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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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mr. albert. and wrote letters for many years. day, when i was just about to graduate from high school i got a call from charlie ward, his administrative assistant. he asked me how i would feel about being the first woman page . knew this say, i was ecstatic about this. i said, i will have to ask my parents. he said, mr. albert has spoken to your parents and it is ok with them. i said absolutely. that was how it began. 1970's, it iser about half female, half male. it's in the early 1980's, that we have the first female based the pageades inth school elevated to the speakers page, which was a real approximate for the grils. -- a real kabul schmidt -- accomplishment for the girls. technology was changing the job. whether it was the telegraph which obviated writing pages. or the telephone which obviated telegraph paged. s. so, technology by the latter 20 century, particularly in the computer age, smartphone age, begins to obviate a lot of the tasks. the need for messengers on the floor was really not that great by the latter part of
mr. albert. and wrote letters for many years. day, when i was just about to graduate from high school i got a call from charlie ward, his administrative assistant. he asked me how i would feel about being the first woman page . knew this say, i was ecstatic about this. i said, i will have to ask my parents. he said, mr. albert has spoken to your parents and it is ok with them. i said absolutely. that was how it began. 1970's, it iser about half female, half male. it's in the early 1980's, that...
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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mr. albert. and wrote letters and letters and letters to mr. albert for many years. finally, one day, when i was just about to graduate from high school, i got a call from charlie ward, the administrative assistant and asked me how i would feel about being the first woman page. i was ecstatic about this. and i said well, i'll have to ask my parent first. he said we've spoken to your parents and it's okay with them. i said absolutely. that's how it began. >> by the latter 1970s, it's about half -- half and half females, half males. it's in the early 1980s that we have the first female based on her grades in the "capitol page school" elevated to speaker position. that's a huge accountment to his right now. but technology was always changing the job of the pages. you know, whether it was the telegraph which obviated, writing payments so many hings. so technology by the latter 20th century, particularly in the computer age, the hand held smart phone age, begins to oviate a lot of the tasks that they had overtaken. the need for members of the juries on the floor was not t
mr. albert. and wrote letters and letters and letters to mr. albert for many years. finally, one day, when i was just about to graduate from high school, i got a call from charlie ward, the administrative assistant and asked me how i would feel about being the first woman page. i was ecstatic about this. and i said well, i'll have to ask my parent first. he said we've spoken to your parents and it's okay with them. i said absolutely. that's how it began. >> by the latter 1970s, it's about...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 3, 2014
11/14
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mr. albert i don't want to take away from the larger network don't block the intersection it is only one thing that's education we i support of the longer study and support the commemorating management pricing and in the downtown area and i'd love to do work with the major employers to pilot that but in the meantime i don't want to have no more work but while we continue to do all the another amazing work to make selma flow better. >> hi again, i want to start with my presentation is additionally provide 6 pcos up to 6 pcos going to first identifying which locates and agreeing to which locations we want to tackle first, i building that education again, the 3 workers we've talked about that i want to start with education some outreach to make sure that everybody understands what the rules are and after that do another assessment with engineering to make sure that we have the proper signage, striping whatever it takes and then bring on the enforcement i'm proposing we do that on december 1st especially okay. we'll start off again with the intersections we've identified and gun to make diff
mr. albert i don't want to take away from the larger network don't block the intersection it is only one thing that's education we i support of the longer study and support the commemorating management pricing and in the downtown area and i'd love to do work with the major employers to pilot that but in the meantime i don't want to have no more work but while we continue to do all the another amazing work to make selma flow better. >> hi again, i want to start with my presentation is...
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Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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WHYY
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mr. secretary. >> i'm honored to be with you in your first outing here. >> albert: thank you for joining us. we have so much to talk about. the deadline of the iranian nuclear negotiations is november 24. what are the odds of having a deal by then or being close enough to have an extension? >> i honestly can't give you odds and i wouldn't. i think i'm hopeful, but it's a very tough negotiation. there are still gaps that are fairly wide on a number of subjects. >> albert: are you getting closer? >> well, we're closer than a week ago or ten weeks ago, but we're still with big gaps. we have critical weeks ahead of us. i think the stakes for the world are enormous. i hope the iranians will not get stuck in a tree of their own making on one demand or another in order to try to find a way together. and we're hopeful. we'll do our best, but we have to close off all pathways to a nuclear weapon, and we have to have enough breakout time in order to be able to guarantee the security of everybody who's concerned about this. >> albert: in these next three and a half weeks, do you have any plans to meet
mr. secretary. >> i'm honored to be with you in your first outing here. >> albert: thank you for joining us. we have so much to talk about. the deadline of the iranian nuclear negotiations is november 24. what are the odds of having a deal by then or being close enough to have an extension? >> i honestly can't give you odds and i wouldn't. i think i'm hopeful, but it's a very tough negotiation. there are still gaps that are fairly wide on a number of subjects. >> albert:...
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Nov 8, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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he has also written biographies of albert einstein, ben franklin and steve jobs. mr. is a isakson discusses book at the computer history museum in mountain view california. this is an hour, 15 minutes. >> and now for tonight's progr program. the history of computing is epic. it is the ongoing story of how one of the greatest periods of creativity in human history has been unleashed. it is populated with some of the most fascinating people of our time and now one of the most distinguished biographers of in our time has taken it on and produced an exceptional result. the biographer of courses walter isaacson. not content solely with his award-winning best-selling biographies of benjamin franklin, albert einstein and steve jobs walter has returned once more to paint on a very large campus and the book is "the innovators" how a group of hackers, geniuses and geeks created the digital revolution. all of us have learned and are delighted to have learned in the process that walter isaacson has an inner geek and he is tapped into it directly. the epic stories are all here. al
he has also written biographies of albert einstein, ben franklin and steve jobs. mr. is a isakson discusses book at the computer history museum in mountain view california. this is an hour, 15 minutes. >> and now for tonight's progr program. the history of computing is epic. it is the ongoing story of how one of the greatest periods of creativity in human history has been unleashed. it is populated with some of the most fascinating people of our time and now one of the most distinguished...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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26
Nov 22, 2014
11/14
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albert blake. >> thank you. >> next speaker please? >> yes. hi, my name is pamela clark. and i am in full support of mr. pappas and the tree as a low income and i depend on the places like the tree for compassion and medicine. and as it helps my arthritis and my so thank you very much. >> okay. >> next speaker please? >> good evening, madam president and fellow commissioner mies name is ed and i am the committee chair of the apprentice program for the uscw cannabis worker's program and soon to be released in the state of california and i am also the executive director of the union cannabis which is the joint group for any collective that is under a collective bargaining agreement and we at the osc w, wholeheartedly, support charlie pappas in the divinty tree and i asked that the rest of the group please stand up for mr. pappas. and i would like to add that you have three members of the legal cannabis task force, and two i must say who were my dear friends have always been in most cases opposed to anything. when it came to legal cannabis and they are here to support charlie and. and i also want to say if
albert blake. >> thank you. >> next speaker please? >> yes. hi, my name is pamela clark. and i am in full support of mr. pappas and the tree as a low income and i depend on the places like the tree for compassion and medicine. and as it helps my arthritis and my so thank you very much. >> okay. >> next speaker please? >> good evening, madam president and fellow commissioner mies name is ed and i am the committee chair of the apprentice program for the uscw...
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Nov 18, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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albert pujols. it's all about tv. they want people to tune in. that's where nay get the money. they need a star. >> you need people in the seats. who gets them there? mr here. i'm curious about sports fans who get ticked off when players are paid so much. is it that they then see the player as a jerk or the a-rod situation where they don't live up to the expectations and sometimes fall into scandals. so you fans who go out in 30 below weather with their naked bodies painted but then they get mad at the player -- not female fans but you know what i mean. get mad at the player when they're wealthy, it seems to me. >> and it seems like sometimes their anger is a little misguided. if you're a player you're going take the money if the owner is paying it. i think probably some -- also, they're not thinking it entirely through. when you pay someone that kind of money you end up paying for it when you buy tickets. you pie for it at the concession stands. they always pass the expenditure along to the fan. that's one thing owners are good at. >> if the marlins win they'll have his jersey and cheering him on. i guess that's when the balance takes place. it's int
albert pujols. it's all about tv. they want people to tune in. that's where nay get the money. they need a star. >> you need people in the seats. who gets them there? mr here. i'm curious about sports fans who get ticked off when players are paid so much. is it that they then see the player as a jerk or the a-rod situation where they don't live up to the expectations and sometimes fall into scandals. so you fans who go out in 30 below weather with their naked bodies painted but then they...