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Sep 14, 2017
09/17
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she is a columbia university grad, a social media sensation with 500,000 followers. >> all the cookies me! >> reporter: she's also looking to make history to become the first woman to climb africa's mora more whaa. only one person has ever successfully free climbed it before. >> looks pretty big up close. >> reporter: free climbing is no joke. sasha can't use any extra aid to ge get up the wall, just their feet, sometimes their finger tips and toes. >> every move is delicate, it's like tiptoeing and dancing on your feet. >> reporter: once again, her sponsor, red bull, documenting the effort. >> scramble to the top. >> reporter: sasha and edu scale different mapping the best route to the top. their nights will be spent on this. >> we have just mounted. this is what it looks like. this is the view. basically, going to be sleeping like this tonight. >> reporter: a porta ledge, a four by seven piece foot of material. >> amazing. >> reporter: that sasha calls a flat hammock. the final push takes three days to get from the bottom to the top of mora mora, without falling. requiring both physi
she is a columbia university grad, a social media sensation with 500,000 followers. >> all the cookies me! >> reporter: she's also looking to make history to become the first woman to climb africa's mora more whaa. only one person has ever successfully free climbed it before. >> looks pretty big up close. >> reporter: free climbing is no joke. sasha can't use any extra aid to ge get up the wall, just their feet, sometimes their finger tips and toes. >> every move...
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Sep 27, 2017
09/17
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FOXNEWSW
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of violent campus protest we talk to famed attorney alan dershowitz, who is set to address a columbia universityutes from now and he fears that something along these lines could potentially happen to him. and what if you found out there was a tiny town in texas that had a thousand planes registered there and no airports? how that lead to an explosive investigation on just who is flying the private planes overhead and what we did not fix after 9/11. ♪ >> american pilot licenses don't include a picture of the pilot despite an order from congress in the wake of the 9/11 terror attacks. that's a big problem. if authorities don't know who is flying american planes, it's possible they don't know what those planes are being used for. ♪ the classes, the friends, the independence. and since we planned for it, that student debt is the one experience, i'm glad she'll miss when you have the right financial advisor, life can be brilliant. ameriprise ethat's the height ofs mount everest. because each day she chooses to take the stairs. at work, at home... even on the escalator. that can be hard on her lower b
of violent campus protest we talk to famed attorney alan dershowitz, who is set to address a columbia universityutes from now and he fears that something along these lines could potentially happen to him. and what if you found out there was a tiny town in texas that had a thousand planes registered there and no airports? how that lead to an explosive investigation on just who is flying the private planes overhead and what we did not fix after 9/11. ♪ >> american pilot licenses don't...
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Sep 24, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN2
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i was at columbia during the height of all of this, columbia university. so, when he came back, he was firmly to the right. in defense of what he felt was democracy. again, remember, his war was very clearly delineated between good and bad, right and wrong, evil, hero, this war, the people he thought were the heroes, were being vilified as evil. then he came under the influence of ronald reagan, which kind of cemented all of this because reagan also was a roosevelt liberal in the '40s. the president of the screen actors guild, which was seen in the '40s, less so today, as a kind of a liberal organization, leftist, maybe softly communist organization, and he was the head of it. and they -- he -- reagan actually saved hollywood from splintering but that's another story. he mentored heston into the screen actors guild. he put him on the board and he was an actor so he had access, and then when reagan retired because he game a producer on nbc for ge theater and you can't be a producer and be a union leader. just no mixing there. so he left, and there was anoth
i was at columbia during the height of all of this, columbia university. so, when he came back, he was firmly to the right. in defense of what he felt was democracy. again, remember, his war was very clearly delineated between good and bad, right and wrong, evil, hero, this war, the people he thought were the heroes, were being vilified as evil. then he came under the influence of ronald reagan, which kind of cemented all of this because reagan also was a roosevelt liberal in the '40s. the...
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Sep 30, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN
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i spoke to scientists at columbia university who have concerns about indian point. it is on a recently discovered fault. capableple think it is of an earthquake as high as 7.0. we should say that most of these power plants are overbuilt. the 2011is with washington, d.c. quake. there was little structural damage to the plant itself. scientists worry about the auxiliary systems. the cooling systems, the fans, the cap's. could do damage that could result in the release of nuclear material. the most extreme example would result in the evacuation of new york city. host: let's go to the phones. harold is calling from palmdale, california. caller: good morning. plant, on those copper pipes that started , iking in the cooling system believe, i believe it is the , 80% ofnes in the water california is on chloramines which has ammonia, nitrates eight the holes in the copper tubing. they did not change the water out, the ammonia got greater and greater because it never leaves the water. that is my theory. i guess that is about it. guest: i can't speak to that directly but i can
i spoke to scientists at columbia university who have concerns about indian point. it is on a recently discovered fault. capableple think it is of an earthquake as high as 7.0. we should say that most of these power plants are overbuilt. the 2011is with washington, d.c. quake. there was little structural damage to the plant itself. scientists worry about the auxiliary systems. the cooling systems, the fans, the cap's. could do damage that could result in the release of nuclear material. the...
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eric foner the pulitzer prize winning historian and de witt clinton professor of history at columbia university he is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history from his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology of the republican party before the civil war to his books on reconstruction and slavery tom paine and the underground railroad issue.
eric foner the pulitzer prize winning historian and de witt clinton professor of history at columbia university he is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history from his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology of the republican party before the civil war to his books on reconstruction and slavery tom paine and the underground railroad issue.
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Sep 16, 2017
09/17
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WJLA
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>> reporter: kevin spacey salinger's writing teacher here at columbia university in new york city wherelinger found inspiration and stability. did he have a good experience here? >> yeah, he had a great experience here. it was really transformative for him. he was a troubled student. dropped out of multiple colleges. then when he got here, his instructor after a semester started to transform him. >> holden caulfield deserves an entire book. all on his own. >> reporter: salinger's creation, holden caulfield, would go on to become one of the most iconic characters in literary history. but the intense public scrutiny brought on by the success of "the catcher in the rye" pushed salinger further into a reclusive state. after having inhabited this role, do you have a sense of why he took himself out of the mix so thoroughly for the last 50 years of his life? >> i mean, it's big speculation, again. i think to be able to walk when you've reached a level of success like that is extremely bold and noble thing in many ways. >> how do you think he's feel about this movie? >> he'd hate this movie. h
>> reporter: kevin spacey salinger's writing teacher here at columbia university in new york city wherelinger found inspiration and stability. did he have a good experience here? >> yeah, he had a great experience here. it was really transformative for him. he was a troubled student. dropped out of multiple colleges. then when he got here, his instructor after a semester started to transform him. >> holden caulfield deserves an entire book. all on his own. >> reporter:...
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Sep 14, 2017
09/17
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. >> reporter: the 24-year-old is a columbia university grad. a rock-climbing phenom.nd social media sensation. more than 500,000 followers. >> all the cookies for me! >> reporter: she's once again looking to make history, to become the first woman to free climb africa's mora-mora. a massive natural wall of vertical granite at over 2,300 feet to the top. >> it's really a personal journey. it's like climbing isn't in competition with anyone else but yourself. >> reporter: we first met sasha in 2014. the then-college junior was attempting sardinia's mad man's journey. >> this is by far the hardest i've ever attempted. >> reporter: sasha lives for cliffs so steep, so remote, they seem impossible for any human to conquer. >> sasha is definitely the forefront of female rock climbers. she's certainly one of the best in the world. >> reporter: with a camera crew in tow and ed jumaren, they took their shot. >> i'm almost invincible today. fy fall, i'll be falling fearlessly. i came over the ledge with my left hand. we made it! there's eddy's face with a big smile. all we could
. >> reporter: the 24-year-old is a columbia university grad. a rock-climbing phenom.nd social media sensation. more than 500,000 followers. >> all the cookies for me! >> reporter: she's once again looking to make history, to become the first woman to free climb africa's mora-mora. a massive natural wall of vertical granite at over 2,300 feet to the top. >> it's really a personal journey. it's like climbing isn't in competition with anyone else but yourself. >>...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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debbie can't go two minutes without talking about columbia university, and the little guy with the lazyown. whatever. honestly, i wish that tart would go back to columbia and take her weird little brown friend with her. [ chuckles ] cam, you need to relax. you explained. not very well. so when i was said "brown people," i-i wasn't talking about your, uh, brown people. i was talking about people who go to a university, um, not your people. not -- not that your people couldn't go to college. okay, now i'm hearing myself say "your people" a lot, so... i'm just very excited because this is, um -- you know, this is our first night out together, so it's our little date. where are we going? make sure your seat belt is securely fastened and your tray tables are in the upright position, because i got us into palaiseau! [ squeals, chuckles ] fancy. i know, it's normally a 4-week wait, but the maitre d' is an old pilates brother of mine, so just one phone call. okay. palaiseau! [ chuckles ] ay, cameron, you know what? i don't know if i'm in the mood for something so fancy. can we just go s
debbie can't go two minutes without talking about columbia university, and the little guy with the lazyown. whatever. honestly, i wish that tart would go back to columbia and take her weird little brown friend with her. [ chuckles ] cam, you need to relax. you explained. not very well. so when i was said "brown people," i-i wasn't talking about your, uh, brown people. i was talking about people who go to a university, um, not your people. not -- not that your people couldn't go to...
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tromp to his friends at columbia university in the hopes that it would be released publicly and that that would trigger the special counsel and indeed that chain of events you know it happened and now president trump is facing robert robert mueller. i assume you agree with that and what do you make of the white house now continuing to try to get the justice department to criminalize mystic lonely. i think it shows that sarah huckabee sanders and the rest of the team over there are really kind of the bad news bears when it comes to how they're handling this investigation i mean. there's no other word for it other than lamebrained there was nothing remotely illegal about former f.b.i. director komi providing the memo either to a friend a law school or to the new york times it's perfectly legal it's perfectly within the scope of whistleblower laws so long as no classified information is being revealed and the idea that the president and the white house would then try to sic the inter the inspector general on former f.b.i. director komi is part of a larger narrative of obstruction of jus
tromp to his friends at columbia university in the hopes that it would be released publicly and that that would trigger the special counsel and indeed that chain of events you know it happened and now president trump is facing robert robert mueller. i assume you agree with that and what do you make of the white house now continuing to try to get the justice department to criminalize mystic lonely. i think it shows that sarah huckabee sanders and the rest of the team over there are really kind...
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fessor of history at columbia university he is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history from his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology of the republican party before the civil war to his books on reconstruction and slavery tom paine and the underground railroad has shattered the myths we tell ourselves about ourselves to shine a fierce and uncompromising light on our nation's past a past that informs our present his latest book is battles for freedom the use and abuse of american history thank you and i should add not only are you a brilliant historian but you can write which makes me wonder how you ever got into academia thank you thank you because i appreciate when i worked as a reporter at the new york times we used to say that. we manipulated facts they were facts they were verifiable facts but we could spin them any way we wanted to and i i think when i read your stuff that you would agree that that's also true about historians yeah in a lot of ways it is i mean we do we're not novelists we do not invent facts we don't invent dialogue from the past y
fessor of history at columbia university he is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history from his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology of the republican party before the civil war to his books on reconstruction and slavery tom paine and the underground railroad has shattered the myths we tell ourselves about ourselves to shine a fierce and uncompromising light on our nation's past a past that informs our present his latest book is battles for freedom the use...
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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it was a great report out of columbia university. columbia center of addiction sciences and alcoholism that says only 11% of people behind bars are treated for their addiction. and so that means people are literally tolling time behind the road and they're trying to grapple with employment, housing, and their family and they're not at that time about to go to an addiction treatment center. and they said let's make the time behind the wall productive. let's provide for enhanced employment and training. i think georgia is making that time. we need to link services stronger in a more pleasing look. and lastly, the business community has to be part of this, peter. we have great midsize new jersey corp rashzs that have decide tootd give people a break. steve are taking people incarcerated. but what we need is major american businesses whose corporate head quarters are not located new jersey to understand the importance of second chances. if they get right with their higher power, with their god but don't for the ability with self sufficien
it was a great report out of columbia university. columbia center of addiction sciences and alcoholism that says only 11% of people behind bars are treated for their addiction. and so that means people are literally tolling time behind the road and they're trying to grapple with employment, housing, and their family and they're not at that time about to go to an addiction treatment center. and they said let's make the time behind the wall productive. let's provide for enhanced employment and...
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sector is working to correct an industry that has grown quote out of control a new report from columbia's university's center on global energy policy argues the number of privately owned quote unquote teapot refineries will shrink over the next decade as larger sophisticated plants thrive at the expense of smaller rivals this announcement cause a flash crash in the price of at the time but their impact on markets. started in two thousand and twelve with the last column for china and that's let them a disease of china right she now so there's going to be a new owner who is going to be the same leader go exactly to day at all as i know they are ok the guy go in for ten years like could it be for another five years i think they appoint a new leader but you know this is a very unusual move the g twenty is like start this stuff like he's going to be around for a while looks like he's going to be going to the well probably you know it's not covered here on the news we've been here for the past few months is not covered on the news because everything is russia great russia great russia gate hillary clinton's
sector is working to correct an industry that has grown quote out of control a new report from columbia's university's center on global energy policy argues the number of privately owned quote unquote teapot refineries will shrink over the next decade as larger sophisticated plants thrive at the expense of smaller rivals this announcement cause a flash crash in the price of at the time but their impact on markets. started in two thousand and twelve with the last column for china and that's let...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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CSPAN3
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the columbia university, same artist, same craftsman as commissioned. when i lead tours of the city and in my book i say the world is all around us in new york. new york avenue is not named for the duke of york. it's named for alvin york. and brooklyn avenue q, it's quinton road for quinton roosevelt and this month is the 99th anniversary of his death. and staten island, victory boulevard, it's that victory over germany and the central powers. so unlike the movie, i'm not going to drop you into everything. i'm going to tell you how we got to where we are. here's world war i 101. the assassination of ferdinand and his wife sophie started the first major european war in nearly 100 years. austria threatened war against serbia with support of germany. germany was mobilized to protect serbia. that led germany to war against russia. france then mobilized against germany because it had a treaty with russia to support it. when germany invaded belgium, this brought in brit inintervention. frankly overnight there was a world war. the central powers and all of the
the columbia university, same artist, same craftsman as commissioned. when i lead tours of the city and in my book i say the world is all around us in new york. new york avenue is not named for the duke of york. it's named for alvin york. and brooklyn avenue q, it's quinton road for quinton roosevelt and this month is the 99th anniversary of his death. and staten island, victory boulevard, it's that victory over germany and the central powers. so unlike the movie, i'm not going to drop you into...
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eric foner of the pulitzer prize winning historian and de witt clinton professor of history at columbia university is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history and his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology.
eric foner of the pulitzer prize winning historian and de witt clinton professor of history at columbia university is one of the country's foremost scholars of american history and his first book free soil free labor free men the idiology.
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Sep 6, 2017
09/17
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BLOOMBERG
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at columbia university, we mentioned john taylor at sanford -- stanford.hey are thought well of in the communities. there are options for him to do something of a mainstream pick. julie: i want to bring in kevin cirilli, our chief washington correspondent for more on the trump perspective. we have heard about tro commentary -- trump commentary about yellen, do we know about his relationship with fischer and mike is giving the economic perspective on who might be a replacement, politically, who could be a potential replacement? kevin: you have to look at this through the lens of the president's relationship with the gary cohn and he was perceived to be for the last week after leading the effort of driving is going to replace fed chair yellen. with stanley fischer out, the question is will gary still have that influence in creating and shaping the direction of some of the very significant federal reserve nominees? in terms of where this is headed, the president has seemingly had a kinship for theing folks who are from rubin trade of thought and from the gold
at columbia university, we mentioned john taylor at sanford -- stanford.hey are thought well of in the communities. there are options for him to do something of a mainstream pick. julie: i want to bring in kevin cirilli, our chief washington correspondent for more on the trump perspective. we have heard about tro commentary -- trump commentary about yellen, do we know about his relationship with fischer and mike is giving the economic perspective on who might be a replacement, politically, who...
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Sep 13, 2017
09/17
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did he really just admit that he sent that to his buddy at columbia university so the professor couldink it to "the new york times" when donald trump keeps saying we have a problem with leakers and then we learned at the head of the fbi himself was one of those leakers and readily admits it. did he do anything illegal? >> josh: sarah huckabee sanders is defending the president and that is well within her right. that's what her job is and what she should do, but you said it at the end, there are at least two investigations where all of this is under scope. do you know what else is in scope as the white house. if i am sarah huckabee sanders, the last thing in the world that i would want to be talking about is jim comey. he's got taxi for monies to get done, he's got a congressional agenda, he's a little bit in the mud here and you have a whole offense you can play. why would you want to look backwards -- >> sandra: you have watched the white house press briefings all week. she can't get away from it. it's every question if not every other question. >> josh: everyone knows what their poi
did he really just admit that he sent that to his buddy at columbia university so the professor couldink it to "the new york times" when donald trump keeps saying we have a problem with leakers and then we learned at the head of the fbi himself was one of those leakers and readily admits it. did he do anything illegal? >> josh: sarah huckabee sanders is defending the president and that is well within her right. that's what her job is and what she should do, but you said it at...
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Sep 7, 2017
09/17
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CNBC
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go to columbia university, congratulations. >> thanks for watching see you tomorrow at 5:00 "mad moneystarts now >>> my mission is simple, to make you money i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere. and i promise to help you find it "mad money" starts now hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica other people like to make friends, my goal is to make you money. so call me or, of course, tweet me at jim cramer anybody who has a high school diploma has almost certainly taken a course in
go to columbia university, congratulations. >> thanks for watching see you tomorrow at 5:00 "mad moneystarts now >>> my mission is simple, to make you money i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere. and i promise to help you find it "mad money" starts now hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica other people like to make friends, my goal is to make you money. so call me or, of course,...
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Sep 13, 2017
09/17
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WTXF
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three schools are tied for number five, columbia university in new york, massachusetts institute of technology stanford university. so now you know. >>> school district of philadelphia's facing a lawsuit, why one recent grad says the way the district handles its athletic teams is just plane wrong. we'll have a live update coming up in just a moment. and it is supposed to be a magic moment. popping the big question to the love of your life. this guy did it on a bridge, and that's when things went, well, didn't go as he planned. the shocking end to this proposal gone wrong, coming up when "good day" continues in about two minutes. gps: faster route detected. let me finish downloading this from the cloud. looks like you found a better way to do this, dad. organic, non-gmo feed, 100% veggie diet. if i can raise you two, i can raise anything. perdue. raising more organic chickens than in anyone america. the old man's still got it. >> the frank rizzo statue has a neighbor now, so, see it, it is a pick! what do you think? what's the message being portrayed here? and then, listen to this. >> ♪ >> ♪ >>
three schools are tied for number five, columbia university in new york, massachusetts institute of technology stanford university. so now you know. >>> school district of philadelphia's facing a lawsuit, why one recent grad says the way the district handles its athletic teams is just plane wrong. we'll have a live update coming up in just a moment. and it is supposed to be a magic moment. popping the big question to the love of your life. this guy did it on a bridge, and that's when...
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Sep 13, 2017
09/17
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WTTG
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researchers at columbia university studied nearly 8,000 people they found those that saturday the mostk of dying over a four year period. get up and walk around every 30 minutes. a way to help decrease that risk. more research is needed to help how prolong sitting. sitting for 90 minutes from ten to 11:30. >> i feel like we hear that study every year. it's more or less the same five studies. we just hear them in different context. don't have too much sugar don't drink too much alcohol. get your tattoos at a clean parlor. fox5 news at 11 is coming up next. tony, do you want to show off your tattoo tonight. >> you left me with nothing to do tomorrow. >> thank you guys very much. coming up straight ahead at 11. an atm targeted with credit card skim ers leads to dozens of fraud length charges. now investigators are looking for your help to find the men suspected of putting them there and lights of hope glowing around the capital's reflecting pool tonight. how this crowd wants to help in the fight against cancer. been trying to prepare for this day... and i'm still not ready. the reason i'm
researchers at columbia university studied nearly 8,000 people they found those that saturday the mostk of dying over a four year period. get up and walk around every 30 minutes. a way to help decrease that risk. more research is needed to help how prolong sitting. sitting for 90 minutes from ten to 11:30. >> i feel like we hear that study every year. it's more or less the same five studies. we just hear them in different context. don't have too much sugar don't drink too much alcohol....
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Sep 13, 2017
09/17
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WTTG
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researchers at columbia university studied 8,000 people and found those that sat the most had twice theg over a four-year period. one saving grace for people who sat a lot was to get up and walk every 30 minutes as a way to help decrease that risk. >> that affects a lot of people. a lot of people sit on jobs right? >> got to get up and move around. exercise is good. >> move it so you don't lose it. >> ravens legend leaves the list of pro football ham of fame cap dates. >> the creator of hamilton receives an honor >> another live look across the d.c. region, pretty picture there lincoln memorial glowing in the night. 5:42 is the too many now. 68 on this wednesday. mike will talk a full weather forecast on the other side of the break. don't go ralph northam: i'm ralph northam, candidate for governor and i sponsored this ad narrator: ed gillespie says dr. ralph northam doesn't show up? dr. ralph northam was an army doctor and a volunteer medical director at a children's hospice. he passed the virginia law requiring concussion standards for school sports. the smoking ban in restaurants. and
researchers at columbia university studied 8,000 people and found those that sat the most had twice theg over a four-year period. one saving grace for people who sat a lot was to get up and walk every 30 minutes as a way to help decrease that risk. >> that affects a lot of people. a lot of people sit on jobs right? >> got to get up and move around. exercise is good. >> move it so you don't lose it. >> ravens legend leaves the list of pro football ham of fame cap dates....
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Sep 21, 2017
09/17
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KCSM
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jeffrey sachs university , professor and director of the center for sustainable development at columbia universitysachs is a leading economist and the author of many books, including most recently "building the new american economy: smart, fair, and sustainable." the book's foreword is by bernie sanders. jeff sachs, welcome to democracy now! you were there. start with north korea and take it from there. >> horrifying. there was a shutter in the room. no president of the united states has declared from the podium of the united nations general assembly that the u.s. is ready to totally destroy a country. it was absolutely shocking. the whole speech was grotesque, in my view. amy: why? >> because it was militaristic. it was filled with grievance, with bias, with ignorance. trump is a very dangerous man. there is no question about it. he individually a very dangerous man and the united states right now is a very dangerous country. nermeen: what was the response among other member states and other people present in the general assembly when he spoke? >> you could hear shuffling, chuckles, amazement, ca
jeffrey sachs university , professor and director of the center for sustainable development at columbia universitysachs is a leading economist and the author of many books, including most recently "building the new american economy: smart, fair, and sustainable." the book's foreword is by bernie sanders. jeff sachs, welcome to democracy now! you were there. start with north korea and take it from there. >> horrifying. there was a shutter in the room. no president of the united...
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Sep 18, 2017
09/17
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WTXF
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researchers at columbia university medical center says patch can reduce risk of diabetes and cancer.esearchers are hoping to begin testing it on humans very soon. a lot of mice running around, with no love handles. >>> all right. >>> we will have more when we come right back. for years, men have enjoyed their man caves without guilt. now, it's mama's turn. welcome to my she shed. i've got my favorite outfit on. my literature. my armando! and these are my treats! i'm just gonna have one if that's okay. of course it's okay. this is my world. fiber one 90 calorie brownies. allll mine. >>> good morning, monday, 5:46 starting to see delays on the schuylkill, i95, beginning of the monday morning rush hour. we will slide into dekalb pike route 202 at sumanytown pike disable causing some delays this morning rolling out of the driveway and we have got some fog from morgan town into downingtown and then down to one lane on the turnpike at downingtown so just be careful that is left over work crew out there over south jersey, swedeboro avenue at democrat road just off of the 295 interchange an
researchers at columbia university medical center says patch can reduce risk of diabetes and cancer.esearchers are hoping to begin testing it on humans very soon. a lot of mice running around, with no love handles. >>> all right. >>> we will have more when we come right back. for years, men have enjoyed their man caves without guilt. now, it's mama's turn. welcome to my she shed. i've got my favorite outfit on. my literature. my armando! and these are my treats! i'm just gonna...
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Sep 4, 2017
09/17
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. >> listen to a sophomore at columbia university. he is a dreamer.what he just told me he thinks should happen. >> well, i don't think that mass amnesty is the right way or solution to this, i don't think that mass deportation is also the right way. there should be more systemic -- i would support immigration where immigrants that have contributed or very likely to contribute to some type of the u.s. or those that have first priority to say. i don't think everybody should be asked to leave. i think shows with skills should be promised to allow to stay. >> is that a compromise? that you could live with? >> everybody who is weighed in in favor continuing daca with the possible exception of paul ryan, they favor hillary clinton in this campaign, donald trump made commitments to his base -- >> dan, i asked you this is a dreamer who said he doesn't believe in complete amnesty. this a dreamer who just told me he thinks that there should be some who can stay and some who can't. that it should be merit based, who helps this country move forward. that is a co
. >> listen to a sophomore at columbia university. he is a dreamer.what he just told me he thinks should happen. >> well, i don't think that mass amnesty is the right way or solution to this, i don't think that mass deportation is also the right way. there should be more systemic -- i would support immigration where immigrants that have contributed or very likely to contribute to some type of the u.s. or those that have first priority to say. i don't think everybody should be asked...
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Sep 6, 2017
09/17
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york state youth leadership council as well as on behalf of the undocumented initiative at columbia university. i am a daca recipient. it expires in december. i don't know what will happen to me. i just don't know. this shouldn't have happened. i am here hoping i could start leftl tomorrow and let my comfortably and focus on school. but now when my work permit expires, what is going to happen? am i going to have to take refuge? and my never going to be a believed campus because that is the only way i will be protected against deportation? .hey have shown no discretion they are snatching you. that horrifies me. i have been here since 1999. i have not left this country since 2001. i have nowhere else to go. i am a daca recipient. i am feeling terrible right now. i have been here for 20 years this january. this is nothing short of heartbreaking. i was able to come out of the shadows, to be who i really wanted to be, who my mom wanted me to be. what my mom sacrificed for. it really breaks my heart. >> my name is catalina. we are fighting for all 11 million undocumented immigrants in this country.
york state youth leadership council as well as on behalf of the undocumented initiative at columbia university. i am a daca recipient. it expires in december. i don't know what will happen to me. i just don't know. this shouldn't have happened. i am here hoping i could start leftl tomorrow and let my comfortably and focus on school. but now when my work permit expires, what is going to happen? am i going to have to take refuge? and my never going to be a believed campus because that is the only...
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Sep 17, 2017
09/17
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. >> doctor keith diaz and researchers from columbia university medical center look at 8,000 adults,nd found they sat on average for 11 to 12 hours a day. >> if you take a moving break every 30 minutes this can increase your risk of death and have walking meetings, if i have to have type in an e-mail, rather to a co-worker, or just walk to their office. >> reporter: megan and her co-workers are getting a message. >> her office, just, and decides to institute, everybody has a fit bit. >> reporter: megan says moving around also gets her mind moving. >> researchers, and, this is largest study done so far that links sedentary times specifically, sitting for long period of time. with an increased risk for death. i'm stephanie stahl, for cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >>> still to come this morning on cbs-3 "eyewitness news", the bird invade kansas city how the eagles handled all of that noise at arrow head stadium, leslie van arsdal talks to the man who knows it all, the voice of the eagles >>> back on eyewitness nice and turning to sports phillies wrap up their three game series with the oakla
. >> doctor keith diaz and researchers from columbia university medical center look at 8,000 adults,nd found they sat on average for 11 to 12 hours a day. >> if you take a moving break every 30 minutes this can increase your risk of death and have walking meetings, if i have to have type in an e-mail, rather to a co-worker, or just walk to their office. >> reporter: megan and her co-workers are getting a message. >> her office, just, and decides to institute, everybody...
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Sep 7, 2017
09/17
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go to columbia university, congratulations. >> thanks for watching see you tomorrow at 5:00 "mad money" starts now >>> my mission is simple, to make you money i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere. and i promise to help you find it "mad money" starts now hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica other people like to make friends, my goal is to make you money. so call me or, of course, tweet me at jim cramer anybody who has a high school diploma has almost certainly taken a course in chemistry, je only geometry and physics you know the one thing they almost never teach you in high school, let alone touch with a ten-foot-pole in college financial literacy i'm not talking about economics here you can be an econ major and still learn nothing about personal financial planning or retirement readiness or even how to balance a darn checkbook, let alone how to invest your money wisely money is not talked about in education. it's like the third rail of the whole educational system and that's why i'm on a constant mission
go to columbia university, congratulations. >> thanks for watching see you tomorrow at 5:00 "mad money" starts now >>> my mission is simple, to make you money i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there's always a bull market somewhere. and i promise to help you find it "mad money" starts now hey, i'm cramer. welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica other people like to make friends, my goal is to make you money. so call me or, of...
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Sep 29, 2017
09/17
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he has frequently spoken on various campuses, including last night at columbia university in new yorkso you are a first amendment absolutist, self-described, and i think your career attests to that. where is the line? it is okay from the perspective of a school administration to have an employee advocate political violence? >> i think employees are different than students because they are supposed to be role models. students are supposed to listen to them. nyu is a private university, and i think the president would be well within his rights to fire a professor who advocates violence, particularly to students, because it is students who are joining antifa. it is growing by leaps and bounds. he is justifying not only violence but violence to suppress free speech and economic freedom. -- economic academic freedom. i guess the implications of what he is saying, if a teacher gets up in class and pronounces a view that he regards as sexist, it would be okay for the students to beat up the t,teacher. or like the student in the bronx that pulled out a knife and killed a fellow student b who
he has frequently spoken on various campuses, including last night at columbia university in new yorkso you are a first amendment absolutist, self-described, and i think your career attests to that. where is the line? it is okay from the perspective of a school administration to have an employee advocate political violence? >> i think employees are different than students because they are supposed to be role models. students are supposed to listen to them. nyu is a private university, and...
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Sep 8, 2017
09/17
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treatment of a substance used disorders consistent with the findings with the research from columbia university so in close collaboration with our partners and stakeholders will focus treatment and the engagement of high quality care with sustained recovery to achieve the aims. said nine of a moment to catch your breath that his mind privilege to introduce mr. talbott was overcome the opioid use disorder but university of tennessee in knoxville his other treatment programs serves as the sponsor as program director. he currently serves of the credentials committee on the certification board of the board of directors on chemical dependency. your proof positive people recover and go want to do incredible things they give for your courage and commitment to turn the tide of substance abuse disorder in to support those to overcome the devastating conditions. [applause] >> hello aicher leave decided it in georgia as a program director for the opioid program born in eastern tennessee and grew up in a small southern town about 30 minutes out of box fell. so we prioritize families and education to gradua
treatment of a substance used disorders consistent with the findings with the research from columbia university so in close collaboration with our partners and stakeholders will focus treatment and the engagement of high quality care with sustained recovery to achieve the aims. said nine of a moment to catch your breath that his mind privilege to introduce mr. talbott was overcome the opioid use disorder but university of tennessee in knoxville his other treatment programs serves as the sponsor...
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Sep 23, 2017
09/17
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>> guest: san francisco state university, columbia university for a graduate degree in broadcast journalism and film. worked for the public broadcasting station here first, kqed, on the famous newsroom where i cut my teeth on journalism with some of these very seasoned ladies and gentlemen and am very pleased with that backdrop to my life. c-span: why this book now? >> guest: took me a long time to cough it up. it was very difficult to write, very difficult to write. i always thought that one day someone would walk in, and there'd just be this large brown puddle of tears, and it would be me, you know? it took therapy, it took focus, it took prayer to get it up, to talk about it, to remember it all, to be able the talk about it from a neutral pedestal. i did not want to write the book through any veil of hostility, but just to simply tell you my story and let you decide what you think about it. c-span: how'd you remember all this? >> guest: kept a diary. i write things down incessantly. i mean, i hear snatches of conversation on a bus or in a lobby, so i always have kept notes, scraps of pap
>> guest: san francisco state university, columbia university for a graduate degree in broadcast journalism and film. worked for the public broadcasting station here first, kqed, on the famous newsroom where i cut my teeth on journalism with some of these very seasoned ladies and gentlemen and am very pleased with that backdrop to my life. c-span: why this book now? >> guest: took me a long time to cough it up. it was very difficult to write, very difficult to write. i always...
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Sep 2, 2017
09/17
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discuss the long road for recovery is the director for the center for disaster preparedness at columbia universityredletter. he's a pediatrician and you took part in response to hurricane katrina. you were getting ready to respond to this disaster. based on what we are seeing out there, how do you think things are going? >> well, i think this is going to be a long haul. i think the initial rescue efforts have been pretty good and a lot of coordination among the federal, state and local officials. that's all fine. a tremendous response from the volunteers helping out. that's the beginning of phase one. >> like the tip of the iceberg. >> and a tremendously difficult recovery process. people will be faced with public health challenges and the physical reconstruction of their homes but most importantly for children and families it will be the recovery of some kind of new normalcy. because it's a difficult time for kids in particular who suddenly don't have schools. their communities are gone, friends and social networks many of them have been really disrupted so we need to get stability for the famili
discuss the long road for recovery is the director for the center for disaster preparedness at columbia universityredletter. he's a pediatrician and you took part in response to hurricane katrina. you were getting ready to respond to this disaster. based on what we are seeing out there, how do you think things are going? >> well, i think this is going to be a long haul. i think the initial rescue efforts have been pretty good and a lot of coordination among the federal, state and local...
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Sep 14, 2017
09/17
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KGO
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irwin redliner, director of the national center for disaster preparedness at columbia university.e knows what to do. so i grabbed guillermo and we met him at the first place i would go if disaster strikes. >> hello, dr. redliner, i'm jimmy. >> hi, how are you? >> jimmy: very good, this is my associate guillermo. thank you for meeting us here, i really appreciate it. we've been worried, right? >> guillermo: yeah, very much. >> jimmy: i'll take off my glasses. we're worried about nuclear attack. we're here in california. we're on the west coast. i know you're director of the national center for disaster preparedness. >> right. >> jimmy: explain it to us like we're children. >> guillermo: yes, like kids. >> jimmy: we kind of are. >> i can do that. first of all, background is and why people are so worried about this, during the cold war -- >> >> jimmy: you say white people? >> i didn't but you can. >> jimmy: he said "why people." i thought you said white people also. white people are worried. >> i think all people are worried about it. it used to be people worried during those years t
irwin redliner, director of the national center for disaster preparedness at columbia university.e knows what to do. so i grabbed guillermo and we met him at the first place i would go if disaster strikes. >> hello, dr. redliner, i'm jimmy. >> hi, how are you? >> jimmy: very good, this is my associate guillermo. thank you for meeting us here, i really appreciate it. we've been worried, right? >> guillermo: yeah, very much. >> jimmy: i'll take off my glasses. we're...
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Sep 16, 2017
09/17
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haroon moghul holds an na from columbia university where you are currently a phd candidate. so you can tell us more about that. his fields of study include muslim nationalism in south asia, colonial and postcolonial islamic politics and the development of the indian ocean economy. i think that sort of differently than your previous work, this is a very personal book so i'm going to leave it at that. if i may. it's a real pleasure to welcome haroon moghul and we will talk a bit later and have time for questions and answers. please welcome haroon moghul, thanks so much. [applause] >> hello. i'm pretty loud, so i don't know if i need the market mike but you need the mic since you are recording. cameras follow me everywhere, it's called being a muslim. joke, you can laugh. what i wanted to do is read a section of the book which the color is orange in honor of our president. i saw that coming but i thought it would be a nice gesture. i asked the publisher if we could maybe change the subtitle to a north american story in case i flee to canada but they were not amenable. so the se
haroon moghul holds an na from columbia university where you are currently a phd candidate. so you can tell us more about that. his fields of study include muslim nationalism in south asia, colonial and postcolonial islamic politics and the development of the indian ocean economy. i think that sort of differently than your previous work, this is a very personal book so i'm going to leave it at that. if i may. it's a real pleasure to welcome haroon moghul and we will talk a bit later and have...