128
128
Aug 23, 2020
08/20
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MSNBCW
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>> i thought schreiber, yes. >> reporter: but where would he find this schreiber?ent back to sandra's interview. when asked about detective wyatt about tom's friend, sandra said the boys were once work buddies. >> met him at target when they worked together. >> reporter: detective dove crisscrossed southern california, searching through the employment records of every target store for a guy named schreiber. but nobody had ever heard of him. >> we were starting to come to the end of our rope. we were getting to a dead end there. >> reporter: that was about the time jack's daughter sherry began getting strange packages in the mail from sandra, who said they were keepsakes jack wanted his girls to have. >> like what? >> little boxes of like ashtrays. his bowling ball bag. a bunch of junk. just weird stuff that just kept coming. >> reporter: which seemed designed to provoke exactly the reaction the sisters felt. >> hatred. more than i had before. >> reporter: sandra seemed to be telling them she'd beaten them, got away with it, won the game. >> we just said, are we cur
>> i thought schreiber, yes. >> reporter: but where would he find this schreiber?ent back to sandra's interview. when asked about detective wyatt about tom's friend, sandra said the boys were once work buddies. >> met him at target when they worked together. >> reporter: detective dove crisscrossed southern california, searching through the employment records of every target store for a guy named schreiber. but nobody had ever heard of him. >> we were starting to...
70
70
Aug 26, 2020
08/20
by
KNTV
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eye 70
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. >> reporter: at 88 years old, in a cap and gown, miriam schreiber savors a moment she has dreamed ofor decades >> due to events beyond my control i was never able to get my high school diploma. >> reporter: schreiber's education disrupted by a desperate journey to survive the holocaust. her family, living for years on the run, hiding from the nazis, eventually sent to a slave labor camp in siberia. >> nobody would have faulted her for just giving up, but she didn't she of course learned all the languages everywhere she went. >> reporter: today she's fluent in six, learning english when she emigrated to the united states to raise a family the generations after live awed and inspired by her >> congratulations >> reporter: this honorary diploma is well deserved and she is certainly in the school of life earned it >> reporter: perhaps a lesson that with perseverance and a grateful heart -- >> it really means the world to me. thank you so much. >> reporter: our greatest moments are yet to come. katy beck, nbc news. >> an amazing life's journey. congratulations to her. >>> that's "nightly
. >> reporter: at 88 years old, in a cap and gown, miriam schreiber savors a moment she has dreamed ofor decades >> due to events beyond my control i was never able to get my high school diploma. >> reporter: schreiber's education disrupted by a desperate journey to survive the holocaust. her family, living for years on the run, hiding from the nazis, eventually sent to a slave labor camp in siberia. >> nobody would have faulted her for just giving up, but she didn't she...
48
48
Aug 22, 2020
08/20
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FBC
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eye 48
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joining me now, ceo and cofounder daniel schreiber.s so much for joining us all the way from tel aviv. i want to start with this idea that insurance salesman is up considered to be a we scoretive, and it's that trust gap that your business plan sets out to close. >> yeah, absolutely. so the traditional insurance model is kind of come into town and build the tall est sky scrape, think about the metlife building in new york or others around the world. project your final prowess in the -- financial prowess in the hope that people will be cowed into trusting you. [laughter] that's not how trust built, and people distrust insurance companies not was they don't think they have the wherewithal to pay their claims, but they don't have the will to pay their claims. we've tried to change the model that we never deny money, that leftover money goes to charity. jack: can you explain that dynamic? so when i don't want -- when i file a claim for the actual amount of the loss and i don't embellish it, i know that extra money doesn't go in your pocket
joining me now, ceo and cofounder daniel schreiber.s so much for joining us all the way from tel aviv. i want to start with this idea that insurance salesman is up considered to be a we scoretive, and it's that trust gap that your business plan sets out to close. >> yeah, absolutely. so the traditional insurance model is kind of come into town and build the tall est sky scrape, think about the metlife building in new york or others around the world. project your final prowess in the --...
42
42
Aug 2, 2020
08/20
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KRON
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now and taking on the responsibility of having to pay all those bills a well paid internship with schreiber food was the next to go more filed for state unemployment benefits in early april a week of waiting turned into 2 then 3 and then april may june july and now we're about to be and and still have no response to an ending status and he's far from the only one i just feel helpless i think i have no money that's coming in. >>talk about sometimes now it's. >>hardcore depression nolan would he hasn't lived like this in almost 15 years i filed for my unemployment benefits every week. >>i checked on him and it's is still on the pending status would he was furloughed from his job in march we live here west. >>because we were basically paycheck to paycheck and just found out it may be another 90 days a furlough for him. really been a struggle to different people were just waiting colors lots of us that are just waiting for money and i look for jobs and i hope and pray that unemployment comes through at some point stock in the same situation and doing their best just to get by. but as monique lo
now and taking on the responsibility of having to pay all those bills a well paid internship with schreiber food was the next to go more filed for state unemployment benefits in early april a week of waiting turned into 2 then 3 and then april may june july and now we're about to be and and still have no response to an ending status and he's far from the only one i just feel helpless i think i have no money that's coming in. >>talk about sometimes now it's. >>hardcore depression...
206
206
Aug 19, 2020
08/20
by
FBC
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eye 206
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you get a wakeup call from liv descri schreiber, eva longoria will chat with you. there you go.ainty. the volatility. the ambiguity. the moment calls for more. and northern trust delivers more. with specialized expertise. proven strategies rooted in data and analytics... and insights borne from over 130 years of successfully navigating economic turbulence. giving you clarity. inspiring confidence. and helping you uncover new paths forward. . . introducing stocks by the slice from fidelity. now you can trade stocks and etfs for any amount you choose instead of buying by the share. all with no commissions. stocks by the slice from fidelity. get your slice today. stuart: another look at apple. big story of the day. though hit the 2 trillion-dollar valuation. did you know that they are twice the value of google which is only just over one trillion? we have microsoft at 1.6 trillion. amazon, 1.6 trillion. facebook, a mere $762 million. and we have alibaba, the chinese amazon,hundred billion dollars. apple, way out front. all right. my time's up. but, neil, sir, it is yours. neil: it
you get a wakeup call from liv descri schreiber, eva longoria will chat with you. there you go.ainty. the volatility. the ambiguity. the moment calls for more. and northern trust delivers more. with specialized expertise. proven strategies rooted in data and analytics... and insights borne from over 130 years of successfully navigating economic turbulence. giving you clarity. inspiring confidence. and helping you uncover new paths forward. . . introducing stocks by the slice from fidelity. now...