124
124
Jan 19, 2013
01/13
by
WMAR
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dr. nelson has me saddle up to the microscope. >> so this is me? can adjust the eyes here so you can see it. >> this is my heart tissue beating outside my body? oh, yeah. little bill is pumping slow. >> so this is a pretty calm, calm cell right now. >> reporter: can you see why this kind of medical science just won the nobel prize. why a company like cellular dynamics in madison, wisconsin, is growing billions of cells a day so drug companies can test new medicine on the living tissue of specific patients instead of mice, and without the controversy that comes can harvesting stem cells from unborn children. >> wow. oh, man. now, that is cool. >> reporter: dr. nelson gets most excited when he shows me a tiny piece of my heart tissue that looks exactly like a heart. a pumping three-dimensional glimpse into a future. when this kind of cell could theoretically get injected into a heart attack victim or a deceased child and literally mend broken hearts. >> this is a functioning tissue. >> reporter: that is the hope. while these cells could grow hearts o
dr. nelson has me saddle up to the microscope. >> so this is me? can adjust the eyes here so you can see it. >> this is my heart tissue beating outside my body? oh, yeah. little bill is pumping slow. >> so this is a pretty calm, calm cell right now. >> reporter: can you see why this kind of medical science just won the nobel prize. why a company like cellular dynamics in madison, wisconsin, is growing billions of cells a day so drug companies can test new medicine on the...
147
147
Jan 22, 2013
01/13
by
KOFY
tv
eye 147
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dr. nelson saddles me up to the microscope. >> you can adjust the eyes to site.ing outside my body. >> oh, yes. the the little bill is pumping slow. >>reporter: thinks pretty calm cell right now. you can see why this kind of medical science just won the nobel prize. why a company like cellular dynamic in made son, wisconsin is agreeing billions of cells a day so drug company can test new medicine on the living tissue of specific patients instead of mice. and without any of the controversy that comes with harvesting stem cells from unborn children. wow! oh, man. now that is cool. dr. nelson gets most excited when he shows me a tiny piece of my heart tissue that looks exactly like a heart. pumping 3 dimensional glimpse into a future. when this kind of cell could theoretically get in jebingted into a heart attack victim or deceased child and lit receipt mend broken hearts. this is a functioning tissue. that is the hope. but while the cells could grow heart or lung or brain they could grow tumor and used before the science is ready for the first clinical trial on hum
dr. nelson saddles me up to the microscope. >> you can adjust the eyes to site.ing outside my body. >> oh, yes. the the little bill is pumping slow. >>reporter: thinks pretty calm cell right now. you can see why this kind of medical science just won the nobel prize. why a company like cellular dynamic in made son, wisconsin is agreeing billions of cells a day so drug company can test new medicine on the living tissue of specific patients instead of mice. and without any of the...
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wasn't today's world jewish congress it was the world jewish congress of the internationalists of dr nelson goldman so i've been involved in this for a long time. they rely on intimidation they rely on blackmail they rely on letting people know that if you cross them your career is in jeopardy they do it with journalists they do it with politicians. and they've been extremely successful because it's not just a pac apac is just the tip that's just the public you've got the presidents conference of major american jewish organizations you've got the american jewish congress the american jewish committee you've got commentary magazine you've got to think tanks one with the republicans and the hardliners the new research institute the other the institute with the democrats it's a whole range of interlocking interworkings organizations but where did it start from it started from the holocaust it started from jewish impotence in the thirty's and forty's and what happened to the jewish people in europe and then the fight in the forty's over whether or not the u.s. would support the creation of a je
wasn't today's world jewish congress it was the world jewish congress of the internationalists of dr nelson goldman so i've been involved in this for a long time. they rely on intimidation they rely on blackmail they rely on letting people know that if you cross them your career is in jeopardy they do it with journalists they do it with politicians. and they've been extremely successful because it's not just a pac apac is just the tip that's just the public you've got the presidents conference...
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268
Jan 31, 2013
01/13
by
WJLA
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dr. katie nelson on our sister station. quex>> coming up, day three of a terrifying standoff.lping the five year-old kidnapped from a school bus. >> is omi love story. -- a >> welcome back. in four days we have gone from snow to the 70's tomb storms and tomorrow we could see >> back to snow again. is this a fluke or something we should get used to? >> during his inauguration president obama talked about climate change and its impact and with these extreme fluctuations in temperature we have had, a lot of people are asking what is going on with the weather? today, wind and stinging cold. hours earlier, sheets of rain. causing flash floods. yesterday, balmy weather blanketed the area. some people were sweating it out. remember a few days ago? record-breaking cold. the roller-coaster weather has a lot of people asking what is up? >> ester it was 70 and is january. >> it is completely ridiculous. >> some people's dressed strange weather is nothing new. >> we have a few winters that were extreme as far as amounts of snow. >> while the debate rages, some say what we saysee here is t
dr. katie nelson on our sister station. quex>> coming up, day three of a terrifying standoff.lping the five year-old kidnapped from a school bus. >> is omi love story. -- a >> welcome back. in four days we have gone from snow to the 70's tomb storms and tomorrow we could see >> back to snow again. is this a fluke or something we should get used to? >> during his inauguration president obama talked about climate change and its impact and with these extreme...
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153
Jan 30, 2013
01/13
by
WTTG
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eye 153
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dr. christina nelson is the co-founder.ood morning to you. >> thanks so much. >> this is an opportunity. this exhibit. >> it is a wonderful opportunity to come and learn about some of the new discoveries. we have a piece here that is actually newly excavated a number of years ago. it dates to 800 bc. >> 800 bc and just found a couple years ago. >> it's a beautiful example of an early portrait of the maya by the maya. very interesting details the maya valued and idealized. as slightly deformed head for cranial deformation. slightly crossed eyes and general appearances is uniquely maya. >> amazingly old things here. and new discoveries. but also amazing visual things to see here. >> yes. we wanted to bring from the later flourishing beautiful compliments. and this set of figure renos are extraordinary. and unique in the naya world. they show a court scene. kings and queens and gestures and they are all playing a part in a very important ritual that took place around 600 ad in a royal palace in a city called waka. >> what is t
dr. christina nelson is the co-founder.ood morning to you. >> thanks so much. >> this is an opportunity. this exhibit. >> it is a wonderful opportunity to come and learn about some of the new discoveries. we have a piece here that is actually newly excavated a number of years ago. it dates to 800 bc. >> 800 bc and just found a couple years ago. >> it's a beautiful example of an early portrait of the maya by the maya. very interesting details the maya valued and...
277
277
Jan 7, 2013
01/13
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FOXNEWSW
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dr. knight apparently made some racy comments to ms. nelson wife got wind of it and ordered him to fire miss nelson. nelson says that was illegal sex discrimination, but the iowa supreme court says no it wasn't. hmm. joining me now lis wiehl fox news legal analyst and mark eiglarsh. it raises an interesting issue, and normally when you don't have an employment contract, fired for anything, fired for being attractive. fired for being unattractive. brown hair or whatever. she didn't have an employment contract, but she says it's sex discrimination because of her looks and his attraction for her. did the court get it right? >> the court got it absolutely wrong on this one, iowa supreme court and the lower court before that. this is absolutely gender bias discrimination, most the cases we've seen before have to do you're too bad, not attractive in someone's eyes, too old, something like that. this is reverse of that. this is gender bias discrimination, a great employee for ten years, they had no-- undisputed and no relationship. and the problem is
dr. knight apparently made some racy comments to ms. nelson wife got wind of it and ordered him to fire miss nelson. nelson says that was illegal sex discrimination, but the iowa supreme court says no it wasn't. hmm. joining me now lis wiehl fox news legal analyst and mark eiglarsh. it raises an interesting issue, and normally when you don't have an employment contract, fired for anything, fired for being attractive. fired for being unattractive. brown hair or whatever. she didn't have an...
578
578
Jan 21, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN2
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eye 578
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all remember nelson mandela it was the students and others that revised the movement that was more abundant in the late 60's. >> host: he did something that got a lot of criticism for him and dr. king. tell that story about the crusade. >> guest: he was at a crucial point in birmingham. he gave a direction in march and millions of people followed him, completely wrong. from montgomery which came didn't initiate through birmingham, king is a leader but only in birmingham can he initiate and sustain the movement but that point in april of 1963 all of the people that are adults that are looking to get arrested had already been arrested including king himself. if he had lost their would have been no march on washington. there would have been no peace prize talking about martin luther king. so let's save the day in birmingham there's no adults to be arrested. james and dorothy are saying there's these young people better just eager to be arrested. they are eager to join in and we have been restraining them and saying you are too young. at that point they come into the picture and they really save the day for martin luther king. >> host: are there any pictures at that mind that spr
all remember nelson mandela it was the students and others that revised the movement that was more abundant in the late 60's. >> host: he did something that got a lot of criticism for him and dr. king. tell that story about the crusade. >> guest: he was at a crucial point in birmingham. he gave a direction in march and millions of people followed him, completely wrong. from montgomery which came didn't initiate through birmingham, king is a leader but only in birmingham can he...