70
70
Feb 11, 2018
02/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
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the game itself was mainly watching kareem abdul-jabbar take on dayton single-handedly if he needed to. not a very close game. by the last few minutes, ucla is playing with dayton and not even trying to hit their shots. a remarkable championship game, but very interesting how the ucla brand becomes imprinted on college basketball in the 1960's. this is the beginning of the error that begins -- that continues for the next three years. time in professional basketball, interestingly enough, the nba has over 30 teams right now. only 101967, there were franchises. most cities do not have a professional basketball team. the playoffs, now they go about two months, they were much more brief. in the end, the two best teams basically pretty much met, even though the biggest rivalry in the nba at this time was a transplanted team that at one point was the syracuse nationals, amazing that in a small city like syracuse they had an nba franchise. they moved to philadelphia and became the 76ers. their opponent was the team that had representative -- had untilented philadelphia three years before. to
the game itself was mainly watching kareem abdul-jabbar take on dayton single-handedly if he needed to. not a very close game. by the last few minutes, ucla is playing with dayton and not even trying to hit their shots. a remarkable championship game, but very interesting how the ucla brand becomes imprinted on college basketball in the 1960's. this is the beginning of the error that begins -- that continues for the next three years. time in professional basketball, interestingly enough, the...
117
117
Feb 28, 2018
02/18
by
WPVI
tv
eye 117
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her husband, ab dull jabbar tells me he escaped from one form of death only to find another. but here, he says, it's slow. back in syria, death came quicker. and this is why they're here. the war in syria that continues to rage. last week this was the scene in the district of ghouta, one of the last rebel-held areas. over 400 were killed, almost a quarter children. in 2015, this crisis hit a tipping point. with packed stations, crossing the perilous seas and the children, like this 2-year-old washed up on a beach, drowned with his mother and brother simply because they tried to reach safety. thousands of migrants and refugees have died in the waters that surround europe over the last few years. although the absolute numbers have gone down, there's been a significant rise just since the fall. and imagine how desperate you must be to put your kids in a rickety boat and send them out across these seas. in the last four years it's thought more than 13,000 people have died or gone missing in the seas around europe. and without the greek coast guard countless more would have drowne
her husband, ab dull jabbar tells me he escaped from one form of death only to find another. but here, he says, it's slow. back in syria, death came quicker. and this is why they're here. the war in syria that continues to rage. last week this was the scene in the district of ghouta, one of the last rebel-held areas. over 400 were killed, almost a quarter children. in 2015, this crisis hit a tipping point. with packed stations, crossing the perilous seas and the children, like this 2-year-old...
41
41
Feb 10, 2018
02/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 41
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backin back in jabbar, i'm back injabbar, i'm really starting to see how determined this young countrymet the robocop is, and join unit that will watch over everything from the sky. now, i am meeting the world's first minister for artificial intelligence, and his ambitious about what comes next. 0ne of my favourite sayings from the tech industry is larry page of google said almost every time we do something crazy, we make progress. do you find the same thing? many of the ideas, many of the top tech companies from around the world, whether it is from the uk or china, the common denominator is that they do not fear something that is seemingly impossible. they come up with an idea that might seem crazy at first. so with that mentality and with that idea, the brightest ideas from around the world come. how do you make sure that you bring all of the people of the uae along on that journey for digital change and innovation? uae is very unique. we have very young population, that population can be retrained and repurposed in positions that are being created in the future. we understand the op
backin back in jabbar, i'm back injabbar, i'm really starting to see how determined this young countrymet the robocop is, and join unit that will watch over everything from the sky. now, i am meeting the world's first minister for artificial intelligence, and his ambitious about what comes next. 0ne of my favourite sayings from the tech industry is larry page of google said almost every time we do something crazy, we make progress. do you find the same thing? many of the ideas, many of the top...
145
145
Feb 15, 2018
02/18
by
KRON
tv
eye 145
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greatest college player in history for his run at ucla...second only to fellow bruin kareem abdul jabbarw alcindor as broadcasting becomes more poilitically correct....walton becomes more and more off the wall....espn pretty much hires interchangable broqdcasters with the exception of walton,,, who can take a run of the mill game in february and turn it in to a conversation piece for the audience. warrior-portland highlites next hour... if you followed the raiders last season i guess this wont come as a shoick...but none-the-less after 18 seasons the raiders released placekicker sebastina janowkowski....in 2000 al davis made him the only placekicker in history to a a teams number one draft choice....he vecame the first man to conmsistently connect from 50 and 60 yards....but janokowski fell victum to a back injuryand spent last season watching bay area native gorgia tavecchio do the raider scoring.. no word if janokowski will try and continue his career. 40 is 40 but no secret john gruden wanted his own man in there back with warriors highlites in one hour....right now i'm on my way to h
greatest college player in history for his run at ucla...second only to fellow bruin kareem abdul jabbarw alcindor as broadcasting becomes more poilitically correct....walton becomes more and more off the wall....espn pretty much hires interchangable broqdcasters with the exception of walton,,, who can take a run of the mill game in february and turn it in to a conversation piece for the audience. warrior-portland highlites next hour... if you followed the raiders last season i guess this wont...
121
121
Feb 5, 2018
02/18
by
KNTV
tv
eye 121
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i think about athletes like kareem abdul-jabbar of there was a moment there where he is now very activeali feeling the need because he's an african-american man to speak up. do players playing now feel pressure to speak up? do you think they want to speak up because of what's going on or do you think they would naturally already be doing this? >> that's a great question. i do think that when the president weighed in, it energized african-american athletes to an extent unified them in a way they had not been before. just how much pressure they feel i think depends on their position on the team and the team they play for, the owner's stance. there are some owners who are more willing to allow the players a great deal of freedom of expression and there were other players who aren't. let's face it, if you are a star or if you are an indispensable member of a team, you have more latitude than the guy who's just barely hanging on for the job minimum. >> bryant, you interviewed mike ditka. i'm not going to play the clip because i'm low on time here, a couple years ago. and we were all stunned
i think about athletes like kareem abdul-jabbar of there was a moment there where he is now very activeali feeling the need because he's an african-american man to speak up. do players playing now feel pressure to speak up? do you think they want to speak up because of what's going on or do you think they would naturally already be doing this? >> that's a great question. i do think that when the president weighed in, it energized african-american athletes to an extent unified them in a...
166
166
Feb 5, 2018
02/18
by
KCSM
tv
eye 166
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abdul-jabbar: i think eric's role in race relations has been showing all americans that a black american handle a job. color has nothing to do with your abilities. holder: in things racial, we have always been and we, i believe, continue to be in too many ways essentially a nation of cowards. muhammad: the speech he gave to the employees of the justice department, um, about the importance of black history and its role in achieving justice in america. henderson: he believed that real change, lasting change began with confronting the hard truths that may have stood as barriers to advancing your goals. murguia: we saw this in last year's election with countless attempts to suppress the vote of communities of color. stevenson: minorities, those who will never have the political power to protect themselves fully through the political process, that, for me, is the most important thing the justice department can do. ifill: the day the shelby versus holder case was decided, the case in which the supreme court struck down a--a key provision of the voting rights act, eric holder convened a number
abdul-jabbar: i think eric's role in race relations has been showing all americans that a black american handle a job. color has nothing to do with your abilities. holder: in things racial, we have always been and we, i believe, continue to be in too many ways essentially a nation of cowards. muhammad: the speech he gave to the employees of the justice department, um, about the importance of black history and its role in achieving justice in america. henderson: he believed that real change,...