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May 4, 2012
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geoffrey canada and even markowitz collectively have over 100 goals at this point. including the cave network is filed. eva moskowitz is highlands success academy and is also a former city council member where she shared the education committee, says she is quite politically at the end when she lost her run for president, she decided to go ahead and open scores improve bushes that she knew, which was that all kids could succeed. c-span: and she's a democrat? >> guest: she is one of the early reform are democrats. c-span: and other clip will show us one of your family is that she filmed. ♪ [inaudible] >> she said she don't go to work now. she got to take care of me. c-span: when did nokia horn loser here in? >> guest: very young, she was about two. c-span: what are her circumstances? is that her home? >> guest: patters her home. she lives down the street from me. i see her a lot, which is very found for me. they are in a very challenging circumstance. she is a single death mother who clearly adores her daughter understands just about all of the parents i met.educatio
geoffrey canada and even markowitz collectively have over 100 goals at this point. including the cave network is filed. eva moskowitz is highlands success academy and is also a former city council member where she shared the education committee, says she is quite politically at the end when she lost her run for president, she decided to go ahead and open scores improve bushes that she knew, which was that all kids could succeed. c-span: and she's a democrat? >> guest: she is one of the...
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May 22, 2012
05/12
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the critic geoffrey grigson, noting the delicate balance in his work between surrealism and abstraction, called moore's work biomorphism. the term biomorphism suits moore absolutely perfectly because it signals that his preoccupation is poised somewhere between the surreal and the abstract. and it also describes beautifully the sense that we have in moore that the organism has laws of growth of its own. it's following some kind of universal law but it's not a species that we know. (narrator) throughout his long working life, moore collected natural forms and kept them near his workplace. he placed his own works side by side with objects that caught his eye: bones, shells, and flints. his own habits coincided with surrealism's interest in the found object and the creative possibilities of unexpected juxtapositions. the fusion of front and back, internal and external spaces, had been one of moore's goals since the early '30s. tunneling holes through heavy masses was a theme that preoccupied him for many years. in the late 1930s, he merged mathematical models he had seen at the science mus
the critic geoffrey grigson, noting the delicate balance in his work between surrealism and abstraction, called moore's work biomorphism. the term biomorphism suits moore absolutely perfectly because it signals that his preoccupation is poised somewhere between the surreal and the abstract. and it also describes beautifully the sense that we have in moore that the organism has laws of growth of its own. it's following some kind of universal law but it's not a species that we know. (narrator)...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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May 25, 2012
05/12
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that the question answer portion of the program will be moderated by a professor geoffrey hazard, a distinguished professor of law at uc hastings. the professor is a leading expert in the field of civil procedure of legal ethics and is good at asking questions. it is my pleasure to introduce our very special guest, stephen zack, president of the american bar association. with nearly 400,000 members, it is the largest volunteer professional membership organization in the world. mr. zack is the first hispanic american to serve as the president and the second to be born abroad. he was only 14 when his family emigrated from cuba under harrowing circumstances, including last minute detention by the secret police. he made it here. in two lines -- and two lines come to mind when i think of him. "this is my country, land of my choice. this is my country, here i found voice." what a voice it is. he earned his aba at the university of florida and he is now in their hall of fame. he is a partner in the miami office of the national law firm. his clients range from former vice president al gore to philip morr
that the question answer portion of the program will be moderated by a professor geoffrey hazard, a distinguished professor of law at uc hastings. the professor is a leading expert in the field of civil procedure of legal ethics and is good at asking questions. it is my pleasure to introduce our very special guest, stephen zack, president of the american bar association. with nearly 400,000 members, it is the largest volunteer professional membership organization in the world. mr. zack is the...
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May 25, 2012
05/12
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in the summer of 1998 professor geoffrey king from the institut de physique du globe in paris, appliedrthquake storm theory to the north anatolian fault in turkey. using a computer model based on and his team came up with a number of locations running east to west along the fault where he thought earthquakes most likely. he then compared his predictions with past history. astonishingly this showed that between 1939 and 1967 seven earthquakes had occurred at the precise locations king had identified along the fault line. the theory that the stress generated by one earthquake could trigger another even many years later was holding up well. king predicted that at some indeterminate point in the future an earthquake was likely in the bay of izmit. the warning duly went out but it was treated with almost complete indifference. this was a tragic mistake.because in august 1999; just a year after king made his prediction, izmit was hit with a devastating earthquake which resulted in the death of at least 17,000 people. >>as the scale of the disaster became clear, we were clearly right in our p
in the summer of 1998 professor geoffrey king from the institut de physique du globe in paris, appliedrthquake storm theory to the north anatolian fault in turkey. using a computer model based on and his team came up with a number of locations running east to west along the fault where he thought earthquakes most likely. he then compared his predictions with past history. astonishingly this showed that between 1939 and 1967 seven earthquakes had occurred at the precise locations king had...
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May 23, 2012
05/12
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the critic geoffrey grigson, noting the delicate balance in his work between surrealism and abstraction, called moore's work biomorphism. the term biomorphism suits moore absolutely perfectly because it signals that his preoccupation is poised somewhere between the surreal and the abstract. and it also describes beautifully the sense that we have in moore that the organism has laws of growth of its own. it's following some kind of universal law but it's not a species that we know. (narrator) throughout his long working life, moore collected natural forms and kept them near his workplace. he placed his own works side by side with objects that caught his eye: bones, shells, and flints. his own habits coincided with surrealism's interest in the found object and the creative possibilities of unexpected juxtapositions. the fusion of front and back, internal and external spaces, had been one of moore's goals since the early '30s. tunneling holes through heavy masses was a theme that preoccupied him for many years. in the late 1930s, he merged mathematical models he had seen at the science mus
the critic geoffrey grigson, noting the delicate balance in his work between surrealism and abstraction, called moore's work biomorphism. the term biomorphism suits moore absolutely perfectly because it signals that his preoccupation is poised somewhere between the surreal and the abstract. and it also describes beautifully the sense that we have in moore that the organism has laws of growth of its own. it's following some kind of universal law but it's not a species that we know. (narrator)...
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May 6, 2012
05/12
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let's start with geoffrey it's not fair for me to ask you to summarize your book in five sentences, but that is basically what i'm going to do. my question is, what was the impetus behind the moderate republican movement? why do you think that decline was a bad thing for america? >> i'm going to go with the monty python summarizing 100 words or less idea. [laughter] the impetus is the same for the republican party generally. it started as an anti-slavery party. that lineage continued to last in the for the next hundred development. years of the party's by 1960, which is the moment when i opened my book, you can actually argue that the moderates held a dominant and what was known as the within the republican party. what we think of the conservative faction which we republican party. think of is the smallest in the others being the dominant party in midwest, which we associate with robert taft. and those from the larger cities of the northeast and west coast, and in the progressives was rockefeller, and those who were largely liberal on civil rights and civil liberties issues and who are
let's start with geoffrey it's not fair for me to ask you to summarize your book in five sentences, but that is basically what i'm going to do. my question is, what was the impetus behind the moderate republican movement? why do you think that decline was a bad thing for america? >> i'm going to go with the monty python summarizing 100 words or less idea. [laughter] the impetus is the same for the republican party generally. it started as an anti-slavery party. that lineage continued to...
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May 13, 2012
05/12
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joseph geoffrey joins us from hamburg. he is the editor of "the german weekly." elaine also joins us. she happens to be in new york, but she is the paris correspondent for the "new york times", a beat she has covered for more than a decade. and david from rounds things out from d.c. he is a regular on the show and a former speechwriter for george bush wrub. welcome all. elaine, let me start with you. you know francois hollande. you have interviewed him. is he a radical? is he a moderate? how does he strike you? >> francois hollande is mr. normal. he got electriced president of france because he promised to be a normal candidate and a normal president. when i was traveling with him in 2007 he was so normal that not -- neither the conductor, nor anyone on the train even recognized him. he is disciplined. he ran the socialist party for over a decade, and he did not make enemies. he is likely to be much more consillatory and moderate than we might expect from a socialist. >> peter mannedelson, you were the architect -- one of the architects of the new labor movement.
joseph geoffrey joins us from hamburg. he is the editor of "the german weekly." elaine also joins us. she happens to be in new york, but she is the paris correspondent for the "new york times", a beat she has covered for more than a decade. and david from rounds things out from d.c. he is a regular on the show and a former speechwriter for george bush wrub. welcome all. elaine, let me start with you. you know francois hollande. you have interviewed him. is he a radical? is...
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May 2, 2012
05/12
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. >> brown: and i'm geoffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow meaning. thank you and good night. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> citi turns 200 this year. in that time, there have been some good days and some difficult ones. but through it all, we persevered. supporting some of the biggest ideas in modern history. so why should our anniversary matter to you? because for 200 years, we've been helping ideas move from ambition to achievement. and the next great idea could be yours. >> by nordic naturals. >> at&t. >> and by the bill and melinda gates foundation. dedicated to the idea that all people deserve the chance to live a healthy, productive life. and with the ongoing support of these institutions and foundations. and... this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting. and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. captioning sponsored by macneil/lehrer productions captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org
. >> brown: and i'm geoffrey brown. we'll see you online and again here tomorrow meaning. thank you and good night. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> citi turns 200 this year. in that time, there have been some good days and some difficult ones. but through it all, we persevered. supporting some of the biggest ideas in modern history. so why should our anniversary matter to you? because for 200 years, we've been helping ideas move from ambition to...
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May 2, 2012
05/12
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. >> brown: and i'm geoffrey brown. on the newshour tonight, we get the latest on the president's visit and the agreement he signed with president karzai spelling out the continuing u.s. commitment after american combat troops leave. >> ifill: then our series on the aftermath of the financial crisis continues with a look at how consumers and banks have altered their spending and lending practices. >> brown: ray suarez examines a new study showing a dramatic rise in the number of babies born addicted to prescription painkillers. >> brown: and judy woodruff gets two views on how hard the u.s. should press china over human rights violations. that's all ahead on tonight's newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: >> this is the at&t network-- a living, breathing intelligence bringing people together to bring new ideas to life. >> look, it's so simple. >> in a year, the bright minds from inside and outside the company come together to work on an idea. adding to it from the road, improving it in the c
. >> brown: and i'm geoffrey brown. on the newshour tonight, we get the latest on the president's visit and the agreement he signed with president karzai spelling out the continuing u.s. commitment after american combat troops leave. >> ifill: then our series on the aftermath of the financial crisis continues with a look at how consumers and banks have altered their spending and lending practices. >> brown: ray suarez examines a new study showing a dramatic rise in the number...
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May 2, 2012
05/12
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again, as i introduce them, let's start with geoffrey kabaservice. it's not fair for me to ask you to summarize your book in five sentences, but that is basically what i'm going to do. my question is, what was the impetus behind the moderate republican movement? why did it decline in what he think that decline was a bad thing for america? >> i'm going to go with the monty python summarizing 100 words or less idea. [laughter] [laughter] >> the impetus is the same for the republican party generally. that lineage continued to last in the for the next hundred years of the party's development. by 1960, which is the moment when i opened my book, you can actually argue that the moderates held a dominant and within the republican party. what was known as the conservative faction which we think of is the smallest in the republican party. the others being the dominant party in midwest, which we associate with robert taft. and those from the larger cities of the northeast and west coast, and in the progressives was rockefeller, and those who were largely libera
again, as i introduce them, let's start with geoffrey kabaservice. it's not fair for me to ask you to summarize your book in five sentences, but that is basically what i'm going to do. my question is, what was the impetus behind the moderate republican movement? why did it decline in what he think that decline was a bad thing for america? >> i'm going to go with the monty python summarizing 100 words or less idea. [laughter] [laughter] >> the impetus is the same for the republican...
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May 3, 2012
05/12
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geoffrey lamb is the managing director for public policy. jeff, the engagement with government and international institutions and prior to that you had a substantial period at the world bank. development is now market stakeholder effort involving foundations as we found this week. businesses, ngos as well as traditional actors like alt-a lateral institutions. how do they need to change to adopt to the new environment we are all facing? >> let me answer that i -- at a little bit of an angle. the gates foundation and most of us who work there are unashamed boosters of multilateralism and what we would like to see actually is moring gauge meant in a multilaterally effective world. we would like to see greater efficiency and focus for these institutions. we would like to see greater civil society support and engagement and as you said some political trends in many major countries are in the opposite direction right now and we think that is a problem. so i think what we try in our modest way to do is to connect up some of the parts of the work in
geoffrey lamb is the managing director for public policy. jeff, the engagement with government and international institutions and prior to that you had a substantial period at the world bank. development is now market stakeholder effort involving foundations as we found this week. businesses, ngos as well as traditional actors like alt-a lateral institutions. how do they need to change to adopt to the new environment we are all facing? >> let me answer that i -- at a little bit of an...