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Aug 22, 2016
08/16
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however, that work out for betty blue eyes and eliot. this is showing a little later in his life when he's out of the naval academy, he's probably about 20 year. >> he was 30 when he traveled to washington. you can see what sort of looked like around 1863. it was a tough journey, and he had to make it on his own. you had to go through cities and cross rivers. bernie describes the trip from dc. you have stage crowe across the city to catch the train to baltimore and when you got to baltimore, the train cars gotten drawn across the city by mules and then you are in a train again getting down to dc. once eliot and bernie got down there, they both -- the commondor. i think he wanted to move away from the on clifts of living in somebody's house and living on his own. he lives across ford's theater in 1865. so even if eliot is trying to explore the city and learning his new jobs and this is what it looked like at the time. works happening in the capitol all the time and letters from home started to arrive. they're not unfamiliar to anyone of a
however, that work out for betty blue eyes and eliot. this is showing a little later in his life when he's out of the naval academy, he's probably about 20 year. >> he was 30 when he traveled to washington. you can see what sort of looked like around 1863. it was a tough journey, and he had to make it on his own. you had to go through cities and cross rivers. bernie describes the trip from dc. you have stage crowe across the city to catch the train to baltimore and when you got to...
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Aug 29, 2016
08/16
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on the restart kyle larson takes t lead and eliot falls back to third. they take the c eliot's team is just in disbelief. >> all right, thanks. and just about 9:00 rescue workers got a call with a stuck kicken in a storm drain. it had been in there for two days. and they trued to lure it with food but had to get creative when it couldn't budge. the kitten is safe and sound craig patrick's money, power, and t i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. there's a race going on right now. the world's clean energy super power's either going to be germany, china, or us. and i'm going to make sure it's us. from 500 million solar panels installed by the end of my first term, to precision manufacturing. that's my plan. someone's hacked all our technology. technology... say, have you seen all the amazing technology in geico's mobile app? mobile app? look. electronic id cards, emergency roadside service, i can even submit a claim. co's mobile app works like a charm. geico. >> with prime areay on tuesday we push the candidates offer the talking point. >> i am p
on the restart kyle larson takes t lead and eliot falls back to third. they take the c eliot's team is just in disbelief. >> all right, thanks. and just about 9:00 rescue workers got a call with a stuck kicken in a storm drain. it had been in there for two days. and they trued to lure it with food but had to get creative when it couldn't budge. the kitten is safe and sound craig patrick's money, power, and t i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. there's a race going on right...
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Aug 18, 2016
08/16
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WFLA
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. >> reporter: caleb eliot captured amazing footage of mother nature in action last night. >> as the shelf cloud was coming out of it. probably some of the best lightning i've seen in a big number of years. >> reporter: a storm chaser, eliot said he's definitely not in canadian kansas anyone. >> initial i didn't know there was anybody in the shop. in between the island, there was one sh looks maybe a half mile away from where they were at. down here, every day, the storms interact, they move through the area and 20 minutes later you get these gorgeous florida sunsets. so it's -- there's nothing bad about it. >> reporter: reporting in pinellas county, news channel 8. >>> it is quite impressive to see that lightning like that. i'm with him, i don't want to observing it. >> he's from the midwest. florida weather is kind of new. it's tropical weather down here. if you're a storm chaser, this is a great place to do it. >> absolutely. but severe stuff can happen. >> yes. >> you don't at some point make light of it. this afternoon, just a collision of sea breeze? >> yeah. >> nothing dramati
. >> reporter: caleb eliot captured amazing footage of mother nature in action last night. >> as the shelf cloud was coming out of it. probably some of the best lightning i've seen in a big number of years. >> reporter: a storm chaser, eliot said he's definitely not in canadian kansas anyone. >> initial i didn't know there was anybody in the shop. in between the island, there was one sh looks maybe a half mile away from where they were at. down here, every day, the...
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Aug 29, 2016
08/16
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MSNBCW
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in the next town over, detective ken kenny eliot continued to work on the jaime hart.ou took dna from 70 people? like 77. many people booked in jail for violent crimes or anyone that was in the area just did not want to talk. >> we took dna from everybody. he never taken his eyes off the boyfriend, chuck cruz. there was something that was bothering you about chuck cruz. >> there is a lot bothered me about chuck cruz. >> the sheriff's office investigated chuck communicating with the da of a grand jury. >> chuck and his lawyer spoke on many occasions and the detective continues to think that chuck's behavior is suspicious and she still seems nervous. >> maybe the reason that chuck cruz was acting this way that you guys were coming down hard on him and he lost his girlfriend. i mean -- is there a way to act? >> i don't know but he had several things going against him and we could not walk away from it. we had to prove that he did it or not. >> chuck said he should have been cleared right away. >> it was no match but they insisted on targeting me as a prime suspect. they w
in the next town over, detective ken kenny eliot continued to work on the jaime hart.ou took dna from 70 people? like 77. many people booked in jail for violent crimes or anyone that was in the area just did not want to talk. >> we took dna from everybody. he never taken his eyes off the boyfriend, chuck cruz. there was something that was bothering you about chuck cruz. >> there is a lot bothered me about chuck cruz. >> the sheriff's office investigated chuck communicating...
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Aug 10, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN2
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those lines and actually in the late 19th century when the idea was still floating, president charles eliot of harvard was one of the opponents and worried that it might displace the emerging place of harvard and the sort of educational hierarchy in the scheme. but i think that there is one facet that is not clearly front and center with our current institutions. there's not always front and center and that's how they speak to pacific understandings and public leadership to help the leadership and civic leadership that's central to their mission but they don't always self-consciously think about what forms of knowledge might be essential into something we are in short supply of. >> do the >> do they have the so-called national university? >> i think other countries do and dimension is interesting. they do speak to more specifically those sorts of educational needs and the idea being that they really are there to support the national political institutions. they don't necessarily work always quite in that fashion and one of the interesting ones that was floated rather recently along those li
those lines and actually in the late 19th century when the idea was still floating, president charles eliot of harvard was one of the opponents and worried that it might displace the emerging place of harvard and the sort of educational hierarchy in the scheme. but i think that there is one facet that is not clearly front and center with our current institutions. there's not always front and center and that's how they speak to pacific understandings and public leadership to help the leadership...
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Aug 7, 2016
08/16
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. -- the 2008 samuel eliot morrison award. in 2018 he received the samuel eliot marston award from the constitutional museum for his body of work. for this evening, george will speak to us for about 30 minutes. then we will invite numbers of the audience to ask questions. please note that c-span is your taping our author event, so speak into the microphone clearly. they will be taping this presentation as well as the q and a. we invite everybody to come on up. if you have a book, george will sign it for you. we have some of his back lists here as well. we have to 1812 book that i spoke about, as well as the fic book. please join me and welcoming author george daughan. [applause] george: thank you for hosting this event. thank you to all these wonderful people who have come here. this book is entitled "revolution on the hudson." new york city and the hudson river valley in the american revolution. its objective is to explain the role of the hudson river valley in the entire revolution. so it's also a book about the whole revolu
. -- the 2008 samuel eliot morrison award. in 2018 he received the samuel eliot marston award from the constitutional museum for his body of work. for this evening, george will speak to us for about 30 minutes. then we will invite numbers of the audience to ask questions. please note that c-span is your taping our author event, so speak into the microphone clearly. they will be taping this presentation as well as the q and a. we invite everybody to come on up. if you have a book, george will...
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Aug 11, 2016
08/16
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BLOOMBERG
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i'm about to walk in there and talk about george eliot's love life, and her deep trauma and tears. walk into this audience that is the most emotionally avoidant -- this is not going to go well. but then when you start talking about a life deeply led the way george eliot lived or dorothy day, they lock in, and there's a quality of silence there i'd never heard in my speaking career. and that's because people are so hungry to at least have a forum to think about the things that matter most to them. they know what is important but they do not have the words and no one is talking to them in those terms the way martin luther king used to. so, there's this void in the public space. for politicians, i think obama did as well as could be expected. if our politicians could talk to that, i think there would be a resonance. people are so hungry for uplift, for someone to name something that inspires and uplifts. clinton unfortunately is so closed and walled off, and trump is his own weird -- charlie: that is part of the reason why michelle obama's speech was the most well-received. david: rig
i'm about to walk in there and talk about george eliot's love life, and her deep trauma and tears. walk into this audience that is the most emotionally avoidant -- this is not going to go well. but then when you start talking about a life deeply led the way george eliot lived or dorothy day, they lock in, and there's a quality of silence there i'd never heard in my speaking career. and that's because people are so hungry to at least have a forum to think about the things that matter most to...
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Aug 11, 2016
08/16
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WCBS
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phase one is complete but face two between 74th street and eliot avenue just began. the manager at the italian charities of america on queens boulevard and van loon street says he and neighbors aren't happy. valuable parking along the median outside his building is now gone and replaced by bike lanes. how long does it take you to find parking then? >> now it's very hard. maybe could be 20 minutes, maybe half-hour to find parking. but before it's easy >> reporter: the local but mayor de blasio pushed the plan forward anyway saying, quote, i respect those who disagree with us but in the end, the safety of our neighbors and our children is the most fundamental responsibility we have in this work. >> people need to make that concession to either look for parking, walk, take the bus, use mass transit. or be more patient more than anything so that everybody usei ng this community can do it safely >> reporter: now, hazel says whihe parking spaces the department of transportation says their plans show they have also added parking spaces to other parts of queens boulevard. th
phase one is complete but face two between 74th street and eliot avenue just began. the manager at the italian charities of america on queens boulevard and van loon street says he and neighbors aren't happy. valuable parking along the median outside his building is now gone and replaced by bike lanes. how long does it take you to find parking then? >> now it's very hard. maybe could be 20 minutes, maybe half-hour to find parking. but before it's easy >> reporter: the local but mayor...
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Aug 3, 2016
08/16
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congressman eliot ingle you can speaknd with others in the audience and from the hill on the details from that. it is not just in terms of we are dealing with the executive branch and the executive branch response but there are sanctions. i can tell you is somebody who lived in syria for a long time, there is one thing that the syrian regime worries about and that is sanctions. it complicates their lives significantly in ways we do not even fully understand. i am going to take the moderator's prerogative and ask the first question. based on what caesar has asked here. as all three of you have said, there is overwhelming evidence of atrocity crimes committed by the syrian regime in syria. well, was mentioned as they have been committed by all sides, but the overall majority has been by the syrian regime. there is a chain of evidence, some of which we can see here. and there is a list of violations that the ambassador outlined. so, my question to you, because i honestly don't know the question. usually i ask questions at already know the answer to. why the hell haven't we been going af
congressman eliot ingle you can speaknd with others in the audience and from the hill on the details from that. it is not just in terms of we are dealing with the executive branch and the executive branch response but there are sanctions. i can tell you is somebody who lived in syria for a long time, there is one thing that the syrian regime worries about and that is sanctions. it complicates their lives significantly in ways we do not even fully understand. i am going to take the moderator's...
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Aug 24, 2016
08/16
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the attorney general's office was to be opened as eliot spitzer ran for governor.rew cuomo was embarrassed by bad racing in 2000 to pulling out just before she would have lost about primary and he was bruised. i was talking throughout the race to give him a vice. but his father had endorsed me in the mayor's race. he said this was his redemptive race. guys saw the 2006 race as my ability to get back into public life. bob burt after kennedy, jr. who was cuomo's brother-in-law came this close to running for attorney general but for various family reasons but he is said barry's guilt politician i would have helped mining to later run and i called him election night and endorse him. >>cspan: pylos 2009 what happened? palm. >> i show more courage than joshua. [laughter] and i served by eight years as public advocate and i got a lot done through legislation. people thought was adept at that be. when the vacancy, three people were running for one year. i decided late to run for public advocate and i enjoyed that. i was supported that i lost and disappointed me. yes. i was
the attorney general's office was to be opened as eliot spitzer ran for governor.rew cuomo was embarrassed by bad racing in 2000 to pulling out just before she would have lost about primary and he was bruised. i was talking throughout the race to give him a vice. but his father had endorsed me in the mayor's race. he said this was his redemptive race. guys saw the 2006 race as my ability to get back into public life. bob burt after kennedy, jr. who was cuomo's brother-in-law came this close to...
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Aug 6, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN2
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eliot. they become very good friends starting in 1963 and they shape each others thoughts profoundly. and on i know that we could about a conservatism here orou abroad without elliott. he won his nobel prize and so forth. to go back certainly he's important. he bookmarks this. for the conservative mind starting with them. the two great figures of their day we as the 26 figures in between those 29 overall. he is a great figure. i have the great privilege of teaching american founding. i get to teach that every two years. but i always make sure that as the students are reading we also do a good deal. i part of that is because i love kirk and i like a bird as well. but he was leading person. he put his life on the line more than once. put h defending american rights. and he did that for his whole career it wasn't just a political movement. he truly believed that the americans have inherited the very long tradition of common-law the right to be innocent until proven guilty, he believed that we w
eliot. they become very good friends starting in 1963 and they shape each others thoughts profoundly. and on i know that we could about a conservatism here orou abroad without elliott. he won his nobel prize and so forth. to go back certainly he's important. he bookmarks this. for the conservative mind starting with them. the two great figures of their day we as the 26 figures in between those 29 overall. he is a great figure. i have the great privilege of teaching american founding. i get to...
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Aug 12, 2016
08/16
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israel, we were joined by other members in the ranking member on foreign affairs, eliot engel. longtime member of the intelligence committee. congresswoman anna eshoo and ranking member on intelligence, dutch ruppersberger. this is a heavily national security delegation. everyone was either from the intelligence, with intelligent background or the defense subcommittee of ppropriations. everyone there was in a position to gain knowledge, to act upon it in the best possible way for the american people. there are couple of points i want to make. when mr. carson was talking about the president's decision to go from 9500 troops to 8400, hatever the number, and to expand the authority, which he did earlier, it was received very positively by our troops in afghanistan, by the leadership in afghanistan. we met with the afghanistan president and the chief executive officer abdullah abdullah. when the president took the action, it was before the warsaw meeting and had a positive impact on our nato allies and so they have chimed in with more resources for our action in afghanistan. our na
israel, we were joined by other members in the ranking member on foreign affairs, eliot engel. longtime member of the intelligence committee. congresswoman anna eshoo and ranking member on intelligence, dutch ruppersberger. this is a heavily national security delegation. everyone was either from the intelligence, with intelligent background or the defense subcommittee of ppropriations. everyone there was in a position to gain knowledge, to act upon it in the best possible way for the american...
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Aug 3, 2016
08/16
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engel. 2016 by congressman eliot ingle and ed royce and you can speak with others in the audience and from the hill on the details from that. it is not just in terms of we are dealing with the executive branch and the executive branch response but there are sanctions. i can tell you is somebody who lived in syria for a long time, there is one thing that the syrian regime worries about and that is sanctions. it complicates their lives significantly in ways we do not even fully understand. moderators prohibitive, i will ask the first question. what caesar has asked here. so as all three of you said, there is overwhelming evidence of atrocity crimes committed by the syrian regime. and they have been committed by all sides but the overwhelming majority -- there is a chain of evidence, some of which we can see here. those violations have been outlined. usually i ask a question in the , whyr to but for this haven't we been going after them from the beginning? what is stopping the united states and its allies for going after them for the crimes? are we waiting for the war to be over? is ther
engel. 2016 by congressman eliot ingle and ed royce and you can speak with others in the audience and from the hill on the details from that. it is not just in terms of we are dealing with the executive branch and the executive branch response but there are sanctions. i can tell you is somebody who lived in syria for a long time, there is one thing that the syrian regime worries about and that is sanctions. it complicates their lives significantly in ways we do not even fully understand....
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Aug 12, 2016
08/16
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. >> i have three sons i worked at m l1 c l0 donald's i have worked there nine years eliot make seven dollars ninety cents? i started a seven dollars 25 cents you now that is a right. that is not right. i did work at chipotle and i only make nine dollars an hour. that aid to write to. because we want 15 a and the union [applause] who else wants fifteen? i can't hear you, now we will start with washington d.c. washington. what is up with this? how about baltimore maryland? what about manchester? i know you're there birmingham alabama? n [cheers and applause] we will get to my state. miami? [cheers and applause] we hear you. i know buffalo pirko where are you that? new york city? that is what i am talking about [cheers and applause] what aboun georgia? -- in atlanta georgia? [cheers and applause] charlotteo ? north carolina [applause] url there. we have ld space north carolina -- the capital of north carolina [cheers and applause] boston? i- austin, texas? [cheers and applause] houston? ? what about dallas texas? that is okay. el paso? we're in the hometown. [cheers and applause]:nizole
. >> i have three sons i worked at m l1 c l0 donald's i have worked there nine years eliot make seven dollars ninety cents? i started a seven dollars 25 cents you now that is a right. that is not right. i did work at chipotle and i only make nine dollars an hour. that aid to write to. because we want 15 a and the union [applause] who else wants fifteen? i can't hear you, now we will start with washington d.c. washington. what is up with this? how about baltimore maryland? what about...
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Aug 18, 2016
08/16
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WISN
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we're going to check in with tim eliot in a moment. let's check in with tim. we have tim? >> yes, good morning, ben. thousands of people have been sharing on social media, like facebook and twitter the picture and the name of the officer who was allegedly involved in the shooting. but his name has not yet been released by the police department. we are not naming the officer either since police haven't officially named him. learned so far, the officer was once an aspiring rapper who rapped about rioting. milwaukee police conducted an internal investigation into his music when he worked as a police aide. he did pass a background check and got in the academy. two years ago, he hit the streets as a worn officer. and despite some reports that the officer and the armed man who he shot, smith, that they knew each other from high school. we have verified they did not go to high school together but they did know each neighborhood. now, the police say he has been getting threats online, as i mentioned, and he's now staying with relatives out of town as the state continues their inve
we're going to check in with tim eliot in a moment. let's check in with tim. we have tim? >> yes, good morning, ben. thousands of people have been sharing on social media, like facebook and twitter the picture and the name of the officer who was allegedly involved in the shooting. but his name has not yet been released by the police department. we are not naming the officer either since police haven't officially named him. learned so far, the officer was once an aspiring rapper who rapped...
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Aug 15, 2016
08/16
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the same way ts eliot's wasteland would not have been had it not been for as her pound.d of thing. that same court of thing -- sort of thing. she went on to be my third student to get a full scholarship to ithaca college is school of communications raised largely on the work she did for my class. and board,tion, room $2500 for a new computer, two semesters overseas in a thousand dollars a semester in spending money. if the best scholarship out there if you are not a quarterback for football team. mr. lamb: we will see a minute and a half of it. it is called dammit. fixed the river. this is her family. they are involved in it. this is 2015. there is a little of the documentary. >> the first bill i will sign today is the water resources reform and develop the act. alsit will put americans to work modernizing the water infrastructure and restoring some of our most vital ecosystems. >> water resources the dominant act gives the engineers the authority to look up flood control for other things have been to do with the waterways. i'm an advocate because i look and see the oppo
the same way ts eliot's wasteland would not have been had it not been for as her pound.d of thing. that same court of thing -- sort of thing. she went on to be my third student to get a full scholarship to ithaca college is school of communications raised largely on the work she did for my class. and board,tion, room $2500 for a new computer, two semesters overseas in a thousand dollars a semester in spending money. if the best scholarship out there if you are not a quarterback for football...
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Aug 10, 2016
08/16
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BLOOMBERG
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when you start to talk about a life deeply led the way george eliot lifted or dorothy day, aey lock inand there's quality of silence there i'd never heard in my speaking career. and that's because people are so hungry to at least have a forum to think about the things that matter most to them. they know what is important that they do not have the words and no one is talking to them in those terms the way martin luther king used to. so, there's this void in the public space. i think obama did as well as could be expected. if our politicians could talk to that, i think there would be a resident. onance. people are so hungry for uplift, for someone to name something that inspires and uplifts. clinton is so walled off and --mp us his own weird charlie: that is part of the reason why michelle obama's speech was the most well-received. david: it was also about -- charlie: it was not political. it was about family, my children. david: and was also about the moral nature of the universe, the arc of justice -- the arc of history bends toward justice. its contains the seeds of own destruction. t
when you start to talk about a life deeply led the way george eliot lifted or dorothy day, aey lock inand there's quality of silence there i'd never heard in my speaking career. and that's because people are so hungry to at least have a forum to think about the things that matter most to them. they know what is important that they do not have the words and no one is talking to them in those terms the way martin luther king used to. so, there's this void in the public space. i think obama did as...
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Aug 10, 2016
08/16
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eliot poetry and to jane austen novels, there are a few that we can convey. and my challenge to is can you convey that to your students, you have a captive audience. and yet the success rate of 3 degrees last year only 1% for math majors. it's down to 1% now. something is happening now. it's the beauty. give it a try. i realize most of us are academics. i'm a liberal arts teacher and i teach in the liberal arts collega liberal arts collegeando be lawyers, but we are really being sold on how we have to train people to get them to majors. >> stem and even starbucks, that's high-tech. by the way, it's all china and russia, too the magic of those words, but who thought of putting it out there, we don't have two major. those are poetic words. they are not even going to get to college because algebra. so then maybe when you think of the fifth one to put down their across the globe i would say more power to you. [applause] >> the beauty of math in general all the way through even teaching high school in algebra. we are on the same page in the testing. that is i pers
eliot poetry and to jane austen novels, there are a few that we can convey. and my challenge to is can you convey that to your students, you have a captive audience. and yet the success rate of 3 degrees last year only 1% for math majors. it's down to 1% now. something is happening now. it's the beauty. give it a try. i realize most of us are academics. i'm a liberal arts teacher and i teach in the liberal arts collega liberal arts collegeando be lawyers, but we are really being sold on how we...
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Aug 10, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN2
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eliot portrait or jane austen's novels, there's a beauty their, and my challenge in mathematics teachersnd professors is please, you see a beauty in mathematics. can you convey that to your students? you've got a captive audience. they can't leave. you've got a chance to do it. and yet the success rate, i'm sort of this, this is not good, of the vouchers of degrees awarded last year, only 1% were to math majors. it used to be 3%. it's down to 1% now. something is happening, maybe it's because of the way the stuff have to teach in the textbook that you can't take time off to show the sheer beauty of pi. give it a try. just one last thing. do i have one more minute? >> yes. >> i realized that most of us in this room are academics. we are not vocational teachers. i'm a liberal arts teacher. i teach in a liberal arts college. i am not training people to be lawyers. but we are really being sold a bill of goods on how we have to train people for stem, get them to make in the s.t.e.m. fields. somebody put something up because i have to use it. s.t.e.m. s.t.e.m. s.t.e.m., and even starbucks. jus
eliot portrait or jane austen's novels, there's a beauty their, and my challenge in mathematics teachersnd professors is please, you see a beauty in mathematics. can you convey that to your students? you've got a captive audience. they can't leave. you've got a chance to do it. and yet the success rate, i'm sort of this, this is not good, of the vouchers of degrees awarded last year, only 1% were to math majors. it used to be 3%. it's down to 1% now. something is happening, maybe it's because...
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Aug 28, 2016
08/16
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ag eliot -- geologist may not be focused on that, but a lot of the rest of us are, and 2000, and it ise for me to quit. my director is giving me the high sign here. these follow the water scenario has yielded all kinds of life on evidence about mars, but we have yet to confirm that, so my poor question i guess i would ask about all of this is so what? findthink we will still some evidence of life on mars and maybe even on venus, but there has been a whole succession of inconclusive evidence. incrementally, i think we want to believe, and every disconfirming piece of evidence does not force us to say no there was never any life there. we typically say we have not looked in the right place or in the right way, we have not asked the white -- right questions, and we carry on. tagline from the x-files, i want to believe, and so do i. i would like to believe that there is life out there, and i hope we find it. but the clock is ticking. thank you very much. [applause] walt: and now, it chief historian conway. eric: ok, for those of :ou who have not been -- erik for those of you who have not b
ag eliot -- geologist may not be focused on that, but a lot of the rest of us are, and 2000, and it ise for me to quit. my director is giving me the high sign here. these follow the water scenario has yielded all kinds of life on evidence about mars, but we have yet to confirm that, so my poor question i guess i would ask about all of this is so what? findthink we will still some evidence of life on mars and maybe even on venus, but there has been a whole succession of inconclusive evidence....
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Aug 30, 2016
08/16
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i feel like i've seen that face somewhere before. [ laughter ] >> i'm norah o'donnell with josh eliotk cbsn and demarco murray. >>> hillary clinton's lead is shrinking. the weekly survey out this morning shows clinton six points ahead of donald trump 48-42. she led by eight points a week ago. >> clinton's long-time aide huma abedin says she is separating from her husband, former congressman anthony weiner, after another reported case of his sexting. now, his first sexting scandal forced him to resign from congress more than five years ago. the "new york post" published this photo yesterday that weiner reportedly sent to a sexting partner. it shows the former congressman in his underwear with his toddler lying next to him in bed. nancy cordes has covered the clinton campaign since it began and rejoins us this morning. nancy, at this point, at this hour, how is the clinton campaign responding? >> well, hillary clinton herself has had no response at all. they view this as a personal matter. certainly there's a lot of sympathy for abedin and everything she's gone through not just the past
i feel like i've seen that face somewhere before. [ laughter ] >> i'm norah o'donnell with josh eliotk cbsn and demarco murray. >>> hillary clinton's lead is shrinking. the weekly survey out this morning shows clinton six points ahead of donald trump 48-42. she led by eight points a week ago. >> clinton's long-time aide huma abedin says she is separating from her husband, former congressman anthony weiner, after another reported case of his sexting. now, his first sexting...
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Aug 29, 2016
08/16
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eliot spitzer prosecuted this gentleman, on the president came in and pardoned the gentleman. when he was scrutinized by the media, he revoked the pardon for the first time in presidential history. that was because it specifically exhibit fight how the system was being gamed. there seems to be a discrimination that exists, especially on the eastern end of long island. that is why we do not have mass transit out here. they do not want lesser people than themselves crowding them in the suburbs and the communities of the east end. host: we want to get erika poethig to jump in. waste, fraud, and abuse, specifically at hud. guest: it has been a problem in hud's history. there have in very public instances where there has been fraudulent behavior and essentially execution of the policy. that meant that congress has held hud more accountable than some other agencies in the federal government through some the called the hud reform act. so the standards for hud now are much higher than they are for other federal agencies because of this history. i do not know about them more recent sit
eliot spitzer prosecuted this gentleman, on the president came in and pardoned the gentleman. when he was scrutinized by the media, he revoked the pardon for the first time in presidential history. that was because it specifically exhibit fight how the system was being gamed. there seems to be a discrimination that exists, especially on the eastern end of long island. that is why we do not have mass transit out here. they do not want lesser people than themselves crowding them in the suburbs...
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Aug 11, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN
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our trip we were joined by another member of the committee, the ranking member on foreign affairs, eliot engel. longtime member of the committee.e eshoo andman anna ranking member on intelligence, .utch ruppersberger everyone was either intelligence background or israel and mr. reversed berger, the defense subcommittee of appropriations. everyone there was in a , totion to gain knowledge act upon it in the best possible way for the american people. there are couple of points i want to make. talking carson was about the president's decision to go from 9500 troops to 8400, number, and to authority, which he receiveder, it was troops inively by our afghanistan, by the leadership in afghanistan. we met with the chief executive officer of do love dula. -- abdullah abdullah. this had a very positive impact on our nader -- nato ally in meeting, and so they have chimed in with more for our action in afghanistan. relationships is not only important in europe in butsatlantic partnership, infighting isis and terrorism and afghanistan. i also want to talk about when she talked about meeting at the v
our trip we were joined by another member of the committee, the ranking member on foreign affairs, eliot engel. longtime member of the committee.e eshoo andman anna ranking member on intelligence, .utch ruppersberger everyone was either intelligence background or israel and mr. reversed berger, the defense subcommittee of appropriations. everyone there was in a , totion to gain knowledge act upon it in the best possible way for the american people. there are couple of points i want to make....
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Aug 5, 2016
08/16
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CNBC
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and they note that the hedge fund eliot management is, quote, agitating inside the company and that theired a boutique investment bank and the analyst of needham said a sale is highly likely. however, other way downgrades it. so really this is a gamble if you believe the needham call on whether or not the company gets sold pretty much period. that's it. it's a bet. >> fourth stock, five below. i picked because brian loves pokemon. the craze is as strong as over. ubs says it helps the shares. they have accessories if you look for them. that pokemon related. they say investors don't appreciate the lift to give five below and news of a brooklyn man the first pokemon go master having caught all 142, 3 more exclusive to certain regions abroad. >> good for him. stock's still $2 above the consensus target. something to be aware of. bermuda based insurer, raising the price target. reiterate it is outperform. goes to 38 from 36. about 8% upside and pay 2.4% dividend yield and earnings estimates raised. up 1.7% today. with that, we wrap up. let's go to "trading nation." gold tumbling on the back
and they note that the hedge fund eliot management is, quote, agitating inside the company and that theired a boutique investment bank and the analyst of needham said a sale is highly likely. however, other way downgrades it. so really this is a gamble if you believe the needham call on whether or not the company gets sold pretty much period. that's it. it's a bet. >> fourth stock, five below. i picked because brian loves pokemon. the craze is as strong as over. ubs says it helps the...
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Aug 18, 2016
08/16
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CNBC
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. >> jeff, bonds here for a second, as part of what kenny's saying, eliot management today saying that you don't go near them. you basically are better off incinerating your money. how dangerous do you think fixed income is here looking at extraordinarily low rates? >> you look at just like we previously said, we have a market in search of a direction, the bond market or the stock market. you know, it is like the scare crow from "the izard of oz" which way do i go? which way do i go? you have the fed reserve, just mentioned, in the position to raise rates, they want to, but september, certainly doesn't seem like it's going to happen. december is a possibility. but we need a lot of more economic data to show that. when you have germany negative, japan negative, when's the fed to do? 1.5% rate on the 10-year treasury right now, to get back to just where we started at the beginning of the year, we need a 50% rise. not sure if we see it. we're stuck in a slow-growth economy right now. >> might be an odd question for you. you're a student of market sentiment and impact on the markets. a rep
. >> jeff, bonds here for a second, as part of what kenny's saying, eliot management today saying that you don't go near them. you basically are better off incinerating your money. how dangerous do you think fixed income is here looking at extraordinarily low rates? >> you look at just like we previously said, we have a market in search of a direction, the bond market or the stock market. you know, it is like the scare crow from "the izard of oz" which way do i go? which...
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Aug 29, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN2
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it is the eliot a seewald, it's an ongoing project for the seattle fund.the city of seattle is really utilizing this infrastructure overhaul of rebuilding their seawall as an opportunity for ecological improvement and recovery. the life benefiting surface that you see here, that's actually made of transparent material and it lets light through and what the light allows is to allow the salmon to migrate with ease and that something very important to be able to migrate. this is how we helped the salmon the surfaces that you are seeing over here, this is the underside of the same place that people are walking on and it actually aids the marine habitat to grow. so it's a very public space and great enhancer of land, but it's really exciting to me is that this is the necessary infrastructure. [inaudible] to be really visible and present but in conclusion what i would like is to make matters and make these issues really visible and engage the public and thing we seek to do through all our projects. thank you. >> thank you. i wanted to start with you vicki, and a
it is the eliot a seewald, it's an ongoing project for the seattle fund.the city of seattle is really utilizing this infrastructure overhaul of rebuilding their seawall as an opportunity for ecological improvement and recovery. the life benefiting surface that you see here, that's actually made of transparent material and it lets light through and what the light allows is to allow the salmon to migrate with ease and that something very important to be able to migrate. this is how we helped the...
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Aug 31, 2016
08/16
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CNBC
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. >> so eric schneiderman clearly went to the rudy giuliani or the eliot spitzer school of advancement least giuliani was prosecu prosecuting the mob. he sends out a press release every day which i sent to junk mail because so much stuff comes to this guy. you send over the links to some of the articles that were written -- the investigative pieces about exxon and what they were doing in the '70s. you will see memos that suggest they are worried about rising temperatures and what it would do to the business model. how does that not contradict what people get the impression that they say that it isn't an issue? >> they still profess to be worried about that and are in favor of a carbon tax to limit people's incentive to burn fossil fuels. there is no change. what exxon learned in the early '70s is what anybody who looks at climate models know which is they're very uncertain. even if you buy the assumption of the climate models, the future we face is one that may be just slightly warmer or significantly warmer. we may face a problem. we may face no problem. that's based on the climate mo
. >> so eric schneiderman clearly went to the rudy giuliani or the eliot spitzer school of advancement least giuliani was prosecu prosecuting the mob. he sends out a press release every day which i sent to junk mail because so much stuff comes to this guy. you send over the links to some of the articles that were written -- the investigative pieces about exxon and what they were doing in the '70s. you will see memos that suggest they are worried about rising temperatures and what it would...
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Aug 29, 2016
08/16
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eliot spitzer prosecuted this gentleman, on the president came in and pardoned the gentleman. when he was scrutinized by the media, he revoked the pardon for the first time in presidential history. that was because it specifically exhibit fight how the system was being gamed. there seems to be a discrimination that exists, especially on the eastern end of long island. that is why we do not have mass transit out here. they do not want lesser people than themselves crowding them in the suburbs and the communities of the east end. host: we want to get erika poethig to jump in. waste, fraud, and abuse, specifically at hud. guest: it has been a problem in hud's history. there have in very public instances where there has been fraudulent behavior and essentially execution of the policy. that meant that congress has held hud more accountable than some other agencies in the federal government through some the called the hud reform act. so the standards for hud now are much higher than they are for other federal agencies because of this history. i do not know about them more recent sit
eliot spitzer prosecuted this gentleman, on the president came in and pardoned the gentleman. when he was scrutinized by the media, he revoked the pardon for the first time in presidential history. that was because it specifically exhibit fight how the system was being gamed. there seems to be a discrimination that exists, especially on the eastern end of long island. that is why we do not have mass transit out here. they do not want lesser people than themselves crowding them in the suburbs...
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83
Aug 22, 2016
08/16
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CSPAN3
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house of representative historians mathew and house curator eliot joining with senate on u.s.apitol page program. they discussed their related research and historic milestone, such as the first women page and the capitol page alumni association hosted this hour long event as part of the union. >> welcome back, our second panel to moderate and spruce this next panel of house and senate historians. we
house of representative historians mathew and house curator eliot joining with senate on u.s.apitol page program. they discussed their related research and historic milestone, such as the first women page and the capitol page alumni association hosted this hour long event as part of the union. >> welcome back, our second panel to moderate and spruce this next panel of house and senate historians. we