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Aug 4, 2014
08/14
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>> good morning, deborah. we hear a specialized air ambulance made its way to liberia to pick up nancy writebol. it's a similar set up we saw with dr. kent brantly. the flight is expected to land some time tuesday. we haven't been given the specifics so far. she would join dr. kent brantly at emory university hospital. we saw the images over the weekend of the doctor arriving back in an ambulance. we saw someone in a white suit walking out. the first tentative steps. we were told dr. kent brantly kind of walked into the hospital. we assume the pictures we have been looking at is the doctor. we are told he's in good spirits. he was able to speak to his wife for 45 minutes through a glass wall. she said, i'm quoting him, he's in great spirits and so grateful. the doctors, meanwhile, saying he was able to talk and converse. we have heard he's been given an experimental serum before leaving liberia. we don't know the details. it's very encouraging signs. doctors at emory hospital are cautiously optimistic they can
>> good morning, deborah. we hear a specialized air ambulance made its way to liberia to pick up nancy writebol. it's a similar set up we saw with dr. kent brantly. the flight is expected to land some time tuesday. we haven't been given the specifics so far. she would join dr. kent brantly at emory university hospital. we saw the images over the weekend of the doctor arriving back in an ambulance. we saw someone in a white suit walking out. the first tentative steps. we were told dr. kent...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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deborah hicks, what do you do here at duke first of all? >> guest: i have a couple of things that i do. i am part of a research unit called social science research institute and that is a unit that is composed of people doing research and social scientist scientists -- science and and also a social entrepreneur so i direct a nonprofit in the carolina mountains codepage partnership for appalachian girls education in there i worked with appalachian girls and middle school and help them get educational opportunities and access. so i have a couple of different hats that i wear at duke university, a researcher in the social entrepreneur. >> host: social entrepreneur. is that a new term? >> guest: i think it was coined by people like nicholas kristof but it's a widely used term now. for people like me who basically direct non-profits and different things in the nonprofit sector. >> host: how did you get involved with appalachian girls in middle school in western north carolina? >> guest: that is a long story that i write about in "the road out."
deborah hicks, what do you do here at duke first of all? >> guest: i have a couple of things that i do. i am part of a research unit called social science research institute and that is a unit that is composed of people doing research and social scientist scientists -- science and and also a social entrepreneur so i direct a nonprofit in the carolina mountains codepage partnership for appalachian girls education in there i worked with appalachian girls and middle school and help them get...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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. >> la pasiÓn por el deporte fue lo que atrajo a deborah a esta cancha de su escuela. >> me me decÍa, paren! >> los padres, hermanos y amigos de deborah, vieron que un auto abruptamente entrÓ a la cancha y le pasÓ por encima. >> recuerdo a la niÑa abajo del carro dando vueltas, y el carro no paraba, no paraba. >> su muerte fue casi instantÁneo. >> cuando le levantÉ la cabeza empezÓ a sangrar por los oÍdos, nariz y boca. >> el auto tambiÉn la arroyÓ a ella, estaba sentada junto a deborah. >> intentÉ agarrarla, ese mi dolor, no pude haber hecho algo. >> las cÁmaras muestran que en el auto habÍan tres personas adultas, la policÍa de montgomery cree que la conductora estaba aprendiendo a manejar. >> chocÓ contra un Árbol, y atropellÓ a la niÑa, el pasajero del lado de la conductora era el dueÑo del vehÍculo y había otra persona de 16 aÑos,en la parte de atrÁs. >> testigos dicen que la tragedia pudo ser peor, mientras deborah era arrollada por el vehÍculo, al muy cerca habÍan 10 niÑos jugando fÚtbol. >> ella le metiÓ con todo, y por eso le pasÓ por encima las llantas a la niÑa. >> en el l
. >> la pasiÓn por el deporte fue lo que atrajo a deborah a esta cancha de su escuela. >> me me decÍa, paren! >> los padres, hermanos y amigos de deborah, vieron que un auto abruptamente entrÓ a la cancha y le pasÓ por encima. >> recuerdo a la niÑa abajo del carro dando vueltas, y el carro no paraba, no paraba. >> su muerte fue casi instantÁneo. >> cuando le levantÉ la cabeza empezÓ a sangrar por los oÍdos, nariz y boca. >> el auto tambiÉn la...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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. >> los padres, hermanos y amigos de deborah vieron que un auto abruptamente entrÓ a la cancha y lemo la niÑa abajo del carro dando vueltas y el carro no paraba. >> su muerte fue casi instantÁnea. >> cuando le levante la cabeza empezÓ a sangrar por los oÍdos, por la nariz y por la boca. >> el vehÍculo tambiÉn arrollÓ a la joven nos cuenta lo que hizo para escapar de la muerte. >> no puede agarrarla, ese es mi dolor pude haber hecho algo pero no pude el carro venÍa muy rÁpido. >> las cÁmara de vigilancia de la escuela registraron el accidentes muestran que en el auto habÍa tres personas adultas, la policÍa de montgomery cree que la conductora estaba aprendiendo manejar. >> la persona cuando manejÓ el carro chocÓ contra una seÑal de trÁnsito, un carro atropello a la niÑa de 13 aÑos el pasajero del lado de la conductora era el dueÑo del vehÍculo. había otra persona de 26 aÑos de edad en la parte de atrÁs. >> testigos dicen que la tragedia pudo ser peor es que mientras deborah arrollada por el vehÍculo algunos pies estaban 10 niÑos jugando fÚtbol. >> ella y va con todo le metiÓ la pata
. >> los padres, hermanos y amigos de deborah vieron que un auto abruptamente entrÓ a la cancha y lemo la niÑa abajo del carro dando vueltas y el carro no paraba. >> su muerte fue casi instantÁnea. >> cuando le levante la cabeza empezÓ a sangrar por los oÍdos, por la nariz y por la boca. >> el vehÍculo tambiÉn arrollÓ a la joven nos cuenta lo que hizo para escapar de la muerte. >> no puede agarrarla, ese es mi dolor pude haber hecho algo pero no pude el...
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Aug 8, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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to make sense of the numbers is deborah, the director of research and policy of blue star families an organization that supports military families and on skype a u.s. army captain and graduate fellow at texas and kevin is an airforce veteran who has written on the topic and skeptical about being cause for alarm and suzanne is a military spouse and husband active duty in the airforce and relied on food stamps and welcome to all of you. deborah is the middle class way of life that people associate the military having provided for decades on its way out? >> i don't know that it's on its way out but what we do see is we see a big differential as enlisted and those who join as officers so your base salary for e 1 who is somebody just joining as enlisted is $20,000 and you see an officer coming in at about $40,000 so when you talk about these issues such as poverty and food stamps there is this big pay differential that you see and so you can imagine somebody who is making 20,000 and has 2.5 children, that doesn't go very far. so you can see that there are some struggles there. >> yeah, ind
to make sense of the numbers is deborah, the director of research and policy of blue star families an organization that supports military families and on skype a u.s. army captain and graduate fellow at texas and kevin is an airforce veteran who has written on the topic and skeptical about being cause for alarm and suzanne is a military spouse and husband active duty in the airforce and relied on food stamps and welcome to all of you. deborah is the middle class way of life that people...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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deborah?teresting to see what the international community does to help these people in the region rebuild. perhaps it will happen sooner. karl penhaul in gaza, thank you. >>> this morning, israel pulled troops out of gaza. they are claiming they achieved most of its objectives. as we said, this operation winding down. troops withdrew over the last 24 hours. most of the hamas tunnels have been destroyed. military capabilities have been crushed. i want to bring in matthew chance live from jerusalem. i just saw a tweet from the idf spokesperson who said mission accomplished. interesting words about this effort. >> reporter: yeah, it's a classic tactic. declare victory and leave. that's what the israelis are doing. they have destroyed 32 tunnels. the number identified and it set out to destroy, they said, basically, they have achieved their objectives. in the minutes before the cease-fire came into force three and a half hours ago, in the words of israeli officials, a massive barrage of rockets co
deborah?teresting to see what the international community does to help these people in the region rebuild. perhaps it will happen sooner. karl penhaul in gaza, thank you. >>> this morning, israel pulled troops out of gaza. they are claiming they achieved most of its objectives. as we said, this operation winding down. troops withdrew over the last 24 hours. most of the hamas tunnels have been destroyed. military capabilities have been crushed. i want to bring in matthew chance live...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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>> that's right, deborah.he tape does go dark at the moment the purported murder, right, when he's apparently being killed, and then it doesn't come up again until after james foley is dead. now, one forensic expert has told cnn he believes the person who appears on the sceecond par of the video is a different person. he says he noticed subtle changes in the person's build and physical appearance and he believes there's another man in that video. that's just one expert who is giving us this opinion. we don't have official word from law enforcement intelligence officials that they believe there's a second person in the vid video. experts are really parsing this video. they're looking at the man's build, the voice, everything. in the opinion of one expert, he believes the person who companicompany comes up after the video is dark is a different person than then who who speaks. >> also be interesting to watch also as they get close to identifying who that person is. >>> as the search for foley's killer continues,
>> that's right, deborah.he tape does go dark at the moment the purported murder, right, when he's apparently being killed, and then it doesn't come up again until after james foley is dead. now, one forensic expert has told cnn he believes the person who appears on the sceecond par of the video is a different person. he says he noticed subtle changes in the person's build and physical appearance and he believes there's another man in that video. that's just one expert who is giving us...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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. >> hi, i'm deborah i live at one hundred 40 belgrade i sport in dr i don't believe the plan that in inclines there were changes and the dr has merit but we don't feel the changes meet the rdt memos so cut to the chase what's been extraordinarily and exceptional about the project one we have a hard time understanding how the envelope i'm going to use this projector will this automatically come on? i have a hard time understanding how the envelope didn't change distinct the two designs before the project on the topping was shown to the neighborhoods and we feel this is a bait-and-switch and second there are two rdt memos that came in after the dr was filed. and the others thick the defense lawyers were not put into the files until after the dr passage was submitted. the thirds thing in terms of the rdt they completely agree with the points we've made in the dr. they said the windows were two massive and didn't scale to the neighborhood and not comparable with the neighborhood. and we think the fact we think it's xoifrld extraordinary there were two memos submitted with you the project
. >> hi, i'm deborah i live at one hundred 40 belgrade i sport in dr i don't believe the plan that in inclines there were changes and the dr has merit but we don't feel the changes meet the rdt memos so cut to the chase what's been extraordinarily and exceptional about the project one we have a hard time understanding how the envelope i'm going to use this projector will this automatically come on? i have a hard time understanding how the envelope didn't change distinct the two designs...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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deborah yes is the director of the department >> when i see her working with the enthusiasm with the cycling that are warms my heart. >> soon she'll graduate with a solid recess may and a mindset that could concur the world. >> she says the program works and graduate with a job or accepting an interview for a job you can checkout the san francisco environment commission. >> thank you, thank you (clapping) isn't that amazing. so you know it's pretty amazing when other people tell our story for you this is not our voice but the voice of the reporter i found us because she was knocking on the doors and she was knocking on his door and explaining to her about composite and he said who are you and when they explained who she was he said can i come and tell our story that's a wow. okay hard to follow that by we're going to the next thing what's going on in zero waste the focus is interesting in our director report from our packet has a lot of numbers it's telling you that the focus is on compliance with policies with existing policies and there's two kinds of compliance one they call surfa
deborah yes is the director of the department >> when i see her working with the enthusiasm with the cycling that are warms my heart. >> soon she'll graduate with a solid recess may and a mindset that could concur the world. >> she says the program works and graduate with a job or accepting an interview for a job you can checkout the san francisco environment commission. >> thank you, thank you (clapping) isn't that amazing. so you know it's pretty amazing when other...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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here again, deborah roberts. >> reporter: it is a haunting mystery. attacked a young woman and left her for dead in this vacant cul-de-sac? detective alan foote's search for clues has become an xer sunrise frustration. so, where did you turn next? >> i start following other leads. suspects in the case. >> reporter: there's no shortage of early suspects. for starters, that friend who was out with inna the night she was attacked. he's 52-year old peter dimouleas, a greek national and -- like inna -- a cruise line employee. >> he asked me, what happened with inna? >> reporter: peter confirms inna's account, a dinner and some drinking in coconut grove, then a friendly parting of ways around midnight when inna takes a cab back to the hotel. he cooperates fully with the police. >> why i have to worry? i don't worry. i know i am not on the crime. >> reporter: but detective foote uncovers this troubling fact -- dimouleas has been arrested just months before, after he and inna had a dispute at a local nightclub. >> peter felt that there were some unsavory char
here again, deborah roberts. >> reporter: it is a haunting mystery. attacked a young woman and left her for dead in this vacant cul-de-sac? detective alan foote's search for clues has become an xer sunrise frustration. so, where did you turn next? >> i start following other leads. suspects in the case. >> reporter: there's no shortage of early suspects. for starters, that friend who was out with inna the night she was attacked. he's 52-year old peter dimouleas, a greek...
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Aug 21, 2014
08/14
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you just saw deborah's piece. obviously there's been a militarization of police.ws from th battlefield to police officers. does it make sense to you? >> it doesn't make sense to me. when you look at this footage, is this the middle east or is this the american midwest? we're not fighting isis here. we're not fighting saddam hussein here. and the problem is when you start to -- when you can't tell the difference between a soldier or a robo cop and a police officer, it gipps to add to the distrust. i don't think that the situation here was enhanced by having so much militarization. you have to be honest. protests and rallies this size or bigger every day. the difference here was this massive militarized response that provoked a lot of what you saw here. the minute you started pulling away from that, things calmed down. it didn't make things better, it made things worse. >> we just played a soundbite from deval patrick. he said he's sick of unarmed black men being shot by police. "usa today" says that between 2005 and 2012 a white police officer killed a black person
you just saw deborah's piece. obviously there's been a militarization of police.ws from th battlefield to police officers. does it make sense to you? >> it doesn't make sense to me. when you look at this footage, is this the middle east or is this the american midwest? we're not fighting isis here. we're not fighting saddam hussein here. and the problem is when you start to -- when you can't tell the difference between a soldier or a robo cop and a police officer, it gipps to add to the...
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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jacqueline, deborah, thank you so much and if you'll be sticking around anyway maybe we'll find stray questions at the end of the q and a for the second panel. thank you so much. thank you. [ applause ] >> and our nascar second panelists could come up, if i could. >> they're good. >> all right. ry are reconstituted panel wise. you've heard from steve rosenberg and the other panelists on my right, dr. sharon lewis medical director for the georgia department of corrections. she's a board-certified pediatrician and a nationally respected expert on quality assurance with more than 20 years of experience in health care and managed care and right now she's responsible for delivering adequate and cost-efficient care to the inmates in the georgia correctional system. next to her is dr. asher turney who is the medical director for centurion of tennessee which is a joint venture of centene with which tennessee contracts to provide health care services for its correctional system. dr. turney is board certified in both urgent care and occupational medicine and he's got a special interest in healt
jacqueline, deborah, thank you so much and if you'll be sticking around anyway maybe we'll find stray questions at the end of the q and a for the second panel. thank you so much. thank you. [ applause ] >> and our nascar second panelists could come up, if i could. >> they're good. >> all right. ry are reconstituted panel wise. you've heard from steve rosenberg and the other panelists on my right, dr. sharon lewis medical director for the georgia department of corrections....
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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. >> host: deborah hicks where do you think you are successful and where do you think you would do thingsdifferently? >> guest: i think we were very successful. we haven't an intimacy and a super successful class. we had seven girls attaching themselves to school loving the schoolwide experience at a teacher. i think the biggest challenge i faced was just about the time that my class finished i had to leave to come back to my home state and eyes found by nonprofit that i was thinking about bounding. the biggest difficulty was with not being able to finish the class. that is why when i founded my program page i made sure we were serving girls in middle school when they are the most liberal and trying to find who they are and what they want to be in li life. that is something i learned from cincinnati that i brought back to me in north carolina. >> host: if people aren't just in a nonprofit what is the web site? >> guest: its carolina page.org, all one word. >> host: page. >> guest: page just what the page of the book in its partnership for appalachian -- education. you can go to a stories
. >> host: deborah hicks where do you think you are successful and where do you think you would do thingsdifferently? >> guest: i think we were very successful. we haven't an intimacy and a super successful class. we had seven girls attaching themselves to school loving the schoolwide experience at a teacher. i think the biggest challenge i faced was just about the time that my class finished i had to leave to come back to my home state and eyes found by nonprofit that i was...
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Aug 15, 2014
08/14
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deborah deborah, it's the way families fly, with a baby in air arms. what is wrong with that?y not safe. we wouldn't think about holding our infants in our arms in a car at 50 miles per hour why would we want to do it at 250 miles per hour in an airplane? it's just not safe. you want to make sure that everybody is restrained. it gives them the best chance of surviving an accident. >> deborah, we now have all 50 states in the past couple decades you have to use car seats and etc., and why do you think you could not get it done as the chair of the ntsb? why are airlines so resistant to it? >> it goes back to a very old rule half a century ago, and they had an exemption for children and said it was okay and it just doesn't keep up with the standards. 50 years ago we didn't buckle up in cars and a lot has changed and this is a glaring gap in an otherwise incredibly safe industry. >> you reminded us of a plane crash in sioux city that shows how important this was. >> it was airlines flight 332 and made a crash landing, and 296 people aboard the plane, and 111 survived but of those
deborah deborah, it's the way families fly, with a baby in air arms. what is wrong with that?y not safe. we wouldn't think about holding our infants in our arms in a car at 50 miles per hour why would we want to do it at 250 miles per hour in an airplane? it's just not safe. you want to make sure that everybody is restrained. it gives them the best chance of surviving an accident. >> deborah, we now have all 50 states in the past couple decades you have to use car seats and etc., and why...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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. >> red carpet ladies in red, deborah norville, jim moret and victoria recano with the behind the scenes action you didn't see. >> miley cyrus. >> what we learned about the homeless dude miley cyrus brought to the vmas. >> exclusive.
. >> red carpet ladies in red, deborah norville, jim moret and victoria recano with the behind the scenes action you didn't see. >> miley cyrus. >> what we learned about the homeless dude miley cyrus brought to the vmas. >> exclusive.
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Aug 13, 2014
08/14
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deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> it's amazing. people we've been speaking to right across cnn have said when it was just one-on-one, he was quiet. as soon as there was two people in the room, he was on. it required so much energy and he gave so much. >> and he was never really off and the energy that requires of you whether on stage or in your personal life, it's challenging to deal with. >> williams' family is asking fans to donate to one of six charities. >> yeah. they are saying, do this rather than send flowers. if you feel compelled, donate to the uso, christopher and dana reeves donation. go to cnn.com/impact sf. >>> well, the u.s. national weather service has issued a warning for flood watches for parts of the northeast and midwest. >> how many of our viewers need to listen up? >> this situation here, we've got an amplified jet stream pattern, extreme conditions on either end of the united states. massive high pressure has been in place. near 100 in the pacific northwest and that fueled storms across the eastern united stat
deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> it's amazing. people we've been speaking to right across cnn have said when it was just one-on-one, he was quiet. as soon as there was two people in the room, he was on. it required so much energy and he gave so much. >> and he was never really off and the energy that requires of you whether on stage or in your personal life, it's challenging to deal with. >> williams' family is asking fans to donate to one of six charities. >> yeah....
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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. >> host: deborah hicks where do you think you were successful and where do you think you would do things differently? >> guest: i think we were very successful. we had an intimacy. we had a super successful class. we had seven girls who are attaching themselves to school, loving literature and loving books, loving a school like experience in the teacher. i think the biggest challenge i faced was just about the time that my class finished i had to leave to come back to my home state and found my nonprofit that i was thinking about founding. the biggest difficulty was not being able to kind of finish the class when the girls were entering adolescence. that's why when i found my new -- i made sure we were serving girls on the middle school years. we are trying to work with students, girls in the years when they are the most vulnerable and trying to define who they are and what they want to be in life. so that is something i learned from a class in cincinnati that i've brought back with me to north carolina. >> host: if people are interested in your nonprofit what is the web site? >> guest:
. >> host: deborah hicks where do you think you were successful and where do you think you would do things differently? >> guest: i think we were very successful. we had an intimacy. we had a super successful class. we had seven girls who are attaching themselves to school, loving literature and loving books, loving a school like experience in the teacher. i think the biggest challenge i faced was just about the time that my class finished i had to leave to come back to my home...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 13, 2014
08/14
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welcome to the show, deborah. tell us how this program began 20 years ago. >> the program began 20 years ago. our founder was an environmentalist and an activist and an artist in the 1970's. she started these street sweeping campaigns in the city. she started with kids. they had an exhibition at city hall. city officials heard about her efforts and they invited her to this facility. we thought it would coincide with our efforts to get folks to recycle, it is a great educational tool. since then, we have had 95 professional artists come through. >> how has the program changed over the years? how has the program -- what can the public has an artist engage with? >> for the most part, we worked with metal and wood, what you would expect from a program like ours. over the years, we tried to include artists and all types of mediums. conceptual artists, at installation, photographers, videographers. >> that has really expanded the program out. it is becoming so dynamic right now with your vision of interesting artists in
welcome to the show, deborah. tell us how this program began 20 years ago. >> the program began 20 years ago. our founder was an environmentalist and an activist and an artist in the 1970's. she started these street sweeping campaigns in the city. she started with kids. they had an exhibition at city hall. city officials heard about her efforts and they invited her to this facility. we thought it would coincide with our efforts to get folks to recycle, it is a great educational tool....
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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joinings us from newton, massachusetts, deborah from the skeleton crew. what a fascinating book, you wrote a book about people who do this almost as a sideline. we have seen reality shows about bount yit hunters. this is not about bounty hunting, it's people who use the internet to connect missing found. >> yes, exactly. i think initially a lot of these people came across these cases by accident. they may have known somebody what knew someone who was missing and they went on the internet to see what they could do. then they found a case and they sort of get sucked in to the mystery of it, the challenge. you know, who was this person, how could they not be identified. just like something you find on c.s.i. >> one of the things that is interesting is in the early days of the internet. and a main case that you study here comes from the early days of the internet. that was one of the things people did. they put information about missing people out there, hoping that the worldwide web would help them find that missing person. tell me the girl. >> well 1968 a y
joinings us from newton, massachusetts, deborah from the skeleton crew. what a fascinating book, you wrote a book about people who do this almost as a sideline. we have seen reality shows about bount yit hunters. this is not about bounty hunting, it's people who use the internet to connect missing found. >> yes, exactly. i think initially a lot of these people came across these cases by accident. they may have known somebody what knew someone who was missing and they went on the internet...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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deborah feyericfeyerick, cnn, n. >>> be sure to tune in or set your dvr for tonight's episode of "thet 9:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. let me get this straight... [ female voice ] yes? lactaid® is 100% real milk? right. real milk. but it won't cause me discomfort. exactly, no discomfort, because it's milk without the lactose. and it tastes? it's real milk! come on, would i lie about this? [ female announcer ] lactaid®. 100% real milk. no discomfort. and for more 100% real dairy treats you'll 100% enjoy look for lactaid® ice cream and lactaid® cottage cheese. that, my friends, is everything. and with the quicksilver card from capital one, you earn unlimited 1.5% cash back on everything you purchase. not just "everything at the hardware store." not "everything, until you hit your cash back limit." quicksilver can earn you unlimited 1.5% cash back on everything you could possibly imagine. say it with me -- everything. one more time, everything! and with that in mind... what's in your wallet? we're changing the way we do business, with startup ny. and with that in mind... we've created tax free
deborah feyericfeyerick, cnn, n. >>> be sure to tune in or set your dvr for tonight's episode of "thet 9:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. let me get this straight... [ female voice ] yes? lactaid® is 100% real milk? right. real milk. but it won't cause me discomfort. exactly, no discomfort, because it's milk without the lactose. and it tastes? it's real milk! come on, would i lie about this? [ female announcer ] lactaid®. 100% real milk. no discomfort. and for more 100% real dairy treats...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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excited to be here and hear our first ever director report and can we all please welcome our director deborah raphael. >> (clapping). >> now first of all, okay. now it's on green. well, thank you president and commissioners for your vote of confidence it's incredible honor to be serving in this position tonsillitis that's my dream job no place i'd rather be working with the partners on the commission, with this particular mayors administration and all the partners he brings as well. 80 so i'm deeply honored to be here that long list of things i'll not give ignore i didn't details but want to highlight things in our department to drawing your attention so what i'm going to do with my director's report this is move forward been the agenda and wanting that was your desire to have it move forward up ranch the end i think it's important for people to hear from the director what's going on o going on so i appreciate that that speaks a lot to the value you place on the relationship between director and wanting i appreciate that. so i'm going to do with my first ever remarks give you quick highlights
excited to be here and hear our first ever director report and can we all please welcome our director deborah raphael. >> (clapping). >> now first of all, okay. now it's on green. well, thank you president and commissioners for your vote of confidence it's incredible honor to be serving in this position tonsillitis that's my dream job no place i'd rather be working with the partners on the commission, with this particular mayors administration and all the partners he brings as well....
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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north carolina where we talk with professors and scholars about some of their books and joining us is deborah hicks said teachers odyssey for for america what do you do here first of all? >> i have a couple of things. i am part of social science research institute that is a unit composed of people doing research into a friend disciplines. i am also a social entrepreneur and directed nonprofit called page partnership for appellation in girls' education and there i work with girls and middle schools so in of the bunch of different hats. >> host: social entrepreneurialism added new term? >> if think it was cleaned as of very widely used term. but for nonprofits in the non-profit sector. >> host: how are you get involved with appellation and girls in middle school from north carolina? >> that is a long story that i wrote about but growing up as of working class a was the first to my family to go to college that was a big step. and then to go to college to do super well and ended up finally after stumbles and falls to get a graduate degree from harvard that journey that i experienced myself came b
north carolina where we talk with professors and scholars about some of their books and joining us is deborah hicks said teachers odyssey for for america what do you do here first of all? >> i have a couple of things. i am part of social science research institute that is a unit composed of people doing research into a friend disciplines. i am also a social entrepreneur and directed nonprofit called page partnership for appellation in girls' education and there i work with girls and...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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deborah feyerick has more. >> the search for suspected child molester and fugitive ended here in news west village. >> the officers rueturned fire. >> the task force tracked mozdir to the busy street. after a profile on cnn's "the hunt" with john walsh. >> my son sat me down and said, mom, i have something to tell you. >> charlie mozdir, his friends called him, was suspected of molesting his 5-year-old godson as the boy's mother slept nearby. the segment was still airing when a florida woman called a hot line with a crucial lead. >> the tipster stated, i know mozdir. >> in new york, people who knew him, knew him not as charlie moz der dir, they knew him as john smith who seemed to blend in with the darker, seedier side of life here on west 4th street. >> he had a history of working in smoke shops, a hobby of blowing glass, which would come in handy at a smoke shop. >> on yelp, customers rated the man they called big john as super helpful. another saying, quote, john is the dude. he was pretty chilled and very helpful. he was also under the radar, living blocks from the shop in apartm
deborah feyerick has more. >> the search for suspected child molester and fugitive ended here in news west village. >> the officers rueturned fire. >> the task force tracked mozdir to the busy street. after a profile on cnn's "the hunt" with john walsh. >> my son sat me down and said, mom, i have something to tell you. >> charlie mozdir, his friends called him, was suspected of molesting his 5-year-old godson as the boy's mother slept nearby. the segment...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> and our viewers in the u.s. can watch "the hunt" with john walsh tonight 9:00 eastern on cnn. >>> we have much more straight ahead in the newsroom and all starts right now. >>> welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. i'm fredericka whitfield in atlanta. >> and i'm jake tapper in jerusalem, these stories are topping our news this hour. >> another u.n. run shelter is attacked in gaza and drawing condemnation. and new details surrounding the death of an israeli soldier. we're live in the middle east with the latest. >>> plus, an american doctor infect eed with ebola has been an atlanta hospital for a day. we'll have the latest on his condition. and hundreds of thousands of people in toledo, ohio still have no safe drinking water. how did the city's water become contamina contaminated. and when will it be safe to drink again? let's start today in the middle east where gaza is rocked by another blast near a school. according to the palestinian health ministry, at least ten people died today near the
deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> and our viewers in the u.s. can watch "the hunt" with john walsh tonight 9:00 eastern on cnn. >>> we have much more straight ahead in the newsroom and all starts right now. >>> welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world. i'm fredericka whitfield in atlanta. >> and i'm jake tapper in jerusalem, these stories are topping our news this hour. >> another u.n. run shelter is attacked in gaza and drawing...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
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. >> deborah: the american doctor stricken with ebola, his message to the world. >>> plus -- >> i madee biggest mistake of my life. >> the football star who knocked out his fiance. >> 14 can do no wrong. >>> and then backing the band, ground swell of support for the best band in the land leader. >> someone you respect so highly dragged through the mud. >>> and curse
. >> deborah: the american doctor stricken with ebola, his message to the world. >>> plus -- >> i madee biggest mistake of my life. >> the football star who knocked out his fiance. >> 14 can do no wrong. >>> and then backing the band, ground swell of support for the best band in the land leader. >> someone you respect so highly dragged through the mud. >>> and curse
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Aug 12, 2014
08/14
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>> reporter: deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> "out front" tonight a psychiatrist who met robin williamsu know, from what we know and what you just heard robin williams saying there, obviously his demons and his addictions destroyed at least two marriages, but he had a supportive family. his daughter adored him. friends adored him. but the depression took over. what could have happened to trigger this now? after fighting it for decades and decades. he's 63 years old. what would have made it happen now? >> well, i think there's actually stacked stresses. so a number of them. what we know is cocaine abuse, alcohol abuse, all damage the brain. the heart surgery that he has, there's evidence that that can damage the brain. aging. and then if you take his show being canceled. you see the stacked stresses that weigh on him so get him to a point where he feels great pain is hopeless and then he kills himself. >> doctor, you mentioned the open heart surgery that he had in 2009, that he just referred to in deb's piece. he talked about that surgery and how it affected his mind and emotional state.
>> reporter: deborah feyerick, cnn, new york. >> "out front" tonight a psychiatrist who met robin williamsu know, from what we know and what you just heard robin williams saying there, obviously his demons and his addictions destroyed at least two marriages, but he had a supportive family. his daughter adored him. friends adored him. but the depression took over. what could have happened to trigger this now? after fighting it for decades and decades. he's 63 years old....
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Aug 12, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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deborah cultural minister said imports from egypt could be doubled.he said imports from brazil would be stepped up as well. food producers have received permission to export over the past week. russia imposed a one-year ban on imports of meat, fish, fruits and vegetables from the united states, canada, osh area and norway in retaliation for sanctions over the ukraine crisis. on monday, the eu said it would help its peach and neck during farmers who have been affected by bad weather this summer and they are now suffering the effects of the russian embargo. farmers will likely be given extra funds for marketing as well as more government compensation for unsold fruit. for some farmers those measures are too little, too late. >> harvest season is well underway and the eu's announcement has arrived too late for some. newman measures to support the peach industry have confused producers. >> i do not think they will be if. -- will be you fact -- effec tive. >> this year, he is facing competition from spain where labor is 50% cheaper. the result the price he
deborah cultural minister said imports from egypt could be doubled.he said imports from brazil would be stepped up as well. food producers have received permission to export over the past week. russia imposed a one-year ban on imports of meat, fish, fruits and vegetables from the united states, canada, osh area and norway in retaliation for sanctions over the ukraine crisis. on monday, the eu said it would help its peach and neck during farmers who have been affected by bad weather this summer...
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Aug 14, 2014
08/14
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if you haven't do nateed yet, deborah intro douses us to a couple of reasons why you might want to actow. >> i want to be a judge, an actor, a singer. >> i want to be a cop. >> reporter: 10 year old kilane isn't allowed to play with school supplies until? >> august 26th. >> but today mom shashi mason is making an exception . these crayons, this paper, notebooks and these backpacks? >> i love this book bag. it looks like high school. >> were all donated by wusa 9 viewers who gave to operation backpack, our partnership with volunteers of america chesapeake. >> it makes me feel great they are going to school with the things they need for school so they won't have to be in their raising their hand, every five seconds, can i get a pencil or an eraser. >> supplies like these would cost a single mom about $100. >> have to make a decision between going out and buying school supplies or spending that same money and putting a meal on the table. >> i'm going to show you how easy it is and i'm going to time it. wusa 9.com/backpack, you can either give money or give school supplies. just find where
if you haven't do nateed yet, deborah intro douses us to a couple of reasons why you might want to actow. >> i want to be a judge, an actor, a singer. >> i want to be a cop. >> reporter: 10 year old kilane isn't allowed to play with school supplies until? >> august 26th. >> but today mom shashi mason is making an exception . these crayons, this paper, notebooks and these backpacks? >> i love this book bag. it looks like high school. >> were all donated...
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Aug 21, 2014
08/14
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. >> deborah: so why were the seven teens taken into custody released with no charges filed?and then this email an executive received on a business trip. >> i will not leave without having sex with you. >>> and drone man verses the cops. reprimanded for flying his drone over a rally protesting the shooting at ferguson. is he going too far? >> are you purposely baiting the police? >>> then, beheaded. >> interrogated me for six hours. kind of felt like a mind game. >> and is this
. >> deborah: so why were the seven teens taken into custody released with no charges filed?and then this email an executive received on a business trip. >> i will not leave without having sex with you. >>> and drone man verses the cops. reprimanded for flying his drone over a rally protesting the shooting at ferguson. is he going too far? >> are you purposely baiting the police? >>> then, beheaded. >> interrogated me for six hours. kind of felt like a...
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Aug 14, 2014
08/14
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. >> deborah: and why are so many funny people haunted by depression?hen, luckiest traffic stop ever. >> are you choking? >> she's choking to death. heimlich cop to the rescue. what you need to know about this life saving technique. >> push in and up, in and up. >>> then, home sweet home. at wal-
. >> deborah: and why are so many funny people haunted by depression?hen, luckiest traffic stop ever. >> are you choking? >> she's choking to death. heimlich cop to the rescue. what you need to know about this life saving technique. >> push in and up, in and up. >>> then, home sweet home. at wal-
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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KGO
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here's deborah roberts. >> can we go the bathroom and smoke a cigarette. i need one.irst let me take a selfie. >> reporter: the song has become an anthem of sorts. no surprise, since everyone seems selfie obsessed! power couples. the president. even -- the pope? there's even a new sitcom on the subject premiering on abc this fall. >> traded likes for likes and before long i was insta-famous. >> reporter: the craze has sparked a whole new industry -- complete with apps allowing users make their instagram insta-glam. there're even online "selfie schools" teaching the "how to's" for capturing that "perfect" pose. >> so you're gonna wanna hold it just a little bit above eye level. >> reporter: but for some selfie-holics filters and photo edits just aren't enough they're actually turning to a more "physical" photo shop -- cosmetic surgery. the latest thing? hand rejuvenation. that's right hand rejuvenation. afterall today's brides may want something borrowed, something blue and - something to post! >> so you're gonna get your hands basically smoothed out for a nice selfie?
here's deborah roberts. >> can we go the bathroom and smoke a cigarette. i need one.irst let me take a selfie. >> reporter: the song has become an anthem of sorts. no surprise, since everyone seems selfie obsessed! power couples. the president. even -- the pope? there's even a new sitcom on the subject premiering on abc this fall. >> traded likes for likes and before long i was insta-famous. >> reporter: the craze has sparked a whole new industry -- complete with apps...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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here's cnn's deborah feyerick. >> reporter: this 2006 mine resistant vehicle once saw action in baghdad and fallujah. >> it's pretty big capacity. >> reporter: now it belongs to the nassau county police department on long island. >> this could enter a hot zone and as you've seen it's very, very heavy. >> reporter: unbelievable. have you ever taken this out? >> it has not been used yet. >> reporter: it hasn't? >> and hopefully it won't be. >> reporter: the defense department is giving out billions of dollars of surplus military equipment to police agencies across the country. >> this will withstand gunfire where this one will not. >> reporter: things like humvees, backhoe, watch towers, in some cases even weapons. all of it handed out for free. >> they're downsizing the military now. rather than dispose of these vehicles or have them sitting in a lot rotting, they've made them available to police agencies such as ours, and we've taken advantage of it. >> reporter: nassau's chief of department steve skernecki oversees police operations here. he says this is the key part of the emergency r
here's cnn's deborah feyerick. >> reporter: this 2006 mine resistant vehicle once saw action in baghdad and fallujah. >> it's pretty big capacity. >> reporter: now it belongs to the nassau county police department on long island. >> this could enter a hot zone and as you've seen it's very, very heavy. >> reporter: unbelievable. have you ever taken this out? >> it has not been used yet. >> reporter: it hasn't? >> and hopefully it won't be. >>...
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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deborah feyerick has the story. >> reporter: when a peaceful sit-in protesting jewish groups ended inis week, what bothered young people like maxberger was not the arrests so much as the older generation's response. >> i was more upset after the fact when they described us as being, quote, insignificant. >> reporter: when it comes to israel and gaza, if you're over age 30, chances are you support israel. but if you're 30 or younger -- >> enough! >> reporter: chances are you're more sympathetic to the palestinians says a new poll by the pew research center. >> how many you have been to israel? >> reporter: iona lieberman on the left, carol segall and max berger are peace activists with the group if now, when? >> is your support of israel different than your parents' support of israel? >> certainly. i think my parents feel that the violence is more justified than i do. >> reporter: among americans 65 or olders 53% blame the militant group hamas for the violence in gaza. that's compared to 21% of americans under 30. 15% of americans over 65 blame israel compared to 29% of americans under
deborah feyerick has the story. >> reporter: when a peaceful sit-in protesting jewish groups ended inis week, what bothered young people like maxberger was not the arrests so much as the older generation's response. >> i was more upset after the fact when they described us as being, quote, insignificant. >> reporter: when it comes to israel and gaza, if you're over age 30, chances are you support israel. but if you're 30 or younger -- >> enough! >> reporter:...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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joining us is deborah flateman, executive director, maryland food bank.s on feeding america's board. welcome. >> thank you. >> brown: on a general level first what do we learn on this report about who is hungry in america? >> you know, honestly, from my point of view it verifies what we have been seeing trending over the past few years. i think one of the most significant pieces of data tells us that more than half of the people who are accessing food through the emergency feeding system including food banks an food shelves are people who are working. >> brown: that have jobs. >> exactly. >> brown: but it's not enough. >> that's right, it's not enough. we've been seeing that anecdotally through our agencies for several years now. >> brown: so i mean it's interesting to compare it to the height of the recession, things have gotten better in some ways, people might even have jobs but still not abating. >> right. an interesting example of that is recently the steel mills in baltimore, for instance, closed down. and so the folks who are going to be able to fi
joining us is deborah flateman, executive director, maryland food bank.s on feeding america's board. welcome. >> thank you. >> brown: on a general level first what do we learn on this report about who is hungry in america? >> you know, honestly, from my point of view it verifies what we have been seeing trending over the past few years. i think one of the most significant pieces of data tells us that more than half of the people who are accessing food through the emergency...
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deborah pa tarks cbs news, johannesburg, south africa. >>> close arguments began this morning in the trial of oscar pistorius as the five-month-long case comes to an end. the double amputee oliympian arrived in court this morning. he's accused of murdering his girlfriend reeva steenkamp. a judge will ultimately decide his fate. >>> and a woman who snuck onboard a southwest airline flight without a ticket says she'll never do it again. 62-year-old marilyn hartman pleaded no contest in court yesterday. she passed by document checks in san jose, went through security, and boarded a plane without a ticket. hartman wasn't caught until she landed in los angeles, but she won't say how she did it. >> i don't want to help the enemy. i'm first and foremost an american. >> well, hartman tried the same stunt four times at san francisco's airport but she was never successful. >>> coming up on the "morning news," group effort. dozens of passengers push a train to free a man trapped in the gap. >>> and coin compensation. a man gets buckets and buckets of coins as payment. this is the "cbs morning n
deborah pa tarks cbs news, johannesburg, south africa. >>> close arguments began this morning in the trial of oscar pistorius as the five-month-long case comes to an end. the double amputee oliympian arrived in court this morning. he's accused of murdering his girlfriend reeva steenkamp. a judge will ultimately decide his fate. >>> and a woman who snuck onboard a southwest airline flight without a ticket says she'll never do it again. 62-year-old marilyn hartman pleaded no...
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deborah must say outside of the temple of the humble. in siberia forty. i see your green light to get to. know you want to do to look good you will be. ok. green six excellent thank you very much i'll be wonderful thank you jim. somebody somewhere so that you know would be allowed to make the sale whole thing a lot more entertaining and was paid for. to just see which we can get to move around without waiting for a week because some point if the top of the eiffel tower. tourist needs just like you are here. and. that's why i need to be. so the talking about pushing the life past. another hour and this is down low down just arrived i had to run to get to the position where the sound like hope was alright when you like. it's ok coast to coast hello how i. waited for you at twelve thirty. we would there but then we were told you got to live at one o'clock so we had to get moving. yet. thousands of people been running in paris and also in the city of leone today in the latest wave of demonstrations for traditional family values peter all of us in the french c
deborah must say outside of the temple of the humble. in siberia forty. i see your green light to get to. know you want to do to look good you will be. ok. green six excellent thank you very much i'll be wonderful thank you jim. somebody somewhere so that you know would be allowed to make the sale whole thing a lot more entertaining and was paid for. to just see which we can get to move around without waiting for a week because some point if the top of the eiffel tower. tourist needs just like...
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Aug 7, 2014
08/14
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deborah is one of a handful of college grads to take part in the transit system's new junior engineer program. >> i think what's so exciting is that, i mean, it's things that you don't learn at school. it's just learning at the job. and using your engineering technical skills to apply it to work. >> reporter: with the help of her mentors, she's learning the ins and outs of being a train control engineer, becoming one of the first women in the system's history to wear that hat. >> she's looking forward to spending a lot of years there. and i'm sure she wants to go right to the top. and i think she'll do it. >> b.a.r.t. is essential for the bay area. what we're doing, it affects lives and makes a difference. that in itself is really rewarding. i know i get up, go to work, and i'll be making a difference. >> reporter: so far, 14 young people have taken part, or are taking part in the program. b.a.r.t. says it will begin accepting applications for its new class of junior engineers soon. reporting live in walnut creek, jodi hernandez, nbc bay area news. >>> you may remember him from this p
deborah is one of a handful of college grads to take part in the transit system's new junior engineer program. >> i think what's so exciting is that, i mean, it's things that you don't learn at school. it's just learning at the job. and using your engineering technical skills to apply it to work. >> reporter: with the help of her mentors, she's learning the ins and outs of being a train control engineer, becoming one of the first women in the system's history to wear that hat....
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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KPIX
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the 0 outbreak in africa is growing worse by the day, and deborah patta has more tonight. >> medical organizations fighting to contain ebola across four west african nations are being stretched beyond their capacity. with nearly 1,000 dead and almost 2,000 infected, a leading health official in liberia told cbs news that they do not have enough beds to treat the ill. many infected people are being left to die alone in their villages. in some cases, the bodies of ebola victims are simply being dumped in the street. researchers believe they have not tracked down the start of the virus to a two-year-old boy from a remote village in guinea who fell nil december last year, but it wasn't until march the mystery disease was identified as ebola. by then, dozens had been infected. and on the front line of the battle to contain the deadly virus, it is health workers who are bearing the brunt, scores have died, and the leader of liberia health workers association george williams says there are growing increasingly angry. >> >> reporter: the doctors working without borders told cbs news the dise
the 0 outbreak in africa is growing worse by the day, and deborah patta has more tonight. >> medical organizations fighting to contain ebola across four west african nations are being stretched beyond their capacity. with nearly 1,000 dead and almost 2,000 infected, a leading health official in liberia told cbs news that they do not have enough beds to treat the ill. many infected people are being left to die alone in their villages. in some cases, the bodies of ebola victims are simply...