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Jul 2, 2015
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of the kenan flagler undergraduate business school. [applause] in addition, i am also a product of unc paths school of journalism and mass communicationsis soon to be rebranded, unc's school of media and journalism which i think is a fantastic moment of change for the school. it has been a pleasure to be back on campus this weekend and to be welcomed by chancellor full with a hospitality that we -- can be found nowhere else on earth. you all have been mighty kind. [laughter] mr. kilar: it must be said that this year, rather than choosing from any number of nobel prize laureates or political luminaries to be your commencement speaker, you have chosen me, the guy best known for making it easier to watch recent episodes of "south park" and "family guy." [laughter] mr. kilar: assuming there were no jedi mind tricks involved, it is clear to me that you have moxie. these things will serve you very well in life. i would like to share my story with you this morning. i share it in the hope that you may find some benefits. it is a story of dreams, failure and loss. perseverance and one unfortunate run-in with the authorities in southern californ
of the kenan flagler undergraduate business school. [applause] in addition, i am also a product of unc paths school of journalism and mass communicationsis soon to be rebranded, unc's school of media and journalism which i think is a fantastic moment of change for the school. it has been a pleasure to be back on campus this weekend and to be welcomed by chancellor full with a hospitality that we -- can be found nowhere else on earth. you all have been mighty kind. [laughter] mr. kilar: it must...
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Jul 25, 2015
07/15
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now as the director of the journalism school i am thrilled that we have our students go do these tripsalways worry about certain concerns so i am going to ask you all about that. when you get off the plane and you get into another country that you have only read about how do you feel? what takes place in your mind? i would say at first i was a little lost cause i don't know the language, i don't know arabic as much. and just trying to understand and get around you get a hang of it after a while. were people engaging? or were they standoffish? how did it come across? i think people were engaging. if i asked them a question like oh where do i go? they would answer. and oman, how did it look in terms of economics? poor country? rich country? how did it look to you? marcella? it depends because if you go into the capital muscat, everything is beautiful it's new it's really nice but then you go into the villages and we went to nizwan we went into a village that was being built and it does look a little poor but people are very friendly. and when it came time to actually drill down and do wh
now as the director of the journalism school i am thrilled that we have our students go do these tripsalways worry about certain concerns so i am going to ask you all about that. when you get off the plane and you get into another country that you have only read about how do you feel? what takes place in your mind? i would say at first i was a little lost cause i don't know the language, i don't know arabic as much. and just trying to understand and get around you get a hang of it after a...
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Jul 2, 2015
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of the undergraduate business school. in addition, i am also a product of unc's school of journalism and mass communication. soon to be rebranded unc school of media and journalism, which i think is a fantastic moment of change for the school. it has been an absolute pleasure to be back on campus this weekend and to be welcomed by the chancellor with the southern hospitality that can be found nowhere else on earth. y'all have been mighty kind. [laughter] jason: it must be said that this year, rather than choosing from any number of nobel prize laureates or political luminaries to be your commencement speaker, you have chosen me, by guy best known for making it easier to watch recent episodes of "south park" and nd "family guy." [laughter] [applause] jason: assuming that there were no jedi mind tricks involved, it occurs to me that you have chutzpah and moxie. these two things will serve you very well in life. i like to share with you my story this morning. i share it with you in hopes that you may find some benefit. it is a story of dreams, failure, loss, perseverance, and one unfortunate run-in with the aut
of the undergraduate business school. in addition, i am also a product of unc's school of journalism and mass communication. soon to be rebranded unc school of media and journalism, which i think is a fantastic moment of change for the school. it has been an absolute pleasure to be back on campus this weekend and to be welcomed by the chancellor with the southern hospitality that can be found nowhere else on earth. y'all have been mighty kind. [laughter] jason: it must be said that this year,...
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Jul 19, 2015
07/15
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the discussion is moderated by todd robbins the teachers at the graduate school of journalism he's a former housing organizer and has been economist and a staff writer at the voice the dalia news and the observer and has written many on urban issues. we will read followed by a discussion but the panelist and then we've got time for questions like i said so please join me in welcoming all of these people to the people. [applause] >> thank you for coming into the greenlight bookstore. in case you don't know who's who i'm going to do a quick reading for you tonight and pick up a little bit about partway through the book actually segues and it leaves in the founder of the association who was one of the first in manhattan and then also between his story and the modern-day lawsuit lawsuits when the department of justice got involved so we are picking up the history of paul and michael and this is when they stick out in the '90s and about in the '90s and that they would be with others of course. if they saw a young looking% of the time they would go to them and get them to sign-up sign up f
the discussion is moderated by todd robbins the teachers at the graduate school of journalism he's a former housing organizer and has been economist and a staff writer at the voice the dalia news and the observer and has written many on urban issues. we will read followed by a discussion but the panelist and then we've got time for questions like i said so please join me in welcoming all of these people to the people. [applause] >> thank you for coming into the greenlight bookstore. in...
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Jul 25, 2015
07/15
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[applause] who teaches at the cueny graduate school of journalism. he is a former housing organizer and a magazine editor and has been a staff writer at the voice, the daily news and the observer and has written many highly-acclaimed stories on political corruption. otis will read from the book followed by a discussion from the panelists and we'll have time for questions as i said, so please join me in welcoming all these lovely people to the stage. [applause] >> so good evening, everyone, thank you very much for coming. thank you to green light bookstore for hosting us and for c-span for coming to cover this. in case you don't know who's who, that's tom robbins that's captain washington and that is michael marshall. so i'm going to do a quick reading for you tonight, and i'm going to punning up about -- pick up about partway through the book, and the book segways through two parts of the vulcan's history and it weaves in the story of the founder of the association, wesley williams, who was the first in manhattan, and how he kind of found his way int
[applause] who teaches at the cueny graduate school of journalism. he is a former housing organizer and a magazine editor and has been a staff writer at the voice, the daily news and the observer and has written many highly-acclaimed stories on political corruption. otis will read from the book followed by a discussion from the panelists and we'll have time for questions as i said, so please join me in welcoming all these lovely people to the stage. [applause] >> so good evening,...
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Jul 4, 2015
07/15
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. >> your dad was a great journalist, frank gibney, news magazine guy, kind of, you know, old school journalism. he influenced your thinking about how to put these kinds of stories -- i was thinking, you know, what might have been an influence for you and i kind of come to your dad's life --. >> well, he was a huge influence for me, though he was, i think, disappointed that i didn't go into the family business, into the print. >> right. >> and he didn't really understand --. >> you have a brother in journalism. >> i do. i have two brothers in journalism. he didn't really understand the movie thing. but nevertheless, he had a sense of curiosity about the world. >> right. >> and also his notorious penchant for -- you know, it's told that if you want to prosper, you suck up and kick down. he was good at sucking down and kicking up, which was not a very good career path strategy. >> that would be a good name for a documentary. "sucking down and kicking up: the frank gibney story." >> right, that's right. >> you know what, if he were with us and he saw what you did with scientology, he would say tha
. >> your dad was a great journalist, frank gibney, news magazine guy, kind of, you know, old school journalism. he influenced your thinking about how to put these kinds of stories -- i was thinking, you know, what might have been an influence for you and i kind of come to your dad's life --. >> well, he was a huge influence for me, though he was, i think, disappointed that i didn't go into the family business, into the print. >> right. >> and he didn't really understand...
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Jul 27, 2015
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of room for doubt. >> reporter: columbia journalism school professor bruce shapiro says the internet magnifies the consequencesmanipulated images. >> powerful images of current events, of controversies, of abuses have been an important driver of social change and public policy. if the public, if the news consuming, image consuming, picture drenched public loses confidence in the ability of photographers to tell the truth in a fundamental way, then the game is up. >> this is pbs newshour weekend, sunday. >> sreenivasan: the recent 20% drop in crude oil prices might be saving you money at the gas pump, but it's now prompting job layoffs by u.s. energy companies. joining me now via skype from houston, is lynn cook of the wall street journal. captioning sponsored by wnet >> how bad is it for the energy industry? >> it's pretty bad because energy companies were expecting a rebound in the oil price. they thought it would go from 60 to 70 or $80 during the second half of the year and it's now dropped below $50 a barrel. so companies are having to figure out what do they have to do to weather this, not just this year
of room for doubt. >> reporter: columbia journalism school professor bruce shapiro says the internet magnifies the consequencesmanipulated images. >> powerful images of current events, of controversies, of abuses have been an important driver of social change and public policy. if the public, if the news consuming, image consuming, picture drenched public loses confidence in the ability of photographers to tell the truth in a fundamental way, then the game is up. >> this is...
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Jul 4, 2015
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but "the new york times" model of a journalism in that which is taught in our schools is you tried to compensate for a personal bias dash bias to be driven because of the explosion of social media the mix between fact based journalism is disappearing and you are entitled to your own opinion beaver not entitled to your own fax but today it seems that you are then you get a highly polarized society with the other side of journalism per car really want to explore that problem it is very hard. i still believe that knowing you will not get their asking a series of questions that will drive you to the fact but my first foray with almost anything almost always contain errors and you have to keep going back what you learn the first of the second for the third time as the story evolves in changes especially with the intelligence world you get a little bit of information then you find out this cia had the aluminum tube from jordan now they are examining that. then the president is told there is high confidence for the air -- iranian centrifuge program then you find out there is a debate whether
but "the new york times" model of a journalism in that which is taught in our schools is you tried to compensate for a personal bias dash bias to be driven because of the explosion of social media the mix between fact based journalism is disappearing and you are entitled to your own opinion beaver not entitled to your own fax but today it seems that you are then you get a highly polarized society with the other side of journalism per car really want to explore that problem it is very...
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Jul 3, 2015
07/15
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"the new york times" model of journalism, "the washington post" model of journalism and journalism which was taught in our schools a long time you try to compensate for whatever personal bias you may have and driven by the facts by your reporting, by what you're finding out. because of the explosion of social media in part but not totally are the mix between opinion journalism and fact-based journalism pretty much all blended together and it is disappearing. and people who, we used to say you're entitled to your own opinion, you're not entitled to your own facts. today you seem to be entitled to your own facts as well. and then you just get a highly polarized society and a politicized society politicized journalism. another reason i wrote the book because i really want to explore that problem and look what happened at "the new york times." it is very, very hard. i still believe that striving for objectivity, knowing that you're not going to get there, that you ask a series of questions and editors ask you about them, the same questions will drive you towards the facts. but the most important thing about journalis
"the new york times" model of journalism, "the washington post" model of journalism and journalism which was taught in our schools a long time you try to compensate for whatever personal bias you may have and driven by the facts by your reporting, by what you're finding out. because of the explosion of social media in part but not totally are the mix between opinion journalism and fact-based journalism pretty much all blended together and it is disappearing. and people who,...
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Jul 2, 2015
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journalism school. writing the history of the mp3.while i was there my masters thesis, i decided to track down the centerpiece of the book. as i said there was a lot of people there who helped me improve my pros and writing style. but i. but i guess that is for the reader to judge. clicks it sounds good. >> the new york times. the new yorker. yeah. clicks about a thousand words or excerpts. clicks have not read your book yet. you shed a little light on what you discussed clicks the fourth character in the book is a guy named douglas who filed the predecessor a gigantic torrent site. he founded in 2,004. a university student majoring in computer science. originally it was like a site that they guy the guy was like ha ha, this would be fun. most of the recorded history and high fidelity recording standards. and this created a lot of demand for him. they used to complain about music as a site filled up opening up a new vertical and audiobook. somebody posted the 104 compact disc set collection of the british comedian stephen fry reading
journalism school. writing the history of the mp3.while i was there my masters thesis, i decided to track down the centerpiece of the book. as i said there was a lot of people there who helped me improve my pros and writing style. but i. but i guess that is for the reader to judge. clicks it sounds good. >> the new york times. the new yorker. yeah. clicks about a thousand words or excerpts. clicks have not read your book yet. you shed a little light on what you discussed clicks the fourth...
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Jul 9, 2015
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of delaware. the school is raising tuition in the up coming year. instate television will go up 1.5%. out of state, 2. >>> "wall street journal" reports apple is betting its next iphone is the next big thing. they are ordered 85 to 90 million. it's 20 million more than prior version and there could be a new color. >>> an odd day on wall street. market suffered major losses because of a computer glitch. this morning they are pointing to a higher open. >>> office space and retail shops and restaurants planned for newark, delaware, built at the site of the old avon products distribution. council will vote to rezone the property from industrial to commercial use. >> a family kidnapped from their own home down south. the kidnappers forced the husband to rob a bank where he works. >> a gator is pulled from a new jersey river when "action news" continues. it's a delicious choice you can feel good sipping. discover the goodness of dunkin's new smoothies today. america runs on dunkin'. hey, honey. day dreaming? [laughing] sorry. about being at the beach? uh... yeah. in the caribbean? that's odd... at our very own beach house? how do y
of delaware. the school is raising tuition in the up coming year. instate television will go up 1.5%. out of state, 2. >>> "wall street journal" reports apple is betting its next iphone is the next big thing. they are ordered 85 to 90 million. it's 20 million more than prior version and there could be a new color. >>> an odd day on wall street. market suffered major losses because of a computer glitch. this morning they are pointing to a higher open. >>>...
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Jul 4, 2015
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of broadcast journalism freshman student at northwest university. >> she is there at northwestern? >> they send it in. they are probably watching it. >> journalism schools are filled all across america and that's because a lot of people love the system. it looked to tell the story and they want to get the truth. what i would recommend for journalism students today is you have to learn something else. you have to have a specialty so if you have a chance to do a minor in something you care about like biotechnology or sports i really think what will set people apart is having a little bit of a specialty in something in addition to covering general news. there are a lot of new opportunities in the media but one of things that's happening is media gets it easier to produce and a lot of people will do it for free. you have to think about how are you going to make a living and you have to be a little bit practical so you can learn how to write. that's going to be one of the most important things. a broadcast journalist needs to learn how to write. when i was in journalism school we all fail their first writing exam. we ended up doing well but writing is your m
of broadcast journalism freshman student at northwest university. >> she is there at northwestern? >> they send it in. they are probably watching it. >> journalism schools are filled all across america and that's because a lot of people love the system. it looked to tell the story and they want to get the truth. what i would recommend for journalism students today is you have to learn something else. you have to have a specialty so if you have a chance to do a minor in...
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Jul 11, 2015
07/15
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school. i loved all classes. but i think if i had to pick one today, i love the history of journalism class. > really? >> yeah. great professor at university of southern colorado. now uc pueblo. >> i loved school. >> i took a course in slovic lit. i read a lot of russian lit. >> i know you know, right? >> then you married a russian. >> then he found a russian wife. >> see? you're a stalker, too. >> my russian is quite good. >> is that it? do you want me to go to the next one? >> coming up. >> you're silly. oh, you mean this. >>> coming up, donald trump isn't ruling out running as a third party candidate. for the 2016 presidential race. we discuss next.ca ndidate. for the 2016 presidential race. we discuss next. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. if you're running a business legalzoom has your back. over the last 10 years we've helped one million business owners get started. visit legalzoom today for the legal help you need to start and run your business. legalzoo
school. i loved all classes. but i think if i had to pick one today, i love the history of journalism class. > really? >> yeah. great professor at university of southern colorado. now uc pueblo. >> i loved school. >> i took a course in slovic lit. i read a lot of russian lit. >> i know you know, right? >> then you married a russian. >> then he found a russian wife. >> see? you're a stalker, too. >> my russian is quite good. >> is that it?...
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Jul 26, 2015
07/15
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. >> the doctor, cardiologist at john hopkins school of medicine in baltimore published the definitive studo this in 2005 in the new england journal. >> we call it broken heart syndrome. we saw that people were coming in with sudden onset on heart failure after being subjected to emotionsal traum a. the first few people that we saw was usually the death of a loved one. >> he estimates 10,000 americans may experience it every year. >> one thing that happens is the body produces a large amount of stress hormones like adrenaline. and when produced in large amounts it can be toxic to the heart. if the whole heart is not squeezing very well. >> believe it or not you can see a broken heart on an ultrasound. the normal heart on the right is pumping fine. the one on the left is lagging behind. >> while it's not squeezing like this, you have very low pressure and congestive heart failure. you could die from this, absolutely. >> the condition is treatable. usually patients recover but sometimes not. there's no way to know if the weisses suffered broken heart syndrome. but the doctor wouldn't be surprised. >> there's other less romantic reas
. >> the doctor, cardiologist at john hopkins school of medicine in baltimore published the definitive studo this in 2005 in the new england journal. >> we call it broken heart syndrome. we saw that people were coming in with sudden onset on heart failure after being subjected to emotionsal traum a. the first few people that we saw was usually the death of a loved one. >> he estimates 10,000 americans may experience it every year. >> one thing that happens is the body...
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Jul 31, 2015
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of school choice in education voucher programs. the godfather of school vouchers is involved. on the next "washington journal" douglas holds aiken on it a new report published in health care. we give comfort -- conservation voters president answers questions about the epa's clean power won't -- rules. later, falling crude oil prices and what they mean for the u.s.. washington journal airlift -- air's life every morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern on c-span. -- live every morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern on c-span. up next, lawmakers reviewing claims against retaliation against whistleblowers. we will hear from doctors who talk about their experiences. from the senate military construction and veterans affairs subcommittee mrs. an hour and a half -- this is an hour and a half. >> thank you all for being here. the american people rightly expect our veterans to receive the best health care in america, but the system designed to provide it is failing. -- is failing. the reason we know about the se failures is because of people we are going to year from like dr. catherine mitchell. dr. mitchell is going to tell us about the
of school choice in education voucher programs. the godfather of school vouchers is involved. on the next "washington journal" douglas holds aiken on it a new report published in health care. we give comfort -- conservation voters president answers questions about the epa's clean power won't -- rules. later, falling crude oil prices and what they mean for the u.s.. washington journal airlift -- air's life every morning at 7:00 a.m. eastern on c-span. -- live every morning at 7:00 a.m....
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Jul 25, 2015
07/15
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his busboys, had a lot of restaurants, that story was not broken by the san francisco chronicle, the police india brushed it under the rug. it was broken by at high school journalism class. they had not attended columbia journalism school. it is against journalistic practice. the report of facts that are unpleasant about model immigrant so he is bringing in bus boys, janitors and concubines entered the age 1 be. there is one category of how it is utter fraud. other category:hot even the ones doing the computer programming work, they're not stars, they doing standard computer programming work, unfortunately americans could do the same work but they want to be paid. the way the h1b vis the works is it is tied to a particular employer. if you come to work for mark zuckerberg and paypal gives you a better offer you can't leave without risking losing your visa, so you are tied to a particular employer. it is what is known in the law as indentured servitude which this country abolished 100 years ago. now the rich are bringing it back. we keep telling college students you got to major in one of the stem seals science, technology engineering, math the stem graft, american
his busboys, had a lot of restaurants, that story was not broken by the san francisco chronicle, the police india brushed it under the rug. it was broken by at high school journalism class. they had not attended columbia journalism school. it is against journalistic practice. the report of facts that are unpleasant about model immigrant so he is bringing in bus boys, janitors and concubines entered the age 1 be. there is one category of how it is utter fraud. other category:hot even the ones...
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Jul 8, 2015
07/15
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KRON
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putt to diabetes occurred the new research can be found in the journal of medical surgery. >> pam: schoolsideo and less implants including hand out further class's turn the program also showed how to what joe for additional communication at age including 60 loss. -- sexting laws. >> pam: their redness is up with all the sports next! >> gary: nonetheless as the all saint john lee was a good soldier. the warriors sent to the tip a team in need of a veteran. the box and boston celtics the warriors will get under the luxury tax by doing that. there will never return gerald wallace accurate it will be interesting to see if they keep them. >> gary: lee thinks the bay area for what has been the great years of his life. he banks this stance. and his team. --h et--he thanks his team and his fans >> gary:" i love you bro!" >> gary: blocking david lee shot! >> gary:years ago and they became the best of friends. >> gary: it the warriors keep wallace they will be under the $100 million payroll. if they want to do that in regards to cut wallace to they can still do that people always ask these owners th
putt to diabetes occurred the new research can be found in the journal of medical surgery. >> pam: schoolsideo and less implants including hand out further class's turn the program also showed how to what joe for additional communication at age including 60 loss. -- sexting laws. >> pam: their redness is up with all the sports next! >> gary: nonetheless as the all saint john lee was a good soldier. the warriors sent to the tip a team in need of a veteran. the box and boston...
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Jul 31, 2015
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he did not stop tinkering with this idea of school vouchers when it happened. in an interview with the journal education next in 2003 when he was 90 years old he first offered up the idea of the partial voucher. he said one of let them spend part of a voucher for math in one place in for english or science another. why should schooling have to be in one building. why can't a student take some lessons at home, especially now the availability of the internet. he was incredible he forward thinking. that brings us to the idea of the education savings which is brought his idea the partial voucher to life. we will hear a lot today about how they work. education savings accounts was allowed heirs to direct every single dollar of their child's education to not just a single private school choice but to multiple services and products . representing the next generation of school choice. esa's are a representation of that model he put forward in 1955 and one of the most promising ways forward for school choice. before and she's our panelists i should note it is ironic that after today's events to honor m
he did not stop tinkering with this idea of school vouchers when it happened. in an interview with the journal education next in 2003 when he was 90 years old he first offered up the idea of the partial voucher. he said one of let them spend part of a voucher for math in one place in for english or science another. why should schooling have to be in one building. why can't a student take some lessons at home, especially now the availability of the internet. he was incredible he forward...
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Jul 18, 2015
07/15
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school education. she went to the university of texas at austin and has a ba in history and ba in journalism. she married lyndon johnson at the age of 21 years old and had two daughters. she ran his congressional office . she purchased and managed an austin radio station and she owned and managed large ranching properties. lady bird became first lady when she was 50 years old. she was first lady for six years. she died at age 94 years old and is buried at the lbj ranch in texas. lbj went into the navy in 1941-1942. while he was in the navy lady bird ran his congressional office. she answered correspondence, she coped with political problems, she gave especially attention to constituents in washington who visited his office. lady bird johnson inherited from her mother a small radio station in austin, texas. it was in terrible financial condition, close to bankruptcy. she took over that station, she hired all new on-air staff, she found commercial sponsors, she kept the financial accounts, she cleaned up the building itself. she served as the manager and then chairman. this became a media congl
school education. she went to the university of texas at austin and has a ba in history and ba in journalism. she married lyndon johnson at the age of 21 years old and had two daughters. she ran his congressional office . she purchased and managed an austin radio station and she owned and managed large ranching properties. lady bird became first lady when she was 50 years old. she was first lady for six years. she died at age 94 years old and is buried at the lbj ranch in texas. lbj went into...
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Jul 3, 2015
07/15
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i had written in high school and college and had written advertising and academic essays and journalism. i had a lot ofriting. i mean, i was comfortable with the act not this active being a ghost. it was entirely new. i went i went to college and measured in english went to graduate school got an ma in english. all that collegiate training did not prepare me for being a ghost writer. i had never contemplated or taken a course in it. the only two books that i really had in my consciousness one was the autobiography of billie holiday, billie holiday, the lady who sings the the blues which i loved his young boy. i knew that that was was written by a ghostwriter you a ghostwriter you i remember i read the book where i was 12 or 13. it had on the cover as told to william dusty. dusty. i remember asking my father who is this guy. my father said his pole with a guy who actually wrote the book. i said no the book was written but holiday. he goes, it's in her voice and she is talking to you. i remember my father saying well, that saying, well that is what he sort of does for her. she is giving you the idea that
i had written in high school and college and had written advertising and academic essays and journalism. i had a lot ofriting. i mean, i was comfortable with the act not this active being a ghost. it was entirely new. i went i went to college and measured in english went to graduate school got an ma in english. all that collegiate training did not prepare me for being a ghost writer. i had never contemplated or taken a course in it. the only two books that i really had in my consciousness one...
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Jul 2, 2015
07/15
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log reviewed together, ring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journal. he did a good job of building consensus including everybody. i see some of the same traits debate. >> the fact he doesn't publicly smoke. >> is much more gray hair than he did back in law school. quite a bit of continuity between who he was back then and how he has evolved as a political leader says. >> we always start with the news. the great michael grunwald popped up a story on political. he had a draft copy of the tpp intellectual property chapter, headlines leaked. what is in obama's trade deal? is the white house going to back for big pharma? a reason draft of the trans-pacific partnership free trade deal would give u.s. pharmaceutical firms unprecedented protections against competition from cheaper generic drugs, possibly transcending the patent protections in u.s. law. why are you carrying water for big pharma? >> first we don't comment on supposedly leaked a draft so i don't know what document he has. but let me address the substance of the issue which is when it comes to in
log reviewed together, ring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journal. he did a good job of building consensus including everybody. i see some of the same traits debate. >> the fact he doesn't publicly smoke. >> is much more gray hair than he did back in law school. quite a bit of continuity between who he was back then and how he has evolved as a political leader says. >> we always start with the news. the...
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because he was trying to bring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journal. he did a very good job of building consensus and including everybody. i see i see some of those same traits today. >> anything different besides the fact that he doesn't publicly smoke? >> he has much more gray hair than he did then. but he really is i think quite a bit of continuity from who he was back then to how he has evolved as a political leader cents. >> will start with the news. they popped up a story that he deemed a brass copy of the tcp intellectual property his headline leaked. is the white house going to back bat? what would the free trade deal give pharmaceutical firms protection from cheaper generic drugs? why are you carrying water for a big farmer? >> we don't comment on supposedly leaked drafts. i don't know which document he has. let me address the substance of the issue which is, when it comes to those involving pharmaceutical products, our view is on one hand we want to incentivize the development and research of life treatments. most of that is done by american
because he was trying to bring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journal. he did a very good job of building consensus and including everybody. i see i see some of those same traits today. >> anything different besides the fact that he doesn't publicly smoke? >> he has much more gray hair than he did then. but he really is i think quite a bit of continuity from who he was back then to how he has evolved as a...
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school of government at harvard university. and education director for the gold water institute. his work appeared in "education next" and georgetown journal of law and public policy. and real clear policy, national journal, along with newspapers across the country. jonathan is a member of the arizona department of education steering committee for the empowerment scholarship program the nation's first education savings account program. and he's also a senior fellow at the beacon center of tennessee. jonathan previously studied education policy at the department of education reform at the university of arkansas and worked with a school choice demonstration project. the research team that evaluated the voucher program in washington, d.c. and in milwaukee, wisconsin. and prior to that, studied education and family policy here at the heritage found aation. jonathan holds a b.a. from furman university and m a a in economics from the university of arkansas. last we'll hear from tim keller who serves as institute for justices arizona office managing attorney. he joins the institute as a staff attorney in 2001 is and litigates school choice, econo
school of government at harvard university. and education director for the gold water institute. his work appeared in "education next" and georgetown journal of law and public policy. and real clear policy, national journal, along with newspapers across the country. jonathan is a member of the arizona department of education steering committee for the empowerment scholarship program the nation's first education savings account program. and he's also a senior fellow at the beacon...
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Jul 31, 2015
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of school vouchers. live on c-span. >> c-span gives you the best access to congress. live coverage of the u.s. house, congressional hearings and news conferences. pinging you of that shape public policy. washington journal is live with elected officials, and journals. and your comments. c-span created by america's create -- cable companies. brought to you by your local provider. >> washington journal is next. then a discussion on how new and developing technologies can be used by the defense department. hosted by the brookings institution. the heritage foundation will discuss the future of school choice. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2015] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] >> and later, former budget director douglas holtz-eakin discusses a report that finds health care spending will outpace economic growth over the next 10 years. then it jim karpinski answers questions about the epa kuwait -- epa's clean power role -- rule. host: good morning. it is friday, july 31. the house is officially on often -- august recess today while the senate is set to return monday for one more week o
of school vouchers. live on c-span. >> c-span gives you the best access to congress. live coverage of the u.s. house, congressional hearings and news conferences. pinging you of that shape public policy. washington journal is live with elected officials, and journals. and your comments. c-span created by america's create -- cable companies. brought to you by your local provider. >> washington journal is next. then a discussion on how new and developing technologies can be used by...
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Jul 24, 2015
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journal all summer. it's due today. wow, first day of school and you're already behind? [ groans ] i'm dead.n. okay. "june 21st -- found a stick." mm. "june 22nd..." that's it. that's it? it was a really cool stick. he's right. it looked like a snake. getting everybody out of the house in the morning can be really tough,
journal all summer. it's due today. wow, first day of school and you're already behind? [ groans ] i'm dead.n. okay. "june 21st -- found a stick." mm. "june 22nd..." that's it. that's it? it was a really cool stick. he's right. it looked like a snake. getting everybody out of the house in the morning can be really tough,
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of a funny attitude. >> sid, he's everybody's best friend. knows no stranger. very popular in high school band, good athlete. he was just an amazing guy. everybody loved him. >> he was studying journalism going to the navy rotc program there at the university of colorado as well. sid was -- had a girlfriend at the time named shauna redford. after a couple, two, three dates, he called me and said you won't believe this, i just found out i'm dating robert redford's daughter. >> sid and shauna had been dating for almost three years. and they were just a fun couple to be around, very much in love. >> we had a condo in boulder, colorado called the spanish towers. it was great, because sid was going to school there so he could live there all through his college days. >> sam moved in the summer of 1983. >> he needed a roommate so i filled in for the summer. got to hang out and get to know shauna a little bit better, his girlfriend. >> that summer, we still needed a good candidate for a third roommate. >> thayne smika was the new person in our lives, so we didn't know him very well. he was from akron, eastern colorado, graduated from csu. we knew he had some things going on for him. thayne too
of a funny attitude. >> sid, he's everybody's best friend. knows no stranger. very popular in high school band, good athlete. he was just an amazing guy. everybody loved him. >> he was studying journalism going to the navy rotc program there at the university of colorado as well. sid was -- had a girlfriend at the time named shauna redford. after a couple, two, three dates, he called me and said you won't believe this, i just found out i'm dating robert redford's daughter. >>...
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of racist tweets end up landing a job at another school and not happy about it. >> how players rush to get him out. on this day in history in 1889 # first issue of the wall street journal published. >> lebron james announces he's leaving cleveland to join the miami heat. but he is back at cleveland. the beast was as long as the boat. for seven hours, we did battle. until i said... you will not beat... meeeeee!!! greg. what should i do with your fish? gary. just put it in the cooler. if you're a fisherman, you tell tales. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it's what you do. put the fish in the cooler! >> good morning. it is the 8th of july. the gun belonged to a federal agent. bombshell details about where a man here illegally got the weapon he used to kill a san francisco woman in cold blood. >> the u.s. army cutting 40,000 troops despite the growing threat of isis. the president's $500 million plan to train syrian rebels is not going as planned. the stunning new numbers. >> here's one you probably haven't heard before. a basketball star blaming his iphone for a bad game. why an upgrade through him off a
of racist tweets end up landing a job at another school and not happy about it. >> how players rush to get him out. on this day in history in 1889 # first issue of the wall street journal published. >> lebron james announces he's leaving cleveland to join the miami heat. but he is back at cleveland. the beast was as long as the boat. for seven hours, we did battle. until i said... you will not beat... meeeeee!!! greg. what should i do with your fish? gary. just put it in the cooler....
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Jul 1, 2015
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determined to bring the blogger get-together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journale did a very good job of building consensus and including everybody and i see the same traits today. >> has a different disguise the fact he doesn't publicly smoke. >> is much more gray hair than a dead back then. quite a bit of continuity from who it was back in and how it's evolved as a political leader since clear >> start to finish them this morning migrate michael greenwald on "politico" team that caught the tpp's intellectual property chapter. his headline leaked it what's in a bonus trade deal is the white house going to bat for big pharma worldwide. a recent draft of the transpacific partnership for a trade journal on trade deal would give pharmaceutical tens protections against competition against cheaper generic drugs transcending the patent protection in u.s. law. why are you carrying water for big pharma? >> we know comment on supposedly drives. i don't know what documents he has. let me address the substance of the issue. when it comes to particularly those involving pharm
determined to bring the blogger get-together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journale did a very good job of building consensus and including everybody and i see the same traits today. >> has a different disguise the fact he doesn't publicly smoke. >> is much more gray hair than a dead back then. quite a bit of continuity from who it was back in and how it's evolved as a political leader since clear >> start to finish them...
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Jul 19, 2015
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former state department official now dean of the school of advanced international studies at johns hopkins. the pulitzer prize winner for the "wall street journal." in your long essay, you talk about saying iran is a mid-life crisis. in that mid-life crisis, what does this deal doing? it seems like the people celebrating the deal are young urban people who at least have meetings with them in iran and they seemed very pro american desperate for a connection with the world. >> i think one of the reasons they came to the negotiating table was with their own environment. not just the international sanctions or the horrific mismanagement by the previous president. there was a recognition that the majority of people and the voters in iran today were born after the revolution. they want to be part of the 21st century and acclimated despite the censorship and repression. they wanted to integrate and after 36 years, they are into that phase of the revolution where they are struggling to be a normal state again. they are not there yet and may have a long way to go but we have to see what's happening beyond just the transaction over a single nuclear issue
former state department official now dean of the school of advanced international studies at johns hopkins. the pulitzer prize winner for the "wall street journal." in your long essay, you talk about saying iran is a mid-life crisis. in that mid-life crisis, what does this deal doing? it seems like the people celebrating the deal are young urban people who at least have meetings with them in iran and they seemed very pro american desperate for a connection with the world. >> i...
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determined to try to bring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journalng consensus and building everybody, and ice some of those same -- i see some of those same traits today. mike: and he does not smoke in public. michael: he has much more gray hair. there has been a lot of continuity between how we was back then and how we has evolved as a political leaders since. mike: and starting with the news, today, there was a great story on politico. a copy of the tpp intellectual property chapter headlines what is in the obama trade deal? backing big pharma, and there was a recent draft of the transpacific partnership free-trade deal that would give u.s. pharmaceutical firms on president its protections against competition from cheaper generic drugs, possibly transcending the patent protections in u.s. law. big pharma. michael: first of all, we do not comment on supposedly drafts, so i do not know what he has. but on the issue, when it comes to the intellectual property rights protection, and particular leave those involving pharmaceutical products, our view is
determined to try to bring people together from different parts of the law school community and have a cohesive group put out the journalng consensus and building everybody, and ice some of those same -- i see some of those same traits today. mike: and he does not smoke in public. michael: he has much more gray hair. there has been a lot of continuity between how we was back then and how we has evolved as a political leaders since. mike: and starting with the news, today, there was a great...
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Jul 20, 2015
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i found having come from the old school journalism background where i was hired by russert and mentored by tom brokaw and we were of the mine set there are two sides to every reporter and our role is to play referee where now i feel like journalism has lost credibility with the audience over the years. they do not believe we can be truly objective. i don't movie that is possible. we all come to every story with our own life experience that create as bias for us all. maybe it is better to be honesty about your bias and your positions and opinions you have when you go into a story and if we were that could go a long way to restoring our credibility with the audience not buy the objectist line anyway. >> one of the stories or union website and you were hiring journalists saying no one knows how hillary clinton will govern on education and the american federation of teachers is endorsing her and you clashed with the teachers union. you learned that not every story has two sides. is that really true? or more of an advocate's point of view? >> i give you an example the story ma brought me to education as an issue i becam
i found having come from the old school journalism background where i was hired by russert and mentored by tom brokaw and we were of the mine set there are two sides to every reporter and our role is to play referee where now i feel like journalism has lost credibility with the audience over the years. they do not believe we can be truly objective. i don't movie that is possible. we all come to every story with our own life experience that create as bias for us all. maybe it is better to be...
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Jul 12, 2015
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two-thirds of investors don't have a high school agree as pointed out in the "wall street journal."ablished their own stock exchanges they say. now many are losing their life savings. whether the government fails or succeeds it seems to create problems. obviously, if the fall continues, china's communist party loses a crucial element of its legitimacy. its much vauntd and the now well deserved reputation for economic competence and good management. but if the intervention succeeds it might arrest the plans in bay beijing to transform china's sxhee economy into a more market related one. it makes it a difficult and troubling economic player on the global scene. so watch greece but keep your eye on china as well. >>> up next the queen of england. well not the actual one, but a great proxy. dame helen mirren has just come off her third run playing elizabeth ii. stay tuned for a great discussion about getting into character and the future of the monarchy. when you're not confident you have complete visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that
two-thirds of investors don't have a high school agree as pointed out in the "wall street journal."ablished their own stock exchanges they say. now many are losing their life savings. whether the government fails or succeeds it seems to create problems. obviously, if the fall continues, china's communist party loses a crucial element of its legitimacy. its much vauntd and the now well deserved reputation for economic competence and good management. but if the intervention succeeds it...
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Jul 19, 2015
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i have found having come from that old school journalism background where i was hired by tim russert and mentored by tom brokaw of the mindset there are two sides to every story and the reporter's role is to play referee whereas now i feel like journalism we lost a lot of credibility with the audience over the years. they don't really believe that we can be truly objective. i don't believe that's really possible. we all come to every story with our own life experience which creates bias for us all and maybe it's better to be honest about your biassed and your positions and the opinions you have when you go into a story and if we were i think that could go a long way to restoring our credibility with the audience who doesn't buy the objectively line anyway. >> one of the stories on your website and you were hiring journalists for this site no one knows how hillary clinton will govern on education. you have clashed with teachers union and you learned that not every story has two sides. is that true or more of an advocate's point of view? >> i'll give you an example. it was a story i read in "the daily news" about 1
i have found having come from that old school journalism background where i was hired by tim russert and mentored by tom brokaw of the mindset there are two sides to every story and the reporter's role is to play referee whereas now i feel like journalism we lost a lot of credibility with the audience over the years. they don't really believe that we can be truly objective. i don't believe that's really possible. we all come to every story with our own life experience which creates bias for us...
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some of the programs are even housed in dilapidated buildings once used as all-black schools during the jim crow era. alan judd is an investigative reporter for the atlanta journalution. he has written about the schools and the justice department's findings. alan judd, we welcome you. so who are these students that the state of georgia is putting in a separate educational program? >> at any given time, there may be about 5,000 of them. they are students who have -- of varying ages who have behavioral issues, mental health issues who maybe are in the autism spectrum, but they are children who have been deemed difficult to control and difficult to educate by their home schools. >> woodruff: and how is the program for them different from the mainstream general education k-12 opportunity that the state of georgia offers children? >> first of all, many are segregated entirely from the mainstream classes from their regular education peers. they often do not have science labs they don't have art classes, music classes, they may not have access to a gymnasium. the report by the justice department found that at least one school actually has segregated restrooms for these
some of the programs are even housed in dilapidated buildings once used as all-black schools during the jim crow era. alan judd is an investigative reporter for the atlanta journalution. he has written about the schools and the justice department's findings. alan judd, we welcome you. so who are these students that the state of georgia is putting in a separate educational program? >> at any given time, there may be about 5,000 of them. they are students who have -- of varying ages who...
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Jul 29, 2015
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school, and tom brady did not go there. >> go trojans. >> you are so racist that is a macro aggression. >> a professor of journalism, made a shocking claimaid, yes is is is brutal but u.s. is more so. janice, she used term imperial feminism as if people in u.s. claim to want to help women in places like afghanistan and protect them from patriarchial -- mutilations because all we want to do is take their land and oil. >> she can say whatever she wants, because we have free speech, i don't like is that she led fight against condoleezza rice speaking at rutgers, she can say horrible things about u.s. and isis but yet she does not want to hear condoleezza rice speak at a commencement so i say hypocrite. kennedy: you were in green room earlier, you thought isis was good. >> they are doing good stuff,. kennedy: a good dental plan. >> this shows difference with extreme left on right oright you are called crazy, and on left they call you a professor, no one else would listen to this nonsense. kennedy: i am sure her classes are filled. >> if you think that u.s. is worst place in the world, you would have left, and gone somewhere better. you want
school, and tom brady did not go there. >> go trojans. >> you are so racist that is a macro aggression. >> a professor of journalism, made a shocking claimaid, yes is is is brutal but u.s. is more so. janice, she used term imperial feminism as if people in u.s. claim to want to help women in places like afghanistan and protect them from patriarchial -- mutilations because all we want to do is take their land and oil. >> she can say whatever she wants, because we have...
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Jul 12, 2015
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two-thirds of new investors don't have a high school degree as morgan stanley pointed out in "the wall street journalers have established their own stock exchanges, he says. now, many are losing their life savings. whether the government fails or succeeds it seems to create problems. obviously, if. the fall continues, china's communist party loses a crucial element of its legitimacy it's much vaulted and until now well deserved reputation for economic competent and good management. but if the intervention succeeds it might well arrest the plans in beijing to transform the chinese economy into a more market oriented one keeping in place instead the state controls and commands that run throughout the chinese economy. and that make it a difficult and troubling economic player on the global scene. so watch greece but keep your eye on china, as well. up next the queen of england, well not the actual one but a great proxy. dame helen mirren has just come off her third run playing elizabeth ii. stay tuned for a great discussion about getting into character and the future of the monarchy. ncert- like-it's-19
two-thirds of new investors don't have a high school degree as morgan stanley pointed out in "the wall street journalers have established their own stock exchanges, he says. now, many are losing their life savings. whether the government fails or succeeds it seems to create problems. obviously, if. the fall continues, china's communist party loses a crucial element of its legitimacy it's much vaulted and until now well deserved reputation for economic competent and good management. but if...
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Jul 6, 2015
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the harvard medical school study showed-- and this is a peer-reviewed study in the "journal of american public health," december 2009--that because people could not afford health insurance to get diagnosed and treated in time, 45,000 americans die every year, 800 a week. completely preventable. nobody dies in canada or japan or taiwan or germany or england or sweden because they don't have health insurance. that could have been accomplished by a democratic party as good today as it was in the 1960s--wasn't that great, but by comparison, it was much better--and a republican party that had some liberal elements in it in 1960 compared to today's draconian conglomeration of political ignorance, arrogance, stupidity, and cruelty in congress. [applause] so... i can footnote all this if we had time. [laughter] now, the first thing we have to ask ourselves is, can 1% of the american people--one out of a hundred; let's say 3 million people--organized back home where you are, and congress watchdog groups steer congress along the whole line of redirections that a majority of the people support? a
the harvard medical school study showed-- and this is a peer-reviewed study in the "journal of american public health," december 2009--that because people could not afford health insurance to get diagnosed and treated in time, 45,000 americans die every year, 800 a week. completely preventable. nobody dies in canada or japan or taiwan or germany or england or sweden because they don't have health insurance. that could have been accomplished by a democratic party as good today as it...
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Jul 31, 2015
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school system. until then, conversation from today's "washington journal." douglas aiken is former director of the -- resin of the wreck and action form and he joins us to discuss a report this week that shows at health care spending has jumped back up from the historic lows of recent years. is that jump something that american should be concerned about? guest: absolutely. if you look at the foundation of the federal edge of it -- budget, concerns about wages not rising in the united states. all this leads to health care spending. the big federal projects are medicaid, before double care act. the costst compensationc with health care programs. to see this pending joe baca in a way it has is really concerning. host: was this jump expected as a result of millions of people joining the ranks of the insured through the afford will care act? this is something it was budgeted for the processor unexpected? -- guest: it is the classic horse race. it did things that would and question what cost money. a covered a lot of people and that was the real point. the point of giving people money for health ins
school system. until then, conversation from today's "washington journal." douglas aiken is former director of the -- resin of the wreck and action form and he joins us to discuss a report this week that shows at health care spending has jumped back up from the historic lows of recent years. is that jump something that american should be concerned about? guest: absolutely. if you look at the foundation of the federal edge of it -- budget, concerns about wages not rising in the united...
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Jul 12, 2015
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of the vietnam war. on the next washington journal defends one technology editor patrick tucker will discuss cyber threats and u.s. technological vulnerabilities. the president and ceo of the national alliance for public charter schools from the alliance from education discuss rewriting the no child left behind law. and michael reagan talks about the greek debt crisis instability, and how the impact american investors. >> the selfie vote, how the political parties are in vine for the increasingly influential voting block. >> political advertising became heavily focused on ads. technology has changed so that now if you walk into a room, not just of 20 euros but of 60 euros, what are they looking at? their phones. for folks who want to reach the next generation, region to the future things like candy crash the latest game, candy crash may be fading in popularity but there is always something new popping up. finding ways to get your message in front of people, it is really important. >> to attorneys who represent both sides of religious freedom cases before the supreme court take part in a panel discussion about religious liberty hosted by the national constitution center. they are joined by michael garson and merrill t
of the vietnam war. on the next washington journal defends one technology editor patrick tucker will discuss cyber threats and u.s. technological vulnerabilities. the president and ceo of the national alliance for public charter schools from the alliance from education discuss rewriting the no child left behind law. and michael reagan talks about the greek debt crisis instability, and how the impact american investors. >> the selfie vote, how the political parties are in vine for the...
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Jul 10, 2015
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school. i loved all classes. but i think if i had to pick one today, i love the history of journalism class.t was pretty good. great professor at university of southern colorado. now uc pueblo. >> i read a lot of russian lit. >> i know you know right? >> then you married a russian. >> then he found a russian wife. >> see? you're a stalker, too. >> my russian is quite good. >> is that it? do you want me to go to the next one? >> coming up. >> you're silly. oh you mean this. coming up donald trump isn't ruling out running as a third party candidate. for the 2016 presidential race. we discuss next. ♪ quicker smarter earlier fresher harder and yeah, even on sundays. if that's not what you think of when you think of the united states postal service watch us deliver. >>> my friend and i still consider him my friend donald trump has been taking criticism i think justly not only from democrats but by some in his own party. so if he does not win the republican nomination will the donald consider a third party run? or will he throw his support behind the gop nominee? sean hannity asked him last night.
school. i loved all classes. but i think if i had to pick one today, i love the history of journalism class.t was pretty good. great professor at university of southern colorado. now uc pueblo. >> i read a lot of russian lit. >> i know you know right? >> then you married a russian. >> then he found a russian wife. >> see? you're a stalker, too. >> my russian is quite good. >> is that it? do you want me to go to the next one? >> coming up. >>...
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Jul 4, 2015
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i had written in high school and college, and i had written advertising, and i had written academic essays, and i had written journalism. i had done a lot of writing. so, i mean, i've i was comfortable with the act but not this act of being a ghost can. that was entirely -- ghost. that was entirely new. and, you know, i went to college and majored in english i went to graduate school, i got an m.a. in english, but all that collegiate training didn't prepare me for being a ghost writer. i had never contemplated, i'd never taken a course in it. the only two books i really had in my consciousness was one was the autobiography of billie holliday "lady sings the blues," which i loved as a young boy, and i knew that that was written by a ghost writer because i remember i read the book when i was about 12 or 13, and it had on the cover "as told to william duffy." and i remember asking my father who is this guy? and my father said, well, he's probably the guy who actually wrote the book. and i told him no, no, no, the book was written by billie holliday because it's all in her voice, and she's talking to you. and i remember my father told me well
i had written in high school and college, and i had written advertising, and i had written academic essays, and i had written journalism. i had done a lot of writing. so, i mean, i've i was comfortable with the act but not this act of being a ghost can. that was entirely -- ghost. that was entirely new. and, you know, i went to college and majored in english i went to graduate school, i got an m.a. in english, but all that collegiate training didn't prepare me for being a ghost writer. i had...