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Feb 12, 2015
02/15
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ALJAZAM
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with us from the austin texas is mario loyola, a constitutional lawyer and contributing editor the the national review. from tucson, arizona, a border litigation attorney for the american civil liberties union of arizona, he works on cases relating to civil and human rights violations. and also out of tucson, he says he has been stopped more than 300 times and frequently, films his check point refusals, his channel has gotten close to 2 million views. thank you for joining us, you say you have been stopped more than 300 times why? and over what period of time. >> sure. well, the border patrol first set up a check point along a rout that i frequent to our remote site. near mile marker 146.5, which is just a few miles outside of 3 points arizona. what is interesting about this check point, is that it is set up along the secondary rout, that runs east to west. it never intersects the border and my remote work site doesn't take me to the border, in fact, i am about how miles away, but since 2008, i have had to go through this check point on the order of about 50 to 60 times every year. tha
with us from the austin texas is mario loyola, a constitutional lawyer and contributing editor the the national review. from tucson, arizona, a border litigation attorney for the american civil liberties union of arizona, he works on cases relating to civil and human rights violations. and also out of tucson, he says he has been stopped more than 300 times and frequently, films his check point refusals, his channel has gotten close to 2 million views. thank you for joining us, you say you have...
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Feb 4, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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loyola university's daca program is an opportunity to address this problem. under this program loyola's daca medical students can receive loans to help cover the cost of medical education. every year these students must work for a year in a medically underserved area in my state of illinois. it is quite a trade-off: a year of medical school for a year of your professional life as a doctor helping people who have no access to doctors. as a result, an amazing thing happened. some of the best and brightest students in america have come to loyola to get a medical education and they have signed up to stay in illinois to serve the parts of our state where the people i represent are desperate for a doctor doctor. last fall, pablo began medical school at loyola where he's pursuing his dream of become ago cardiothoracic tour john. here is what he said about the program. "daca has allowed me to fulfill my long-lasting aspiration to pursue a career in medicine. it has truly changed my future. for that i am truly grateful. i am eager to contribute my share to the country
loyola university's daca program is an opportunity to address this problem. under this program loyola's daca medical students can receive loans to help cover the cost of medical education. every year these students must work for a year in a medically underserved area in my state of illinois. it is quite a trade-off: a year of medical school for a year of your professional life as a doctor helping people who have no access to doctors. as a result, an amazing thing happened. some of the best and...
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. >>> american hosting loyola. this game all au first half. jesse reed gets a lane. drives right to the rim. count the bucket and the foul. eagles up by 12. later in the half au on the run. the layup. au leads from beginning to end. they win it 64-49. vance, all the highlights. come on [ female announcer ] business travel isn't just about the going. it's also about the going home. and being connected all along the way. whether you're working or recharging do business travel on your terms. acela. take off. you exercise. you choose the salad. occasionally. but staying well... physically, financially, emotionally... is hard on your own. so cigna's got your back and your knees 24/7. cigna's there to answer your questions. or when you need some coaching. in sickness and in health, cigna's there, helping you to get well and stay well. that's having a partner, who's with you all the way. cigna. >>> that's our broadcast for now. "the tonight show" is up next. >> see you tomorrow. good night. >> steve: from stage one at universal studios hollywood in los angeles, california,
. >>> american hosting loyola. this game all au first half. jesse reed gets a lane. drives right to the rim. count the bucket and the foul. eagles up by 12. later in the half au on the run. the layup. au leads from beginning to end. they win it 64-49. vance, all the highlights. come on [ female announcer ] business travel isn't just about the going. it's also about the going home. and being connected all along the way. whether you're working or recharging do business travel on your...
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Feb 5, 2015
02/15
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WUSA
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. >>> american hosting loyola. a good night for derek's eagles. >>> the maryland terrapins recent movement to scoop up local talent was met with some success today. the highlights include offensive lineman bullware, and adam mclean, and isaiah davis whose brother shawn is already a safety for the maryland terrapins. >> i'm thrilled about this group. it's a great group. when you guys get a chance to meet them in june, in august i think you will be very impressed with them. >> but it wasn't all about football today. student athletes from a variety of sports joined the celebration including these two young women. mad dee watson is headed to east carolina university. >> without my family or friends i don't know how i would have made it, to be honest. it's such a stressful process trying to be recruited to playy sport. >> it's so emotional. i'm getting choked up. it's just like the climax of this long journey over high school. >> good for them. it has been a very long journey for all of them. congratulations, everybody
. >>> american hosting loyola. a good night for derek's eagles. >>> the maryland terrapins recent movement to scoop up local talent was met with some success today. the highlights include offensive lineman bullware, and adam mclean, and isaiah davis whose brother shawn is already a safety for the maryland terrapins. >> i'm thrilled about this group. it's a great group. when you guys get a chance to meet them in june, in august i think you will be very impressed with...
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Feb 10, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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loyola strich college of medicine in the city of chicago. she couldn't believe it, and she applied quickly. and she was accepted because she is an extraordinarily bright and promising young medical student. like many states across the country, my home state of illinois faces a shortage of physicians in some communities. loyola university decided, all right, if a daca-protected young graduate is willing to come here and qualifies in the competitive field of admissions to medical school -- and qualifies -- they can come to loyola medical school if they promise to give one year of service after they're doctors for every year of medical school. if they promise to go to an underserved area where in the inner city or rural areas there are not enough doctors. johanna signed up for it. she said it was worth it. she would give a year of her life for each year of medical school if she were just given a chance to become a doctor. this daca loan program that we've created is one that allows these students to receive the loans they need to finish at loyo
loyola strich college of medicine in the city of chicago. she couldn't believe it, and she applied quickly. and she was accepted because she is an extraordinarily bright and promising young medical student. like many states across the country, my home state of illinois faces a shortage of physicians in some communities. loyola university decided, all right, if a daca-protected young graduate is willing to come here and qualifies in the competitive field of admissions to medical school -- and...
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Feb 3, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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i got i got to go to loyola the data started classes and met ten of them. she is an amazing young woman an extraordinary academic achievement in her life and she is surrounded by those just like her. protected by president obama's executive order. serve in underserved areas. they gladly agree. they are going for the enrichment of a profession. that is where she yesterday. i want to thank loyola university forgiving her and nine others is chance. the opportunity to serve those in america who have no doctors. the house republicans want to deport this chairwoman. that is what they have said. we don't believe she should stay in america. after all she has accomplished in her life, after all the she promises to bring to our great country, the republicans have said know. we don't need you call what you believe. that. that is what they say on the department of homeland security. i come to this floor virtually every day and tell another story like the story i'm a, the story of what she has been through and the policy as she holds out for the future of this country.
i got i got to go to loyola the data started classes and met ten of them. she is an amazing young woman an extraordinary academic achievement in her life and she is surrounded by those just like her. protected by president obama's executive order. serve in underserved areas. they gladly agree. they are going for the enrichment of a profession. that is where she yesterday. i want to thank loyola university forgiving her and nine others is chance. the opportunity to serve those in america who...
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Feb 5, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eduardo arias is in his first year at loyola university chicago school of medicine. he is one of seven protected by daca who have a chance to go to school. but there's a catch. loyola university said you can go to medical school here, but for every year you're in medical school, you have to promise to give one year of your professional life working with the poorest people in my home state of illinois. in small towns and rural areas as well as big cities. and he agreed to it. he is a giving, caring heart. he agreed to it. to finish medical school and be of service back to the poorest people my state -- in my state. why do the republicans want to deport eduardo arias? why do they want to take this outstanding individual who has struggled and succeeded in life who knows no other country but america and deport him to mexico? will we be a better nation if this young man is not a doctor? will we be a better country if he's not given a chance to give back? here's what he wrote to me in a letter about this daca program which the republicans want to abolish. daca changed my l
eduardo arias is in his first year at loyola university chicago school of medicine. he is one of seven protected by daca who have a chance to go to school. but there's a catch. loyola university said you can go to medical school here, but for every year you're in medical school, you have to promise to give one year of your professional life working with the poorest people in my home state of illinois. in small towns and rural areas as well as big cities. and he agreed to it. he is a giving,...
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Feb 3, 2015
02/15
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that's where ima is today at loyola medical school. i want to thank loyola for giving her a chance and giving nine others a chance. i want to thank them as well for giving ima the opportunity to serve those in america in cities and rural areas who have no doctors. mr. president, the house republicans want to deport this young woman. that's what they said. we want to deport her. we don't believe she should stay in america. after all that she has accomplished in her life, after all that she promises to bring to our great country the republicans have said, no, we don't need you we don't want you. leave. that is what the rider says on the department of homeland security. i come to this floor virtually every day until another story like the story of ima the story of what she has been through and the promise that she holds out for the future of this country. i cannot understand the mentality of some on the other side of the aisle who are so hateful when it comes to these young idealistic, amazing young people. some of the things they've said
that's where ima is today at loyola medical school. i want to thank loyola for giving her a chance and giving nine others a chance. i want to thank them as well for giving ima the opportunity to serve those in america in cities and rural areas who have no doctors. mr. president, the house republicans want to deport this young woman. that's what they said. we want to deport her. we don't believe she should stay in america. after all that she has accomplished in her life, after all that she...
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Feb 7, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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. >> loyola university law professor, bill quigley, is with protesters outside city hall. >> we weressentially locked out and people were outraged. they had been working on this for months and years, and you're talking about literally the opportunity for people to come home after katrina. >> as council members take their seats, pastor torin sanders sees chamber doors closing, but there are dozens of empty seats. he yells in outrage. >> let those people in! there are seats right there! there are seats right there! let those people in! >> i was just frankly appalled that an elected body would deliberately close out people from participating in a meeting. >> then, tempers explode. >> one of the security guards, you know, he put his hands on me, and then i pushed him back. >> sess is tackled and thrown to the ground. but what happens just out of range of cameras hurts the most. >> i was actually tased three times from three different officers at once. two went in my chest and one went in my stomach. >> outside, police are struggling to close the gates to prevent more protesters from comi
. >> loyola university law professor, bill quigley, is with protesters outside city hall. >> we weressentially locked out and people were outraged. they had been working on this for months and years, and you're talking about literally the opportunity for people to come home after katrina. >> as council members take their seats, pastor torin sanders sees chamber doors closing, but there are dozens of empty seats. he yells in outrage. >> let those people in! there are...
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Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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he holds an honorary degree from loyola university of maryland here in baltimore. he was named the connecticut citizen of the year in 1995 and has received other honors and degree cans too numerous to mention -- degrees too numerous to mention. tim is the chairman of the special olympic founded by with tim's mother, eunice kennedy shriver. for over 40 years, the special olympics has created opportunity for young athletes from all walks of life to discover their inherent strengths abilities and skill and to experience success. the organization supports 80,000 events this year, there are four million special olympic athletes, which is totally amazing. somehow -- and i don't know how, maybe he can answer this question -- tim has managed to find time and energy to write this new book "fully alive: what matters most." the book is a gripping memoir of a man on a mission. mr. shriver's mission is to create opportunities to celebrate the differences in human beings and to teach us to acknowledge that even one of us-- that each one of us possesses powerful capabilities and
he holds an honorary degree from loyola university of maryland here in baltimore. he was named the connecticut citizen of the year in 1995 and has received other honors and degree cans too numerous to mention -- degrees too numerous to mention. tim is the chairman of the special olympic founded by with tim's mother, eunice kennedy shriver. for over 40 years, the special olympics has created opportunity for young athletes from all walks of life to discover their inherent strengths abilities and...
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Feb 18, 2015
02/15
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FBC
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loyola giving back a couple of dollars. $52 a barrel for oil.traight tails. it used to be 28 states. a terror cell summit without calling it a terror summit. >> we spend more time talking about what do you call it? as opposed to what do you do about it. if fox did not talk about this, they would have nothing else to talk about. stuart: oh, yes, we would. what on earth are you doing down there in washington? >> wow. it is truly amazing. the administration does not talk about putting those words together. it is not just fox that deals with this and talks about it. other media outlet has mentioned it. if you look at the defense intelligence agency head who just recently left his position, he said you cannot defeat an enemy unless you describe it, unless you define it. stuart: simple as that. there you go. i want to talk about obamacare for a minute. there is no plan is the supreme court strikes down. >> this is the biggest challenge to obamacare that we have seen. the legal challenge in the supreme court, if the supreme court decides to uphold the
loyola giving back a couple of dollars. $52 a barrel for oil.traight tails. it used to be 28 states. a terror cell summit without calling it a terror summit. >> we spend more time talking about what do you call it? as opposed to what do you do about it. if fox did not talk about this, they would have nothing else to talk about. stuart: oh, yes, we would. what on earth are you doing down there in washington? >> wow. it is truly amazing. the administration does not talk about putting...
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loyola moving higher. the largest national strike since 1980. gas prices holding steady.rice of regular up two and a half cents since this time last week. look at that. 1.764810 year treasury. stocks reacting to another negative read on the economy. >> aims are certainly better tom. the market is react into what is going on in europe. it is reacting to what i am calling the quantitative easing. unless we get some type of fiscal reform in the united states i think the market languishes here over the next several months. >> europe is firing up their quantitative easing. they have all kinds of problems. they have protesters in spain over the weekend. they want anti-austerity. >> i think that is something that is worrying our market. the strengthening dollar is also worrying our market. two and a half, two and a quarter% growth. that is weighing on the markets. the quantitative easing was working for a very long period of time. you need political reform. you need corporate tax reform. tom: you say it was working but it was artificial. we do not have a pure market. >> we will
loyola moving higher. the largest national strike since 1980. gas prices holding steady.rice of regular up two and a half cents since this time last week. look at that. 1.764810 year treasury. stocks reacting to another negative read on the economy. >> aims are certainly better tom. the market is react into what is going on in europe. it is reacting to what i am calling the quantitative easing. unless we get some type of fiscal reform in the united states i think the market languishes...
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Feb 3, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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got a degree to teach at loyola university. he hasn't been able to find a job as a teacher and he's now working as a paraprofessional in a school district east of hamilton county where cincinnati is. he made only $16,000 last year and because he doesn't have children he will miss out on critical tax credits that could put more of his money in his pocket or my legislation david mentioned the working families tax relief act would triple the size of the eitc for workers without children and expand access to young workers. what they permanent enhancement of eitc that will expire in 2017 2017 expanding the child was eitc in our legislation that president obama proposed in the state of the numeral lift more than a happen people out of poverty and reduce poverty for an additional 10 million people. for jason who is ineligible for every 1 dollar eitc the credit under my plan would be $600 for him so in a sense he is taxed further into poverty because he gets no help from the earned income tax credit. we know what this means. we know wh
got a degree to teach at loyola university. he hasn't been able to find a job as a teacher and he's now working as a paraprofessional in a school district east of hamilton county where cincinnati is. he made only $16,000 last year and because he doesn't have children he will miss out on critical tax credits that could put more of his money in his pocket or my legislation david mentioned the working families tax relief act would triple the size of the eitc for workers without children and expand...
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Feb 5, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eduardo arias is in his first year atlloylloy loyola school of med sun. he is one of 7 protected by daca to go to school. loyola said you can go to medical school but for every year you are in medical school, you have to promise to give one year of your professional life working with the poorest people in my home state of illinois, in small towns and rural areas as well as big cities. and he agreed to t he is a giving caring -- he has a giving care heart. he agreed to it. to finish medical school and give the years necessary of service back to the poorest people in my state. why do the republicans want to deport eduardo arias? why do they want to take this outstanding individual who has struggled and succeeded in life, who knows no other country but america, and deport hum to mexico? -- deport him to mexico? will we be a better nation if this young man is not a doctor? will we be a better country if he's not given a chance to give back? here's what he wrote to me about this daca program which the republicans want to abolish. "daca changed my life," medica
eduardo arias is in his first year atlloylloy loyola school of med sun. he is one of 7 protected by daca to go to school. loyola said you can go to medical school but for every year you are in medical school, you have to promise to give one year of your professional life working with the poorest people in my home state of illinois, in small towns and rural areas as well as big cities. and he agreed to t he is a giving caring -- he has a giving care heart. he agreed to it. to finish medical...
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Feb 12, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN
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eli attended howard university, dillard university, and loyola. he started the law firm of collins douglas and eli which became the most noteworthy firm in louisiana for racial equality. in 1960, the new orleans chapter of the congress of racial equality, or core, asked eli and his firm to represent them following a sit-in. eli and his firm defended core chapter president rudy lombard and three others who were arrested for staging a sit-in at the mccurry five and 10 cent store. their appeal to the united states supreme court which in its decision declared the city's ban on sit-ins unconstitutional. later in his career, eli was one of seven supporters of the freedom riders who met with attorney general robert kennedy in 1961 when kennedy encouraged them to shift their efforts to registering black southerners to vote. his son is a prominent writer and filmmakers. he still calls new orleans home and mentors the younger generation through his training program for new black attorneys. through his example, many young black men and women are able to achi
eli attended howard university, dillard university, and loyola. he started the law firm of collins douglas and eli which became the most noteworthy firm in louisiana for racial equality. in 1960, the new orleans chapter of the congress of racial equality, or core, asked eli and his firm to represent them following a sit-in. eli and his firm defended core chapter president rudy lombard and three others who were arrested for staging a sit-in at the mccurry five and 10 cent store. their appeal to...
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Feb 25, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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i taught at loyola university in baltimore at the community college, but my colleague who was the president of a college a university, said we ought to look at regs. regulation could have a tremendous impact. so we put our heads together. our cochairs came from tennessee, the maryland cochair was dr. kirwan, our retiring but very able chancellor. and it is a terrific report. it's exactly what we wanted. where are these regs that number one are duplicative duplicative. the same darn report after report and then you do a report on the reports so that then they can ask you questions and ask for a follow-up addendum. then there is also issues where the requirements are contradictory so there they are, the administrators of both the colleges and universities themselves or of an individual grant program. so we want to clarify that. and not only did under senator alexander's leadership did we go for what were the top ten concerns that were really burdensome duplicative or contradictory, they gave us a checklist on what would constitute a criteria for a good reg. i think they gave us a great road m
i taught at loyola university in baltimore at the community college, but my colleague who was the president of a college a university, said we ought to look at regs. regulation could have a tremendous impact. so we put our heads together. our cochairs came from tennessee, the maryland cochair was dr. kirwan, our retiring but very able chancellor. and it is a terrific report. it's exactly what we wanted. where are these regs that number one are duplicative duplicative. the same darn report after...