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Oct 23, 2013
10/13
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KGO
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>> it happens like clockwork. $160 take your number, say your vows. >> how did he propose to you? >> golden gate park. >> i proposed. >> the venue is only a starting point. >> run to the baseball stadium. >> i didn't understand. >> a lot of people don't. >> this stadium. at ask t park. last night behind a cloak of secrecy in front of 40,000 empty seats, singer kanye west proposed to the overexposed kim kardashian. >> just to rent the field is $35,000. the stadium, let's not forget the diamond. 15 carats estimated $6 million. >> or not. this is hardly the first time someone proposed in a ballpark but may be the most ostentatious. why would brine wilson throw a fit when he didn't receive his ring in the park this year? >> now in celebrity circles we're on the map. well it's a dubious map. and all because love is, as love does, in public, and in private. >> just think you're getting married before kanye and... >> i know. >> hopefully it will last longer. >> in san francisco, wayne freedman abc 7 news. >> tonight apple is wowing the tech industry with its new ipad. it's almost a half
>> it happens like clockwork. $160 take your number, say your vows. >> how did he propose to you? >> golden gate park. >> i proposed. >> the venue is only a starting point. >> run to the baseball stadium. >> i didn't understand. >> a lot of people don't. >> this stadium. at ask t park. last night behind a cloak of secrecy in front of 40,000 empty seats, singer kanye west proposed to the overexposed kim kardashian. >> just to rent the...
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very few places where land and air meet with such harmony, where smooth ridge juts into clockwork windcatch a free ride with equal ease. and this is, this may be the best such place in the world. >> when i was a kid, i would dream about flying all the time. and you would have to run fast and jump in the air you. could fly. and here we can do that. we run really fast. >> you didn't have to run that fast. >> that's true. you have wind. you don't have to run that fast. how incredible state. >> point of the mountain utah, most days send a rye out of color wings in the sky above sprawling suburbs of salt lake city. much the way scuba divers have the great barrier reef, and climbers cling to yosemite. this place has been a mecca of fliers ever since glider pilots trained here before world war ii. and as glider sports took off, those generations of fliers earn their wings here, some finding spots among the best aerial stunts and air batt teams. others dropping by to taste a new kind of freedom. >> when you are in a wheelchair you feel look you are in a wheelchair. this, you feel like the pilo
very few places where land and air meet with such harmony, where smooth ridge juts into clockwork windcatch a free ride with equal ease. and this is, this may be the best such place in the world. >> when i was a kid, i would dream about flying all the time. and you would have to run fast and jump in the air you. could fly. and here we can do that. we run really fast. >> you didn't have to run that fast. >> that's true. you have wind. you don't have to run that fast. how...
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Oct 10, 2013
10/13
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WJLA
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according to the buyer, the business ran like clockwork. you ever suspect him of being undercover? >> no. not at all. i honestly thought he was a real deal he was doing, you know? >> reporter: this isn't a seedy part of the sunshine state, the retirement central. sunrise, florida, home to a giant shopping center, coral colored homes and lots of drug busts. >> here you go. >> reporter: a nurse by profession, father of two from homestead, florida, who on this day carried a satchel stuffed with $23,000 in cash. he said he had been convinced to go by a friend. >> reporter: did you thin tubing yourself at any point how did i get myself involved in a drug deal? >> yeah. yes, i did. i mean -- afterward. but i mean it was, it wasn't easy for him, for the informant to convince me. but he managed to do it. >> reporter: risky business and in sleepy sunrise, these stings have become big business. he says he was there because a man owed him money for five years and told him this was the only way he would ever get paid back. >> reporter: you are no walt
according to the buyer, the business ran like clockwork. you ever suspect him of being undercover? >> no. not at all. i honestly thought he was a real deal he was doing, you know? >> reporter: this isn't a seedy part of the sunshine state, the retirement central. sunrise, florida, home to a giant shopping center, coral colored homes and lots of drug busts. >> here you go. >> reporter: a nurse by profession, father of two from homestead, florida, who on this day carried a...
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the exercise in the model plane had gone like clockwork but as i saw the ground get further and further away everything became horribly real. even washing someone else was making it easier. i was forty metres up and every fiber of my being was telling me to head straight back down the ladder. just was the most susceptible would have been at the foot of the uk but after we hook you up you step on the spare bed on my commander ready you adopt the stance upon the command go you exit the tower you already. know about all we did we did. we got to get ready that was probably brown out. didn't it at least get us lessons this little when you emacs and tower try to turn towards it driving around come on. already. ready to put your hand on the harness faster. so. it was a nightmare one off of my brain saying you've seen it safe you train for this and the other screaming at me if you jump over this tower you're going to die. it. was mostly concentrate as much as possible get used to what i feel something is holding me it's ok they're out of fear anything it's really frightening. it's just a. circu
the exercise in the model plane had gone like clockwork but as i saw the ground get further and further away everything became horribly real. even washing someone else was making it easier. i was forty metres up and every fiber of my being was telling me to head straight back down the ladder. just was the most susceptible would have been at the foot of the uk but after we hook you up you step on the spare bed on my commander ready you adopt the stance upon the command go you exit the tower you...
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the exercise in the model plane had gone like clockwork but as i saw the ground get further and further away everything became horribly real. even watching someone else wasn't making it easier. i was forty metres up and every fiber of my being was telling me to head straight back down the ladder. just was the most acceptable would have been at the foot of the a but after we hook you up you step on the spare bed are my command ready you adopt the stance upon the command go you exit the tower you're at it. you know about all we think we did. before. we got to get ready that was probably brown our. good news at least that is what i sense this little way you emacs said tower try to turn towards it driving around come on . already. ready to put your hand on the harness faster and you. know. there was a nightmare a one off of my brain saying you've seen it safe you train for this and the other screaming at me if you jump over this tower you're going to die. it just. must concentrate as much as possible get used to what i feel something is holding me it's ok they're out of fear anything it's r
the exercise in the model plane had gone like clockwork but as i saw the ground get further and further away everything became horribly real. even watching someone else wasn't making it easier. i was forty metres up and every fiber of my being was telling me to head straight back down the ladder. just was the most acceptable would have been at the foot of the a but after we hook you up you step on the spare bed are my command ready you adopt the stance upon the command go you exit the tower...
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Oct 14, 2013
10/13
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KPIX
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eye 113
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everything is moving like clockwork. that's your latest kcbs traffic. for more, if you have to work today, here's more. >> and if you don't, lots of sunshine in the bay area expected and the temperatures going to be something else and warm things up and high pressure clear across the bay area and the top all the way from the coastline and offshore wind. nice and clear in the san francisco and rest of the area now. chilly in some spots and 40 in santa rosa and 52 in san francisco. towards the afternoon, we expect mostly sunny skies and warm temperatures all the way to the cost line. fire danger is not elevated. just beautiful weather to enjoy. 81 and 73 degrees in the monterey bay and as we look at the computer models, looking for it there and today and tomorrow and wednesday, may be late winds tonight into thursday and clouds across our skies. and otherwise, we're cloud free. 77 degrees in san jose. 76 in palo alto. in the 60s, close to low 70s and low 80s inland and then inside the bay, look at temperatures in the 60s and also the 70s. >> we love it. t
everything is moving like clockwork. that's your latest kcbs traffic. for more, if you have to work today, here's more. >> and if you don't, lots of sunshine in the bay area expected and the temperatures going to be something else and warm things up and high pressure clear across the bay area and the top all the way from the coastline and offshore wind. nice and clear in the san francisco and rest of the area now. chilly in some spots and 40 in santa rosa and 52 in san francisco. towards...
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Oct 18, 2013
10/13
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FOXNEWSW
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well, rebecca came home like clockwork every afternoon from school.immediately, rebecca's mother ran home. they started going through her friends and couldn't find her, and notified the sheriff's office. ultimately, at 2:30 the next morning, one of our sergeants and one of our detectives found rebecca lying at the bottom of an abandoned cement plant, at the bottom of one of the silos, deceased, where she had obviously jumped from above. >> as you conducted your investigation into her death, what did you learn about the two who you arrested? >> as the investigation went on, we determined that our victim, rebecca, was bullied. the bullying started november before this event in september. so as a result, our detectives started talking to witnesses. we started gathering information. we found out that rebecca was a very fragile child, and that at the end of the day, the bullying by these two primary suspects, one 14 and one 12 were kind of like the final straw. when we found her, she was deceased. our investigation told us that she was bullied, and therefo
well, rebecca came home like clockwork every afternoon from school.immediately, rebecca's mother ran home. they started going through her friends and couldn't find her, and notified the sheriff's office. ultimately, at 2:30 the next morning, one of our sergeants and one of our detectives found rebecca lying at the bottom of an abandoned cement plant, at the bottom of one of the silos, deceased, where she had obviously jumped from above. >> as you conducted your investigation into her...
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Oct 13, 2013
10/13
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MSNBCW
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eye 43
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he's like clockwork. i don't know what he likes about that little area, unless it's me feeding him all the time. apples, cookies, coffee cake. he's a more sophisticated rabbit. you know what i'm saying? won't be long i'll have him on some watermelon hooch. >> like stone inmate christopher trotter has been behind bars since the mid 1980s. >> i came into prison to serve a four-year prison sentence for petty theft. i came in with four years and ended up with 142 years. that's what could happen in prison if you make the wrong choice. it has consequences. >> the wrong choice trotter refers to was being one of the instigators of a 1985 riot at another indiana prison. seven corrections officers were stabbed. two others and a counselor were held hostage for 15 hours. >> it was a pretty massive riot that they had at that time and chris trotter was one of the main players in that. and since then, trotter has done his share to maintain his image of that. >> trotter has maintained that he was defending another inmate
he's like clockwork. i don't know what he likes about that little area, unless it's me feeding him all the time. apples, cookies, coffee cake. he's a more sophisticated rabbit. you know what i'm saying? won't be long i'll have him on some watermelon hooch. >> like stone inmate christopher trotter has been behind bars since the mid 1980s. >> i came into prison to serve a four-year prison sentence for petty theft. i came in with four years and ended up with 142 years. that's what...
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Oct 20, 2013
10/13
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FOXNEWSW
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believe human decency is something that needs to be conditioned in, in a less -- a less extreme clockworkrange-style fashion over about a 20-year period of time. you have to learn it slowly. this idea that you're born with a pure soul and want to spread good as soon as you come out of the womb is absurd. >> who ever said that, though? >> most religions say you're born pure, born good. the world is what pollutes you. the sin is what pollutes -- it's not true. you're born a rabid, meat-craving animal. that needs to be house broken. honestly. >> a very hume nifk point of view we're all born good. there's nothing other than that good parenting. kids need two good parents. to raise them through this time and not good friends. parents aren't supposed to be friends. supposed to discipline and teach them. these are the things that are right. these are the things that aren't. even when going through a time when they can't get it in their heads. >> i'm hungry for a pig's head on a stick. >> by the way, when willem writes this, is should be "lord of the flies." he was an outstanding outfielder. >> a
believe human decency is something that needs to be conditioned in, in a less -- a less extreme clockworkrange-style fashion over about a 20-year period of time. you have to learn it slowly. this idea that you're born with a pure soul and want to spread good as soon as you come out of the womb is absurd. >> who ever said that, though? >> most religions say you're born pure, born good. the world is what pollutes you. the sin is what pollutes -- it's not true. you're born a rabid,...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
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FOXNEWSW
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also, sorry about the frog in my throat, he takes up residence twice a year like clockwork.l americans rise up against obama care? that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. it's now becoming apparent that millions of americans will pay a lot more for health insurance under obama care. i was talking to some insurance people this weekend, big guys, and they are happy, they like obama care. you know why? because deductibles and co-pays are going up big time. that, of course, means more profit for the health insurance companies. less money for you. now, how many voters do you think knew that while obama care was being debated? in my opinion very few. that's just one reason why individual americans should get a year reprieve from obama care. some businesses have the reprieve and you should get it, too. that's the crux of the government shutdown situation. republicans want some changes in obama care. the president and the democrats do not. but talking points is another question. what is best for the folks, the american people? there is a tremendous amount of confu
also, sorry about the frog in my throat, he takes up residence twice a year like clockwork.l americans rise up against obama care? that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. it's now becoming apparent that millions of americans will pay a lot more for health insurance under obama care. i was talking to some insurance people this weekend, big guys, and they are happy, they like obama care. you know why? because deductibles and co-pays are going up big time. that, of course, means...
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Oct 18, 2013
10/13
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KPIX
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but these strike threats that have been coming like clockwork. unfortunately, that's not up to us.hat's a game of brinksmanship on the unions. we don't feel that that's fair to riders. we don't feel it's fair to their workers. >> are you still holding tight to that $57 million package? >> that is negotiable. >> that is negotiable? >> yes. that's actually what we have been talking about here. as i mentioned, there is room to move on financials. and there's been room to move on work rules. we want an agreement that works for everyone. we have been entertaining proposals some from other own side, some from the unions actually about how to save money. and we would like to include any of those that have come forward. we have seen some recreativity on some of those. and those could be part of a comprehensive agreement. but i think our look is a long look. we would be willing to pay more in the next four years for things that will pay dividends not only in these four years but after. and i think that's the main thing. we just need an agreement that works well for our workers which we thin
but these strike threats that have been coming like clockwork. unfortunately, that's not up to us.hat's a game of brinksmanship on the unions. we don't feel that that's fair to riders. we don't feel it's fair to their workers. >> are you still holding tight to that $57 million package? >> that is negotiable. >> that is negotiable? >> yes. that's actually what we have been talking about here. as i mentioned, there is room to move on financials. and there's been room to...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN2
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and then we hear from an individual this as do most clockworks come from harvard or other northeastern schools? >> well, i think that is probably a bias of the court in terms of numbers and law clerks and certainly the west coast and a sense that the law clerks is the justices themselves are from a relatively small and select root of law schools. that is not always the case. but i do think that it is part of the risk-averse nature of the hiring that the justices that do. but they want to know the people who they hire come from people that they know, often people who they know are professors from those law schools. so there is a personal budget comes from and i think that certain of them make more of an effort to look beyond the conditional law school is. and to make this from those other law schools. i think many have gone beyond like justice breyer. i think there is a risk-averse nature that prevents it from happening more often. >> let's talk about the 39 law clerks, each justice with a law clerk, do they get a new one every term? >> they do each internship. some of those justices ar
and then we hear from an individual this as do most clockworks come from harvard or other northeastern schools? >> well, i think that is probably a bias of the court in terms of numbers and law clerks and certainly the west coast and a sense that the law clerks is the justices themselves are from a relatively small and select root of law schools. that is not always the case. but i do think that it is part of the risk-averse nature of the hiring that the justices that do. but they want to...
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN2
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first, life expectancy in the developed world has been increasing like clockwork. a quarter of a year every year for 160 years. clean water, child mortality, vaccines, and other audits and so forth. that is already baked in. second, the amount of computer fire power that you can buy for a dollar has been doubling every 18 months. this is all. that's why the smartphone has more computer firepower than did the entire air defense command in 1965. third, the genetics, robotics and the man no revolutions are now exceeding this accelerated curved. that's why the first sequence in 2000 costs several billion and today the cost is approaching that of a comprehensive blood test. now, those are uncertainties. those we know. but there are plenty of critical certainties in this scenario. a few examples include how will the new public she's like the obesity epidemic affect the life span and the health span. as the wife who spanned increases what about the diseases that take on new importance like alzheimer's? what about the gap between the rich and poor? is it possible that tech
first, life expectancy in the developed world has been increasing like clockwork. a quarter of a year every year for 160 years. clean water, child mortality, vaccines, and other audits and so forth. that is already baked in. second, the amount of computer fire power that you can buy for a dollar has been doubling every 18 months. this is all. that's why the smartphone has more computer firepower than did the entire air defense command in 1965. third, the genetics, robotics and the man no...