102
102
May 27, 2014
05/14
by
KQEH
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eye 102
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mr. robinson had retired at this point, i believe. d he invited jackie robinson to speak at the school and he shut up. so my brother is a big hero in the school. he did come. tavis: telling the story of how andrew made the decision that he wanted to go to mississippi. >> i'm not so sure that it was a making of a decision as much as it was how we were brought up. he particularly was a person who really looked at things in terms of the word fair. call him political. he viewed the world in terms of this is fair, this is wrong, this is really wrong. he wanted to understand certain situations because they are both simple and can't located. he heard in certain parts of the country, if you wanted to vote, you could get the upper even shot and murdered. just to go to a voting booth. he thought that was unfair. explained to me. he heard that there were people organizing to register african-americans to vote in mississippi specifically. that is what freedom summer became and he joined that along with 900 other volunteers. he was not the only one
mr. robinson had retired at this point, i believe. d he invited jackie robinson to speak at the school and he shut up. so my brother is a big hero in the school. he did come. tavis: telling the story of how andrew made the decision that he wanted to go to mississippi. >> i'm not so sure that it was a making of a decision as much as it was how we were brought up. he particularly was a person who really looked at things in terms of the word fair. call him political. he viewed the world in...
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632
May 16, 2014
05/14
by
KNTV
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mr. robinson." please welcome mr. nson there, oh my goodness. [ cheers and applause ] craig, nice to see you my friend. >> it's great to see you. great to be here. >> jimmy: yeah, thank you for being here and congrats on the new show. >> thank you very much. >> jimmy: "mr. robinson." >> thank you very much. >> jimmy: we had -- nbc had a a thing called up fronts where it's basically you go in front of, i guess, media buyers or advertisers -- >> advertisers, yeah. >> jimmy: -- and you tell them the new lineup of shows are and so you are one of the new shows and everyone loved it. congrats and that's all good stuff. do you have fun at the up fronts? you had fun -- you post like a a thousand photos. >> it's a lot of photos. yeah, but -- it's good time. >> jimmy: do you have a go to face when photos are getting taken of you? >> i have a blue steel. yes. >> jimmy: what is it? what is it? >> well -- i always kind of duck my head down. you know, because you don't want them to see the fat. and you know? and then you go down and
mr. robinson." please welcome mr. nson there, oh my goodness. [ cheers and applause ] craig, nice to see you my friend. >> it's great to see you. great to be here. >> jimmy: yeah, thank you for being here and congrats on the new show. >> thank you very much. >> jimmy: "mr. robinson." >> thank you very much. >> jimmy: we had -- nbc had a a thing called up fronts where it's basically you go in front of, i guess, media buyers or advertisers --...
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131
May 18, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
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eye 131
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mr. robinson i would advise you with respect to the charge. ave the right to have an attorney and have the attorney represent you at all stages of the proceeding. >> robinson was convicted of christina's murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. >> there's certainly a feeling of the victim getting some justice but at the end of the day, you still have a 20-year-old single mother that died for no reason other than someone else's violence. that's sad. >> i believe that other people -- parents have children that got killed and murdered and move on with theirly. me, i don't know. i can't. i cannot go work outside. it hurts me. it hits me all the time that i miss christina so bad. >>> up next, a woman goes missing. >> an obvious possibility was an abduction. >> police find hints of a secret life inside the victim's computer. >> the internet opens up a whole new superhigh way of suspects. >> and deserving evidence in an unexpected loc. >> something had happened in that basement. >> they almost looked like chain saw marks. >> scientis
mr. robinson i would advise you with respect to the charge. ave the right to have an attorney and have the attorney represent you at all stages of the proceeding. >> robinson was convicted of christina's murder and was sentenced to life in prison without parole. >> there's certainly a feeling of the victim getting some justice but at the end of the day, you still have a 20-year-old single mother that died for no reason other than someone else's violence. that's sad. >> i...
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May 2, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 97
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mr. robinson's newsletter, quote -- >> no way. you are lying.never in my life written that statement. >> only government classification of more and more diseased types as aids cases has kept the number of victims at politically necessary levels. you wrote it. i'm quoting it. >> that was art robinson, wacky candidate of 2010. art robinson runs something called the oregon institute of science and medicine. he's got lots of ideas. radiation is good for you. we should sprinkle it around the country for our health, aids is not true, schools should be abolished. in to 2010, he had the benefit of a super pac that ran ads attacking peter defazio and selling art robinson as a scientist, a new voice, a smarter choice. that outside group turned out to be funded largely by one guy, a hedge fund billionaire in new york. but his new york money made art robinson a contender in oregon. he got within ten points of peter defazio. seriously, the sprinkle radiation all over the country guy got within ten points. money is a very powerful thing. in their second conte
mr. robinson's newsletter, quote -- >> no way. you are lying.never in my life written that statement. >> only government classification of more and more diseased types as aids cases has kept the number of victims at politically necessary levels. you wrote it. i'm quoting it. >> that was art robinson, wacky candidate of 2010. art robinson runs something called the oregon institute of science and medicine. he's got lots of ideas. radiation is good for you. we should sprinkle it...
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49
May 16, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 49
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mr. robinson. >> thank you for inviting student veterans of america to submit our testimony on the state of v.a. health care. s the advocate for students of higher education, we are sharing our perspective with you today. i would like to address the veterans for whom we are gathered today. we have student veterans of america honor the service of your loved ones and stand with you seeking answers. student veterans of america is a network of over 1,000 chapters on as many campuses coose all 50 states and three countries. they comprise veterans with the majority having served after 9/11. paramount to their success is the ability to remain healthy and utilize the health care system provided by the department of veterans affairs. in this testimony, we speak on student level issues of health and well-being with our main focus being on higher education. as the g.i. bill makes up a major portion of the benefits, we believe it is essential to consider education and the role it plays in the life of veterans who may be receiving health care. as a former commander in the army with service spanning t
mr. robinson. >> thank you for inviting student veterans of america to submit our testimony on the state of v.a. health care. s the advocate for students of higher education, we are sharing our perspective with you today. i would like to address the veterans for whom we are gathered today. we have student veterans of america honor the service of your loved ones and stand with you seeking answers. student veterans of america is a network of over 1,000 chapters on as many campuses coose all...
60
60
May 15, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN
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eye 60
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mr. robinson. >> thank you for inviting student veterans of america to submit our testimony on the state of v.a. health care. s the advocate for students of higher education, we are sharing our perspective with you today. i would like to address the veterans for whom we are gathered today. we have student veterans of america honor the service of your loved ones and stand with you seeking answers. student veterans of america is a network of over 1,000 chapters on as many campuses coose all 50 states and three countries. they comprise veterans with the majority having served after 9/11. paramount to their success is the ability to remain healthy and utilize the health care system provided by the department of veterans affairs. in this testimony, we speak on student level issues of health and well-being with our main focus being on higher education. as the g.i. bill makes up a major portion of the benefits, we believe it is essential to consider education and the role it plays in the life of veterans who may be receiving health care. as a former commander in the army with service spanning t
mr. robinson. >> thank you for inviting student veterans of america to submit our testimony on the state of v.a. health care. s the advocate for students of higher education, we are sharing our perspective with you today. i would like to address the veterans for whom we are gathered today. we have student veterans of america honor the service of your loved ones and stand with you seeking answers. student veterans of america is a network of over 1,000 chapters on as many campuses coose all...
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269
May 9, 2014
05/14
by
CNBC
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eye 269
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mrs. robinson f that was filmed today, he might say 3d printing, i think it's the most interesting and disruptivetry but the stock 100 times sale. >> you will not get a fight from me. it reminds me of north american rockwell in 1964. they had game two. so did xerox. take a look at the way the stocks trasdsed along with admiral. those were the hot stocks. and texas instruments. >> 200 publicly traded radio companies in the '20s. >> collins. remember when rca peaked, 480? right before the crash. >> there you go. >> all right. >> what a buy. >> thank you very much. good stuff here. the opening bell a few minutes away on friday may 9th. futures indicating a slightly down open. a lot more to do here at post nine for you bulls, bears, and the bell, coming up next. female announcer: female announcer: when you see this truck, it means another neighbor is going to sleep better tonight because they went to sleep train's ticket to tempur-pedic event. choose from a huge selection of tempur-pedic models, including the new tempur-choice with head-to-toe customization. plus, get 36 months interest-free financin
mrs. robinson f that was filmed today, he might say 3d printing, i think it's the most interesting and disruptivetry but the stock 100 times sale. >> you will not get a fight from me. it reminds me of north american rockwell in 1964. they had game two. so did xerox. take a look at the way the stocks trasdsed along with admiral. those were the hot stocks. and texas instruments. >> 200 publicly traded radio companies in the '20s. >> collins. remember when rca peaked, 480? right...
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May 13, 2014
05/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 344
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mr. sterling as expeditiously as possible. gene robinsonit's hard to know where to begin when you listen to comments like that. >> i'm just -- oh, my god. >> you could spend an entire show telling what magic johnson has done for african-american communities. >> he's donated tens of millions of dollars in low income communities around the country. he could have picked any random person and said they, you know, they might not have done something for the african-american community, but not magic johnson. tus just -- this guy is on mars or something. but he's not a racist. right? i'm not a racist. but let me tell you about every african-american. it's just -- get him out of here. >> i'll tell you one way that video helped, he's clearly out of his mind. beyond being a racist. you could just see in the way he responds and as he drifts off, he's just mentally just not there. >> apparently soon-to-be ex-wife has indicated she feels strongly he's in the early stages of dementia. and he has proven it. >> you watch him and then he talks, he's not a we
mr. sterling as expeditiously as possible. gene robinsonit's hard to know where to begin when you listen to comments like that. >> i'm just -- oh, my god. >> you could spend an entire show telling what magic johnson has done for african-american communities. >> he's donated tens of millions of dollars in low income communities around the country. he could have picked any random person and said they, you know, they might not have done something for the african-american...
61
61
May 5, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 61
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mr. fisher, before we do that, have you been accurate in what you said about robinson and about the court's cases? in weeks, which was quoted in robinson, the court said: "the right, always recognized under english and american law, to search the person of the accused when legally arrested to discover and seize the fruits or evidences of crime. is that historically inaccurate? do you want us to repudiate that? >> no, your honor. what weeks said, you quoted it, fruits and instrumentalities of the crime have always been something that could be seized from a person. now, weeks, of course, as this court said in robinson itself, was dicta. and there was that historical authority to take fruits and evidence i'm sorry fruits and instrumentalities of the crime. which did it say? >> did it say instrumentalities or evidence? >> weeks used because justice alito said evidence. you you changed it to instrumentality. is one of you wrong? >>weeks uses the word "evidence, " but, justice scalia, because it was not at issue in that case, the the bishop treatise that you cited in your thornton concurrence tal
mr. fisher, before we do that, have you been accurate in what you said about robinson and about the court's cases? in weeks, which was quoted in robinson, the court said: "the right, always recognized under english and american law, to search the person of the accused when legally arrested to discover and seize the fruits or evidences of crime. is that historically inaccurate? do you want us to repudiate that? >> no, your honor. what weeks said, you quoted it, fruits and...
68
68
May 3, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 68
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mr. fisher, before we do that, have you been accurate in what you said about robinson and about the court's cases? in weeks, which was quoted in robinson, the court said: "the right, always recognized under english and american law, to search the person of the accused when legally arrested to discover and seize the fruits or evidences of crime. is that historically inaccurate? do you want us to repudiate that? >> no, your honor. what weeks said, you quoted it, fruits and instrumentalities of the crime have always been something that could be seized from a person. now, weeks, of course, as this court said in robinson itself, was dicta. and there was that historical authority to take fruits and evidence i'm sorry fruits and instrumentalities of the crime. which did it say? >> did it say instrumentalities or evidence? >> weeks used because justice alito said evidence. you you changed it to instrumentality. is one of you wrong? >>weeks uses the word "evidence, " but, justice scalia, because it was not at issue in that case, the the bishop treatise that you cited in your thornton concurrence tal
mr. fisher, before we do that, have you been accurate in what you said about robinson and about the court's cases? in weeks, which was quoted in robinson, the court said: "the right, always recognized under english and american law, to search the person of the accused when legally arrested to discover and seize the fruits or evidences of crime. is that historically inaccurate? do you want us to repudiate that? >> no, your honor. what weeks said, you quoted it, fruits and...
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270
May 6, 2014
05/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 270
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mark halperin, eugene robinson, steve rattner with us. and now with us mr. remnick.we'll get to your great book in just a moment. can i just say feature writing, essays and criticism, columns and commentary, fiction. you kept coming up on stage. are you tired? >> it was nice to come see you. >> you seem completely uninterested, actually. >> we actually moved a chair just to sit right by the podium because you kept coming up. people said just sit here. >> congratulations. >> i've had the opposite happen. completely strike out with loads of nominations which was less fun. >> it was a good night. also joining us chief white house correspondent and political director and host of "the daily rundown," chuck todd. >> good morning. >> have you seen cranston at lbj? >> yes. he's brilliant. portrayal is great. i'm higher on his performance than the play itself. >> i've heard the play itself is a little scattered and sort of wanders in the second act, but he's good. >> he's worth the price of admission. >> steve, have you seen it? >> no. >> i want to talk to you about barack ob
mark halperin, eugene robinson, steve rattner with us. and now with us mr. remnick.we'll get to your great book in just a moment. can i just say feature writing, essays and criticism, columns and commentary, fiction. you kept coming up on stage. are you tired? >> it was nice to come see you. >> you seem completely uninterested, actually. >> we actually moved a chair just to sit right by the podium because you kept coming up. people said just sit here. >> congratulations....