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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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dean of the nyu stern school of business.t to our agenda. >> my agenda is what is happening on the markets. this is a monday morning surprise. pay attention to this on bloomberg radio and television through the morning. negative yield strive lower in germany. there is the german 10 year. these are little incremental moves. they are huge deals to the economy. >> tom, you have to head to the radio studio. brendan, what are you watching? , a13 cases of ebola reported brand-new strain, in the democratic republic of congo. very worrying. as a problemt it of public health, there is a country -- that is a country where they have little or no infrastructure for public health. .hat is troubling that is the nicest way to put it. >> i'm going to switch gears and go to something lighter. the emmys are on my agenda. seth meyers is hosting at 8:00 p.m. in lastf cards" won year's emmys. netflix is back with "house of cards" and orange is the new black. this is the golden age of television, after all. let's get to our twitter question of the
dean of the nyu stern school of business.t to our agenda. >> my agenda is what is happening on the markets. this is a monday morning surprise. pay attention to this on bloomberg radio and television through the morning. negative yield strive lower in germany. there is the german 10 year. these are little incremental moves. they are huge deals to the economy. >> tom, you have to head to the radio studio. brendan, what are you watching? , a13 cases of ebola reported brand-new strain,...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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he said, try nyu. we went to nyu. and as i was talking to dean ruth schafer, a few minutes before the close of registration, she asked me if i had a diploma. and i said no. she said, well, have you applied to nyu? and i said no. and she looked at me as if she was so puzzled as to why would i still be trying to enter if i hadn't applied. and my sister whispered to me, and she said, dorothy, show her your letter from barnard college accepting you. so i showed her the letter. and i'll never forget, she took the letter, she looked at it, and she said, a girl that makes these kind of grades doesn't need an application. and she accepted me. c-span: what kind of grades had you made in high school? >> guest: i was an a student. c-span: straight a? and then what kind of a student were you in college? >> guest: straight a. c-span: back to barnard for a moment. why would you have a quota of only two -- at the time, you were called negroes -- of two black people? why would they have that kind of a quota? >> guest: i don't know. b
he said, try nyu. we went to nyu. and as i was talking to dean ruth schafer, a few minutes before the close of registration, she asked me if i had a diploma. and i said no. she said, well, have you applied to nyu? and i said no. and she looked at me as if she was so puzzled as to why would i still be trying to enter if i hadn't applied. and my sister whispered to me, and she said, dorothy, show her your letter from barnard college accepting you. so i showed her the letter. and i'll never...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
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market selloffs, you talk this -- at stanford and migrated to nyu. stanley fischer has been known to throw chalk. >> i never did it. how weael spence on control our emotions when things go down. >> this is -- there are two things going on worth attention. the markets have not figured out how dangerous the global economy has become. secondly, we have these better than expected gdp reports. monetaryslated in policy. >> two crosscurrents. josh rosslyn, you are shaking your head yes. isyou agree that this possibly global contagion? as a global contagion, no. i agree we have a larger issue. the rate of recovery globally has not been what it has been expected to be. if you look and dig into participation rates, we have real reasons for concerns. there is too much irrational exuberance. >> what did you mean a moment ago when you said global markets are dangerous? the global economy, the tradable side of it relies on flows of people, information, capital and goods. four are under threat. we are shooting down airplanes. whereis a problem about to fly. cyber s
market selloffs, you talk this -- at stanford and migrated to nyu. stanley fischer has been known to throw chalk. >> i never did it. how weael spence on control our emotions when things go down. >> this is -- there are two things going on worth attention. the markets have not figured out how dangerous the global economy has become. secondly, we have these better than expected gdp reports. monetaryslated in policy. >> two crosscurrents. josh rosslyn, you are shaking your head...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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CNBC
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nyu's business school has seen some of the most power of financial leaders pass through its door. allen greenspan and ken langone come to mind. so clearly the school has considerable full with influencers. what skills will they learn about leadership and technology and much more? our week-long special continues now, with the dean of the nyu stern school, peter blare henry, a frequent guess on power lunch. conner, let me let you go ahead of your boss there, and ask about what the students are coming in now wanting to learn and wanting to scuddy. how tars it changed from 10 or 15 years ago? >> sure, i think there's a pretty big difference from, of course, 10 or 15 years ago. the hot topic we are seeing right now is business annual illustratics, how to deal with big data, even with our center for business analytics, we're seeing it spreads across all industries. for them it almost doesn't matter what they're going to study, as long as they know that. i think some of the courses we are seeing are data-driven decision-making, for example. really interestingly there's a big demand from
nyu's business school has seen some of the most power of financial leaders pass through its door. allen greenspan and ken langone come to mind. so clearly the school has considerable full with influencers. what skills will they learn about leadership and technology and much more? our week-long special continues now, with the dean of the nyu stern school, peter blare henry, a frequent guess on power lunch. conner, let me let you go ahead of your boss there, and ask about what the students are...
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Aug 24, 2014
08/14
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she writes a column for forbes, teaches at nyu stern school of business and has served for over the years as a columnist of the financial times and for its and believe she is also a fellow with their sister library that george w. bush presidential center down in dallas. everyone, please welcome amity shlaes. [applause] >> i am going to push this back. can you hear me? okay. if you cannot hear me or there is something wrong with the audio, stop me. i am so happy to be here today. i will ask mr. clarke to give me that put tow. and i am grateful to mr. clarke a mile i have no long time working on various projects. this library is just an awesome library. every one of assess the same job, to share information about presidents and history. in no library has been as pleasant to work with as this one over time. so i am here to tell you a story, basically describes a work project. i am almost like a contractor, an architect and builder telling you our bill the certain house to about miami your to hear how your building your houses, how you tell your stories. i know some people in the room are aut
she writes a column for forbes, teaches at nyu stern school of business and has served for over the years as a columnist of the financial times and for its and believe she is also a fellow with their sister library that george w. bush presidential center down in dallas. everyone, please welcome amity shlaes. [applause] >> i am going to push this back. can you hear me? okay. if you cannot hear me or there is something wrong with the audio, stop me. i am so happy to be here today. i will...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> and mark siegel, nyu's lang medical center and author of "the secret code of sickness and health." >> we want to start here, so the centers for disease control stepping up its response to the growing ela
. >> and mark siegel, nyu's lang medical center and author of "the secret code of sickness and health." >> we want to start here, so the centers for disease control stepping up its response to the growing ela
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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people are not drinking enough, and one of our top experts at nyu is saying, you also have lemon and line, if you use a lot of lemon and lime and a lot of hydration, you can cut down on kidney stones dramatically. you want to avoid beef, spinach rhubarb and nuts. you want to avoid the calcium, you want to drink a lot of water and it's genetic, so watch out if somebody in your family has them. >> what do you get, stabbing pains? it's going to happen to me, i know. >> they say it's as painful as childbirth. >> the reason why it's so painful. if you look at, for example, the kidneys right here, you would have a crystal right in the kidneys. >> kind of like your side? >> exactly. so it's in the back, you have it on the right side and the left side the bay you have your kidney. if you have a stone over here, as long as it sits in the kidneys, it doesn't obstruct the kidneys, when you start drinking beer, and you have a lot going through there, it can pop the stone and come right through this tube, this is a ureter which is a narrow tube and it starts to block the kidney, that's when you'r
people are not drinking enough, and one of our top experts at nyu is saying, you also have lemon and line, if you use a lot of lemon and lime and a lot of hydration, you can cut down on kidney stones dramatically. you want to avoid beef, spinach rhubarb and nuts. you want to avoid the calcium, you want to drink a lot of water and it's genetic, so watch out if somebody in your family has them. >> what do you get, stabbing pains? it's going to happen to me, i know. >> they say it's as...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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. >> and mark siegel, nyu's lang medical center and author of "the secret code of sickness and health." >> we want to start here, so the centers for disease control stepping up its response to the growing ebola outbreak, they are issuing a level one activation alert, a rating reserved for the most serious public health emergencies and dr. samadi i start with you and ask you why. >> number one, alert is actually the highest alert you can get. this is a public health crisis, and the reason is the numbers are increasing, we're now going from 1,400 infected, about 932 are dead in that. and also this ebola is expanding to nigeria now and the government is also calling it an emergency. level one alert is what we saw after katrina. they have called ill with h 1 n 1rks and what that means is they're taking their agents from the cdc who are working on other projects. they are sendi ining agents abo0 of them to control the disease over there. you should be thinking about this, just like we have global economy, if some bank in argentina or greece has a problem, your financial -- the virus in wes
. >> and mark siegel, nyu's lang medical center and author of "the secret code of sickness and health." >> we want to start here, so the centers for disease control stepping up its response to the growing ebola outbreak, they are issuing a level one activation alert, a rating reserved for the most serious public health emergencies and dr. samadi i start with you and ask you why. >> number one, alert is actually the highest alert you can get. this is a public health...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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he is the professor emeritus of russian studies at princeton and nyu. and general wesley clark, the former nato supreme allied commander. gentlemen, thank you so much for being here. general clark, let me start with you. what is putin doing? >> well, he is building up his capacity to intervene. he habit apparently made a decision overtly to intervene. we do know there are russians on the ground there is russian equipment inside. and there is russian artillery and rockets that fire across the boarder to target the ukrainian forces. so he is building up the military capacity. he has a pretext for intervention now. he has the separatist mayor of luhansk citing an eminent humanitarian catastrophe and he is calling a council to discuss a humanitarian situation. he has many options. he could invade. he could infiltrate across the border. he could declare himself a unilateral peacekeeping mission. he could call for a ceasefire. he has lots of options here. and he -- he is playing it. he is like someone fumbling with the lock trying to find the right key to ope
he is the professor emeritus of russian studies at princeton and nyu. and general wesley clark, the former nato supreme allied commander. gentlemen, thank you so much for being here. general clark, let me start with you. what is putin doing? >> well, he is building up his capacity to intervene. he habit apparently made a decision overtly to intervene. we do know there are russians on the ground there is russian equipment inside. and there is russian artillery and rockets that fire across...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center.thor of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> thanks for being here,
mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center.thor of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> thanks for being here,
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center. also author of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and dr. david samadi chairman and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> good to see you guys. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thanks for being here, the big news story here that it happened over the past week was the death of robin williams. we wanted to play a clip of him that everyone will remember and then we'll begin talking. >> medicine, law, business, engineering, these are noble pursuits and necessary to sustain life. but poetry, beauty, romance, love, these are what we stay alive for. to quote from whitman, oh, me, oh, life of the questions of these recurring, of the endless trains of the faithless, of cities filled with the foolish, what good amid these, oh, me, oh, life. answer, that you are here, that life exists, and identity, but the powerful play goes on and you in the universe. >> that was "dead poet's society" starring robin williams. just one of his many iconic movie roles. w
mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center. also author of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and dr. david samadi chairman and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> good to see you guys. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thanks for being here, the big news story here that it happened over the past week was the death of robin williams. we wanted to play a clip of him that everyone will remember and then...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center.o author of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and dr. david samadi chairman and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> good to see you guys. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thanks for being here, the big news story here that it
mark siegel, professor of medicine at nyu's medical center.o author of "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health." >> and dr. david samadi chairman and professor of urology and chief of robotic surgery. >> good to see you guys. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> thanks for being here, the big news story here that it
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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professor of sports management at nyu.ry, and he has a very interesting book out. definitely check this out. it seems like viewers cannot get enough of pro football, obviously. the nfl isn't giving it away for free, though. the league and directv are close to signing a deal for the sunday ticket package. the price would raise the cost up to 40% by 2022. the pending merger of directv and at&t is contingent on the nfl contract being renewed. i thought it was great the other wast that the emmys ditched for a preseason football game on sunday. doesn't even matter for the season but we would rather watch that than the emmys. the u.s. is conducting surveillance in the country president obama vowed he would stay out of. will it lead to airstrikes in syria in the near future? definitely stable with us for that. >> the crisis in ukraine will overshadow the european union meeting in belarus. vladimir putin will meet with the ukraine leader poroshenko, but a one-on-one meeting is not in the plants. ukraine says its forces had inled 2
professor of sports management at nyu.ry, and he has a very interesting book out. definitely check this out. it seems like viewers cannot get enough of pro football, obviously. the nfl isn't giving it away for free, though. the league and directv are close to signing a deal for the sunday ticket package. the price would raise the cost up to 40% by 2022. the pending merger of directv and at&t is contingent on the nfl contract being renewed. i thought it was great the other wast that the...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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. >> reporter: in the study out today, nyu professor bjorn hanson reveals some surcharges you might not expect, like when the bellhop takes your bags to your room and you give him a tip. >> in addition there might be an automatic gratuity. >> so you're paying twice? >> that's right. >> reporter: planning on having the hotel store your luggage as a courtesy? some hotels charge $2 a bag. thought that $5 coke from the mini bar was stuff to swallow? how about the new restocking fee sometimes as high as $5 more. want to guarantee a king or two queen beds? $30, please. >> this sort of makes me feel like i'm being ripped off. >> reporter: but the american hotel and lodging association told abc news hotels and resorts provide guests full disclosure for all fees charged at the time of booking with each property setting its own fee structure. according to professor hanson, one of the challenges for guests is that these fees are not consistent across the same hotel brand. >> someone could stay at a brand hotel on the east side of manhattan one night and the next night stay in that exact same brand
. >> reporter: in the study out today, nyu professor bjorn hanson reveals some surcharges you might not expect, like when the bellhop takes your bags to your room and you give him a tip. >> in addition there might be an automatic gratuity. >> so you're paying twice? >> that's right. >> reporter: planning on having the hotel store your luggage as a courtesy? some hotels charge $2 a bag. thought that $5 coke from the mini bar was stuff to swallow? how about the new...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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. >> arthur kaplan, director of medical ethics at nyu medical school, thanks for giving us per respect i've today. >>> now to continue this topic, the world health organization says ebola has killed nearly 900 people just this year. but as you've both just alluded to, there are some stories of hope and survival. dr. tom karens is one of them. >> he was serving as a missionary in zaire, now the democratic republic of congo in the early 1970s and he contracted ebola. earlier, though, had he had a chance to speak with cnn about the pain and also the fear of dying. >> you know, the fever was certainly a big part of it. fever and flu normally doesn't drag on that long. and it carried on -- my wife made very good temperature charts. and this went on for well over a week into two weeks. and that would not be typical for flu. in addition, the rash that i developed, that would not be typical for flu. so we were realizing this was not a classical flu. there's something more to it than that. >> and how did he get it? cairns became infected when he accidentally cut himself performing an autopsy at
. >> arthur kaplan, director of medical ethics at nyu medical school, thanks for giving us per respect i've today. >>> now to continue this topic, the world health organization says ebola has killed nearly 900 people just this year. but as you've both just alluded to, there are some stories of hope and survival. dr. tom karens is one of them. >> he was serving as a missionary in zaire, now the democratic republic of congo in the early 1970s and he contracted ebola. earlier,...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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also author of coolidge teaches at nyu stern school of business and has served for over the years as a columnist at the financial times and is also a fellow with our sister library the charge of the bush presidential center. so everyone please welcome amity shlaes. [applause] >> can you hear me? okay. if you can't, stop me. i am so happy to be here today and i am grateful. i have known him a long time working on various projects you know, this library is just an awesome library. everyone of us has the same jobs which is to share information about presidents and history. and the library has been as much of a pleasure to work with this is one overtime. so i'm here to tell your story, basically describes a work project. almost like a contractor, an architect, allied build a certain house. i am also eager to hear how you build your house is, that is how you tell your story. i know some people in the room are authors themselves as well. or questions you have. some of your educators. we as authors, if we fail to produce work that educators can use. we'll let you down so you can't do your w
also author of coolidge teaches at nyu stern school of business and has served for over the years as a columnist at the financial times and is also a fellow with our sister library the charge of the bush presidential center. so everyone please welcome amity shlaes. [applause] >> can you hear me? okay. if you can't, stop me. i am so happy to be here today and i am grateful. i have known him a long time working on various projects you know, this library is just an awesome library. everyone...
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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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. >> hinojosa: so you end up going to film school at nyu. >> uh-huh. >> hinojosa: and you spent a chunk of time living in new york, and after smoke signals came out, you had another great success with another wonderful movie called edge of america, about an african american basketball coach who ends up working on a res... >> yeah. >> hinojosa: ...and this whole, kind of relationship; african american/native, which was fascinating. >> yeah. >> hinojosa: but now you live in south dakota, and this is your base-- south dakota is your base... >> yeah. >> hinojosa: you made a decision to be in a place like south dakota, as opposed to-- and you could have. you could have been in new york, you could have been in hollywood... >> yeah. >> hinojosa: why? >> because, basically, i wanted to be around, you know, northern plains native american americana. >> hinojosa: because as a film director, for you it's essential to stay in touch with that reality? >> it's... yeah, it's essential for me to stay in the culture, and learn about the culture all my life, because i was apart from it. >> hinojosa: and
. >> hinojosa: so you end up going to film school at nyu. >> uh-huh. >> hinojosa: and you spent a chunk of time living in new york, and after smoke signals came out, you had another great success with another wonderful movie called edge of america, about an african american basketball coach who ends up working on a res... >> yeah. >> hinojosa: ...and this whole, kind of relationship; african american/native, which was fascinating. >> yeah. >> hinojosa:...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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i'm actually going to try to go to nyu or something. >> jimmy: you are? >> maybe.rd studying amongst other people. won't it? >> it would be strange. not my mother. >> jimmy: why do you feel you need to go to college? i think you're all set. i don't think it's necessary. >> i kind of want to go to college to study cinematography and film editing. >> jimmy: okay. i hear chapman college is real good for that. [ cheers and applause ] it's a little inside audience joke. these four girls think their school is as good as usc. >> ooh, that was low. >> jimmy: last time you were here, you were learning to play the cello for a role and it turns out the role is this movie. >> yeah. >> jimmy: and you really learned to play the cello. >> yeah, i studied for about seven months on it and practiced with it. it would be kind of silly to say i in seven months learned such a classical instrument because it's incredibly intricate. but it was really mainly -- the seven months were kind of learning the passion that cellists have when they play and kind of the emotive -- >> jimmy: do cell
i'm actually going to try to go to nyu or something. >> jimmy: you are? >> maybe.rd studying amongst other people. won't it? >> it would be strange. not my mother. >> jimmy: why do you feel you need to go to college? i think you're all set. i don't think it's necessary. >> i kind of want to go to college to study cinematography and film editing. >> jimmy: okay. i hear chapman college is real good for that. [ cheers and applause ] it's a little inside audience...
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Aug 8, 2014
08/14
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. >> i am speaking to a professor from nyu, talking about that big announcedhe ncaa yesterday.ller conference schools, they have little say or influence before. ir was going to be listened to? >> another great question. maybe yes. the reality is, probably not so much. if we go back to black-and-white terms, it is a have and have-nots situation. >> do they have a voice now? >> they do, but you have these powerhouses that are pushing through, that really have the power and strength and financial wherewithal. the question that is really being asked a lot is whether the smaller schools and smaller conferences should be getting into what they call an arms race ? should they even be involved at the level they are trying to get into? >> we're talking about what, the sec, the pac-12, and these little guys -- i do not mean to be offensive, but it sounds like they are battling over table scraps while the big guys are getting the bulk of the food here. >> that is it. it may sound defensive, but it is tough not to get to honesty, what -- which is what you are really talking about. these po
. >> i am speaking to a professor from nyu, talking about that big announcedhe ncaa yesterday.ller conference schools, they have little say or influence before. ir was going to be listened to? >> another great question. maybe yes. the reality is, probably not so much. if we go back to black-and-white terms, it is a have and have-nots situation. >> do they have a voice now? >> they do, but you have these powerhouses that are pushing through, that really have the power and...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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. >> then you went to nyu. " is the perfect balance of the first professional job to have those influencese soul, the musical theater. >> do you think of yourself more as a senior fan an actor? actor?nger than an >> i used to. i have more confidence but i'm starting to change my tune. i've had the voice of her since i was a little girl and it was something that i held onto. it's why i think people like me or why they think i'm special. i'm getting older and realizing i have more to offer than the high notes and the acrobatics. like "if/then" involves a lot of character work and authenticity, all of that kind of stuff. as i'm getting older, i think i am more equal actress-the singer. broadway is afto ter a year. >> i was in "wicked for a year-and-a-half, went to london, had a baby, and i was looking for another original piece. original musicals take a long time. with thehis one director from "rent," tom, brian, david stone, my producer from "wicked." you have to give it time to develop and find its way. >> who are liz and beth? beth are two parts of one's soul, i guess, is how i look at it.
. >> then you went to nyu. " is the perfect balance of the first professional job to have those influencese soul, the musical theater. >> do you think of yourself more as a senior fan an actor? actor?nger than an >> i used to. i have more confidence but i'm starting to change my tune. i've had the voice of her since i was a little girl and it was something that i held onto. it's why i think people like me or why they think i'm special. i'm getting older and realizing i...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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the world health organization lou: joining us now, doctor natalie azar and nyu langone medical center 1145 people dead because of ebola. who says it's out of control. every association organizations of the out of control. what we have to do? >> the issue, we were speaking a few weeks ago, one of the main reasons that there has been such an epidemic is partly because of a lack of understanding among the people of west africa and partly because of cultural issues. >> a majority of the cases were in sudan. and one of the reasons we have seen this is because of industrialization. there's a lot more cross contamination within these situations. >> we have anticipated these social issues and why should any health organization be surprised by the barriers to success in dealing with the pandemic? >> all very good questions. and this is hard to speak on their behalf to say how can we anticipate that. and these cases are sporadic. so there hasn't been in production. it's hard to predict when and where this will happen. >> i think it will take a lot longer. i know that sounds like a lawyer answer
the world health organization lou: joining us now, doctor natalie azar and nyu langone medical center 1145 people dead because of ebola. who says it's out of control. every association organizations of the out of control. what we have to do? >> the issue, we were speaking a few weeks ago, one of the main reasons that there has been such an epidemic is partly because of a lack of understanding among the people of west africa and partly because of cultural issues. >> a majority of the...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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he is at the nyu stern school of business. he was a jackson hole.will get his on the ground assessment of what yellen and draghi said. we will talk to peter henry about the value of an mba. i know that is a big debate in london as well. >> tom, thank you. veryeene will be back fully employed during "surveillance." island food chain is offering something unusual. depending how much you invest in the four-year loan, you will not only get interest but free food whenever you visit one of the stores. we went to see if these are a tasty investment. >> this is a simple concept. you loan money to us over a four-year. and in turn we pay you an 8% rate of interest. this is a 500 pound minimum investment. then we throw in some food as well. everybody who invests gets a couple of freeman vouchers -- free meal vouchers. there is over 80 of those people so far. that entitles them to a free mail once a week for the duration of the bond. that could be up to four years. we have been going for seven years. our first restaurant was on upper street. we have made our sh
he is at the nyu stern school of business. he was a jackson hole.will get his on the ground assessment of what yellen and draghi said. we will talk to peter henry about the value of an mba. i know that is a big debate in london as well. >> tom, thank you. veryeene will be back fully employed during "surveillance." island food chain is offering something unusual. depending how much you invest in the four-year loan, you will not only get interest but free food whenever you visit...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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and they actually don't make that much of a difference if you look at research from duke or nyu or yell go into this and they go into a vending machine not necessarily based on the number of calories. so you will look at the benefits and they are not that great. david: i think these guys have argued telegraphed their concerns of what they want in their perfect society. so then you have to watch out because it means you're in for trouble. they don't like any carbon energy, so they come out with these new regulations the point is not to put into effect regulations but to wipe out whole or whatever carbonation areas. >> it's funny because we are going to fall into this and it doesn't work that way. i was just over in france which everyone is very thin. if you look at the studies, we are the fattest country in the world. and so maybe put a little bit into this. >> i'm not giving up. this is something that they need to teach from a young age, as you said. david: that is going to be the last word. okay, thank you. the new health care law, >> enough is enough, this administration will not tole
and they actually don't make that much of a difference if you look at research from duke or nyu or yell go into this and they go into a vending machine not necessarily based on the number of calories. so you will look at the benefits and they are not that great. david: i think these guys have argued telegraphed their concerns of what they want in their perfect society. so then you have to watch out because it means you're in for trouble. they don't like any carbon energy, so they come out with...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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natalie azar of nyu langone medical center.at to have you with us. 1,145 people dead because of ebola. w.h.o. says it's out of control. every association, organization says it's out of control. what do we have to do to get it under control? >> the issue -- we were speaking a few weeks ago that one of the main reasons that there's been such an epidemic this time is partly because of a lack of understanding among the people of west africa of how the disease is transmitted and spread, partly because of some cultural issues, burial, rituals and habits. >> but these are the same people that have had to contend with ebola -- >> but not on the west african coast. the majority of the cases were in kenya or the sudan. one of the reasons we've seen such a rampant rise this time around is because of industrialization. there's a lot more cross-contamination within these countries -- >> but the w.h.o. has nothing to do but anticipate these cultural issues. why should any health organization be surprised by the lack of education and the barr
natalie azar of nyu langone medical center.at to have you with us. 1,145 people dead because of ebola. w.h.o. says it's out of control. every association, organization says it's out of control. what do we have to do to get it under control? >> the issue -- we were speaking a few weeks ago that one of the main reasons that there's been such an epidemic this time is partly because of a lack of understanding among the people of west africa of how the disease is transmitted and spread, partly...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CNBC
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. >>> tomorrow or back to school special rolls on with the dean of nyu stern business school. what advise would peter henry give president obama right now in his final years in the white house? lessons from the c suite offered up to the oval office. that's tomorrow on "power lunch." >>> good series. to the bond market now, rick santelli cracking some cross-asset action for us at the cme. >> sarah, it says it all. we're doing a bit of work, and we want to pay close attention to which side of the pivot that traders say is at 238. open the chart up for two years, get a glymph of why the momentum mostly continues to the up side. let's talk foreign exchange. hey, i hear a question out there. why is the dollar index at 11-plus month mys? three reasons why. first the euro versus the dollar. second is the pound versus the dallas. now let's switch gears. dollars versus yen. everyone is having a rather large movie, especially the pound, so we continue to monitor the woes in japan and europe, and who benefits, which in this case is a dollar index. back to you, tyler and sarah. >>> thanks
. >>> tomorrow or back to school special rolls on with the dean of nyu stern business school. what advise would peter henry give president obama right now in his final years in the white house? lessons from the c suite offered up to the oval office. that's tomorrow on "power lunch." >>> good series. to the bond market now, rick santelli cracking some cross-asset action for us at the cme. >> sarah, it says it all. we're doing a bit of work, and we want to pay...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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it was actually done by sews y'all gists at -- sociologists at nyu who looked at how a man's height affectselationships. they do more housework and earn a greater household income and less likely to get divorced and it is probably due to their abnormally large member -- ship in clubs. joe app, did you ever -- joanne, did you ever date a short man, and don't count martin short. >> i am 5 foot 6, 5 foot 7 which is in the short range. i don't like really tall. 6 foot 2 and taller it freaks me out. i think some has to do with the woman's father. as awful as that sounds, if you have a tall father, you are probably going to be on the taller side, but you won't want to date someone super short. you are looking for someone like your father. >> why do you think shorter men are better than tall people like you? >> greg, it is interesting. this study spawned a lot of stories. they had the same title. the study said women prefer taller men one was titled short men make better boyfriends. the reason is they have to work harder because women prefer tall men. it is funny you chose this story and it focuse
it was actually done by sews y'all gists at -- sociologists at nyu who looked at how a man's height affectselationships. they do more housework and earn a greater household income and less likely to get divorced and it is probably due to their abnormally large member -- ship in clubs. joe app, did you ever -- joanne, did you ever date a short man, and don't count martin short. >> i am 5 foot 6, 5 foot 7 which is in the short range. i don't like really tall. 6 foot 2 and taller it freaks...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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. >> the nyu center for global affairs, he says the holocaust and world war ii directly influenced manysrael. >> they say israel as the final refuge, the only refuge for jews. and regardless of even sometimes their own doing, they feel it justifies. >> 65-year-old jerry believes young people who question the military's actions do so because they lack context. >> the news media tells them about, you know, 85% negative. 85% negative, that's the way i react. >> many young people, the so-called millennials, people born from the 1980s to the early 2000s are more influenced by what they see on social media and news alternatives like the "daily show" with jon stewart. >> launched by israel -- >> do you believe that the state of israel, its existence is at risk if they don't do what they're doing? >> i would say the state of israel is at risk if it continues doing what it's doing. >> yes. >> a dilemma pitting old against young and even those in the jewish community against each other. >> i think this is tearing a hole in the jewish soul. >> cnn, new york. >> also, still ahead, what do you do wh
. >> the nyu center for global affairs, he says the holocaust and world war ii directly influenced manysrael. >> they say israel as the final refuge, the only refuge for jews. and regardless of even sometimes their own doing, they feel it justifies. >> 65-year-old jerry believes young people who question the military's actions do so because they lack context. >> the news media tells them about, you know, 85% negative. 85% negative, that's the way i react. >> many...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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WTXF
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shorter men work to compensate for their height with higher earnings, the study comes from researchers at nyu i love all of these studies. confusing the closet, believe it or not, pretty common. it is because after sleep disorder called con fewer nail a rouse al. it affect about one in seven people according to a new study in the journal neurology t happens when someone wakes up, but their brain is still -- so if you tune in every morning at had. you will see this live on the air. it essentially is like being drunk, but people don't know where they are, what's going on, what they are doing. confusional a rise al, here live good day. >> a couple said they had run out of options, going to lose their unborn child, but the couple decided that wasn't their destin. >> i instead turn to the internet, found little known miracle. so, doctor joet shows us how it saved their baby's life. >> keeping up with little benjamin is a full-time job. kristin and jeff love watching the son they nearly lost. >> he was lucky, he was really lucky little baby to make it here. >> i've already had a miscarriage, i had
shorter men work to compensate for their height with higher earnings, the study comes from researchers at nyu i love all of these studies. confusing the closet, believe it or not, pretty common. it is because after sleep disorder called con fewer nail a rouse al. it affect about one in seven people according to a new study in the journal neurology t happens when someone wakes up, but their brain is still -- so if you tune in every morning at had. you will see this live on the air. it...
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let's turn to assistant professor at nyu school of medicine dr.makes people nervous we don't want ebola to come to our shores and bring someone here. emory is set up for this. cdc doesn't have a flawless track record lately. >> that's sdwru of keeping things contained. should people be nervous. >> i don't to downplay how dangerous ebola is. it has a 60% fatality rate. the two health care workers knew about isolation protocols when they went there. they were trained for it. you worry will the people here be ready for it? a couple things are different. the first thing is the culture of the hospital and the environment. here we have a culture where we hand wash all the time. we use hand sanitizers, cleaning protocols. we sterilize the equipment and dispose a lot of the equipment. when you are working in a poor area you may not have the resources available to you. that may not necessarily be the culture of the other health care workers, even the patients or people coming in. and cultural differences of people of west africa managing ebola. i think we
let's turn to assistant professor at nyu school of medicine dr.makes people nervous we don't want ebola to come to our shores and bring someone here. emory is set up for this. cdc doesn't have a flawless track record lately. >> that's sdwru of keeping things contained. should people be nervous. >> i don't to downplay how dangerous ebola is. it has a 60% fatality rate. the two health care workers knew about isolation protocols when they went there. they were trained for it. you worry...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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when i taught journalism at nyu i sam barry students sam barry students how one day to interview the proverbial man on the street about what he or she thinks about the space program and they came back and once said professor burrows the lady i talked to said she's more interested in educating the children. a man said actually -- barges in and paying the mortgage and another interested in putting -- putting food on the table. in answer small percentage. people worried about keeping a roof on and i don't mean the roof that protects us against any ohs but i mean literally a ref on the house and that's where it is. >> host: it seems to me at least in the recent past congress has been motivated about this question so that's important but are you thinking of how to get the word out about this threat and how we need to more -- spend more money than we are now? >> guest: i was privileged to be picked as the only nonscientist of a 14 member panel by their national research council which of course is the national academy of sciences to be on a near earth object survey and mitigation panel a fe
when i taught journalism at nyu i sam barry students sam barry students how one day to interview the proverbial man on the street about what he or she thinks about the space program and they came back and once said professor burrows the lady i talked to said she's more interested in educating the children. a man said actually -- barges in and paying the mortgage and another interested in putting -- putting food on the table. in answer small percentage. people worried about keeping a roof on and...
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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with me is janie dana a provensor of political science and a professor of campaign management at nyu. wow. >> that's right. stri striking revelation. >> let's break this down. the senate was actually investigating the cia's interrogation program. what were they looking for? >> this does date back to the bush administration. john brennan worked for clinton. he worked in the cia under bush and was in charge of some of the secret prisons and enhanced interrogation techniques. when president obama came in and cancelled those enhanced interrogation practices, the senate intelligence committee began investigating. next week, the report you mentioned is the report that is set to be released on what the cia was doing. >> they were trying to get a look? >> trying to get a look at that. and that has precipitated this enormous tension between the cia director, john brennan, and the senate intelligence committee. and what happened really was that in a very public statement, dianne feinstein, who is the head of the committee from camera, came out and said -- this was last ma, we believe that the c
with me is janie dana a provensor of political science and a professor of campaign management at nyu. wow. >> that's right. stri striking revelation. >> let's break this down. the senate was actually investigating the cia's interrogation program. what were they looking for? >> this does date back to the bush administration. john brennan worked for clinton. he worked in the cia under bush and was in charge of some of the secret prisons and enhanced interrogation techniques....
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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KQED
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. >> exactly i went to nyu and had my bands and so rent was the perfect balance of first professionalnfluences, and the rock and the soul and that was also musical theatre. >> do you think of yourself more as a singer than actor? >> i used to. i used -- i still i think i have more confidence as a singer although, i am starting to change that tune. i think because i had a voice ever since i was a little girl it was the thing i held on to, how i see myself. why i think people like me or why they think i am special. as i am getting older i realize i have more to offer than just my voice or the high noteacrobatics and stuff. and a show like i said, it requires more than just singing it is a lot of character work and authenticity and vulnerability and all that kind of stuff. so as i am getting older i think i am more equal actress, singer. >> the return to broadway was after 10 years. >> yes, you know, it is not technically that i was in wicked for a year and a half then i went to london and did it for another year i had a baby then you know i did concertall in that time i was looking for
. >> exactly i went to nyu and had my bands and so rent was the perfect balance of first professionalnfluences, and the rock and the soul and that was also musical theatre. >> do you think of yourself more as a singer than actor? >> i used to. i used -- i still i think i have more confidence as a singer although, i am starting to change that tune. i think because i had a voice ever since i was a little girl it was the thing i held on to, how i see myself. why i think people...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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KYW
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. >> when surgeons at nyu lan gone medical center removed the tumor they also had to take out one ofrank's kidneys, his spleen, part of his adrenal glands. >> what you don't want to do is tug and pull on something while they're attached to these very del can't blood vest. >> when got woke up after the operation i said thank you god. >> frank and his family are greatful. >> for awhile there, i thought i might lose him. >> i think i'm going to live to see 100, i'm happen. >> i likely the tumor will grow back, now frank being check every three months. craig boswell, cbs-3, "eyewitness news". >> amazing store. >> i to know know thawed? thank goodness they found it. >>> coming up in the next half hour of "eyewitness news", following breaking news, cleve? >> reporter: after fatal shooting in the northeast, the gunman sticks around to give his gun over to police. coming up we'll have his explanation that he gave to detectives. >> also, some disturbing surveillance video shows an explosion at a chain east take out restaurant. and the suspect is just 14 years old. now, police need help tracki
. >> when surgeons at nyu lan gone medical center removed the tumor they also had to take out one ofrank's kidneys, his spleen, part of his adrenal glands. >> what you don't want to do is tug and pull on something while they're attached to these very del can't blood vest. >> when got woke up after the operation i said thank you god. >> frank and his family are greatful. >> for awhile there, i thought i might lose him. >> i think i'm going to live to see 100,...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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WUSA
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. >> reporter: art kaplan is director of medical ethics at nyu langone medical center. >> it seems tomost problem is when you can't consent, you can't agree, who's going to protect you. >> do you have those questions about this? >> many are so vulnerable they couldn't tell you if they're in pain or can't go on. others are very psychiatrically disturb. you have to be careful. >> reporter: the center says a state judge approves the use of shock devices for each student who receives them and for some it's the only option. >> so you're not just shocking someone. you're shocking someone who has -- they've been through every other treatment, every other medication. we're not only giving them an option. we're giving them a life that they haven't been able to live before. >> reporter: she now has a new life at a group home in florida where her therapy includes positive feedback reinforcement, but no electric shocks. >> wonderful. i feel good. i feel happy. i'm calm. i can control my own body now. i feel like i have whole another life. >> jennifer is now suing the center. we asked officials at
. >> reporter: art kaplan is director of medical ethics at nyu langone medical center. >> it seems tomost problem is when you can't consent, you can't agree, who's going to protect you. >> do you have those questions about this? >> many are so vulnerable they couldn't tell you if they're in pain or can't go on. others are very psychiatrically disturb. you have to be careful. >> reporter: the center says a state judge approves the use of shock devices for each...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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MSNBCW
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according to arthur kaplan, director of bioethics at nyu langone medical center.idea of being diagnosed with ebola is terrifying, absolutely horrifying. today's outbreak is the worst than ever, 1,600 suspected cases and 887 deaths according to the world health organization. it is not nearly as contagious as another more common disease. the flu, which you might have heard of, causes as many as 500,000 deaths each year. 500,000. ebola is scarier with the whole sometimes bleeding from the eyes thing. but you are a lot less likely to die from it. in a press conference today, bruce johnson, director of simusa, the organization nancy writebol is working for in liberia added some perspective. >> i don't know if you know, but there are 50 doctors, liberian doctors, for 4 million people. the kind of infrastructure that we have in the u.s. is something that really provides this. i saw a report, you can help me here, someone in new york went into a hospital and felt like they may have ebola. that's exactly what people need to do, but it's not available in liberia. they can't
according to arthur kaplan, director of bioethics at nyu langone medical center.idea of being diagnosed with ebola is terrifying, absolutely horrifying. today's outbreak is the worst than ever, 1,600 suspected cases and 887 deaths according to the world health organization. it is not nearly as contagious as another more common disease. the flu, which you might have heard of, causes as many as 500,000 deaths each year. 500,000. ebola is scarier with the whole sometimes bleeding from the eyes...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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KYW
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. >> reporter: when surgeons at nyu medical center removed the tumor they had to take out one of frank'sys, spleen and adrenal glands. >> what you don't want to do is tug and pull on something while they are attached to these blood vessels. >> when i go woke up have after the operation i said thank god. >> reporter: frank and his family are grateful. >> for a while there, i thought i might lose him. >> i will live to be a hundred i'm happy. >> reporter: doctors say it is likely the tumor will grow back so frank is being check every three months. craig boswell for cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >>> on the health front it turns out breakfast may in the be the the the most important meal of the day in, research published in the american journal of clinical nutrition, researchers found that breakfast eaters had no change in their metabolism and didn't lose weight than those who skipped a morning meal, but there were health perks to eating breakfast, people who ate breakfast were more active during the daze and had steadier blood sugar levels. >>> more and more flyers are fining a convenient way to
. >> reporter: when surgeons at nyu medical center removed the tumor they had to take out one of frank'sys, spleen and adrenal glands. >> what you don't want to do is tug and pull on something while they are attached to these blood vessels. >> when i go woke up have after the operation i said thank god. >> reporter: frank and his family are grateful. >> for a while there, i thought i might lose him. >> i will live to be a hundred i'm happy. >> reporter:...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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no secret that airlines know how to pile on fees on our bills but there are some new findings out of nyu that show hotels are adding more surcharges than they ever have. sarah, it says your room is $195 a night and then by the time you get finished, it's like $300. >> exactly. that's exactly right. just this year alone, hotels have made over $2.25 billion in just these add-ons alone, more than double from a decade ago. so the way they get you is things like guaranteed bed size. you want to make sure you have two queen beds in your room, they might charge you for that. also, early check-in and check-out, some hotels are now adding fees for that. that in-room safe that you may or may not use, you are automatically going to get a surcharge on your bill in some chains. also, luggage storage. it used to be if you have a flight out late in the evening, you check out in the morning, they will hold your bags for you. now, just like the airlines, they will charge you a couple bucks for that to hold them behind the counter. >> that would be the last time i stayed there. >> and resort fees have sky
no secret that airlines know how to pile on fees on our bills but there are some new findings out of nyu that show hotels are adding more surcharges than they ever have. sarah, it says your room is $195 a night and then by the time you get finished, it's like $300. >> exactly. that's exactly right. just this year alone, hotels have made over $2.25 billion in just these add-ons alone, more than double from a decade ago. so the way they get you is things like guaranteed bed size. you want...