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Jan 26, 2010
01/10
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CNN
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heather, is that it? >> that's it. heathermills.org. >> larry: sanjay, how is haiti going to be able to handle all of these amputees? i know your specialty is brain surgery, but you know the body pretty well. it's going to be an enormous task, isn't it, assuming they get a lot of help coming in? >> yeah. there's no question about it, larry. it's going to be an enormous task. heather should know that the types of patients that this is going to help. we met a 7-year-old boy not that long ago, marie claude is his name. he's 7 years old. this house literally fell on his leg. he required an amputation. he's back there with his mother. his four other siblings and father perished in the home. he needs a leg. if he doesn't have a leg, he can't get around. if he can't get around port-au-prince, it's hard to get around in wheelchairs in port-au-prince. you need to be able to walk. with this amputation he needs help with the prosthetic device. how is port-au-prince going to be able to deal with this? it's going to be very, very t
heather, is that it? >> that's it. heathermills.org. >> larry: sanjay, how is haiti going to be able to handle all of these amputees? i know your specialty is brain surgery, but you know the body pretty well. it's going to be an enormous task, isn't it, assuming they get a lot of help coming in? >> yeah. there's no question about it, larry. it's going to be an enormous task. heather should know that the types of patients that this is going to help. we met a 7-year-old boy not...
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Jan 26, 2010
01/10
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CNN
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heather is working with physicians for peace. she's urging people to donate their old prosthetics to the people of haiti. she's an affirm tee, having lost part of her left leg in a 1993 road accident. staying with us in port-au-prince is dr. sanjay gupta, our chief medical correspondent. heather, you're working with physicians for peace. you want mobility supplies. can people actually donate their old prot thettics and it will work elsewhere? >> well, we started this program, larry, in '94 after i lost my leg. we had to find a really quick way of getting limbs to the amputees in yugoslavia. we fitted 27,000 people with the same system. in the indian earthquake when we set up the tents, with worked with the lions club charity there. so i always like to not reinvent the wheel and find out exactly which agencies, which cling clin shuns are working on the ground. so physicians for peace have been on the ground for several years. they had a great clinic for rehabilitation and prosthetic care, and now it's been destroyed. what i'm trie
heather is working with physicians for peace. she's urging people to donate their old prosthetics to the people of haiti. she's an affirm tee, having lost part of her left leg in a 1993 road accident. staying with us in port-au-prince is dr. sanjay gupta, our chief medical correspondent. heather, you're working with physicians for peace. you want mobility supplies. can people actually donate their old prot thettics and it will work elsewhere? >> well, we started this program, larry, in...
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Jan 8, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN
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whether it will be remains to be seen. >> heather?>> couple of comments on the data on unemployment. first, you are seeing folks simply going back to home countries at this point because there are no jobs here. so there's that issue. but then second, the unemployment rate does include nonlegal workers. it's a household survey. there's an undercounting, but those workers are already included in the data. there's no reason to think that legalization would somehow effect the unemployment rate from one day to the next. if anything, it would likely lower it because you have hundreds of thousands of -- i don't know exactly how many people, but somewhere in the tens thousands of work hes who because they are unemployed and unauthorized to work are looking at a much smaller job market than other workers. they may be out of work for more time than workers who work for any job. these are some of the jobs that were hit hard by the recession, particularly in construction. >> this is really the confluence on the political argument. the policy argu
whether it will be remains to be seen. >> heather?>> couple of comments on the data on unemployment. first, you are seeing folks simply going back to home countries at this point because there are no jobs here. so there's that issue. but then second, the unemployment rate does include nonlegal workers. it's a household survey. there's an undercounting, but those workers are already included in the data. there's no reason to think that legalization would somehow effect the...
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Jan 11, 2010
01/10
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whether it will be remains to be seen. >> heather?ks simply going back to home countries at this point because there are no jobs here. so there's that issue. but then second, the unemployment rate does include nonlegal workers. it's a household survey. there's an undercounting, but those workers are already included in the data. there's no reason to think that legalization would somehow effect the unemployment rate from one day to the next. if anything, it would likely lower it because you have hundreds of thousands of -- i don't know exactly how many people, but somewhere in the tens thousands of work hes who because they are unemployed and unauthorized to work are looking at a much smaller job market than other workers. so they may be out of work and searching for work for a much longer time than workers who could apply for any job. so you've really closed off opportunities for them and they've been in some of the jobs that have been hitteardest by t recession, in particular the construction. >> i think the final thought on the poli
whether it will be remains to be seen. >> heather?ks simply going back to home countries at this point because there are no jobs here. so there's that issue. but then second, the unemployment rate does include nonlegal workers. it's a household survey. there's an undercounting, but those workers are already included in the data. there's no reason to think that legalization would somehow effect the unemployment rate from one day to the next. if anything, it would likely lower it because...
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Jan 8, 2010
01/10
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heather, do you want to start? >> i can do that. first,-- i could not read my own handwriting there. first the question of benefits and health care. i think communities pay for that regardless, so we are only in the can that one tiny slice of the puzzle when you think just because somebody doesn't have health care or can't get medicaid that communities are not paying for that. it may not come to the federal system but it is coming either to more people becoming sicker and sicker in using emergency rooms or using other public health facilities or getting sick and because they don't have basic labor standards, showing up to works that. many of these workers work in the food industry. they show up sicken that lowers productivity because it makes everybody six so we are paying for this regardless. it is just who is paying for it and how our restructuring it? are we making the communities that have the most problems deal with it or we aggregating this across a wider range of people through doing it for making folks legal? second, the que
heather, do you want to start? >> i can do that. first,-- i could not read my own handwriting there. first the question of benefits and health care. i think communities pay for that regardless, so we are only in the can that one tiny slice of the puzzle when you think just because somebody doesn't have health care or can't get medicaid that communities are not paying for that. it may not come to the federal system but it is coming either to more people becoming sicker and sicker in using...
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Jan 3, 2010
01/10
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WBAL
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time for the business news with heather from "the baltimore business journal." first, white march is a local developer with a vision? >> they will spend $1 billion building a humongous complex. two hotels, over 1000 homes, and a mass of all set -- a massive office park. they have some hurdles to clear in terms of zoning. but that is what they want to do. >> of their we go. so, how are they doing this now? >> interesting, right? >> yes. >> therir ceo was the business person of the year. they are well capitalized with business trust. they are giving us a lot of hope in the development community where everyone else has not been able to finance projects. >> you are talking about these small businesses and local start-ups that are coming through the recession. something is going on to allow them to start up. what is that concoction happening? >> it is interesting. we picked 10 of them to watch during this recession. in past recessions it has shown the big companies have started up with small ideas. procter and gamble, general lechter, general motors, and most recentl
time for the business news with heather from "the baltimore business journal." first, white march is a local developer with a vision? >> they will spend $1 billion building a humongous complex. two hotels, over 1000 homes, and a mass of all set -- a massive office park. they have some hurdles to clear in terms of zoning. but that is what they want to do. >> of their we go. so, how are they doing this now? >> interesting, right? >> yes. >> therir ceo was...
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Jan 17, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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when they choose came over during the fifth heather point* and after the fall of the third reich they came over in the huge waves. where were they going to live? what water were they going to use? where would the road speak? have the transfer agreement never occurred in the 1930's there would have not been the infrastructure to rapid the of sorg all of these issues. the nazi program was continued, as you well know after world war ii by the arabs. they had approximately 1 million jews from arab lands from the fall of the third reich. these people were not put into refugee camps but quickly absorbed. calling the ministry of absorption and they've sort the people and so the answer to gilbert it is the state of israel not be aided with the most important impetus during the depression years, it would have been coming i think difficult to of the sorg hundreds of thousands of jews who came on mass from those that follow. and this was anticipated. >> i have another question from professor from the executive director of scholars of peace in the middle east. there were other transfer agreements
when they choose came over during the fifth heather point* and after the fall of the third reich they came over in the huge waves. where were they going to live? what water were they going to use? where would the road speak? have the transfer agreement never occurred in the 1930's there would have not been the infrastructure to rapid the of sorg all of these issues. the nazi program was continued, as you well know after world war ii by the arabs. they had approximately 1 million jews from arab...
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heather sent these in. beautiful, pretty pictures, she says winter wonderland outside the window of her apartment complex. okay. it is beautiful until you have to drive in it. if you've ever been in the south when there's ice, you know that the actual -- definitely the weather does not make for good conditions. all right. here's a look at what it looks like in knoxville, tennessee. you can see icy roads on beaverton road. look at the hills off in the distance. all those cars could not get down that hill or they came down terribly fast and ended up at the bottom in a heap. there's an example of some of those accidents that we are seeing across much of the south due to this tremendously treacherous weather. all right. it is still snowing and sleeting not in tennessee, not in north carolina but in florida. we have snow and sleet reported. flagler beach, just north of daytona beach, where we had sleet earlier, reporting sleet mixing with snow at times. that's right. this is florida i'm talking about. the temper
heather sent these in. beautiful, pretty pictures, she says winter wonderland outside the window of her apartment complex. okay. it is beautiful until you have to drive in it. if you've ever been in the south when there's ice, you know that the actual -- definitely the weather does not make for good conditions. all right. here's a look at what it looks like in knoxville, tennessee. you can see icy roads on beaverton road. look at the hills off in the distance. all those cars could not get down...
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Jan 14, 2010
01/10
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WETA
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commissioner heather murren, retired merrill lynch dictor, pressed goldn sachs chief exutive lloyd blankfein on the issue. goldmais expected to award billions of dollars in bones next week. >> how can you reconle these things, gin what's going on in the couny economically? and do you feel thatour compensaon adequately reflects yourirm's behaviors, what the standards ofhe times are? >> if you look at the hiory of our compensationthe compensation alwaycorrelated with theesults of the firm, as it did last year. >> holman: blankin noted that he and other top execuves at goldman dinot receive bonuses last yea commission chairman phil angelides, aormer democratic treasurer of cifornia, sharply questioned him about goldm's practice opackaging risky mortgages anselling them to investorat the same time the firm took fincial positions tting against those troubled assets. >> what we do is ris manageme. cause we had this risk, becauswe were accumulating positions-- which, by the y, we acqred from clients who wanted to sell them to us-- have to out ourselves and provide ansource the other side of the tra
commissioner heather murren, retired merrill lynch dictor, pressed goldn sachs chief exutive lloyd blankfein on the issue. goldmais expected to award billions of dollars in bones next week. >> how can you reconle these things, gin what's going on in the couny economically? and do you feel thatour compensaon adequately reflects yourirm's behaviors, what the standards ofhe times are? >> if you look at the hiory of our compensationthe compensation alwaycorrelated with theesults of the...
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Jan 10, 2010
01/10
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i wanted to run against heather wilson and the reason i wanted to run against heather wilson is becausevery time she talked, something gets passed and she was going for the senate and that's exactly the way i wanted to get in. and any way, they showed what he said and i don't see anything racist. he said he's light skinned african-american. it's true. what's wrong with that? there's something else - i didn't - like i said, i tuned in about five minutes late and i didn't even know what this was. light skinned african-american with no - i don't know i lost it. no negro dialect unless he wanted to have it. yes. a light skinned african-american. true. with no negro dialect. you know, the negro dialect, because i lived or listened to you every morning and people have to say that they are african-american because if you) educated, you - you know like i'm spanish. my name is randy sanchez and i'm spanish. do have a hispanic dialect. i don't think so. i have an american dialect. i was brought up in american. that's true, justice and american way party. what i'm running for is healthcare. i cann
i wanted to run against heather wilson and the reason i wanted to run against heather wilson is becausevery time she talked, something gets passed and she was going for the senate and that's exactly the way i wanted to get in. and any way, they showed what he said and i don't see anything racist. he said he's light skinned african-american. it's true. what's wrong with that? there's something else - i didn't - like i said, i tuned in about five minutes late and i didn't even know what this was....
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Jan 30, 2010
01/10
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CSPAN2
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if you want a quick history of this in an interesting way, it shows up in heather thompson's detroit, who's detroit, and it's a fascinating case. i wonder if you want to say por about those kinds of uses of race and this notion about illness, which would seem to come from the other side. >> so you're talking about actually coming in to the popular domain or -- >> yeah. as an actual defense of actions. >> right. right. i definitely, as i was trying to say, i only do it in a tiny way here. there were certain issues that get very short shreft in this talk. i was just getting back to your first question, biological psychiatry, throughout the course of the reef search on schizophrenia, people have argued that there's a confluence of developmental, cultural, social factors in addition to biological, and so i have oversimplified that and hopefully don't do that too badly in the book and secondly is this idea of what's the relationality between the cultural politics of the civil rights movement and what's being understood as schizophrenic illness, so the one financing i did produce evidence f
if you want a quick history of this in an interesting way, it shows up in heather thompson's detroit, who's detroit, and it's a fascinating case. i wonder if you want to say por about those kinds of uses of race and this notion about illness, which would seem to come from the other side. >> so you're talking about actually coming in to the popular domain or -- >> yeah. as an actual defense of actions. >> right. right. i definitely, as i was trying to say, i only do it in a...
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Jan 1, 2010
01/10
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i was chris warner going to get out there or heather mcdonald?e have so many fantastic in new york you could go on and on and on. with so many intestate right-wing writers out there and you're banging your head against the wall. just to get attention for a book. when it's not hard for me to get on tv, what does that see about all the conservatives people know about? >> host: he also claimed and others have said you try to be funny, but he called it a sophomoric sort of view of things and it keeps people from taking you seriously according to him. i mean, what do you say to people who criticize your humor? >> guest: i mean, often these are set in front of audiences and i mean i suppose you could bring in a humor analyst to determine whether or not something is funny. i just know when a thousand people in the audience laugh. that means it's funny. somebody asked me about this on the radio yesterday. i was standing in the airport and there is a man standing next to me and she asked me about a line in my book. i was describing how the democrats compe
i was chris warner going to get out there or heather mcdonald?e have so many fantastic in new york you could go on and on and on. with so many intestate right-wing writers out there and you're banging your head against the wall. just to get attention for a book. when it's not hard for me to get on tv, what does that see about all the conservatives people know about? >> host: he also claimed and others have said you try to be funny, but he called it a sophomoric sort of view of things and...