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female nobel prize winner for 55 years and she becomes only the third woman to win the award after mary cury in 1903 and maria mayer in 1963. huge congratulations to donna. we have cornelia mayer with us. the daily telegraph says cabinet ministers have said to them it isa cabinet ministers have said to them it is a question of when, not if, when it comes to the pm stepping down. it is reminiscent of tony blairand down. it is reminiscent of tony blair and gordon brown, remember when they said, when tony blair was asked to tell what he was stepping down, to step aside? yeah, ifeel sorry for her, it is incredibly unhelpful, because right now she should really concentrate on brexit. this whole brouha ha should really concentrate on brexit. this whole brouhaha in the conservative party, with the brexiteers, jacob rees—mogg, boris johnson, you know, conjuring up all the dissent, it is not helpful because she has to negotiate now with europe, not within her own party. she is, and that is the reality and today she delivers her speech at the tory party conference. last year there were all sorts going
female nobel prize winner for 55 years and she becomes only the third woman to win the award after mary cury in 1903 and maria mayer in 1963. huge congratulations to donna. we have cornelia mayer with us. the daily telegraph says cabinet ministers have said to them it isa cabinet ministers have said to them it is a question of when, not if, when it comes to the pm stepping down. it is reminiscent of tony blairand down. it is reminiscent of tony blair and gordon brown, remember when they said,...
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Oct 2, 2018
10/18
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with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium beer famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female winners beyond curie the only other woman to win was marie get at maya and nine hundred sixty three for her work on nuclear structure the most famous laureate was what einstein he won not for his most famous theory relativity but for theoretical physics in general here's author george bernard shaw paying tribute to the probably other great many. of our make. up and i'm not a man. get beyond that they are not the kind of am i up an army of. i don't need you and i can't tell you i'm on. the year after einstein niels bohr one for developing the structure of an atom he helped to establish certain european o
with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium beer famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female...
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Oct 2, 2018
10/18
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with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium beer famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female winners beyond curie the only other woman to win was marie get at maya and nine hundred sixty three for her work on uclear structure the most famous laureate was albert einstein he won not for his most famous theory relativity but for theoretical physics in general here's author george bernard shaw paying tribute . the problem and the other great many i believe are make. up and are not of a man get beyond back they are not because of them but they are a part of you know that i am radio and i can tell you that. the year after einstein niels bohr one for developing the structure of an atom he helped to es
with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium beer famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female...
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mean it's hard to believe she's joining a pretty exclusive club that if you have good includes marie curie. the nobel prizes in general women or dramatically under represented across the three for science prizes that are awarded but physics is really kind of the worst of the lot and i think. talking about that would go way beyond the scope of this particular conversation discussion as we're limited by time but i think it is changing and i think that we see it. in things like this in the award with the awarding of this particular prize because she really deserves it and i think it's going to we're going to see a trend in that direction more in the coming years especially because gender parity we know a conversation not only around the world but also within the nobel committee itself very well but i don't think that they just gave her the prize because she's a woman her work really has vast merit and she did it back when she was a ph d. student in the late seventy's and early eighty's so it's fits in with actually the scheme of what the nobel prize is about which is awarding prizes to resear
mean it's hard to believe she's joining a pretty exclusive club that if you have good includes marie curie. the nobel prizes in general women or dramatically under represented across the three for science prizes that are awarded but physics is really kind of the worst of the lot and i think. talking about that would go way beyond the scope of this particular conversation discussion as we're limited by time but i think it is changing and i think that we see it. in things like this in the award...
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she found a new audience in one thousand nine hundred seven though when she joined rock star freddie curie in recording an album the title track off the no now became the anthem of the one thousand nine hundred two summer lympics. for more let's talk to a classical music correspondent rick in boston it's good to see you so let's start with that famous moment in one thousand eighty seven duets with freddie mercury which then became the anthem of the buffalo in olympics in one thousand nine hundred two what's the background to that performance well pretty murky he loved opera and he loved months of a couple a couple and she invited him to join her on a project for the summer games and they had this iconic video. and she actually performed alone at the one thousand nine hundred two games because he died the year before when she did that she reached an audience of some two billion people in this was many times more than she had in all her four thousand other appearances combined this made her as you can see it rocked. it rocked indeed i mean operatic circles she also rocked own way by reviving
she found a new audience in one thousand nine hundred seven though when she joined rock star freddie curie in recording an album the title track off the no now became the anthem of the one thousand nine hundred two summer lympics. for more let's talk to a classical music correspondent rick in boston it's good to see you so let's start with that famous moment in one thousand eighty seven duets with freddie mercury which then became the anthem of the buffalo in olympics in one thousand nine...
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his new mission to explore the planet curie. one european and one japanese it will release them into orbit around the smallest of the rocky planets that they'll spend at least a year mapping and analyzing the sun's closest planetary neighbor scientists hope it will help them learn more about the conditions in the center of the solar system was in four billion years ago. and. is one of the european space agency's most complex missions the probe will fly by the earth venus and mercury a total of nine times using the gravity of those planets to decelerate and avoid being drawn to its due by the sun's huge gravitational pull it will finally end to orbit around mercury in december two thousand and twenty five when it will release its two research satellites. it's a complicated trajectory we have to follow to get to mercury it's not actually getting there that's difficult but it is very difficult to maneuver into orbit that's what makes this flight path complicated and that has to do with the fact that mercury is so close to the sun.
his new mission to explore the planet curie. one european and one japanese it will release them into orbit around the smallest of the rocky planets that they'll spend at least a year mapping and analyzing the sun's closest planetary neighbor scientists hope it will help them learn more about the conditions in the center of the solar system was in four billion years ago. and. is one of the european space agency's most complex missions the probe will fly by the earth venus and mercury a total of...
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overall she's joined mary curie and. she's the first one to win it in fifty five years so it's a shame it is a shame that it's one of those things that the nobel prizes of traditionally always been dominated by men it's not only in physics it's also in the other sciences not all three science prizes there's been fewer than twenty female laureates that is slowly starting to change but it's certainly taking time to take williams thank you for joining us. let's shift to soccer now where by and munich are coming off a bad winter skiing a week have been drawn at home. and then lost to hit a billion on the road they're looking to find their groove in their champions league clash tonight but they face a tough test against a dutch club with a rich history. when it rains it pours the clouds are hanging over byron munich after a bad spell and the mood at training match the weather some stern faces run show as byron plot their recovery from a dreadful showing it hurts of their lin ill timed tackles a lack of urgency and a defense a
overall she's joined mary curie and. she's the first one to win it in fifty five years so it's a shame it is a shame that it's one of those things that the nobel prizes of traditionally always been dominated by men it's not only in physics it's also in the other sciences not all three science prizes there's been fewer than twenty female laureates that is slowly starting to change but it's certainly taking time to take williams thank you for joining us. let's shift to soccer now where by and...
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Oct 3, 2018
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female nobel prize winner for 55 years and she becomes only the third woman to win the award after mary cury. huge congratulations to donna. we have cornelia mayer with us. the daily telegraph says cabinet ministers have said to them it isa cabinet ministers have said to them it is a question of when, not if, when it comes
female nobel prize winner for 55 years and she becomes only the third woman to win the award after mary cury. huge congratulations to donna. we have cornelia mayer with us. the daily telegraph says cabinet ministers have said to them it isa cabinet ministers have said to them it is a question of when, not if, when it comes
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Oct 1, 2018
10/18
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what marie curie and scores of other women scientists down the ages would say, i don't know, but thisgh, jess, isn't it? he has told the times he stands by his comments even though he knows they could his career. it is interesting, that is the right word. -- they could ruin his career. it would be funny if it wasn't so frustrating. a funeral scientist is quoted in this times article that makes the excellent point that this isn't about being offended, it is about senior scientists give out research grants and decide whether women getjobs in physics, that is much more worrying than merely offence, because it is actually starving woman from progressing in these careers. that's it for the papers for now. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it's all there for you — 7 days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers. and if you miss the programme any evening, you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you to my guests john crowley and jess brammar. only for now, though, because we'll all be back for a longer look at the papers at 11:30. but for the moment
what marie curie and scores of other women scientists down the ages would say, i don't know, but thisgh, jess, isn't it? he has told the times he stands by his comments even though he knows they could his career. it is interesting, that is the right word. -- they could ruin his career. it would be funny if it wasn't so frustrating. a funeral scientist is quoted in this times article that makes the excellent point that this isn't about being offended, it is about senior scientists give out...
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Oct 2, 2018
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with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium here famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female winners beyond curie the only other woman to win was marie get that maya and nine hundred sixty three for her work on nuclear structure the most famous laureate was what einstein he won not for his most famous theory relativity but for theoretical physics in general his author george bernard shaw paying tribute. the problem and other great men i believe are making. other than not have a very. good we are back now and not because of them but they are very kind of you know that i don't like radio and i can tell you that. the year after einstein niels bohr one for developing the structure of an atom he hel
with a wedding ring two years later one of physics first families was recognized marie and pierre curie won in one thousand nine hundred three for discovering a radioactive elements polonium and radium here famously said he would not accept the prize and he says wife received equal honors marie went on to also when a nobel prize in chemistry the gender balance wasn't to last they have been two hundred seven physics laureates represented here the two red dots they represent the two female...
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Oct 2, 2018
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before that it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 price with her husband, pierre. this is winter hopes that breaking the half-century hiatus the focus in the future will be other research rather than the render of the searcher. pretoria gill, bbc news. -- victoria gill, bbc news. in just five weeks from now, voters in the u.s. will cast the ballots in the dterm elections. all eyes will be on the democrats to see if they can pick up key seats and tip the gtbalance of power in wash. of the 35 senate races taking place, one of the most closely watched is in texas, where ted cruz is trying to fend off a challenge by democrat beto o'rourke. from dallas, james cook rorts. >> ♪ we're the kids in america ♪ james: texas is changing. i becoming more urban and less white. the democrats have not won a senate seat here for 30 years, but maybe the lone star state is about to see a new wave. thto former punk rocker want shake things up, reforming police and prisons, embracing immigration, spending more on health and education. critics call beto'rourke a socialist, a dirty word he
before that it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 price with her husband, pierre. this is winter hopes that breaking the half-century hiatus the focus in the future will be other research rather than the render of the searcher. pretoria gill, bbc news. -- victoria gill, bbc news. in just five weeks from now, voters in the u.s. will cast the ballots in the dterm elections. all eyes will be on the democrats to see if they can pick up key seats and tip the gtbalance of power in wash. of the 35...
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Oct 3, 2018
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before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. now, a story that's been baffling british scientists. since the start of august, 70 deep water whales have washed up dead on scottish and irish beaches. one theory is that military activity and sonar signals in the atlantic may have caused their deaths. our scotland correspondent lorna gordon reports from tiree in the inner hebrides. the islands along scotland's west coast have become a graveyard for cuvier‘s bea ked whales. in one month, more washed ashore here than in the previous ten years combined, and scientists are trying to work out why they died. it's not a natural occurrence. is it concerning, what has happened? it's very concerning. very, very concerning. it's possibly the highest ever mortality, as a recorded mortality for this particular whale species, ever, anywhere in the world. cuvier‘s bea ked whales are creatures of the deep. they can dive to depths of almost 10,000 feet. research has shown they are sensitive to s
before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. now, a story that's been baffling british scientists. since the start of august, 70 deep water whales have washed up dead on scottish and irish beaches. one theory is that military activity and sonar signals in the atlantic may have caused their deaths. our scotland correspondent lorna gordon reports from tiree in the inner hebrides. the islands along...
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women for the longest time where being ignored and or rican eyes for the woodwork i mean even marie curie who won one of the nobel prizes she almost didn't get it or the other winner was my error and she for the longest time wasn't even rican honest as a real scientist. but it seems that this is still a problem today because just yesterday the scientist. was suspended of to saying that physics was invented and built by man i don't know how you feel about that and he also said that mill scientists were being discriminated against because of ideology so how big a deal is gender when it comes to science where as you can see it's a big deal you say if i can give you a little exercise you know if you close your eyes then just picture scientists how does this scientist look like i mean he is probably pale stale and male. and that's what a lot of people i imagining when they mention a scientist it's still in people's minds even there are a lot of female scientists but because it's so male dominated also on boards on panels on the on the media it's kind of paper to itself you see it's a it's a ne
women for the longest time where being ignored and or rican eyes for the woodwork i mean even marie curie who won one of the nobel prizes she almost didn't get it or the other winner was my error and she for the longest time wasn't even rican honest as a real scientist. but it seems that this is still a problem today because just yesterday the scientist. was suspended of to saying that physics was invented and built by man i don't know how you feel about that and he also said that mill...
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Oct 3, 2018
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before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.the focus in future will be on the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. you have been watching newsday. i'm rico hizon in singapore. i'm babita sharma in london. that's all for now. stay with bbc world news. hello. the rather warm for the time of year and humid air that became established across wales and england on tuesday will, in the day ahead, spread across northern ireland and scotland. it will feel noticeably warmer here. behind this weather front, a warm front, the leading edge of milder air. but that's coming with plenty of cloud, and to start wednesday it's a damp, and drizzly, and cloudy, misty, murky start across many parts, western parts, especially coasts and hills. it will be clear overnight in scotland and eastern england. there will be a chill around first thing, but the cloud will thicken here as we go on through the morning, which leaves us during wednesday with a good deal of cloud around. a few bright and sunny spells here and there, but still, along
before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.the focus in future will be on the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. you have been watching newsday. i'm rico hizon in singapore. i'm babita sharma in london. that's all for now. stay with bbc world news. hello. the rather warm for the time of year and humid air that became established across wales and england on tuesday will, in the day ahead, spread across northern ireland and scotland. it...
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when it comes to the topic some of the some of the greatest names in science albert einstein marie curie the. have won this prize over the years but people tend to know the least about what it actually is and i think that that boils down to we know that these people or they are doing things on the edges pushing the edges of the envelope of of our perceived reality of the universe and we want to honor that and that's why they become sort of such rock stars of the science of the sciences fascinating stuff terry williams our expert breaking it all down for us thank you so much. now we're going to turn to some sports news because soccer star christian over naldo is being sued in the united states by a woman who claims that the portuguese player raped her back in two thousand and nine she says that the assault occurred in all those penthouse suite in the last vegas palms hotel the woman bringing the case says that the player quote fixers or his fixers rather tricked her into keeping quiet for a payment of three hundred seventy five thousand dollars las vegas police confirmed that they have re
when it comes to the topic some of the some of the greatest names in science albert einstein marie curie the. have won this prize over the years but people tend to know the least about what it actually is and i think that that boils down to we know that these people or they are doing things on the edges pushing the edges of the envelope of of our perceived reality of the universe and we want to honor that and that's why they become sort of such rock stars of the science of the sciences...
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Oct 2, 2018
10/18
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. —— marie curie.e gender of the research. —— her husband, pierre. blue plaques have been around for more than 150 years, making it one of the oldest schemes of its kind. but now, the chairman of an organisation that puts up the plaques says there are far too many of them, and that some had only a tenuous link to the person they honoured. duncan kennedy has the story. it is like a who's who in blue. the plaques that take pride of place across britain. but are they too many of them, and are they all valid? take the hobbit author, jr tolkien. there is a clerk for him we re tolkien. there is a clerk for him were saying just this one night at this hotel in birmingham. while charles dickens is on about 50 blue plaques. michael reed, a former radio one dj, is head of the british pluck trust and feel they may be coming a little devalued. pluck trust and feel they may be coming a little devaluedlj pluck trust and feel they may be coming a little devalued. i remember another one which says this house is very, v
. —— marie curie.e gender of the research. —— her husband, pierre. blue plaques have been around for more than 150 years, making it one of the oldest schemes of its kind. but now, the chairman of an organisation that puts up the plaques says there are far too many of them, and that some had only a tenuous link to the person they honoured. duncan kennedy has the story. it is like a who's who in blue. the plaques that take pride of place across britain. but are they too many of them, and...
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before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.n the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. victoria gill, bbc news. the mayor of a town regarded by many as a model for migrant integration in italy, has been put under house arrest. domenico lucano is accused of organising marriages of convenience to help people seeking asylum. he made headlines around the world for welcoming migrants after the population of riace, in calabria, dropped significantly. lebo diseko has more. this is domenico lucano, smiling and waving here, but now under house arrest. he's the mayor of riace in the south of italy, famous for opening its doors to migrants. the town's population had dwindled so newcomers were welcomed in and give an abandoned homes and on—the—job training. hundreds have come since the scheme started in 1997. but now lucano, is accused of organising sham marriages for the purposes of immigration. his partner also faces the same charges and has been banned from living in riace. translation: if domenico lucano did something he
before that, it was marie curie, who shared the 1903 prize with her husband, pierre.n the research, rather than the gender of the researcher. victoria gill, bbc news. the mayor of a town regarded by many as a model for migrant integration in italy, has been put under house arrest. domenico lucano is accused of organising marriages of convenience to help people seeking asylum. he made headlines around the world for welcoming migrants after the population of riace, in calabria, dropped...
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Oct 28, 2018
10/18
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driver i was curis with the push for inclusion in our public schools, and moving away from modified or resource classes towards the full inclusion based model, where do you see educational law going award to the spectrum of services offered to students with disabilities. republican national committee were you talking about kids with special needs? okay. it's fairly the prospects for these kids are dismal. if i can put it frankly. i talked to there are several activists in china, they are trying to call the attention to this issue. they're setting up separate sisters, throughout is nothing in the school system that can identify special needs. even the diagnosis is incredibly primitive. the document says every city with 300,000 population or more should have a special center, but there's nothing with mainstream and/or identifying kids that need help. >> justin: i focus on student's constitutional rights in theht where as you know the -- these issues are governed by the idea which is a statute so i alas don't dedicate much attention to that very important issue, which is a source of case
driver i was curis with the push for inclusion in our public schools, and moving away from modified or resource classes towards the full inclusion based model, where do you see educational law going award to the spectrum of services offered to students with disabilities. republican national committee were you talking about kids with special needs? okay. it's fairly the prospects for these kids are dismal. if i can put it frankly. i talked to there are several activists in china, they are trying...
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Oct 21, 2018
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there's like madame curie or like a poet. and ours has a masonic symbol of the all-seeing eye. roosevelt, he was a mason. talked to wallace his vice president about redesigning the money, also a mason. this is the great seal of the united states. so these two things are the either side of the great seal of the united states, which never got much play, but it was made in the 1770's by a bunch of masons and is now put on the money. but there's an argument that they will argue that money is the kind of magic spell. that the money looks like this for a reason. if someone is plotting and saying, there's a luciferian masonic plot on the united states and they feature this, right? then this is the argument of these are the important symbolisms, right? so -- then i can't actually believe. you have people who are afraid of the government. right? you have people who are afraid of the government, afraid of plots, afraid of masonic plots, loose a very plots. is everyone familiar with who john poindexter is? john poindexter was in the bush white house and was indicted iran contra plot. foun
there's like madame curie or like a poet. and ours has a masonic symbol of the all-seeing eye. roosevelt, he was a mason. talked to wallace his vice president about redesigning the money, also a mason. this is the great seal of the united states. so these two things are the either side of the great seal of the united states, which never got much play, but it was made in the 1770's by a bunch of masons and is now put on the money. but there's an argument that they will argue that money is the...
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Oct 2, 2018
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madam curie in 1903. this a big deal. it's for lasers.er, american arthur ashcan, he's the oldest to ever win -- >> let's talk pepsi. >> you don't have to cut me off. i'm finished >>> pepsi is out with quarterly results. sara eisen joins us with more on this >> i'll give you some of the highlights from the quarter. she is leaving on a strong note. more than 4% organic growth is a turning point. speaks to much better trends going on in the business it's not just snacks which has been the case over the past few quarters remember pepsi owns frito-lay. north american beverages returned to growth other highlights, international very strong especially in developing emerging markets. as far as the weak spot and this may be weighing on the stock this morning strong dollar, starting to hurt. places like latin-america, russia the currencies have gone against them we saw that recently in nike's quarter where foreign exchange goes from being a helpful tail wind to an actual head wind. they raised their outlook for organic revenue growth which is a si
madam curie in 1903. this a big deal. it's for lasers.er, american arthur ashcan, he's the oldest to ever win -- >> let's talk pepsi. >> you don't have to cut me off. i'm finished >>> pepsi is out with quarterly results. sara eisen joins us with more on this >> i'll give you some of the highlights from the quarter. she is leaving on a strong note. more than 4% organic growth is a turning point. speaks to much better trends going on in the business it's not just snacks...
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Oct 24, 2018
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>> if you are curie booker you want to take credit for helping people in ways they want to be helped.e know there is no money to pay for it? >> well, yeah. we can borrow it we can keep borrowing money. we have a huge deficit i don't think he cares how we are going to pay for it the point is he can make the promise and sounds good. i agree it's disingenuous. not being honest about fiscal. brian: kamala harris lift the middle class act. tax credit for $3,000 for individuals and $6,000 per house. >> depending on income under $100,000 you get a tax credit at the end of the year whether you pay taxes or not, by the way. you will get the tax credit. again, it sounds nights, if you are a middle income family you love the idea of getting $6,000. the question is what do you have to give up? either more debt or the tax cuts we got that are growing our economy and putting people in jobs. steve: why are we seeing these things? bernie sanders was so effective last time. look at bernie sanders 2016 make tuition free university medicare for all and top tax rate 54.2%. >> bernie sanders owns the demo
>> if you are curie booker you want to take credit for helping people in ways they want to be helped.e know there is no money to pay for it? >> well, yeah. we can borrow it we can keep borrowing money. we have a huge deficit i don't think he cares how we are going to pay for it the point is he can make the promise and sounds good. i agree it's disingenuous. not being honest about fiscal. brian: kamala harris lift the middle class act. tax credit for $3,000 for individuals and $6,000...
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curie booker the paper he wrote about groping women in high school.fter joe biden said he would like to fight him behind out barn because biden said he would like to beat the hell out of him. and talked about pocahontas and elizabeth warren. she actually looks conservative now compared to the rest of the party. steve: it was a wide ranging speech. regarding mr. kavanaugh, yesterday, the president and the house did authorize the fbi to talk to anybody you want. go anywhere you want. be done by friday. mitch mcconnell said he would bet almost anything dems would be unsatisfied. at the same time senate democrats sent to the fbi a list two of dozen names of people they would like the fbi to interview. and debra ramirez who was the second accuser, back in the day at yale, sent them a list with 20 names on it. so, clearly, if the fbi were going to do that it might run past friday. brian: mark judge was interviewed yesterday. they didn't finish of the interview. reportedly when he was asked about the swetnick accuser that you are about to hear about now, jul
curie booker the paper he wrote about groping women in high school.fter joe biden said he would like to fight him behind out barn because biden said he would like to beat the hell out of him. and talked about pocahontas and elizabeth warren. she actually looks conservative now compared to the rest of the party. steve: it was a wide ranging speech. regarding mr. kavanaugh, yesterday, the president and the house did authorize the fbi to talk to anybody you want. go anywhere you want. be done by...