SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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ralph i think i don't know. i think good people of ralph should think about it two it's not as simple you don't want a curb cut on ralph street but banning about when the buildings their garages on ralph street one of the problems i imagine the traffic is not residential homes on ralph street people passing through and cutting through on the way to mission i think one of the reasons they patios pass through it looks at inviting and part of the problem not on ralph there is blight so it looks like the street is witnesseder so, i mean one thought during the continuance with commissioner president wu it doesn't get narrow eras you get past the development if i put the garage on ralph street to match the sidewalk that it continues on mission street ralph street would not be an inviting street to drive down when you limit the amount of people you know like me who are looking to get to mission street and go down ralph street you without the possibility of parole if it felt more narrow and you have to go slow i hope those are the things we look at if it's on ralph street how to improve it there's an impact on full name street
ralph i think i don't know. i think good people of ralph should think about it two it's not as simple you don't want a curb cut on ralph street but banning about when the buildings their garages on ralph street one of the problems i imagine the traffic is not residential homes on ralph street people passing through and cutting through on the way to mission i think one of the reasons they patios pass through it looks at inviting and part of the problem not on ralph there is blight so it looks...
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Nov 10, 2014
11/14
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king had to say to ralph, "ralph, ralph." ralph got into the car but his jaw was tight for the rest of the day. dr. king wanted to give all the money to the movement and he did. ralph's jaw was tightened again but he got the money should be split between the kings and him. i do not want to take anything away from the courageous life that ralph lived and dr. king called him his dear friend. that is dr. king's characterization. none of us are perfect. there are some good in the worst of us. ralph had, it seemed, some issues with the fact that dr. king was getting more exposure. >> clarence jones, in 2013 -- before we run the clip, who is the? >> a a young lawyer. dr. king recruited him to work with him. he paid a courtesy of going to his house in california to recruit him to work for the movement. clarence did not fancy the idea. dr. king said i am preaching tomorrow, why don't you go hear me preach. he laid in on him. he laid in on him with a sermon that talked about elite negroes who do not want to give back to the movement. c
king had to say to ralph, "ralph, ralph." ralph got into the car but his jaw was tight for the rest of the day. dr. king wanted to give all the money to the movement and he did. ralph's jaw was tightened again but he got the money should be split between the kings and him. i do not want to take anything away from the courageous life that ralph lived and dr. king called him his dear friend. that is dr. king's characterization. none of us are perfect. there are some good in the worst of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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ralph street it doubles the conflicts between pedestrians and cars compared to the fulsome there's one conflict with the ralph there's 2 conflicts the one where cars turn fulsome subpoena duces tecum the across and the ralph sidewalk sorry where the cars into the ralph and the one open the ralph's sidewalk in front of the garage i'll showing you an illusion. >> sir, you need to speak into the microphone. >> the green one is the proposed vehicles moving into the driveway this is had a conflict with the pedestrians and the ultimate has one conflict we want to have a raised sidewalk along the intersection of fulsome like perry street third point is that the project provides a 19 ramp behind the curb cut into the existing garage the same treatment what about applied to the fulsome there's no difference the 4 factor is the transit corridor according to the section we want to protect the transit corridor by reducing the number of curb but the u cuts but the traffic will be indicating added to the walk areas regardless it will interfere with the bikes and trait from fulsome into the driveway it's anothers same to sum up the department has 4 factors two are equal and one is better for the full name entrance. >> t
ralph street it doubles the conflicts between pedestrians and cars compared to the fulsome there's one conflict with the ralph there's 2 conflicts the one where cars turn fulsome subpoena duces tecum the across and the ralph sidewalk sorry where the cars into the ralph and the one open the ralph's sidewalk in front of the garage i'll showing you an illusion. >> sir, you need to speak into the microphone. >> the green one is the proposed vehicles moving into the driveway this is had...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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ralph if so garage is on ralph it will be denser and in the acceptance that open space will be much diminished so keep in mind i think this is a good way to end is the garage on fulsome will 0 have no impact on fulsome street fulsome can easily handle the traffic ralphould not. >> thank you. next speaker. thank you, commissioners jim follower chair of the western selma task force the departments decision to dump 70 or 80 more cars into ralph represents another broken promise to the accept it after assurance by the planning department that additional protection would be put in place to moderate new development jimmy john john ram was represent we were pitting policies in place to enhance the quality of life the board of supervisors told us to ironically this department will destroy the intimacy that makes those neighbors popular yesterday was the first time planning staff was willing to sit down and talk with us it immediately became apparent that staff p had no idea of the comprehensive conditions and their location of the driveway would make it worse we're asking for a continuance we think you should explorer easiest locations that's completely lacking in their analysis the driveway in its current location creates for problems than it solves we als
ralph if so garage is on ralph it will be denser and in the acceptance that open space will be much diminished so keep in mind i think this is a good way to end is the garage on fulsome will 0 have no impact on fulsome street fulsome can easily handle the traffic ralphould not. >> thank you. next speaker. thank you, commissioners jim follower chair of the western selma task force the departments decision to dump 70 or 80 more cars into ralph represents another broken promise to the accept...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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LINKTV
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[applause] >> so i thank you, ralph neighbor--ralph nader... >> [laughter] >> ralph nader, the consumer advocate in our neighborhood. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. thank you. thank you. [laughs] [applause] >>> welcome to nhk world "newsline," i'm gene otani in tokyo. here's a look at some of the stories we're following this hour. >>> japan's supreme court justices have ruled last year's upper house election was held in a state of unconstitutionality. but they didn't nullify the vote. >>> protests spreading in the united states over a grand jury's decision to clear a white police officer who fatally shot a black teenager in ferguson, missouri.
[applause] >> so i thank you, ralph neighbor--ralph nader... >> [laughter] >> ralph nader, the consumer advocate in our neighborhood. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. thank you. thank you. [laughs] [applause] >>> welcome to nhk world "newsline," i'm gene otani in tokyo. here's a look at some of the stories we're following this hour. >>> japan's supreme court justices have ruled last year's upper house election was held in a state of...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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[applause] >> so i thank you, ralph neighbor--ralph nader... >> [laughter] >> ralph nader, the consumer advocate in our neighborhood. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. thank you. thank you. [laughs] [applause] [applause]ññ thank you. thank you very much, and good evening to every body. thank you so much for coming out tonight. to the muslimell legal fund for inviting me here and for the outstanding work they do. i'm as genuine as i can be when i say everyone in those two organizations is extremely impressive, even inspiring to me because of the work they do in areas where very few other organizations are able or willing to venture. i'm truly delighted to participate in any event they sponsor any work they do. for the last 6, 7 years, i have been writing about the systematic erosion and attack on civil liberties in the united states and the war on terror that justifies those erosions that drivesm-phobia those. the past few years i have been spending an increasing amount of time traveling around the country speaking about these issues at events like this, similar offense on col
[applause] >> so i thank you, ralph neighbor--ralph nader... >> [laughter] >> ralph nader, the consumer advocate in our neighborhood. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. thank you. thank you. [laughs] [applause] [applause]ññ thank you. thank you very much, and good evening to every body. thank you so much for coming out tonight. to the muslimell legal fund for inviting me here and for the outstanding work they do. i'm as genuine as i can be when i say everyone...
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Nov 18, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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let me go to ralph in d.c., a democratic caller. hi, ralph. ralph, you with us? >> caller: the reason i'm calling is, the republicans are receiving -- the senate is receiving $675,000 apiece from the oil and gas industry. and the -- they've opposed any type of limb gags on fuel economy or anything like that. what we're doing is essentially firing a bullet that is going to kill a billion people in about 70 years. and if you look at what that is, you're essentially talking about a crime against humanity. they're committing a crime against humanity, where a billion are going to die in about 70 years and you're going to destroy half the world's environment. >> i'll have you quickly respond to his comments. >> one of the most -- well, not directly, but one of the most powerful if not the most powerful influence as lobbyists is gas and oil in congress. they'll be more now with new majority in house, more powerful now. and reforms are going to be very, very difficult to get. >> congressman, i want to show our our viewers what's hapt happening on the capitol steps right
let me go to ralph in d.c., a democratic caller. hi, ralph. ralph, you with us? >> caller: the reason i'm calling is, the republicans are receiving -- the senate is receiving $675,000 apiece from the oil and gas industry. and the -- they've opposed any type of limb gags on fuel economy or anything like that. what we're doing is essentially firing a bullet that is going to kill a billion people in about 70 years. and if you look at what that is, you're essentially talking about a crime...
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Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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ralph. >> yeah. ralphn, the longtime owner of the buffalo bills who recently passed away, a great man indeed. one final question, jim, before i let you go. how are you feeling? >> i'm getting better. i finally got my i.v. taken out of my arm, my pick line. i had a bone infection called mrsa. that's now passed, thank god. i continue to press on. i've still got my feeding tube in. but i've eaten a lot of solid foods. trying to keep my energy level up. my wife, my daughter cameron, i cannot ask for anything better. i'm so blessed. to have such great support. a couple of my brothers, my brother ray and brother danny, i could go on and on to all the brothers that have helped support me. they've rallied around me. i'm just blessed to have some great people. >> we wish you only the best you and your entire family, all of our friends, our fellow buffaloians, good luck to all of you during this tough period. jim kelly, you led our buffalo bills to four, not three, not two, but four super bowls in a row. that was an
ralph. >> yeah. ralphn, the longtime owner of the buffalo bills who recently passed away, a great man indeed. one final question, jim, before i let you go. how are you feeling? >> i'm getting better. i finally got my i.v. taken out of my arm, my pick line. i had a bone infection called mrsa. that's now passed, thank god. i continue to press on. i've still got my feeding tube in. but i've eaten a lot of solid foods. trying to keep my energy level up. my wife, my daughter cameron, i...
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Nov 25, 2014
11/14
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open is ralph lauren. ralph lauren launched at the u.s.hirt, our signal.ered by that's an example of an iconic brandon bringing their design. next -- what's next? you have shirts, you are developing bras, go to you -- where do you go from there? >> we have software, hardware, intelligent textiles, and scientific algorithms. this platform is there to create multiple smart probably -- projects. the sure you are wearing is just one of the times of products we bring to market. we are working on things that have nothing to do with fitness. >> there could be a dress shirt? >> built into your lifestyle. they are not about fitness. >> health monitoring. >> and so on. we are a platform, and what you are wearing right now is the first-ever consumer. sensing shirt. the first product manifestation of this platform. there will be quite a variety of products down the line. >> that gives you a sense of the scale of his ambitions. if you think about what they have now, it really is a fitness watch, except you wear it. it does more than a fitness watch can
open is ralph lauren. ralph lauren launched at the u.s.hirt, our signal.ered by that's an example of an iconic brandon bringing their design. next -- what's next? you have shirts, you are developing bras, go to you -- where do you go from there? >> we have software, hardware, intelligent textiles, and scientific algorithms. this platform is there to create multiple smart probably -- projects. the sure you are wearing is just one of the times of products we bring to market. we are working...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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ralph menzies has been there for 17 years. >> ralph's crime was a brutal one. he kidnapped a female from a convenience store. took her up one of the canyons. tied her to a tree and cut her throat and then left her there. it was so brutal, that's why he is on death row. >> my window is always covered. if i can't go out there and walk on the grass, i don't want to see the grass. because it does bring back a lot of memories. and it does tell me what i can't have and can't do. so, i just fit into my little world and i'm all right. >> ralph has always maintained his innocence. that's ralph's fight. that's not the state of utah's fight. our staff here manage him day to day because he is a death row inmate. and he will get what's coming to a death row inmate, and nothing more. >> from death row, the condemned will be transferred in a state van to the back of the uinta-3 building. >> i personally wish they would either overturn my case, my conviction, or execute me and get it over with. now, you don't know if it's going to be five years down the road, if it's going to be two years, ten years, what they're going to decide. and that's really hard. >> if ralph menzies is to be executed, he will be moved from a holding cell at 30 minutes to midnight, then be escorted by a team of five officers down this hallway, arriving at a room whose purpose cannot be mistaken. some inmates die by lethal injection. utah still uses a firing squad for inmates who have chosen that option. one such execution made headlines when convicted murdere
ralph menzies has been there for 17 years. >> ralph's crime was a brutal one. he kidnapped a female from a convenience store. took her up one of the canyons. tied her to a tree and cut her throat and then left her there. it was so brutal, that's why he is on death row. >> my window is always covered. if i can't go out there and walk on the grass, i don't want to see the grass. because it does bring back a lot of memories. and it does tell me what i can't have and can't do. so, i...
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ralph's on a rampage. ralph nader, the guy wrote the book on car safety. why he says hillary clinton would drive this country off a cliff! 8:00 p.m. charles: neil, i never knew ralphwould say something like that. proof you dream it can happen. calling all fans of the original batman series. the show, it might have been campy and corny and was prescient of a lot of things. i will explain. send us the questions and tweets. where are they? i like when you flood us with them. keep it right here. market at all-time highs. i will make you more money. ♪ ameriprise asked people a simple question: in retirement, will you have enough money to live life on your terms? i sure hope so. with healthcare costs, who knows. umm... everyone has retirement questions. so ameriprise created the exclusive confident retirement approach. now you and your ameripise advisor.... can get the real answers you need. start building your confident retirement today. get to the terminal across town. are all the green lights you? no. it's called grid iq. the 4:51 is leaving at 4:51. ♪ they cut the power. it'll fix itself. power's back on. quick thinking traffic lights and self correcting power grids
ralph's on a rampage. ralph nader, the guy wrote the book on car safety. why he says hillary clinton would drive this country off a cliff! 8:00 p.m. charles: neil, i never knew ralphwould say something like that. proof you dream it can happen. calling all fans of the original batman series. the show, it might have been campy and corny and was prescient of a lot of things. i will explain. send us the questions and tweets. where are they? i like when you flood us with them. keep it right here....
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ralph nader is saying about her! wreck it ralph. @? . >> this is not just an issue for him. this is intensely personal. neil: it's not been a great week for hillary clinton. the former secretary of state heckled over immigration at a campaign event. you can see the dustup in the crowd. this stuff happens but happening a lot more. ralph nader wasn't one of the hecklers, but what he's saying is actually worse. ralph, you made headlines when you said that hillary clinton would be a menace to the country. what did you mean by that? >> i mean she's demonstrated again and again that she represents giant corporate power out in new york, and a militaristic brute force foreign policy. neil: and corporations don't create great jobs is not exactly corporate talk. >> she's in a conundrum now, trying to lean more liberal but record pulls her to the corporate side and she's halfway between walmart on whom she served as a board of directors and wall street. i think she's going to split the party more and more and there's going to be more attentiveness to holding her to progressive agendas, and took dozens of groups riding her over the months to get her to come out for restored minimum wage that was sponsored by her own party in the congress, and these were groups, she would rely on to get elected. women's groups, social service gr
ralph nader is saying about her! wreck it ralph. @? . >> this is not just an issue for him. this is intensely personal. neil: it's not been a great week for hillary clinton. the former secretary of state heckled over immigration at a campaign event. you can see the dustup in the crowd. this stuff happens but happening a lot more. ralph nader wasn't one of the hecklers, but what he's saying is actually worse. ralph, you made headlines when you said that hillary clinton would be a menace to...
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neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebookokokokok how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i have $40, $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge might not seem so big after all. ♪ hard it can be...how ...to breathe with copd? it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled... ...copd maintenance treatment... ...that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. you know, spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms.
neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebookokokokok how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i...
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neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralph does speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebook information? you might not "like." . neil: facebook getting a little political now. the mega social network will be digging into facebook profiles to report on what issues and candidates and users are hot on. that would be you, if you're a facebook customer. mark zuckerberg's immigration reform push is one of the things he likes, but that meano what you're sending friends to see what you like. should you share that with anyone? you have your doubts, right? >> i have strong doubts. we know mark zuckerberg is a liberal, pushing for amnesty. if he finds out that the majority of facebook users are against amnesty, is he truthfully going to tell the american people that or results skewered because he doesn't want to affect policy he's again
neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralph does speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebook information? you might not "like." . neil:...
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neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebookokokokok new york state is jump-starting business with startup-ny. an unprecedented program that partners businesses with universities across the state. for better access to talent, cutting edge research, and state of the art facilities. and you pay no taxes for ten years. from biotech in brooklyn, to next gen energy in binghamton, to manufacturing in buffalo... startup-ny has new businesses popping up across the state. see how startup-ny can help your business grow at startup.ny.gov . neil: facebook getting a little political now. the mega social network will be digging into facebook profiles to report on what issues and candidates and users are hot on. that would be you, if you're a facebook customer. mark zuckerberg's immigration reform
neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with facebookokokokok new york state is jump-starting business with...
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neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with what are you doing with facebookokok synchrony financial partners with over two hundred thousand businesses, from fashion retailers to healthcare providers, from jewelers to sporting good stores, to help their customers get what they want and need. banking. loyalty. analytics. synchrony financial. engage with us. hard it can be...how ...to breathe with copd? it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled... ...copd maintenance treatment... ...that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. you know, spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma
neil: all right, ralph nader, thank you, good to hear you again. >> see you on election night, neil. neil: thank you very much. use hashtag cavuto and tell me what you think, ralphs speak his mind, both parties with the statements there. let me know what you think. this week we told you that mark zuckerberg is planning on a multibillion dollar buying bid to do things many of you aren't keen on. what are you doing with what are you doing with facebookokok synchrony financial partners with...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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SFGTV
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ralph student i don't know if it will be in the future this building has hundreds and 20 new people having their entrance on ralph street when you have those things you'll not have people driving the wrong way done u down fulsome and speeding through when we see traffic going towards the bridge and cut over to howard you'll see less because there will be people on the street 2 and 20 new residents not there now i think in my mind that future impacts my vision of what a driveway on ralph's i think also some of the people kwooilg it's on the other side of fulsome people make left turns on fulsome many people cross over because people can do it that a right turn so with the cycling impacts. >> if you mind if i interrupt we're looking at different alternatives from fulsome street the length and turning it into a two-lane and the western selma and the supervisor many of us that that ultimate it could be a great thing we're looking at other solutions one of them has things on both sides of the street we want to mayor we understand if it works we all i think there's a lot of support for turning it 20/20 way. >> commissioner richards. >> just a couple more things i'm sure we won't have moisten solid for the streetscape enhancements for student safety working with the office getting fund to the power that be from the city to make things happen and the other things with the gentleman we did some things last night based on integrity and we - he did a project in upper market and w
ralph student i don't know if it will be in the future this building has hundreds and 20 new people having their entrance on ralph street when you have those things you'll not have people driving the wrong way done u down fulsome and speeding through when we see traffic going towards the bridge and cut over to howard you'll see less because there will be people on the street 2 and 20 new residents not there now i think in my mind that future impacts my vision of what a driveway on ralph's i...
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Nov 6, 2014
11/14
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WHYY
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ralph lauryn. why don't i go directly to ralph lauryn. >> that's correct. assuming that you already know ralphnd that is a brand you like. >> and so one of the things that is different about wanelo is that you will be exposed to lots of independent brands, lots of low-end, high-end brands that you just would have never found on your own. so yes, it works for, i this, you know, five brands i like to go to. but it will expose you to thinks that you would have never found otherwise. and of course the other benefit is that it brings all of the brands together for you in a single place. >> is there any risk for you in this. >> risk? >> yeah. in other words, they don't like a product, it's not your fault, it's the fault of the company that sold it to they you just got a transactional fee for connecting two people, a buyer and a seller. >> we take on some responsibility for connecting for sure. and there's choices for us to be made in terms of how centralized, you know, of a platform we want, how much responsibility do we take. and i think that's something we will have to learn a lot about, as we con
ralph lauryn. why don't i go directly to ralph lauryn. >> that's correct. assuming that you already know ralphnd that is a brand you like. >> and so one of the things that is different about wanelo is that you will be exposed to lots of independent brands, lots of low-end, high-end brands that you just would have never found on your own. so yes, it works for, i this, you know, five brands i like to go to. but it will expose you to thinks that you would have never found otherwise....
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Nov 7, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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ralph lauren? >> assuming you already know ralph lauren, that is correct.f the things that is different about wanelo is you will be exposed to lots of independent brands. low end, high end of brands you would have never found on your own. yes, it works for my house. i have five brands i like to go to. it will expose you to things he would have never found otherwise. it brings all the brands together for you in a single place. >> do you see any risk for you? >> what do you mean? >> they don't like the product, it is not your fault. you just got a transactional fee for connecting two people. >> there is some responsibility for what kind of platform we want to be. absolutely. we have people e-mailing us all the time. they think they have already purchased it from wanelo. >> they see it from you, and send the credit card in. >> the majority of usage is on mobile. it is a very fragmented experience, going from the product page to the retailer. it is frequently hard to tell on your phone whether you are on wanelo or the retailer. >> what percentage use mobile? >>
ralph lauren? >> assuming you already know ralph lauren, that is correct.f the things that is different about wanelo is you will be exposed to lots of independent brands. low end, high end of brands you would have never found on your own. yes, it works for my house. i have five brands i like to go to. it will expose you to things he would have never found otherwise. it brings all the brands together for you in a single place. >> do you see any risk for you? >> what do you...
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Nov 18, 2014
11/14
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ralph. i think it was ralph. amy says i don't know >> time 8:23 york county mom very, very busy these days. >> because she taking care of not one, not two, 19 new babies. >> wow. >> that great dame's name is snowy. check out her litter. her owners new she was pregnant, just did not expect 19 puppies. great dane's usually have between seven to ten pups in the litter. her owners say that snow is he a great mom, very patient there. and that all of the pups are doing well. >> oh, that's good to hear. >> my goodness. that poor mama. >> i know, but that's one beautiful family. >> little pups all snuggled up. >> oh, adorable. ukee, i know you want one. >> i know, i do, you took the words right out of my mouth. that's great. >> going to break, we'll be right back. be very quiet. >> good morning, i'm ukee washington, it is decision day on where or whether philadelphia gets a second casino. there are four contenders, two want to builds in center city, two other want to build near the sports complex. philadelphia region alr
ralph. i think it was ralph. amy says i don't know >> time 8:23 york county mom very, very busy these days. >> because she taking care of not one, not two, 19 new babies. >> wow. >> that great dame's name is snowy. check out her litter. her owners new she was pregnant, just did not expect 19 puppies. great dane's usually have between seven to ten pups in the litter. her owners say that snow is he a great mom, very patient there. and that all of the pups are doing well....
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Nov 21, 2014
11/14
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. >> so there is ralph wilson stadium, ralph is very cold. the team tried bribing fans to help them dig out by offering free tickets to anyone who showed up with a shovel. instead nfl just gave up. they are moving the game over to detroit on monday night. not even down, they are playing jets, just go down to the jets stadium whatever they call that thing in the swamp land meadow land. they are going to detroit a neutral site on monday night. >> maybe that is fair. >> i it this it is funny no one showed up for shovel not even for free tickets. wasn't worth it. >> i can say something about detroit and buffalo. >>> how about send them to my am toy play, how about that. >> true. >> detroit. >> is that an indoor stadium it is a dome. >> it is a dome. >> okay. we have some good news this morning. we want to say congratulations to sue serio, she will be induct in the broadcast pioneers hall of fame tonight. >> wow. >> all right. >> listen to this, sue, there is a ceremony, big time scheduled for tonight, and it will be up in bala cynwyd at the hilto
. >> so there is ralph wilson stadium, ralph is very cold. the team tried bribing fans to help them dig out by offering free tickets to anyone who showed up with a shovel. instead nfl just gave up. they are moving the game over to detroit on monday night. not even down, they are playing jets, just go down to the jets stadium whatever they call that thing in the swamp land meadow land. they are going to detroit a neutral site on monday night. >> maybe that is fair. >> i it this...
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206
Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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FOXNEWSW
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ralph. we don't have it. i've got to run. colonel ralph peters in washington with us today. thank you. martha?a: turns out obamacare is less popular than ever before according to some new poles. more and more is uncovered now about jonathan gruber and the deception used to get that law over the finish line. bill: also a teenager fighting for her right to keep the words, "under god," in the pledge of allegiance. the battle playing out right now in court. here's some news you may find surprising. we're for an open internet for all. we're for creating more innovation and competition. we're for net neutrality protection. now, here's some news you may find even more surprising. we're comcast. the only isp legally bound by full net neutrality rules. everyone is looking for ways while to cut expenses.s unique, and that's where pg&e's online business energy checkup tool can really help. you can use it to track your actual energy use. find rebates that make equipment upgrades more affordable. even develop a customized energy plan for your company. think of it as a way to take more control over your ope
ralph. we don't have it. i've got to run. colonel ralph peters in washington with us today. thank you. martha?a: turns out obamacare is less popular than ever before according to some new poles. more and more is uncovered now about jonathan gruber and the deception used to get that law over the finish line. bill: also a teenager fighting for her right to keep the words, "under god," in the pledge of allegiance. the battle playing out right now in court. here's some news you may find...
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82
Nov 20, 2014
11/14
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FBC
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ralph, a consumer advocate and author of unstoppable. ralph, i'll start with you. got a big apology from the folks at takata from the head of their global division. however, they might have -- they might have apologized, but they're not going to do what nhtsa is asking which is recalling all autos. what do you say? >> i think they have to. the media is on them. the congress is on them. there's a criminal investigation by the southern district of new york. us attorney. more and more is coming out. they had secret settlements with victims of these defective air bags in order cover up the information and keep it from going public to the media and to people around the country. so i think takata is going to go bankrupt if they don't level on this. they will have to agree there will be other manufacturers of the air bags to replace them. they can't ramp up enough to replace 20 -- 25 million cars with air bags. they don't have the manufacturing capacity -- they can't continue to resist that. they have to come clean. gerri: they say. they don't have to ramp up the recalls, that they can cover it. which is, i think still in question. i want to turn to clarence, for a moment. in this hearing today, in front of the senate committee, we had a very graphic illustration of just how big this problem is. one of the victims was shown, and her injuries shown behind her in the photo. if you're watching the show and you have small children in the room, you might want them to go somewhere else. it's pretty greask. i'lgraphic.look at this. this is what happened to this poor woman. shards of metal in her eye. she will never be the same. she testified today. clarence, to you. do people understand how serious this is. shouldn't americans be demanding new air bags that these fixes be made? >> absolutely. this is one of the most gruesomemost grewsome defects wn and particularly worse for women sitting close to the air bags. it's like a grenade going off in your face. he's absolutely right. gerri: ralph to you. big debate overt accelerant, used in these bags. the fear is that takata used an inferior product. do you believe that to be the case? what went wrong? what is the real culprit? >> they cut their cost. they got a cheap compound. very sensitive to temperature changes. this problem does not occur unless there's a collision. so, number one. but number two, this is what happens when the media gets on the back of government regulators and hammers them because they think they're overregulated. it's the lack of quality control feedback by auto companies who bought these air bags from takata. where were their quality control engineers to spot this? gerri: last night we had on former nhtsa chief. joan, she said it's the fault of nhtsa. they don't think of themselves as the cop on the beat. what's the cup ability of nhtsa here? >> it's extreme. this is a defect that's been on the road since 2003. and nhtsa treats the industry as its partners. they're not its partners. they're the regula
ralph, a consumer advocate and author of unstoppable. ralph, i'll start with you. got a big apology from the folks at takata from the head of their global division. however, they might have -- they might have apologized, but they're not going to do what nhtsa is asking which is recalling all autos. what do you say? >> i think they have to. the media is on them. the congress is on them. there's a criminal investigation by the southern district of new york. us attorney. more and more is...
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451
Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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WPVI
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ralph lauren. i think i paid like $60 for it so very good deal. >> reporter: for ralph lauren that's a good deal. >ry good deal yes. >> reporter: some were hitting store after store. >> h and m, gap, forever 21. we went to a lot of stores. they got a lot of deals. >> i got great stuff at victoria secret and new york and company, $5.99 for a hat and scarf. >> reporter: some came from far to spend their cash. james lucas came from chicago. how much did you spend. >> i spend almost $875 here. >> reporter: good deals. >> good deals. i'm not too happy with all the money spent. >> reporter: happy holidays. >> thank you. >> reporter: there is some good news for holiday shoppers. we found most major retailers are extending deals beyond just the normal one day. they're extending them through the weekend. happy shopping. live here at king of prussia mall, dann cuellar channel6 "action news." >> thank you dan. in center city philadelphia the deals were plenty and so were the shoppers. walnut street was filled with people looking for the best prices. most everybody was local but we did find some people from as
ralph lauren. i think i paid like $60 for it so very good deal. >> reporter: for ralph lauren that's a good deal. >ry good deal yes. >> reporter: some were hitting store after store. >> h and m, gap, forever 21. we went to a lot of stores. they got a lot of deals. >> i got great stuff at victoria secret and new york and company, $5.99 for a hat and scarf. >> reporter: some came from far to spend their cash. james lucas came from chicago. how much did you spend....
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Nov 16, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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ralph menses had been on death row for 17 years. >> i remember when ralph was first brought to the interview room so that we could talk to him. they're setting up the lights and getting the microphone set. making sure the lightning is just so. and it's important to establish a report very quickly and ralphnever forget, i asked him, hey, what are you watching on tv these days? and he told me he was a big fan of the "oc ". >> i see "oc" all the time. >> i got to be honest with you, i love the "oc." >> who is your favorite character? >> kelly rowan. >> yeah. she's pretty hot. >> his interest in women became more disturbing when we learned the details of his crime. >> ralph's crime allegedly was a brutal one. he kidnapped a female from a convenience store and took her up one of the canyons, tied her to a tree and then cut her throat and then left her there. >> well, i've always maintained my innocence. i've done a lot of things in my life, you know, that i'm not proud of. this particular one is not one of them. i just come to the conclusion that karma bit me in the --. i personally wish they would either overturn my case, my execution or execute me and get it over with. whereas now you don't know if it's going to be five years down the road, two years or ten years, what they're going to dec
ralph menses had been on death row for 17 years. >> i remember when ralph was first brought to the interview room so that we could talk to him. they're setting up the lights and getting the microphone set. making sure the lightning is just so. and it's important to establish a report very quickly and ralphnever forget, i asked him, hey, what are you watching on tv these days? and he told me he was a big fan of the "oc ". >> i see "oc" all the time. >> i got...
82
82
Nov 22, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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ralph menses had been on death row for 17 years. >> i remember when ralph was first brought to the interview room so that we could talk to him. they're setting up the lights and getting the microphone set. making sure the lightning is just so. and it's important to establish a report very quickly and ralph forget, i asked him, hey, what are you watching on tv these days? and he told me he was a big fan of the "oc ". >> i see "oc" all the time. >> i got to be honest with you, i love the "oc." >> who is your favorite character? >> kelly rowan. >> yeah. she's pretty hot. >> his interest in women became more disturbing when we learned the details of his crime. >> ralph's crime allegedly was a brutal one. he kidnapped a female from a convenience store and took her up one of the canyons, tied her to a tree and then cut her throat and then left her there. >> well, i've always maintained my innocence. i've done a lot of things in my life, you know, that i'm not proud of. this particular one is not one of them. i just come to the conclusion that karma bit me in the --. i personally wish they would either overturn my case, my execution or execute me and get it over with. whereas now you don't know if it's going to be five years down the road, two years or ten years, what they're going to decide.
ralph menses had been on death row for 17 years. >> i remember when ralph was first brought to the interview room so that we could talk to him. they're setting up the lights and getting the microphone set. making sure the lightning is just so. and it's important to establish a report very quickly and ralph forget, i asked him, hey, what are you watching on tv these days? and he told me he was a big fan of the "oc ". >> i see "oc" all the time. >> i got to...
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39
Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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ralph and david, are those programs something that your member institutions or, ralph, your unsti institutiinstitution action? it seems like if there's students who could benefit from these programs that they don't know about them. >> absolutely. we're tireless in our efforts to communicate such opportunities. i would like just to go back to ted's point a few moments ago. and that is the administration's focus on funding or support and accountability with regard to completion. again the through puts and outputs rather than inputs, if you will. and it's true after six years of diminishing public investment and increasing tuition in florida, for the first time this year, in a long time, we have seen an infusion of new investment in public higher education around performance-based funding. while performance-based funding across the nation has perhaps received mixed reviews, for a state that is now investing $100 million a quarter of which came to south florida, so we like it. based upon completion rates, based upon retention rates, based upon the percentage of pell students served, based upon the number of students graduating with excess hours -- without excess hours to sarah's point. if we keep piling on the completion expectations, many of our students will never get them. they will become so discouraged that they drop out and we lose them for a long, long time. so, yeah, i think this is representing a change for us. new funding came to us six or seven years ago on the basis of opening our doors wide open. it's one of the reasons why i think five of the top ten largest public universities in the united states are in florida. we haven't recovered from access for the sake of access. now with the refocus on completion and placement, i'm very confident we're moving in the right direction. >> a couple comments. first of all the issue that the money the students leave on the table in the form of not filing is very disturbing across our sector. the numbers are different depending on which source you cite. clearly at minimum, aqua quartef college students don't complete the application process. as i say, it's a very bothersome fact for our institutions. colleges are doing what they can to promote awareness and counseling students throughout the application process. but it remains a hurdle for them. getting back to what i started talking about about the quandary that institutional ceos have between where they allocate resources, a lot of them have problems processing the papers as opposed to making sure everybody files. in terms of the issue of student debt that's been touched upon, fortunately, because of our low tuitions, our institutions are age able to ensure that the vast majority of community college students don't graduate with debt. about a third of our students who attain a associate's degree have debt. only 17% of our of our credit students borrow. that is a function of our low tuitions. in terms of getting students to complete though and providing incentives and there are institutional incentives at play, performance based funding, which is gaining ground across the country at the state level, one of the things that we think would enhance completion would also be better information about student outcomes. and we do remain disappointed there the that there is not a national data system which would follow students through their course so that institutional performance would be accurately reflected in the federal data. but also that individual students who are perspective students who are considering enrolling would have a more complete picture of their likelihood of getting a college grew. and then related to that and the basic architecture is currently in place in the form of the gainful employment regulations, my association believes in community college presidents believe is that we ought to know what types of earnings students get after they leave college at some appropriate point. we understand that there's a lot of complexity in interpreting this data. we understand it's not comprehensive under all cases. we believe that students who complete a given program at a community college -- we believe they should apply for all programs, not just gainful employment programs as it were. they ought to know two years, five years after graduation, on average, how well are students doing economically? because the fact is is that most students go to college first and foremost to increase their career prospects. it's by no means the only reason they go. they get other benefits that come along free of charge or just along with the ride of going through college. but the notion that students go to institutions simply for learning sake is wonderful as learning is and as much as it transforms lives is denying reality. so we are hopeful at some point through some mechanism, that when a student enrolls at their local community college they know not just what the graduation of 150% of normal time is but how likely they are to graduate from any institution, whether it might be four-year, and then after that what they might expect economical economically, what the returns would be. we all know the best investment you can make in your future is going to college and completing college. >> david, just answered what was going to be my next question for david and ralph, which was if there was one thing you would like to change at a policy level, federal or state -- david, you can have an opportunity to add to this. but i think that the access to the data you are describing is something the federal government, state governments could provide on a policy basis to help your institutions improve their performance. just wondering if there are other either federal or state policies that you think -- if you were king tomorrow you would enact in order to help your institutions be successful. >> well, one concern i've always had with federal data reporting is the seemingly myopic focus on traditional -- the path of traditional freshmen. while that may indeed have been the experience of many in this town, the reality -- the increasing reality is that more and more students are finding their way to four-year colleges and universities through community colleges. so recognizing that reality and tracking transfer student pathway to success, to completion i think
ralph and david, are those programs something that your member institutions or, ralph, your unsti institutiinstitution action? it seems like if there's students who could benefit from these programs that they don't know about them. >> absolutely. we're tireless in our efforts to communicate such opportunities. i would like just to go back to ted's point a few moments ago. and that is the administration's focus on funding or support and accountability with regard to completion. again the...
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49
Nov 19, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
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david: ralph nader, author of, unstoppable, the emerging left-right alliance to dismantle the corporate state. ralphk you very much. appreciate it. >> you're welcome, dade. thank you. david: the president will address on the nation on immigration tomorrow and is expected to announce he will take executive action on the issue. next we'll debate the legality of his actions. what do you think about it? should he take action all by himself or is he breaking the law when he does that? send us a message on facebook or tweet us @fbnatb. your answers coming up. cheryl: the deep freeze across the nation continues with many areas under a few feet of snow. when is this going to end? we have a very fascinating forecast coming up. david: buffalo five feet of snow in buffalo this five feet! plus as ferguson awaits a grand jury decision on the death of michael brown, businesses, well they're close to panicking about potential violence that could be coming their way. is the government doing all it can to stop that? cheryl: bowing down to pressure from investors. one airline is cutting passenger leg room, and adding
david: ralph nader, author of, unstoppable, the emerging left-right alliance to dismantle the corporate state. ralphk you very much. appreciate it. >> you're welcome, dade. thank you. david: the president will address on the nation on immigration tomorrow and is expected to announce he will take executive action on the issue. next we'll debate the legality of his actions. what do you think about it? should he take action all by himself or is he breaking the law when he does that? send us...
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85
Nov 1, 2014
11/14
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 85
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ralph raider was running on the green party ticket. he got 97,000 votes. george bush carried he florida by 537 votes. if ralph nader had not been on the ballot, most of his votes would volunteering to al gore. by videoing for nader, they were help together elect george w. bush. >> to real estate, even a square inch of space in the united states can be valuable especially in a big city. in new york, the sky is quite literally the limit in the hunt for prime real estate. mary snow reports now on a race to buy air. >> on an island home to 1.6 million people, squeezed for space and vying for a view, the only way to build is up. demand is high, leaving developers jockeying for a slice of the skyline. the more the view, the more money can be fetched. launching a balloon equipped with cameras, this man's job is to photograph the view from skyscrapers that haven't yet been built. >> we're at 99. 99.5. >> mere inks can mean the difference of millions. >> you can advertise an apartment with views of times square or without, just those inches back and forth. that's really cool to find that out. you discovered wow, you c
ralph raider was running on the green party ticket. he got 97,000 votes. george bush carried he florida by 537 votes. if ralph nader had not been on the ballot, most of his votes would volunteering to al gore. by videoing for nader, they were help together elect george w. bush. >> to real estate, even a square inch of space in the united states can be valuable especially in a big city. in new york, the sky is quite literally the limit in the hunt for prime real estate. mary snow reports...
50
50
Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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eye 50
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ralph and david, are those programs something that your member institutions or, ralph, your institution is taking action? it seems like if there's students who could benefit from these programs that they don't know about them. >> absolutely. we're tireless in our efforts to communicate such opportunities. i would like just to go back to ted's point a few moments ago. and that is the administration's focus on funding or support and accountability with regard to completion. again the throughputs and outputs rather than inputs, if you will. and it's true after six years of diminishing public investment and increasing tuition in florida, for the first time this year, in a long time, we have seen an infusion of new investment in public higher education around performance-based funding. while performance-based funding across the nation has perhaps received mixed reviews, for a state that is now investing $100 million a quarter of which came to south florida, so we like it. based upon completion rates, based upon retention rates, based upon the percentage of pell students served, based upon the number of students graduating with excess hours -- without excess hours to sarah's point. if we keep piling on the completion expectations, many of our students will never get them. they will become so discouraged that they drop out and we lose them for a long, long time. so, yeah, i think this is representing a change for us. new funding came to us six or seven years ago on the basis of opening our doors wide open. it's one of the reasons why i think five of the top ten largest public universities in the united states are in florida. we haven't recovered from access for the sake of access. now with the refocus on completion and placement, i'm very confident we're moving in the right direction. >> a couple comments. first of all the issue that the money the students leave on the table in the form of not filing is very disturbing across our sector. the numbers are different depending on which source you cite. clearly at minimum, a quarter of college students don't complete the application process. as i say, it's a very bothersome fact for our institutions. colleges are doing what they can to promote awareness and counseling students throughout the application process. but it remains a hurdle for them. getting back to what i started talking about about the quandary that institutional ceos have between where they allocate resources, a lot of them have problems processing the papers as opposed to making sure everybody files. in terms of the issue of student debt that's been touched upon, fortunately, because of our low tuitions, our institutions are able to ensure that the vast majority of community college students don't graduate with debt. about a third of our students who attain a associate's degree have debt. only 17% of our of our credit students borrow. that is a function of our low tuitions. in terms of getting students to complete though and providing incentives and there are institutional incentives at play, performance based funding, which is gaining ground across the country at the state level, one of the things that we think would enhance completion would also be better information about student outcomes. and we do remain disappointed that there is not a national data system which would follow students through their course so that institutional performance would be accurately reflected in the federal data. but also that individual students who are perspective students who are considering enrolling would have a more complete picture of their likelihood of getting a college degree. and then related to that and the basic architecture is currently in place in the form of the gainful employment regulations, my association believes in community college presidents believe is that we ought to know what types of earnings students get after they leave college at some appropriate point. we understand that there's a lot of complexity in interpreting this data. we understand it's not comprehensive under all cases. we believe that students who complete a given program at a community college -- we believe they should apply for all programs, not just gainful employment programs as it were. they ought to know two years, five years after graduation, on average, how well are students doing economically? because the fact is is that most students go to college first and foremost to increase their career prospects. it's by no means the only reason they go. they get other benefits that come along free of charge or just along with the ride of going through college. but the notion that students go to institutions simply for learning sake is wonderful as learning is and as much as it transforms lives is denying reality. so we are hopeful at some point through some mechanism, that when a student enrolls at their local community college they know not just what the graduation of 150% of normal time is but how likely they are to graduate from any institution, whether it might be four-year, and then after that what they might expect economically, what the returns would be. we all know the best investment you can make in your future is going to college and completing college. >> david, just answered what was going to be my next question for david and ralph, which was if there was one thing you would like to change at a policy level, federal or state -- david, you can have an opportunity to add to this. but i think that the access to the data you are describing is something the federal government, state governments could provide on a policy basis to help your institutions improve their performance. just wondering if there are other either federal or state policies that you think -- if you were king tomorrow you would enact in order to help your institutions be successful. >> well, one concern i've always had with federal data reporting is the seemingly myopic focus on traditional -- the path of traditional freshmen. while that may indeed have been the experience of many in this town, the reality -- the increasing reality is that more and more students are finding their way to four-year colleges and universities through community colleges. so recognizing that reality and tracking transfer student pathway to success, to completion i think
ralph and david, are those programs something that your member institutions or, ralph, your institution is taking action? it seems like if there's students who could benefit from these programs that they don't know about them. >> absolutely. we're tireless in our efforts to communicate such opportunities. i would like just to go back to ted's point a few moments ago. and that is the administration's focus on funding or support and accountability with regard to completion. again the...
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249
Nov 5, 2014
11/14
by
WTXF
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eye 249
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controlling father, and make sure what ralph yet rob gets out of prison that he doesn't live a life of luxury. >> the daughter testified today that she fears that her dad, ralph yell rob, or that she still fears her dad, i should say, raphael robb serving five to ten years in state prison. >> they say no good deed goes un punish. >> ninety year old good samaritan who has become a person charged in for the lauderdale. >> for what, kerry? >> for feeding the homeless. first person ever charged for that, i should add, arnold abbott, two local pastors, charged sunday with violating the city's new law, and this new law bans giving out food in public. so facing 06 days in jail. fifty days! >> he's 90. >> he's 90. sixty days in jail? and a 500-dollar fine. but the homeless advocate says that's not going to stop him from helping those in need. abbott says his only crime is loving thigh neighbor. >> remind me where this is? >> this is in texas. >> no, florida. >> of course any time something crazy happens, floored. >> why do you that to me? >> i don't know, all of the wacky stuff happens in florida. >> true. >> just dripping home that point. >> i should have known. >>
controlling father, and make sure what ralph yet rob gets out of prison that he doesn't live a life of luxury. >> the daughter testified today that she fears that her dad, ralph yell rob, or that she still fears her dad, i should say, raphael robb serving five to ten years in state prison. >> they say no good deed goes un punish. >> ninety year old good samaritan who has become a person charged in for the lauderdale. >> for what, kerry? >> for feeding the homeless....
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77
Nov 20, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
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ralph a name for himself by drawing attention to car safety. bookdecades ago, his "unsafe at any speed" was a revelation to many. ralph is on the phone. you have been focused on automobile safety for so long, relative to everything you have seen, how big a deal is this takata airbag problem? >> cars and vans and trucks are much safer now than they were in 1966. this is a great safety device. air bags have saved a lot of -type, but this takata airbag, using a compound called ammonium nitrate, which is very cheap, is now presenting a threat. in 20 million cars, at least. they have been stonewalling this for too long, and they are in deeper and deeper trouble, along with more and more motorists. takata knew about this in 2004. it knew more and more about it as the years progressed. has been stonewalling the department of transportation on the recall. it now has to recall at least 14 million and probably a lot more. thetragedy in this is that auto companies themselves did not do quality control and due diligence enough on their big supplier. the government and department of transportation did not be the watchdog it was supposed to be. the opportunity out of this is stronger legislation, to increase criminal penalties, to provide an adequate budget for the auto safety agency, which was disgracefully low. thatlso, to make sure congress begins supporting this great effort of safety on the highway for millions of motorists. >> you mentioned that in your opinion auto makers and regulators failed or were toelict in their duty enforce proper standards when it comes to airbags. are they doing enough right now? are automakers taking this seriously enough? >> they are now. out of the bag. the auto companies have to look into themselves and see why their engineers and quality control specialists did not discover this problem with takata, their giant supplier of airbags. a real interest in this. they will be exposed to bad public relations, more costs, litigation. and barra, they ceo of gm the head of honda and toyota, they have got to look into their companies and see out of their own self interest. they did not catch this year after year. >> what do you think of the new nominee to run ntsa? >> we don't know enough about him. all i know is that congress led by congressman john dingell, who is retiring, and the white house under both parties have been dampening down ntsa and our national auto safety, highway safety programs for years. that is developed a culture of passivity in the department of transportation, dealing with not the regulating for safety auto companies, but the suppliers. senator richard blumenthal and other senators have put in good legislation. i hope out of this tragedy will come reform and upgrade of the national traffic safety laws. first we have got to deal with how is takata and other suppliers that must be brought into this area going to manufacture fast enough, up to 20 to 30 million airbags. takata cannot do it by itself. it doesn't have the capacity. the department of transportation has got to order an expansion to other manufacturers to get this job done, to protect motorists on the highway. >> is regulation the only way to go here? aren't some of the private lawsuits that as a result of tragedy filed against these automakers and suppliers also incentive to protect behavior? >> berry much so. is often ability first responder because there is political pressure to take it slow and easy. when they see these companies, the depositions, interrogatories, that material spills out for the media. when the media starts reporting it, [indiscernible] start popping up. these companies, they should have independent ombudsman who can report to the ceo when they receive alerts from engineers and other people inside the companies who now are very reluctant to blow the whistle because they will be retaliated against or fired. what i propose to ceo mary barra, that that is what she does to protect the confidentiality of whistleblowers who wish to bring their conscience to work every day and protect the american people. >> good to have you on our show today. ralphngtime consumer advocate who has brought special attention to safety failures in the auto industry. sittingp, is your car around for hours at a time, not being used? now there is an app for that, and a company too. -- latest business for akon we will talk with him in a few minutes. ♪ >> welcome back to "market makers." the peer-to-peer car sharing company get around is teaming up with a funding round to let people rent out their cars to complete strangers, either by the hour or the day. it is announcing its first expansion into the east coast market, washington, d.c. - is theus this ceo - ceo. is this the airbnb of cars? the sharing being economy, similar to airbnb. the airbnb of cars is a good starting description. one of the key differences is that we really make the whole experience very seamless and on demand. all throughck it the app. >> who is a bigger competitor, zipcar or uber? >> we don't look at ridesharing, as competitive. they are quite complementary. they are pioneering th
ralph a name for himself by drawing attention to car safety. bookdecades ago, his "unsafe at any speed" was a revelation to many. ralph is on the phone. you have been focused on automobile safety for so long, relative to everything you have seen, how big a deal is this takata airbag problem? >> cars and vans and trucks are much safer now than they were in 1966. this is a great safety device. air bags have saved a lot of -type, but this takata airbag, using a compound called...
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Nov 19, 2014
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ralph peters and the exploitation on ferguson. ♪ stuart: at any moment we could get a grant jury decision on whether ferguson, missouri i'm a police officer will be indicted. lieutenant colonel ralph peters is with us. is this a case of those people that paid us are exploiting this situation? >> certainly that is the case. they know that they can inflate hatred, even v. by the way, stuart, the irony of a mob seems totally lost on the president and attorney general. i have long viewed as a suppressive group. they are really noisy. they are able to attract so much attention. all of their pleas about prejudice against muslims and islam's, it is starting to wear thin. they are having trouble on two fronts. it was not working well. although, they were able to bully american moslems. now, it is wearing thin. they are trying to recruit among america's black population. they are trying to recruit him present. they are familiar with the muslim brotherhood. their radical message is not nearly radical enough for young people. they are now competing with the likes of islamic state. they are losing backgrounds. they are growing desperate. that is why they are trying to do their worst to exacerbate. stuart: colonel peters, will you stay there for a moment. back to you in a second. the big ward says a big loss. a flat market yet again today. we are down a quarter of 1%. target, there is a winner. strong sales and a surprise profit. look at it go. lowe's raised its forecast. it is mid-november. in part, lowe's is up 6.5%. look at staples. it is back 9% today. higher profits also at least the boy. 6% higher. quickly to the weather. freezing temperatures all across the country. seven people killed in this storm. up to 6 feet of snow in upstate new york. buffalo getting a record amount. grand rapids michigan digging out. 2700 people in that city without power. this instagram post. braving the cold wearing just a pair of shorts. the caption reads this snow does not scare me. maybe it should. if the snow does not scare you, the temperatures should. check the map. we do have temperatures below freezing all across the region. >> i came from the city. it was not so bad downtown. as i got farther and farther out, it got worst. >> the snow blower does not do anything. >> too much shoveling. >> it is november. november the eighth team did we want to see more pictures on the weather. gasoline prices. $2.86 is the nationwide average for regular. cheap gas is great. i am wondering if the benefits are outweighed by this cold snap? do they cancel each other out, do you think? >> as you are reading all of those, all i could think about is we might as well cancel thanksgiving and christmas. this bad weather will give every democrat in excuse for why they got run out of office on the fourth of november because it is all about the economy. if this economy catches fire, so well oiled. >> the words of wisdom and the voice of reason. that is good stuff. let's go to the keystone pipeline. one vote short of the 60 needed. senator elizabeth warren talking about it. >> the bill has not passed. stuart: john hoban joins us now from capitol hill. senator, i do not want to be harsh. i think you have lost. the president will veto it. you do not have the votes to override. it looks like you lost and the greenies one. >> you could maybe argue that for this round. i do not think that is the case at all. i think that we will pass it. the votes were not there. fifty-nine votes. that continues to move us forward in the new congress. the real challenge will be president obama likely to veto it. stuart: you need 67 votes in the senate to override geared odds are, you will not get them. i hate to go back to this. you cannot win this one. >> i think we can. it is about energy, jobs, the american people overwhelmingly support it did 60, 70% of the polls. this is about working for the american people. i think that we will win it. i think we will get to that threshold. we will ultimately win it on the merit. stuart: it is not just to the pipeline. you will have to chuck a few things in there. >> it may be a two-step process. we may not be able to override directly. you have the litigation in nebraska which should be resolved by then. we may need to add another energy measure to bring just a few more votes. stuart: okay. we admired your optimism there, serve. thank you for joining us. appreciate it. >> bank you, stuart. stuart: five people were killed in an attack by two palestinian men yesterday. >> two attackers brutally attacked innocent workers in a synagogue during their morning prayers. obviously, we condemn them to the strongest term. stuart: senator ralphere. >> i barely heard it. the president sounded bored. for more dead jews. i just have to say something. this is horrible what happened. two palestinian cousins armed with hatchets, knives and guns entered a synagogue, attacked the rabbis, a dozen other people were injured geared they literally butchered for rabbis. our president does not even mention religion anywhere in there. you are back to the fact that this president acts as if this is casual violence or work based violence. those two palestinians did this shouting -- stuart: i only have 30 seconds left. tell me why you think the president holds back on harsh criticism or a strong statement when this kind of terror attack occurs. >> can you imagine how furious, how outraged our president would have been if two israeli jews had entered a mosque? i can only conclude that this is a hangover from his entire upbringing and adulthood. stuart: colonel ralph peters telling us how it is. here is what we have for you. the lineup for the r
ralph peters and the exploitation on ferguson. ♪ stuart: at any moment we could get a grant jury decision on whether ferguson, missouri i'm a police officer will be indicted. lieutenant colonel ralph peters is with us. is this a case of those people that paid us are exploiting this situation? >> certainly that is the case. they know that they can inflate hatred, even v. by the way, stuart, the irony of a mob seems totally lost on the president and attorney general. i have long viewed as...
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colonel ralph peters, get news from the wall street journal that barack obama last month wrote a letter, a secret letter he wrote to iran's supreme leader asking for help in dealing with isis. as ralph ago, iran does not like -- from a different muslim group van isis is. how leverrge it is a contrary -- controversial thing for a president to write a secret letter to a letter to another country, particularly one that is an adversary like iran. not the first time this has happened. this is the fourth time % president obama has written to iran's supreme leader ince 2009 since taking office in 2009 but undoubtedly ttis will add fuel to the fire of ttose suggesting that his policies with iran are now where we should be going. back to your money we are talking about a market rally at the gop takes the senate and there are numbers historically to back that up after an election when there is a democrat in the white house and republicans control congress it brings an average 21% rally on the s&p 500 over the next six months but listen to what harry dent told us in the last hour. roll it. >> the biggest trend, the market is usually opinions the end in 5, with the republican congress and democ
colonel ralph peters, get news from the wall street journal that barack obama last month wrote a letter, a secret letter he wrote to iran's supreme leader asking for help in dealing with isis. as ralph ago, iran does not like -- from a different muslim group van isis is. how leverrge it is a contrary -- controversial thing for a president to write a secret letter to a letter to another country, particularly one that is an adversary like iran. not the first time this has happened. this is the...
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Nov 26, 2014
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ralph. >> good morning. >> a real pleasure. >> thank you. >> let me take you back to that day. go to the mailbox and there it is. greetings, ralphernoon or evening when my mom got home from work, i made a comment to her that i should just go to canada like a lot of the other guys did. >> because it was to vietnam. >> and i had concerns about going over there at all. and so -- she looked at me and says, you're not going to canada. you got a duty to your country and if go to canada, you don't have to worry about the government. you got to worry about me. i'll come up there and kick your butt all the way back down here and then you'll go. >> all right. so you did wind up going. you wound up going to korea, right? >> right. i wound up december 72 in a hawk missile site as a generator operator and mechanic. i liked it over there and when it came time for me to get out, i actually went ahead and went active reserves for a year with duty in korea and stayed over there. i wound up liking it so much, i enlisted. >> here you are. >> and here i am now retiring out of my sixth tour in korea. >> that's fantastic. what was it you loved about
ralph. >> good morning. >> a real pleasure. >> thank you. >> let me take you back to that day. go to the mailbox and there it is. greetings, ralphernoon or evening when my mom got home from work, i made a comment to her that i should just go to canada like a lot of the other guys did. >> because it was to vietnam. >> and i had concerns about going over there at all. and so -- she looked at me and says, you're not going to canada. you got a duty to your...
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Nov 27, 2014
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ralph hall is the oldest member of congress and has been in office for 33 years. runoff in may.ry he set down for an interview and talked about his career. this is 35 minutes. >> can congressman ralph hall, you've been in the house of representatives since january of 1981,aged you'd hoped to be here for one last term. the voters thought otherwise. how are you processing your departure? >> well, everything that i checked on during that that i was 10 to 12 points ahead. it told me one thing, don't listen to people who tell you you're ahead and you're not. i really thought i had it won. come back that night at 3:00 in the morning, i had to think as i was driving back out to my house how it happened. when i got home i pulled out old elections and checked to see how i did there. looked at robert's rule. i figured it out finally. the guy got more votes than i did. i got beat. that's all there is to me. it didn't bother me but it hurt me because it hurt some of my friends. >> how are you feeling about leaving? >> well, when i wanted a doughnut this morning, i went down and get it. i've been a member of congress for 34 years and to finally get beat, if i was a manager for a be able or football team and i had 34-1, i'd be in the hall of fame, so doesn't bother me. and really it didn't bother me to get beat, because i wasn't just set on going. i had 18 co-chairman who were chairman of my 18 counties in my district that were supporting me and wanted me to run, and i did. it's -- better judgment was it -- it's hard toe get elected if you are 90 or 91-year-old and they don't tell people that you run two miles every morning, that you vote 99 plus percent of the time. there's a difference between that and old people. that wasn't brought up by the dallas morning news because they're not in my favor. >> what's your secret, how are you running two miles a day? >> i was told once, i was in the cattle building, if one of your he was has a bull calf. go out there and lift the bull calf every day over the fence, day after day after day until he's a full-grown bull. then when you can still lift him over the fence and throw him over the fence, you can throw the bull enough, you can run for congress. that's what they told me. so that's how i got into the congress, i left the cattle business and came here. >> well, you've switched parties during your time here. you've seen the parties change so many times. what's your handicap, let's start with the democrats what do you see when you look at the democratic party? >> well, the democrat party was a two-party party, democrats and liberal democrats. i wasn't really liked any better by the republicans than the democrats, because i voted in my district. i had the sam rayburn district. go up there and do a job and tell them you're doing a good job. i'm not a golfer. i don't hunt. i don't fish. i campaign when i have a day. i go walk a building out or something. i've campaigned all my life. i think that's the way i stayed elected ed. >> staying with the democrats, today is it still split between the liberals and the conservatives >> oh. yeah. there's three or four conservatives over there now. >> that's it? >> yeah. >> so it's changed. >> they'll slowly become republicans, probably. of course it would make sam rayburn if he were alive. he was our kind of democrat. because when he looked back over his shoulder as he went to bonham texas to die, he left a balanced budgets, so he was a conservative. >> when you look at the republican party, your challenger was a tea party member. is the republican party -- >> i don't know if he's a tea party member or not. you can't direct mail them. we don't know who they are or where they are. i always tell them to look at my record. >> are you seeing the party split the same way you described the democrats between fiscal conservatives and -- >> well, we have different types of conservatives as republicans. we have those that are hell for leather, republicans, you know, and it's got to be a republican if you're right. you have to be a conservative if you're right, and that's what we're beginning to learn, i think. >> other members that we've talked to have talked about how the congress has changed in the past during your tenure to an institution where people used to do things together off hours, which played out in more compromise. do you find that the place has changed in that regard and, if so, why? >> well, pretty much. when i got here i was a conservative democrat. i didn't really fit. republicans really didn't want me and the democrats didn't like me. for example, the bushes were dear friends of mine. i flew with the old bush. he flew torpedo bombers. he was of a famous family. he didn't know me until after the war was over. i knew those people and add mired them. i had good luck with the bushes and good luck with reagan. i have a picture on my wall made with reagan, looking at our boots at camp david. the first six months he was there, i thought i'm going to be at camp david for the rest of my life. that was 30 or 40 years ago. i haven't been back. i don't know if i participated correctly out there. i asked him some questions about marilyn monroe. he was a good guy and easy to talk to. ronald reagan came here when a man, one person could make a difference. i doubt that they can today. >> why so ? >> i don't know. he came here accepted as a conservative democrat or republican, but he'd been a democrat like all the rest of us, so he was in between -- he was a in-between deal there. somehow we felt like you could trust him. i got called the first 30 days he was here, because when he hit here, he hit here with a plan to increase pay for the military and yet cut the budget. that was his goal, and he had enough folks to get it, do it. when he got here about 19 or 20 of his fellow republicans came to him and said, if you don't hang the way you're voting on funs and on abortion, we're not going to support your bill. of course, you know what they told them, to go jump. but then he had to have some help out of the democratic party i was a democrat there. billy townsend was a democrat. we had some strength over there. jim baker could tell the president, call one of those guys and they'll help you. they said, well, i know ralph hall better an i know any of them. we'll have the president call him and maybe he'll pick up those votes that he lost. they needed about 10 votes. they told me he was going to call me. so i was ready for him. he called and said, this is ronald reagan. i said, yeah, i believe that. martha, come over here. he thinks i'm reagan now, but -- i want you to hear him. he said, no, i really am. another guy came over and no, it's really him. that's the funny type things that you don't forget. >> sure. >> when i knocked on the door he told me to come over there. i need some time. i had a program like he did. i always wanted to put a president on hold. i put him on hold about two minutes and i said, well, i can come over there today, tomorrow, or the next 30 minutes. what you want me to do? he told me to get my you-know-what over there. i knocked on the door. he said one question, what is it going to take for you to help me pay for the budget? i had an answer for him. >> as you look across the pr
ralph hall is the oldest member of congress and has been in office for 33 years. runoff in may.ry he set down for an interview and talked about his career. this is 35 minutes. >> can congressman ralph hall, you've been in the house of representatives since january of 1981,aged you'd hoped to be here for one last term. the voters thought otherwise. how are you processing your departure? >> well, everything that i checked on during that that i was 10 to 12 points ahead. it told me one...