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Sep 5, 2019
09/19
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CSPAN3
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david on the staff of harvard medical school in the 1860s. he was the one who was describing what drugs were used in different parts of the world. what he said was that some people might think it was bizarre that he's talking about such drugs as opium and hemp, because the idea was those weren't being used here, so why bother? he wrote, and i'm quoting, the caucasian races are no longer content with tobacco, coffee, and tea, and that what they would be seeking would be stronger narcotics. and that this was directly connected to the fact that society was moving so quickly. that people would need something to address their cares, their uneasiness. the exhaustion that they were feeling and again, there's this racial aspect because the focus was on professionals as they describe at the time, they use the phrase brain work a lot. people who were brain workers were the ones who really needed this kind of assistance. that they were the ones who needed to relax. and a lot of this really comes to a head as we'll be seeing in the 1870s when domestic dr
david on the staff of harvard medical school in the 1860s. he was the one who was describing what drugs were used in different parts of the world. what he said was that some people might think it was bizarre that he's talking about such drugs as opium and hemp, because the idea was those weren't being used here, so why bother? he wrote, and i'm quoting, the caucasian races are no longer content with tobacco, coffee, and tea, and that what they would be seeking would be stronger narcotics. and...
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really when they when they talked with all these scientists especially in harvard medical school. i understood that if we if to become eternal we have to become partly robots partly mutants you know we have to become creatures like in. iraq or you know all those superhero movies then i don't think i want i don't think i want i don't want to be. algorithm or you know i don't want to be fuzzy and. so we're talking about the human evolution but literature like anything else like a living organism also evolves and you're saying people are reading less and less you have 3 kids i've heard you say somewhere they don't read they chat with their friends on the internet mostly. the lives are ones because it's very young to have to have portable phones and i'm going to fight i'm good i hope i'm going to fight but with my 20 year old daughter i lost about her completely when she was 13 but this it's scary like do you feel like you're part of a dying breed because people aren't going to read any. more know she reads she reads but you know she doesn't read what they tell her to read and that's
really when they when they talked with all these scientists especially in harvard medical school. i understood that if we if to become eternal we have to become partly robots partly mutants you know we have to become creatures like in. iraq or you know all those superhero movies then i don't think i want i don't think i want i don't want to be. algorithm or you know i don't want to be fuzzy and. so we're talking about the human evolution but literature like anything else like a living organism...
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Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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i attended harvard medical school. did a year of harvard law school and actually, really, law seemed very attractive to me, so i decided to continue to pursue law. i ended up at the justice department under the reagan and bush administration, in an office called the office of the solicitor general, which handles all the united states business before the supreme court of the united states, a very exciting place to be, a really wonderful shop in the justice department. i, then, started teaching law at the university of virginia law school, and after about seven years, i moved to the university of pennsylvania law school. so, i have been an appellate practitioner, i have worked in medicine, and i have been an academic, a legal academic. lamb: go back to what you said about being a part of the bourgeoisie. what does that word mean? wax: well, i've had reason to think hard about what that word means because part of the reason that i become infamous, or infamous in my small way is that i published an op-ed about so called bou
i attended harvard medical school. did a year of harvard law school and actually, really, law seemed very attractive to me, so i decided to continue to pursue law. i ended up at the justice department under the reagan and bush administration, in an office called the office of the solicitor general, which handles all the united states business before the supreme court of the united states, a very exciting place to be, a really wonderful shop in the justice department. i, then, started teaching...
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Sep 17, 2019
09/19
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the study's lead author at harvard medical school say those experiences amount to rape. those women eventually had more sex partners, unwanted pregnancies, abortions, and reproductive health services. more than 13,000 adult women participated in the health surveys from 2011 to 2017 before the #metoo movement. >>> and still to come here, neighbors are calling it a ticking time bomb. at 10:45 their frustration with pg&e over this section of a gas pipeline that has been exposed to the elements. >>> and we will look into the chance for some sprinkles on wednesday and beyond that and the weekend after the break. >>> a man wearing fog, but underwear tries to force his way on a moving school bus. the crazy encounter captured on video. >>> authorities in southern california says nearly a naked man was taken into custody after trying to forsays had way onto a school bus. last week's interstate on interstate 5 north of los angeles was all captured on video. it shows the man pounding on the window of the bus as it sat in had bumper to bumper traffic. no children were on board at th
the study's lead author at harvard medical school say those experiences amount to rape. those women eventually had more sex partners, unwanted pregnancies, abortions, and reproductive health services. more than 13,000 adult women participated in the health surveys from 2011 to 2017 before the #metoo movement. >>> and still to come here, neighbors are calling it a ticking time bomb. at 10:45 their frustration with pg&e over this section of a gas pipeline that has been exposed to the...
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Sep 17, 2019
09/19
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KTVU
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laura fox is an internist and researcher at harvard medical school and she talked to was on the four.of women were between 12 and 18. which is a really alarming statistic at how young these women who are actually girls at the time of the results. >>> the study relied on responses from more than 13,000 adult women who participated in u.s. government health surveys from 2011 to 2017 before the etoo movement. to make the woman who was accused former oakland raider antonio brown of and sexual assault reportedly had a closed- door meeting with nfl officials today. the interview with brittany taylor is part of its investigation of the allegations she made in a lawsuit filed last week in florida. brown has denied the allegations and said his relationship with taylor, his former trainer was consensual. brown played in his first game for the patriots yesterday but did not meet with the media after the game. >>> the nike advertisement featuring colin kaepernick has won an emmy for best commercial. >> believe in something. even if it means sacrificing everything. >>> the dream crazy ad when the
laura fox is an internist and researcher at harvard medical school and she talked to was on the four.of women were between 12 and 18. which is a really alarming statistic at how young these women who are actually girls at the time of the results. >>> the study relied on responses from more than 13,000 adult women who participated in u.s. government health surveys from 2011 to 2017 before the etoo movement. to make the woman who was accused former oakland raider antonio brown of and...
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Sep 1, 2019
09/19
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a researcher from mass hospital and harvard medical school in boston. i am very happy to be here. has tasked me with a moderator role this morning. i will chime in when i feel appropriate. panel. a top expert i am honored to be on the stage with all these fantastic experts in the field of addiction. what i thought we would do to begin with -- i want to get your questions. i think that's what we all want to get. what's on your mind ? i want to make sure we get plenty of your thoughts and questions about what we need to do more research on, and the pressing issues you are facing. what i have suggested to the panel to begin with is for each panel member to come up and talk for 5-7 minutes and tell you who and give one or two newsworthy tidbits on research in addiction and what's new. why don't we -- any volunteers to start? wilson has bravely volunteered. [applause] good morning, everybody. my name is wilson compton. i am the deputy director at the national institute on drug abuse. do allthe folks that sorts of research related to drug abuse and drug addictions. we are the ones that
a researcher from mass hospital and harvard medical school in boston. i am very happy to be here. has tasked me with a moderator role this morning. i will chime in when i feel appropriate. panel. a top expert i am honored to be on the stage with all these fantastic experts in the field of addiction. what i thought we would do to begin with -- i want to get your questions. i think that's what we all want to get. what's on your mind ? i want to make sure we get plenty of your thoughts and...
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Sep 11, 2019
09/19
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KGO
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. >> reporter: the mythical search for the fountain of youth is under way here at this harvard medical schoollecular level in "lifespan." >> if i took your blood i could tell you how old you are biologically. very accurate clock. scary, right? >> like the crystal ball you don't want to look into. >> now that we have this clock of age, we can ask what accelerates it and what slows it down and what reverses it. literally turn that clock backwards by a lot. >> reporter: decades worth of research suggests turning back the hands of time involves putting the body under stress with high intensity interval training, cold exposure or calorie reduction diets like intermittent fasting. >> what we've been working on for the last 20 years is that these diets are putting us into a state of biological stress. the body gets shocked. it thinks that times are bad and it might not survive, so it fights back with everything it's got. it fights against heart disease. imagine 40,000 years ago we're running away from wild animal, these days we get on a treadmill but it's the same thing. it tells your body that ther
. >> reporter: the mythical search for the fountain of youth is under way here at this harvard medical schoollecular level in "lifespan." >> if i took your blood i could tell you how old you are biologically. very accurate clock. scary, right? >> like the crystal ball you don't want to look into. >> now that we have this clock of age, we can ask what accelerates it and what slows it down and what reverses it. literally turn that clock backwards by a lot....
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Sep 10, 2019
09/19
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CNBC
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university of pennsylvania harvard medical school all kinds of people who should have known better thatete scam. he drove that up only to half a billion in that case it was a non-profit. sophisticated people make dumb mistakes all the time. it's the old if you're so smart -- if you are so rich, why aren't you smart >> right right. both good questions, jeff. thank you. >> thank you >> yeah. i don't want to ask those of myself, actually coming up, stockfutures off th lows of the morning. we're going to talk strategy next later the chief legal officer of microsoft brad smith joins us to talk about the antitrust crackdown on big tech and a lot more stay with us at synchrony, we're changing what's possible. for instance, we know how your customers shop. and what they've already purchased. like this lamp. and we use those insights to show you what they might consider buying next. mid-century modern, nice. that way, you can keep sending them offers for the perfect products. and that keeps them coming back. how's that for changing what's possible? >>> will wall street's recent rally lose sting
university of pennsylvania harvard medical school all kinds of people who should have known better thatete scam. he drove that up only to half a billion in that case it was a non-profit. sophisticated people make dumb mistakes all the time. it's the old if you're so smart -- if you are so rich, why aren't you smart >> right right. both good questions, jeff. thank you. >> thank you >> yeah. i don't want to ask those of myself, actually coming up, stockfutures off th lows of the...
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543
Sep 2, 2019
09/19
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KPIX
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medical schools are passionate about. >> stahl: they'd better be, because otherwise, those deans at harvard and hopkins and stanford are ee the very best medical students attending n.y.u.-- for free. >> langone: you have a right to push and say, "why didn't you make kids who could afford to pay, pay?" because we really wanted to be blind, in terms of the kids coming here. and we want them to know that they owe us nothing. that, one day, if you're dealing with a patient who can't afford to have something done, you might say, "it's on me." pass it on. >> stahl: just after this story aired in april, an anonymous donor reached out and offered to pay all of elaine deleon's existing student debt, saying they want to encourage her and others to specialize in primary care where patients badly need it. elaine graduated from n.y.u. med school in may, and has now begun her residency training in new york city. ( ticking ) rooh, really? 's going on at schwab. "thank you clients"? well, investors business daily did just rank them #1 broker overall and #1 in customer service. and online equity trades are only $4.95? i mean, you can't
medical schools are passionate about. >> stahl: they'd better be, because otherwise, those deans at harvard and hopkins and stanford are ee the very best medical students attending n.y.u.-- for free. >> langone: you have a right to push and say, "why didn't you make kids who could afford to pay, pay?" because we really wanted to be blind, in terms of the kids coming here. and we want them to know that they owe us nothing. that, one day, if you're dealing with a patient who...