59
59
Aug 30, 2020
08/20
by
FBC
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
magna, the canadian with auto parts giant, they also is have complete vehicle assembly.ith all of these new, hot electric ipos like the one ben just mentioned, they are also in talks to build these cars, these, you know, start-ups that don't have the experience manufacturing cars. so that's two ways to play the unbelievable excitement in ev stocks. jack: borg warner and magna, got it. thank you, al. and carlton, we're at a politic low, right? the conventions are over, the debates won't start for a month, not much to look at unless you recorded the conventions, you want to watch them over and over again. i am nervous about the election. i'm worried about a contested or disputed result. not necessarily who might win. and i have recently taken some money out of the stock market. i want a second opinion. am i right for doing that? am i i wrong for doing that? what do you think? >> well, or it's definitely a very personal decision, but, you know, there's a lot of reasons to realize that we may not know the outcome of the election on election night, you know? there's going to
magna, the canadian with auto parts giant, they also is have complete vehicle assembly.ith all of these new, hot electric ipos like the one ben just mentioned, they are also in talks to build these cars, these, you know, start-ups that don't have the experience manufacturing cars. so that's two ways to play the unbelievable excitement in ev stocks. jack: borg warner and magna, got it. thank you, al. and carlton, we're at a politic low, right? the conventions are over, the debates won't start...
138
138
Aug 20, 2020
08/20
by
FBC
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> he was my great-grandfather, and what he left us was the magna carta of basketball. >> naismithse. >> i'm jim. good to meet you. >> hi, jim. how are you? >> jamie, i'm sean naismith. >> great to meet you both. >> likewise. >> i am interested to hear about your strange inheritance. i'm awfully curious what the connection is to k.u. >> we'd love to show you. my great-grandfather, dr. james naismith, started the first basketball teams here at k.u. [ whistle blows ] >> but time out! let's reset the clock. the boy who would grow up to invent basketball, james naismith, is born in ontario, canada, in 1861. at age 9, he and his brother and sister are orphaned when both their parents die of typhoid fever. >> the three kids were left with a bachelor uncle. now, that is not the softest person to be raising three kids on a farm. i know for sure that he just deeply missed his mother. >> james drops out of school at the age of 15 to work in a lumber mill. by 19, he's working hard and drinking harder. >> he was in the bar drinking too much, and there was an older man down at the end of the bar
. >> he was my great-grandfather, and what he left us was the magna carta of basketball. >> naismithse. >> i'm jim. good to meet you. >> hi, jim. how are you? >> jamie, i'm sean naismith. >> great to meet you both. >> likewise. >> i am interested to hear about your strange inheritance. i'm awfully curious what the connection is to k.u. >> we'd love to show you. my great-grandfather, dr. james naismith, started the first basketball teams here...
109
109
Aug 23, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
not the liberty bell, not the magna carta, not any symbol of freedom, but victoria, the symbol of conquest and the myth of russian superiority had become the myth of the master race. of thathe carl schmitt generation had any worry about the liberties that had been denied, they were now forgotten. in this moment of triumph, just to be a german was enough. in the newly created right industry flourished as never before. the merchant fleet grew larger every day. german harbors were jammed with commerce. and german stomachs filled with beer and saucers -- sausage. germany had achieved unity, become rich, no other country threatened her. the world hoped for a peaceful, good neighbor. but the world have forgotten the prussian inheritance. a tradition not of peace, but of war and conquest. [gunshots] [singing] and by now, carl schmitt of the second generation. the father of the carl schmitt we had to fight was arrogantly singing "germany, germany overall." as he probably watched his father lamb becoming the most aggressively nationalistic country in the world. industry was carefully controlled for
not the liberty bell, not the magna carta, not any symbol of freedom, but victoria, the symbol of conquest and the myth of russian superiority had become the myth of the master race. of thathe carl schmitt generation had any worry about the liberties that had been denied, they were now forgotten. in this moment of triumph, just to be a german was enough. in the newly created right industry flourished as never before. the merchant fleet grew larger every day. german harbors were jammed with...
35
35
Aug 19, 2020
08/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
yeah that the situation as we do each area's 40 years in magna only or. so who was the options on the table to where this has happened before but the timing comes ahead of it as a surprise and as ugly was not the coalition of. religious leaders speaking to the streets and what we call the book jester where in search of a 2nd wind at. 4 who just. sort of dean martin was what because. they wanted the president to go and for them to be the one who. also led maybe we are movement has. been weakened by attack and then all of a sudden so all those drone president even looked at we mind. was specific blanket of them ali and. of course the situation was right for them. under pressure. 2012. judges groups and we have been speaking about. that. and but more. and more are more and more important for the they are. increasingly being source that they were in so many people killed and the one of the being which of the porch we criticize that the president did not interfere in the divvying he will sort of be different to what. to what half of them and all of them was no
yeah that the situation as we do each area's 40 years in magna only or. so who was the options on the table to where this has happened before but the timing comes ahead of it as a surprise and as ugly was not the coalition of. religious leaders speaking to the streets and what we call the book jester where in search of a 2nd wind at. 4 who just. sort of dean martin was what because. they wanted the president to go and for them to be the one who. also led maybe we are movement has. been weakened...
75
75
Aug 16, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
he went to harvard law school, graduating 1979 magna cum laude, and was the supreme court editor of the harvard law review. he then clerked for judge basil on and judge leventhal on the d.c. circuit court before he clerked for chief justice burger. after his clerkship, he went to nyu in 1981, and by 1988, he was dean of the law school. his tenure there was extremely successful. the law school is firmly ensconced in the rankings as one of the top five in the country. by 2002, he had been elevated to president of nyu. he served there until the end of 2015. during that tenure, freshman applications doubled. the endowment grew by over 200%. minority enrollment went from 11% to 19%. and throughout all of this, he continued to teach and write about the supreme court. jennifer, we are going to have this get ready for our lecturer. he has had a variety of other important positions including president of the federal reserve bank of new york -- be my guest -- president of the american association of law schools, president of the new york academy of science. thank you. it was 43 years ago that chi
he went to harvard law school, graduating 1979 magna cum laude, and was the supreme court editor of the harvard law review. he then clerked for judge basil on and judge leventhal on the d.c. circuit court before he clerked for chief justice burger. after his clerkship, he went to nyu in 1981, and by 1988, he was dean of the law school. his tenure there was extremely successful. the law school is firmly ensconced in the rankings as one of the top five in the country. by 2002, he had been...
71
71
Aug 22, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
my question kind of is, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, and going to britain, the magna carta, the rest of it -- was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for non-christian peoples, for people with brown skin? where did the skills come from, and what was the permission that was granted? >> there is a lot going on. that is a big question. slavery largely disappears by 1400 or so, especially after the black death. that said, other forms of unfreedom still exist. they do have experience of using bound labor even in the absence of slavery. a few things happen in the 1500s that are key for understanding what is happening in new england. the first is englishmen begin traveling abroad. they go all over the world. and they begin writing about what they encounter and what they see. one of the places they spend a lot of time in is in the caribbean and latin america. by the 16th century when they visit a place like cuba or mexico or peru, they see large numbers of africans that the portuguese and spanish use. what this doesn't their minds is it links slavery to black
my question kind of is, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, and going to britain, the magna carta, the rest of it -- was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for non-christian peoples, for people with brown skin? where did the skills come from, and what was the permission that was granted? >> there is a lot going on. that is a big question. slavery largely disappears by 1400 or so, especially after the black death. that said, other forms of unfreedom still...
157
157
Aug 24, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
question is kind of, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, going to, you know, britain, magna carta, and the rest of it, was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for nonchristian peoples, for people with brown skin? and where did the skills come from? and what was the permission that was granted? >> is there wasthere was a lot . it's a big question. slavery largely disappears from england by 1400 or so, especially after the black death in 14th century. slavery largely disappears. and with best said, other forms, apprenticeship, servitude, they do have the presence of using bound labor even in the absence of slavery. 1500s. they're key for understanding what's happening in new england. the first is englishmen begin traveling abroad. they go all over the world and they begin writing on what they encounter and see. one of the places they see is the caribbean and latin america. by the 16th century when they visit cuba or mexico or peru, they see a large number of unslaved africans. what this does in their mind, it links slavery to blackness. through the travels, it
question is kind of, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, going to, you know, britain, magna carta, and the rest of it, was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for nonchristian peoples, for people with brown skin? and where did the skills come from? and what was the permission that was granted? >> is there wasthere was a lot . it's a big question. slavery largely disappears from england by 1400 or so, especially after the black death in 14th century. slavery...
41
41
Aug 24, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
question is kind of, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, and going to, you know, britain, magna carta, the rest of it, was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for nonchristian peoples, for people with brown skin? and where did the skills come from, and what was the permission that was granted? >> there's a lot going on. okay. so it's a big question. >> a big question. >> so interestingly enough, slavery largely disappears from new england by 1400 or so, especially after the black death in the mid-14th century. slavery largely disappears. and that said, other forms of unfreedom still exist. unprentise apprenticeships, things like that. a couple things happen in the 16th century, in the 1500s, that are key for understanding what's happening in new england. the first is englishmen begun traveling abroad. they go all over the world and begin writing about what they encounter and what they see. one of the places they spend a lot of time in is the caribbean and latin america. by the mid-16th century when they visit a place like cuba or mexico or peru, they see large n
question is kind of, without going back to egypt and greece and rome, and going to, you know, britain, magna carta, the rest of it, was it a permission that was granted for native peoples, for nonchristian peoples, for people with brown skin? and where did the skills come from, and what was the permission that was granted? >> there's a lot going on. okay. so it's a big question. >> a big question. >> so interestingly enough, slavery largely disappears from new england by 1400...
72
72
Aug 14, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 1
she graduated from harvard college magna cum laude with a degree in history and literature.he earned her law degree from harvard law school where she served as executive editor of the journal of law. after graduation, she served as a law clerk. from 2005-2000 six, she served a special counsel to the u.s. senate committee on the judiciary where she assisted with the confirmation of chief justice roberts and associate justice alito. prior to becoming assistant attorney general, she was a litigation and appellate partner of a national law firm. cases in federal and state courts across the country. she also served as chair of the women's leadership initiative in washington, d.c.. she received a pro bono award seven years in a row. with that, i will turn it over to our opening speaker, assistant attorney general beth williams. >> thank you for that kind introduction. i wish i could join you all in person. it is a real pleasure to be here with you all. for the past three years, i have been blessed to serve and what i believed to be one of the best jobs in the federal government, l
she graduated from harvard college magna cum laude with a degree in history and literature.he earned her law degree from harvard law school where she served as executive editor of the journal of law. after graduation, she served as a law clerk. from 2005-2000 six, she served a special counsel to the u.s. senate committee on the judiciary where she assisted with the confirmation of chief justice roberts and associate justice alito. prior to becoming assistant attorney general, she was a...
60
60
Aug 29, 2020
08/20
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
joining the staff, beginning her legal career in the legal defense and education, she graduated magna laude in the and yale university, received her law degree from the new york university school of law, where she had civil rights litigation at the clinic for several years. we welcome you. finally, commissioner donald palmer, was the eac in 2019, a former bipartisan policy scholar, divided testimony to state legislature on election year in voting reform. commissioner palmer was appointed secretary of the virginia board of election by former governor bob mcdonnell in 2011 and the commonwealth chief election officer until 2014. he formerly served as the florida department of state elector of elections. prior to the election administration, he served as attorney for the voting rights section of the department of justice's civil rights division. he was a u.s. navy intelligence advocatend judge advocat general and he was awarded the navy's service model, and accommodation medal. we welcome you, commissioner, and all witnesses, and i remind the witnesses the full statement will be limited t
joining the staff, beginning her legal career in the legal defense and education, she graduated magna laude in the and yale university, received her law degree from the new york university school of law, where she had civil rights litigation at the clinic for several years. we welcome you. finally, commissioner donald palmer, was the eac in 2019, a former bipartisan policy scholar, divided testimony to state legislature on election year in voting reform. commissioner palmer was appointed...
448
448
Aug 10, 2020
08/20
by
KSTS
tv
eye 448
favorite 0
quote 0
no contar con la aprobaciÓn de la asamblea legislativa y limitar derechos establecidos en la carta magnaapital a buscar trabajo ahora por la emergencia regresar a su casa de adobe y a su cocina de leÑa >>> tengo mucho miedo les digo no nos vamos hasta que empiecen anunciar que ya se acabÓ eso >>> asÍ sin un solo contagio los habitantes del rea li to toman sus precauciones por muertes de covid-19 del paÍs mÉxico supera los 50 mil fallecidos y de acuerdo con las estadÍsticas en los prÓximos dÍas se cumplen el escenario previsto por el subsecretario de salud 2 meses atrÁs. >>> incluso un escenario muy catastrÓfico que podrÍa llegar a 60 mil >>> pero para el presidente de mÉxico lo peor ya pasÓ >>> vamos saliendo los puedo decir que poco a poco >>> mientras tanto en el rea lito prefieren no bajar la guard hay que saludar mucho >>> en calles de tierra se blindan contra el coronavirus en mÉxico vÍctor silva noticias telemundo. muy interesante como algunos lugares han logrado protegerse de esta pandemia. ahora quÉ tal si vamos a ver la temperatura de la mano de ustedes nuestros corresponsales d
no contar con la aprobaciÓn de la asamblea legislativa y limitar derechos establecidos en la carta magnaapital a buscar trabajo ahora por la emergencia regresar a su casa de adobe y a su cocina de leÑa >>> tengo mucho miedo les digo no nos vamos hasta que empiecen anunciar que ya se acabÓ eso >>> asÍ sin un solo contagio los habitantes del rea li to toman sus precauciones por muertes de covid-19 del paÍs mÉxico supera los 50 mil fallecidos y de acuerdo con las...