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paleoclimatologists his work is featured in dozens of scientific journals and periodicals including national geographic currently teaches at paul smith college in new york as a researcher at maine's climate change institute or bring to the table an interesting new perspective on climate change and the future of our planet he's also the author of a new book entitled deep future the next one hundred thousand years of life on earth i'm pleased to welcome from our studios in new york dr kurt spader dr sevier welcome. dr stater can you hear me. dr staker is apparently not here. ok. we'll be right back with dr staters stick around. let's not forget that we had an apartheid break. i think. one of the well. we never got the shows the safe get ready because you are free to. take charge in here broadcasting live from washington d.c. coming up today on the big picture a. new website with twenty four seventh's live streaming news tells us what to do about the ongoing financial heart unlimited high quality videos for download. and stories never mainstream news. to me so. we listen to. our team talk to. you guys wel
paleoclimatologists his work is featured in dozens of scientific journals and periodicals including national geographic currently teaches at paul smith college in new york as a researcher at maine's climate change institute or bring to the table an interesting new perspective on climate change and the future of our planet he's also the author of a new book entitled deep future the next one hundred thousand years of life on earth i'm pleased to welcome from our studios in new york dr kurt spader...
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Apr 16, 2011
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kids national geographic is a great place for animal lovers and young explorers to learn about our planetcheck out amazing photos and videos of almost any animal you can think of, and even some you may have never heard of. click on the "people and places" link to learn about different cultures from around the world. there are also links to tons of games, activities and stories. you can travel to distant countries and go on a safari without ever leaving your house. ♪ >>> there are thousands of colleges in the united states. 4,140 at last count. yet a lot of ambitious kids and their parents have a very short list -- the eight schools of the ivy league. >> the ivy league is a very hard group of schools to get into. >> they give you more opportunities than other schools. >> there's a lot of kids that their whole life depends on getting into an ivy league school. for the record, the eight ivies are harvard, dartmouth, brown, cornell, columbia, yale, princeton and the university of pennsylvania. to find out what's so special about them, we talked to lee stetson. he spent almost 30 years as an i
kids national geographic is a great place for animal lovers and young explorers to learn about our planetcheck out amazing photos and videos of almost any animal you can think of, and even some you may have never heard of. click on the "people and places" link to learn about different cultures from around the world. there are also links to tons of games, activities and stories. you can travel to distant countries and go on a safari without ever leaving your house. ♪ >>>...
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Apr 3, 2011
04/11
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this week, ginji partnered with national geographic at the cherry blossom festival.et shrimp like toro will melt in your mouth. >> tastes sweet. >> reporter: sustainable sushi has been slow to catch on. tataki is one of the few restaurants in united states not offering blue fin. >> again, that was wendy reeger reporting. by the way, you can have a say by simply refusing to order blue fin and let the restaurant know why. >>> first of its kind festival in the south bay is the food truck craze making its way to san jose. restaurants on wheels came together downtown this afternoon. vendors have been featured on food channels for alternative to fine dining but for a fraction of the cost. >> most of the food trucks are either in l.a. or san francisco, or maybe new york. but we thought there was a great market here. we thought there was a great amount of people who have such enthusiasm for great food. we figured let's bring all these trucks. a lot of these guys are my friends. we put it on facebook, got a random parking lot and let's see what happens. >> it's similar to the
this week, ginji partnered with national geographic at the cherry blossom festival.et shrimp like toro will melt in your mouth. >> tastes sweet. >> reporter: sustainable sushi has been slow to catch on. tataki is one of the few restaurants in united states not offering blue fin. >> again, that was wendy reeger reporting. by the way, you can have a say by simply refusing to order blue fin and let the restaurant know why. >>> first of its kind festival in the south bay...
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this week genji partnered with national geographic to bring sushi chef where they offered people sustainable sushi like sweet shrimp which like toro will melt in your mouth. >> tasty shrimp it's not like cocktail shrimp. >> reporter: sustainable sushi has been slow to catch on. totaki sushi in san francisco not offering bluefin. alas washington restaurants still keep it on their menus but customers can change that. just stop ordering it and let the restaurant know why. a simple act. allowing future generations to taste this gift from the sea. wendy rieger, news4, washington. >> good idea. >> i love sushi but i'll forego the bluefin. >> stay away from that. >> for sure. >> nasty out there, man. >> it is and it's just been like that for the last couple of days. nine days from a row, below average. and then you mention the clouds and the drizzle and you mentioned it earlier. >> yuck. >> down around union station right now where we still have the yuck, the drizzle, the clouds, and yes very cool temperatures as well for this time of year. average temperature, average high temperature's in the 60s
this week genji partnered with national geographic to bring sushi chef where they offered people sustainable sushi like sweet shrimp which like toro will melt in your mouth. >> tasty shrimp it's not like cocktail shrimp. >> reporter: sustainable sushi has been slow to catch on. totaki sushi in san francisco not offering bluefin. alas washington restaurants still keep it on their menus but customers can change that. just stop ordering it and let the restaurant know why. a simple act....
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the new season of "sharkmen" premieres this sunday on the national geographic channel. >>> up next, preparing for a government shutdown. >>> and disney breaks ground on a brand-new theme park. new dove visible care. en we asy a revolutionary new line of body wash with the highest concentration of nutrium moisture. visible care makes skin visibly more beautiful in just 1 week. ♪ when they saw how much more beautiful and radiant their skin looked with new dove visible care... there was only one question. ♪ new dove visible care creme body wash. with being fed on. we demand k9 advantix ii. it not only kills fleas and ticks, it repels most ticks before they can attach and snack on us. frontline plus kills but doesn't repel. any tick that isn't repelled or killed may attach and make a meal of us. so let's put our paws down in protest. no fetching, no friendship till we all get k9 advantix ii. join us at poochprotest.com. [ male announcer ] ask your veterinarian about k9 advantix ii. [ mdiscover customers asare getting five percent cashback bonus at home improvement stores it pays to switch, it pay
the new season of "sharkmen" premieres this sunday on the national geographic channel. >>> up next, preparing for a government shutdown. >>> and disney breaks ground on a brand-new theme park. new dove visible care. en we asy a revolutionary new line of body wash with the highest concentration of nutrium moisture. visible care makes skin visibly more beautiful in just 1 week. ♪ when they saw how much more beautiful and radiant their skin looked with new dove...
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you and workers in that country and earlier i spoke spoke with neil cher who is a writer for national geographic magazine about the blowback effect of our actions here at home and our policies abroad. pedo and american forces have had a lot of trouble in buzzard sharif in one of the more peaceful areas of the country i think what we're seeing today is there over the last few days is just a real violent reaction against things that we can afford dictum don't really have much control over the united states military parent against burning korans last year with this particular pastor said that he was going to do it because they knew that there would be a backlash in afghanistan and around the muslim world against american and allied forces so that's really what we're seeing today i don't think it has much to do with the taliban or al qaeda yet why do you think there is such i guess a short term focus an inability to really sort of think through the consequences and understand that these kinds of actions really do lead to soldiers' lives being lost workers' lives being lost human people human beings
you and workers in that country and earlier i spoke spoke with neil cher who is a writer for national geographic magazine about the blowback effect of our actions here at home and our policies abroad. pedo and american forces have had a lot of trouble in buzzard sharif in one of the more peaceful areas of the country i think what we're seeing today is there over the last few days is just a real violent reaction against things that we can afford dictum don't really have much control over the...
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journalist who has spent quite a bit of time in afghanistan and yet nile share is a writer for national geographic magazine and he joins us from portland oregon. thank you so much for being here you know i know you've spent a lot of time in this country and i want to begin by sort of looking at where this attack took place this is normally a peaceful city a northern city this is not an area that's normally overrun by insurgents in fact it's a quite a bit of pride in the in the stability in that specific city so what what does it what are the implications for you that some such an action could take place in in that country in that area was to nato and american forces evident a lot of trouble in my certain sure it's scary but of the more peaceful areas of the country i think what we're seeing today is there over the last few days is just a real violent reaction against things that we cannot predict and don't really have much control over the united states military parent against early qur'an says last year this particular pastor said that he was going to do it because they knew that there would be a
journalist who has spent quite a bit of time in afghanistan and yet nile share is a writer for national geographic magazine and he joins us from portland oregon. thank you so much for being here you know i know you've spent a lot of time in this country and i want to begin by sort of looking at where this attack took place this is normally a peaceful city a northern city this is not an area that's normally overrun by insurgents in fact it's a quite a bit of pride in the in the stability in that...
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Apr 21, 2011
04/11
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"the 12,000-bottle boat," on national geographic channel.t here on our website, abcnews.com. entire battle right here on our website, abcnews.com. >>> next, starring, >>> finally, an unsung hero is getting the attention he richly deserves. for 55 years, he has been the track coach at duke. we're talking about al bueller. he broke new ground in race relations, international sport, women's athletics. and his work has inspired a brilliant, new documentary called "starting at the finish line, the coach bueller story." and it stars nba superstar, grant hill. great to see you, grant. with the phoenix suns. you are a renaissance man. i didn't know this about you. >> i kind of like that, renaissance man. i have a lot of interests. and the thing with filmmaking, i guess, is just love stories. i love great stories. great stories in the world of sports. stories that inspire. and obviously, in book form and movies, motion pictures. and now, documentaries. i have a chance to participate and tell a great story. >> and this goes beyond sports. it transcend
"the 12,000-bottle boat," on national geographic channel.t here on our website, abcnews.com. entire battle right here on our website, abcnews.com. >>> next, starring, >>> finally, an unsung hero is getting the attention he richly deserves. for 55 years, he has been the track coach at duke. we're talking about al bueller. he broke new ground in race relations, international sport, women's athletics. and his work has inspired a brilliant, new documentary called...
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national geographic has these pictures is world's largest bat cave. is 1.8 million fruit bats living in there. a cave mapping expedition stumbled on the cave in january, they say they are driving and growing. >> kristen: come on, come on. whoa! here, come on. come on. you got a rhythm there but check out -- >> yep. there are the contestants in the annual hog calling contest in alabama. it's a big event in that region. i don't know if you picked a personal favorite but the second person won the event. >> eric: congratulations to you. that was quite a job. 5:25. feeling the impact of the japan earthquake and tsunami, next at 5:30 the danger a huge patch of floating debris to hit the pacific coast. >> are you ready? i'll have preview of the big home opener coming up next. >> and $3 million fine pg&e is hinting that they may not pay. >> good morning. we have airport delays in denver and chicago as spring storms march their way through the midwest into the southern part of the northeast. if you have a flight out today or you are traveling across the countr
national geographic has these pictures is world's largest bat cave. is 1.8 million fruit bats living in there. a cave mapping expedition stumbled on the cave in january, they say they are driving and growing. >> kristen: come on, come on. whoa! here, come on. come on. you got a rhythm there but check out -- >> yep. there are the contestants in the annual hog calling contest in alabama. it's a big event in that region. i don't know if you picked a personal favorite but the second...
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Apr 30, 2011
04/11
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everything memorized about polar bears and all sorts of books from national geographic but i didn't even know that there were groups organized to fight for animals. it is a constant reminder to me that there are so many people who do care but who are not actively involved in the cause of animal protection. and some of the choices we made as a family. some are chronicled in the book. a group with dogs and i'm sure many of you did. we didn't have any cats growing up. it was later in life the acquired some cats but i think about the dogs that we acquired and one in particular, randy. a beautiful west silent carrier. we love it randy so much and one of our other dogs named brandy and we were all thoroughly confused. then my aunts and uncles named dogs candy and mandy so it was very confusing. but my uncle actually fought the west bound terriers were fantastic. he got randy from a pet store and deliver him to us and we were so thrilled because she came from kansas. we thought how exotic this is that she came from kansas and it was only later as i got older that i learned at the time in the 19
everything memorized about polar bears and all sorts of books from national geographic but i didn't even know that there were groups organized to fight for animals. it is a constant reminder to me that there are so many people who do care but who are not actively involved in the cause of animal protection. and some of the choices we made as a family. some are chronicled in the book. a group with dogs and i'm sure many of you did. we didn't have any cats growing up. it was later in life the...
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Apr 8, 2011
04/11
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national geographic have the pictures of what may be the world biggest bat cave. 1.8 million fruit batunder a tree and clearly thriving. >>> and if that didn't unnerve awe bit. maybe this will. annual hog calling contest in alabama. about about [ calling for pig] about i don't think i have ever heard quite so much dialoguea hog calling contest. in case you couldn't tell this lady right here second one you heard she is the winner. shirley jensen. >>> all right spencer you want to try your tall went that. >> those calls would scare pigs away. work was the hog calling contest. here's a look at live doppler 7 hd. we have scattered precipitation. mainly quiet but south bay east of san jose. area of precipitation and snow in the higher elevation and snow top mount hamilton. travel up to the north bay where north of napa in fact going newspaper lake county south of clear lake we have an area of rainfall mainly light rain and some mixed precipitation and snow in the higher terrain. now check out this picture. this is what it looked like at rockville road near fairfield today. in the area where
national geographic have the pictures of what may be the world biggest bat cave. 1.8 million fruit batunder a tree and clearly thriving. >>> and if that didn't unnerve awe bit. maybe this will. annual hog calling contest in alabama. about about [ calling for pig] about i don't think i have ever heard quite so much dialoguea hog calling contest. in case you couldn't tell this lady right here second one you heard she is the winner. shirley jensen. >>> all right spencer you want...
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Apr 9, 2011
04/11
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, los angeles times, wall street journal atlantic, and he worked as a correspondent for the national geographic television and cnn. he holds an m a in oxford university. i invite each other to tell us about this book and we start with mr. thomas. >> back to the question of our wars really necessary with teddy roosevelt. let me take you to july 1st, 1998, the most important day of his life. he was standing aside a hill in santiago, cuba. at 4:00 he put on his uniform from brooks brothers, tied a bandanna over his head and set off on his horse. like many powerful people he arranged to have a newspaper reporter to cover this and richard harding davis, as roosevelt headed up san juan hill. no one salt roosevelt take that right expected him to finish a live. he rested for a moment and started to the other side on the next hill shaking what fun! an end of the day he took out his pocket diary and rose it for big battle. a couple days later, he said did i tell you i killed a spaniard with my own hand? teddy roosevelt was a war lover. it your thing. no ambiguity in him. he wrote constant letters before
, los angeles times, wall street journal atlantic, and he worked as a correspondent for the national geographic television and cnn. he holds an m a in oxford university. i invite each other to tell us about this book and we start with mr. thomas. >> back to the question of our wars really necessary with teddy roosevelt. let me take you to july 1st, 1998, the most important day of his life. he was standing aside a hill in santiago, cuba. at 4:00 he put on his uniform from brooks brothers,...
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. >> and the new season of "shark men" premieres this sunday, april 10th, on the national g geographicel. thank you for watching abc news. we do hope you check in on
. >> and the new season of "shark men" premieres this sunday, april 10th, on the national g geographicel. thank you for watching abc news. we do hope you check in on
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she was going by the description of a kangaroo off of national geographic, which is a wild kangaroo. domestic kangaroo. we don't have wild kangaroos here. >> so, christie -- >> the kangaroos here are born on a domestic kangaroo farm where they were sold as pets. >> so sorry to interrupt you. let me ask you, what will you do if the city council comes down and says you can't keep irwin? >> irwin will not survive if he is not with me because of the care that he gets and because of the bond between us. i will have to move at this point in time. it'll have -- if they don't approve it, we'll have to move out into the county. there is a possibility if we raise enough funds for wild heart ranch that they will be able to enlarge the clinic as we've been planning to for several years and were wanting to put in -- on property cabins where on property volunteers will stay, and irwin and i will stay up there for awhile. >> well, christie, we wish you and irwin all the best. thank you so much for joining us and we do love that suit that irwin has on this morning. thanks for dressing him up for us.
she was going by the description of a kangaroo off of national geographic, which is a wild kangaroo. domestic kangaroo. we don't have wild kangaroos here. >> so, christie -- >> the kangaroos here are born on a domestic kangaroo farm where they were sold as pets. >> so sorry to interrupt you. let me ask you, what will you do if the city council comes down and says you can't keep irwin? >> irwin will not survive if he is not with me because of the care that he gets and...
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Apr 30, 2011
04/11
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we will go through -- >> i-- this is from a series of photos i did for national geographic magazine on women in afghanistan. and i worked on the story over the course of about 18 months. i went back several times. and this particular day i was, i wanted to photograph maternal health issues in afghanistan. they have one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world. and this is-- hi been all throughout the province. and withnfpa actlly was taking me around. and on the way back i saw these two women on the side of the road. and it's very rare in afghanistan to see two women without a man, especially just standing on the side of the road. so i stopped the car and my translator was a woman who worked with the u.n.. and she was this incredible woman. and we ran up the hill. they were sort up on the hill and we ran up the hill and said what are you doing here. and she said well this woman's water just broke. and she's pregnant and she's about to give birth and the car broke down. and she lived in a village that was a very far drive from the hospital. and most women die in childbirt
we will go through -- >> i-- this is from a series of photos i did for national geographic magazine on women in afghanistan. and i worked on the story over the course of about 18 months. i went back several times. and this particular day i was, i wanted to photograph maternal health issues in afghanistan. they have one of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world. and this is-- hi been all throughout the province. and withnfpa actlly was taking me around. and on the way back i...
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Apr 23, 2011
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>>vern: anybody can just click on national geographic and logic, you're actually doing it why? in the wild frontier and i love challenges and pushing the limits of human endurance. >>vern: you could easily be like man versus wild right? >> i haven't done any tv shows like that before but it's the real deal and i love pushing those limits that of raising money for charity as well as taking young people, i took a 16 year-old last week. >>vern: still want to show video of you actually training, you don't just show up and make it in a day. this is you: it tire and a couple of kids. >> these are my boys, that's part of my training we need to make sure we simulate the same activity we do. about 12 hours a day, if you have to be really fit and ready to go. it's a lot of hard work, that's part of it. >>vern: you had mentioned that parker, the fellow from atherton just last week he took it, how will the sea? >> 16, we tried last year and we ran into some really bad weather conditions, really want to have the jurors which is really unheard of in april of on the north pole. a lot of " the
>>vern: anybody can just click on national geographic and logic, you're actually doing it why? in the wild frontier and i love challenges and pushing the limits of human endurance. >>vern: you could easily be like man versus wild right? >> i haven't done any tv shows like that before but it's the real deal and i love pushing those limits that of raising money for charity as well as taking young people, i took a 16 year-old last week. >>vern: still want to show video of...
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Apr 1, 2011
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national geographic tv investigated. their reporter lived among them for a month to try to figure out why some cultures think it's okay. >> cannibalism, one of mankind's ultimate taboos. what would it take to kill and devour another human being? i'm heading keep into the jungles of new guinea to find out. i will search for the truth about cannibalism from the people that are done it. does that mean there are people alive in this village who have eaten people? >> yes. >> i want to know who they killed and why. megyn: so do we. my very brave guest is host of that special. who did they kill and why? >> well, they killed people who had harmed them. in their belief system, someone who is a magic man has caused harm to their village. the punishment is death and being devoured. megyn: what is the harm? could it be days of floods and they just have somebody to blame it on? >> more likely an illness. so someone gets ill and they will have a ceremony to determine who caused that illness. and that person may have done that even wit
national geographic tv investigated. their reporter lived among them for a month to try to figure out why some cultures think it's okay. >> cannibalism, one of mankind's ultimate taboos. what would it take to kill and devour another human being? i'm heading keep into the jungles of new guinea to find out. i will search for the truth about cannibalism from the people that are done it. does that mean there are people alive in this village who have eaten people? >> yes. >> i want...
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Apr 9, 2011
04/11
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i didn't think of -- and no one in my household thought of "amos and andy" as being the national geographic anthropological treatment of the nature of the negro. i mean, it it was bunch of buffoons. but "amos and andy" also had several different class types. for example, there were black lawyers and black doctors and black judges and black undertakers, as well as the black trickster figure, the kingfish, who was, you know, brer rabbit, who was a figure straight out of black mythology, and andy, who looked like a bear, was brer bear. i mean, these were myths that we had been raised with, which were playing themselves out on television. i was too young to have heard them on radio, but my parents, of course, did and my parents loved them on radio, too. but they took them as signs of human vulnerability and of arrogance, of hubris, of pain, of love. they took them as typical of the human experience, rather than typical black people. my father still cracks up at "amos and andy" and we have -- i guess we have tapes of 77 "amos and andy" episodes. we watch them every once in a while. i like showin
i didn't think of -- and no one in my household thought of "amos and andy" as being the national geographic anthropological treatment of the nature of the negro. i mean, it it was bunch of buffoons. but "amos and andy" also had several different class types. for example, there were black lawyers and black doctors and black judges and black undertakers, as well as the black trickster figure, the kingfish, who was, you know, brer rabbit, who was a figure straight out of black...
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"shark men" premieres this sunday, april 10th on the national geographic channel..com/gma to see amazing, close-up pictures on how the scientists capture and tag the great white shark. >>> coming up, would you cut your own hair? >>> coming up, would you cut your own hair? , dog: bacon? gotta get that bacon! smokey bacon, crispy bacon, tasty bacon! where is it? where is the bacon? tv newscaster: bacon popular, "story at 11. dog: yummy. crunchy. bacon. bacon. bacon. there, in that bag! mom: who wants a beggin' strip!? dog: me! i'd get it myself but i don't have thumbs! yum, yum, yum... it's beggin'! hm... i love you! i love bacon! i love you! i love bacon! i love you! beggin' strips! there's no time #like beggin' time! share the fun at beggintime.com where's the fire, arnie? [ laughing ] ♪ ♪ ahh. hello. [ female announcer ] glasses in about an hour. lenscrafters. ...but my symptoms kept coming back... ...kept coming back. then i found out advair helps prevent symptoms from happening in the first place. advair is for asthma that's not well controlled on a long-term as
"shark men" premieres this sunday, april 10th on the national geographic channel..com/gma to see amazing, close-up pictures on how the scientists capture and tag the great white shark. >>> coming up, would you cut your own hair? >>> coming up, would you cut your own hair? , dog: bacon? gotta get that bacon! smokey bacon, crispy bacon, tasty bacon! where is it? where is the bacon? tv newscaster: bacon popular, "story at 11. dog: yummy. crunchy. bacon. bacon....
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Apr 27, 2011
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reauthorization bill passed down the road, get this one passed and a good one passed later, to work with national geographic and groups like that. you can use aviation to teach so many things, and then really get people interested in aviation that way. >> time for one or two more. okay. i might take the final question. there's one over here, okay. >> i'm bill culli began with itt. it seems like the funding for airports promote capital intensive projects, but the world and private industry seems to be gravitating towards services or cloud-based solutions in many cases. what could be done either with ait or pfcs to change their eligibility service-based approaches or cloud-based solutions? >> anybody want to take that on? >> well, i'm not real sure of the question, but i'll try to see if i can get into the cloud technology. i think all of us are looking at using cloud technology to sort of improve the efficiency of our i.t. systems whether it's security systems or just business systems. i think the cloud solution is something that we all look at to become more efficient. i think the fact that we have, you kno
reauthorization bill passed down the road, get this one passed and a good one passed later, to work with national geographic and groups like that. you can use aviation to teach so many things, and then really get people interested in aviation that way. >> time for one or two more. okay. i might take the final question. there's one over here, okay. >> i'm bill culli began with itt. it seems like the funding for airports promote capital intensive projects, but the world and private...
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Apr 23, 2011
04/11
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partly if you look at the geographic spread and the mapping of the country over the last ten years, the sources of grievance are basically national even though people are expressing it in different ways and different places, there is not a place in the country where some group has not some reason to be up set, which is again why it is so hard for them to contain it. because it's now emerging virtually across the country and across ethnic and security groups as well. >> woodruff: so no one group is dominating over another. >> i mean the numbers, if you want to look at the numbers, of people that are sunnies, there is really no identity, there is a northeastern identity, arab kurds, muslim christians, but there is no sunni identity. so think of it as a country of minorities. all of them have their own cultures.
partly if you look at the geographic spread and the mapping of the country over the last ten years, the sources of grievance are basically national even though people are expressing it in different ways and different places, there is not a place in the country where some group has not some reason to be up set, which is again why it is so hard for them to contain it. because it's now emerging virtually across the country and across ethnic and security groups as well. >> woodruff: so no one...
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Apr 6, 2011
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nations at madagascar. so there were three geographic combatant commands previously that divided the continent. but the majority was in european command. so when the decision was made to stand up after command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already at stuttgart. facilities were already at stuttgart, so for purposes of getting the command object expeditious start testing to make a lot of sense. >> i understand. in the situation in ivory coast right now, we have a constitutional elected government that is not being permitted to assume the government, and jeffrey president-elect -- and you have a president-elect that is not allowed to assume his position in the government, that has not been a peaceful transfer of power, were there any quotations between that president-elect and you and your command in reference to any assistance? >> nose or. only to the u.s. embassy there was specifically focused on u.s. missions. for example, play for a noncombatant evacuation. >> so those virtually no communication whatsoever, from this constitutional elected government, that wa
nations at madagascar. so there were three geographic combatant commands previously that divided the continent. but the majority was in european command. so when the decision was made to stand up after command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already at stuttgart. facilities were already at stuttgart, so for purposes of getting the command object expeditious start testing to make a lot of sense. >> i understand. in the situation in ivory coast right now, we...
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Apr 15, 2011
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national security gotta take it out. would you support them? do you think it is in our best geographic, political interests to do so? was the ground marshal of the israeli day parade 10 years ago when believe me, it was dangerous. because there was a little war going on. i walked down fifth avenue. jewish friends of mine still remember that day. i have a park named after me in israel that i donated. and i'm a big find of israel. i will say this i have so many jewish friends that are big obama fans. and they are supporting obama and giving tremendous amounts, wealthy guys, live in new york, wealthy, hedge funds, real estate guys. they are supporting obama. obama is terrible for israel. he's terrible for israel. >> sean: i agree. >> it is interesting with obama if you look at wisconsin. he made a pledge he was going to march in wisconsin. he was going to put on his walking shoes and march with those teamers. where is he? he's all talk. unfortunately, he's also action but the wrong action. >> sean: you mentioned recently that you are a christian that you go to church. how important is your faith to donald trump? >> ver
national security gotta take it out. would you support them? do you think it is in our best geographic, political interests to do so? was the ground marshal of the israeli day parade 10 years ago when believe me, it was dangerous. because there was a little war going on. i walked down fifth avenue. jewish friends of mine still remember that day. i have a park named after me in israel that i donated. and i'm a big find of israel. i will say this i have so many jewish friends that are big obama...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 29, 2011
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SFGTV
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i will drill down into the geographic areas you are interested in, but it is important to see this context. across the entire nation, this is what each state spends in relation to the national average, just to the right of the middle of the screen. california, to the left, in comparison to other states in the country, california is actually very efficient. i have done one thing with these numbers that some of the others have not. i have cost adjusted for inflation and i have acuity- adjusted these numbers. i am trying to create a level playing field. when you compare just the numbers, you see these vast differences, so i accounted for the numbers in looking at inflationary costs as well as the acuity of the patient. california spends 90% of the national average on health care costs. and then what i did further was breaking this down into house bill referral region. thousands of little lines and i would not expect you to follow. but the important point to know is the u.s. mean. if you look to the right, there are many hospital regions, and to the left of that, many other regions in california. i want to show you a s
i will drill down into the geographic areas you are interested in, but it is important to see this context. across the entire nation, this is what each state spends in relation to the national average, just to the right of the middle of the screen. california, to the left, in comparison to other states in the country, california is actually very efficient. i have done one thing with these numbers that some of the others have not. i have cost adjusted for inflation and i have acuity- adjusted...
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world a four geographic points in space the fifth one it means that we're following global laws clickable to all people in the world and we want these values to dominate other religious national and other values chinese martial arts have deep philosophy which history and important values so very effective in teaching these are not just words for us we cannot lose our children let them become terrorists. this is heard each time one of the boys wins a medal in various events held in russia or anywhere else in the world look at the scene works and lives right here at the school and leaves only one his students take or in major competitions but all the trophies eventually end up right here at the five directions of the world. this trophy is given at the end of each year to the winner of the congress who world cup one of our students won this trophy it is a very valuable price basically it confirms that he was the best fighter of the year and if we've. got fighters. is mostly in sally hope who was also named the king of kong flu becoming the only non chinese warrior in the world to be awarded this title though he graduated a while ago and was lean still considers it an honor to co
world a four geographic points in space the fifth one it means that we're following global laws clickable to all people in the world and we want these values to dominate other religious national and other values chinese martial arts have deep philosophy which history and important values so very effective in teaching these are not just words for us we cannot lose our children let them become terrorists. this is heard each time one of the boys wins a medal in various events held in russia or...
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world for geographic points with spray spraying the fifth one means that we're following global moules clickable to all people in the world we want nice values to dominate other religious national and other values when people live in just four dimensions it is a lower level. and space people become more developed spiritually been more patient kind and can live in peace with each other. we decided to develop these qualities through sports chinese martial arts have deep philosophy rich history and important values so very effective in teaching peace and not just words for us we cannot lose our children let them become terrorists. this is heard each time one of the boys wins a medal in various events held in russia or anywhere else in the world the same works right here at the school and leaves only when his students take part in major competitions but all the trophies eventually end up right here at the five directions of the world this trophy is given at the end of each year to the winner of the conflict world cup one of our students won this trophy it is a very valuable prize basically it confirms that he was the best fighter of the year. that fighters name is mostly in sally h
world for geographic points with spray spraying the fifth one means that we're following global moules clickable to all people in the world we want nice values to dominate other religious national and other values when people live in just four dimensions it is a lower level. and space people become more developed spiritually been more patient kind and can live in peace with each other. we decided to develop these qualities through sports chinese martial arts have deep philosophy rich history...
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Apr 9, 2011
04/11
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CSPAN
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nations and madagascar. there were three geographic combat commands previously that divided the continent. the majority was under european command. when the decision was made to stand back in command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already in stuttgart. for the purposes of getting the command to an expeditious start coming in made the most sense. >> i understand. with the situation on the ivory coast, you have a constitutionally elected government that is not being permitted to assume the government. you have a president-elect that has not been allowed to assume his position. there has not been a peaceful transfer of power. but were there any communications between that president-elect and you in reference to any assistance? >> the leader the u.s. embassy were dave physical it focused on u.s. missions, for example and non-combatant mission. >> are virtually no communication whatsoever from this constitutionally elected government that was not able to assume power to provide assistance whatsoever? >> not with african command. that is to the best of my knowle
nations and madagascar. there were three geographic combat commands previously that divided the continent. the majority was under european command. when the decision was made to stand back in command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already in stuttgart. for the purposes of getting the command to an expeditious start coming in made the most sense. >> i understand. with the situation on the ivory coast, you have a constitutionally elected government that is...
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Apr 6, 2011
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nations in madagascar. so they were actually three geographic combatant commands previously that divided the continent.ut the majority within european command. and so when the decision was made to stand at africa command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already in a stuttgart. so for purposes of getting the command off to an expeditious start, that to make a lot of sense. >> i understand. now, in the situation in the ivory coast right now, where you have a constitutional elected government that is not being permitted to assume the government and you have a president-elect there that is not going to be allowed to assume his position in the government, that there is not then a peaceful transfer of power. were there any communications between that president elect a new in your command in reference to any assistance cleric's >> no, sir. only to the u.s. embassy, specifically focused on u.s. missions. for example, playing for noncombatant evacuations. >> iac, virtually no communication whatsoever from this constitutional elected government that was not able to assume power to
nations in madagascar. so they were actually three geographic combatant commands previously that divided the continent.ut the majority within european command. and so when the decision was made to stand at africa command as a separate geographic command, the bulk of the resources were already in a stuttgart. so for purposes of getting the command off to an expeditious start, that to make a lot of sense. >> i understand. now, in the situation in the ivory coast right now, where you have a...
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Apr 18, 2011
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diverse states, one of the most geographically diverse state and one of the most politically powerful states. several recent u.s. presidents have come from texas. several national legislators have come from texas. >> why did you want to write this book? what was the interest to get you started? >> my impetus to get started on this book really was an interest in how we as a society decide it's a good kid learned that kids are and what is to be done with them. i initially began looking at popular culture and representations and then i became dissatisfied with that and decided i needed to look at real kids and real policies and institutions that affected them. >> so, after all your research where do other states go from here? have you seen improvement since you've written a book or after you were writing a book? >> there's been a lot that's changed since i finished the book. as we sit here, the legislature is considering abolishing the agency that oversees juvenile justice in texas. several of the large facilities have been shut down as that was finished in the book. lots of kids have been sent back to their communities and there really is a movement to move away
diverse states, one of the most geographically diverse state and one of the most politically powerful states. several recent u.s. presidents have come from texas. several national legislators have come from texas. >> why did you want to write this book? what was the interest to get you started? >> my impetus to get started on this book really was an interest in how we as a society decide it's a good kid learned that kids are and what is to be done with them. i initially began...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 13, 2011
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nationally from the very beginning by some people who are thinking about the social implications of all of this as well. because we're not just talking about some abstract way of assigning dollars to a particular geographic area, we're talking about neighborhoods and people that will be sacrificed or at least not receive the same level of attention as others will. and in the urban areas where we tend to have the greatest extremes of wealth and poverty and of neighborhoods that are -- facilities that are absolutely -- that absolutely must be protected at all costs versus areas that are more marginal, this is going to become a very contentious area for debate at the political level. similarly, when we talk about the amounts of money that are going to be invested don't sound maybe that huge right now, but an on-going and going forward basis they are gigantic investments that we are talking about and those are not necessarily the glamorous investments to be making. they are not the ribbon-cutting projects that people like to get their pictures taken in front of, but at the same time the people who are the political appointees -- i think we've seen that in other places who are standing there at the time that
nationally from the very beginning by some people who are thinking about the social implications of all of this as well. because we're not just talking about some abstract way of assigning dollars to a particular geographic area, we're talking about neighborhoods and people that will be sacrificed or at least not receive the same level of attention as others will. and in the urban areas where we tend to have the greatest extremes of wealth and poverty and of neighborhoods that are -- facilities...
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Apr 20, 2011
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nations. what is important, what we have made good progress on, and what we're committed to its closing regulatory gaps, ending opportunities for geographic arbitraged, and preventing a global race to the bottom. fifth, critics suggest that the consumer protection bureau will fight for consumer choice and innovation or interfere with the role of existing regulators. they also claim that the agency is not accountable. rather than limiting choice, it will be essential to creating real choice for consumers. the system we had before allowed lenders to hide the true cost of financial products in hidden fees and interest rate changes. consumers often did not get the information they needed to understand the loans they were taking a or the credit card agreement they were signing. that is not choice. real choice is about having the information to make the right decisions. the cpb job is to deter deceptive and abusive practices, promote clear disclosure, and help consumers get the information they need. with that information, consumers will have real choice. there will be able to understand what products and services are best for them and to make
nations. what is important, what we have made good progress on, and what we're committed to its closing regulatory gaps, ending opportunities for geographic arbitraged, and preventing a global race to the bottom. fifth, critics suggest that the consumer protection bureau will fight for consumer choice and innovation or interfere with the role of existing regulators. they also claim that the agency is not accountable. rather than limiting choice, it will be essential to creating real choice for...
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Apr 20, 2011
04/11
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KRON
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national terrorism will be unveiled today. common security is holding an event in new york announcing details of the system which will focus on specific threats in geographic areas. 7:14 a.m. back with more a couple of minutes. it is very light as the net? no problems or holdups. nothing ahold to back there. we want to tell you about programming coming up. programming note, exclusive coverage of the 100 zazzle, bay to breakers on kron4 that will be sunday, may 15th, beginning at 8:00 a.m. >> james: keeping an eye on the whether it is changing today. you can see conditions out there so far no rainbow we expect some throughout the day today. let's give you a forecast cloudy with chants of scattered showers.chas afternoon some sunny breaks, this evening light rain becomes widespread. storm tracker for showing you the rain at the moment. some popping up in the north bay, maybe a light sell through san rafael right now. for the most part we are trying through most of the bay area. that is how will be throughout the day today. random pops in advance of the main system pushing through tonight. 5:00 p.m. things will organize with this cold front. as your drive hom
national terrorism will be unveiled today. common security is holding an event in new york announcing details of the system which will focus on specific threats in geographic areas. 7:14 a.m. back with more a couple of minutes. it is very light as the net? no problems or holdups. nothing ahold to back there. we want to tell you about programming coming up. programming note, exclusive coverage of the 100 zazzle, bay to breakers on kron4 that will be sunday, may 15th, beginning at 8:00 a.m....
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Apr 20, 2011
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nations. but it's important, what we have made good progress on and what we are committed to disclosing regulatory gaps, ending opportunities for geographicrbitrage and preventing a global race to the bottom. fifth, critics suggest that the consumer financial protection euro will stifle consumer choice and innovation or interfere with the role of existing regulators and they also claim the agency isn't accountable. rather than limiting choice, the csp people be central to creating real choice for consumers. the system we had before allowed people to hide the real cost of financial products in hidden fees and interest rate changes. consumers often didn't get the information they needed to understand the loud they were taken out of the credit card agreement they were singing. that is not choice. real choices have an information to make the right decisions. the cfpb job is to hope consumers get information they need. with the information, consumers will have no choice. they will be able to understand what products and services are best for them and to make fully informed financial decisions. as consumers begin to make more informed financial
nations. but it's important, what we have made good progress on and what we are committed to disclosing regulatory gaps, ending opportunities for geographicrbitrage and preventing a global race to the bottom. fifth, critics suggest that the consumer financial protection euro will stifle consumer choice and innovation or interfere with the role of existing regulators and they also claim the agency isn't accountable. rather than limiting choice, the csp people be central to creating real choice...