, not business leaders. if they were allowed out of the house to expect it to the secretaries in the office and not secretaries of state and expected to marry a doctor might not be a doctor so all of this in the 1930's was preposterous that my father who was a ditch digger, who was a janitor and said mi dark skinned girls are going to be doctors. my dad of course without an education had to do meaningful work and he worked in the slaughterhouses of new y
i look more like the sisters of buckley. we didn't have any role models when i was growing up, other than a black woman with a big bag of laundry. we had basically people on one knee singing and then butterfly mcqueen saying i don't know nothing about babies from book on with the wind. that was our role model. there were no other role models for women. there were distinct gender roles when i was growing up. you never saw a man pushing a baby carriage. was the fifth gender roles. women stayed at...
200
200
May 21, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 200
favorite 0
quote 1
>> guest: she was extremely fond of bill buckley. in fact, she adored him. they had a very nice correspondence. on occasion, she would write for his magazine, national review. and she went on "firing line"--his program on pub--on public television. she always kept up her friends in the intelligence community and in--in the military. and she had close women friends in newport, chicago, new york. and they're not names that you'll particularly know; they weren't well known except in society. and she had a variety of friends, and she liked young people, too. she--she befriended henry luce's grandchildren, would take them on her travels and encourage them in their enterprises, just... c-span: what did she die of? >> guest: well, it's ironic because she had a brain tumor. and my husband used to joke with her because, quite often, she'd have these little ailments and we'd be there when the doctor would come. and he'd test her wrist, you know, take her pulse, test her heart, tap her stomach and everything. and then he'd say, 'well, i can't find anything.' and she wo
>> guest: she was extremely fond of bill buckley. in fact, she adored him. they had a very nice correspondence. on occasion, she would write for his magazine, national review. and she went on "firing line"--his program on pub--on public television. she always kept up her friends in the intelligence community and in--in the military. and she had close women friends in newport, chicago, new york. and they're not names that you'll particularly know; they weren't well known except...
171
171
May 5, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
ray buckley from the great state of new hampshire, our vice chair. [applause] >> and, of course, on my far left, but not too far, the honorable ms. linda chavez. [applause] >> and from a friend i have always considered to be a college in the bank of justice, our national treasurer. [applause] >> and a woman to lead us to victory in 2012, our current vice chair, the honorable debbie wasserman schultz is the chairwoman elect. [applause] >> and now for a woman who has been a good friend and a great colleague, dnc secretary alice germond who will basically tell us if they form is present. madam secretary. [applause] >> thank you, chairwoman brazile. thank you, donna. [applause] >> as you know, our charter bylaws determine the requirements of a quorum for a meeting. for the record, there are 447 members of the democratic national committee. currently there are 440 serving. we have seven vacancies. our core am, therefore, will be 221. attending this meeting, we have 190 -- let's see. i want to get it exactly right. we have 196 members joining us by telepho
ray buckley from the great state of new hampshire, our vice chair. [applause] >> and, of course, on my far left, but not too far, the honorable ms. linda chavez. [applause] >> and from a friend i have always considered to be a college in the bank of justice, our national treasurer. [applause] >> and a woman to lead us to victory in 2012, our current vice chair, the honorable debbie wasserman schultz is the chairwoman elect. [applause] >> and now for a woman who has been...
97
97
May 5, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
the association of state democratic chairs and dnc vice chair, new hampshire party chair raymond buckley for the purposes of nominating congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz. [applause] >> thank you, madam chair, fellow officers our future leader. and members. 18 years ago, a new hampshire legislator went to a conference of sophomore state legislators who showed great promise for being leaders in the future. and when i picked my friend up at the airport, she couldn't stop talking about this 26 year old legislator from florida. this woman is just amazing. she is so bright, she's so powerful, she so articulate and strong. you would just love her. now, 18 years later, not only do i just love her, there are tens of thousands of folks in the debbie wasserman schultz fan club across this country. and it's my honor to place the nomination, that's amazing, bright, passionate, strong and articulate, former state florida state legislator and now congresswoman, debbie wasserman schultz, for chair of the democratic national committee. [applause] >> now, while debbie may work in washington, she is n
the association of state democratic chairs and dnc vice chair, new hampshire party chair raymond buckley for the purposes of nominating congresswoman debbie wasserman schultz. [applause] >> thank you, madam chair, fellow officers our future leader. and members. 18 years ago, a new hampshire legislator went to a conference of sophomore state legislators who showed great promise for being leaders in the future. and when i picked my friend up at the airport, she couldn't stop talking about...
222
222
May 5, 2011
05/11
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 222
favorite 0
quote 1
the president of state democratic chairs and the nc vice chair, new hampshire party chair raymond buckley for the purposes of nominating congresswoman debbie wasserman shultz. [applause] >> thank you, madam chair, fellow officers, our future leader, and members. 18 years ago, a new hampshire legislature went to a conference vote, showing great promise for being leaders of the future. when i picked my friend at the airport, she could not stop talking about this 26-year-old legislator from florida. she is amazing, so bright, powerful, articulate and strong. you would love her. now, 18 years later, there are tens of thousands of folks in the debbie watson and shultz fan club across this country. it is my honor to place the nomination of that amazing, bright, passionate, strong, and articulate former florida state legislature and the congresswoman debbie wasserman schulz for chairman of the dnc. while she may work in washington, she is not of washington. it she was in constant motion, traveling from every corner of this country. she understands elections are not one in washington. she knows t
the president of state democratic chairs and the nc vice chair, new hampshire party chair raymond buckley for the purposes of nominating congresswoman debbie wasserman shultz. [applause] >> thank you, madam chair, fellow officers, our future leader, and members. 18 years ago, a new hampshire legislature went to a conference vote, showing great promise for being leaders of the future. when i picked my friend at the airport, she could not stop talking about this 26-year-old legislator from...