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Oct 5, 2014
10/14
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BLOOMBERG
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[laughter] melinda has a lot of good ideas.aternal health, we have been doing a number of things under her guidance to trying to advance the causes of getting the kids so they can get born and survive the first couple of days and then the next five years. there are lots of good ideas. you can't do everything, you have to decide what your core competencies are. like the bill and melinda foundation, and a lot of cases, they administer funds. in our case, we probably do more donating funds and having others administrate but we have a big group working on public health issues as well. >> mike, when you were mayor, you had certain metrics by which you could measure the success of your own projects and initiatives. when you give money, how do you measure success? >> number one, not everything is going to work quickly. you have to have some patience. number two, if you do something in the scientific world and it turns out to be a failure, that in some sense is a success because you don't have to go down that path again. unfortunately,
[laughter] melinda has a lot of good ideas.aternal health, we have been doing a number of things under her guidance to trying to advance the causes of getting the kids so they can get born and survive the first couple of days and then the next five years. there are lots of good ideas. you can't do everything, you have to decide what your core competencies are. like the bill and melinda foundation, and a lot of cases, they administer funds. in our case, we probably do more donating funds and...
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Oct 27, 2014
10/14
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WUSA
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>> melinda: yes.a lifetime of having to worry about it, and i just didn't... i didn't want my kids to have to do that. >> o'donnell: the best way to ensure that was to do embryo screening for the brca1 gene mutation, which dr. hughes says is among the fastest-growing parts of his business. >> hughes: this takes the risk... for example, in breast cancer, it takes the risk if you have this mutation from 50/50 of passing it to the next generation down to less than 1%. >> o'donnell: but the screening isn't easy. all couples, even fertile ones, must first go through in-vitro fertilization, the process in which a man's sperm is injected into a woman's eggs under a microscope to create embryos. then, five days later, a tiny tube just one 20th the diameter of a human hair is used to extract from each embryo one single cell to be genetically tested for disease. it's just one cell? >> hughes: yes. >> o'donnell: you can tell that much from one cell? >> hughes: you can tell an awful lot in one cell. >> o'donnell:
>> melinda: yes.a lifetime of having to worry about it, and i just didn't... i didn't want my kids to have to do that. >> o'donnell: the best way to ensure that was to do embryo screening for the brca1 gene mutation, which dr. hughes says is among the fastest-growing parts of his business. >> hughes: this takes the risk... for example, in breast cancer, it takes the risk if you have this mutation from 50/50 of passing it to the next generation down to less than 1%. >>...
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Oct 20, 2014
10/14
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CNBC
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we begin with bill and melinda gates. with their plan to give away $60 billion, they're the most generous philanthropists in the world. they want to make american kids among the best-educated on earth. and while they're doing that, they also intend to save millions of lives worldwide. the gates shun publicity, but in october 2010, melinda gates agreed to show scott pelley the nuts and bolts of giving away a fortune. [train whistles] >> the north of india, where it is a short drive from the big city to the middle ages. [animals bellow] in the countryside of india's most crowded state, uttar pradesh, often, food is scarce, electricity nonexistent, women and infants die in childbirth, and medicine remains in the realm of superstition. it's exactly what melinda gates is looking for: a neglected crisis where her investment can save the most lives. >> our belief is that all lives, no matter where they're lived on the globe, have equal value. all lives. >> what are your global priorities? >> hiv/aids, malaria, mother and child d
we begin with bill and melinda gates. with their plan to give away $60 billion, they're the most generous philanthropists in the world. they want to make american kids among the best-educated on earth. and while they're doing that, they also intend to save millions of lives worldwide. the gates shun publicity, but in october 2010, melinda gates agreed to show scott pelley the nuts and bolts of giving away a fortune. [train whistles] >> the north of india, where it is a short drive from...
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Oct 9, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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i confronted that with melinda. it shows companies need to do more and put more money into it especially ebola. a couple things that stood out to me, we need to build trust on the ground. us westerners can't just flying and assume everyone there suffering is going to trust our medicine, trust our clinics, trut our doctors. you have to earn our trust first. she said you have to fly into the radar. when she spends time on the ground in west africa, no one knows he's melinda gates. she throws up her hair and talks to them just as a western woman. i can also tell you how much she emphasized urgency. we know all of these u.s. troops are going, they have to act overnight. what the gates foundation did, they have a big polio clinic in west africa. literally, overnight, they said we're turning into an ebola clinic and overnight, it changed. >> it's going to take $1 billion to fight this epidemic? >> at least, yes. >> poppy harlow, thank you so much. >>> also this morning, signs and symptoms of ebola. sergeant michael monnic
i confronted that with melinda. it shows companies need to do more and put more money into it especially ebola. a couple things that stood out to me, we need to build trust on the ground. us westerners can't just flying and assume everyone there suffering is going to trust our medicine, trust our clinics, trut our doctors. you have to earn our trust first. she said you have to fly into the radar. when she spends time on the ground in west africa, no one knows he's melinda gates. she throws up...
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Oct 28, 2014
10/14
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KCSM
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that is the kind of thing that has unrated fear here. >> melinda, i am so sorry. we have to leave it there. thank you for that insight. >> german soccer news now. bundesliga leaders are undefeated. >> and while they had more opportunities, but failed to take advantage of them. >> it was a battle of equals. they fought back against byron munich. they fought in the air and on the ground. the two sides played a top notch match, but could not find the mat. an axon tactical plan. as usual, buyer had more ball possession, but they were limited to long-distance shots. here, he crossed his crude -- teammate who did not react fast enough. some of the first half was very difficult for us. they played very well. >> they stepped up the game after the break. the aggressive play created more opportunities but the host's work repeatedly denied -- the hosts were repeatedly denied. >> recently have only had to make two or three saves per match. recently i've had two of -- intervene more often -- today i had to intervene more often. >> the suspense was enough to rattle the nerves o
that is the kind of thing that has unrated fear here. >> melinda, i am so sorry. we have to leave it there. thank you for that insight. >> german soccer news now. bundesliga leaders are undefeated. >> and while they had more opportunities, but failed to take advantage of them. >> it was a battle of equals. they fought back against byron munich. they fought in the air and on the ground. the two sides played a top notch match, but could not find the mat. an axon tactical...
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Oct 7, 2014
10/14
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KQEH
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and finally, melinda jackson, associate professor of political science at san jose state. here are some of the key guidelines and rules of this debate. 75 minutes in length, 90 second responses, and 60 second rebuttal. there is a possibility of 30 second follow-up questions. we have shared the topics of the debate with both men. but our specific questions have not been revealed. we also instructed our studio audience to hold all applause until the very end, no cheering, booing or any other reaction except for right now. we want to officially welcome congressman mike honda and mr. ro khanna. [ applause ] it is nice to see you and have both of you inside of our studios. >> thank you. >> nice be to be here. >> we agreed prior to the debate, coin flip, first question goes to mr. khanna. this is a polarizing district. you know this very well. so much wealth and innovation. but if you simply cross the street, there are a lot of people and families struggling just to keep ends -- to make ends meet. if elected, realistically, how can you serve both sides and what is number one on
and finally, melinda jackson, associate professor of political science at san jose state. here are some of the key guidelines and rules of this debate. 75 minutes in length, 90 second responses, and 60 second rebuttal. there is a possibility of 30 second follow-up questions. we have shared the topics of the debate with both men. but our specific questions have not been revealed. we also instructed our studio audience to hold all applause until the very end, no cheering, booing or any other...
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Oct 18, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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bill and melinda gates alone, $25 million from mark zuckerberg. some of that is going to aid organizations, some is going to the u.s. government organizations and units like the cdc. now, private sector donations are not enough, clearly. the u.n. said that it needs about $1 billion in a fund to go ahead and get ahead of the curve. >> we are not there. >> we are totally not there. you're talking about $20 million in pledges and the fund itself only has $100,000 in cash. now, clearly, there's money going to other organizations, but the u.n., it's clearly indicative of a shortfall. >> let's talk about the industries affected. interesting that the chocolate industry is actually affected by ebola, because it operates in these countries. it's a $67 billion business. 26 global companies collectively donating $600,000. wait a minute. look at the profit number, look at the revenue number, look at what they're donating. could they do more? >> absolutely, they could do more. 70% of the world's supply of cocoa beans actually comes from west africa. so you wou
bill and melinda gates alone, $25 million from mark zuckerberg. some of that is going to aid organizations, some is going to the u.s. government organizations and units like the cdc. now, private sector donations are not enough, clearly. the u.n. said that it needs about $1 billion in a fund to go ahead and get ahead of the curve. >> we are not there. >> we are totally not there. you're talking about $20 million in pledges and the fund itself only has $100,000 in cash. now, clearly,...
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Oct 7, 2014
10/14
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KNTV
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and finally, melinda jackson, associate professor of political science at san jose state. here are some of the key guidelines and rules of this debate. 75 minutes in length, 90 second responses, and 60 second rebuttal. there is a possibility of 30 second follow-up questions. we have shared the topics of the debate with both men. but our specific questions have not been revealed. we also instructed our studio audience to hold all applause until the very end, no cheering, booing or any other reaction except for right now. we want to officially welcome congressman mike honda and mr. ro khanna. [ applause ] it is nice to see you and have both of you inside of our studios. >> thank you. >> nice be to be here. >> we agreed prior to the debate, coin flip, first question goes to mr. khanna. this is a polarizing district. you know this very well. so much wealth and innovation. but if you simply cross the street, there are a lot of people and families struggling just to keep ends -- to make ends meet. if elected, realistically, how can you serve both sides and what is number one on
and finally, melinda jackson, associate professor of political science at san jose state. here are some of the key guidelines and rules of this debate. 75 minutes in length, 90 second responses, and 60 second rebuttal. there is a possibility of 30 second follow-up questions. we have shared the topics of the debate with both men. but our specific questions have not been revealed. we also instructed our studio audience to hold all applause until the very end, no cheering, booing or any other...
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Oct 20, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN2
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one question maybe to melinda, i think that was the way you were heading but there was something about pulling back mon from the most closed regimes. i completely agree with the logic but how to make sure -- the societies are not monolithic which you know much better than me. how to make sure that those who are striving for democracy in those regimes, that these are alive or they have some money to distribute, whatever they have to distribute. so how to make sure is it through net or how to make sure this will happen. one last remark, coming back to the first panel, we did not address the fact that i mean we used poland or central europe as a reference point for good transitions but we didn't say that, this happened when, when pro-democracy promotion was highest priority of both the european union and the united states. i mean there are some structural elements in the societies in the region. so that might help it but we should realize that this is the not case anymore. i mean the democracy promotion is not that close to our hearts as it was in the 1990s. so we should not blame everyth
one question maybe to melinda, i think that was the way you were heading but there was something about pulling back mon from the most closed regimes. i completely agree with the logic but how to make sure -- the societies are not monolithic which you know much better than me. how to make sure that those who are striving for democracy in those regimes, that these are alive or they have some money to distribute, whatever they have to distribute. so how to make sure is it through net or how to...
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Oct 5, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN
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the bill and melinda gates foundation donated $50 million to response efforts in countries affected by the outbreak. the interview is just under an hour. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2014] . >> i thank you so much. delighted to be partnering with bank of america and to kick off this series, i can't think of anyone better or more timely to have a conversation with than bill gates. so appreciate you joining us this morning and to all oaf you who are here.you we're going to start off in a i think's unlikely but absolutely fitting topic, which is the subject of ebola and the crisis in africa and potentially beyond africa. recently foundation announced it is donating $50 million to help with the response. of us think about what's happening with the disease and the spread of it, we have to ask questions that really relate to leadership, right? health it's our global institutions, whether it's individual countryings and their country -- countries, and lack thereof to respond. mr. gates, obviously you spent the last,
the bill and melinda gates foundation donated $50 million to response efforts in countries affected by the outbreak. the interview is just under an hour. [captioning performed by national captioning institute] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2014] . >> i thank you so much. delighted to be partnering with bank of america and to kick off this series, i can't think of anyone better or more timely to have a conversation with than bill gates. so appreciate you joining us...
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Oct 2, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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we'll stay on this because coming up next, the bill and melinda gates foundation announced $50 million to help fight the ebola virus. what is this money being used for and how has there been progress is this we' progress? we'll talk to the ceo of the foundation next. not to be focusing, again, on my moderate my goal was to finally get in shape. to severe chronic plaque psoriasis. so i finally made a decision to talk to my dermatologist about humira. humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis saw 75% skin clearance on humira. and the majority of people were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to are
we'll stay on this because coming up next, the bill and melinda gates foundation announced $50 million to help fight the ebola virus. what is this money being used for and how has there been progress is this we' progress? we'll talk to the ceo of the foundation next. not to be focusing, again, on my moderate my goal was to finally get in shape. to severe chronic plaque psoriasis. so i finally made a decision to talk to my dermatologist about humira. humira works inside my body to target and...
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bill and melinda gates, his wife, have given away $35 billion since 1994. we did the math.hat's about $4,859,000 every day. and tonight, right here, he talks about his biggest emergency grant ever. $50 million to fight ebola. this gift to fight ebola, how important do you think it is that the world get involved in this fight? >> well, the disease is out of control in the three countries right now. >> reporter: we saw dr. besser and those exclusive pictures earlier. the beds, filled with the sick. bill, when you see those images emerging from the ebola wards, what concerns you the most? >> the horrific fact that people dying of ebola, but also, the whole health system is shut down. >> reporter: a health system he and his wife melinda are determined to help build. bill gates grew up in seattle. he was the one who organized the family competitions, reading with his siblings at an early age. there were a lot of board games in your house. you remember the favorites? >> we played a lot of cards. we played monopoly. >> reporter: it's safe to say, he won. you were reading the encyc
bill and melinda gates, his wife, have given away $35 billion since 1994. we did the math.hat's about $4,859,000 every day. and tonight, right here, he talks about his biggest emergency grant ever. $50 million to fight ebola. this gift to fight ebola, how important do you think it is that the world get involved in this fight? >> well, the disease is out of control in the three countries right now. >> reporter: we saw dr. besser and those exclusive pictures earlier. the beds, filled...
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Oct 20, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 49
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i think that they originate from some of the same dynamics that melinda is talking about.but some of the geostrategic and charges also are at play. i guess i would just emphasize the continuing role of donors interests, even as we look at some of the structural and kind of competitive aspects that were highlighted. and i think in tsveta his comments, the idea that some actors, there's a debt to be repaid, really ardent commitment to promoting democracy. you know, these are i think the donors that are willing to make the hard trade-offs against competing interests. and financial pressures to promote democracy in ways that are most likely to make a change. i think, i'm sure that is under my time but i think let me give it to my fellow panelists to finish their remarks. >> so i'd like to return to this idea of reforming u.s. democracy promotion by encouraging its cooperation with actors, democracy promoters from other new democracies around the world. and again i will speak, expense and central and eastern europe but i think there are important cases. i believe that the u.s.
i think that they originate from some of the same dynamics that melinda is talking about.but some of the geostrategic and charges also are at play. i guess i would just emphasize the continuing role of donors interests, even as we look at some of the structural and kind of competitive aspects that were highlighted. and i think in tsveta his comments, the idea that some actors, there's a debt to be repaid, really ardent commitment to promoting democracy. you know, these are i think the donors...
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Oct 8, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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bill and melinda gates are doing their part.heir fougs just announced it$5 ebola. >>> an air tanker dropping fire retardant dog park are dropping on the fire. >>> an early start on "your money," asian and european markets lower. weak out of china. major selloff yesterday. u.s. stocks in months of worries of stocks in europe. the dow lost 270 points. the s&p 500, futures are slightly higher, so maybe a bounceback today. we'll have to see if it holds. one bright spot in the u.s. economy. job openings, at the highest level in 13 years. ironic, right, job openings the highest in 14 years. and the dow is down. two unemployed workers for every available job. >> look at that chart. >> you know me, i love that chart. analysts say it's a sign we should expect more declines unemployment. the unemployment rate fell below 6% since 2008. i've been looking at pretty ugly charts for the last years. two for every job opening, it's like i have to beat you out easy. >> i don't know why you have to go there. let's take an early look with our weath
bill and melinda gates are doing their part.heir fougs just announced it$5 ebola. >>> an air tanker dropping fire retardant dog park are dropping on the fire. >>> an early start on "your money," asian and european markets lower. weak out of china. major selloff yesterday. u.s. stocks in months of worries of stocks in europe. the dow lost 270 points. the s&p 500, futures are slightly higher, so maybe a bounceback today. we'll have to see if it holds. one bright...
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Oct 18, 2014
10/14
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KDTV
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ha pedido responder al llamado pero para poner las cifras en perspectiva, la fundaciÓn de bill y melindalamos de seguridad fronteriza, normalmente nos referimos a las medidas tomadas de este lado de la lÍnea para evitar el ingreso de inmigrantes desde el sur pero autoridades mexicanas han decidido incrementar los filtros de seguridad en puntos de acceso a ese paÍs desde los estados unidos con el fin de evitar la propagaciÓn del brote de Ébola. mi compaÑera nos tiene mÁs detalles. >> estamos acostumbrados a que las autoridades estadounidenses revisen interroguen minuciosamente a los inmigrantes que vienen de mÉxico a estados unidos a travÉs de la frontera. pero que las autoridades mexicanas hagan lo mismo con los pasajeros que vienen de estados unidos es otra cosa. el miedo a que los viajeros que vienen de estados unidos traigan el Ébola a méxico desencadenÓ todo un dispositivo de control en la lÍnea fronteriza liderado por la secretarÍa de salud mexicana. >> la vigilancia primero consiste en tener mucha relaciÓn con las autoridades de estados unidos para la notificaciÓn directa de cualqu
ha pedido responder al llamado pero para poner las cifras en perspectiva, la fundaciÓn de bill y melindalamos de seguridad fronteriza, normalmente nos referimos a las medidas tomadas de este lado de la lÍnea para evitar el ingreso de inmigrantes desde el sur pero autoridades mexicanas han decidido incrementar los filtros de seguridad en puntos de acceso a ese paÍs desde los estados unidos con el fin de evitar la propagaciÓn del brote de Ébola. mi compaÑera nos tiene mÁs detalles....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 14, 2014
10/14
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SFGTV
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eye 22
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. >> good evening commissioners melinda with rose we're asking together you deny the appeal for the following reasons first, as tie mentioned in the code project not asking for concessions or mischievous it is a project under the code could search warrant have been build larger it will fit within the scale of the neighborhood and second this is not a project that has slipped through the cranks it was thoroughly reviewed and mraufd by the planning department and dbi and checked by zoning administrator and reviewed by the planning commission chose not to take a discretionary review and allow this project to proceed and third tie and molly have been receptive to remove a 6 foot tall fences and set back along the north property line the one point a that's important a number of the noechgsz o modifications were done after the discretionary review hearing although not action was required at this point further changes are necessary and will unreasonably he effect the property for tie i want to start off to talk about the project on the overhead here an aerial image of the site there's a an existing
. >> good evening commissioners melinda with rose we're asking together you deny the appeal for the following reasons first, as tie mentioned in the code project not asking for concessions or mischievous it is a project under the code could search warrant have been build larger it will fit within the scale of the neighborhood and second this is not a project that has slipped through the cranks it was thoroughly reviewed and mraufd by the planning department and dbi and checked by zoning...
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Oct 5, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN
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india with melinda going through the primary health care systems, that is a place where we have done pilot rollouts of the digital tracking, so nobody forgets who is going to remind his mother about the vaccination. if she does not follow-up, who is going to make sure? systems havee new very low cost, not much complexity. you should be able to raise performance, and so it is not just this huge level, macro, but it really is that one center that you know what is happening or not happening. >> who is a leader in washington that you admire? >> a leader in washington that i admire. >> it is not a trick. the think on education, president and arne duncan have brought a lot. in educationole k-12 is not the central role, but having raced to the top and having visibility, what charter schools have done, how they can be expanded, taking the test data that came out of no child left behind, which really did -- it was bad news, because it showed us how poorly the interest -- intercity was doing, so no child left behind was an advance. now, nobody wanted to deal with all of that bad news. it was,
india with melinda going through the primary health care systems, that is a place where we have done pilot rollouts of the digital tracking, so nobody forgets who is going to remind his mother about the vaccination. if she does not follow-up, who is going to make sure? systems havee new very low cost, not much complexity. you should be able to raise performance, and so it is not just this huge level, macro, but it really is that one center that you know what is happening or not happening....
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Oct 8, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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bill and melinda gates doing their part, their foundation has just announced it's donating $50 million to fight ebola. interestingly, they've been laser focused with malaria, the bill and melinda gates foundation take their expertise to zero in on this one. >>> the battle against a wildfire in california's yosemite park taking a turn. the air frank crashed near the entrance to the park. rescue crews are working their way through tough terrain to try to reach the pilot who was the only person on board that plane. taking a look at the forecast, indra petersons is here. good morning. >> a little thunder last night depend wrong you are. i know christine did. i had gotten light showers. still, anywhere you have the jet stream, we're talking about unsettled weather throughout. to the desert southwest, remnants of simon. they are still throughout so we do have the concern that we could be talking about flooding. we're taking a look at the maps, even some wind as that system is making its way out. we're still talking about strong gusts that are going to be out there today. as that cold front m
bill and melinda gates doing their part, their foundation has just announced it's donating $50 million to fight ebola. interestingly, they've been laser focused with malaria, the bill and melinda gates foundation take their expertise to zero in on this one. >>> the battle against a wildfire in california's yosemite park taking a turn. the air frank crashed near the entrance to the park. rescue crews are working their way through tough terrain to try to reach the pilot who was the only...
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bill and melinda gates' wife have given away $35 billion since 1994.out $4,859,000 every day. he talks about his biggest emergency grant ever. $50 million to fight ebola. >> this gift to fight ebola. how important that the world get involved in this fight? >> the disease is out of control in the three countries right now. >> reporter: a health system he and his wife melinda are determined to help build. he grew up in seattle. he organized the family competitions, reading with the siblings at an early age. a lot of board games in your house. remember the favorites? >> a lot of cards, monopoly. >> reporter: safe to say, he won. >> you were reading the encyclopedia. >> the world book, right. >> reporter: but something else caught his eye. >> you were 13 when you first started showing an interest in computers? >> i was very lucky to get a chance to use one when i was 13. >> that was it? that was the moment? >> i got somewhat addicted. >> reporter: addicted, and it paid off. the founder of microsoft. >> i'm bill gates, chairman of microsoft. >> reporter: th
bill and melinda gates' wife have given away $35 billion since 1994.out $4,859,000 every day. he talks about his biggest emergency grant ever. $50 million to fight ebola. >> this gift to fight ebola. how important that the world get involved in this fight? >> the disease is out of control in the three countries right now. >> reporter: a health system he and his wife melinda are determined to help build. he grew up in seattle. he organized the family competitions, reading with...
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Oct 17, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN
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host: melinda in virginia. this is melinda. i am a registered nurse. i've been in the military for 24 years. the cdc is a place to do .creening i can only wonder if this is the training that i recently received, which is nonexistent. pamphletering if the she talked about, i am wondering if those are at a fifth grade level or less, that is what our reading level is today in america. politics should be out of this. this is about the american people. travel should be stopped. the government needs to get their shit together and focus on this country because politics, whether it is democratic or republican or independent party, they are all about themselves and about how much money they can make. the cdc director should resign his position. he made fatal errors. host: theresa cardinal brown? you for your service. in past medical situations, there's a strong effort on the part of dhs and cdc when they give out informational pamphlets to make it as understandable as possible for the general public. we are also talking about international travelers whose grasp
host: melinda in virginia. this is melinda. i am a registered nurse. i've been in the military for 24 years. the cdc is a place to do .creening i can only wonder if this is the training that i recently received, which is nonexistent. pamphletering if the she talked about, i am wondering if those are at a fifth grade level or less, that is what our reading level is today in america. politics should be out of this. this is about the american people. travel should be stopped. the government needs...
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49
Oct 1, 2014
10/14
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KNTV
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lead doctor, lead ebola doctor in nigeria, were able to contain the outbreak and credits bill and melinda gates foundation. >>> 5:ooh 2. palo alto homeowners on high alert after a string of recent break-ins. at least 15 homes targeted this month in one area south of embarcadero road to south of the border. a sketch of a possible suspect. they're not sure if the same person is behind every break-in. >>> police are looking for a thief who stole credit cards from a woman's wallet at a restaurant and went on a shopping supreme take a look and see if you can spot the suspect. reaches over, steals the wallet out of the purse, then the thief empties it, puts it back into the purse, and leaves. all of this stealth. the thief charged $3,000 to the woman's credit cards. this happened monday around 1:00 at the tender greens restaurant in walnut creek. if you recognize that suspect, contact police. >>> 5:03. the city of san joses the police substation empty since built is finally going to open. between 101 and 85 in south san jose, where we find "today in the bay's" bob redell. does it look ready to
lead doctor, lead ebola doctor in nigeria, were able to contain the outbreak and credits bill and melinda gates foundation. >>> 5:ooh 2. palo alto homeowners on high alert after a string of recent break-ins. at least 15 homes targeted this month in one area south of embarcadero road to south of the border. a sketch of a possible suspect. they're not sure if the same person is behind every break-in. >>> police are looking for a thief who stole credit cards from a woman's wallet...
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Oct 7, 2014
10/14
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. >> our last question of the evening for the question for us comes from melinda jackson from san jose state for congressman honda and, melissa, you want to do the approval of congress if you don't mind. >> congressman honda, a recent field poll found that 75% of california voters disapproved 6 the job congress is doing. why do you think the public holds such a dim view of congress right now and why would you want to be re-elected to such an unpopular group. also, if re-elected, what would you do to try to improve the public trust and confidence in congress? >> 75% are judging their -- the sense because of the word congress. if we were able to desegregate the word congress into different parties and how people voted, so that they understand that one word doesn't paint each and every congress person with the same brush, i think their feelings would be different because when they say how you to like your current congress person, that's a different story. i think the way we report things has to be a little bit more desegregated. i don't take a dim view of congress. i think congress is a w
. >> our last question of the evening for the question for us comes from melinda jackson from san jose state for congressman honda and, melissa, you want to do the approval of congress if you don't mind. >> congressman honda, a recent field poll found that 75% of california voters disapproved 6 the job congress is doing. why do you think the public holds such a dim view of congress right now and why would you want to be re-elected to such an unpopular group. also, if re-elected,...
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Oct 25, 2014
10/14
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i think a big part of it is what melinda's book details in terms of what the women due to provide thenancial resources and structure that make it possible for people like randolph to be kind of out on the edge. -- i was going to say something colloquial, but i cannot say it in this setting. he is able to say and do some of the things he is able to say and do because of the financial support provided by the women's auxiliary. it is also timing. timing is important. the brotherhood of sleeping car porters was not the first union founded. there were two coupe or three others that failed almost right after, right at the turn-of-the-century. randolph is an important figure because he brings certain insights to organizing. there is no doubt about that. that is only part of the story of success. you can't really account for the success of the brotherhood without taking into account what melinda is talking about in her book. >> one last question and it has to be quick. >> good afternoon. sessionnjoyed the panel . i have to be here with three other mid-level managers from the park service in t
i think a big part of it is what melinda's book details in terms of what the women due to provide thenancial resources and structure that make it possible for people like randolph to be kind of out on the edge. -- i was going to say something colloquial, but i cannot say it in this setting. he is able to say and do some of the things he is able to say and do because of the financial support provided by the women's auxiliary. it is also timing. timing is important. the brotherhood of sleeping...
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Oct 17, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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not many people know about that was articulated very well to me by my colleagues at the bill and melinda foundation. in 20 12, they put together a polio emergency response unit. so this was a presidential task force for combatting polio in this country. and they created an entire health care infrastructure just for purposes of combatting polio. so when the first ebola case hit from the individual coming in from liberia, they used that as a template to mobilize a similar type of emergency operations unit. they used some of the same polio people that were so successful in controlling polio, put them on and repurposes for ebola. they mobilized a thousand soshl woerkers and caseworkers and they snuffed it out. i think it's a great example of how they went from one case to 20 and then snuffed it out as opposed to what we're seeing elsewhere in west africa. >> it isn't necessarily rocket science. it's a certain brut force and care and labor and execution of the plan that matters. >> yeah, exactly. that's why we'll never see an ebola outbreak in the united states. we have a terrific health care
not many people know about that was articulated very well to me by my colleagues at the bill and melinda foundation. in 20 12, they put together a polio emergency response unit. so this was a presidential task force for combatting polio in this country. and they created an entire health care infrastructure just for purposes of combatting polio. so when the first ebola case hit from the individual coming in from liberia, they used that as a template to mobilize a similar type of emergency...
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Oct 28, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN3
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then we have another initiative, the last mile, which again we work with the bill and melinda gates foundation to take hiv vaccines with our own infrastructure because we can go the last mile with more than tens of thousands of vehicles and mike crow distributors in africa. which by the way, are womenant p entreprene entrepreneurs. which is part of our 2020 initiative. we are working to take hiv vab seens to the last mile to the imof villages and we have increased distribution to tanzania alone just in that initiative. we worked with president obama on aids day, to expedite child transmission of hiv. we are on target, and we will do that. those are all of the social infrastructure the third vector which i want to emphasize. and despite the gaps of basic infrastructure that steve talked about, despite the gaps in business infrastructure because there is just. sufficient foreign direct investment today in africa. there needs to be more. and despite we need to scale up the great programs, i'm extremely bullish about the future of africa. and the most dynamic region in the world that i can see rig
then we have another initiative, the last mile, which again we work with the bill and melinda gates foundation to take hiv vaccines with our own infrastructure because we can go the last mile with more than tens of thousands of vehicles and mike crow distributors in africa. which by the way, are womenant p entreprene entrepreneurs. which is part of our 2020 initiative. we are working to take hiv vab seens to the last mile to the imof villages and we have increased distribution to tanzania alone...
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Oct 1, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN2
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india with melinda going through the primary health care systems, that is a place where we have done pilot rollouts of the digital tracking, so nobody forgets who is going to remind his mother about the vaccination. if she does not follow-up, who is going to make sure? systems havee new very low cost, not much complexity. you should be able to raise performance, and so it is not just this huge level, macro, but it really is that one center that you know what is happening or not happening. >> who is a leader in washington that you admire? >> a leader in washington that i admire. >> it is not a trick. the think on education, president and arne duncan have brought a lot. in educationole k-12 is not the central role, but having raced to the top and having visibility, what charter schools have done, how they can be expanded, taking the test data that came out of no child left behind, which really did -- it was bad news, because it showed us how poorly the interest -- intercity was doing, so no child left behind was an advance. now, nobody wanted to deal with all of that bad news. it was,
india with melinda going through the primary health care systems, that is a place where we have done pilot rollouts of the digital tracking, so nobody forgets who is going to remind his mother about the vaccination. if she does not follow-up, who is going to make sure? systems havee new very low cost, not much complexity. you should be able to raise performance, and so it is not just this huge level, macro, but it really is that one center that you know what is happening or not happening....
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Oct 1, 2014
10/14
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. >> reporter: little boy was home with his mother melinda stevenson grace at the time.nvestigators spent the day trying to sort out chain of events to how a toddler to access a loaded firearm. the residents say mother, father and two boys here are good solid neighbors. >> he was as cute as could be. he would play out there with his dad. >> happy go lucky little kid, very bright, three years old. i feel very sorry for him. >> reporter: well, the investigation, continues into this case, at this point in time, and the origin and ownership of that firearm. was it secured in anyway. we're told that the delaware attorney general's office is now looking into the the possibility of charges stemming from what happened here today. live from claymont, john rawlins for "action news" at ten on phl17. >>> all right, john, thank you. >>> gold medalist michael phelps took to twit tore day, after being arrested for his second dui. officials say that the olympian failed a field sobriety test this morning in after being stopped for speed nothing baltimore. phelps tweeted i understand the
. >> reporter: little boy was home with his mother melinda stevenson grace at the time.nvestigators spent the day trying to sort out chain of events to how a toddler to access a loaded firearm. the residents say mother, father and two boys here are good solid neighbors. >> he was as cute as could be. he would play out there with his dad. >> happy go lucky little kid, very bright, three years old. i feel very sorry for him. >> reporter: well, the investigation, continues...
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Oct 17, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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not many people know about that was articulated very well to me by my colleagues at the bill and melinda foundation. in 20 12, they put together a polio emergency response unit. so this was a presidential task force for combatting polio in this country. and they created an entire health care infrastructure just for purposes of combatting polio. so when the first ebola case hit from the individual coming in from liberia, they used that as a template to mobilize a similar type of emergency operations unit. they used some of the same polio people that were so successful in controlling polio, put them on and repurposes for ebola. they mobilized a thousand soshl woerkers and caseworkers and they snuffed it out. i think it's a great example of how they went from one case to 20 and then snuffed it out as opposed to what we're seeing elsewhere in west africa. >> it isn't necessarily rocket science. it's a certain brut force and care and labor and execution of the plan that matters. >> yeah, exactly. that's why we'll never see an ebola outbreak in the united states. we have a terrific health care
not many people know about that was articulated very well to me by my colleagues at the bill and melinda foundation. in 20 12, they put together a polio emergency response unit. so this was a presidential task force for combatting polio in this country. and they created an entire health care infrastructure just for purposes of combatting polio. so when the first ebola case hit from the individual coming in from liberia, they used that as a template to mobilize a similar type of emergency...
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Oct 24, 2014
10/14
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WPVI
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the bill and melinda gates foundation gave $100 million. >>> people in gloucester county took part inola awareness training today. they met in clayton for free training, all ems and first responders were invited to attend. it contains information before the virus and how to use personal protective equipment. firefighters from camden county are fighting a three alarm blaze, it's reported in voorhees this morning before noon time, it quickly reached two alarms, and the billowing smoke is seen escaping there. this is the 3600 block of avalon court in voorhees, it ignited this morning and quickly reached two alarms. we'll bring you more information as soon as it becomes available from voorhees, new jersey. >>> a catholic priest in chester county is arrested on charges of child pornography. these are charges against mark haines. he has been at eight different parishes and is charged with possessing and distributing child pornography. >> "action news" just received this statement from the archdiocese, it reads in part, these charges are serious and disturbing and the archdiocese is cooperat
the bill and melinda gates foundation gave $100 million. >>> people in gloucester county took part inola awareness training today. they met in clayton for free training, all ems and first responders were invited to attend. it contains information before the virus and how to use personal protective equipment. firefighters from camden county are fighting a three alarm blaze, it's reported in voorhees this morning before noon time, it quickly reached two alarms, and the billowing smoke is...
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Oct 9, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN
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eye 30
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melinda jackson from san jose state university. a recent field poll found 58% found the election office shelter and support to the increasing number of unaccompanied children are now entering the country illegally from central america. be doneyou think should with the immigrant children now in california, and what role should the federal government play in addressing the problem? >> thank you for the question. it is a humanitarian crisis, and my heart breaks for the kids coming over from guatemala, honduras. we have to treat them with due process. i think the president's plan to have refugee applications in the home country is a step in the right direction so folks are not taking the treacherous journey here, and i think we need to work with local governments to theire those kids with families. alternately having them apart for their families will not serve their interest or humanitarian interests. turn back to to the point on bart. i get the congressman's credit bart, but he is par relying on something that no longer exist, earmar
melinda jackson from san jose state university. a recent field poll found 58% found the election office shelter and support to the increasing number of unaccompanied children are now entering the country illegally from central america. be doneyou think should with the immigrant children now in california, and what role should the federal government play in addressing the problem? >> thank you for the question. it is a humanitarian crisis, and my heart breaks for the kids coming over from...
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Oct 3, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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an emergency epidemic command center that had been financed in part by the bill and melinda gates foundation up in 2012 to fight folio, they decided to repurpose that center and decided to make it an ebola command krener. they did 19,0 0 face-to-face visits with people. they took every school kids' temperature to make sure they could find and isolate any kids who had a fever, which is almost always the first symptom. and they did it. they nailed it. they realized they had a problem. they identified it. they isolated it. they sprang into action. and since august 31st, there has not been a single, confirmed case in nigeria. for all intents and purpose, it is over. is texas capable of doing the same thing? when texas governor rick perry held his press conference yesterday to talk about the nation's first ebola patient being diagnosed, he opened up his comments with what amounted to good news, bad news and worse news. the good news is that the centers for disease control has developed a training protocol for state health department departments for how to prepare fsh and deal with potential ebola
an emergency epidemic command center that had been financed in part by the bill and melinda gates foundation up in 2012 to fight folio, they decided to repurpose that center and decided to make it an ebola command krener. they did 19,0 0 face-to-face visits with people. they took every school kids' temperature to make sure they could find and isolate any kids who had a fever, which is almost always the first symptom. and they did it. they nailed it. they realized they had a problem. they...
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Oct 22, 2014
10/14
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KNTV
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political analyst melinda jackson says that's not surprising with so many undecided voters. >> a lot of people haven't made up their minds. you try to push them and say if you lean toward one or the other, that can affect the numbers that you get. >> reporter: jackson says in her view cortese may have a slight edge because public safety appears to be a higher priority with pension reform, at least with voters. robert handa, nbc bay area news. >>> tomorrow marks the one-year anniversary of the teenager andy lopez's death. sonoma county leaders have approved a new memorial park in his name. community activists continue to press for change. the group called justice for andy lopez circulated a petition to fire the deputy who killed lopez. that deputy claimed that the pellet gun lopez carried was an assault rifle. today activists told the board of supervisors they want local law enforcement to wear cameras and they want oversight. >> we want very much to have an oversight board that will oversee critical incidents and actually also help to set new policies for hiring a more diverse and bi
political analyst melinda jackson says that's not surprising with so many undecided voters. >> a lot of people haven't made up their minds. you try to push them and say if you lean toward one or the other, that can affect the numbers that you get. >> reporter: jackson says in her view cortese may have a slight edge because public safety appears to be a higher priority with pension reform, at least with voters. robert handa, nbc bay area news. >>> tomorrow marks the one-year...
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Oct 2, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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stopped it in nigeria because of a strong health care system apparently and a lot of help from bill and melindaot of money in there, and very quickly helped them convert a malaria treatment center into an ebola treatment center. that, plus contacts, allowed them apparently to stop it in nigeria. and if they can do it in nigeria we ought to be able to do it in texas. >> we did a lot of this reporting on viruses, in africa, gone out with hunters and shown how viruses were transmitted from animals to humans. you call this the dress rehearsal for the next epidemic or pandemic, what should we learn from this outbreak to prepare for the next one? and is your concern on the next one that the virus is transmittable before somebody shows symptoms? >> well, what we should be learning is that this is not a one-time event. assuming we can stop this in texas which i certainly take tom frieden's point, that can be done. it should not be a problem. assuming it can be stopped, this is not a one-time event. this year it is ebola, 2014, it even makes it to the u.s. next year it will be a different virus, the yea
stopped it in nigeria because of a strong health care system apparently and a lot of help from bill and melindaot of money in there, and very quickly helped them convert a malaria treatment center into an ebola treatment center. that, plus contacts, allowed them apparently to stop it in nigeria. and if they can do it in nigeria we ought to be able to do it in texas. >> we did a lot of this reporting on viruses, in africa, gone out with hunters and shown how viruses were transmitted from...
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Oct 15, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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thank you, amy, and thank you, chuck and thank you melinda. we'll be right back after this.an, homeowners insurance doesn't cover floods? [ heart rate increases ] man: a few inches of water caused all this? [ heart rate increases ] woman #2: but i don't even live near the water. what you don't know about flood insurance may shock you -- including the fact that a preferred risk policy starts as low as $129 a year. for an agent, call the number that appears on your screen. a broader mix of energies, world needs to move, to keep warm, to make clay piggies. that's why we are supplying natural gas, to generate cleaner electricity, that has around 50% fewer co2 emissions than coal. let's broaden the world's energy mix, let's go. >>> let me finish tonight with pope francis. i don't live in some religious ghetto. most of the people i work with, most of my friends are not catholics like us. so i've got a good reading on the new pope who is as much a breath of fresh air as when he first arrived. people like him. they like his whole approach to life and faith both. they like his confro
thank you, amy, and thank you, chuck and thank you melinda. we'll be right back after this.an, homeowners insurance doesn't cover floods? [ heart rate increases ] man: a few inches of water caused all this? [ heart rate increases ] woman #2: but i don't even live near the water. what you don't know about flood insurance may shock you -- including the fact that a preferred risk policy starts as low as $129 a year. for an agent, call the number that appears on your screen. a broader mix of...
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Oct 28, 2014
10/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 39
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we bring sterile vaccine grade water with partners, with ifc, the bill and melinda gates foundation, co-investors, into small villages, small towns. provide connectivity, solar power, and this unit that we've developed works with, again, solar power. 1,000 liters of sterile water generated from any water, no matter how contaminated the water is, working on solar power. and we need to scale these up. we're looking for partners. we're inviting partners to come and join us. i talked to strive about it and i think all we need to continue to scale these big projects up from where they are. then we have another initiative, which is the last mile, which again we work with the bill and melinda gates foundation to take hiv vaccines with our own infrastructure because we request go the last mile with more than tens of thousands of vehicles and microdistributors in africa, which by the way most are women entrepreneurs, so that's part of our 5 by 20, 5 million women to be empowered by 2020 initiative, which connects into the microdistribution to take hiv vaccines to the last mile to the villages
we bring sterile vaccine grade water with partners, with ifc, the bill and melinda gates foundation, co-investors, into small villages, small towns. provide connectivity, solar power, and this unit that we've developed works with, again, solar power. 1,000 liters of sterile water generated from any water, no matter how contaminated the water is, working on solar power. and we need to scale these up. we're looking for partners. we're inviting partners to come and join us. i talked to strive...
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Oct 6, 2014
10/14
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CNNW
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. >> folks are trying to chip in talking to someone from the bill and melinda gates foundation they haveion hoping they'll be able to produce these vaccines soon. kevin, thank you so much for your time. i truly appreciate it. >>> if you are sitting there watching all of our coverage here on cnn about these patients and infection and ebola, you can help. go to our impact your world site at cnn.com/impact and you'll find multiple organizations cnn vetted that are helping fight this deadly disease and how you can help. cnn.com/impact. >>> coming up next here on cnn, there's new evidence in that pennsylvania hunt for a man accused of killing a state trooper and wounding another. we're now learning about this note allegedly written by eric frein himself. find out what police say he wrote in this note next. also ahead, vice president joe biden apologizing to turkey and the uae after comments he made suggested the middle eastern allies may be partly to blame for strengthening of isis but what was the vice president saying? was it true? we'll discuss. stay here. at t-mobile get four lines for ju
. >> folks are trying to chip in talking to someone from the bill and melinda gates foundation they haveion hoping they'll be able to produce these vaccines soon. kevin, thank you so much for your time. i truly appreciate it. >>> if you are sitting there watching all of our coverage here on cnn about these patients and infection and ebola, you can help. go to our impact your world site at cnn.com/impact and you'll find multiple organizations cnn vetted that are helping fight this...
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Oct 6, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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. >> sue desmond is the chief executive officer of the bill and melinda gates foundation that pledged to fight ebola around the world. we will be joined sortly from liberia as well from the world health organization. tell us about the gates foundation and what this commitment means and whether the supplies that you are trying to provide are going to get to the people who need them. we have seen how things have been backed up by a lack of responsiveness from the governments. >> andrea, our foundation always had a small amount of funding available for emergencies. when we heard in early september that help was needed and rapid response was needed, we moved almost 15 million of the 50 million we pledged towards ebola to organizations on the ground who were working with the communitys, who, unicef and cdc. they could not only get supplies where they need it the most, but put in place the important shoe leather public health efforts that we know have contained this virus before. isolating the cases and making sure we track the contacts and those things. very importantly now in the medium t
. >> sue desmond is the chief executive officer of the bill and melinda gates foundation that pledged to fight ebola around the world. we will be joined sortly from liberia as well from the world health organization. tell us about the gates foundation and what this commitment means and whether the supplies that you are trying to provide are going to get to the people who need them. we have seen how things have been backed up by a lack of responsiveness from the governments. >>...