SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 13, 2013
02/13
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. >> i am joined by helen, who is here to school me on all the nocturnal activities that are gettingdy to take place here. tell us a little about what we can expect to see at nightlife. >> we open up the doors every thursday night at the california academy of sciences. there are certain things you can see every week you can go to the museum, visit the planetarium, and we bring in bars and a deejay or band. it is a different feel from during the day, something different every week. tonight , we have beer and music. -- tonight we have great beer and music. it is beer week. we have a dozen local brewers in african hall. we have a deejays to set up throughout the museum and a live performance at 9:00 p.m. tonight. >> what has been your favorite part as a participant or as an observer? >> my favorite part is to walk around the aquarium in to see people with a drink in their hands, getting to know maybe somebody new, may be looking for a day, or chatting with friends. there jellyfish. i mean, they are beautiful. >> the culmination of the animals. >> it is very impressive. we do not have th
. >> i am joined by helen, who is here to school me on all the nocturnal activities that are gettingdy to take place here. tell us a little about what we can expect to see at nightlife. >> we open up the doors every thursday night at the california academy of sciences. there are certain things you can see every week you can go to the museum, visit the planetarium, and we bring in bars and a deejay or band. it is a different feel from during the day, something different every week....
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so you're both nocturnal. sydney, you have really big eyes. >> yes! the better to see at night.r can be found in the same spot pointing toward the north. i call it bright star! >> how about the sauropod constellation? shouldn't it be right where i saw it? >> good question, tiny. often it is hard to find certain stars and constellations. do you know why? >> because there's so many stars up there? >> i like that answer. >> me, too, and you're right buddy. from here on earth, we can only see thousands of stars, but there are soooo many more stars up there in the sky that we can't see. >> millions, right? >> actually billions. >> my cuz is right--billions and billions of stars. impossible to count them all. >> 1, 2, 3, 10, 100, 2 million. yup. looks like billions to me. [all laughing] >> but, sydney, the sauropod constellation isn't in the same spot where it was before. >> yeah. i wonder if my hypothesis was right. aren't the stars always in the same spot? >> i think i can help with this "where are the constellations" question. who wants to go to my superspecial stargazing site? if
so you're both nocturnal. sydney, you have really big eyes. >> yes! the better to see at night.r can be found in the same spot pointing toward the north. i call it bright star! >> how about the sauropod constellation? shouldn't it be right where i saw it? >> good question, tiny. often it is hard to find certain stars and constellations. do you know why? >> because there's so many stars up there? >> i like that answer. >> me, too, and you're right buddy. from...
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can you think of another animal that's nocturnal? a bat! right! bats are nocturnal, too.
can you think of another animal that's nocturnal? a bat! right! bats are nocturnal, too.
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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he was nocturnal anyway. rusher loved this. he didn't have that irregular schedule himself.as i suggested he was more organized than that, but he loved that spirit and he and meyer were allies in believing national review should be as political as possible. let me say a word and then i'll take your questions about rushers last two decades at national review in the 1970s and 80s. the intense discussions, arguments that the national review that i have alluded to were primarily, not totally, but primarily in the 60s as they were feeling their way in the conservative movement was still gelling. in the 1970s, rushers focuses on -- is initially on the possibility of actually replacing the republican party with a new conservative party. i found a letter in which he said to a friend, about 1975. my problem with the republican party isn't that it's not conservative enough. it is that it isn't big enough. again, he wanted to land and the republicans after watergate in the mid-70s weren't terrible or shave. i won't recite the details, but a lot of them felt they were back where they we
he was nocturnal anyway. rusher loved this. he didn't have that irregular schedule himself.as i suggested he was more organized than that, but he loved that spirit and he and meyer were allies in believing national review should be as political as possible. let me say a word and then i'll take your questions about rushers last two decades at national review in the 1970s and 80s. the intense discussions, arguments that the national review that i have alluded to were primarily, not totally, but...
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Feb 4, 2013
02/13
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he was nocturnal. rusher loved it is kind of thing. he didn't have the irregular schedule themselves. he was again as i suggested he was more organized than that, but he loved that spirit. .. >> as they were still feeling their way, as the conservative movement was still gelling. in the 1970 rusher's focus is on, is initially on the possibility of actually replacing the republican party with a new conservative party. i found a letter in which he said to a friend my problem -- it was about 1975 -- my problem with the republican party isn't that it's not conservative enough, it's that it isn't big enough. again, he wanted to win. and the republicans after watergate in the mid '70s were in just terrible shape. i won't recite the details, but they were, you know, they -- a lot of them probably felt that they were back where they were in the 1930s. not only a minority party, but a small minority party. rusher wants to take this opportunity to start a new conservative party. not rigidly conservative, but consciously conservative. one in whic
he was nocturnal. rusher loved it is kind of thing. he didn't have the irregular schedule themselves. he was again as i suggested he was more organized than that, but he loved that spirit. .. >> as they were still feeling their way, as the conservative movement was still gelling. in the 1970 rusher's focus is on, is initially on the possibility of actually replacing the republican party with a new conservative party. i found a letter in which he said to a friend my problem -- it was about...
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Feb 2, 2013
02/13
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we set the gear at night because swordfish are nocturnal. they feed at night. we set the gear at night. we leave it for a few hours. daylight the next morning we start hauling this 40-mile-long piece of line back aboard the boat. now, east of newfoundland, daylight is 3:30 in the morning so it's a real early start to the day. it takes most of the daylight hours to get the 40 miles of gear back onto the boat. c-span: so you say you worked as a cook in the summertime to go to colby college. what did you study at colby? >> guest: i studied english and government. c-span: why didn't you do either one of those? >> guest: well, you know, at the age of 19 when you're supposed to be declaring your major, i don't know what i thought at the age of 19. i thought attorney sounded good i wanted to be a lawyer, so i thought english and government. that's pretty close to pre-law and it just sounded like a good thing to do, so that's what i studied. i enjoyed both of them but i knew after i started fishing that i would not be going to law school. c-span: by the way, when you t
we set the gear at night because swordfish are nocturnal. they feed at night. we set the gear at night. we leave it for a few hours. daylight the next morning we start hauling this 40-mile-long piece of line back aboard the boat. now, east of newfoundland, daylight is 3:30 in the morning so it's a real early start to the day. it takes most of the daylight hours to get the 40 miles of gear back onto the boat. c-span: so you say you worked as a cook in the summertime to go to colby college. what...
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Feb 28, 2013
02/13
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. >> mostly nocturnal. the better to see you with. >> this is the treatment room?we do the majority of our procedures. >> vets at busch gardens operate on everything from tigers to frogs. >> some of this blood work is being done so you can tell what ailment an animal may be faced with? >> exactly. a lot of our patients in wildlife are good at hiding signs of disease. being out in the wild, if you show signs that you're sick or injured, a predator might try to take advantage and finish you off. >> injured wild animals are also brought in like this sea bird that swallowed sea hooks. >> we unfortunately see this fairly commonly. >> and this owl hit by a car. >> badly broken wing but we were able to surgically put it together today. >> we're back in the treatment center. this is where they do all of their sterile surgeries. it's very massive and expansive and very interactive as well. the guests here at the park can watch through the glass here and they'll do question and answer sessions with the vets even while they're doing their procedures. you've got to stay tuned
. >> mostly nocturnal. the better to see you with. >> this is the treatment room?we do the majority of our procedures. >> vets at busch gardens operate on everything from tigers to frogs. >> some of this blood work is being done so you can tell what ailment an animal may be faced with? >> exactly. a lot of our patients in wildlife are good at hiding signs of disease. being out in the wild, if you show signs that you're sick or injured, a predator might try to take...
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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then had to do with -- created hospitalists or nocturne is for those who are lights out oriented at night. [laughter] the specialists really need to pay attention right now because they've changed their names again but it have a notice they're being called procedure list. that means they're getting ready to be locked within the context of how we talk about those who care forced them a lot of times there's a lot of economic language underneath. so when you talk about medicine, of that to has to do with a patent system as opposed to a care system. so i don't know that in particular the term primary care physician is such a bad thing because primary ought to be a good thing. but it actually wasn't something that actually even heard in trading 20 years ago but by the time i was out of training and was looking co-pay differential that's where the term came a. i don't know what the solution is. i'm not sure it's a bad term, but i do think we need to really pay attention to what we call our doctors or other care providers, is underneath there is quite often and economic assumption. >> i'm wonder
then had to do with -- created hospitalists or nocturne is for those who are lights out oriented at night. [laughter] the specialists really need to pay attention right now because they've changed their names again but it have a notice they're being called procedure list. that means they're getting ready to be locked within the context of how we talk about those who care forced them a lot of times there's a lot of economic language underneath. so when you talk about medicine, of that to has to...