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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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it always works on newspapers at harvard square. monday to folks came and beat them up, much enforcement. $3 or $5 that he had. beat him in the and knocked two teeth out. and then -- they were arrested, and when they met in court again for some of the time the tickets came over to my son and said, unless you drop the charge, next up will you in front of the train. and so i saw these kids and i walked up to them and i mentioned the name of the man i was representing at the time. i was representing him only on a marijuana charge, but he was a notorious hitman for the mob. and he killed his clients in a particularly brutal way, and all it did was mentioned the name of my client and tell these kids how much my client admired me, and made it clear to them that if they touched my son again, my client would find out about it. these kids that down on their hands and knees and begged me not to do it. i probably committed a crime, but the next one was just recently, a few much ago. my son again have a problem, went to the hospital, and when h
it always works on newspapers at harvard square. monday to folks came and beat them up, much enforcement. $3 or $5 that he had. beat him in the and knocked two teeth out. and then -- they were arrested, and when they met in court again for some of the time the tickets came over to my son and said, unless you drop the charge, next up will you in front of the train. and so i saw these kids and i walked up to them and i mentioned the name of the man i was representing at the time. i was...
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 111
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she said, well, harvard didn't want me? they turned you down? no, they accepted me, but when i went to a dance, i showed letters from harvard and yale to a professor, and he said we have about as many women as we need at harvard, and yale is more suited to the feminine mentality, you ought to go to yale. and as a result of that, she went to yale, she met bill clinton. had she not done that, he would never have been president. so this professor changed history -- [laughter] and we found who it was, he was ultimately on the international court of justice. but harvard was loaded in those days with sexist professors who didn't think women were able to think like lawyers. so when i went to dinner at the dean's house, he came to me afterwards and said how come you didn't eat your wife's roast beef? i said, well, i'm kosher. he said, you're still kosher? don't you think you ought to have your people change? i said -- i thought he was vocking. i said, i'll talk to my people. [laughter] about a week later, i saw him in the hall, and i spoke to my people
she said, well, harvard didn't want me? they turned you down? no, they accepted me, but when i went to a dance, i showed letters from harvard and yale to a professor, and he said we have about as many women as we need at harvard, and yale is more suited to the feminine mentality, you ought to go to yale. and as a result of that, she went to yale, she met bill clinton. had she not done that, he would never have been president. so this professor changed history -- [laughter] and we found who it...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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a lot of students that come to harvard want to change the world. better to make it out to a $300,000 the only way is d.c. corporation and help the rich become superrich in the mega rich become outlandish the rich. not in a stephen are permitted to follow their dreams because of the way the legal profession is structured. harvard has a very good program of forgiveness of loans if you go into the public interest. anything that serves the public interest. i encourage nice it is. i tell my event, pay attention. statistically, more of you will be criminal defense and criminal lawyers. so pay good attention. that probably has been a factor for years. i would like to see more students do what you're doing. >> i was one of the great horses precisely because he took very contradictory to what the students were normally sane. >> thank you yet i appreciate that. >> last question. [laughter] >> i'm reading your book. you note in the book that there's going to be a lot of litigation. i wonder what you think about with seats for conversion therapy. >> those are
a lot of students that come to harvard want to change the world. better to make it out to a $300,000 the only way is d.c. corporation and help the rich become superrich in the mega rich become outlandish the rich. not in a stephen are permitted to follow their dreams because of the way the legal profession is structured. harvard has a very good program of forgiveness of loans if you go into the public interest. anything that serves the public interest. i encourage nice it is. i tell my event,...
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Jan 25, 2014
01/14
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KCSM
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my reaction was i'm not a woman president of harvard and the president of harvard. and by that time and i can have some kind of asterisk after my name it gave me a special dispensation as if i hit the home runs in an especially long baseball season. i wanted to be fully the president of harvard but after i was named. i got many many letters from little girls all over the world young women all over the world. parents of girls all of the world saying this matter so much to me to my daughter that there be a woman president of harvard one young woman read to me in fact one time and since then she said now i know i can do anything. so i thought i need to inhabit that expectation and to try to be a model in so far as i'm capable and to reach out to young women all over the world and say to them aspire to green file your ambitions. let these possibilities become realities for you. and talking about women china's li na zoellick would right now in the final of the australian open. she's playing slovakian dominik this opal cove. they've been on the cornell for about forty fiv
my reaction was i'm not a woman president of harvard and the president of harvard. and by that time and i can have some kind of asterisk after my name it gave me a special dispensation as if i hit the home runs in an especially long baseball season. i wanted to be fully the president of harvard but after i was named. i got many many letters from little girls all over the world young women all over the world. parents of girls all of the world saying this matter so much to me to my daughter that...
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Jan 10, 2014
01/14
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FBC
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yeah, it's very funny to get expelled from harvard.inds of credibility, but mathew martoma's not even his real name, is it? >> no, that's right. he has a name that was changed, and then when you look at the transcript making up grades in your transcript -- liz: it looked line he changed his name to cover up the fact that he was expelled from harvard. >> in his defense, a lot of ethnic people have changed their names to be more anglo. the name change isn't the problem. the name change is the problem here, clearly, is the transcripts. and let me ask you this, though, you know, that clip that we just showed was on the "frontline" special, we were both on the "frontline" special on insider trading. why did you ask steve cohen about insider trading? the case that you were bringing against cohen had nothing to do with insider trading, it had to do with market manipulation. he and other hedge funds manipulated the stock, allegedly, of fairfax financial. the case was thrown out of court. i know you're appealing, but, you know, i think cohen ha
yeah, it's very funny to get expelled from harvard.inds of credibility, but mathew martoma's not even his real name, is it? >> no, that's right. he has a name that was changed, and then when you look at the transcript making up grades in your transcript -- liz: it looked line he changed his name to cover up the fact that he was expelled from harvard. >> in his defense, a lot of ethnic people have changed their names to be more anglo. the name change isn't the problem. the name...
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Jan 23, 2014
01/14
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FOXNEWSW
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she was a single mother and went to harvard law school.n in texas and i think she did a very brave thing on the abortion issue. so that is my opinion, but as a professional crisis manager i don't think she got out in front on some of the soft spots that have been raised and addressed them very quickly. the last thing she should do is blame the media or her opponent, and address things that were meant to be addressed -- >> she could have said i'm working on my tighter language. the truth is she misled people. i get that people are saying what, she said she got a divorce at 19, and really it was 21, all right, whatever. >> whatever. >> she lived in a trailer park but turns out it was only for a short period of time. people suggest she made the impression she was there for a long period of time. it turns out her husband paid for the last two years of her under grad and the final two years of harvard, then he says she left him. so they feel she has not been quite honest with them. >> the reason they say tell it early, tell it all is that the a
she was a single mother and went to harvard law school.n in texas and i think she did a very brave thing on the abortion issue. so that is my opinion, but as a professional crisis manager i don't think she got out in front on some of the soft spots that have been raised and addressed them very quickly. the last thing she should do is blame the media or her opponent, and address things that were meant to be addressed -- >> she could have said i'm working on my tighter language. the truth...
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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CNBC
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and that, i mean, it was a dating site for harvard.greed to help them out with it--to help them, right? i mean, it wasn't a job. they weren't paying me. i wasn't hired by them or anything like that. and then, the idea that i would then go work on something completely different, like facebook, and that they would be upset about this all these years later is kinda mind-boggling for me. now, i mean, this is another thing that i think the movie really missed is, i mean, they make it seem like this whole lawsuit is such a huge part of facebook's history. i've probably spent less than two weeks of my time worried about this lawsuit at all, right? >> maybe you should've worried about it a little more. [laughs] >> maybe i should have early on, right? but i guess the point that i'm trying to make is, this has never been a big deal to facebook or its evolution. >> do you feel any, any remorse at all about the twins or anything that happened with them? >> i mean, after all this time, i feel bad that they still feel bad about it. >> kara swisher,
and that, i mean, it was a dating site for harvard.greed to help them out with it--to help them, right? i mean, it wasn't a job. they weren't paying me. i wasn't hired by them or anything like that. and then, the idea that i would then go work on something completely different, like facebook, and that they would be upset about this all these years later is kinda mind-boggling for me. now, i mean, this is another thing that i think the movie really missed is, i mean, they make it seem like this...
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Jan 10, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.d warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ money" on "lunch bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson. mark messier was an idol to many theyorkers growing up in 1990's, captain of the new york rangers' stanley cup championship team and was inducted into the hall of fame in 1997. he is taking on the role of brand ambassador for the harvard-yale game taking place at madison square garden this weekend. >> it is one of the best forms of amateur hockey we have in the u.s. a rivals amateur leagues in canada, many great players are being drafted into the nh;. there is a long -- into the nhl. a long history of rivalry in the ivy league schools, i have a lot of cousins who have gone to harvard and
the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.d warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ money" on "lunch bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson....
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.eed warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ >> this is "lunch money" on bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson. mark messier was an idol to many new yorkers growing up in the 1990's, captain of the new york rangers' stanley cup championship team and was inducted into the hall of fame in 1997. -- 2007. he is taking on the role of brand ambassador for the harvard-yale game taking place at madison square garden this weekend. >> it is one of the best forms of amateur hockey we have in the u.s. rivals amateur leagues in canada, many great players are being drafted into the nhl. there is a long history of rivalry in the ivy league schools, i have a lot of cousins who have gone to harvard an
the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.eed warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ >> this is "lunch money" on bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i...
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Jan 20, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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went on to harvard law. then to one of the chicago's most prestigious law firms. michelle was a rising star at sidley austin and just one of a few black attorneys there when she was asked to mentor an intern named barack obama. >> at first i thought, what kind of name is barack obama? my assumption was, this guy has got to be kind of weird. i'd already created an image of this very intellectual nerd. >> i thought she was gorgeous. i noticed that there was a certain wit to her and mischievous to her that appealed to me a lot. >> she was cuter than i thought he'd be. >> but michelle wasn't interested when he asked her out. >> she thought it was inappropriate to have any inner office dating. >> she tried to set him up with friends. but he was relentless. >> she had all these theories. and i basically knocked them down one after the other until finally -- >> i said, okay. we'll go on this one date but we won't call it a date. i'll spend the day with you. >> at that point i thought, okay. i think i got something going. >> we went to the art institute in chicago. and he
went on to harvard law. then to one of the chicago's most prestigious law firms. michelle was a rising star at sidley austin and just one of a few black attorneys there when she was asked to mentor an intern named barack obama. >> at first i thought, what kind of name is barack obama? my assumption was, this guy has got to be kind of weird. i'd already created an image of this very intellectual nerd. >> i thought she was gorgeous. i noticed that there was a certain wit to her and...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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harvard university. >> he was only 16 when he went to harvard. he came from a very modest background. and in harvard, that's a snobby kind of environment. and he was also socially maladjusted so it was a disaster for him. >> at harvard, kaczynski was one of 22 student volunteers, chose on the take part in a study in a technology study of gifted undergraduates. what the participants didn't know was the test was allegedly part of a secret program funded by the cia and military intelligence. >> what they did was essentially interview these kids and put them up against someone who ridiculed them mercilessly. now this is something that if you do that to someone who is not socially confident anyway, it's going to be at the very least very difficult to deal with. >> some experts later surmised that the harvard experiments might have played a role in kaczynski's emotional problems. >> i think they took advantage of a young, very vulnerable person as a subject. they really treated him badly. they really played games with their mind. >> kaczynski graduated
harvard university. >> he was only 16 when he went to harvard. he came from a very modest background. and in harvard, that's a snobby kind of environment. and he was also socially maladjusted so it was a disaster for him. >> at harvard, kaczynski was one of 22 student volunteers, chose on the take part in a study in a technology study of gifted undergraduates. what the participants didn't know was the test was allegedly part of a secret program funded by the cia and military...
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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yale undergrad and then i went to harvard law. >> host: after harvard, where did she wear? >> guest: my first job was for a judge in a federal court in the federal trial court in manhattan. she was the second african-american women federal judge in new york. her name was mary johnson road. she was a feisty lady who had been a criminal defense attorney in the bronx before she became first a state judge and then a federal judge. she had seen it all from both police, prosecutors and also from thence. she was a very effective judge. she got tough breaks. she was in a court to consider wall street's court. the southern district of new york. i think a lot of lawyers who are practicing that harper representing the top corporations. they weren't used to taking orders from this black woman. so she didn't have the pc and mac court. she gave them how. >> host: you served as a defense attorney as well? >> guest: i did. after an laughter stopped being a clerk was one year opportunity i joined a law firm here. here in washington is associate. for a few years i took litigation, including
yale undergrad and then i went to harvard law. >> host: after harvard, where did she wear? >> guest: my first job was for a judge in a federal court in the federal trial court in manhattan. she was the second african-american women federal judge in new york. her name was mary johnson road. she was a feisty lady who had been a criminal defense attorney in the bronx before she became first a state judge and then a federal judge. she had seen it all from both police, prosecutors and...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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nathan is an assistant professor of economics from harvard, is it a misnomer to think that americans have upward economic mobile whereas it's been the same as it's been for a long known? >> it's been well-known that the united states has a lower upward mobility in relation to other places. there is a lot of places in the united states that have some of the lowest rates of upward mobility than have ever been measured. >> what makes the characteristics that put san jose, san francisco, salt lake city at the top of upward mobility? >> we found five strong correlations, five strong factors that were correlated with areas of lier rates of upward mobility. the structure of two parent households, places that have higher rates of civic engagement, also areas that had less residential segregation and greater economic equality. >> a place like atlanta or the lack of social capital are one of the reasons why atlanta for example or indianapolis, atlanta, some of the other cities, dayton that's why they're at the bottom of the list? >> it's hard to say whether that is causal factor or other thing
nathan is an assistant professor of economics from harvard, is it a misnomer to think that americans have upward economic mobile whereas it's been the same as it's been for a long known? >> it's been well-known that the united states has a lower upward mobility in relation to other places. there is a lot of places in the united states that have some of the lowest rates of upward mobility than have ever been measured. >> what makes the characteristics that put san jose, san...
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Jan 23, 2014
01/14
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FBC
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uc berkeley chancellor, president of harvard, and edex president.>> thank you. liz: back to you in new york. ashley: liz, thank you very much. coming up on "countdown to the closing bell," liz will be sitting down with the ceo of citigroup. don't miss it. that's 3 p.m. eastern time right here on fox business. tracy: we have some breaking news for you now. the ap reporting chris christie's election campaign and the republican party committee have received subpoenas from federal prosecutors. now, it is all part of the investigation into allegations that his aides created traffic jams as political payback. a lawyer representing christie for governor and the republican state committee tells the associated press: the subpoenas are for documented related to the closure of traffic lanes near the george washington brick. a state legislative committee investigating the traffic jams has also issued subpoenas to the two osars. ashley: all right. netflix shares streaming higher. dennis kneale coming up with whether there's more growth ahead and how you can make
uc berkeley chancellor, president of harvard, and edex president.>> thank you. liz: back to you in new york. ashley: liz, thank you very much. coming up on "countdown to the closing bell," liz will be sitting down with the ceo of citigroup. don't miss it. that's 3 p.m. eastern time right here on fox business. tracy: we have some breaking news for you now. the ap reporting chris christie's election campaign and the republican party committee have received subpoenas from federal...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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SFGTV
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explain this statement to somebody knowing that the gentleman is a smart, educated person, a lawyer, harvard law degree, but doesn't seem cognizant of the first amendment of the united states or any other laws which protects speakers who come to this chamber. i was given the information that supervisor breed actually
explain this statement to somebody knowing that the gentleman is a smart, educated person, a lawyer, harvard law degree, but doesn't seem cognizant of the first amendment of the united states or any other laws which protects speakers who come to this chamber. i was given the information that supervisor breed actually
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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spinet then harvard. >> host: then where did you work? eighty-one working for a judge in the federal trial courts in manhattan. she was the second african-american woman federal judge in new york. she was a feisty who said criminal defense attorneys before she was the state judge said a federal judge. she had seen it all from police, prosecutors, defense attorneys covet and defendants. i think she was very effective and she got some tough breaks. she was in a court that was considered wall street the southern district of new york. i think a lot of lawyers who would practice would represent the top corporations in the investment banks were not used to taking orders from this black woman. she did not have it easy but she gave them how. >> host: do serve as a defense attorney as well? >> guest: i did. after i was done with the clerk i joined a law firm here as an associate. for two years i did litigation. >> host: how long have you been teaching? >> guest: almost 20 years. it is the best job i ever had. i get to work with young people, helps
spinet then harvard. >> host: then where did you work? eighty-one working for a judge in the federal trial courts in manhattan. she was the second african-american woman federal judge in new york. she was a feisty who said criminal defense attorneys before she was the state judge said a federal judge. she had seen it all from police, prosecutors, defense attorneys covet and defendants. i think she was very effective and she got some tough breaks. she was in a court that was considered...
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Jan 17, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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also joining us for his second time on this program, justin porter, who is a sophomore at harvard and issues in an essay he wrote for "the new york times" last summer. also joining us, msnbc's joy reed. troy, tell us about how you turned your life around. you were 14 years old. you couldn't read at that point. you had been through a lot of hard times including a lot of problems after hurricane katrina with the way you were able to live in new orleans, but you decided you wanted to change. how did you do it and how did you get the help? >> so i decided what i wanted to change when i was 14. you know, i considered, it was a thursday, and i believe it was somewhere around the new year in 2007, going into 2008. and i saw my friends, you know, going down a self-destruct path and i realized that that's going to be me, too, if i keep it up. and i saw that most of my friends were ending up in jail, ended up dying, not going to school. and even some older people that i hung around, you know, who graduated, didn't make it, get a job after graduating high school. i saw that they stopped and that
also joining us for his second time on this program, justin porter, who is a sophomore at harvard and issues in an essay he wrote for "the new york times" last summer. also joining us, msnbc's joy reed. troy, tell us about how you turned your life around. you were 14 years old. you couldn't read at that point. you had been through a lot of hard times including a lot of problems after hurricane katrina with the way you were able to live in new orleans, but you decided you wanted to...
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Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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my own view, which is shared by psychologist at harvard, it is largely woven into the genes. >> that would be my theory based on the whole range of connections to the brain. molecular contribution to a lot of the brain. studiesare looking at -- for many years they would try people -- what makes people ill. maybe it is more constructive to look at what our people who are resistant or resell you against these things, what makes them. i was fascinated. i ended -- there are these studies that show army rangers and navy seals go through these tests. you are subjected to all but torture. see deprivation, all of that. this one researcher can determine in advance who will pass and who will not by taking blood. if you are high in neuropeptide y, you are almost immune to developing poster manic stress disorder. you're more likely to thrive in the situations. that said, the army has startled -- tested it you can learn resilience. >> it's interesting. i'm on chapter one. you quote sigmund freud. the most various important questions comverge a riddle whose solution is bound to throw a flood of li
my own view, which is shared by psychologist at harvard, it is largely woven into the genes. >> that would be my theory based on the whole range of connections to the brain. molecular contribution to a lot of the brain. studiesare looking at -- for many years they would try people -- what makes people ill. maybe it is more constructive to look at what our people who are resistant or resell you against these things, what makes them. i was fascinated. i ended -- there are these studies that...
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Jan 23, 2014
01/14
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FBC
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harvard says economic mobility hasn't changed. do you agree?n the right-hand side of the screen and i will share the results at the end of tonight's show. coming back next, the truth behind fish oil. is it is good for you as everyone says? don't go away. [ male announcer ] there is no substitute for experience. for what reality teaches you firsthand. he face of danger, and unr the most demanding circumstances. experience builds character. experience builds confidence. anexperience... has built this. introducing the 2014 glk. he engineering and the experience of mercedes-benz. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. le, for crossing. feet...splashing. better things than the joint pain and swelling of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. if you're trying to ma, now may be time to ask abouxeljanz. xeljz (tofacitinib) is a small pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexat did not work well. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, i
harvard says economic mobility hasn't changed. do you agree?n the right-hand side of the screen and i will share the results at the end of tonight's show. coming back next, the truth behind fish oil. is it is good for you as everyone says? don't go away. [ male announcer ] there is no substitute for experience. for what reality teaches you firsthand. he face of danger, and unr the most demanding circumstances. experience builds character. experience builds confidence. anexperience... has built...
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Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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founded by harvard students in 1876, the lampoon has been steadfastly behind the times ever since.at the lampoon in 1971, when the "new yorker's" patty marks became the first woman member. a few years later jim downey became what became a stampede of lampoon graduates into comedy writing via "saturday night live." but by the time colin conan o'brien was president the job had become so undesirable he couldn't find a successor to hand it off to and had to serve an unprecedented second term. the last lampoon presidential election to earn national media attention was won by lisa henson, who became the first female president in 1982. the year before, maya williams had become the first african-american woman on the harvard lampoon. and now, a mere 32 years after lisa henson was elected, the harvard lampoon has elected its first african-american woman president. thereby vaulting ahead of the times only as compared to the american government. president-elect wilkinson had to carry the white boy vote since that remains the dominant demographic at the harvard lampoon. outgoing president eric
founded by harvard students in 1876, the lampoon has been steadfastly behind the times ever since.at the lampoon in 1971, when the "new yorker's" patty marks became the first woman member. a few years later jim downey became what became a stampede of lampoon graduates into comedy writing via "saturday night live." but by the time colin conan o'brien was president the job had become so undesirable he couldn't find a successor to hand it off to and had to serve an...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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she did go to harvard law school.s out that her second husband at the time cashed in his 401(k) account and took out a loan to help pay for her final loan there. on a scale of 1 to 10 when it comes to fudging and lying, 10 being outright deceit, this is closer to a 1, i think. but as a democratic politician running for statewide office in texas, wendy davis has to realize that for the right-wing, this is not about the slipperiness of candidate bios, this is about a dam of vitriol that has been building and building and now the dam has burst. wendy davis is probably the single biggest conservative target in this election cycle, and you can see it in the way the right has run with this story. from drudge, texas abortion heroine lined about being a single teen mom. erick erickson, i await wendy davis' lawsuit. and john noulte tweets, interesting, as mainstream media destroys christie, new media is taking down wendy davis. joining me now, chris ball, co-host of msnbc's, "the cycle," which airs weekdays at 3:00 p.m. easter
she did go to harvard law school.s out that her second husband at the time cashed in his 401(k) account and took out a loan to help pay for her final loan there. on a scale of 1 to 10 when it comes to fudging and lying, 10 being outright deceit, this is closer to a 1, i think. but as a democratic politician running for statewide office in texas, wendy davis has to realize that for the right-wing, this is not about the slipperiness of candidate bios, this is about a dam of vitriol that has been...
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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FOXNEWSW
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i mean paying for harvard law school and not paying for harvard law school is a very different thingshony weiner and the one question i have been dieing to ask him. >> i'm trying to understand, how somebody with a secret like that could go on national television and be that cooky. wait until you hear his response. suffice to it say it's the tale of two wieners. hannity at the top of the hour. >> i don't know what you need to wake you up than having a hole blown in the wall. obviously the secretary of state was asleep at the switch. she wasn't paying attention. from the classic lines to the elegant trim in each and every piece, ♪ kohler will make your reality a dream. test. test. test. test. test. test. test. test. test. if you wear a denture, touch it with your tongue. if your denture moves, it can irritate your gums. try fixodent plus gum care. it helps stop denture movement and prevents gum irritation. fixodent. and forget it. and prevents gum irritation. iespecially when it's miralax. re can love their laxative. it hydrates, eases, and softens, to unblock your system naturally. so
i mean paying for harvard law school and not paying for harvard law school is a very different thingshony weiner and the one question i have been dieing to ask him. >> i'm trying to understand, how somebody with a secret like that could go on national television and be that cooky. wait until you hear his response. suffice to it say it's the tale of two wieners. hannity at the top of the hour. >> i don't know what you need to wake you up than having a hole blown in the wall....
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Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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my genome, i talk about my great-grandfather, who was dean of harvard college in the 1940's. to all outward appearances, he was an extremely effective administrator and professor. in his 40's or 50's he had mental breakdowns seized by anxiety. institutionalized multiple times. obviously, i am not him. but, you can see when you look at families, once there are two embers of the family with anxiety disorders, you see it. at some fundamental level i'm exactly the same way. a high reactive temperament. a high reactive physiology. but, having spent years in therapy, nearly 10 years researching and writing this book, i have a better understanding of only of the nero mechanics of what it is that is causing these unpleasant emotions, and some perspective. i was flying across the rockies, reading a book about narrow science anxieties. these babblings of nearer transmitters. we hit turbulence, and at that point any perspective i had is fight or flight overrides. >> had it affect you? >> in that moment? it was terrifying. i sit there popping dramamine, paging the flight attendant to bri
my genome, i talk about my great-grandfather, who was dean of harvard college in the 1940's. to all outward appearances, he was an extremely effective administrator and professor. in his 40's or 50's he had mental breakdowns seized by anxiety. institutionalized multiple times. obviously, i am not him. but, you can see when you look at families, once there are two embers of the family with anxiety disorders, you see it. at some fundamental level i'm exactly the same way. a high reactive...
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Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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i didn't go to harvard law school to end up another n this jail, and that's what i felt like. you know, people treated me during this -- the this one incident, the time i was actually locked up if for a few hours, they treated me like garbage. it was humiliating. but at the same time, i had all this privilege. when i got my proverbial phone call, i knew so many lawyers, i had to think of all these lawyers which ones do i want to call? i knew folks would be willing to help me, and they were. and, you know, at the end of the day, things worked out fine more me. the reason they worked out fine was i had status. people wanted to help me. the reason they worked out fine was because i had money. i could afford the best lawyer in town. the reason why things worked out fine for me was because i had legal skills. i literally prosecuted people in the courtroom where i was being prosecuted. there are and the other reason why things worked out fine more me was because i was innocent. but when i thought about all those reasons, that didn't seem like the most important one. so, again, there
i didn't go to harvard law school to end up another n this jail, and that's what i felt like. you know, people treated me during this -- the this one incident, the time i was actually locked up if for a few hours, they treated me like garbage. it was humiliating. but at the same time, i had all this privilege. when i got my proverbial phone call, i knew so many lawyers, i had to think of all these lawyers which ones do i want to call? i knew folks would be willing to help me, and they were....
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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FOXNEWSW
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i mean paying for harvard law school and not paying for harvard law school is a very different thingsner and the one question i have been dieing to ask him. >> i'm trying to understand, how somebody with a secret like that could go on national television and be that cooky. wait until you hear his response. suffice to it say it's the tale of two wieners. hannity at the top of the hour. >> i don't know what you need to wake you up than having a hole blown in the wall. obviously the ♪ [ male announcer ] to truck guys, the truck is everything. and when you put them in charge of making an unbeable truck, good things happen. this is the ram 1500. the 2014 motor trend truck of the year. ♪ and first ever back-to-back champion. guts. glory. ram. as a i'm still not going toall the pmake it to mars,o visit. but thanks to hotwire's incredibly low travel prices, i can afford to cross more things off my list. this year alone, we went to the top of the statue of liberty... and still saved enough to go to texas-- to a real dude ranch! hotwire checks the competition's rates every day... so they can gu
i mean paying for harvard law school and not paying for harvard law school is a very different thingsner and the one question i have been dieing to ask him. >> i'm trying to understand, how somebody with a secret like that could go on national television and be that cooky. wait until you hear his response. suffice to it say it's the tale of two wieners. hannity at the top of the hour. >> i don't know what you need to wake you up than having a hole blown in the wall. obviously the...
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Jan 29, 2014
01/14
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KQED
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. >> narrator: at harvard, nowinski was a punishing tackr. he suffered countless head injuries. then, instead of the nfl, he became a professional wrestler. >> he ends up with the nickname chris harvard, the persona of this sort of snobbish wrestler who's smarter than all the fans. >> you people should be grateful to have someone of my intelligence in your presence. >> narrator: for chris harvard, the performance often ended with a blow to the head. >> chris harvard landed on his head quite a bit. you know, as much as wrestling is performance, there's a very, very small margin of error. and especially when you're learning the thing, you fall on your head a lot. >> narrator: nowinski began to have violent nightmares and migraine headaches. >> and i said, "there's something really wrong with me." and the headache didn't go away for five years. >> narrator: brain trauma became an obsession. >> what motivated me every day was the fact that my head was killing me and i knew that i felt awful and i knew that i wasn't the only person, but i was a person in a position to make a differen
. >> narrator: at harvard, nowinski was a punishing tackr. he suffered countless head injuries. then, instead of the nfl, he became a professional wrestler. >> he ends up with the nickname chris harvard, the persona of this sort of snobbish wrestler who's smarter than all the fans. >> you people should be grateful to have someone of my intelligence in your presence. >> narrator: for chris harvard, the performance often ended with a blow to the head. >> chris...
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Jan 29, 2014
01/14
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FBC
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joining us professor martin feldstein, harvard university professor of economics.o have you. we really want your opinion on this. you were so ahead of the game back in early 2007. take out the crystal ball for our viewers and tell us in the short term what you see for the year 2014? >> i think 2014 is going to be better than the last several years. for the last several years as you just said, i have continually said and said on your program, that i think that the economy is not going to do as well as the fed or others thought it would. but i think 2014 has the advantage that households have a lot more wealth that happened last year, as the stock market went up and as house values went up and that will translate into more consumer spending. and also of course, we don't have the pushback coming from higher taxes that we had last year, higher payroll taxes and higher personal income taxes. so i think we've got a shot of doing significantly better in 2014 than we did in 2013 and in previous years. liz: well this is certainly welcome news, coming from you. you have a lo
joining us professor martin feldstein, harvard university professor of economics.o have you. we really want your opinion on this. you were so ahead of the game back in early 2007. take out the crystal ball for our viewers and tell us in the short term what you see for the year 2014? >> i think 2014 is going to be better than the last several years. for the last several years as you just said, i have continually said and said on your program, that i think that the economy is not going to...
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we'll talk to ken row governor, chief economist at harvard and formerly with the imf. bernanke. david: speaking of movies that set a new record, we'll give you a preview how it set that record, if we could, but we're not supposed to use that kind of language on television. didn't kind of record we're talking about here, f-bombs, get the picture. >> started my own firm out of an abandoned auto body shop. we'll target wealthiest 1% of americans. nouncer ] this is the story of the dusty basement at 06 35th street the old dining table at 25th and hoffman. ...and the little room above the strip mall f roble avenue. ♪ this mic momt it is the story of where every great idea begins. and of those o believed they had the power to do more. dell is honored to be part of some of the world'great stories. that began much the same w ours did. in a little dorm room -- 2713. ♪ this magicoment ♪ ♪ this magicoment so ally bank really has no hthat's right, no hidd fees.nts? it's just that i'm worried about, you know, "hidden things." ok, why's at? well uhhh... surprise!!! um... well, it's
we'll talk to ken row governor, chief economist at harvard and formerly with the imf. bernanke. david: speaking of movies that set a new record, we'll give you a preview how it set that record, if we could, but we're not supposed to use that kind of language on television. didn't kind of record we're talking about here, f-bombs, get the picture. >> started my own firm out of an abandoned auto body shop. we'll target wealthiest 1% of americans. nouncer ] this is the story of the dusty...
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Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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LINKTV
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i'm joined by economic professor at harvard university. thank you for speaking with us.n bernanke is leaving after eight years as the head of the fed. in what shape is he leaving the u.s. economy e >> in great shape. you saw the first growth figures, which are stunning. bernanke should get most of the credit for forgetting -- four getting the u.s. economy out of a rough spot. the european countries are in a slow growth spot. there has been a lot of innovation and a lot of out of the box thinking. i think we should give him the credit, a lot of the credit for getting the u.s.-backed on high- growth. the u.s. back on high-growth. >> let's talk about his legacy. he had to steer the economy through the worst crisis and the economic -- since the great depression. how did he do it? >> he did several things. first, he introduced monetary policy where interest rates were already very low. usually, when you want to boost the economy, you use interest rates. forlower interest rates short-term loans. that is the usual thing you do. that is called the open market operation. but he w
i'm joined by economic professor at harvard university. thank you for speaking with us.n bernanke is leaving after eight years as the head of the fed. in what shape is he leaving the u.s. economy e >> in great shape. you saw the first growth figures, which are stunning. bernanke should get most of the credit for forgetting -- four getting the u.s. economy out of a rough spot. the european countries are in a slow growth spot. there has been a lot of innovation and a lot of out of the box...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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they used to pretend they were harvard students. the only debate he remembered well enough to write about in his autobiography was a debate he had with his friend john collins over the proprietary of educating the female in learning and about their abilities for study. collins is of the opinion that it was improper as girls are unequal. franklin disagreed. he took the contrary side. maybe he was thinking of jane. in crafting his argument franklin wrote a book -- read a book called essays and projects. the establishment of an academy of for women. i have regretted the frivolousness of women's education. they are taught to read and maybe to write their names and that is the height of a woman's education. he proposed an academy for one that would hold back such geniuses that would lead them to appear this is the argument he made in his debate with his best friend. following his arguments for the need for a woman's education. frank and lost the argument. he had actually carried on a lot of the argument. he and his friend would bug each
they used to pretend they were harvard students. the only debate he remembered well enough to write about in his autobiography was a debate he had with his friend john collins over the proprietary of educating the female in learning and about their abilities for study. collins is of the opinion that it was improper as girls are unequal. franklin disagreed. he took the contrary side. maybe he was thinking of jane. in crafting his argument franklin wrote a book -- read a book called essays and...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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she got herself into harvard law school. >> reporter: she got herself into harvard but had help.d by then and her second husband paid for her college and cashed in his 401(k) to pay for law school. the davis campaign says she also relied on financial aid and scholarships. a spokes ohman for greg abbott says that davis has systematically, intentionally and repeatedly deceived texans, and calls her personal story a fanciful narrative. >> and ed lavandera joins you live from dallas. what is wendy davis saying about this? >> we spent the last two days trying to get an interview with her and that request has been denied the last two days. but she did post a letter to her supporters on her campaign's website this afternoon saying that the abbott campaign has stooped to a new low here. that she is not surprised they would resort to attacking the story of a single mother who worked hard to get ahead. now in the "dallas morning news" interview, anderson, wendy davis did acknowledge she should, quote, be tighter with her language. but she says she will keep on talking about her story, beca
she got herself into harvard law school. >> reporter: she got herself into harvard but had help.d by then and her second husband paid for her college and cashed in his 401(k) to pay for law school. the davis campaign says she also relied on financial aid and scholarships. a spokes ohman for greg abbott says that davis has systematically, intentionally and repeatedly deceived texans, and calls her personal story a fanciful narrative. >> and ed lavandera joins you live from dallas....
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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he's a graduate of northwestern university and harvard law school. he began his career as a prosecutor and the state attorney's office. in 2004 he argued that medical marijuana case in that case actually feature prominently in terms of the analysis for the obamacare case. he's he is the author of over 100 articles as well as mine books. and he will discuss the role that policy played in litigation. please join me in welcoming our panel. [applause] >> okay, up to you, whatever you would like. >> okay. thank you very much, john. thank you to the heritage foundation for putting on and also for helping out and doing an incredible job of litigation. i also want to thank the conspirators come through to my left and uncle we are representing. david bernstein was my boss will proceso and he gave me opportunities work on this book. and i had some interesting experiences coming out of law school. so that was somewhat surreal things working at the cato institute. and so i lecture about this throughout the country and sometimes it doesn't have to return people t
he's a graduate of northwestern university and harvard law school. he began his career as a prosecutor and the state attorney's office. in 2004 he argued that medical marijuana case in that case actually feature prominently in terms of the analysis for the obamacare case. he's he is the author of over 100 articles as well as mine books. and he will discuss the role that policy played in litigation. please join me in welcoming our panel. [applause] >> okay, up to you, whatever you would...
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Jan 9, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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as mentioned one of the world's most respected economist in addition to speeching economy in harvard, he served as economist at the imf and "new york times" best selling author. he joins us from massachusetts. good to see you, thank you for being with us again. >> thank you. >> let's talk about these job numbers, the adp numbers the fact that we're going to get in the neighborhood of 200,000 jobs on friday, generally speaking this feels like a recovery in the job market. >> well, it certainly is. i mean, at this pace its still going to take a very long time to absorb all the unemployed and completely normalize, but it's been very stable, very healthy. i mean, i still want to see the businesses check in with more investment before i feel that it's completely solidified, but we've had a long string of favorable news. >> tell me about the study that you did, you compared this recovery to prior recoveries and recessions, and you compared this recovery to how the rest of the world recovered from this financial crisis. what were the outside? >> this is work in progress that we reported, but
as mentioned one of the world's most respected economist in addition to speeching economy in harvard, he served as economist at the imf and "new york times" best selling author. he joins us from massachusetts. good to see you, thank you for being with us again. >> thank you. >> let's talk about these job numbers, the adp numbers the fact that we're going to get in the neighborhood of 200,000 jobs on friday, generally speaking this feels like a recovery in the job market....
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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and there's some educators at the harvard graduate school of education the passport to the middle class used to be the high school diploma. not anymore. there's a new economy. and the new passport to the middle class is education beyond high school. and girls seem to be getting it and boys less and less. i feel that problem -- i can't find major organizations or government groups. the department of education is still talking about the shortchanged girl. because they were deeply i think influenced by the early research. and that said girls were shortchanged in the 1990s. and so they haven't adjusted or adapted to the times. so we have a white house council on women and girls that concerned about the education of girls and girls don't fall behind, and when it's boys that are, like, every significant -- almost every significant metric significantly behind girls. so i think we need a white house council on boys as well. >>> in a recent atlantic article you write that women in the u.s. now earn 62% of the associates degrees. 57% of bachelors degrees, 60% of master's degrees, 52% of doctorate
and there's some educators at the harvard graduate school of education the passport to the middle class used to be the high school diploma. not anymore. there's a new economy. and the new passport to the middle class is education beyond high school. and girls seem to be getting it and boys less and less. i feel that problem -- i can't find major organizations or government groups. the department of education is still talking about the shortchanged girl. because they were deeply i think...
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Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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a fascinating discovery in a harvard science lab, doctors there have isolate add protein that could be the closest thing to that illusive point of youth, the problem the protein is called jdf -- i'm sorry, one more time, the protein is called gdf 11, and it's been tested in mice. the substance appeared to turn old mice's hearts young again. >> you get these heart failure episodes what is it like. >> it feels like you can't breathe. >> dr. richard lee is ant net owens cardiologies, and has been treating her for a common heart problem. >> she has a heart that squeezing normally, but it doesn't fill. >> both harvard lee and his professor colleague, join forces to tackle this problem. >> so you found basically that when you joined an old and a young mouse together, the sizes and the structure of the hearts changed how dramatic was this change? >> it was amazing enough that even i could see it looking at the heart as a whole, and even more amazing when you started digging more deeply into the larrys of how the individual cells changes how the genes that the cells expressed change as a resul
a fascinating discovery in a harvard science lab, doctors there have isolate add protein that could be the closest thing to that illusive point of youth, the problem the protein is called jdf -- i'm sorry, one more time, the protein is called gdf 11, and it's been tested in mice. the substance appeared to turn old mice's hearts young again. >> you get these heart failure episodes what is it like. >> it feels like you can't breathe. >> dr. richard lee is ant net owens...
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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taken with the idea of dean called -- and if anybody would recall it was a classic harvard professor. he was stunned by what he saw and frankly that was very hopeful to him later on when he was writing about the place of government liberalism and the civil rights movement and how important it was. he got onto it a lot earlier than has friends kennedy who came to the subject much later frankly. that is what comes through with this and the other thing is that i think it's sad for me at least not as a historian but a student that we don't have people keeping journals and writing letters anymore the way that arthur did. when i was working on the greatest generation and subsequently my continuing inched in that subject we loved the british because everybody wrote it down. >> i think that his idea of liberalism was such that he started right after the second world war sort of promoting the idea of liberal anti-communism and this was a great movement. eleanor roosevelt and jon kenneth galbraith and many liberals who wanted to make clear that liberals did not mean communism and it's a social
taken with the idea of dean called -- and if anybody would recall it was a classic harvard professor. he was stunned by what he saw and frankly that was very hopeful to him later on when he was writing about the place of government liberalism and the civil rights movement and how important it was. he got onto it a lot earlier than has friends kennedy who came to the subject much later frankly. that is what comes through with this and the other thing is that i think it's sad for me at least not...
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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leader some say was a man of many contradictions is chuck frilich, who is a senior fellow at the harvard kennedy school. how would you characterize his leadership style? >> i think sharon was first and foremost a man of contradictions throughout his life. he was, first of all, an ardent defender of israel's security. a man who contributed to it enormously and who always emphasized the importance of israel being able to defend itself solely by itself. he was also very much a leading example of what's known in israel as the activist or the doer school of thought. it's a school of thought which did not have a lot of patience for deep, intellectual thinking, for what they would call fill local fiezing. it was about going out and doing things and tackling problems head-on. he was very pragmatic. he was a great tactician and at times maybe a very good short-term strategist but not a long-term thinker or grand strategist. that's probably one of the reasons that led him to times in some of the errors he made. finally i would say he really was a man of polar opposites. he was a man who was known
leader some say was a man of many contradictions is chuck frilich, who is a senior fellow at the harvard kennedy school. how would you characterize his leadership style? >> i think sharon was first and foremost a man of contradictions throughout his life. he was, first of all, an ardent defender of israel's security. a man who contributed to it enormously and who always emphasized the importance of israel being able to defend itself solely by itself. he was also very much a leading...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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FOXNEWSW
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he supported her and raised kids she went to harvard law school.orning news article, he says i quote, it's ironic the day after i paid the last -- >> i made the last payment and the next day, she left. >> crucial part there is it's ironic. no. expression is that it's entirely predictable. as onion is unravelling, more and more is coming out. this article written by slater, an tack book against george bush. this is a puff piece to allow wendy davis to get ahead of the story. she's attacking her republican opponent and -- as the feminists always do. she was caught telling a lie. i'm being attacked because i'm a woman! >> i guess she's not the great hope for texas after all. >> this is all i want to talk about all year. >> i can tell. >> as always, thank you for being with us. start your day with fox and friends each right now. >> who do you think is more pap larr, the president of the united states or the crack-smoking mayor of tore robert toe, rob ford? >> they wanted to get rid of this guy. they tried to get rid of this guy. they made fun of this g
he supported her and raised kids she went to harvard law school.orning news article, he says i quote, it's ironic the day after i paid the last -- >> i made the last payment and the next day, she left. >> crucial part there is it's ironic. no. expression is that it's entirely predictable. as onion is unravelling, more and more is coming out. this article written by slater, an tack book against george bush. this is a puff piece to allow wendy davis to get ahead of the story. she's...