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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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bob woodward, gloria borger, michael duffy and lesley stahl.e book, i want to hear about your date. well, he showed up in a van. [ women ] oh-awww. [ voices in background ] [ female announcer ] swapportunity. the opportunity to swap a higher calorie snack for a delicious 90 calorie yoplait light. ♪ sorry... about your date, the details of your date. [ female announcer ] just one swap a day helps keep the calories away. yoplait. it is so good. >>> good evening. i'm dine divider. >> i'm terry mcsweeney. we begin with breaking news out of boston where nbc news is reporting the surviving marathon bomber is communicating with investigators with handwritten responses. i don't ca dzhokhar tsarnaev is -- charge may come tomorrow. >> also today many pause to remember the victims and reflect on what has been an overwhelming week in the city. >> jie gray has been following and has the aftermath from boston. >> reporter: they continue to clean out the area inside the crime scene. as more of the city begins to open, many today were drawn here to the area ne
bob woodward, gloria borger, michael duffy and lesley stahl.e book, i want to hear about your date. well, he showed up in a van. [ women ] oh-awww. [ voices in background ] [ female announcer ] swapportunity. the opportunity to swap a higher calorie snack for a delicious 90 calorie yoplait light. ♪ sorry... about your date, the details of your date. [ female announcer ] just one swap a day helps keep the calories away. yoplait. it is so good. >>> good evening. i'm dine divider....
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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KNTV
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lesley stahl? >> well, i want to pick up on what we talked about before. i think we're going to find out how much information about us is out there easily accessible including our faces. chris: ok. >> immigration reform, big issue. i think it's going to pass the senate. 70% chance it's going to pass the senate. chris: 70 votes? >> i don't know. but what i'm hearing is there's a lot of concern about when it comes to the house because the speaker has this unruley bunch under control for spending issues and budget issues. if they don't vote on it this summer which is lookingless likely then it could be in the fall and then you get involved in all kinds of elections. chris: mike duffy? >> when the presidential library opens in dallas, texas, the former president would have raced more than $500 million just destroying oh -- all previous fundraising efforts. chris: how? >> hard work. he calls up a donor and asks for three. he usually gets it. chris: that's an old fundraising trick. it makes people feel hefty. up next, will the n.r.a. block wider gun background l
lesley stahl? >> well, i want to pick up on what we talked about before. i think we're going to find out how much information about us is out there easily accessible including our faces. chris: ok. >> immigration reform, big issue. i think it's going to pass the senate. 70% chance it's going to pass the senate. chris: 70 votes? >> i don't know. but what i'm hearing is there's a lot of concern about when it comes to the house because the speaker has this unruley bunch under...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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KPIX
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. >> i'm lesley stahl. >> i'm morley safer. >> i'm bob simon. >> i'm lara logan. >> i'm scott pelley. those stories tonight on "60 minutes." >> cbs money watch update sponsored by: >> . >> glor: good evening. federal budget cuts hit the f.a.a. today with air traffic controllers told to stay home one day every two weeks. apple reports earnings tuesday amid increasing investor concern. the stock is off 40% since september. and gas prices at $3.51 a gallon are down 17 cents in a month. i'm jeff glor, cbs news. [ woman ] i take one prevacid 24 hr for frequent heartburn and coffee is coffee, a quick bite is a quick bite, and play time is play time, because for 24 hours my heartburn is lights out. prevent acid for 24 hours with prevacid 24 hour. introducing bbm video with screen share. hey aleigh. hey! carol! update on 171 woodward..... let's other people see what's on your screen. and these are the material studies. the dog was my suggestion. aleigh. aleigh! it's great. but i'm on vacation for another week, remember? oh, right! i'll call you tomorrow! ok. but don't. carol? the blackberry z
. >> i'm lesley stahl. >> i'm morley safer. >> i'm bob simon. >> i'm lara logan. >> i'm scott pelley. those stories tonight on "60 minutes." >> cbs money watch update sponsored by: >> . >> glor: good evening. federal budget cuts hit the f.a.a. today with air traffic controllers told to stay home one day every two weeks. apple reports earnings tuesday amid increasing investor concern. the stock is off 40% since september. and gas prices...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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KRCB
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>> well, when he mets lesley he's made very uncomfortable by him because he's such good man. and a good man really, really puts jacob off and reminds him of his father who was a very good man, very disapproving of him and jacob is a bit of a rake by nature and it's his instinct to bring a good man down and when he sees masha the first time he thinks to himself "maybe i could use her to bring him down." and gradually he realizes that one of the powers he has as this reincarnated -- well, at first he thinks he's an angel and realizes he's a fly-- this creature, this demon is that he can speak inside of people -- certain people's heads. and these two characters he can get right inside of them. and he begins to kind of affect their narrative, or so he thinks he's affecting the narratives. of the what degree he's doing it and to what degree something else is doing it is one of the questions. >> rose: and jacob is your narrator? >> yes, he's my narrator. >> rose: and the role of the narrator here? >> well, he is -- >> rose: he sees everything? >> he sees everything to a degree. he
>> well, when he mets lesley he's made very uncomfortable by him because he's such good man. and a good man really, really puts jacob off and reminds him of his father who was a very good man, very disapproving of him and jacob is a bit of a rake by nature and it's his instinct to bring a good man down and when he sees masha the first time he thinks to himself "maybe i could use her to bring him down." and gradually he realizes that one of the powers he has as this reincarnated...
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history lesley. the truth is i always tend to root for the underdog and i felt an attraction to these men who were taking on the world's largest oil corporations and the corrupt government of africa's most populous nation so i took my camera to nigeria to try to meet them. bob as bad. guy i bought your new book. and you usually go i'm going to tell you through. all that who got you into so i got it all why did not you call we don't let you fall stuff yes or like you. yes or you want my butt out. yes. yes or no but i don't and i doubt yes a few forty think you see only what you see don't add. but. i decided to follow the camp commander's advice traveling with some fishermen i set out to see for myself what life is like in the niger delta and hopes of understanding the conditions out of which the militancy was born. my brother such a life is sweet it's just that there is no money. manager good life is not easy. but i had to keep a low profile numerous foreign journalists and documentary filmmakers had
history lesley. the truth is i always tend to root for the underdog and i felt an attraction to these men who were taking on the world's largest oil corporations and the corrupt government of africa's most populous nation so i took my camera to nigeria to try to meet them. bob as bad. guy i bought your new book. and you usually go i'm going to tell you through. all that who got you into so i got it all why did not you call we don't let you fall stuff yes or like you. yes or you want my butt...
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Apr 15, 2013
04/13
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KPIX
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and i don't cry very much, lesley, but i cried. and it was hard, but i enjoyed it.enjoy risking that, because i felt like i was being freed up in some way. >> stahl: he invited his wife to join him in therapy and told her for the first time about the abuse. you had no idea? >> anne dickey: yeah. you know, i used to say, "well, how come you didn't trust me," you know? and, and he'd say, "i didn't trust anybody," you know? "i didn't trust anybody." >> stahl: he says the therapy, along with his christian faith, helped turn his life around at home and at the ballpark. he was able to concentrate almost obsessively on his pitch. over the next two years, he threw the knuckleball thousands of times. and when he wasn't throwing the ball, he was gripping it, even as he drove. do you think that if you hadn't had the breakthrough in therapy that you would have had the one in baseball? >> r.a. dickey: no, i think they had to happen simultaneously. >> stahl: he says he became a more attentive father of his four children and a better husband. he recently reconciled with his mother
and i don't cry very much, lesley, but i cried. and it was hard, but i enjoyed it.enjoy risking that, because i felt like i was being freed up in some way. >> stahl: he invited his wife to join him in therapy and told her for the first time about the abuse. you had no idea? >> anne dickey: yeah. you know, i used to say, "well, how come you didn't trust me," you know? and, and he'd say, "i didn't trust anybody," you know? "i didn't trust anybody."...
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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i'm lesley stahl. the information technology revolution changes our world on a daily basis, but one thing that doesn't change is our fascination with the so-called nerds who not only transformed society but became billionaires in the process. this edition features a trio of these tech titans: bill gates, the man who created the world's most valuable software company, microsoft; mark zuckerberg, the young, geeky computer programmer behind the internet phenomenon facebook; and sergey brin, the cofounder of google. we'll begin with brin. has there ever been a brand name like google? in less than five years, it went from an idea to a global verb, as in, "i googled this," or, "i google that," or, "i google you." back in 2006, shortly after the company went public, google opened its doors for the first time and let us google them. >> we have north america. >> oh, look at that. google cofounder sergey brin is showing us an electronic globe that displays the mountains of google searches happening around the wo
i'm lesley stahl. the information technology revolution changes our world on a daily basis, but one thing that doesn't change is our fascination with the so-called nerds who not only transformed society but became billionaires in the process. this edition features a trio of these tech titans: bill gates, the man who created the world's most valuable software company, microsoft; mark zuckerberg, the young, geeky computer programmer behind the internet phenomenon facebook; and sergey brin, the...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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lesley stahl first talked with mark zuckerberg in 2008, and three years later, we sat down with mark again. he gave us a preview of his site's new profile page, a change that would affect the 500 million people who were then using facebook, an idea that zuckerberg had cooked up in his dorm room at harvard. >> when you first thought about this--19 years old--is this what you had in mind? did you see this far into the future, or is it way beyond what you dreamed? >> well, it's funny. i mean, when i was getting started, you know, with my roommates in college, you never think that you could build this company or anything like that, right? because, i mean--it just--and we were college students, right? >> yeah. >> i mean, we were just building stuff because we thought it was cool. i do remember having these specific conversations with my friends where we thought, "you know, someone is gonna build this. someone is gonna build something that makes it so that people can stay connected with their friends and their family," but no way would we be the ones who were contributing to kind of leadin
lesley stahl first talked with mark zuckerberg in 2008, and three years later, we sat down with mark again. he gave us a preview of his site's new profile page, a change that would affect the 500 million people who were then using facebook, an idea that zuckerberg had cooked up in his dorm room at harvard. >> when you first thought about this--19 years old--is this what you had in mind? did you see this far into the future, or is it way beyond what you dreamed? >> well, it's funny....
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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with us today from "the washington post," bob woodward, cbs' lesley stahl, gloria borger from cnn androm time magazine. for nearly 12 years americans have had a full awareness that enemies are dedicated to hitting us. we dedicate ourselves to carrying on to stiffening our resolve as the president said thursday. >> we may be momentarily knocked off our feet. but we'll pick ourselves up. we'll keep going. we will finish the race. chris: and our resilience isn't just rhetoric. we haven't seen evidence that worries about threats intimidate americans from carrying on. here is the way condoleeza rice expressed it to you on "60 minutes" back then. >> we had an event on september 11th that has changed the way we think about security. that can't be ignored. the fact is that we are more aware of the vulnerabilities of an open society. but we simply can't let the terrorists win. chris: maybe we don't get hit that often. that's a nice picture, by the way. is theory about the american resilience and our national character. >> we do find a sense of equilibrium. but life isn't nothing the way it was
with us today from "the washington post," bob woodward, cbs' lesley stahl, gloria borger from cnn androm time magazine. for nearly 12 years americans have had a full awareness that enemies are dedicated to hitting us. we dedicate ourselves to carrying on to stiffening our resolve as the president said thursday. >> we may be momentarily knocked off our feet. but we'll pick ourselves up. we'll keep going. we will finish the race. chris: and our resilience isn't just rhetoric. we...
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. >> reporter: but when lesley noyes of arizona discovered her second-grade son in this padded cell without her consent, she made a secret cellphone video and launched a public campaign to stop their use. >> it breaks my heart. it really does. that's what caused me to want to fight this fight. >> reporter: last week, success, as the arizona legislature passed a law restricting the use of the padded cells without parental consent. the arizona governor says there has to be a better way. but despite repeated efforts, there's still no federal law putting limits on what schools can do to deal with children who are considered behavioral problems. >> thank you. >>> still ahead on "world news," the report for the airlines is just in in time for the next vacation. and the frustration is flying. tonight, how to get justice if you think you're getting the run-around. i have never encountered such a burning sensation... until i had the shingles. it was like a red rash. like somebody had set a bag of hot charcoal on my neck. i had no idea it came from chickenpox. it's something you never want to encount
. >> reporter: but when lesley noyes of arizona discovered her second-grade son in this padded cell without her consent, she made a secret cellphone video and launched a public campaign to stop their use. >> it breaks my heart. it really does. that's what caused me to want to fight this fight. >> reporter: last week, success, as the arizona legislature passed a law restricting the use of the padded cells without parental consent. the arizona governor says there has to be a...
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Apr 29, 2013
04/13
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. >> this is where i take something seam lesley from fresh meat to hauling my carcass on an atv sugarhip and can cross the board near venezuela to live or trade there whenever they need to. luckily for us it means that cheap gas is easy to come by in these parts. there are no stations as such. you just keep an eye out for the cans. >> most of this gas is from venezuela. it's extremely cheap. it's like 50 cents a gallon. the government subsidizes a lot of it. they are able to buy venezuelan gasoline and sell legally venezuelan gasoline in colombia. >> having taken on as much gas as can be mouth siphoned in one sitting, we're off again.- siphe sitting, we're off agai sitting, we're off again. let me set the scene. it's hot out here. desert hot, and we plan to ride e hours along the coast to our lunch spot, and i ate salty goat inards for breakfast and i refuse to wear a helmet or sun block. we avoid wild donkeys and goats and get lost more than a few times. so a little heat stroke leads to a lot of horsing around, and we decide to open these puppies up. conservative. very logical thinke
. >> this is where i take something seam lesley from fresh meat to hauling my carcass on an atv sugarhip and can cross the board near venezuela to live or trade there whenever they need to. luckily for us it means that cheap gas is easy to come by in these parts. there are no stations as such. you just keep an eye out for the cans. >> most of this gas is from venezuela. it's extremely cheap. it's like 50 cents a gallon. the government subsidizes a lot of it. they are able to buy...
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Apr 2, 2013
04/13
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and as lesley stahl reported in january of 2012, they're being trafficked like drugs, stolen by thugsatened by inferior imports from china. >> he found one already? where, where, where? where? he found one? oh, my god. oh, smell that. in the beautiful italian province of perugia, truffle hunters roam the frosty hills with their trained dogs, who sniff out these lumpy mushrooms when they're ripe, one at a time, as they have for centuries. wow. truffles grow wild, underground, usually at the base of an oak tree. [pig snorts] they used to use pigs, but they ate the truffles. >> very rich american people, they only see truffles on the table of a very elegant restaurant. they don't see this. now you know why they are expensive, right? >> olga urbani may be the only person in the world who goes truffle hunting in a full-length fur coat and a caribbean tan. but in the truffle business, she can pretty much do what she wants. olga. >> yeah. >> her company, urbani, controls 70% of the world's truffle trade. >> when you find the truffles, it's like to have a miracle. >> another one. other countr
and as lesley stahl reported in january of 2012, they're being trafficked like drugs, stolen by thugsatened by inferior imports from china. >> he found one already? where, where, where? where? he found one? oh, my god. oh, smell that. in the beautiful italian province of perugia, truffle hunters roam the frosty hills with their trained dogs, who sniff out these lumpy mushrooms when they're ripe, one at a time, as they have for centuries. wow. truffles grow wild, underground, usually at...
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Apr 22, 2013
04/13
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with us today from "the washington post," bob woodward, cbs' lesley stahl, gloria borger from cnn andfy from time magazine. for nearly 12 years americans have had a full awareness that enemies are dedicated to hitting us. we dedicate ourselves to carrying on to stiffening our resolve as the president said thursday. >> we may be momentarily knocked off our feet. but we'll pick ourselves up. we'll keep going. we will finish the race. chris: and our resilience isn't just rhetoric. we haven't seen evidence that worries about threats intimidate americans from carrying on. here is the way condoleeza rice expressed it to you on "60 minutes" back then. >> we had an event on september 11th that has changed the way we think about security. that can't be ignored. the fact is that we are more aware of the vulnerabilities of an open society. but we simply can't let the terrorists win. chris: maybe we don't get hit that often. that's a nice picture, by the way. is theory about the american resilience and our national character. >> we do find a sense of equilibrium. but life isn't nothing the way it
with us today from "the washington post," bob woodward, cbs' lesley stahl, gloria borger from cnn andfy from time magazine. for nearly 12 years americans have had a full awareness that enemies are dedicated to hitting us. we dedicate ourselves to carrying on to stiffening our resolve as the president said thursday. >> we may be momentarily knocked off our feet. but we'll pick ourselves up. we'll keep going. we will finish the race. chris: and our resilience isn't just rhetoric....
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Apr 1, 2013
04/13
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joining me lesley gelb, desk 23er-- dexter filkins and gram bowlly of the "new york times". so what do we leave in afghanistan. >> what do we leave? >> yeah. >> we leave a country that is even more war-torn than the one we went into more than ten years ago. a country that is still divided, still corrupt, still lags economically, still on the verge of erupting into a wider war. because we under stock far more than we were capable of fixing. and i think the-- we paid a heavy price for that. and i think the afghans did as well. >> so was it a failure of american policy. >> it was right for us to go in there to punish the taliban for providing safe haven to al qaeda. and it would have been right to have an anti-terrorist policy, a rather small one with a small military foot print. but when we got into the business of trying to fight a counterinsurgency war and change the country into a democracy, it was far more than we or any other nation had the capability to accomplish. >> was that our mission? >> yeah, but i think i disagree slightly. i think it had to be. because you know w
joining me lesley gelb, desk 23er-- dexter filkins and gram bowlly of the "new york times". so what do we leave in afghanistan. >> what do we leave? >> yeah. >> we leave a country that is even more war-torn than the one we went into more than ten years ago. a country that is still divided, still corrupt, still lags economically, still on the verge of erupting into a wider war. because we under stock far more than we were capable of fixing. and i think the-- we paid a...
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Apr 16, 2013
04/13
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or tees, minal panchal, aaron peterson, michael poly, julia pride, mary karen reid, rema semaha, lesley turner, nicole white. i read those names, mr. president, to honor those who were killed and had their lives snuffed out on april 16, 2007. i acknowledge also that many students and faculty members were injured and we have with us in the gallery today both family members of those who were deceased and even some students who were injured. i also honored all in the virginia tech community that is very close and still suffers the wounds from this terrible shooting. mr. president, in the aftermath of the shooting at virginia tech six years ago today, we learned a lot. we learned that we have to make fixes to the mental health system, that school security and safety is incredibly important, that alert systems that can moatify people when bad things happen are incredibly important. but, mr. president, we also learned a tragic but important lesson, and that is that background record checks make us safer. the young, troubled individual with no criminal record had a long history of mental illne
or tees, minal panchal, aaron peterson, michael poly, julia pride, mary karen reid, rema semaha, lesley turner, nicole white. i read those names, mr. president, to honor those who were killed and had their lives snuffed out on april 16, 2007. i acknowledge also that many students and faculty members were injured and we have with us in the gallery today both family members of those who were deceased and even some students who were injured. i also honored all in the virginia tech community that...
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Apr 2, 2013
04/13
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KRON
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. >> good news for consumers starting to see believe lesley stahl on loans. >> car loans, are the loans personal loans. this is a guided by capital one. coarsens we're not going the lead on our loans 1.99% down from 2.1% 15 year average 2.3%. i am getting a%nerdy on numbers. our economy is good. we're not borrow from strangers we're lending to people we care about. our banks are lending. i am pro business today. >> even more good news the gm bail out we're seeing gm and other also sells on the rise. in 2000 when we were crazy at the comet were selling 17 and half million cars. at our low point it was 14 million. now we're up to the 15.4 million range. we're off the bottom. we're moving in the right direction. sales up by 7.4%. chrysler a 5%. autos create jobs. i like seeing the economy moving. >> let us talk about the jay z. he invents himself a million different ways now is starting a sports agency. >> i want him to adopt me. >> he is a rapper, songwriter, businessman, a clothing line, music publishing. now sports agent. what is interesting he owns part of the brooklyn nets he cannot b
. >> good news for consumers starting to see believe lesley stahl on loans. >> car loans, are the loans personal loans. this is a guided by capital one. coarsens we're not going the lead on our loans 1.99% down from 2.1% 15 year average 2.3%. i am getting a%nerdy on numbers. our economy is good. we're not borrow from strangers we're lending to people we care about. our banks are lending. i am pro business today. >> even more good news the gm bail out we're seeing gm and other...
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Apr 4, 2013
04/13
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lesley. hi there. go ahead with your comment. caller: i want to say that i think being -- it is a wonderful thing. without it, we're not speaking out, we are not making our voices heard. i am part of a women's group that is holding a big rally in richmond, virginia on august 27. it's called women matter, use your power. i love codepink. i love all of the activist groups that are speaking out against the injustices that are happening in our country. host: so the rally you are having in virginia, what is that about? caller: we are focusing on the issues that affect women in our state of virginia. medicaid extension, reproductive rights, equal pay, ratifying the equal rights amendment, all the different things that affect women in the state of virginia and our country. host: david meyer, it takes us back to the beginning what you said earlier today you had been thinking about the suffrage movement. guest: that national women's party pushed equal rights back in 1920. it was considered in the united states in the 1970's and died in th
lesley. hi there. go ahead with your comment. caller: i want to say that i think being -- it is a wonderful thing. without it, we're not speaking out, we are not making our voices heard. i am part of a women's group that is holding a big rally in richmond, virginia on august 27. it's called women matter, use your power. i love codepink. i love all of the activist groups that are speaking out against the injustices that are happening in our country. host: so the rally you are having in virginia,...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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intensely disliked by employers and labor advocates alike, but the senators have lesley succeeded, inmy estimation. the visa program is a creative, well-crafted blueprint. among its most innovative features, in contrast to other temporary workers programs for all workers would not be tied to specific employers but can change jobs that will accepting work from any employer enrolled in the program approved to participate. this is a win-win for workers and employers and most particularly employers providing flexibility in the possibility of hiring and real time. the size of the program is designed to adjust automatically and in response to changing u.s. labor needs growing in good times and the economy needs more workers in shrinking in down years when americans are out of work. number three, employers who participate are required to try to hire americans first and pay the same or more than they pay american markers. in contrast, existing temporary worker programs applying for her thesis lot is relatively simple, straightforward, and predictable . the mine, my numbers, much to admire. th
intensely disliked by employers and labor advocates alike, but the senators have lesley succeeded, inmy estimation. the visa program is a creative, well-crafted blueprint. among its most innovative features, in contrast to other temporary workers programs for all workers would not be tied to specific employers but can change jobs that will accepting work from any employer enrolled in the program approved to participate. this is a win-win for workers and employers and most particularly employers...
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Apr 25, 2013
04/13
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FOXNEWSW
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lesley e mailed us and asks, if i default on a lease because i needed to relocate abruptly, what exposurewers, a lease is a contract. if you sign a lease and you abandon that lease because you had to relocate for a job, you still have a responsibility on that contract. but here is what happens. the landlord has a duty to what we call mitigate the damage. the landlord has to go out and try to re-lease that home or apartment. if it takes him two months to do that and you had eight months left, the landlord could coming up for the difference. i suggest go to your landlord and many times you can buy the lease out. if you have eight months left, sometimes you can negotiate a couple months and get out from the lease and get a release if do you that. >> steve: make sure you get all this stuff in writing. it's got to be in writing. >> brian: no question. >> steve: and finally, bruce in florida wants to know what, are the pros and cons of a reverse mortgage, which is available to people 62 and older, right? >> basically what it is is people who have equity in their home, let's say it's paid for. t
lesley e mailed us and asks, if i default on a lease because i needed to relocate abruptly, what exposurewers, a lease is a contract. if you sign a lease and you abandon that lease because you had to relocate for a job, you still have a responsibility on that contract. but here is what happens. the landlord has a duty to what we call mitigate the damage. the landlord has to go out and try to re-lease that home or apartment. if it takes him two months to do that and you had eight months left,...
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Apr 11, 2013
04/13
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selma high school debaters i had the privilege of competing with, tom, lawrence, and , max, john, lesley, crystal to name a few. to say thank you to coach tate seems woefully inadequate but i do take comfort in knowing that his legacy will live on through those of us he influenced. may coach billy tate always be remembered for the excellence that he he inspired in all of us. today -- that he inspired in all of us. today i ask my colleagues in the united states congress to join me and the hundreds of debaters he taught in his 40 years of coaching in celebrating the life and legacy of a native alabaman and a nationally renowned debate coach, mr. william "wood" tate jr. thank you. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlewoman yields back. the chair recognizes the gentleman from kentucky, mr. yarmuth, for five minutes. mr. yarmuth: madam speaker, i rise to honor the university of louisville cardinals who went to a second straight final four this season and returned home national champion. going into the ncaa tournament the question was whether the cards' stifling defense would be enough to win it
selma high school debaters i had the privilege of competing with, tom, lawrence, and , max, john, lesley, crystal to name a few. to say thank you to coach tate seems woefully inadequate but i do take comfort in knowing that his legacy will live on through those of us he influenced. may coach billy tate always be remembered for the excellence that he he inspired in all of us. today -- that he inspired in all of us. today i ask my colleagues in the united states congress to join me and the...