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Jun 29, 2009
06/09
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david goode joins the tata sons group in 2005. after a 34 year career at the state department. at state, david was the director of the office of india, nepal, sri lanka and multi-affairs. following a three-year stint as american council judgment in mumbai. arvind panagariya, professor of indian political economy at columbia university. as well as a nonresident senior fellow working institution. he has also worked for the asian development bank, world bank, imf, injuries capacities. he has also published extensively including a recent book i-india, the emerging giant. my colleague claude barfield is a resident scholar here at aei. is the author or editor of a number of books on trade and science policy. and has also served as an advisor to the office of the u.s. trade representative. our format will follow the one of the prior panel. each panelist will present eight to 10 minute remarks. we will then open up the floor for questions. so with that, i will turn the discussion over to susan. >> thank you and good morning, everyone. several factors provide a stronger foundation for u
david goode joins the tata sons group in 2005. after a 34 year career at the state department. at state, david was the director of the office of india, nepal, sri lanka and multi-affairs. following a three-year stint as american council judgment in mumbai. arvind panagariya, professor of indian political economy at columbia university. as well as a nonresident senior fellow working institution. he has also worked for the asian development bank, world bank, imf, injuries capacities. he has also...
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Jun 30, 2009
06/09
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. >> david good. bob, secretary clinton in his speech last week said that india is india and other nations play an expanded role in resolving international security challenges. we should be prepared to adapt the architecture of international as additions to revive their new responsibilities. is there anything specific in mind that the united states support expansion of security council for instance? >> we are engaged now in a review on the broad issue of human security council reform which includes the thorny issue of new permanent members and things like that, so i don't have any news for you on that yet, but in general as the secretary said we do believe that international institutions as a group should reflect the new wage in the new importance of countries like india. >> malcolm brown and i ask this on behalf of times out of india. the you were basically a broadly on the same page but there were some areas of potential difference. on the security front for instance there is a concern evidently tha
. >> david good. bob, secretary clinton in his speech last week said that india is india and other nations play an expanded role in resolving international security challenges. we should be prepared to adapt the architecture of international as additions to revive their new responsibilities. is there anything specific in mind that the united states support expansion of security council for instance? >> we are engaged now in a review on the broad issue of human security council...
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Jun 5, 2009
06/09
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our guest is david makovsky. good morning. caller: good morning to david. thank you for c-span. today, i listened to the entire speech. i listened to the whole speech from the beginning to the end. the reason i want to call today is i feel very close to the palestinian issue. i was born a year after 1948. we were moved from a major palestinian cities. they were moved in a sense -- removed in a systematic way. most of us ended up in refugee camps. some of my family came back with the help of the red cross. i was born in 1950. the city overnight turned into a jewish city. yesterday, the president -- which i'm very proud of -- he alluded to the issue of the palestinians by saying that we have a just cause. he said that we were misplaced. i would like you to talk about it. guest: he used the word displacement. i think there is no question that as the historians go over the 1948 war, this has probably been one of the most hotly contested issues, the refugee crisis and its origins. historians tend to say that the caller is right partly. some of the arabs at the time were displaced. a
our guest is david makovsky. good morning. caller: good morning to david. thank you for c-span. today, i listened to the entire speech. i listened to the whole speech from the beginning to the end. the reason i want to call today is i feel very close to the palestinian issue. i was born a year after 1948. we were moved from a major palestinian cities. they were moved in a sense -- removed in a systematic way. most of us ended up in refugee camps. some of my family came back with the help of the...
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Jun 9, 2009
06/09
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. >> host: round rock, texas, good morning for david mccurdy. >> caller: good morning mr. mccurdy. i have a question. i am a self-employed. i tried to deal with chrysler finance to get them to go down on my payments, just to adjust them a little bit so i could afford to make my payments. they don't even want to listen to me. why should i want to give money to chrysler, chevrolet or anybody else when everything they are doing seems to be-- chrysler is going up on their cars. you have to have more money to put a downpayment on the cars. i am for u.s. cars that why should i want to help them when they don't want to help me? people are-- people should call in and let you know just how chrysler and other car companies are treating people that are being laid off. >> host: how much are you paying for your car and what kind of card you have? >> caller: i have a 2006 rangel. >> host: thanks for the call. >> guest: the domestic companies, chrysler and gm were white-- finance with the chrysler arm but now they have funds, gmac controls both of those and that is something that consumers have t
. >> host: round rock, texas, good morning for david mccurdy. >> caller: good morning mr. mccurdy. i have a question. i am a self-employed. i tried to deal with chrysler finance to get them to go down on my payments, just to adjust them a little bit so i could afford to make my payments. they don't even want to listen to me. why should i want to give money to chrysler, chevrolet or anybody else when everything they are doing seems to be-- chrysler is going up on their cars. you have...
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Jun 26, 2009
06/09
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. >> host: waukee daniel inouye with sir david frost. goodmorning. >> caller: i heard on another tv station that nixon said he would agree to abortion if the child was conceived by an interracial couple. did you know anything about that? >> host: is that also from the latest recordings released by the national archives? >> guest: i was staggered by that. there were two nixon's of course, there was a good nixon and bad nixon and that nixon in the end went out but the thing that surprised me of course he did use sort of controversy words for italians and other people in the tapes and off the record things we had. the only thing that surprises me about that which obviously i'm sure it's true and that was a sign of nixon, but in fact his record of the enough on race was better than several presidents after him, which is rarely realized that if you go back on the progress he made but i think he had a fairly primitive view of race. i is sent -- the main thing about nixon that brought him down was his paranoia, nothing to do with race that his panel
. >> host: waukee daniel inouye with sir david frost. goodmorning. >> caller: i heard on another tv station that nixon said he would agree to abortion if the child was conceived by an interracial couple. did you know anything about that? >> host: is that also from the latest recordings released by the national archives? >> guest: i was staggered by that. there were two nixon's of course, there was a good nixon and bad nixon and that nixon in the end went out but the...
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Jun 27, 2009
06/09
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as the good governor was saying to me, who was that guy that built our 110-mile-per-hour service, i said david gunn, it's the only good thing he did for amtrak. but that's not true, i want to say that because david and i are friends, i talked to him a couple of days ago, i accused him from using the turbo money from the project in new york to get that done. but i know he got pennsylvania money. i think what tom is talking about is sab lutely true, with an exception. that is that the culture in this country is not a train riding culture. in the northeast corridor, about 43 million people live within 40 miles of where we operate ocela. it is a success. in 2000, we had about 37%, this was before it started, of the air-rail market was with rail. today, in 2008, we have just the opposite of that. we have 63% of the rail-air market. that's with service that's two hours and 45 minutes. from new york to washington. and on north end, from new york to boston, it was at about 20% and is now, or 22%, it's now at about 49% in the same way system of we are demonstrating success. but the piece that we can't
as the good governor was saying to me, who was that guy that built our 110-mile-per-hour service, i said david gunn, it's the only good thing he did for amtrak. but that's not true, i want to say that because david and i are friends, i talked to him a couple of days ago, i accused him from using the turbo money from the project in new york to get that done. but i know he got pennsylvania money. i think what tom is talking about is sab lutely true, with an exception. that is that the culture in...
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Jun 18, 2009
06/09
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an unhappy david wright heads off. good job by jim johnson. wright retired and there are two down in the inning. the orioles have announced a series of baseball camps designed for boys and girls 7 to 16. the instructional program, player appearances, current player, former oral yole. -- form oriole. click on fan forum to register. reimold there. church retired. good job by johnson who gets it done in a hurry. - oh, it's on. - it's on. - it's on. - ( music playing throughout ) - it's on. - oh, it's on, all right. - it's on. - totally on. jimmy, it's on. - it's on. - oh, yeah, it's on. affirmative, it's on. announcer: southwest airlines announces new service out of bwi airport, with three daily nonstop flights to new york laguardia for just 49 dollars one-way starting june 28th. grab your bag. it's on. - ( ding ) - book now at southwest.com. it's easy to identify the leaders of tomorrow. they're all around us. which is why pnc created grow up great. a $100 million program that prepares young children for school. and the world the
an unhappy david wright heads off. good job by jim johnson. wright retired and there are two down in the inning. the orioles have announced a series of baseball camps designed for boys and girls 7 to 16. the instructional program, player appearances, current player, former oral yole. -- form oriole. click on fan forum to register. reimold there. church retired. good job by johnson who gets it done in a hurry. - oh, it's on. - it's on. - it's on. - ( music playing throughout ) -...
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Jun 6, 2009
06/09
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good books on that. but many, many others. i would look at john ericson's work and anything by david glants. i highly recommend. because you will get a good look at the eastern front. >> next up is around from caller: i was calling to in defense of the russia. they certainly -- we wouldn't have been able to invade normandy, and we would have done it at a much higher cost if they hasn't taken so many troops away from the east. that's basically all i had to say. thanks. host: thank you. john, go ahead. guest: that's an excellent point. the cost of invading normandyy would have been much higher if the sofeyts hasn't done what they had done over the last two to three years. that was the point stalin was making was, hey, you've got to help me out here. you've got to have a major effort to sifen off part of the german army because i'm dealing with most of it here. that's why stalin didn't feel like the campaign in north africa or italy were really valid second fronts. and that's why he wanted a bone fide invasion of france from the beginning of the big three at the end of 1941 when the u.s. was in the war all the way
good books on that. but many, many others. i would look at john ericson's work and anything by david glants. i highly recommend. because you will get a good look at the eastern front. >> next up is around from caller: i was calling to in defense of the russia. they certainly -- we wouldn't have been able to invade normandy, and we would have done it at a much higher cost if they hasn't taken so many troops away from the east. that's basically all i had to say. thanks. host: thank you....
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Jun 18, 2009
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we got a pretty good crowd tonight. david wright and all of them come in here and everything and hit the ball the way they hit the ball tonight and do all the little things we did, it was pretty exciting. i could hardly hear anything you say, they're so loud. >> we're going to head into the clubhouse, he's in the dugout i'm told. aubrey, tell us about that at- bat. you absolutely crushed that ball and it couldn't have come at a better time to give the orioles the win. >> it was a, the night before i'd faced him he threw me a lot of sliders. he got a 3-2 slidatory strike me out. i took two fastballs right there, pretty good pitches to hit. i was just looking slider the whole time. just got a good pitch to hit. >> aubrey, you talk a little about all the mechanical little things that you do. an at-bat like that where you kind of stay back like you were talking when you did dempsey's, does that kind of catapult you for the rest of the week? >> i hope so. it's been a rough two weeks for me. i had a tough road trip. coming back hom
we got a pretty good crowd tonight. david wright and all of them come in here and everything and hit the ball the way they hit the ball tonight and do all the little things we did, it was pretty exciting. i could hardly hear anything you say, they're so loud. >> we're going to head into the clubhouse, he's in the dugout i'm told. aubrey, tell us about that at- bat. you absolutely crushed that ball and it couldn't have come at a better time to give the orioles the win. >> it was a,...
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Jun 7, 2009
06/09
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>> the post american world i think will be a good one, my friend david kessler has wrote the end of yourating which i clearly need. there are two sports books i like, red and me and the yankee years by joe torre will be good and when i get into the bookstore i always discover something else. ♪ >> to see more summer reading lists and other program information, visit our web site at booktv.org. >>> the book tv bus is traveling the country visiting bookstores, libraries, festivals and authors. you're are some of the people and places we visited. >> we are with boris bradley in the book room of the linda hall library in kansas city, missouri. at the authors reception for the kansas city literary festival. please tell a little bit about the linda hall library. >> the linda hall library is one of the world's great libraries of science, engineering and technology and in fact we think the collection here is as strong as any library in the world in our areas of subject coverage and would cover all areas of science, engineering and technology. this includes all of the recent monographs and journal
>> the post american world i think will be a good one, my friend david kessler has wrote the end of yourating which i clearly need. there are two sports books i like, red and me and the yankee years by joe torre will be good and when i get into the bookstore i always discover something else. ♪ >> to see more summer reading lists and other program information, visit our web site at booktv.org. >>> the book tv bus is traveling the country visiting bookstores, libraries,...
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Jun 8, 2009
06/09
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. >> host: our guest is richard wolffe and david is on the line from milwaukee. good morning. >> caller: my question this morning would be barack obama is an office during the best he can and it's going to take a long time with what has gone on the last eight years. she won't be able to make everybody happy but as long as he is doing what is best for the american people and the united states how long do you think it will be before america can get right, 20, 50 years? >> host: how much time do you have, david? [laughter] >> guest: that is a great question. we don't know how long things are going to take to turnaround. and that's going to be the key question. if this presidency really comes to an end it's going to be because the economy doesn't turn around quickly enough and it hasn't turned around quickly enough to make a difference in the midterm elections, so there isn't much time for them to show some progress otherwise he's looking at a repeat of the clinton era and if he loses authority or even a majority in cullom chris, then the weakened presidency can go on a l
. >> host: our guest is richard wolffe and david is on the line from milwaukee. good morning. >> caller: my question this morning would be barack obama is an office during the best he can and it's going to take a long time with what has gone on the last eight years. she won't be able to make everybody happy but as long as he is doing what is best for the american people and the united states how long do you think it will be before america can get right, 20, 50 years? >> host:...
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Jun 27, 2009
06/09
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angrier going to do the good fight from the inside but i am wondering what you think about how we can parse that could work out? i think even the study's that you showed came up with david validated response to the chromium industry but it was squashed. how can we find the good work and validate it? right will cite is the work for industry are honest but what happens when industry faces a crisis they see a chemical of some importance has been implemented, they do not use their own side is they're often go outside and find some consultants who are very sleazy and know how to work the regulatory system. the most important thing is essentially i recall regulation by shame. people have to have their names on their documents it has to be public and grass to be a conversation. one will know professor at university of alabama and who has published on behalf of some litigants in the chromium suits the study showing that the chromium barely causes lung cancer or stomach cancer and it was done for gas and electric that has been sued a number of times in the erin brockovich series of cases. i would fail but of my students but yet it was turned and and it is very important to talk
angrier going to do the good fight from the inside but i am wondering what you think about how we can parse that could work out? i think even the study's that you showed came up with david validated response to the chromium industry but it was squashed. how can we find the good work and validate it? right will cite is the work for industry are honest but what happens when industry faces a crisis they see a chemical of some importance has been implemented, they do not use their own side is...
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Jun 6, 2009
06/09
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good. and one morning i get an email from obama that says david, if you want to attack us, fine, but you're only throwing in those sentences to make yourself feel good. like yep. he got that. he's also a real intellectual. somebody who really reads. one -- one afternoon i was interviewing over the phone and late afternoon, he was tired. the interview was going nowhere. he was a little cranky. and out of the blue i asked him, have you ever -- this guy named reinhold nabor. a 19th century theologian and i asked him what he means to you and he described for the next 20 minutes his theology in perfect paragraph. and believe me, there are not a lot of u.s. senators who can do that. there used to be one and now there's none. and that's incredible testimony to his intelligence. he also as you've seen is a man with incredible self-control. and the story i tell about that concerns one. presidential debates, and it was the one bob -- bob sheefer was hosting on -- schiefer was hosting on cbs. mccain wrote his talking points as politicians tend to do when they're on stage. obama didn't write a word. bu
good. and one morning i get an email from obama that says david, if you want to attack us, fine, but you're only throwing in those sentences to make yourself feel good. like yep. he got that. he's also a real intellectual. somebody who really reads. one -- one afternoon i was interviewing over the phone and late afternoon, he was tired. the interview was going nowhere. he was a little cranky. and out of the blue i asked him, have you ever -- this guy named reinhold nabor. a 19th century...
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Jun 14, 2009
06/09
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good. how do white differ from david mccullough? my emphasis-- i think david mccullough's john adams has been not only a service to john adams but to all of us. john adams was the least known of all of the founding fathers until mccauliffe's book. there were a few biography of adams but mccullough's book brought him to attention and since that time-- there have been a couple of television programs as you note and so forth, so it is a very wonderful book. and he gets john adams bob on from the first paragraph where he has john adams on a horse in a snowstorm writing from quincy, massachusetts to boston talking and talking and talking and that to me is john adams spot on. the mouth talking in every circumstance, inventively, creatively. mcculloch also likes abigail a great deal, but she is a subordinative figure in the book. she shows up only as a complement to john adams, and he doesn't give her what i call agency. that is, she reacts throughout the book. she-- you don't see her as an innovator. for instance, this passage that i just
good. how do white differ from david mccullough? my emphasis-- i think david mccullough's john adams has been not only a service to john adams but to all of us. john adams was the least known of all of the founding fathers until mccauliffe's book. there were a few biography of adams but mccullough's book brought him to attention and since that time-- there have been a couple of television programs as you note and so forth, so it is a very wonderful book. and he gets john adams bob on from the...
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Jun 28, 2009
06/09
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good accurate throw by wieters. harris just beat it. >> jim p.: he's called that on david hernandez.ack-to-back terrific throws by matt wieters. >> rob: he's got to jump out there to the right-handed batter's box. he makes a perfect throw. i don't know if he might have got him there. see the x-mo. >> jim p.: slapped the tag. grass just a little high from that angle. hard to tell there. >> bob: umpire right there though. could have gone either way. guzman hits it sharply to the right side. that will be two outs with another run at third base. >> jim p.: drop it, get the glove down. >> rob: looks like he missed the tag. >> bob: looks like he tagged the base and not the foot. that's a great throw. >> jim p.: that's two in a row. again, the nationals doing what they need to do. you're struggling for runs, you got a guy with speed. >> rob: got to play small ball. >> bob: i didn't see any hurry in either of those throws. he was nice and relaxed. >> jim p.: that is what don werner told him yesterday and they worked on it. that's why they don't bring out the stopwatch. he's on the bench timi
good accurate throw by wieters. harris just beat it. >> jim p.: he's called that on david hernandez.ack-to-back terrific throws by matt wieters. >> rob: he's got to jump out there to the right-handed batter's box. he makes a perfect throw. i don't know if he might have got him there. see the x-mo. >> jim p.: slapped the tag. grass just a little high from that angle. hard to tell there. >> bob: umpire right there though. could have gone either way. guzman hits it sharply...
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Jun 12, 2009
06/09
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good pitching staff. garza going tomorrow against us. they are deep. david price. >> byron: yeah.verall from last year of course with david price. nationals are going to go with craig stammen. >> ray: he has been able to pitch well. he gave up five runs in the 1st inning but he has been out there throwing strikes. good sinker. fastball. he can get up to 93. good curve ball. 12-6. this is just his 5th start. he has gone at least 5 innings. his ball moves all over the place, garza. 11-9 last year with 188 innings. he has given up a homerun in every one of his last 6 outings. but he is a guy that throws the ball through the corners with a lot of velocity. straight over the top. nice guy to hit if you like four-seam fastballs. >> byron: the nationals face the world championing in the phillies and now they get the a. l. champions. stammen should be loose and ready to go. >> ray: always feels better to win. that flight will be really good. some guys can relax, smile. you know and play some cards and just in some cases maybe just get some rest. it is hard to rest when you lose all the ti
good pitching staff. garza going tomorrow against us. they are deep. david price. >> byron: yeah.verall from last year of course with david price. nationals are going to go with craig stammen. >> ray: he has been able to pitch well. he gave up five runs in the 1st inning but he has been out there throwing strikes. good sinker. fastball. he can get up to 93. good curve ball. 12-6. this is just his 5th start. he has gone at least 5 innings. his ball moves all over the place, garza....
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Jun 5, 2009
06/09
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there do seem to be some good indication of massachusetts as well. host: david gallagher email us some questions. he asks if it is true that a portion of every health care dollar goes to an insurance company. the second question is why not a single payer system? guest: i am not certain about the 43 cents out of every dollar. i do know there has been good work done by dartmouth university that estimates that easily 30% of health-care spending is what they call pure waste. it may be administrative. a lot of it is unnecessary tests and procedures. we hear a lot about going to one doctor and they take an x-ray. then you get sent on to a specialist. the x-ray may not have made it to the specialist. the specialist may not think it is good enough. they do another one. it is this sort of duplication and replication of tests and procedures that add to a lot of the health care costs. dartmouth says that could be 30% waste. host: this next tweet says that single-payer is the best. they say their canadian relatives are very happy. guest: absolutely. i hear from many people
there do seem to be some good indication of massachusetts as well. host: david gallagher email us some questions. he asks if it is true that a portion of every health care dollar goes to an insurance company. the second question is why not a single payer system? guest: i am not certain about the 43 cents out of every dollar. i do know there has been good work done by dartmouth university that estimates that easily 30% of health-care spending is what they call pure waste. it may be...
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Jun 17, 2009
06/09
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david wright again. >> jim: yeah, he made an awfully good adjustment. struck out the first time. it wasn't he hit a slider the last time into left field. it was a -- it wasn't a horrible pitch. just looked -- looked like maybe this is why he has a lifetime average at .307 309 and he's leading the league in hitting because he makes awfully good adjustments. >> gary: he does that. two down here. wright, shattered bat. pops it up behind second. andino is there. whenever you get wright, it's a big out. no runs, one hit, one left object base from the innerharbor across to a famous sign. knit, delicate, permanent press... the ocean doesn't care. so grab your bag. >> gary: 4-5-0 for the mets 0-1-2 for the orioles as guthrie settles in and gets the side out. now it's about the orioles bats. last thing orioles want to see after what they went through for five days is any kind of -- they want to continue what happened against atlanta in the last two. >> jim: you're right. i think everybody talked about it says i got the game. that's a long, long time ago. good pitching does stop good h
david wright again. >> jim: yeah, he made an awfully good adjustment. struck out the first time. it wasn't he hit a slider the last time into left field. it was a -- it wasn't a horrible pitch. just looked -- looked like maybe this is why he has a lifetime average at .307 309 and he's leading the league in hitting because he makes awfully good adjustments. >> gary: he does that. two down here. wright, shattered bat. pops it up behind second. andino is there. whenever you get wright,...
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Jun 14, 2009
06/09
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host: david, on our line for republicans reporting from white lake new york. good morning. caller: good morning, and thank you for c-span. i would like to discuss with you american-jewish voting behavior and how it harms israel. the american-jewish community spurred on by such rags as you work for and that other broad sheet published in new york is top-heavy democrat. yet the democrat party has harmed israel, always. every time a democrat administration is in office, israel is harmed. host: give me a specific example of how democrats are harming israel? caller: president obama's speech in israel misstates history. he compares the palestinian problem. it was caused by arabs in 1948 when they attacked israel. they could have had a palestinian state. they attacked israel. the arab armies and palestinian irregulars. host: mr. guttman, your response? guest: the elections, president obama got a large percentage of the jewish vote, which is higher than any other faith group. however, when you look at polls, when you ask jewish voters when they base their decision on, they find it
host: david, on our line for republicans reporting from white lake new york. good morning. caller: good morning, and thank you for c-span. i would like to discuss with you american-jewish voting behavior and how it harms israel. the american-jewish community spurred on by such rags as you work for and that other broad sheet published in new york is top-heavy democrat. yet the democrat party has harmed israel, always. every time a democrat administration is in office, israel is harmed. host:...
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Jun 30, 2009
06/09
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each year, the road scholars committee to held organized a good bye event for the new been elected road scholar, david souter was a rhodes scholar. they need him at the court in addition to going to capitol hill and the white house and the rest of it. when we debrief this dollars on the things they have done in washington, every year, year in, year out, david souter has been at the top of the list. the one person they would not eliminate from the next year's scholars, my impression is they have seen someone who is thoughtful and measured, he talks about how he goes about his work on the court. it seems their impression is of someone whose private persona is the same as his public persona. washington, that is a rare commodity. i don't know, we have a minute if anyone wants to add to that. i wanted to be sure we don't conclude today without a word on the retiring justice. >> i will say one word, he is a very decent, for man. the president talks about empathy. david souter manifests that a great deal. he gave a farewell speech to the third circuit. that was at the independence conference a couple weeks a
each year, the road scholars committee to held organized a good bye event for the new been elected road scholar, david souter was a rhodes scholar. they need him at the court in addition to going to capitol hill and the white house and the rest of it. when we debrief this dollars on the things they have done in washington, every year, year in, year out, david souter has been at the top of the list. the one person they would not eliminate from the next year's scholars, my impression is they have...
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Jun 6, 2009
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one morning i got an e-mail from obama that said david, if you want to attack us, you are only throwing in a sentence is to make yourself feel goodhe got that. he is also a real intellectual, someone who really reads. i was interviewing him over the phone one afternoon and he was tired. he was a little cranky. out of the blue i asked him, if he had heard of a certain theologian. he said yes. i ask what it meant to him. he described his theology in perfect paragraphs. there are not a lot of u.s. senators who can do that. there used to be one, and now there are none. that is just an incredible testimony to his intelligence. as you have seen, he is a man was incredible self control. there was a presidential debate where bob schieffer was hosting on cbs. when mccain would get to the podium, there was a legal pad, and mccain wrote his talking points as politicians tend to do on stage. obama did not write a word. but every time he would be asked a question, he would draw a straight line through a piece of paper. after the debate, one of bob's keepers assistance ran on stayeged and took the paper fora souvenir. it was just a white sheet
one morning i got an e-mail from obama that said david, if you want to attack us, you are only throwing in a sentence is to make yourself feel goodhe got that. he is also a real intellectual, someone who really reads. i was interviewing him over the phone one afternoon and he was tired. he was a little cranky. out of the blue i asked him, if he had heard of a certain theologian. he said yes. i ask what it meant to him. he described his theology in perfect paragraphs. there are not a lot of u.s....
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Jun 12, 2009
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good demeanor in the clubhouse. that's huge. >> you see what david price did.n 2008, he worked in the minor league and then now he is here in 2009. talking to mike griswold, he said he had a great relationship with scott boras. five of the nats are boras clients. that should help in the relationship. >> i think we all anticipate the negotiations over the next couple of months, until august 15th. >> yes, for sure. i feel good about it getting done. there is no way that it's not going to get done, johnny. you take a guy no who is going to fit for somewhere in the slot. he will probably get $8 million. you can ask for the $50 million if you are scott boras. it's going to be $10 million or less to signing him. >> doesn't the silver fox still wish he was still playing, for the kind of money they are getting. >> rob: for a lot of reasons, not just -- >>not just for the money. >> bob: the game against the ray's first pitch tomorrow night. we're going to join the game already in progress at about 7 0-0 on masn 2 and you can follow the game on masnsports.com. ♪ ♪ who's
good demeanor in the clubhouse. that's huge. >> you see what david price did.n 2008, he worked in the minor league and then now he is here in 2009. talking to mike griswold, he said he had a great relationship with scott boras. five of the nats are boras clients. that should help in the relationship. >> i think we all anticipate the negotiations over the next couple of months, until august 15th. >> yes, for sure. i feel good about it getting done. there is no way that it's not...
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Jun 28, 2009
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i want to congratulate you david, for his extremely well-written book. it is a very good reading. it is a read that makes you very angry about the harm that has been done to thousands, perhaps millions of people, ruined lives, kill people. you use a number of examples in your book how the government has ceased to collect information or stopped reporting information when they don't like the results of that information. can you give us some examples of how the administration is using science or manipulating science for their own ends today? >> thank you for asking. it is a very important question and i devote a big portion of the book to the bush administration because they have essentially taken this strategy of manufacturing and institutionalize the uncertainty. they built structures and to interagency review processes and requirements to take into account bad signs come to give producers bad science and no signs in the ability to question studies. there was one very worrisome attempt called peer review, not the peer review the scientists know about. in that most scientists did no
i want to congratulate you david, for his extremely well-written book. it is a very good reading. it is a read that makes you very angry about the harm that has been done to thousands, perhaps millions of people, ruined lives, kill people. you use a number of examples in your book how the government has ceased to collect information or stopped reporting information when they don't like the results of that information. can you give us some examples of how the administration is using science or...
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Jun 16, 2009
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[applause] >> good morning everyone and thank you so much coming david, for the introduction in the energy and the leadership you provide. we all really appreciate you and i hear nothing but just wonderful things about you from some different people. i want to return the compliment and i'm so delighted to be here with all of you and to serve as the honorary chair for this year's conference. when i was asked i didn't think twice. i wanted to be involved when ever i can be for mental health and mental wellness, it's a lifetime commitment for me and the mental health movement that began in 1909, we know has encountered obstacles of the last 100 years but with every single mountain we have had to climb the was a time of reaching the top of that and a scene that promise and i think we are here again. i think we can see the other side. i think it is such an exciting time for all of us to come together with renewed energy and around the issue of the mental health and the parity bill and implementation of it around this great nation of ours. i know some of us can feel like charlie brown here, but
[applause] >> good morning everyone and thank you so much coming david, for the introduction in the energy and the leadership you provide. we all really appreciate you and i hear nothing but just wonderful things about you from some different people. i want to return the compliment and i'm so delighted to be here with all of you and to serve as the honorary chair for this year's conference. when i was asked i didn't think twice. i wanted to be involved when ever i can be for mental health...
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Jun 28, 2009
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.: he should get pretty good pitch to hit here, 2-1. the one guy that david hernandez has had great command on the outside quarter to third of the plate is elijah dukes. >> rob: yep. >> bob: struck him out swinging in the second to end that inning. after the three consecutive hits, walked him in the fourth. but he was erased on the double play ball. dukes will pull a slow roller to third. going for two, and safe, aubrey huff might have saved a run, if that ball gets down the line. josh willingham might score from second base. >> jim p.: you know you're going to get the lead runner. he catches it, then tags the runner, the throw sails, aubrey huff, a very underrated first baseman. last year mostly third base to dh, but he does save a run. you try to be balanced so you can come off the bag. >> bob: he's not underrated in those games against washington this year. he's been outstanding. >> jim p.: aubrey, as dunn will come out to talk to david hernandez, aubrey was proving that he let the orioles resign him, that he can not only hit, but he can play the position.
.: he should get pretty good pitch to hit here, 2-1. the one guy that david hernandez has had great command on the outside quarter to third of the plate is elijah dukes. >> rob: yep. >> bob: struck him out swinging in the second to end that inning. after the three consecutive hits, walked him in the fourth. but he was erased on the double play ball. dukes will pull a slow roller to third. going for two, and safe, aubrey huff might have saved a run, if that ball gets down the line....
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Jun 26, 2009
06/09
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. >> we want to welcome sir david frost here at c-span and his program frost over the world. good morning, thanks for being with us. >> great to be here, steve. >> let me begin by asking you about the nixon tapes. any reaction from what you have heard from richard nixon and your own dealings with him in the 1970's? major revelation in the last 30 years contradicting what has been in the nixon interviews. but there is this interesting stuff coming out. i missed some of it on the plane yesterday, but it is amazing that it is still coming out, and it is an indication, and i guess the movie was even more of an indication in the abiding fascination with richard nixon because he was such an enigma, so difficult to read and understand. he was the most fascinating press that we have had, really, for all of reasons. ully clear, mr. president. >> what were they talking about there? host: that was >> what were they talking about there? >> they both wanted to grab the credit as far as they could for themselves, for the good things, and they couldn't knock their opponents because in the judgme
. >> we want to welcome sir david frost here at c-span and his program frost over the world. good morning, thanks for being with us. >> great to be here, steve. >> let me begin by asking you about the nixon tapes. any reaction from what you have heard from richard nixon and your own dealings with him in the 1970's? major revelation in the last 30 years contradicting what has been in the nixon interviews. but there is this interesting stuff coming out. i missed some of it on...
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Jun 20, 2009
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the high standards of joan and david permeate all the candidates and entries we consider for the honors this year. we're in good hands in the journalism world. >> thanks, chad. it is my pleasure and honor to introduce the president of the united states, barack obama. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. thank you very much. thank you. thank you so much. thanks to all of you, thank you. please, everybody have a seat. before i get started, as the father of two girls, can i just say how incredibly impressive those three young ladies were. [applause] that would be proud. -- dad would be proud. to heather and all the others that made this evening possible, thinking some much. it is wonderful to be here. i want to express my i want to express my appreciation for the opportuni
the high standards of joan and david permeate all the candidates and entries we consider for the honors this year. we're in good hands in the journalism world. >> thanks, chad. it is my pleasure and honor to introduce the president of the united states, barack obama. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. thank you very much. thank you. thank you so much. thanks to all of you, thank you. please, everybody have a seat. before i get started, as the father of two girls, can i just...
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Jun 19, 2009
06/09
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david wright with 18 leads the mets. >> gary: a chopper, knocked down, and got it. good play by baez on the comeback. 7th inning. hour, andy roddick has the fastest serve in the history of professional tennis. so i've come to this court to challenge his speed. ...on the internet. i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't so i can book travel plans faster, check my account balances faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than andy roddick. (announcer) "switch to the nations fastest 3g network" "and get the at&t laptopconnect card for free". >> gary: hernandez is making it tough right now, because hes pitched consistently throughout this game, and as he does, wee talked about the fact he gets runners on base, and just continues to throw well, and that doesn't seem to change. so see what the orioles can do. andino has delivered a home run, solo shot that gave the orioles early on the lead in the ballgame in the 3ed inning. and reached on -- 3rd inning. hernandez fields his position, and gets the out. a
david wright with 18 leads the mets. >> gary: a chopper, knocked down, and got it. good play by baez on the comeback. 7th inning. hour, andy roddick has the fastest serve in the history of professional tennis. so i've come to this court to challenge his speed. ...on the internet. i'll be using the 3g at&t laptopconnect card. he won't so i can book travel plans faster, check my account balances faster. all on the go. i'm bill kurtis and i'm faster than andy...
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Jun 20, 2009
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the high standards of joan and david permeate all the candidates and entries we consider for the honors this year. we're in good in the journalism world. >> thanks, chad. it is my pleasure and honor to introduce the president of the united states, barack obama. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. thank you very much. thank you. thank you so much. thanks to all of you, thank you. please, everybody have a seat. before i get started, as the father of two girls, can i just say how incredibly impressive those three young ladies were. [applause] that would be proud. -- dad would be proud. to heather and all the others that made this evening possible, thinking some much. it is wonderful to be here. i want to express my appreciation for the opportunity to tell jokes that were not funny enough when we did this five weeks ago. [applause] -- [laughter] what ever. the jokes may not be as good, but neither is the guest list. [laughter] [applause] i am just joking. for me, there is no contest. why bother hanging out when celebrities -- with celebrities when i can spend time with people that made me one. i know where
the high standards of joan and david permeate all the candidates and entries we consider for the honors this year. we're in good in the journalism world. >> thanks, chad. it is my pleasure and honor to introduce the president of the united states, barack obama. [applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. thank you very much. thank you. thank you so much. thanks to all of you, thank you. please, everybody have a seat. before i get started, as the father of two girls, can i just say...
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Jun 5, 2009
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david makovsky is author of this new book, "myths, illusions, and peace." guest: good to be with you, steve. host: the call it the cairo speech, pointing out that words are important. mr. obama was right when he urged leaders privately speak of moderation and compromise to dare to say those words in public, but the words are not enough. mr. obama, who had been in office less than six months, has a lot to do to fulfil this mission, and so do others. guest: i mean, clearly what depressed and it is trying to do is turn the page in the muslim world, began a new dialogue, try to transcend old divisions, search for some common ground, and he is trying to open a conversation with them. at the same time, as he said himself, everything does not change with one speech. but i think one of his prime objectives is to get a lot of people in different muslim communities around the world to reevaluate their attitudes toward the united states and to create a wider distance between some of these muslim communities and some of the extremist forces, and he says one of the ways to do that,
david makovsky is author of this new book, "myths, illusions, and peace." guest: good to be with you, steve. host: the call it the cairo speech, pointing out that words are important. mr. obama was right when he urged leaders privately speak of moderation and compromise to dare to say those words in public, but the words are not enough. mr. obama, who had been in office less than six months, has a lot to do to fulfil this mission, and so do others. guest: i mean, clearly what...
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Jun 6, 2009
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david hernandez. james keller and i were there to go see another player. as a good scout does, he says, before we go to another guy, i would like to see you another guy. we saw him for two innings and we were gone. that's a credit to him. >> is there a player that somebody sold you on, one of your scouts that, looking back on, you can say, it was a good thing that i listened. >> there are guys obviously, you know. we have a kid in delmarva, ronnie willke who is playing well but john marriotti who had a flyball-ground ball ratio ridiculous. one guy that i'm most proud of him for taking because i thought he was bad but that whole room never let up. they kept telling me, we like him, we like him. it was reimold. i did not see him play well. the staff saw it. it was lard to do to some degree being the first year scouting director but i'm happy i did. >> i know who is going to be the first pick of the draft? >> who do you think it's going to be. >> it's going to be -- >> jordan never tip his hat. well, he talked about reimold. that was his very first round pick in that d
david hernandez. james keller and i were there to go see another player. as a good scout does, he says, before we go to another guy, i would like to see you another guy. we saw him for two innings and we were gone. that's a credit to him. >> is there a player that somebody sold you on, one of your scouts that, looking back on, you can say, it was a good thing that i listened. >> there are guys obviously, you know. we have a kid in delmarva, ronnie willke who is playing well but john...
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Jun 7, 2009
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good of a singer britney spears is. she might be a great singer. but i saw paris hilton on davidtterman last night and people were like you were extraordinary, for what? laughter, and i think it's subjective, the whole view but don't mistake -- i think too often we mistakes of the credit for extraordinary and that is unfair to all but concerned. go ahead, paul, what do you think? >> i think if you go through the book and read carefully any number of the people you could say why don't they drop their job and go to another, why do they stay with a miserable job and there's no easy answer to that. there's also some business executives and others that are by no means favorably treat in their own words. you know, they actually think highly of themselves, but the reader doesn't think they do very much with their hands coming to his or her own conclusion and studs was taking a straight on. you never have this sense of studs talking town or engaging in false uplifting and i am hoping not to have done that through my editing process and i will think harvey did that either. there is inclin
good of a singer britney spears is. she might be a great singer. but i saw paris hilton on davidtterman last night and people were like you were extraordinary, for what? laughter, and i think it's subjective, the whole view but don't mistake -- i think too often we mistakes of the credit for extraordinary and that is unfair to all but concerned. go ahead, paul, what do you think? >> i think if you go through the book and read carefully any number of the people you could say why don't they...
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Jun 15, 2009
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. >> has a book that he and david makovsky publish cause any problems internally in this administration? >> no, it's a very good book. >> doing reviews from the podium and. >> was a concern about -- >> is probably inappropriate. >> was there any concern about his authorship of this book of some of the opinions that he and his co-author expressed in the book during the time leading up to his appointment came at not at all. mr. ross is in the administration now, he is very close adviser of the secretary and on a number of issues related to iran in the region but he also came out of the academic community and he was entitled to his opinion. he wrote the book before he came on board here. >> but i mean his opinion in his book and everything notwithstanding are using the dennis ross is not being reassigned to another position at the white house? >> he is working hard at the speed -- state department. >> you are not saying now? >> is working very hard. i am not going to predict the future. >> no one is asking if he worked retardant,. >> i don't have a crystal ball and can predict. i may be reassigned to god knows whe
. >> has a book that he and david makovsky publish cause any problems internally in this administration? >> no, it's a very good book. >> doing reviews from the podium and. >> was a concern about -- >> is probably inappropriate. >> was there any concern about his authorship of this book of some of the opinions that he and his co-author expressed in the book during the time leading up to his appointment came at not at all. mr. ross is in the administration...
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Jun 20, 2009
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good. thank you. [applause] >> i'm happy to answer questions if anybody has any. >> david, great speech. thank you for being so animated about these subjects. the private university system, in my world, is constructed materially differently from the public university system. we know of some pension funds and some endowment funds at private universities, which are run differently. up not made a distinction between public and privates and i was surprised at duke and usc and miami of ohio. >> terrible year. >> there must be reason for that. >> we did a chapter, a chapter in one-party classroom, is about duke university. ists called white devils, because first, because the duke basketball team of course is the blue devils. and second, because there was a university lynching of three students t a couple years ago, three lacrosse students were at a party where there was a deranged pathological liar and criminal prostitute, drug addicted, who made up a story that she had been raped, and accused them of raping her. not a shred of evidence existed. yet, if a country -- in a country which is suppo
good. thank you. [applause] >> i'm happy to answer questions if anybody has any. >> david, great speech. thank you for being so animated about these subjects. the private university system, in my world, is constructed materially differently from the public university system. we know of some pension funds and some endowment funds at private universities, which are run differently. up not made a distinction between public and privates and i was surprised at duke and usc and miami of...
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Jun 14, 2009
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good morning everyone. thank you for the introduction and the leadership that you provide, david. we all really appreciate you, and i hear nothing but just wonderful things about you from so many different people. so i want to return the compliment. and i'm so delighted to be here with you, and to serve as the honorary chair for this year's conference. when i was asked, i didn't think twice. i wanted to be involved whenever i can be for mental health and mental wellness. it's a life-time commitment for me. and the mental health movement that began with clifford bears in 1909, we have encountered a lot of obstacles in the last 100 years, but with every obstacle we have had to climb, there was always the point of reaching the top that mountain and reaching that promise, and i think we're here again. i think we can see the other side. i really do. i any -- think it is an exciting to time to come together with renewed energy around mental health and wellness and the parity bill all around this great nation of ours. i know some of us will feel like charlie brown here, but i believe. i'
good morning everyone. thank you for the introduction and the leadership that you provide, david. we all really appreciate you, and i hear nothing but just wonderful things about you from so many different people. so i want to return the compliment. and i'm so delighted to be here with you, and to serve as the honorary chair for this year's conference. when i was asked, i didn't think twice. i wanted to be involved whenever i can be for mental health and mental wellness. it's a life-time...
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Jun 13, 2009
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i count is my great good fortune to have known him as a working colleague and dear friend. much as i will miss david sutor's company i was cheered by the next headline, the president's nomination of second circuit judge sonia sotomayor as the next associate justice. the nominee will bring to the supreme court, as she did to the district court, and then the court of appeals, a wealth of experience in law and in life. and i am so glad no longer to be the lone woman on the court. [laughter] >> i look forward to a new colleague well-equipped to handle the challenges our work presents. and turning to the term's work,ly say some things about our -- i will say some things about our caseload and lineup. then note a few of the most watched cases. and after that, describe second circuit decisions on our agenda. last year i predicted we might hear as many as 100 cases this term. that estimate proved incorrect, not at all to my regret. we in fact heard 78 cases. that was up from 69 the preceding term. and next term if the 31 grants are reviewed so far, by a fair measure we will stay in the high 70's ranges. of
i count is my great good fortune to have known him as a working colleague and dear friend. much as i will miss david sutor's company i was cheered by the next headline, the president's nomination of second circuit judge sonia sotomayor as the next associate justice. the nominee will bring to the supreme court, as she did to the district court, and then the court of appeals, a wealth of experience in law and in life. and i am so glad no longer to be the lone woman on the court. [laughter]...
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Jun 17, 2009
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. >> so the next batter with two on and none out, david wright, he delivers a base hit to left field. >> he comes in and he shows a pretty goodng right here. good low fastball. this is what puts the first run on the board for the mets. >> mets went on to score four runs in that fourth inning, so it's 4-0 new york. here's nick markakis, breaks the long home run drought. >> 22 games without a home run. he gets ahold of this one. full extension, connects up on the flag court. >> now, the orioles rallied in the 9th, two in, two on. francisco rodriguez against adam jones. >> k-rod lets it fly, that's exactly what happened. strikeout there to adam jones to finish the game. >> so pelfrey got the win, guthrie the loss, rodriguez the save, markakis the home run. look at the note, the orioles now 2-6 when committing two or more errors in a game. twice this year they've committed three errors in a game and they have lost both those games. the talk in the o's clubhouse was about the errors. >> those things are going to happen. those guys are playing hard, they're giving us 100%. that's not going to make any errors, but again, yes, anytim
. >> so the next batter with two on and none out, david wright, he delivers a base hit to left field. >> he comes in and he shows a pretty goodng right here. good low fastball. this is what puts the first run on the board for the mets. >> mets went on to score four runs in that fourth inning, so it's 4-0 new york. here's nick markakis, breaks the long home run drought. >> 22 games without a home run. he gets ahold of this one. full extension, connects up on the flag...
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Jun 30, 2009
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i count it my great good fortune to have known him as a working colleague and dear friend. much as i will miss david souter's company, i was cheered by the next banner headline, the president's nomination of second circuit judge sonia sotomayor as the next associate justice. the
i count it my great good fortune to have known him as a working colleague and dear friend. much as i will miss david souter's company, i was cheered by the next banner headline, the president's nomination of second circuit judge sonia sotomayor as the next associate justice. the
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Jun 7, 2009
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good question. what about the profile of michelle obama? well, we get a quote from david axelrod a list of political campaigning through and a longtime family friend and that mrs. obama is quote, very very smart and sensitive. we're told that when she speaks at a rally, the audience roars with delight and that her primary role is imam in chief. mark helprin, time magazine who was absolutely a mainstream journalist, not some right wing anybody, he said at the profile of a michelle obama was a front-page endorsement of what a great person michelle obama is. here is why this is important -- just a few weeks earlier executive editor of the new york times bill keller was that the conference and media conference in new york city and he was asks about what did you do when it mccain protest to "the new york times" about your coverage? and the questionnaire was referring to the page one story in the new york times earlier in the campaign about mccain hinting, i want to be fair, alleging, hinting in suggesting is the best word, suggesting that john mccain might have been having an
good question. what about the profile of michelle obama? well, we get a quote from david axelrod a list of political campaigning through and a longtime family friend and that mrs. obama is quote, very very smart and sensitive. we're told that when she speaks at a rally, the audience roars with delight and that her primary role is imam in chief. mark helprin, time magazine who was absolutely a mainstream journalist, not some right wing anybody, he said at the profile of a michelle obama was a...
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Jun 6, 2009
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host: david in wellsboro, pennsylvania, what is your connection to d-day and the invasion of normandy in caller: good morning. my connection and my family's connection was with my father. he went in on d-da
host: david in wellsboro, pennsylvania, what is your connection to d-day and the invasion of normandy in caller: good morning. my connection and my family's connection was with my father. he went in on d-da