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Nov 19, 2021
11/21
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BLOOMBERG
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emory: it is hard to foot of -- part a figure on what could be the one thing. single senator could have an issue with a provision and block that vote. senator kyrsten sinema, her issue is with corporate taxes. senator joe manchin has an issue with climate provisions. potentially senator bernie sanders. depending how they are able to get to a consensus, this is why it is so difficult in the senate. it is because the democratic party has a majority, but it is razor thin. every single vote they need. anyone at any moment could act like senator joe manchin, who some people call president manchin, and the president said when you have a senate with 50 democrats, everyone is president. caroline: there is a little tension into the holidays. it will be busy in washington. let's turn our attention to the headlines in the world of technology, bitcoin of. in less than two weeks, this is a volatile asset if you haven't realized. bloommberg news crypto managing editor and i am interested in the overall volatility. it is to be expected. we are up 40% since october. reporter:
emory: it is hard to foot of -- part a figure on what could be the one thing. single senator could have an issue with a provision and block that vote. senator kyrsten sinema, her issue is with corporate taxes. senator joe manchin has an issue with climate provisions. potentially senator bernie sanders. depending how they are able to get to a consensus, this is why it is so difficult in the senate. it is because the democratic party has a majority, but it is razor thin. every single vote they...
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Nov 25, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 31
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between educating our american democracy projects author, daniel allen, and critic marked our line of emory university about the best way to teach american history read. >> why. >> that is gotten a lot of votes so isn't this the case where you spent a career in higher ed at the university of emory, the freshman it year, but is it possible that secondary teachers in america are not particularly ideological interested in and going there. what would you say to that. >> you would know more about those lower grades that i would. do you think the social studies teaching profession is nonpartisan. there is not an ideological women in the social studies teachers professional organizations. >> look, i think when teachers are teaching kids k - two, there hoping them learn norms of productive behavior in a classroom and try to understand the right responsibility relationship to the group their part of including the classroom is that basic in politics is at the end of the day, about people coming together to establish norms and cultures of respect and institutions. we do things collectively and we need
between educating our american democracy projects author, daniel allen, and critic marked our line of emory university about the best way to teach american history read. >> why. >> that is gotten a lot of votes so isn't this the case where you spent a career in higher ed at the university of emory, the freshman it year, but is it possible that secondary teachers in america are not particularly ideological interested in and going there. what would you say to that. >> you would...
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31
Nov 23, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 31
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expand this to something people think of as an epidemic of memory which is the more we understand emory and how it works and what triggers an injury and how we best treat that injury, you can generalize way beyond well this person used sentinel to what about the unknowns about emory and our understanding of alzheimer's. i don't know myself to describe alzheimer's is an epidemic because it isn't that we are just able to do better diagnostics while we are aware of the specific condition but alzheimer's and other dementias that affect memory, why does it matter so much and it's not just about daily function and this gets back to the core memory issue it's only our memory. we are able to. >> it's how you navigate your day. are we their memory and why does this matter so much? >> we are our memory. i will go back to the neurological episode that i've referencedne in the beginning because part of the journey to the story is i had an episode where he lost my memory for a couple thing i had no idea where i was what century it was her where i was pretty she asked me my name at that moment i coul
expand this to something people think of as an epidemic of memory which is the more we understand emory and how it works and what triggers an injury and how we best treat that injury, you can generalize way beyond well this person used sentinel to what about the unknowns about emory and our understanding of alzheimer's. i don't know myself to describe alzheimer's is an epidemic because it isn't that we are just able to do better diagnostics while we are aware of the specific condition but...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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96
Nov 20, 2021
11/21
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SFGTV
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emory is twisting the arm of the commission. does mr. emory have the power to do that? is he committing any infraction? mr. horbal has given 43 years of his life to the taxi industry. he has given his physical and mental health to the industry and had a medallion before the convenient interpretation spin on prop k language. even though mr. horbal cannot drive anymore, i believe a.d.a. allows him to lease his lab to a viable driver. i ask the commission to allow mr. horbal to keep his medallion. thank you. >> clerk: we're just going to pause for a moment. commissioner honda is having technical difficulties, so mr. longway is going to call him. the next speaker will be ronald [indiscernible]. we're taking a brief pause. >> clerk: one moment. >> president honda: i apologize for this delay, for my senior moment here. okay, alex. i don't know what i did. so i see a screen, i see everyone's on there, and i have nothing on the bottom. it's just black. >> clerk: okay. you can mute yourself, president honda. >> clerk: -- regular meeting for the board of appeals for november 17,
emory is twisting the arm of the commission. does mr. emory have the power to do that? is he committing any infraction? mr. horbal has given 43 years of his life to the taxi industry. he has given his physical and mental health to the industry and had a medallion before the convenient interpretation spin on prop k language. even though mr. horbal cannot drive anymore, i believe a.d.a. allows him to lease his lab to a viable driver. i ask the commission to allow mr. horbal to keep his medallion....
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Nov 15, 2021
11/21
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ALJAZ
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hello, i'm emory anglin in dough. how these, the top story is on al jazeera nato. secretary general has warned russia against what it describes as aggressive actions on the border with ukraine. yen stoughton burg says there has been a large and unusual build up of russian troops. on ukraine's borders in racing wakes stoughton burg, also warned the president of belarus over his involvement in the migrant crisis on the border. he said nato member, poland. has the block support? we condemn? oh, well, to the other question could assume is doing. this is using vulnerable migrants and cruising children and families are to conduct hybrid or actions against nato or laws. or you foreign affairs minister is at brussels. we'll be discussing recent developments in sudan. it comes a day after general abdel fatter, albert han shared the 1st meeting of the new sovereign counsel that he appointed. it's been criticized by the un for excluding the recently ousted civilian leadership. the u. n. has released $40000000.00 of emergency fun
hello, i'm emory anglin in dough. how these, the top story is on al jazeera nato. secretary general has warned russia against what it describes as aggressive actions on the border with ukraine. yen stoughton burg says there has been a large and unusual build up of russian troops. on ukraine's borders in racing wakes stoughton burg, also warned the president of belarus over his involvement in the migrant crisis on the border. he said nato member, poland. has the block support? we condemn? oh,...
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41
Nov 11, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN3
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henry, patrick, edmund herbie, emory upton, illegal cussing, and george kuster. aims would later recall he, thinking of tell them, was easily one of the most popular men in the court in my time. everybody liked him. i never heard anyone say a word against him. he was that kind of man, the kind of man whom you felt instinctively, here is a friend. now, he was quiet, simple, unassuming, unpretentious. there was a reserve about him that we got to know covered in inward strength. in his class work, pell i'm would never gain top of class. he struggled with mathematics, but he excelled in the most physical way classes. he went home in the summer of 1858. there is a photograph on the screen that was taken on that first trip home. when he returns to west point, some of his correspondence, his west point correspondent does survive and there's an excerpt from a letter that he wrote to his brother sam. pelham says, i do not think a man can be strictly honorable unless he is brave. if he fears and cringes, then he cannot fulfill the full definition of a man. and his west poi
henry, patrick, edmund herbie, emory upton, illegal cussing, and george kuster. aims would later recall he, thinking of tell them, was easily one of the most popular men in the court in my time. everybody liked him. i never heard anyone say a word against him. he was that kind of man, the kind of man whom you felt instinctively, here is a friend. now, he was quiet, simple, unassuming, unpretentious. there was a reserve about him that we got to know covered in inward strength. in his class work,...
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Nov 26, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 42
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a debate between educating for american democracy project author danielle allen and critic of emory universitybout the best way to teach american history. >> why is it that you think teachers are going to be teaching all of this from a liberal frame and that's got any lot g of votes. that is the thing that is going to be discussed but is it possible that most in america. what would you say to that? >> you would know more about those grades than i would but do you think the social studies teaching profession is nonpartisan, that there is not an ideological slant and social studies teachers, professional organizations? >> when the people are teaching kids they try to help them learn norms in the classroom. sat the end of the day it's abot people coming together we do think collectively you need a word for that group. erthat's what's going on in thoe earlyly grades and conversation. >> good morning, friends. how are you doing
a debate between educating for american democracy project author danielle allen and critic of emory universitybout the best way to teach american history. >> why is it that you think teachers are going to be teaching all of this from a liberal frame and that's got any lot g of votes. that is the thing that is going to be discussed but is it possible that most in america. what would you say to that? >> you would know more about those grades than i would but do you think the social...
137
137
Nov 20, 2021
11/21
by
KQED
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eye 137
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fast-forward to my nephew, who is just graduated from every school in the world, georgia tech, duke, emory, and now he's at tufts in his second-year of residency, right? and here's a kid, when i brought all of his friends to lunch after graduation, it looked like the united nations. i can't look at that and say, "boy, we're going backwards." it's absolutely not true. we are going forward by leaps very quickly. i look at the fact that we've elected the first african-american president. i'm the first african-american to be ever elected to congress and the united states senate in the history of the country. we've seen so much progress. we have so much to celebrate. we're also, by the way, the only country, i think in the history of the world where the majority population fought each other to make sure that all people living in america were recognized of equal value and intrinsic worth. that has never been done anywhere in the world. and so we should celebrate all those areas of progress, but those are hopefully some signs of the progress that i see in the country. >> senator, here's something
fast-forward to my nephew, who is just graduated from every school in the world, georgia tech, duke, emory, and now he's at tufts in his second-year of residency, right? and here's a kid, when i brought all of his friends to lunch after graduation, it looked like the united nations. i can't look at that and say, "boy, we're going backwards." it's absolutely not true. we are going forward by leaps very quickly. i look at the fact that we've elected the first african-american president....
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44
Nov 3, 2021
11/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 44
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so it's going to be tough, couple of lines coming up filler manager and i emory is turned down the job as the next manager of premier league slide newcastle, saying he'd rather stay in spain for me. also in p s g pos was top contender to replace steve bruce who was stacked from the club shortly after it was taken over by a sound g banks, consulting. the spaniard, who's been villareal since last year says he was grateful for the offer, but a 100 percent committed to staying the legal fine living on christiana. and although rescued much the united from the brink of the feed to them champions, we on choose day off for falling wall know behind us atlanta, the sky saw, rounded off a great move to get the red devils level just before half time. and with united down again in the dying minutes, he produced some more magic to save his team's c. 2 is the final school, which means united talk group f. he does provide those moments and, and i'm sure chicago bulls didn't mind having michael jordan either. so, you know, sometimes teams have they have the plays they have and that's why they are at mo
so it's going to be tough, couple of lines coming up filler manager and i emory is turned down the job as the next manager of premier league slide newcastle, saying he'd rather stay in spain for me. also in p s g pos was top contender to replace steve bruce who was stacked from the club shortly after it was taken over by a sound g banks, consulting. the spaniard, who's been villareal since last year says he was grateful for the offer, but a 100 percent committed to staying the legal fine living...
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i don't think you understood emory the angle for meta is that it is no longer a service you use, but instead the infrastructure upon which you live. it zuckerberg achieving his final form from campus king to tech, emperor. and finally, virtual reality. god and sucker bergs brave new world will finally achieve humanities, dream of being charged for every moment we experience and every action we take. instantly transporting us from one corporation to another, using virtual roads, buildings, and plazas all owned by facebook. i mean meta, sorry, please forgive me. i have sinned, javert jarvis, calm down. okay, well, why you so excited about this? just hoping nightmare. do you really want facebook have all this power? well, meta has previously stated that it has no current plans to use visit or motion data like head in eye movements as a means of predicting behavior and serving adds, while it's good, i guess. but earlier this year that company announced its entry into v are based advertising. say that's exactly what i'm talking about. oh lee. i was once like you naively resisting our kind
i don't think you understood emory the angle for meta is that it is no longer a service you use, but instead the infrastructure upon which you live. it zuckerberg achieving his final form from campus king to tech, emperor. and finally, virtual reality. god and sucker bergs brave new world will finally achieve humanities, dream of being charged for every moment we experience and every action we take. instantly transporting us from one corporation to another, using virtual roads, buildings, and...
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20
Nov 10, 2021
11/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 20
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was very narrow, narrow, or even a california court, that that would, that will affect other cases. emory, how much then does this ruling mark the later set back for state, some local governments who are trying to hold big pharma responsible for the opioid epidemic? i think it's a said back now just as a matter of the public nuisance law, but as a matter of what was said earlier, that 465000000 wasn't even enough to keep certain clinics open for a year. there's not enough money in the united states, much less the settlement to a b o b with crisis. so both the removal of this money from the abatement plan for now, as well as the delay of paying out anything to update the crisis is significant for everyone trying to fight the ban demik and all the families affected by that. and demick a maria, just for our international audience. we're watching this program. i mean, this was a decision by a state court, but a federal court recently granted sweeping legal immunity to the sack of family who were in per you pharmaceuticals, which makes oxycontin, and just to remind our viewers, this is the dru
was very narrow, narrow, or even a california court, that that would, that will affect other cases. emory, how much then does this ruling mark the later set back for state, some local governments who are trying to hold big pharma responsible for the opioid epidemic? i think it's a said back now just as a matter of the public nuisance law, but as a matter of what was said earlier, that 465000000 wasn't even enough to keep certain clinics open for a year. there's not enough money in the united...
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23
Nov 30, 2021
11/21
by
ALJAZ
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but the other game of the evening is the emory versus syria that's taking place just a few kilometers away. and that is stadium 974. and that is named because it is made out of $974.00 shipping containers and will be the only world cup stadium that can be dismantled after its use. this arab cup, of course, 356 days ahead of next year's with beef a well kept the world's biggest sporting event, the 1st ever to happen in the middle east. so it is, as you said, an important stress test for that world cup, not just of the all important full full infrastructure, but also places like this tourism destinations, the, the traffic, the security, the public transport of fans are being encouraged use public transport it to get to the games to get into the match, you've got to have a fan pass and that will give gain go is free access to public transport on those days. there also being a car to use it to get to places like this, like supermarket and some of the other events that are happening around the city. there's an international food festival of is a light show. they the flower festival kicking
but the other game of the evening is the emory versus syria that's taking place just a few kilometers away. and that is stadium 974. and that is named because it is made out of $974.00 shipping containers and will be the only world cup stadium that can be dismantled after its use. this arab cup, of course, 356 days ahead of next year's with beef a well kept the world's biggest sporting event, the 1st ever to happen in the middle east. so it is, as you said, an important stress test for that...
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14
Nov 17, 2021
11/21
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ALJAZ
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eye 14
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here is speaking on october, the 20th emory goldman though we have recommended a public investment program and a public infrastructure program to generate employment, a public infrastructure program to generate massive employment. so that the people of he, the haitians stay in their country so that they see progress and a future and haiti, bro, initial photo, any more, you cheat, comments and questions, let me put this one tea, theresa advert james os. is there no way that my class can get to that destination without going through the horrifying forest, the jungle? well, our people, if we have spoken to know that they have to, they have a path that they go through. you know, they've been in touch with, you know, their co pays or guide before and, and they know the way, i mean, this is something that should be, you know, that authority regional authority should make a safe passage when we were in nick oakley, for example. you know, migrant, we're going to go one way and then be ended up changing the tray and then that's where that's the part that we filmed be agreed with. it was kind of a v
here is speaking on october, the 20th emory goldman though we have recommended a public investment program and a public infrastructure program to generate employment, a public infrastructure program to generate massive employment. so that the people of he, the haitians stay in their country so that they see progress and a future and haiti, bro, initial photo, any more, you cheat, comments and questions, let me put this one tea, theresa advert james os. is there no way that my class can get to...
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223
Nov 29, 2021
11/21
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KGO
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. >> reporter: -- tim and kathy are grateful for an extra helping of kindness from their team at emoryal. tim and kathy are co-workers. tim needed a kidney. family and friends were not a match. tim tried looking everywhere including a request in the company newsletter. turns out kathy was a perfect match. >> it's been amazing. no more dialysis. >> reporter: and they too have matching clothing, only theirs reads kidney buddies for life. tonight tim is thankful for a second chance. >> thank you so much for watching. david muir back here tomorrow. i'm linsey davis. happy hanukkah. good night. dion: next on abc news at 6:00 call it the post holiday travel crunch. airports are looking like we haven't seen them since early 2020 as americans return home after the thanksgiving holl day and the new covid variant sparks concerns. the travel restrictions about to kick in and what vaccine makers are doing right now to keep americans safe. and a dog heist in oakland a bulldog taken as the thief holds the woman at gun point. abc7 news at 6:00 starts rite now. >> building a better bay area moving for
. >> reporter: -- tim and kathy are grateful for an extra helping of kindness from their team at emoryal. tim and kathy are co-workers. tim needed a kidney. family and friends were not a match. tim tried looking everywhere including a request in the company newsletter. turns out kathy was a perfect match. >> it's been amazing. no more dialysis. >> reporter: and they too have matching clothing, only theirs reads kidney buddies for life. tonight tim is thankful for a second...
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while emory joined andrew farmer to expand on that interview and talk about the risks that migrants are prepared to take. i remember how surprised i was to 1st hear that to max of is not his real name to go around in people across the border and that the price is between 30500 yours person in we felt he didn't tell us the truth, but i just couldn't understand why would he lie? but later off camera, he admitted what he was doing during the interview. he was trying to deliberately diminish these numbers for security reasons. but in all other aspects, facts and details he gave us, i can tell you, he was quite honest. my job in the last few years at least, was to transport migrants along with my team from bridge l. gina, where people had previously transferred them across the serbian border through improvised methods. so we picked them up and transport them, obviously at night through some wooded areas. sometimes 510, sometimes. 20 mostly sick is in, and the clergy in a region where other people then transported the mom, the path was through serbia and also through small or big boats where
while emory joined andrew farmer to expand on that interview and talk about the risks that migrants are prepared to take. i remember how surprised i was to 1st hear that to max of is not his real name to go around in people across the border and that the price is between 30500 yours person in we felt he didn't tell us the truth, but i just couldn't understand why would he lie? but later off camera, he admitted what he was doing during the interview. he was trying to deliberately diminish these...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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18
Nov 27, 2021
11/21
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SFGTV
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eye 18
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emory is twisting the arm of the commission. does mr. emory have the power to do that? is he committing any infraction? mr. horbal has given 43 years of his life to the taxi industry. he has given his physical and mental health to the industry and had a medallion before the convenient interpretation spin on prop k language. even though mr. horbal cannot drive anymore, i believe a.d.a. allows him to lease his lab to a viable driver. i ask the commission to allow mr. horbal to keep his medallion. thank you. >> clerk: we're just going to pause for a moment. commissioner honda is having technical difficulties, so mr. longway is going to call him. the next speaker will be ronald [indiscernible]. we're taking a brief pause. >> clerk: one moment. >> president honda: i apologize for this delay, for my senior moment here. okay, alex. i don't know what i did. so i see a screen, i see everyone's on there, and i have nothing on the bottom. it's just black. >> clerk: okay. you can mute yourself, president honda. >> clerk: -- regular meeting for the board of appeals for november 17,
emory is twisting the arm of the commission. does mr. emory have the power to do that? is he committing any infraction? mr. horbal has given 43 years of his life to the taxi industry. he has given his physical and mental health to the industry and had a medallion before the convenient interpretation spin on prop k language. even though mr. horbal cannot drive anymore, i believe a.d.a. allows him to lease his lab to a viable driver. i ask the commission to allow mr. horbal to keep his medallion....
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260
Nov 15, 2021
11/21
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 260
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emory university professor, herni book, beyond belief.robably institutional problem, writing: >> this relates to what goes on in our country today, how the media distort, lie and spin -- >> germans were not hiding what they were doing. -- >> there were reports in europe for crying out loud! -- >>ut she wrote how "new york times" failed in coverage of fate of european-jews in her book, buried by the times . the times publisher, buried news about the holocaust. deep within the paper, or ignored it. she writes, although the war was dominant news, it was not only front page news. "new york times" printed between 12 to 15 front page stories every day. fewer than half of these concerned war. times first story on nazi campaign appeared on page 5, on bomb of column of stories. less research, like that of. found that the times and media overall withheld or buried much of what they knew about the holocaust from american public and wrote the way that press in general, times in particular presented the facts, play a role in the gap between informatio
emory university professor, herni book, beyond belief.robably institutional problem, writing: >> this relates to what goes on in our country today, how the media distort, lie and spin -- >> germans were not hiding what they were doing. -- >> there were reports in europe for crying out loud! -- >>ut she wrote how "new york times" failed in coverage of fate of european-jews in her book, buried by the times . the times publisher, buried news about the holocaust....
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428
Nov 15, 2021
11/21
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 428
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emory university professor, her book beyond belief, a broadly institutional problem, wrote: mark: thiswhat goes on in our country today, how media distort, lie and spin. >> germans were not hiding what they were doing. >> there were reports in europe for crying out loud. >> it dismissed what they said, because they were not considered reliable. taking direct aim at "new york times," professor, of northeastern university, scrutinized role of media during the holocaust but "new york times" in particular. she has written about how the "new york times" failed in its coverage of fate of european jews from 1939 to 1942. she asked what was it about prevailing press san stards, and policies and personalities at the times. a damning disclosure, the times judgment, that murder of millions of jews was a relatively unimportant story reverberated among other journalists trying to assess the news. times publisher, intentionally buried news about the holocaust, deep within his paper or ignored it all together, and she writes: appeared on page 5. to the bottom of a column of stories. less research mou
emory university professor, her book beyond belief, a broadly institutional problem, wrote: mark: thiswhat goes on in our country today, how media distort, lie and spin. >> germans were not hiding what they were doing. >> there were reports in europe for crying out loud. >> it dismissed what they said, because they were not considered reliable. taking direct aim at "new york times," professor, of northeastern university, scrutinized role of media during the holocaust...
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106
Nov 22, 2021
11/21
by
CSPAN2
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eye 106
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doctor miles holds an abn afro-american studies from harvard university, an ma in women's studies from emory university and phd from the university of minnesota. currently doctor miles is a professor of history and the ratcliffe alumnus professor at harvard. she's also the director of the charles center for studies in american history. now i'm not kidding what i say dr. miles is prolific. she's the author of six books. her first book ties that bind, one an award from the organization of american historians, and the lower america prize for american studies association. the house on diamond hill won the national council on public history and the american society for ethnic history book prices. her novel yes, a novel, the cherokee road was a land of literary award finalist. the don at detroit won an award of social history, the james rollie prize in the history of race relations from the organization of american historians, the james bradford best biography prize from the society for historians of the early american republic, the hurston wright legacy award in nonfiction, awa book award and a f
doctor miles holds an abn afro-american studies from harvard university, an ma in women's studies from emory university and phd from the university of minnesota. currently doctor miles is a professor of history and the ratcliffe alumnus professor at harvard. she's also the director of the charles center for studies in american history. now i'm not kidding what i say dr. miles is prolific. she's the author of six books. her first book ties that bind, one an award from the organization of...
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154
Nov 18, 2021
11/21
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 154
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is there the institutional emory that is in the market that is capable of contemplating such a big?atie -- such a big pivot? katie: that is part of the worry. court pci is at the highest level since 1990. you probably haven't seen this in a long t and you haven't had to deal with this. the risk is that we do end up going back to what we were seeing in terms of the late 1960's to the early 1980's in terms of how the bond markets react, how the equity market takes its cues, and we are talking in terms of decades, so it is definitely questionable. alix: katie, thanks a lot. joe, thank you as well. it was a really good conversation. we will have more about inflation and how it is showing up in food prices. the suitegreen ceo -- the sweetgreen ceo will join us later in the hour. anastasia amoroso joins us next. this is bloomberg. ♪ ♪ >> not only have rates come down, bringing down the prospects of all securities and investments, but at the same time, markets have become more efficient. it is not easy to be the markets these days, and the margin of superiority is smaller. you must expect
is there the institutional emory that is in the market that is capable of contemplating such a big?atie -- such a big pivot? katie: that is part of the worry. court pci is at the highest level since 1990. you probably haven't seen this in a long t and you haven't had to deal with this. the risk is that we do end up going back to what we were seeing in terms of the late 1960's to the early 1980's in terms of how the bond markets react, how the equity market takes its cues, and we are talking in...
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103
Nov 30, 2021
11/21
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CNBC
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carlos del rio from emory university school of medicine doctor, thank you for joining us always valueinsight here like delta back in may, there's so much we don't know. there's a lot of scary headlines. we hear words like variants, mutations, spike proteins. you're a doctor, i'm not, and i guarantee you, 99.9% of the audience watching is not from a doctor's perspective, what do we need to do? what do we need to know? and maybe, does the media need to be a little more patient around this? >> brian, first of all, thank you and good morning i think there are a couple of things that are very important number one what you mentioned previously is delta is not gone. we still have a significant problem with delta in our country. a lot of transmission. we have no evidence yet of omicron being diagnosed in our country. it will be it will be here. but at this point rather than worry about omicron we need to worry about delta. we still have a lot to do. we need to get our covid vaccine if we haven't been vaccinated. if you have been vaccinated get your booster, continue to wear a mask in crowded
carlos del rio from emory university school of medicine doctor, thank you for joining us always valueinsight here like delta back in may, there's so much we don't know. there's a lot of scary headlines. we hear words like variants, mutations, spike proteins. you're a doctor, i'm not, and i guarantee you, 99.9% of the audience watching is not from a doctor's perspective, what do we need to do? what do we need to know? and maybe, does the media need to be a little more patient around this?...
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Nov 26, 2021
11/21
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the sending the message that people for example who had gotten two doses of the emory vaccine and one dose of the j.j. vaccine were not fully immunized. so we have an excellent vaccine that continues to have excellent protection against serious disease, including delta variant, including all age groups right up to the present time, but you would never know it by the way it is communicated, because everybody is going to get sort of cash in on this looser -- that we've created and we scared people. we created the sort of third dose fever, and if we really want to get on top of this pandemic, it's not the issue. i can tell you that the hospital of the university of pennsylvania and philadelphia, and people adults come into her hospital and intensive care unit -- they haven't gotten any doses. until we get on top of that we're not going to have a major impact on this pandemic. >> i share your perspective on those issues. sometimes it's hard -- if a new disease emerged today with the same mortality rate, that we would not shut the world down. and i think those are important messages for ge
the sending the message that people for example who had gotten two doses of the emory vaccine and one dose of the j.j. vaccine were not fully immunized. so we have an excellent vaccine that continues to have excellent protection against serious disease, including delta variant, including all age groups right up to the present time, but you would never know it by the way it is communicated, because everybody is going to get sort of cash in on this looser -- that we've created and we scared...
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Nov 11, 2021
11/21
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henry edmund kirby emory upton alonzo cushing and george custer. ames would later recall he speaking of pelham was easily the most popular man at the core in my time. everybody liked him. i never heard anyone say a word against him. he was that kind of man, the kind of man who you felt instinctively hears her friend. he was quiet simple unassuming and unpretentious. there was a reserve about him that we got to know covered in inward strength. in his classwork pelham would never gain top of class struggled with mathematics but he excelled in the more physical activities like fencing horsemanship than boxing. he went home and the summer of 1858 after being at west point for two years and the photograph on the screen was taken on that first trip home. when he returns to west point some of the correspondents at the west point correspondence does survive and there's an expert -- excerpt from his brother sam and pelham says i do not think a man can be strictly honorable and less he is brave. if he fears encouragement to other men he cannot fulfill his de
henry edmund kirby emory upton alonzo cushing and george custer. ames would later recall he speaking of pelham was easily the most popular man at the core in my time. everybody liked him. i never heard anyone say a word against him. he was that kind of man, the kind of man who you felt instinctively hears her friend. he was quiet simple unassuming and unpretentious. there was a reserve about him that we got to know covered in inward strength. in his classwork pelham would never gain top of...
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Nov 9, 2021
11/21
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CSPAN3
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and kurzoic stan to emory, north carolina and finally to ft.ood and then we were there another week to get our stuff back and do our paperwork, we deploy back and then drove home. back to cal -- back here to georgia. >> -- got back? >> i took three months off. because of the medical. had to do all that medical stuff. and then started a new job. at atlanta medical center here in atlanta. level 1 trauma center. couldn't get away from that. and then i worked there for almost a year. and decided, you know, i can't do o.r. anymore. i'm done. i'm done. >> and you stayed -- is that correct. >> i'm still --. i want to get my 20 year. i only have seven years left. but i want to get my 20 year. i figure i've done this far. i'm going to finish it out. so from the six two a in san antonio i finally decided i can't fly back and forth so i needed to find a home and besides that, i'm no longer deployable. so i find a non deployable unite. the 3703rd mtsb. in georgia. basically what i do now is called an o.c., observe controller. and i validate units going out
and kurzoic stan to emory, north carolina and finally to ft.ood and then we were there another week to get our stuff back and do our paperwork, we deploy back and then drove home. back to cal -- back here to georgia. >> -- got back? >> i took three months off. because of the medical. had to do all that medical stuff. and then started a new job. at atlanta medical center here in atlanta. level 1 trauma center. couldn't get away from that. and then i worked there for almost a year....
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Nov 1, 2021
11/21
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KRON
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people who are fully vaccinated and they include, as i said, contra costa county, but also alameda emory counties as well. so people going to controlled spaces like offices and gyms and places of worship can now take off their masks if they're fully vaccinated. however, there can be no more than a 100 people present inside at any given time. so there's more than 300 or more than a 100, then you still have to wear masks, but a gym is excited that we spoke with his excited that the ease rules will now allow members to work out again without those masks. >> we're just very excited for our members were really excited for our staff were excited to get people back to the gym that have been waiting for a long time to get the mask off. a lot of people have kind of avoided coming back to the gym and we're really excited to see the rest of our our regular members and people return to us. >> masks will still be required in public settings like bars and restaurants and retail and grocery stores too. and also in schools. >> speaking schools, james tomorrow, cdc advisers are going to talk about recomm
people who are fully vaccinated and they include, as i said, contra costa county, but also alameda emory counties as well. so people going to controlled spaces like offices and gyms and places of worship can now take off their masks if they're fully vaccinated. however, there can be no more than a 100 people present inside at any given time. so there's more than 300 or more than a 100, then you still have to wear masks, but a gym is excited that we spoke with his excited that the ease rules...