SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
31
31
Apr 14, 2015
04/15
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
marlene is a terrific leader in the peninsula. we're happy to have her and i think she would be involved in the east west trail discussions as we go forward. all right. thank you. >> supervisor pine. thank you very much. thank you for coming. that's all i have for speakers presenting on the plans. i do have a list of questions i wanted to go through. mostly are for the public utilities commission so if mr. rich i, mr. ramirez -- probably mr. ramirez is available to answer some of these, about 10 of them all together. i might not go through all of them. i guess the first is like if you can go into a little more detail about conservation especially of sensitive habitats that are there? what are the plans to limit invasive plants? overall what are the most sensitive areas that you're seeing? >> wow. i will try to be very brief. so our group within the organization we manage the property we own and do all of the environmental compliance for the water supply system and the activities and our staff deal with this everyday. and steve can
marlene is a terrific leader in the peninsula. we're happy to have her and i think she would be involved in the east west trail discussions as we go forward. all right. thank you. >> supervisor pine. thank you very much. thank you for coming. that's all i have for speakers presenting on the plans. i do have a list of questions i wanted to go through. mostly are for the public utilities commission so if mr. rich i, mr. ramirez -- probably mr. ramirez is available to answer some of these,...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
31
31
Apr 25, 2015
04/15
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
think virginia is here one the quality people those are the people doing the work and deborah and marlene and others from primary care regina at laguna honda and i'll be remiss in not giving a shout out to kilogram all the background materials she was responsibly for putting together so thank you. >> questions? >> question for any of the represented. >> i have a question. >> you mentioned the challenges dr. chin in meeting the quality standards because there's so many source of data how do you get here. >> a consumer of health care there's a difference between patient care and quality care well, i think we've talked about that repeating but what's necessary but not sufficient is an enterprise e m r it collects data in one place you need data warehouse to extract and analysis the gap between data and information. >> so the patient surveyed our most used tool for quality care. >> that aspect the quality care that survey is what we used to determine patient experience. >> i maybe missing part of our question. >> i'm not sure i got the are answer i was looking for i'm trying to determine you
think virginia is here one the quality people those are the people doing the work and deborah and marlene and others from primary care regina at laguna honda and i'll be remiss in not giving a shout out to kilogram all the background materials she was responsibly for putting together so thank you. >> questions? >> question for any of the represented. >> i have a question. >> you mentioned the challenges dr. chin in meeting the quality standards because there's so many...
88
88
Apr 20, 2015
04/15
by
KCSM
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
amy: marlene is the mother of tarik shah. you are close to malcolm x.one of the last people to speak to him on the telephone the day he was killed in 1965. >> that's right. amy: what happened to your son? >> i think what happened withtarik, he is always befriended a lot of people. he used to always say, you know, if someone needed his help, he would give it to them. he spoke with me about teaching this particular person, saeed music lessons. and also that his wife was pregnant and he needed another place to stay -- which was in my brownstone. i had an apartment downstairs. tarik was redoing the apartment so he could basically stay there. also he was speaking to me about martial arts. he said saeed told him he could help him get his passport back -- amy: did he tell he worked for the fbi? >> no, he told him he was a paralegal. amy: with the working at legal aid at the time? >> i don't know. he also told him he could help him with his child support. the child support was definitely drowning tarik. when he was working abroad, there was no problem. because
amy: marlene is the mother of tarik shah. you are close to malcolm x.one of the last people to speak to him on the telephone the day he was killed in 1965. >> that's right. amy: what happened to your son? >> i think what happened withtarik, he is always befriended a lot of people. he used to always say, you know, if someone needed his help, he would give it to them. he spoke with me about teaching this particular person, saeed music lessons. and also that his wife was pregnant and...
62
62
Apr 20, 2015
04/15
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
marlene, thank you for being with us, mother of tarik shah. c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c c
marlene, thank you for being with us, mother of tarik shah. ccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc
696
696
Apr 25, 2015
04/15
by
KNTV
tv
eye 696
favorite 0
quote 1
applause ] >> jimmy: well, you know our next guest from her work in such films as "martha marcy may marlene elizabeth, great to see you again. you look gorgeous. thank you so much for coming back on the show. i appreciate this. >> thank you. happy to be here. >> jimmy: this is a show we have kid inventors on the show tonight. i was asking chris if he ever invented anything. did you ever invent anything as a kid? >> well, we had in sixth grade we had an awesome science teacher. and she had an entire class just inventing stuff. it was an hour of us just fooling around basically and you could do roller coasters or games. and my friend clay and i made these platform heels. they weren't shoes. they would just be something you would rubber band to the bottom of your shoes made of wood. we called them the shaquille heel because shaq was real big back then. >> jimmy: he still is. >> he's still very large. we sold it to a kid for 20 bucks. >> jimmy: oh, my god. what? you ripped some kid off? >> and then he broke it the moment he put them on. i don't remember feeling bad about it. but i feel bad shar
applause ] >> jimmy: well, you know our next guest from her work in such films as "martha marcy may marlene elizabeth, great to see you again. you look gorgeous. thank you so much for coming back on the show. i appreciate this. >> thank you. happy to be here. >> jimmy: this is a show we have kid inventors on the show tonight. i was asking chris if he ever invented anything. did you ever invent anything as a kid? >> well, we had in sixth grade we had an awesome...
114
114
Apr 18, 2015
04/15
by
KGO
tv
eye 114
favorite 0
quote 0
trough to drop down from the north best that allows for the low clouds the fog, the setup of the marlenee coast cool and the mild numbers around the barracks warm numbers inland. that's today, that's tomorrow, and then we will be looking at the changes. state-wide, we talk about the high surf. monterey 64. 88 in fresno. too warm tore april. 76 los angeles. 67 in the sierra nevada. some forms arrive perhaps by late sunday into monday. and looks more likely by the middle of next week up in tahoe. so we will look for numbers around the bay today to be warm, in the 80s. livermore valley today tomorrow, very little change. average highs in the 70s. look what happens. yep, the cooler air even reaches our east bay valleys. so looking at the city today nice afternoon after the fog clears. 60s. in fact, the high about 67 japan town. 82 concord. 79 san jose with upper 60s in the cities. accuweather seven-day forecast. here's the summer like spread today and tomorrow and cooler increasing clouds monday. maybe a thunderstorm in the higher elevations, sierra nevada. you will see the cloud build up mi
trough to drop down from the north best that allows for the low clouds the fog, the setup of the marlenee coast cool and the mild numbers around the barracks warm numbers inland. that's today, that's tomorrow, and then we will be looking at the changes. state-wide, we talk about the high surf. monterey 64. 88 in fresno. too warm tore april. 76 los angeles. 67 in the sierra nevada. some forms arrive perhaps by late sunday into monday. and looks more likely by the middle of next week up in tahoe....
121
121
Apr 9, 2015
04/15
by
CNNW
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
>> reporter: this cell phone video led to a $1.5 million settlement for marlene, beaten on the side of a highway last summer by a california high washington patrol officer. he resigned. this video made all the difference. >> thank you for the footage, for the video. >> reporter: she survived. eric garner did not. in his case, the video shows the unarmed man being placed in a chokehold by a new york city police officer, but the grand jury decided not to indict the officer. in so many cases of alleged police abuse of power, videos like this are proving to be key pieces of evidence. atika scubert, cnn, new york. >>> coming up in our next half hour, our gary tuchman compares the video evidence of the shooting of walter scott to the initial reports of the other officers on the scene and there are quite a few discrepancies. >>> satisfaction, a step forward, those are just some of the feelings boston marathon bombing survivors say they have, now that a jury found dzhokhar tsarnaev guilty of all 30 counts he faced. but the case isn't closed just yet. chris welsch reports. >> it's not a day to
>> reporter: this cell phone video led to a $1.5 million settlement for marlene, beaten on the side of a highway last summer by a california high washington patrol officer. he resigned. this video made all the difference. >> thank you for the footage, for the video. >> reporter: she survived. eric garner did not. in his case, the video shows the unarmed man being placed in a chokehold by a new york city police officer, but the grand jury decided not to indict the officer. in...
145
145
Apr 27, 2015
04/15
by
CNBC
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
>> i was hosting an event, this marine that reflects the story of marlene ashley white.d on a night mission in afghanistan in 2011 i said wait, what was a woman doing on a night mission in afghanistan, and who were these people what were they doing there and why don't we as a country know who they are, because it seems to me that's the story we should -- >> how easy is it to get these people to talk because it's always complicated when you are trying to do stories like this? >> there was nothing easy about it, but i will say it was not easy because nobody thought they did anything exceptional or worth remembering, they didn't want their teammate forgotten. that's why they spoke to him. >> what's the current situation with women in special ops? they may make the cut to become marine troops. >> women still cannot become rangers, s.e.a.l.s delta, by january 2016 that zig will be made whether all jobs will be open to women or an explanation as to why they don't. army ranger school opened to women last monday. 19 women started. they have the same wash-out rain -- rate as men
>> i was hosting an event, this marine that reflects the story of marlene ashley white.d on a night mission in afghanistan in 2011 i said wait, what was a woman doing on a night mission in afghanistan, and who were these people what were they doing there and why don't we as a country know who they are, because it seems to me that's the story we should -- >> how easy is it to get these people to talk because it's always complicated when you are trying to do stories like this?...
115
115
Apr 18, 2015
04/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
we will move on to marlene in new jersey who opposes the legislation. caller: hello?ost: you are on "washington journal." caller: good morning. listen, i am 71 years old, and contrary to what the 75-year-old said, i consider the united states now a fascist nation. the reason i say that is because fascism is when the government and big business are in bed together. in the 1950's, corporations paid 32% of federal taxes. today, they pay less than 10%. that means, guys, we making up the difference. on the second point with this free-trade, the american people just paid billions to bail general motors out. they went bankrupt and started a new company. that new company has just build a $9 million brand-new plant across the border in mexico. how many jobs did that make for americans? hello? host: i will let you finish your point. caller: i think that's pretty much the point. people work for months and months to pay taxes, and yet a corporations like general electric made millions and millions of dollars of profit, paid no taxes and got a $9 million tax refund from the people
we will move on to marlene in new jersey who opposes the legislation. caller: hello?ost: you are on "washington journal." caller: good morning. listen, i am 71 years old, and contrary to what the 75-year-old said, i consider the united states now a fascist nation. the reason i say that is because fascism is when the government and big business are in bed together. in the 1950's, corporations paid 32% of federal taxes. today, they pay less than 10%. that means, guys, we making up the...