211
211
Jun 23, 2013
06/13
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CNNW
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i thought what would isaac newton do. for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. wton's third law. i needed to find a force equal to my father. someone my father would listen to. maybe hawa could be my force. i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going on without me. she really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry, but he agreed to hear me out. i told him all the good things the radio show is doing like how i was able to help her go back to mother. by being on the radio i could help even more girls like her. hawa said i should have another chance. together we were a force to be reckoned with. finally papa agreed to let me carry on with the show only if i promised to come straight home after the show and let him or my moms know where i was. i was back on the air. now everything is cool again. you out there watch this face because one day you're going to see dr. mariama's miracle mystery show. now there's nothing to stop me, nothing in the world. nothing in the uni
i thought what would isaac newton do. for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. wton's third law. i needed to find a force equal to my father. someone my father would listen to. maybe hawa could be my force. i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going on without me. she really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry, but he agreed to hear me out. i told him all the good things the...
215
215
Jun 23, 2013
06/13
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CNNW
tv
eye 215
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i thought what would isaac newton do. for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. third law. i needed to find a force equal to my father. someone my father would listen to. maybe hawa could be my force. i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going on without me. she really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry but reagreed to hear me out. i told him all the good things the radio show is doing like how i was able to help her go back to mother. by being on the radio i could help even more girls like her. hawa said i should have another chance. together we were a force to be reckoned with. finally papa agreed to let me carry on with the show only if i promised to come straight home after the show and let him or my moms know where i was. i was back on the air. now everything is cool again. you out there watch this face because one day you're going to see dr. mariama's miracle mystery show. now there's nothing to stop me, nothing in the world. nothing in the universe. b
i thought what would isaac newton do. for every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. third law. i needed to find a force equal to my father. someone my father would listen to. maybe hawa could be my force. i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going on without me. she really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry but reagreed to hear me out. i told him all the good things the radio...
128
128
Jun 17, 2013
06/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 128
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i thought, what would isaac newton do? for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. rce equa& to my father, someone my father would listen to. maybe halla could be my force. so i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going ithout me. $alla really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry but he agreed to hear me out. i told them all the good things the radio show was doing, like the way i was able to help satu go back to her mother. by being on the radio, i could help even more girls like her. halla said i should have another chan(q together, we were a force to be reckoned with. finally, papa agreed to let me carry on with the show. only if i promised to come straight home afterwards and always let him or my moms know where i was. i was back on the air. now everything is cool again. so you out there, watch this space because one day you're going to see dr. mariama's now there'áh'othing to stop me. nothing in the world. nothing in the universe because i am the lucky one. be
i thought, what would isaac newton do? for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. rce equa& to my father, someone my father would listen to. maybe halla could be my force. so i borrowed a radio and turned it to eagle 91.3. i hated to hear the show going ithout me. $alla really listened. she liked what she heard. she told papa that he might have made a mistake. papa was still angry but he agreed to hear me out. i told them all the good things the radio show was doing, like the...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
137
137
Jun 16, 2013
06/13
by
WHUT
tv
eye 137
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that is isaac newton getting hit on the head with an apple. you suddenly figured it out?etty much, i was thinking, maybe if i can combine two different fields together, that is where we get this revolutionary innovation. when you combine two completely unrelated fields with a really elegant solution. >> in terms of your enthusiasm, i am thinking how it might play with people in your own age in your own country and also here. hearing somebody talk about science and the way that you do. do you think you can turn people on the science? >> definitely. when people at my school see that -- i am just this regular kid of the school. just a regular public school. inner-city baltimore. a lot of bad kids there. but when they see me being able to do this great science, they think, hey, maybe i can do that. now there is a lot more people getting into science and being able to do this amazing research. >> that in and of itself is quite inspirational. >> it is massive to inspire the next generation of kids and young adults to get into science and make a difference for patients in the cl
that is isaac newton getting hit on the head with an apple. you suddenly figured it out?etty much, i was thinking, maybe if i can combine two different fields together, that is where we get this revolutionary innovation. when you combine two completely unrelated fields with a really elegant solution. >> in terms of your enthusiasm, i am thinking how it might play with people in your own age in your own country and also here. hearing somebody talk about science and the way that you do. do...
587
587
Jun 22, 2013
06/13
by
KGO
tv
eye 587
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quote 1
. >> you all know more science than isaac newton, than albert einstein did. >> reporter: and about those giving his speech, he leaned over and asked the dean, the president, if he could shake every graduate's hand. all 1,889 of them. >> as i say to everybody, i don't think they are going to remember what i said, but they will remember how they felt, how they feel at that time, and that is very important. dare i say it, change the world! i really feel that way. everybody can make the world better. >> and so we choose bill nye, the science guy, and >>> breaking news on the scene of a search of san francisco bay ai. van is in the water and rescue efforts now underway. >> tonight the gang murder of a 16-year-old boy and the police response getting underway now to suppress the growing violence. >> in sacramento governor brown denied parole to a baby killer but a court reversed it. now, a california family wants the governor to intervene. >> grass roots movements to stop a north coast highway bypass, you'll see demonstrators tonight. >> you can see sky 7 is over the scene right now. divers you
. >> you all know more science than isaac newton, than albert einstein did. >> reporter: and about those giving his speech, he leaned over and asked the dean, the president, if he could shake every graduate's hand. all 1,889 of them. >> as i say to everybody, i don't think they are going to remember what i said, but they will remember how they felt, how they feel at that time, and that is very important. dare i say it, change the world! i really feel that way. everybody can...
84
84
Jun 16, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 84
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harvey said this is the gray matter of the greatest scientific thinker since isaac newton and we have one chance, just one chance to preserve his brain. not like we can go back a month from now and decide we want to do this. we have to do it tonight or never and i think a lot of us might have been kind of tempted in the same way harvey was but i am not sure we all would have done what harvey did which was to extract einstein's brain without permission, to sell einstein backup, the body to the family without telling them he was doing this. unfortunately for him, harvey was very excited about this kind of war, told a few friends, also told his family including his small son who went to school the next day, they were talking about einstein, son's hand goes in the air and you can't blame the kid, hand goes in the air and he blurts out my dad has einstein's brain. people start talking, thomas hardy's friends started talking, newspapers got a hold of the story and if you can imagine einstein's family was not very happy to find out what happened to his brain this way. this isn't the first ce
harvey said this is the gray matter of the greatest scientific thinker since isaac newton and we have one chance, just one chance to preserve his brain. not like we can go back a month from now and decide we want to do this. we have to do it tonight or never and i think a lot of us might have been kind of tempted in the same way harvey was but i am not sure we all would have done what harvey did which was to extract einstein's brain without permission, to sell einstein backup, the body to the...
716
716
Jun 3, 2013
06/13
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KPIX
tv
eye 716
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. >> simon: there were remarkable documents-- letters signed by mark twain, sir isaac newton, charlesckens; a document penned by lorenzo de medici 533 years ago; an epitaph written by benjamin franklin for himself... and he wrote, "lies here food for the worms, yet the work shall not be lost." pretty good stuff. a letter written by john hancock with a real john hancock signature. and for 20th-century buffs, there was the original reading copy of f.d.r.'s 1937 inaugural address-- this one... >> president franklin roosevelt: one-third of a nation, ill housed, ill clad, ill nourished... >> rosenstein: it was a rainy day. in fact, the reading copy of the speech, the document the president read from that day was waterlogged. and you can see that on the document that we seized from mr. landau. >> simon: and landau didn't just steal from historical libraries. he had taken his campaign of kindness all the way to the white house, befriending president clinton's former secretary, betty currie, who made the mistake of inviting landau to her house. landau was pretty good at making friends with pe
. >> simon: there were remarkable documents-- letters signed by mark twain, sir isaac newton, charlesckens; a document penned by lorenzo de medici 533 years ago; an epitaph written by benjamin franklin for himself... and he wrote, "lies here food for the worms, yet the work shall not be lost." pretty good stuff. a letter written by john hancock with a real john hancock signature. and for 20th-century buffs, there was the original reading copy of f.d.r.'s 1937 inaugural address--...
64
64
Jun 22, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 64
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tell me this, that, you know, we're using technology that isaac newton had. we are one step up from a quill. [laughter] it's crazy. this is, of course, what happens when you have a mark place in which there's no need for consumers and producers to negotiate with one another. everyone's interest are adverse to everyone's health. there no venue repeated relationship that make life easier everywhere else. so the thing about where we are with the money end of the situation is simply that these obligations are never going to be had. they're not. we have got, you know, again by account something like $140 trillion of liabilities and 0 to pay for them. if you ever try to talk to people about the national debt and things related to. when you say trillion people go -- numbers all sound alike at the certain point. i'm an english major. anything above 16, you know, i have a check twice. $100 billion, $1 trillion. it sounds the same. i was at the house speaking to a couple of members of congress, and they have some level know the difference between $100 billion and $100
tell me this, that, you know, we're using technology that isaac newton had. we are one step up from a quill. [laughter] it's crazy. this is, of course, what happens when you have a mark place in which there's no need for consumers and producers to negotiate with one another. everyone's interest are adverse to everyone's health. there no venue repeated relationship that make life easier everywhere else. so the thing about where we are with the money end of the situation is simply that these...
416
416
Jun 8, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 416
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quote 0
members included, of course, robert boyle, robert hook, christopher wren and realitier, of course, isaac newtons, edmund holly. when they first started gathering, they said, okay, let's figure out what we know. what's the state of engine? knowledge? and they went to kercher's weeks to do it -- books to do it. i love the way kercher sort of illustrates how you can be a genius and a crackpot. maybe most geniuses are crackpots, i don't know. maybe that ties into edward -- moybridge's story as well. he, his legacy is very interesting, you know? he was a progressive in certain ways. he was one of the first people to describe what could be seen through a microscope. this was in his book on optics in 1646, and he was perhaps the first person to study human blood with a microscope. it's an ongoing debate. i won't say how active it is about whether to give him credit for the germ theory of disease because he looked at the blood of plague victims. the plague came through rome in 1656, and he -- it's not clear what he saw, it's not clear exactly, you know, how sophisticated this microscope was. but he loo
members included, of course, robert boyle, robert hook, christopher wren and realitier, of course, isaac newtons, edmund holly. when they first started gathering, they said, okay, let's figure out what we know. what's the state of engine? knowledge? and they went to kercher's weeks to do it -- books to do it. i love the way kercher sort of illustrates how you can be a genius and a crackpot. maybe most geniuses are crackpots, i don't know. maybe that ties into edward -- moybridge's story as...
103
103
Jun 30, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 103
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quote 0
founded, very famous members include of course, robert boyle, robert hook, and then later of course isaac newton and others. when i first started gathering they said okay, let's figure out what we know, what's the state of knowledge, and they went to the books to do it. i love sort of the way in which, you know, he illustrates how you can be sort of a genius and the crackpot. maybe that ties into edward muybridge's story as well. is legacy is very interesting. he was a progressive in certain ways. he was one of the first people to describe what could be seen through a microscope, in his book on the optics in 1546. it was perhaps one of those, perhaps the first person to study human blood with a microscope. i won't say it's an ongoing, or it's an ongoing debate. i won't say how active it is, about whether to give him credit for the term theory disease because he looked at the blood of plague victims. the plague came to rome in 1566, and it's not clea that what he . it's not clear exactly how sophisticated this microscope was, but he looked and he saw what he called a multitude of invisible little
founded, very famous members include of course, robert boyle, robert hook, and then later of course isaac newton and others. when i first started gathering they said okay, let's figure out what we know, what's the state of knowledge, and they went to the books to do it. i love sort of the way in which, you know, he illustrates how you can be sort of a genius and the crackpot. maybe that ties into edward muybridge's story as well. is legacy is very interesting. he was a progressive in certain...