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Jul 6, 2011
07/11
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i'll columnist for the rutgers daily newspaper. about usually pro-israel and conservative issues. i have been threatened to be sued. i have been petitioned by the outreach coordinator of the middle eastern studies department to be kicked out of my job. i've been physically threatped by the same woman cussing me out of a meeting pounding her chest and saying she's palestinian and i have to get through her before i can get -- >> glenn: you know the first death threat i ever had? first death threat, i get a lot of them. i spend $1 million a year in perm security. it comes out of my pocket. for death threats. the first one i had was a palestinian that called me up and said you have got to shut up. this is right after september 11. we are a peace loving people. if you don't shut up, i will behead you myself. i was like okay, i don't think you should -- you're not helping the cause. wear it with a badge of honor. >> rutgers earlier in the year originally had student-fee sponsored program to send a flotilla to gaza. luckily the state depa
i'll columnist for the rutgers daily newspaper. about usually pro-israel and conservative issues. i have been threatened to be sued. i have been petitioned by the outreach coordinator of the middle eastern studies department to be kicked out of my job. i've been physically threatped by the same woman cussing me out of a meeting pounding her chest and saying she's palestinian and i have to get through her before i can get -- >> glenn: you know the first death threat i ever had? first death...
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Jul 31, 2011
07/11
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what we call rutgers. >> rutgers is the state university? that's cool. >> i'm going to the ohio state university. >> you mean the -- >> and so you don't to have decide for a while. >> no. >> that's pretty cool. they say teacher training is changing -- i was just talking to a guy that teacher training in maryland they won't let you become an education major until after your sophomore year, and that you start in schools. you don't just stay in the university or college campuses you go spend a lot of time in school and that -- i mean, that's really important now. i mean, other countries, say, south korea, would be a teacher in training might spend that first year paid but watching and doing practice teaching and so to see if they really have what it takes. that's great. i think it's terrific that you're here. i would offer you a glass of wine but -- >> but i would say no. >> i wouldn't offer it anyway. [laughter] >> but that's terrific in yeah. >> thank you. >> great to meet you. >> i'm going to point you out when i say something. >> bob wise.
what we call rutgers. >> rutgers is the state university? that's cool. >> i'm going to the ohio state university. >> you mean the -- >> and so you don't to have decide for a while. >> no. >> that's pretty cool. they say teacher training is changing -- i was just talking to a guy that teacher training in maryland they won't let you become an education major until after your sophomore year, and that you start in schools. you don't just stay in the university or...
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Jul 16, 2011
07/11
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i was are of course were invited to give a speech at rutgers. he is almost 100 and won't remember me but i made a promise so are called, he not only remembered me but ask, wife is doing and the kids and i was taken aback. i would love to take you to dinner. he said we can't do it. i am recovering from major surgery and i don't think i can make it. i will bring dinner. as we started talking his voice started cracking. he said i served four years in congress. i was on the cover of time magazine and recognize the all-around world and when you leave that place nobody remembers you or cares. i am trying to recover from major surgery and not one of my former colleagues have called to say how are you doing? the only guy who calls me is a guy in the wrong party who came 20 years after i left. his voice started breaking. i said you need to know something. what you went through setting a protocol and standards at 25 years later when another president faced impeachment and republican congress was doing it we had done this rule that became the template that
i was are of course were invited to give a speech at rutgers. he is almost 100 and won't remember me but i made a promise so are called, he not only remembered me but ask, wife is doing and the kids and i was taken aback. i would love to take you to dinner. he said we can't do it. i am recovering from major surgery and i don't think i can make it. i will bring dinner. as we started talking his voice started cracking. he said i served four years in congress. i was on the cover of time magazine...
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Jul 26, 2011
07/11
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here's bill rodgers, professor at rutgers university. >> as the debt ceiling negotiations drag on, legislation that could help americans better prepare for 21st century labor markets and rebound from the great recession and today's pothole recovery has been placed on hold. one example is the re- authorization of the workforce investment act, also known as w.i.a. created in 1998, wia, which has been up for reauthorization for eight years, provides the framework for the nation's workforce development and employment system. what's my rationale for re- authorization? globalization and i.t. expansion continue to change how americans work, when they work, with whom they work and where they work. the great recession and our current pot-hole recovery have permanently altered the workplace. reauthorization of the 13-year- old act would enable the labor department to update, make innovations, and respond to these changes. simply put, wia re-authorization is good government. since everything is on the negotiations table, i urge policymakers to include wia reauthorization as a part of the forthcoming debt
here's bill rodgers, professor at rutgers university. >> as the debt ceiling negotiations drag on, legislation that could help americans better prepare for 21st century labor markets and rebound from the great recession and today's pothole recovery has been placed on hold. one example is the re- authorization of the workforce investment act, also known as w.i.a. created in 1998, wia, which has been up for reauthorization for eight years, provides the framework for the nation's workforce...
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Jul 11, 2011
07/11
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he went to rutgers college in, rutgers university in new jersey, as did i.tarted sending it home to me, and i started reading it in high school, and i was like wow this makes a lot of sense to me. it was really after i went to grad school, i worked for a few years, went to grad school in a highly politicized environment and that's when i became much more kind of systematic about my political thought. >> where was the grad school? >> at first i went to temple university in philadelphia for a master's degree in english with a concentration in creative writing, and it was a great experience. this was the late '80s. i started in '88 and it was the beginning of what became known as political correctness, where it was just very difficult to get through any casual conversation without politics being front and center, and i knew i was not a conservative in terms literary culture, or cultural studies and things like that, and i also knew that i was not a left-winger, i mean, this is, again, in the late '80s, after i got my master's i went to the state university of n
he went to rutgers college in, rutgers university in new jersey, as did i.tarted sending it home to me, and i started reading it in high school, and i was like wow this makes a lot of sense to me. it was really after i went to grad school, i worked for a few years, went to grad school in a highly politicized environment and that's when i became much more kind of systematic about my political thought. >> where was the grad school? >> at first i went to temple university in...
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while you're busy discussing how to screw people and privatized medicare on a list of rutgers university professor susan feinberg watched ryan and his companions sit two bottles of outrageously priced piano off after much fanfare from the restaurant's waitstaff the irony of ryan joins us and actually is where he spends his days on the hill promoting cuts to programs that support seniors and who are simply too much for so she did something about it joining me now to share the details of the event that unfolded during that what was supposed to be a quiet birthday dinner with her husband is economics professor susan feinberg professor welcome thanks so much for having me thank you for joining us would you call yourself it well actually even before we get to that tell us what happened just give us the the the snapshot of what happened when you were there. well we were sitting at a table and after about i guess where the minutes or so congressman ryan came in with two companion who we didn't recognize and one of the companions very loudly ordered a wine and he ordered it by number from the wi
while you're busy discussing how to screw people and privatized medicare on a list of rutgers university professor susan feinberg watched ryan and his companions sit two bottles of outrageously priced piano off after much fanfare from the restaurant's waitstaff the irony of ryan joins us and actually is where he spends his days on the hill promoting cuts to programs that support seniors and who are simply too much for so she did something about it joining me now to share the details of the...
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Jul 14, 2011
07/11
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week at lack land air force base in san antonio to begin studying english and head to alabama's fort rutgersroud to pave the way for equal rights in native afghanistan where women are still struggling with the basic rights after the fall of the taliban. now, the rise of freedom. we have been falling the rebuilding of the world trade center site for months. we are seeing amazing progress, especially at the national 9/11 memorial and museum. it will include steel beams from the original world trade center. but even if you can't get to new york, you may still be able to see a piece of the twin towers in person. ♪ ♪ >> a forklift operator carefully places an 8500-pound piece of the twin towers on to the back of a truck. >> we're going to be taking the steel down to brooklyn, new jersey. >> travel properly. >> somber scenes like this happening several times a week at new york's jfk airport. teams from towns across america taking home world trade center steel for their own 9/11 memorials. >> present arms. >> treating it with the same respect they would give any other fallen hero. >> people come ou
week at lack land air force base in san antonio to begin studying english and head to alabama's fort rutgersroud to pave the way for equal rights in native afghanistan where women are still struggling with the basic rights after the fall of the taliban. now, the rise of freedom. we have been falling the rebuilding of the world trade center site for months. we are seeing amazing progress, especially at the national 9/11 memorial and museum. it will include steel beams from the original world...
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Jul 14, 2011
07/11
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. >>> you may remember eric la grand, the rutgers football star paralyzed in a game last fall.eeted two photos of himself standing up during therapy. he tweeted the words, standing tall, we can't fall. >>> and tour de france, cavendish took the 11th stage. all eyes are on defending champ alberto contador of spain. he's been dealing with swelling in his right knee. >>> and the americans are in the final. they they won yesterday 3-1. now they face japan. three members of the u.s. team will join us in about an hour on "american morning." right now we'll bring in pablo torre. reporter for "sports illustrated." the team heading into the world cup finals. tell us how tough an opponent japan is likely to be. >> there's no question the u.s. could beat any team in the world right now, ali. japan they haven't lost to in 25 games. the u.s. has a wombach and hope solo. >> while we're all watching soccer we might as well call it football because we don't have football in the united states. steelers linebacker james harrison has a mouthful to say about nfl commissioner roger goodell. calling
. >>> you may remember eric la grand, the rutgers football star paralyzed in a game last fall.eeted two photos of himself standing up during therapy. he tweeted the words, standing tall, we can't fall. >>> and tour de france, cavendish took the 11th stage. all eyes are on defending champ alberto contador of spain. he's been dealing with swelling in his right knee. >>> and the americans are in the final. they they won yesterday 3-1. now they face japan. three members...
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Jul 27, 2011
07/11
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he was a rutgers student and he was close to graduating. you know, he was one of the wonder kids that make it out of urban communities, and here he was just about to make it out. >> gawande: brenner's immediate response was to get involved in police reform. he thought if he could get a hold of crime statistics he could map hotspots, the places where good policing would make a difference. but the department wasn't interested in helping a local doctor. so he went to another place, one he knew well-- the hospital. there, buried in billing records from the er, where violent assaults get treated, he found crime patterns. as he crunched the hospital data, brenner discovered something totally unexpected-- other kinds of hotspots. >> it became clear that there were hotspots of everything. there were hotspots by disease, hotspots by patient. there were certain patients who had been, over and over and over, going to the emergency room and hospital too much. there were hotspots by zip code and by neighborhood. so you sit and begin to look through the
he was a rutgers student and he was close to graduating. you know, he was one of the wonder kids that make it out of urban communities, and here he was just about to make it out. >> gawande: brenner's immediate response was to get involved in police reform. he thought if he could get a hold of crime statistics he could map hotspots, the places where good policing would make a difference. but the department wasn't interested in helping a local doctor. so he went to another place, one he...
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Jul 2, 2011
07/11
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english and american studies at northwestern university, barnard college, new york university and rutgers, and then in 1989 he moved to the city university of new york, and he is now distinguished professor of english and american studies at the ph.d. program in english at the graduate center. he's a widely published author, and his books have been recognized with awards including the bancroft prize and the ambassador book award. he was also the finalist for the national book critics' circle award. he was the editor for six books and is the author of "waking giant: america in the age of jackson," "john brown: abolitionist, the man who ceded civil rights." john brown also a connecticutan as stowe is, so you are already seeing some overlaps here. author of "wallet whitman's -- walt whitman's america," a book with the straightforward title, "walt whitman." he's the author of beneath the american renaissance in the age of emerson and melville, and i certainly found that that s word, subversive, came up quite a bit in his analysis of "uncle tom's cabin "and its impact. and david is the author
english and american studies at northwestern university, barnard college, new york university and rutgers, and then in 1989 he moved to the city university of new york, and he is now distinguished professor of english and american studies at the ph.d. program in english at the graduate center. he's a widely published author, and his books have been recognized with awards including the bancroft prize and the ambassador book award. he was also the finalist for the national book critics' circle...
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Jul 3, 2011
07/11
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english and american studies at northwestern university and barnard college, new york university and rutgers in 1989 he moved to the city university of new york and is now a distinguished professor of english and american studies at the ph.d. program in english at the graduate center. he's in a widely published of reckoned books have been recognized with awards including the bancroft prize and the ambassador book award. he was also a finalist for the national book critics circle award and the editor for six books and is the author of tweaking the giant american in the age of jackson, john brown, al-awja nist the man who killed slavery sparked the civil war and seated civil-rights. john brown also connecticut as stowe so you see overlaps year. author of walt whitman, a cultural biography, e-book with a straightforward title, walt whitman. he's the author of believe the american renaissance the imagination and the age of emmerson and nels will and i found that that word subversives came up quite a bit in his analysis of ongoing tom's cabin and its impact and to david is the author of fifa fict
english and american studies at northwestern university and barnard college, new york university and rutgers in 1989 he moved to the city university of new york and is now a distinguished professor of english and american studies at the ph.d. program in english at the graduate center. he's in a widely published of reckoned books have been recognized with awards including the bancroft prize and the ambassador book award. he was also a finalist for the national book critics circle award and the...
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Jul 23, 2011
07/11
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. >> yes, my name is leslie, i'm a high school teacher and graduate student at rutgers university. fantastic panel and enjoying it tremendously. >> pull the mic up a little bit. >> malcolm x was in harlem in the 1940s, and manning marable introduces the fact that during his time this '40s he was around the formation and experimentation of modern jazz. did malcolm -- that malcolm was in contact with charlie parker, felonious monk and dizzy gillespie. and this music is, in many ways, music of resistance and rebellion and race. i was wondering if you could talk a little bit, because this was something i was not aware of, how jazz was influential to malcolm's life. >> one of the great thing about the book is that manning marable argues that the jazz he listened to as a young man, and he even said that malcolm perform inside a jazz club as jack carlton as a drummer, and, um, that they were reflected in the his cadence and his speech, right? so in addition to the fact that malcolm being around all these big time musicians, some of whom he sold marijuana to, um, he's really influenced by,
. >> yes, my name is leslie, i'm a high school teacher and graduate student at rutgers university. fantastic panel and enjoying it tremendously. >> pull the mic up a little bit. >> malcolm x was in harlem in the 1940s, and manning marable introduces the fact that during his time this '40s he was around the formation and experimentation of modern jazz. did malcolm -- that malcolm was in contact with charlie parker, felonious monk and dizzy gillespie. and this music is, in many...
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Jul 26, 2011
07/11
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don imus called the rutgers university women's basketball team quote, nappy headed hos. dr. laura schlesinger used the "n" word. you also have the fact -- sorry, pete? >> i do a radio show for three hours a day on sirius xm like glenn beck and howard stern. the difference is, i'm also a comedian. i know when i'm entertaining. but entertainers say really outrageous things to get people to talk about them. that's what we're doing right now. glenn beck needs us to do this for his new transition. that's what we're doing. but the difference of course is public fascination versus public interest. what i do, i would argue, is public interest. that is entertaining for some people like me. >> sure. but i do want to point out, though, roland, this goes to you, glenn beck has said this but he also founded and supports an organization that has camps in several states, so should he be attacking a camp like this? >> first of all, he should ask himself will he call his own camp that. there is a clear line of demarcation, randi, when it comes to people like howard stern, when it comes to sh
don imus called the rutgers university women's basketball team quote, nappy headed hos. dr. laura schlesinger used the "n" word. you also have the fact -- sorry, pete? >> i do a radio show for three hours a day on sirius xm like glenn beck and howard stern. the difference is, i'm also a comedian. i know when i'm entertaining. but entertainers say really outrageous things to get people to talk about them. that's what we're doing right now. glenn beck needs us to do this for his...
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Jul 21, 2011
07/11
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rutgers paid snooki $32,000 for one speech. lot of people make in a year to come and talk to their students. tonight, she would pull out all the stops. she started with makeup, including her trick of blush to make her boobies look even bigger. bestseller. when i think of my snooki with hair all poofed up, with nowhere to go, it hurts my heart. >> even though we are tiny bitches, i don't give a [ bleep ]. i will attack you just like a squirrel monkey. >> as snooki responded on her twitter page, she wrote, everybody is asking me about mista anderstand cooper. he called me freakishly tan and i'm lucky? right on, little snooki, right on. they are depriving me of my snooki. shut up! jersey snore. >> if i want to have a beer, i'm allowed to have a beer. this isn't like law school. this is a t-shirt shop. tonight is the night, the party, get it all out, freaking do everything that you can. you know, have sex with an old man and steal a plant and then get arrested and then do whatever. >>> well done, anderstand. we'll be right back. sa
rutgers paid snooki $32,000 for one speech. lot of people make in a year to come and talk to their students. tonight, she would pull out all the stops. she started with makeup, including her trick of blush to make her boobies look even bigger. bestseller. when i think of my snooki with hair all poofed up, with nowhere to go, it hurts my heart. >> even though we are tiny bitches, i don't give a [ bleep ]. i will attack you just like a squirrel monkey. >> as snooki responded on her...
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Jul 3, 2011
07/11
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i did a story on young elected officials when there had been some new statistics released by rutgersrsity. in doing research for that story, one thing i noticed was there were a lot of anomaly pieces. the 18-year-old mayor, the 20- year-old state legislator. there was nothing there really tied them together. who are they? what impact do they have? what impact did have one policy and contact? host: how did you choose the age 35 docs -- 35? guest: it seemed to be the best age. 30 seems a bit too young, and 40 was too all encompassing. i interviewed people who were not just 35 and under now, but those who started under 35 who are now over 35, so i looked at a very broad historical perspective including someone who was first elected to the l.a. city council in 1953. host: give us a flavor of who these people are. do spoke to 90 people. who are they? where are they from? guest: point they are from all over. i spoke to people from new jersey, oregon, alaska, kansas, oklahoma, massachusetts, florida, and every other state in between. a wide range of offices, a lot of local town councils, sc
i did a story on young elected officials when there had been some new statistics released by rutgersrsity. in doing research for that story, one thing i noticed was there were a lot of anomaly pieces. the 18-year-old mayor, the 20- year-old state legislator. there was nothing there really tied them together. who are they? what impact do they have? what impact did have one policy and contact? host: how did you choose the age 35 docs -- 35? guest: it seemed to be the best age. 30 seems a bit too...
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Jul 16, 2011
07/11
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rutger sleeves and join your neighbor in the frontline. again, thank you for the hearing today and i'm ready to answer any questions from day one of july 1, working with exxon, epa and anyone else the work it does to see we find out what happened and we fixed the problem and three, it never happens again. thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, congressman rehberg. i'd like to announce that the third panel will be testifying next thursday as we expect a lot of those on the floor here varies in the next hour. so i apologize for that, but it is to work better if we do that and i apologize if it inconveniences anyone. i know it probably does. next time, please welcome congresswoman jackie speier to deliver her testimony. >> thank you, ranking member rash or the opportunity to speak to you. let me say at the outset that i am thrilled that this committee is going to move swiftly to address this issue. i have a couple of concerns i will address this morning. but at the outset, let me say that before september 9, i knew very little about this issu
rutger sleeves and join your neighbor in the frontline. again, thank you for the hearing today and i'm ready to answer any questions from day one of july 1, working with exxon, epa and anyone else the work it does to see we find out what happened and we fixed the problem and three, it never happens again. thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, congressman rehberg. i'd like to announce that the third panel will be testifying next thursday as we expect a lot of those on the floor here...