SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 9, 2013
08/13
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that he said would be the nucleus that would host the city. and san francisco gave further incentive to expand the city's network. a project by way of tunnel leading into chinatown by way of north beach. in december the first streetcar was driven into the tunnel. just two years after its berth, muni had added two lines. and k, l and m lines that span out from westportal. in 1928, the j line opened heading west to the beach. in 1944 san francisco voters finally approved muni take-over of the market street railway. by then motor bus and trolley bus improvement had given them the ability to conquer san francisco's hills. after the war most of the street-car lines would be replaced with motor or trolley bus service. in 1947, the mayor recommended replacing two lines with motor coaches. and it appeared that san francisco's iconic cable cars had seen their final days. entered mrs. cluskin, the leader to save the cable cars. arguing that the cable cars were a symbol of the city, and she entered a charter placed on the november ballot. it passed overw
that he said would be the nucleus that would host the city. and san francisco gave further incentive to expand the city's network. a project by way of tunnel leading into chinatown by way of north beach. in december the first streetcar was driven into the tunnel. just two years after its berth, muni had added two lines. and k, l and m lines that span out from westportal. in 1928, the j line opened heading west to the beach. in 1944 san francisco voters finally approved muni take-over of the...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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CNNW
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knowing that i can hold a piece of uranium in my hand that has enough, you know, energy locked in its nucleus to bring down an entire city, that's an incredibly powerful thing. to tell you the truth, the reason i started building my fusion reactor was to make things radioactive. i had this obsession with radioactivity, and short of contaminating something, to make something radioactive, you had to have a source of new tron ne neutrons. i didn't just have them laying around the house, but i would have to build a neutron reactor, and from that came the fusion. >> i'm donald phaneuf. i met him when he was 15, and he told me he had a plan to build a nuclear fusion. i knew he was serious, and i knew this wasn't a project you need to be building around your family. i started thinking right then maybe we could find room for taylor to do that right here at the university. first impression is he was probably about a foot shorter than he is now, and like i say, painfully young. and i was just wondering, could this little guy really be as smart as they say he is, and after talking to him, it didn't take
knowing that i can hold a piece of uranium in my hand that has enough, you know, energy locked in its nucleus to bring down an entire city, that's an incredibly powerful thing. to tell you the truth, the reason i started building my fusion reactor was to make things radioactive. i had this obsession with radioactivity, and short of contaminating something, to make something radioactive, you had to have a source of new tron ne neutrons. i didn't just have them laying around the house, but i...
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Aug 30, 2013
08/13
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LINKTV
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the compounds pearson looks for are indicators of the existence of eukaryotes or organisms with a nucleus, the ancient relatives of today's animals and plants. to gain access to these compounds pearson extracts fats, or lipids, from the rock sample. once the lipids are extracted, they are run through a mass spectrometer, which indicates what kinds of compounds are in the sample. pearson: so, when we look at a mixed sale and identify what kinds of compounds we have in the sample, sometimes we see a compound with a mass spectrum like this and this is the mass spectrum of a sterol. the sterol is related to the compound cholesterol, which is something we're familiar with. and any time we see a sterol we interpret that as meaning there was a eukaryote in the sample. and this is significant because we're able to then look for molecular fossils or biomarkers that record eukaryotes before eukaryotes became big enough to leave large, macroscopic fossils that we can then see. narrator: but sterols do more than tell us what kind of life was present. they provide evidence for its environment. this co
the compounds pearson looks for are indicators of the existence of eukaryotes or organisms with a nucleus, the ancient relatives of today's animals and plants. to gain access to these compounds pearson extracts fats, or lipids, from the rock sample. once the lipids are extracted, they are run through a mass spectrometer, which indicates what kinds of compounds are in the sample. pearson: so, when we look at a mixed sale and identify what kinds of compounds we have in the sample, sometimes we...
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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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LINKTV
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the compounds pearson looks for are indicators of the existence of eukaryotes, or organisms with a nucleus, the ancient relatives of today's animals and plants. to gain access to these compounds, pearson extracts fats, or lipids, from the rock sample. once the lipids are extracted, they are run through a mass spectrometer, which indicates what kinds of compounds are in the sample. pearson: so, when we look at a mixed sample and identify what kinds of compounds we have in the sample, aass spectrum like this, and identify what kinds of compounds we have in the sample, and this is the mass spectrum of a sterol. the sterol is related to the compound cholesterol, which is something we're familiar with. and any time we see a sterol, we interpret that as meaning there was a eukaryote in the sample. and this is significant because we're able to then look for molecular fossils or biomarkers that record eukaryotes before eukaryotes became big enough to leave large, macroscopic fossils that we can then see. narrator: but sterols do more than tell us what kind of life was present. they provide evidenc
the compounds pearson looks for are indicators of the existence of eukaryotes, or organisms with a nucleus, the ancient relatives of today's animals and plants. to gain access to these compounds, pearson extracts fats, or lipids, from the rock sample. once the lipids are extracted, they are run through a mass spectrometer, which indicates what kinds of compounds are in the sample. pearson: so, when we look at a mixed sample and identify what kinds of compounds we have in the sample, aass...
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having this war against it from all fronts syria will only be and nucleus to a snowball that will stop probably growing towards other areas in the world it will start redrawing the map of the new world order the americans now are probably very concerned about such sonora and they want to stop it by force by hysteria by any means that are available to them though michael would like to expand upon that this is a very interesting point the americans are just losing their grip on the region and they have to show who's boss excellent analysis by dr abdullah i mean we think we can cleanly go in remove the bad guy and somehow the country's going to be better off but we see iraq's current violence as illustrative of how impossible that is and how dilatory is our approach is we're certainly see that in afghanistan we're seeing that in libya we thought we could support a very clearly defined with clean parameters rebel group in libya and that we funnel arms in and money to them and them only that they'll somehow be able to stand up and overthrow qaddafi we're doing the same in syria thinking we
having this war against it from all fronts syria will only be and nucleus to a snowball that will stop probably growing towards other areas in the world it will start redrawing the map of the new world order the americans now are probably very concerned about such sonora and they want to stop it by force by hysteria by any means that are available to them though michael would like to expand upon that this is a very interesting point the americans are just losing their grip on the region and...
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Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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FOXNEWSW
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had a long house they all live together, kids, grandparents, brought together a nucleus and family andhad a lot of emphasis on that in 7th grade. >> are you iroquois? >> no. they occupy new york. >> i was going to ask another question. made me stop and blow my nose, i couldn't answer. >> if it is good enough for the indians. >> that's my point. brought together a sense of community and family, maybe the kid can move into a wing or to the shed. give a sense of unity and family, don't have to go too far. >> don't you think as dana said, make a choice between what is comfortable and uncomfortable, more comfortable if you can go home, do what you want to do. >> a lot of kids would prefer to be on their own, not have to move home. i think a lot of them graduate from college, think they'll have fantastic jobs and take the offices, those dreams are squan dered. there is a silver lining. can i be positive a second. sometimes kids at home, ifs parents are driving you crazy, one day you'll look back, think i am glad i did that. >> eric, you were home until you were 39. what was that like for you
had a long house they all live together, kids, grandparents, brought together a nucleus and family andhad a lot of emphasis on that in 7th grade. >> are you iroquois? >> no. they occupy new york. >> i was going to ask another question. made me stop and blow my nose, i couldn't answer. >> if it is good enough for the indians. >> that's my point. brought together a sense of community and family, maybe the kid can move into a wing or to the shed. give a sense of unity...
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Aug 7, 2013
08/13
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CNBC
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back to something that you said, in the early days when you and i found each other in 09 in our core nucleus of people talking about stocks, now corporations are in the mix, professionals are in the mix which is great but how does that translate because now it seems like it's noise yer than ever with so many people voicing an opinion. >> of course. again, this is not free. it's free in the sense that you can download the app. where it's not free is you have to invest your time. you can't just have a block berg and have it work. you can't download twitter and stock twits and magic happens. the more you put in, the more you get out. there is no simple solution. you have to use these tools, understand the tools, have the same buyer beware mentality. as guy said this is a new tape. this is a tape that people like me want to carry around in their pocket to be dialed into what is happening in the market. we've invested thousands of hours as traders and investors learning the market. we're in a mentorship where we can give this information to other people. i have a quarter million followers. every
back to something that you said, in the early days when you and i found each other in 09 in our core nucleus of people talking about stocks, now corporations are in the mix, professionals are in the mix which is great but how does that translate because now it seems like it's noise yer than ever with so many people voicing an opinion. >> of course. again, this is not free. it's free in the sense that you can download the app. where it's not free is you have to invest your time. you can't...
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Aug 12, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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those suburbs were built before the car so they kind of spread it organically usually there was a nucleus for the public transportation dropped to rebut the off and then the shocks and maybe there were apartments they sprouted out that center because there was no car at the time all of the houses had to be built relatively within walking distance to that town so starting after in the 1930's there was a new type of zoning that came to be, and i go into it in great detail in the book about what that did is it broke everything apart and basically mandated that all of the stories were going to be over here from all the houses were going to be over here, the industries were going to be over year and even the medical places would be over here and we sort of spread everything apart and by that time of course the car is how everyone was getting around everywhere and so it set up a lifestyle where it had to kind of go from one place to the other to the other and so that is the sort of modern-day suburbia but as the default, the distances between those points a grew longer and farther and farther a
those suburbs were built before the car so they kind of spread it organically usually there was a nucleus for the public transportation dropped to rebut the off and then the shocks and maybe there were apartments they sprouted out that center because there was no car at the time all of the houses had to be built relatively within walking distance to that town so starting after in the 1930's there was a new type of zoning that came to be, and i go into it in great detail in the book about what...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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there was a nucleus where the public transportation dropped off. there was no car at the time period there was really no walking distance to that town. there was a new type of sounding that came to be and i go to it in great detail in the book but what i did was broke everything apart and mandated that all the stores are going to be here and all the houses are going to be over here. the industry is going to be over here and even the medical places are going to be over here. it's sort of spread everything apart and by that time the car is how everyone is getting around everywhere so instead of this lifestyle where you had to go from one place to the other to the other. that is sort of modern-day suburbia but as modern suburbia involves the distances between those points grew longer and farther and farther apart. so many years between then and now but during that interim we kind of over expanded far apart from the cities, far apart from each other and very far away from the cities and the traditional definition of the suburb is a residential communit
there was a nucleus where the public transportation dropped off. there was no car at the time period there was really no walking distance to that town. there was a new type of sounding that came to be and i go to it in great detail in the book but what i did was broke everything apart and mandated that all the stores are going to be here and all the houses are going to be over here. the industry is going to be over here and even the medical places are going to be over here. it's sort of spread...
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Aug 18, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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usually there was a nucleus with the public transportation to everyone of. and then because there was no car at the time, all the houses had to be buith within walking distance. a new type of zoning. i go into it in detail on the book. what that did was breng in everything apart which mandated that all the stores to be over here, houses over here, the industry over year, and even all the medical places will be over here. it's bread everything apart. by that time, of course, the car was how everyone was getting around everywhere. so it set up this lifestyle where you had toes oind of go fm one place to the other to the of the pits of that sort of modern-day suburbiica but as modern suburrt a evolved the distances between those points grew longer and farther and farther apasor. so, you know, there are many years between then and now, but during an interim wees oind of over expanded, build houses far apart from the city's, far apasr buiom each other, very far away from the cities. it traditional definition of a suburb is a residential community and outside of t
usually there was a nucleus with the public transportation to everyone of. and then because there was no car at the time, all the houses had to be buith within walking distance. a new type of zoning. i go into it in detail on the book. what that did was breng in everything apart which mandated that all the stores to be over here, houses over here, the industry over year, and even all the medical places will be over here. it's bread everything apart. by that time, of course, the car was how...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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should understand microscopic physics for instance now you have an atom that is been charged the nucleus of the atom is made out of protons and neutrons but you don't need to understand that in order to understand how basketball bounces by though long distance large-scale e fax that we can understand so we tested gravity extremely well. and our understanding why it is our important why it could have thrown a wrench into our understanding whether or not there is dark matter out there because this is something as you go to the airports we know how long dash judge wright down the theory i am a skeptic if this is. by another skeptic. [laughter] you have to completely rethink how to write down the theory of gravity. throughout the rule book to end start again. that would not be an easy task. with the evidence of dark matter that consistently points to a lot of stuff out there that we cannot observe we know there is new physics out there but it all realize upon as understating gravity really well. i think that is why this particular anomaly captures a very well. >> all these theories of the un
should understand microscopic physics for instance now you have an atom that is been charged the nucleus of the atom is made out of protons and neutrons but you don't need to understand that in order to understand how basketball bounces by though long distance large-scale e fax that we can understand so we tested gravity extremely well. and our understanding why it is our important why it could have thrown a wrench into our understanding whether or not there is dark matter out there because...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the nucleus of the atom is made of protons and neutrons, but you don't need to understand that, but you understand how that is. large-scale affects, and macroscopic laws and physics, and understand long distance physics. and done extremely well. we tested all sorts of distances so what is so special about the pioneer anomaly and our understanding and why is important for understanding of the weather, why it could have thrown a wrench into our understanding of whether there is dark matter out there, because this is something which has your going to outer parts of the solar system gravity is starting to change and we don't really know how to write a theory that does that simply. this would not, if this had been, or if this is, i am a skeptic. i am not a skeptic. i am a skeptic. you would have had to completely rethink how to write down the theory of gravity. it would not have been -- just throw out the rules, start again, how do i write a theory of gravity that acts like this, would not have been an easy task. on the other hand when we look out and see galaxies spinning giving evidence fo
the nucleus of the atom is made of protons and neutrons, but you don't need to understand that, but you understand how that is. large-scale affects, and macroscopic laws and physics, and understand long distance physics. and done extremely well. we tested all sorts of distances so what is so special about the pioneer anomaly and our understanding and why is important for understanding of the weather, why it could have thrown a wrench into our understanding of whether there is dark matter out...
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455
Aug 14, 2013
08/13
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CNNW
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that i can hold a piece of uranium in my hand that has enough energy in it to bring down an entire nucleus a great thing. >> i don't know where taylor gets this thing. i'm a fourth generation coca-cola bottler. >> we have no science in our background at all. >> he has the courage to pursue it. >> planet earth has an existing geology and what we do as human beings and as architects, we try to alter and modify and expand the geology our cities and our buildings and architecture isn't the way it is because there's some kind of universal law that says that's how it has to be. they are the way they are because that's how far we got the last time we tried. >> join us saturday for "the next list," 2:30 eastern. >>> it is 10:00 eastern straight up. let's go right to cairo, egypt. all day long the military has been trying to clear out protests who have been staging a sit-in in support of mohammed morsi. he's the ousted president. people are setting things on fire. people are running through the streets of cairo setting cars on fire, setting churches on fire, actually setting fire to almost everythi
that i can hold a piece of uranium in my hand that has enough energy in it to bring down an entire nucleus a great thing. >> i don't know where taylor gets this thing. i'm a fourth generation coca-cola bottler. >> we have no science in our background at all. >> he has the courage to pursue it. >> planet earth has an existing geology and what we do as human beings and as architects, we try to alter and modify and expand the geology our cities and our buildings and...
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146
Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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KRON
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generation pre as hybrid and the company's first hydrogen fuel cell car parade to engineers says of the nucleuswill get significantly better fuel economy than its current 50 mi. per gallon it will have an advanced batteries, motor and gas and in combination that is smaller, lighter and cheaper than the current version. the company will reveal more about its zero emission carl early next year. >>darya: we're keeping you up to date on the commute on this first day of the bay bridge closure. as you can see it's rough on both the san mateo and richmond bridges. we will be right back. a7 we are back. 8730. here is a live look of the toll plaza full of construction equipment as of a british shutdown. george tracking where they are going. >>george: to the richmond bridge and the san mateo bridge. kron4's mike pelton has been monitoring the approach. it could see it as our lead on a colander road. as it is all the way to the nimitz freeway. the worst approach to the bridge to the richmond parkway about interstate 583 richmond and starting to back up as well as kron4's jack is the sow has been pointed o
generation pre as hybrid and the company's first hydrogen fuel cell car parade to engineers says of the nucleuswill get significantly better fuel economy than its current 50 mi. per gallon it will have an advanced batteries, motor and gas and in combination that is smaller, lighter and cheaper than the current version. the company will reveal more about its zero emission carl early next year. >>darya: we're keeping you up to date on the commute on this first day of the bay bridge closure....
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN
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it was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent there in formal time.hey are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement .hat features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag.-- her bed. this is also the room where lucy's story ends. she was sitting in one of the chairs here in this room. she was working on some needle points and watching her younger children play tennis outside the windows here. she suffered a massive stroke and slumped over in her chair and the family rushed in and carried her to the bed and this she wase she passed away. buried in a cemetery here in fremont. eventually, her children had her and rutherford reinterred here, and they are now buried here on the grounds. >> how old was she when she passed away? >> she was 57 when she died. she had her funeral there and was laid out in the front hallway. thousands of people came through. one of the great stories of
it was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent there in formal time.hey are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement .hat features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag.-- her bed. this is also the room where lucy's story ends. she was sitting in one of the chairs here in this room. she was...