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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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KTVU
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. >> now he's headed to ohio state university for the spring semester! >> not the first person to dance for a college education but done in a very tasteful way. i like cody's approach. >> we have cody and susan via skype. welcome to the show, you guys. >> hi, happy to be here. >> yeah. >> cody, is this shocking to you? >> completely shocking. i had no idea i was having that kind of impact. i had never met such genuine people. >> there a lot of people that dance with signs on the street. what sets you apart? >> i think it's my attitude. i want to show not don't i have a small work ethic but maybe also to brighten someone's day. >> usae susan, you're shaking head. >> yeah. we had over a hundred people show up because they so appreciated him and he made their day also. >> did you pick up any moves, cody? >> do you think we could see some of your awesome moves that are so inspiring to so many people? >> sure. >> oh, yeah, he's grooving. >> there he is. >> it's the time of the season to get skating and sliding, just not like this hopefully. this is on a freew
. >> now he's headed to ohio state university for the spring semester! >> not the first person to dance for a college education but done in a very tasteful way. i like cody's approach. >> we have cody and susan via skype. welcome to the show, you guys. >> hi, happy to be here. >> yeah. >> cody, is this shocking to you? >> completely shocking. i had no idea i was having that kind of impact. i had never met such genuine people. >> there a lot of...
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Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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WUSA
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tracy reports from ohio state university in columbus. >> as you breathe out, the opportunities to letgo. >> a yoga class for cancer survivors at ohio state university james care. it may be the best prescription for women like sue cavanaugh. she was diagnosed with breast cancer four years ago. >> you get the air knocked out of you psychologically. >> after sue's surgery and radiation, dr. janice asked her to join a study. the professor of psychiatry and psychology wondered if yoga could help beat the terrible fatigue that plagues many breast cancer survivors for years. >> the best treatment is exercise. you don't want to exercise if you are fatigued. we were interested in a mild kind of exercise that might have other benefits as well. >> from a group of 200 survivor, half took yoga classes for 90 minutes for twice a week. >> one of the best things is the breathing. and it really is totally relaxing. >> participates filled out questionnaires and had blood drawn. sue was not the only one to notice a difference. the doctor says the yoga group saw a 41% drop in fatigue and a 15% decline in
tracy reports from ohio state university in columbus. >> as you breathe out, the opportunities to letgo. >> a yoga class for cancer survivors at ohio state university james care. it may be the best prescription for women like sue cavanaugh. she was diagnosed with breast cancer four years ago. >> you get the air knocked out of you psychologically. >> after sue's surgery and radiation, dr. janice asked her to join a study. the professor of psychiatry and psychology...
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155
Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> ohio state university's cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the way that the u.s. library treats thom mos jefferson, seriously. >> they can give the collections to ohio state and preserved and exhibited and accessible to the researchers. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt and then richard nixon. >> people come from around the coraled to study it. >> this was really the material that everybody has in their hands and these are i think important visual artifacts of an era that need to be taken serious. >> 45,000 books of cartoons and 67,000 journals, the world's largest collection of cartoons and comiccomics. the first modern use of the term cartoon. >> we have everything. >> the hand drawn strips of charles m. schultz. >> it is timeless. the way it was drawn. the captioning. it is timeless. >> an in original drawings of dick tracy and 300,000 original collections of art. so now, a standard original might be worth tens of thousands of dollars and an early one from 1951 is priceless. the collection illustrates historical stooer types. >> there is a different wa
. >> ohio state university's cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the way that the u.s. library treats thom mos jefferson, seriously. >> they can give the collections to ohio state and preserved and exhibited and accessible to the researchers. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt and then richard nixon. >> people come from around the coraled to study it. >> this was really the material that everybody has in their hands and these are i think...
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187
Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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KRON
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a new study at ohio state university find cohabitation and a major role and couples stay together andchers took in 80 year- old woman as an example. this issue as a 16 percent chance of getting married by the age of 22 and on average stays married for 12 years. well, the chances of her getting married job by 6 percent if she'd already started living with her partner. should also stay with them married are not for at least 12 years. it's a pretest. you learn about everything that may be a stay together we'll be right back as the kron4 morning news continues. it's been a rough year for president obama. it will have a look back and what we can expect from tonight's state of the [son] she has no idea. [man] no one told her,right? [son]hi! [mom screams] and national knows he's calling it a year of faction and the president is expected to lay out exactly what he means by that and tonight's state of the union. andrew spencer reports lawmakers are expected to press the president and congress on a minimum wage and immigration. most of the details on tonight's speech will have to come straight
a new study at ohio state university find cohabitation and a major role and couples stay together andchers took in 80 year- old woman as an example. this issue as a 16 percent chance of getting married by the age of 22 and on average stays married for 12 years. well, the chances of her getting married job by 6 percent if she'd already started living with her partner. should also stay with them married are not for at least 12 years. it's a pretest. you learn about everything that may be a stay...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon lebrary and museum treats cartoons and comics the the u.s. library treats thomas jefferson and geoffrey chaucer, seriouslily. >> cartoonists know they can give their collections of paper and art. they'll beobserved, exhibited. >> from classic to the political. >> here is a fantastic franklin delano roosevelt by basil wolverton. it's one part museum and one part university. where the scholars practice weighty matters. >> this was the material that everybody had in their hands. these are, i think, important visual artefacts of an era that need to be, well taken seriously. >> you came all the way from hanover. >> all the way from happen over germany. >> in the shelves of this volt are 45,000 books of cartoons, 67,000 journals, a large collection of cartoons and comics. >> in 1843. the british sat ear call magazine recorded the first use. >> there's a calvin and hobbs. >> i like the "peanuts" strip, i do. it's timeless, the way it was drawn, the captioning. >> in the original drawings of dick tracy. it includes 300,000 original works of
. >> ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon lebrary and museum treats cartoons and comics the the u.s. library treats thomas jefferson and geoffrey chaucer, seriouslily. >> cartoonists know they can give their collections of paper and art. they'll beobserved, exhibited. >> from classic to the political. >> here is a fantastic franklin delano roosevelt by basil wolverton. it's one part museum and one part university. where the scholars practice weighty matters....
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137
Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon library treats cartoons and comics the way the u.slibrary of congress treats thomas jefferson and jeffrey chawser: seriously. >> cartoonists everywhere know they can give their collections of paper and art to a higher state and they will be preserved. they will be exhibited to researchers. >> from classic economics to political cartoons? >> a fantastic franklin d roosevelt and richard nixon. >> one pardon museum, one part cartoon university where scholars from around the worldcom to study the weightiest practiciansers of light literature. >> that was the material everybody had in theirs hands. >> these are, i think, important visual artifacts of an era that need to be certain seriously. all the way from hanover. >> housed in the shelves of this temperature-control room vault are 45,000 books of cartoons, 67,000 journals, the world's largest collection of cartoons and economics. in 1843, british "punch" records the first use of the word "cartoons. >> the calvin and hobbes collection and charles m.schultez. i do. it's timeless. you know
. >> ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon library treats cartoons and comics the way the u.slibrary of congress treats thomas jefferson and jeffrey chawser: seriously. >> cartoonists everywhere know they can give their collections of paper and art to a higher state and they will be preserved. they will be exhibited to researchers. >> from classic economics to political cartoons? >> a fantastic franklin d roosevelt and richard nixon. >> one pardon museum,...
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194
Jan 12, 2014
01/14
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 194
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in ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the wayibrary of congress treats thomas jefferson and jeffrey causer, seriously. >> now cartoonists know they can give their collections to a higher state and they will be preserved, they will be exhibited and accessible to researchers. from classic comics to political cartoons. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt by wolverton. and richard nixon. >> it is one part museum, one part cartoon university where scholars come to study the world's weightiest practitioners of light literature. >> there is so much school scholarship on novels but this was really the material that everyone had in their hands. this is i think important artifacts of an era that need to be, well, taken seriously. in and you came all the way from hanover. >> all the way from hanover germany. houses in the temperature controlled shelves are 45,000 books of cartoon, 67,000 journals, the world's largest journals of cartoons and comics. here in 1843, the satirical magazine punch reports the first cartoon. the original cal
in ohio state university's billy ireland cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the wayibrary of congress treats thomas jefferson and jeffrey causer, seriously. >> now cartoonists know they can give their collections to a higher state and they will be preserved, they will be exhibited and accessible to researchers. from classic comics to political cartoons. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt by wolverton. and richard nixon. >> it is one part museum, one...
212
212
Jan 16, 2014
01/14
by
FBC
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joining us now is a neurologist with the ohio state university western medical center.u tell us about this test? i'm very curious. >> it is a brief and cognitive screening test designed to pick up impairments very early. it's not a diagnosis of any specific condition. it is not a diagnostic test for alzheimer's. it's designed to get some of the early signs and symptoms with demented conditions and to pick up early. gerri: what kinds of things are you looking at? orientation, language? >> that's exactly right. we designed it to measure all of the different parts of the brain. different sides do different things and it includes orientation, calculations, meaning pictures, visual and spatial drawing, problem-solving tests, measuring accurately all the sides of the brain to try to get a global picture of the cognitive ability. gerri: give me a couple of ideas about questions. what kind of question what i face on this test? can you tell us what we would see? >> you'll see a picture of a volcano. and you may have to identify that. and he will say that you go to the store and
joining us now is a neurologist with the ohio state university western medical center.u tell us about this test? i'm very curious. >> it is a brief and cognitive screening test designed to pick up impairments very early. it's not a diagnosis of any specific condition. it is not a diagnostic test for alzheimer's. it's designed to get some of the early signs and symptoms with demented conditions and to pick up early. gerri: what kinds of things are you looking at? orientation, language?...
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124
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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. >> from ohio state university. i am interested in having you comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. we know there are a whole bunch of moments out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are not agreeing with each other. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a moment that had two targets -- one was government, the other was wall street. that wall street target has a long history in american politics. that has kind of evidence where the anti-government part has expanded over time. you see groups like freedom works that is more like a beltway group. the leadership is their driving the movement in some ways. it is applying a lot of the financing for it. please comment on that. how do we sort all that out? >> i think part of what we spoke to at the constitutional liberty argument hits on that, where they found the least common denominator thread so you can have multiple groups that are aking somewhat diverging views on similar issues but still tie it
. >> from ohio state university. i am interested in having you comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. we know there are a whole bunch of moments out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are not agreeing with each other. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a moment that had two targets -- one was government, the other was wall street. that wall street target has a long history in american politics. that has kind of...
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60
Jan 15, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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he was at the ohio state university college of law. he was named of -- to cochair. he served as the clinton administration's chief counsel from 1999 through 2001. did you have a particular way in which you wanted to receive? >> after consultation, we have a brief opening statements. diversity,ding our which you just signaled, we began this process with great admiration and gratitude for the intelligence community and we want to start by honoring their extraordinary work in keeping the nation safe from the risks associated with terrorism. and one of are real our main goals has been to suggest reforms that is compatible. after extensive discussions and consultations, the gratitude and admiration that we had for the admiration committee has only increased as a result of interacting with them. professionalism. we found no evidence of political or religious targeting or targeting because of people because of political dissent. the focus genuinely has been on national security. we are also grateful to them for their help and cooperation on a very tight time schedule and t
he was at the ohio state university college of law. he was named of -- to cochair. he served as the clinton administration's chief counsel from 1999 through 2001. did you have a particular way in which you wanted to receive? >> after consultation, we have a brief opening statements. diversity,ding our which you just signaled, we began this process with great admiration and gratitude for the intelligence community and we want to start by honoring their extraordinary work in keeping the...
724
724
Jan 20, 2014
01/14
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CNBC
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a law professor at ohio state university, his specialty is chinese counterfeiting. we know that 15% to 20% of all goods in china are counterfeit. >> and these days, the way china's economy is booming, 15% to 20% means tens of billions of dollars. evidence of the counterfeiting trade can be seen at this hong kong warehouse where counterfeit watches, shoes, computer chips, all copied in china, and seized in hong kong, are tossed onto a conveyor belt, and consigned to the dust bin of history. but it's like stopping the rain, the seizure may look impressive, but every day, 6,000 shipping containers leave hong kong's harbor for the u.s. packed with products made in china, and only a small fraction of those containers are ever inspected. >> this is the most profitable criminal venture, as far as i know, on earth. >> counterfeiting. >> counterfeiting. and your partners don't kill you. >> attorney harley lewin has been chasing counterfeiters from china for more than twenty years. and china's now the undisputed capital of the counterfeit. >> 80% or more worldwide. >> can you
a law professor at ohio state university, his specialty is chinese counterfeiting. we know that 15% to 20% of all goods in china are counterfeit. >> and these days, the way china's economy is booming, 15% to 20% means tens of billions of dollars. evidence of the counterfeiting trade can be seen at this hong kong warehouse where counterfeit watches, shoes, computer chips, all copied in china, and seized in hong kong, are tossed onto a conveyor belt, and consigned to the dust bin of...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
by
KRON
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. >> : ohio state university found that the number of people treated been injuries related to phony asan doubled that since 2005. nine all- star starter since 1995 but goes get ready for the super bowl by wells practicing in the snow. >> : kerrey has that story all sports coming up next. you can catch our sports talk gary r. read it should with sports night live. the talk with robinson and also talk about how the forty-niners will get the super bowl next year good. good answer. check it out. learning's fun now. yeah, back in our day, we didn't have u-verse high speed internet to play and learn online. all we had was that franklin fuzzypants. ah, the educational toy bear. remember when the battery went out? [ slow, deep voice ] give me your abc's. all i learned was a new definition of fear. i need some pudding. yeah, there's one left. [ male announcer ] connect all your wi-fi-enabled devices with u-verse high speed internet. rethink possible. not time for gary r. from the jack in the box sports. >> : warriors stands steve curry everybody who follows the lawyers this is the next up. firs
. >> : ohio state university found that the number of people treated been injuries related to phony asan doubled that since 2005. nine all- star starter since 1995 but goes get ready for the super bowl by wells practicing in the snow. >> : kerrey has that story all sports coming up next. you can catch our sports talk gary r. read it should with sports night live. the talk with robinson and also talk about how the forty-niners will get the super bowl next year good. good answer....
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98
Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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we have a question on the side. >> from ohio state university. i am interested in having you comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. we know there are a whole bunch of moments out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are not agreeing with each other. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a moment that had two targets -- one was government, the other was wall street. that wall street target has a long history in american politics. that has kind of evidence where the anti-government part has expanded over time. you see groups like freedom works that is more like a beltway group. the leadership is their driving the movement in some ways. it is applying a lot of the financing for it. please comment on that. how do we sort all that out? >> i think part of what we spoke to at the constitutional liberty argument hits on that, where they found the least common denominator thread so you can have multiple groups that are taking somewhat diverging views on similar issues but still tie it
we have a question on the side. >> from ohio state university. i am interested in having you comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. we know there are a whole bunch of moments out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are not agreeing with each other. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a moment that had two targets -- one was government, the other was wall street. that wall street target has a long history in...
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104
Jan 17, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 104
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a professor at the georgia institute of technology, previously at ohio state university's college of law. he was named the cochair of the do not track standards process of the worldwide web consortium could he served as the clinton administration's chief counsel on privacy from 1999 to 2001. gentlemen, do you have a particular why you want to proceed? >> after a consultation with your staff, we have a very brief opening statement, if that is agreeable to you, chairman. ,on-withstanding our diversity you just a signal, we began the process with great admiration for the intelligence intelligence community, and we want to start by honoring their great work you keeping the nation safe. terrorism and associated threats are real and one of our main goals has been to suggest reforms that are compatible with combating those risks. after extensive discussions and s during the last month, the gratitude and admiration we have for the intelligence community has increased as a result of interacting with them. the highest levels of professionalism, no evidence of political or religious targeting,
a professor at the georgia institute of technology, previously at ohio state university's college of law. he was named the cochair of the do not track standards process of the worldwide web consortium could he served as the clinton administration's chief counsel on privacy from 1999 to 2001. gentlemen, do you have a particular why you want to proceed? >> after a consultation with your staff, we have a very brief opening statement, if that is agreeable to you, chairman. ,on-withstanding...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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i am paul beck, from ohio state university. the comment is, we have done national surveys in this country and 20 other countries around the world, asking about discussion networks. americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that has increased over time. americans are more polarized than people in any of these other societies, along the lines the panel has, i think very nicely, commented on. my question to joel, your result that whites who live in the most diverse counties are the most likely to vote republican or be republican. i can see that in cities in the south quite well, and some of the most diverse counties in the country are these black belt counties from the rural south and maybe the suburban south. does it hold in the north as well? i think of places -- you think of new york city. a very diverse series of counties. and yet whites were overwhelmingly voting democratic there, and probably did for president as well. does it extend beyond the south? is it the south driving that? maybe a
i am paul beck, from ohio state university. the comment is, we have done national surveys in this country and 20 other countries around the world, asking about discussion networks. americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that has increased over time. americans are more polarized than people in any of these other societies, along the lines the panel has, i think very nicely, commented on. my question to joel, your result that whites who live in the most...
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97
Jan 17, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 97
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appeared before any groups in washington, d.c., that my first speech had been out in ohio at the ohio state university. my second was in silicon valley and followed immediately by oakland because the action is out there. but if i'm to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i couldn't think of a better place than here. so thank you very much for inviolating me today. -- inviting me today. >> the struggle for minority participation in the media has been long, it's been heroic and it's been right. what i'd like to do today is to visit with you about how we can a those kinds of ideas to ew level, how we can join in a new great campaign that celebrates the activities of the past but identifies the opportunities of the future. i think we need to begin by being honest with each other. supreme court has made it very difficult for the government to take direct steps to create advantages on a specific group basis. ut it has not removed the twin goals of diversity of voices and diversity in ownership. the challenge is how do we go after those goals and i think the new environment we exist in offers tha
appeared before any groups in washington, d.c., that my first speech had been out in ohio at the ohio state university. my second was in silicon valley and followed immediately by oakland because the action is out there. but if i'm to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i couldn't think of a better place than here. so thank you very much for inviolating me today. -- inviting me today. >> the struggle for minority participation in the media has been long, it's been heroic and...
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85
Jan 15, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 85
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i was in poland in 1991 working for ohio state university right after the polish communist government -- after the communist government in poland fell. all over eastern poland and krakow, the first billboards were tobacco. most american tobacco companies, the british tobacco companies, those were the first billboards up. the tobacco companies try to is seduce young people in our country to smoke. they've in some sense attacked the developing world to get people to smoke there. one of the ways they've done this, mr. president, is by using our trade agenda to weaken public health laws in other countries. some developing countries, some poor countries have enacted public health antismoking laws, and the u.s. tobacco companies and tobacco companies from other countries have tried to weaken, sometimes successfully, those laws. it's important that we close loopholes in our trade agenda that allow big tobacco corporations to undermine these health -- these global health standards. this administration's decision not to exclude any one product, including tobacco, from the transpacific partners
i was in poland in 1991 working for ohio state university right after the polish communist government -- after the communist government in poland fell. all over eastern poland and krakow, the first billboards were tobacco. most american tobacco companies, the british tobacco companies, those were the first billboards up. the tobacco companies try to is seduce young people in our country to smoke. they've in some sense attacked the developing world to get people to smoke there. one of the ways...
90
90
Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 90
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appeared before any groups in washington, had, that my first speech been out in ohio at the ohio state university. my second was in silicon valley, followed immediately by oakland, there. the actions out but if i am to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i could not think of a better place than here, so thank you very there much for ig me today. the struggle for minority participation in the media has --n long, hard road with euro it, and it has been right -- heroic, and it has been right. what i want to do today is visit with you on how we can take those kinds of ideas to a new level. new, greatjoin in a campaign that celebrates the activities of the past, but identifies the opportunities of the future. i think we need to begin by being honest with each other. supreme court has made it very difficult for the government to take the wreck steps to create advantages on a specific group basis. the twins not removed voices, diversity, of and diversity of ownership. the challenge is how do we go after those goals? the new environment we are existing in offers that opportunity. i believe t
appeared before any groups in washington, had, that my first speech been out in ohio at the ohio state university. my second was in silicon valley, followed immediately by oakland, there. the actions out but if i am to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i could not think of a better place than here, so thank you very there much for ig me today. the struggle for minority participation in the media has --n long, hard road with euro it, and it has been right -- heroic, and it has...
83
83
Jan 2, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 83
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[laughter] i'm from ohio state university, and i wanted to make one comment and then ask a question really directed at joel. the comment is that we've done national surveys this 1992, 2004 and again in 2012 in this country and in 20 other countries around the world asking about discussion networks. and americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that's increased over time. and americans, by the way, are more polarized than people in any of these other societies along the lines that the panel has, i think very nicely, commented on. now my question to joel, i was very interested, joel, in your result that whites who live this the most diverse counties are the most likely to vote republican or to be republicans. and as i think about that, i can see that fitting into the south quite well. some of the most diverse counties this the country, of course, are these black belt counties from the rural south and maybe the suburban south. does it hold in the north as well? because i think of places, well, you know, you think of the new york city elections, a very dive
[laughter] i'm from ohio state university, and i wanted to make one comment and then ask a question really directed at joel. the comment is that we've done national surveys this 1992, 2004 and again in 2012 in this country and in 20 other countries around the world asking about discussion networks. and americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that's increased over time. and americans, by the way, are more polarized than people in any of these other...
108
108
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 108
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. >> i am from ohio state university. i'm interested in having a comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. i mean come we know there are a whole bunch of movements out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are, don't agree with each other necessarily. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a movement that had two targets. one was government, the other was wall street. and that wall street target has a long history of course in american politics. but that's kind of an were as the and the government part has expanded over time. receive groups like freedom force that is more a beltway group, at least its leadershileadershit'sleadershipf driving the movement in some ways and supplying a lot of the financing. so please comment on that. how do we sort all of this out? >> does someone want to jump in? >> i think part of what we spoke to at the constitutional liberty argument hits on that where they found the least common denominator thread so that you can have mu
. >> i am from ohio state university. i'm interested in having a comment on the internal dynamics within the tea party movement. i mean come we know there are a whole bunch of movements out there under different names with different leadership. some of them are, don't agree with each other necessarily. we also know that the movement started out in 2009 as a movement that had two targets. one was government, the other was wall street. and that wall street target has a long history of...
102
102
Jan 18, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 102
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appeared before any groups in washington, d.c., that my first speech had been out in ohio at the ohio state university my second was in silicon valley and followed immediately by oakland because the action is out there. but if i'm to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i couldn't think of a better place than here. so thank you very much for inviting me today. >> the struggle for minority participation in the media has been long, it's been heroic and it's been right. what i'd like to do today is to visit with you about how we can take those kinds of ideas to a new level, how we can join in a new great campaign that celebrates the activities of the past but identifies the opportunities of the future. i think we need to begin by being honest with each other. supreme court has made it very difficult for the government to take direct steps to create advantages on a specific group basis. but it has not removed the twin goals of diversity of voices and diversity in ownership. the challenge is how do we go after those goals and i think the new environment we exist in offers that opportunity. i be
appeared before any groups in washington, d.c., that my first speech had been out in ohio at the ohio state university my second was in silicon valley and followed immediately by oakland because the action is out there. but if i'm to break the mold and make a washington appearance, i couldn't think of a better place than here. so thank you very much for inviting me today. >> the struggle for minority participation in the media has been long, it's been heroic and it's been right. what i'd...
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212
Jan 12, 2014
01/14
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 212
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. >> ohio state university's billy island cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the wayhe u.s. library speaks jeffer sop and jeffrey cossser. >> exhibits will be preserved and accessible to researchers. >> from class k comments to political cartoons. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt. >> it's one part museum, one part university, where scholars around the world study weighty praccers of light, literature. >> there's scholarships on nv else. this is the material everyone had. these are important visual artefacts of an era that need to be taken seriously. >> you came all the way from hanover. >> all the way from hanover. >> housed in the shelves of this volt are 45,000 books of cartoons, 67 shouz journals. a large collection of cartoons and comics. the british satirical magazine included the first calvin and hobs collection. >> we have everything saved. >> i like the peanuts. i do. >> it's timeless. the way it was draup, the captioning. it's time also. >> in the original drawings of dick tracy. the collection includes 300,000 original works of art. there would be m
. >> ohio state university's billy island cartoon library and museum treats cartoons and comics the wayhe u.s. library speaks jeffer sop and jeffrey cossser. >> exhibits will be preserved and accessible to researchers. >> from class k comments to political cartoons. >> here is a fantastic franklin roosevelt. >> it's one part museum, one part university, where scholars around the world study weighty praccers of light, literature. >> there's scholarships on nv...
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Jan 6, 2014
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state universities. at the university of michigan, ohio state, penn state, alabama, one building on campus where everyoneate who paid for these universities is always welcome. in answer of father ed in state college, pennsylvania, methodist minister i interviewed for the book, he said we all need as human beings a place to stand, people to stand with and values to stand for. he said i know you can get these things here in my methodist church but i can't help but notice that penn state church holds 108,000 people. religion is real. >> i followed these things so closely. i don't know why you are apologizing to me for going to uva. i do know that tonight is the last hurrah for current bcs system. next year they'll start a four-team playoff system. do you think that will work better than the much hated bcs? >> it will work better for those making the money on it. not for players and not necessarily for the fans. the old system, current one, you pick two peoples based on polls, strength of schedule and computerized rankings. they pick that by picking four teams based on polls, strength of schedule and compute
state universities. at the university of michigan, ohio state, penn state, alabama, one building on campus where everyoneate who paid for these universities is always welcome. in answer of father ed in state college, pennsylvania, methodist minister i interviewed for the book, he said we all need as human beings a place to stand, people to stand with and values to stand for. he said i know you can get these things here in my methodist church but i can't help but notice that penn state church...
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Jan 1, 2014
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ohio state university's marching band, apologies to kate. >> their band is good.n's "bad" album. they even do the moon walk, people. >> that's strong. >> that tops it off. they are known for pulling off outstanding formations, just impressive. >> this in a word is sick, a monster wave to remember in october. parts of portugal being pummeled. my goodness. no match for these pros, though. preliminary estimates suggest that carlos may have topped the record for the biggest wave ever surfed. >> remember, he didn't do it until after his surfing companion had gotten almost killed. >> he went and saved her life. >> must see, must hear. >> must never try at home. >> it doesn't look real. >> we'll see more fantastic videos. must-see moments in 2014. >>> coming up next on "new day," from a looming fight over the debt ceiling to midterm elections. what you need to know about the year ahead in politics. >>> and this morning, headlines, colorado, goes to pot. will other states jump on the recreational marijuana band wagon? this morning,ç colorado many hungry people, soon to b
ohio state university's marching band, apologies to kate. >> their band is good.n's "bad" album. they even do the moon walk, people. >> that's strong. >> that tops it off. they are known for pulling off outstanding formations, just impressive. >> this in a word is sick, a monster wave to remember in october. parts of portugal being pummeled. my goodness. no match for these pros, though. preliminary estimates suggest that carlos may have topped the record for...
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Jan 6, 2014
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louis and universities like ohio state and michigan state are closed. at jfk airport in new york, a plane slidded off the slippery runway, the delta flight made a safe landing. while taxiing it slid into a sne bank. 35 people or on board. no one was hurt. >> travellers continue to face long lines at san francisco international airport. flights were cancelled today. travellers waited inside terminal 3 to get rebooked on united airlines. bay area travellers are feeling the ripple effect of cancellations atunite's other hubs. >> all hands on deck. everybody worked together but it just wasn't going that way. >> we have been here about two hours standing in line. there's one person here who can help with ticketing for the rest of the week. >> there were no cancellations in oakland or san jose. children's hospital oakland announced it released the body of jehi mcmath to a destination unknown. she is the oakland girl declared she is the oakland girl declared brain dead after fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. yeah. everybo
louis and universities like ohio state and michigan state are closed. at jfk airport in new york, a plane slidded off the slippery runway, the delta flight made a safe landing. while taxiing it slid into a sne bank. 35 people or on board. no one was hurt. >> travellers continue to face long lines at san francisco international airport. flights were cancelled today. travellers waited inside terminal 3 to get rebooked on united airlines. bay area travellers are feeling the ripple effect of...
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Jan 27, 2014
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from ohio state university. on his first day in law school john rogers met his future wife, jill stratford who would become the first african-american woman to graduate from the university of chicago law school. she later served in the administration of two presidents. john and jill rogers had one john, john jr. and although they divorced after 15 years of marriage, they remained close frentsdz until her death many years later and they both were actively engaged in raising an extraordinary son who is my friend today. judge rogers practiced law in chicago for almost 30 years. he gained an reputation an outstanding attorney, committed to justice and his clients and mentoring and supporting younger talented african-american lawyers. in 1968 on a blind date he met a fellow university of chicago graduate who was active with the naacp education fund. john rogers and gwen debose dated for 33 years before marrying in 2001. they were devoted to one another. in may, 1977 john rogers was appointed an associate judge in cook
from ohio state university. on his first day in law school john rogers met his future wife, jill stratford who would become the first african-american woman to graduate from the university of chicago law school. she later served in the administration of two presidents. john and jill rogers had one john, john jr. and although they divorced after 15 years of marriage, they remained close frentsdz until her death many years later and they both were actively engaged in raising an extraordinary son...
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Jan 2, 2014
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host: you were talking about the university of maryland and ohio state. these are allstate schools. any d. rules for state schools and how much money they can either collect or use for the athletic program or the number of scholarships they can give? guest: division 1 limits scholarships to 85 per year. the university of alabama, they have 85 scholarships. that's the max mum they can use. most of the big programs use their maximum. the smaller programs that much money programs don't use their maximums. the max mum of 63 for division two. division three does in the hospital allow athletic scholarships but does allow athletic admission. host: when did the coaches' salaries in college skyrocket? guest: guest: it started about 20 years ago. the big money skyrocketed about 20 years ago. in 1984 the supreme court essentially deregular lated college football. the short version is before that the ncaa could control how many games were on per week and very few were on. when college football was essentially deregular lated in 1984 the number of games on tv shot way up. this week in the washin
host: you were talking about the university of maryland and ohio state. these are allstate schools. any d. rules for state schools and how much money they can either collect or use for the athletic program or the number of scholarships they can give? guest: division 1 limits scholarships to 85 per year. the university of alabama, they have 85 scholarships. that's the max mum they can use. most of the big programs use their maximum. the smaller programs that much money programs don't use their...
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Jan 3, 2014
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miller from flagler college and i call john burton from ohio university, discussing "who needs enemies?" >> thanks. we always appreciate the stateof the parties conference. it is interesting to point out that if we go back to the 2009 state of the parties, i remember one conversation about the tea party. it was at lunch and it was not very kind. it was much more of a they will have these nice little rallies and dress up and be gone in a few months. a few months later we started to see the idea that robert boatwright talked about, of individual elected officials being primaried within their own party and the effect that could have. what we are going to talk about today is a little bit different than looking at actually speaking with activists or tracking money back to causes. instead, we want to discuss the intellectual history of the tea party and how what we're seeing today and hearing about today is not necessarily new to the conservative discourse, but it is being presented in a new way with a little more organization than previously. and again, focusing on the fact that when the tea party came into existence, it was using th
miller from flagler college and i call john burton from ohio university, discussing "who needs enemies?" >> thanks. we always appreciate the stateof the parties conference. it is interesting to point out that if we go back to the 2009 state of the parties, i remember one conversation about the tea party. it was at lunch and it was not very kind. it was much more of a they will have these nice little rallies and dress up and be gone in a few months. a few months later we started...
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Jan 7, 2014
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ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? second of all, why was the various state insurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. also, is there a possibility that our politicians could be regulating hospital billing practices and letting us know how much we are charged for various services? take you so much. -- thank you so much. guest: some people believe that obama care represents universal health care because, as the previous caller noted, everyone is now required to pay insurance or face fines. there are a variety of extremes in getting that coverage, you might get it through medicaid or private insurance tax credits. it depends on how you define universal health care, but certainly it is a law that help -- attempts to achieve that in several ways. second, state insurance departments are heavily involved in regulating the insurance. and they were before the passage of the affordable care act. some of th
ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? second of all, why was the various state insurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. also, is there a possibility that our politicians could be regulating...
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Jan 12, 2014
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at the table, ohio state senator, nina turner, victoria defrancesco soto, professor at the universityr of sociology at temple university, and author of "ain't no trust: how bosses, boyfriends, and bureaucrats fail low-income mothers and why it matters." and one of the editors of the shriver report, senior vice president for american values and new communities at the center for american progress. so i want to start with you, daniella, because i want to go right to this question of single mothers and how much this whole story about women has to do with the ability of women to control and manage their own fertility. >> right, exactly. i mean, the thing we found most in this report and through our polling, which was an amazing over 3,500 people, is that women need time. they need time to take care of chair children. they need time to take care of their parents. they need time if they want to get out of that low-wage job. how are they supposed to better their education if they have no flexibility over their schedule? it's an ironic thing that the wealthiest people are the once who have the
at the table, ohio state senator, nina turner, victoria defrancesco soto, professor at the universityr of sociology at temple university, and author of "ain't no trust: how bosses, boyfriends, and bureaucrats fail low-income mothers and why it matters." and one of the editors of the shriver report, senior vice president for american values and new communities at the center for american progress. so i want to start with you, daniella, because i want to go right to this question of...
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Jan 7, 2014
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. >> we got data back from 21 division i universities, club top 25 ranked football schools like texas avmt & m, george george, oklahoma state, ohio state and clemson. the results were startling. most schools had between 7% and 18% of football and basketball players scoring so low on the reading portion of their exams, experts told us they would only be reals at an elementary level. that's an a.c.t. score of 16 or less or below a 400 on the reading pores of the s.a.t. but many of the universities had different explanations. like texas, which said some athletes don't try very hard, aiming only to become ncaa eligible. or washington, which pointed out low scores may indicate learning disabilities, and louisville, which said -- entrance exams are just one factor considered when admitting a student athlete. you can read their full responses on cnn.com. not every school we asked would give us information. in fact about half refused or said they would send the data after football season. neither florida state nor auburn, which played in the bcs championship game, provided data. why did we first go to unc? we were following up on a scand
. >> we got data back from 21 division i universities, club top 25 ranked football schools like texas avmt & m, george george, oklahoma state, ohio state and clemson. the results were startling. most schools had between 7% and 18% of football and basketball players scoring so low on the reading portion of their exams, experts told us they would only be reals at an elementary level. that's an a.c.t. score of 16 or less or below a 400 on the reading pores of the s.a.t. but many of the...
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Jan 19, 2014
01/14
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take a look at this new report by grand valley state university out of ohio.re are -- i'm sorry, west michigan, excuse me, there are 1,000 fewer jobs in west michigan as a result. and then it gets worse in ohio. >> that's a big deal, though. that's in west michigan alone. ohio's governor is also worried that insurance companies are going out of business and won't be able to pay the claim. the lieutenant governor mary taylor was on governor huckabee's show last night and talked about how there are higher premiums that her folks in her state are seeing, less choice and even more -- less competition as well. a ac take a listen to this. >> unfortunately, we are very concerned about the insurance companies staying in business to pay the claims. if it happens quick enough and they can't get the prices up soon enough, they are going to go bankrupt. that's bad for consumers. we have less consumer choice and less competition on the exchange. in ohio prior to the exchange, we had 60 companies selling individual health insurance. >> 60? >> on the exchange we have 12. >>
take a look at this new report by grand valley state university out of ohio.re are -- i'm sorry, west michigan, excuse me, there are 1,000 fewer jobs in west michigan as a result. and then it gets worse in ohio. >> that's a big deal, though. that's in west michigan alone. ohio's governor is also worried that insurance companies are going out of business and won't be able to pay the claim. the lieutenant governor mary taylor was on governor huckabee's show last night and talked about how...
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Jan 14, 2014
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. >> ohio university's billy island cartoon and comic museum, treats this seriously. >> they can give their collections of cartoons and paper to a higher state they will be exhibited and accessible to researchers. here is a fantastic franklin delano roosevelt by basil woverton. >> practitioners of light literature. >> this was really the material that everybody had in their hands. so these are i think important visual artifacts of an era that need to be, well, taken seriously. >> and you came all the way from hanover? >> all the way from hanover, germany. >> housed in the shelves of the temperature controlled, the world's largest collection of cartoons and comics. here in 1883, the british satirical publication punch. the hand drawn strips of charles schultz. >> i like the peants strip, the way it's drawn, the captioning, it's timeless. >> chester gould's original drawings of dick tracy. there would have been more but the originals were often tossed out. after they were photographed for the newspaper. now a standard original by a person like charles m. schultz may have been worth tens of thousands of dollars. the collection illustrates histo
. >> ohio university's billy island cartoon and comic museum, treats this seriously. >> they can give their collections of cartoons and paper to a higher state they will be exhibited and accessible to researchers. here is a fantastic franklin delano roosevelt by basil woverton. >> practitioners of light literature. >> this was really the material that everybody had in their hands. so these are i think important visual artifacts of an era that need to be, well, taken...
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Jan 8, 2014
01/14
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we got data back from 21 division 1 universities, including top 25 ranked football schools like texas a&m, georgia, oklahoma state, ohiod clemson. the results were startling. most schools had between 7% and 18% of football and basketball players scoring so well on the reading portion of their exams, experts told us they would only be reading at an elementary level. that's an act score of 16 or less or below a 400 on the reading portion of the sat. many of the universities had different explanations for low test scores. like texas, which said some athletes don't try very hard aiming only to become ncaa eligible or washington, which pointed out low scores may indicate learning disabilities and louisville, which said entrance exams are just one factor considered when admitting a student athlete. you can read their full responses on cnn.com. not every school we asked would give us information. about half refused or said they would send the data after football season. neither florida state nor auburn, which played in the bcs championship game, provided data. why did we first go to unc? we were following up on a scandal from
we got data back from 21 division 1 universities, including top 25 ranked football schools like texas a&m, georgia, oklahoma state, ohiod clemson. the results were startling. most schools had between 7% and 18% of football and basketball players scoring so well on the reading portion of their exams, experts told us they would only be reading at an elementary level. that's an act score of 16 or less or below a 400 on the reading portion of the sat. many of the universities had different...
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Jan 20, 2014
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tables hosted by baker and hostettler, cleveland state university, hawkins school which as steve mentioned is his high school alma mater, policy lawers ohio, thechandra firm in our strategy. thank you for your support today. we welcome students to today's program, student participation is made possible by a generous gift from the fred e. shawl foundation. we welcome students from cleveland high school and students from the hawken school so students, stand and be recognized. [applause] a reminder that students do get to ask questions. we will return as promised to our speaker for our traditional city club question and answer period. we welcome questions from everyone. holding the microphones are our development associates. first question please -- >> i want to thank you for being here. your presentation was wonderful. my question is -- there is this arrogance problem with a lot of people who feel like they do everything. though what you are saying is really logical, it is still difficult to get some folks to say you are right. my question is -- -- i'm speaking of democrats basically -- how do you move them off of that my way is the best wa
tables hosted by baker and hostettler, cleveland state university, hawkins school which as steve mentioned is his high school alma mater, policy lawers ohio, thechandra firm in our strategy. thank you for your support today. we welcome students to today's program, student participation is made possible by a generous gift from the fred e. shawl foundation. we welcome students from cleveland high school and students from the hawken school so students, stand and be recognized. [applause] a...
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Jan 21, 2014
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guests at tables hosted by baker & hostetler, cleveland state university, hawkins school as steve mentioned is his alma mater, policy matters ohio, the shondra law firm and our strategy. thank you all for your support today. we welcome students to today's program. student participation is made popular by a generous gift from the fred shaw charitable foundation. today we welcome students from cleveland heights high school. we also have students from hawkins school here. i will ask all our students to stand and be recognized. [applause] and just a remind they're students get to ask questions. now we'll return as promised to our speaker for our traditional city club question and answer period. we welcome questions from everyone including guests and students. holding the microphones today are development associate mike grimaldi and administrative assistant kristin pianka. where is kristin? there she is. first question please. >> i want to thank you for being here. your presentation was wonderful. my question is,, there's this arrogance problem with a lot of people who feel like they know everything and so even though what you're say
guests at tables hosted by baker & hostetler, cleveland state university, hawkins school as steve mentioned is his alma mater, policy matters ohio, the shondra law firm and our strategy. thank you all for your support today. we welcome students to today's program. student participation is made popular by a generous gift from the fred shaw charitable foundation. today we welcome students from cleveland heights high school. we also have students from hawkins school here. i will ask all our...
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ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? thend of all, why was various state insurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. a possibility that our politicians could be regulating hospital billing practices and letting us know how much we are charged for various services? take you so much. some people believe that obama care represents universal health care because, as the previous caller noted, everyone is now required to pay insurance or face fines. there are a variety of extremes in getting that coverage, you might get it through medicaid or private insurance tax credits. it depends on how you define universal health care, but certainly it is a law that help -- attempts to achieve that in several ways. second, state insurance departments are heavily involved in regulating the insurance. some of them are working heavily with the federal government to implement this law. others have not been as involve
ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? thend of all, why was various state insurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. a possibility that our politicians could be regulating hospital billing...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? thend of all, why was various statesurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. a possibility that our politicians could be regulating hospital billing practices and letting us know how much we are charged for various services? take you so much. some people believe that obama care represents universal health care because, as the previous caller noted, everyone is now required to pay insurance or face fines. there are a variety of extremes in getting that coverage, you might get it through medicaid or private insurance tax credits. it depends on how you define universal health care, but certainly it is a law that help -- attempts to achieve that in several ways. second, state insurance departments are heavily involved in regulating the insurance. some of them are working heavily with the federal government to implement this law. others have not been as involved.
ohio, darlene is on the line for independents. caller: good morning, ladies. guest: hi. caller: a couple of questions. they are easy. are we headed for universal health care? thend of all, why was various statesurance departments not involved in the process prior to the affordable health care? my third question is -- do you know anything about ohio's magi? i may be saying that wrong, so i will spell it. m a g i. a possibility that our politicians could be regulating hospital billing practices...
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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ohio history. what some of you may not know is argued. cordray has seven cases before the united states supreme court, both for the clinton and bush justice department. he is a graduate of michigan state university, oxford university, the university of chicago law school. speaks,ter mr. cordray we will do some q&a. then i will be back at that time. without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, please help me welcome director richard cordray. [applause] >> thank you, chris. thank you for those remarks, and i will try to address some of those points as we go through. thank you all for being here today, and i bring you all good tidings and great joy for the new year. if you are like me, change comes hard, and i will still find myself mistakenly writing 2013 on documents such as personal checks for another few weeks, but there will be big differences between last year and this year and the mortgage market with the advent of new mortgage rules that congress required our agency to write against a very strict statutory deadline. that was a great deal of work for us, and i know it has meant a great deal of work for many others as well, so i will focus closely on those issues in my remarks today. the consum
ohio history. what some of you may not know is argued. cordray has seven cases before the united states supreme court, both for the clinton and bush justice department. he is a graduate of michigan state university, oxford university, the university of chicago law school. speaks,ter mr. cordray we will do some q&a. then i will be back at that time. without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, please help me welcome director richard cordray. [applause] >> thank you, chris. thank you for...
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Jan 8, 2014
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ohio history. some of the main not know that mr. cordray has argued seven cases before the united states supreme court boat for the clinton and bush justice departments. he is a graduate of michigan state university, oxford university, university of chicago law school. right after mr. cordray speaks we are going to do some q&a and i will be back for that at that time. without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, tell me welcome director richard cordray. [applause] >> thank you for those remarks and i will try to address those points as we go through. thank you for being here today and i bring all of you good tidings and great joy for the new year. if you are like me change comes hard and i will find myself mistakenly riding 2013 on documents such as personal checks for another few weeks but there will be big differences between last year and this year in the mortgage market with new mortgage rules congress required our new agency to write against a very strict statutory deadline. that was a great deal of work for us and a great deal of work for many others as well so i will focus closely on those issues and my remarks to you today. the consumer financial protection bureau and the national associati
ohio history. some of the main not know that mr. cordray has argued seven cases before the united states supreme court boat for the clinton and bush justice departments. he is a graduate of michigan state university, oxford university, university of chicago law school. right after mr. cordray speaks we are going to do some q&a and i will be back for that at that time. without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, tell me welcome director richard cordray. [applause] >> thank you for those...
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Jan 1, 2014
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i am paul beck, from ohio state university. the comment is, we have done national surveys in this country and 20 other countries around the world, asking about discussion networks. americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that has increased over time. americans are more polarized than people in any of these other societies, along the lines the panel has, i think very nicely, commented on. my question to joel, your result that whites who live in the most diverse counties are the most likely to vote republican or be republican. i can see that in cities in the south quite well, and some of the most diverse counties in the country are these black belt counties from the rural south and maybe the suburban south. does it hold in the north as well? i think of places -- you think of new york city. a very diverse series of counties. and yet whites were overwhelmingly voting democratic there, and probably did for president as well. does it extend beyond the south? is it the south driving that? maybe a
i am paul beck, from ohio state university. the comment is, we have done national surveys in this country and 20 other countries around the world, asking about discussion networks. americans are the ones most likely to talk only to people they agree with, and that has increased over time. americans are more polarized than people in any of these other societies, along the lines the panel has, i think very nicely, commented on. my question to joel, your result that whites who live in the most...
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Jan 14, 2014
01/14
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ohio state and they will be preserved and exhibited and made accessible to researchers. >> reporter: from classic comics to political cartoons. >> this is a fantastic roosevelt and richard nixon. >> reporter: one part museum and one part cartoon universityhere scholars from around the world study the weighty practitioners of light literature. >> and it talks about novels but this is the material that everybody had in their hands and these are i think important visual artifacts of an era that need to be, well, taken seriously. >> and you came all the way from hanover. >> all the way from hanover, germany. >> reporter: in the temperature controlled vault are 45,000 books of cartoons, 67,000 journals, the world's largest collection of cartoons and comics, in 1843 the british punch records the first modern use of the term cartoon and the calvin and hobs collection and the peanuts cartoon charles m.schults. >> i like the peanuts strip, i do, the way it was drawn. the captioning. it's just timeless. >> reporter: in his original drawings of dick tracey. the collection includes 300,000 original works of art. there would be more but the originals were often tossed out after they were photographed and reprinted for the newspaper and so now a stan
ohio state and they will be preserved and exhibited and made accessible to researchers. >> reporter: from classic comics to political cartoons. >> this is a fantastic roosevelt and richard nixon. >> reporter: one part museum and one part cartoon universityhere scholars from around the world study the weighty practitioners of light literature. >> and it talks about novels but this is the material that everybody had in their hands and these are i think important visual...