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this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students wanted well working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. to the problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. looking so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. and the. this is. that if. that's the way i would do it. the quizzes accorded with it we're looking for a sign that will best convey the meaning of the word or expression sometimes even a big chunk of text. quite often one sign will be enough to communicate an entire sentence. but listen to. me you know that. what i did not know our fight here bot. ah there it is. you know who. the is more of this place is an opportunity to experiments to act the part of the queen or savage things that deaf people rarely get to do what do they do work at the plant then go home have something to eat and go to sleep. and may need this it's a kind of refinement of things they don't have wow. so it
this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students wanted well working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. to the problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. looking so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. and the. this is. that if. that's the way i would do it. the quizzes accorded...
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this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students wanted well working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. to the problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. we can so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. is. that if. that's the way i would do it. this could go to put it we're looking for a sign that will best convey the meaning of the word or expression sometimes even a big chunk of text. quite often one sign will be enough to communicate an entire sentence. that losing. me. what i do not know our fight here bot. ah there it is. you know who did. the most more than the place is an opportunity to do experiments to act the part of the queen or savage things that deaf people rarely get to do what do they do work at the plant then go home have something to eat and go to sleep. and they need this it's a kind of refinement of things they don't have wow. so it's not fun for them anymor
this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students wanted well working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. to the problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. we can so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. is. that if. that's the way i would do it. this could go to put it we're...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 20, 2013
07/13
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SFGTV2
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chaired the part -- share the bard's word hundred famous verses from a shakespearean plays. this is a gem to share with someone special. pack a picnic, find a bench, and enjoy the sunshine, and let the whimsical words of william shakespeare and floats you and your loved one away. this is one of the most popular wedding locations and is available for reservations. take a bus and have no parking worries. shakespeares' garden is ada accessible. located at the bottom of this hill, it is a secret garden with an infinite in captivating appeal. carefully tucked away, it makes the top of our list for most intimate pyknic setting. avoid all taurus cars and hassles by taking a cable car. or the 30, 45, or 91 bus. the garden was designed by thomas church in 1957. grow old with me, the best is yet to be is inscribed on a sundial. it is anchored by twin white gazebos and flowers that bloom year-round. this is the place to tell someone special or the place to declare the commitment you two share. weddings and the event reservations are available for this adorable hidden gem. we know there
chaired the part -- share the bard's word hundred famous verses from a shakespearean plays. this is a gem to share with someone special. pack a picnic, find a bench, and enjoy the sunshine, and let the whimsical words of william shakespeare and floats you and your loved one away. this is one of the most popular wedding locations and is available for reservations. take a bus and have no parking worries. shakespeares' garden is ada accessible. located at the bottom of this hill, it is a secret...
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Jul 26, 2013
07/13
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KQEH
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having played shakespearean villains, who will announce himself as the glorious, and righteous king. he has a sense of commitment and a righteousness. all of shakespeare's "villains" have this sense of righteousness and conviction. looking back, welding that back onto the broadcast the i have seen, going back to europe and the 1930's, up where you started to use that kind of political language and manner on radio, news room, it broadcasts, it was the first use of mass media in germany and the 1930's. and to look at the key speaker, he has a sense of unswervable righteousness and a sense of destiny. you must play a villain somber, sober, patriarchal, a presidential, a teacher, a teacher, a giver of lessons. tavis: do you see what i mean? you've already given me stuff to think about. i've never thought about it in quite that way. you must not play it villainously. >> hello, boys and girls, i am evil. tavis: you have just explained how to play a villain best. what is it that attracted to these characters? you have played everything from ghandi to gangsters and you do them equally well.
having played shakespearean villains, who will announce himself as the glorious, and righteous king. he has a sense of commitment and a righteousness. all of shakespeare's "villains" have this sense of righteousness and conviction. looking back, welding that back onto the broadcast the i have seen, going back to europe and the 1930's, up where you started to use that kind of political language and manner on radio, news room, it broadcasts, it was the first use of mass media in germany...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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KNTV
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that said, things happening in there are almost shakespearean, there's so much going on, with warfare and races and it's an exciting space. >> he said that too. >> he did. it's an exciting spot to be in. >> it is, it's a very exciting spot to be in, it's not glap ru -- glamorous. >> i will say hr software is not glamorous, you do not make the iphone. >> you feel like the glamour, you feel it has increased a bit? >> i think today's generation of enterprise is all about consumer, when you think of what workday does, it is for hr and accounting, but they are used by employees and managers to run the business. >> i do not doubt you have a tiger by the tail and that is what i'm trying to communicate to the viewer. and quinton can explain it better, this is the place to be. >> it seems to me, you have two jobs, you either have six or one, i will try to stay inside the one space. when you seem to be seeing and the world has kind of caught on to now, we are whole heartedly in the world where everyone has a laptop, a tablet, a smartphone, and they go to any shop and expect to be connect to the
that said, things happening in there are almost shakespearean, there's so much going on, with warfare and races and it's an exciting space. >> he said that too. >> he did. it's an exciting spot to be in. >> it is, it's a very exciting spot to be in, it's not glap ru -- glamorous. >> i will say hr software is not glamorous, you do not make the iphone. >> you feel like the glamour, you feel it has increased a bit? >> i think today's generation of enterprise is...
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school this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students we're working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. working so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. and. this. if. that's the way i would do it. in. the quizzes with it we're looking for a sign that will best convey the meaning of the word or expression sometimes even a big chunk of text that quite often one sign will be enough to communicate an entire sentence. with. me that. what you hear.
school this is a lesson in the art of expression for fourth year students we're working with a shakespearean sonnet they chose it and so we now have to tackle it. problem is that shakespeare's language is english the poet marshak translated into russian and we're trying to do it in sign language which is much more difficult. working so now we deconstruct it and try to figure out a way in which it can be signed. and. this. if. that's the way i would do it. in. the quizzes with it we're looking...
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Jul 25, 2013
07/13
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MSNBCW
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we could call it a shakespearean drama, but that would demean the great man of letters.ling...take 13. geico's defensive driver, good student and multi-policy discounts could save you hundreds of dollus. engineer: uh geico's discounts could save you hundreds of "doll-ars." it sounds like you're saying "dollus." dollus. engineeif you could accentuate the "r" sound of "dollars." are...are... are... engineer: are... arrrrrr. arrrrr. someone bring me an eye patch, i feel like a bloomin' pirate. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. honestly, i feel like i nailed that. using night-vision goggles to keep an eye on my spicy buffalo wheat thins. who's gonna take your wheat thins? i don't know. an intruder, the dog, bigfoot. could you get the light? [ loud crash ] what is going on?! honey, i was close! it's a yeti! [ male announcer ] must! have! wheat thins! honey, i was close! it's a yeti! wait a sec! i found our colors. we've made a decision. great, let's go get you set up... you need brushes... you should check out our workshops... pus
we could call it a shakespearean drama, but that would demean the great man of letters.ling...take 13. geico's defensive driver, good student and multi-policy discounts could save you hundreds of dollus. engineer: uh geico's discounts could save you hundreds of "doll-ars." it sounds like you're saying "dollus." dollus. engineeif you could accentuate the "r" sound of "dollars." are...are... are... engineer: are... arrrrrr. arrrrr. someone bring me an eye...
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Jul 6, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN2
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his shakespearean flow was that he had a bad temper.the holocaust went into the periodic functions of rage. he it used to be someone like my brother you know, the jewish day schools and refugees from europe, fairly observant in these close knit communities. my brother didn't fit in very well and my father hadn't had a father. so my brother was sometimes age-appropriate and sometimes fresh in his response in. and my father would freak out if he said something to be learned from the tv, like you don't understand anything, dad. and he would freak out about that. my brother would often enrage him and that was an issue in the family that my father really didn't understand my brother and chose me as the honorary boy, the honorary air to him, the olympic runner, here's the torch, you going on. he definitely loses his temper and i would be very worried about him. i did think about david. and i think that i was the david that tried to console and cover my father. and in turn, he consoled and comforted me. he said they're a very bad people in the
his shakespearean flow was that he had a bad temper.the holocaust went into the periodic functions of rage. he it used to be someone like my brother you know, the jewish day schools and refugees from europe, fairly observant in these close knit communities. my brother didn't fit in very well and my father hadn't had a father. so my brother was sometimes age-appropriate and sometimes fresh in his response in. and my father would freak out if he said something to be learned from the tv, like you...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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KNTV
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witches, a king, a queen, and a lot of shakespearean drama. to save you from traffic drama, i'll be back to help you with your commute monday through friday right here on today in the bay. >>> good sunday morning to you from campbell, looking live there to the south of san jose. patches of low clouds this morning. not as misty as other parts of the bay area, including san francisco, the peninsula and coast waking up to drizzle right now. temperatures outside mostly in the 50s and close to 60 currently in sunnyvale. 57 in san jose. 55 in fairfield, 54 in san francisco. wind speed fairly interesting. when you look at fairfield, southwest wind up to 26 miles per hour. gusts above 30 this morning. so that marine air making its way inland, all the way into stockton and sacramento. the tropical weather getting more interesting here. this is off to the east of hawaii as we're watching tr tropical storm flossie. winds have increased to 55 miles per hour. not quite a hurricane, it would have to go up to 75 miles per hour to do that. which will take it
witches, a king, a queen, and a lot of shakespearean drama. to save you from traffic drama, i'll be back to help you with your commute monday through friday right here on today in the bay. >>> good sunday morning to you from campbell, looking live there to the south of san jose. patches of low clouds this morning. not as misty as other parts of the bay area, including san francisco, the peninsula and coast waking up to drizzle right now. temperatures outside mostly in the 50s and close...
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Jul 25, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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or to put it in less shakespearean terms, the market is wondering what will happen to housing.id we just hit a speed bump on the road to a multi-year bull market or a retaining wall? perhaps a stoplight. i'm a big believer in housing, but i know we need to collect some evidence. and the way i do my research is by listening to what individual companies with boots on the ground have to say. take owens corning, the best maker of building materials like insulation, roofing shingles, fiberglass composites. gets 54% of the sales from north american residential and new construction. but rallied 6% year-to-date. now, owens corning reported this morning, numbers came in shy of wall street estimates, delivering 12 cents miss off a 69-cent basis, the revenues declined, 100 million below the consensus. the stock barely moved. more important, though, looking beneath the headlines, you get the sense that both roofing and especially insulation are expected to improve in the second half. insulation in particular is projected to experience higher volumes and higher prices. let's check in with t
or to put it in less shakespearean terms, the market is wondering what will happen to housing.id we just hit a speed bump on the road to a multi-year bull market or a retaining wall? perhaps a stoplight. i'm a big believer in housing, but i know we need to collect some evidence. and the way i do my research is by listening to what individual companies with boots on the ground have to say. take owens corning, the best maker of building materials like insulation, roofing shingles, fiberglass...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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nevertheless, than one of the stars moved on to london and had quite a successful career as a shakespearean there. he did all fellow but he also do a lot of other characters, shylock and the rest and others in white face. [laughter] >> there was the irish west of those, the waterfront village at the western end of the village that inspired the movie on the waterfront, although it was shot over in jersey. it was inspired by the village and chelsea and hell's kitchen, waterfront. the irish village also gave us one of the most colorful is not necessary one of the best mayors in 20th century in new york city, jimmy walker. and a world champion boxer who i think could only have come from greenwich village, gene, in the 1930s but he was a boxer who read shakespeare, who was good friends with george bernard shaw, who talked about the size of future lesson and this was a time when boxers tended to be bugs in the months. the press for the longest time couldn't tell if he was a hoax or not because he could speak whole sentences. [laughter] and it was the italian south village, another huge community
nevertheless, than one of the stars moved on to london and had quite a successful career as a shakespearean there. he did all fellow but he also do a lot of other characters, shylock and the rest and others in white face. [laughter] >> there was the irish west of those, the waterfront village at the western end of the village that inspired the movie on the waterfront, although it was shot over in jersey. it was inspired by the village and chelsea and hell's kitchen, waterfront. the irish...
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Jul 6, 2013
07/13
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CSPAN2
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this great shakespearean tragedy but when i read it i got the sense that there is an underlying sympathythat you have for rajat gupta that may not have been the case in your interpretation of raj rajaratnma and his colleague but an underlying huge wave of sympathy for him. is that correct? >> that is why wanted to redo the passage i did he cut his the picture of rajat we all saw over the last several years was a very stoic man. you know, he was a student -- and dignified statesman. when i went to calcutta to interview members of his family and luckily i went there before he was indicted. they spoke to me very openly and i said you know was rajat affected at all by his father's death? cgart ever talked about it. his first roommate at mackenzie told me that he didn't even know that rajat was an orphan and his cousin said to me, of course he was. he was wandering around in it, toasts date you know. he had hopped on a train from new delhi and come to calcutta when he had found out that his father was very ill and the moment he learned he had died he was -- >> when you meet, i mean you met al
this great shakespearean tragedy but when i read it i got the sense that there is an underlying sympathythat you have for rajat gupta that may not have been the case in your interpretation of raj rajaratnma and his colleague but an underlying huge wave of sympathy for him. is that correct? >> that is why wanted to redo the passage i did he cut his the picture of rajat we all saw over the last several years was a very stoic man. you know, he was a student -- and dignified statesman. when i...
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Jul 3, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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look, it is like a shakespearean play where all the characters are true to their character.aker. the leaker has to go public so the public understands what is really many in play. the real issue is this isn't going to be resolved if they catch this one guy. governments are still looking at every e-mail you've got. and that's not going to go way. the big issue is going to come when people realize government are going to tie this to the tax office and you start claiming your lunch with george was a business expense when you talked baseball as is clear from your e-mails back and forth, people will realize what the implications are. >> stop using e-mails. >> yeah. >> that's scary. i'm scared. the obama administration is delaying a key part of the president's landmark health care reform, providing coverage to all workers. the provision which was supposed to take effect in january will now be delayed until 2015. the administration says the decision comes after it heard numerous requests from businesses and lobby groups for more time to comply. the provision requires companies with
look, it is like a shakespearean play where all the characters are true to their character.aker. the leaker has to go public so the public understands what is really many in play. the real issue is this isn't going to be resolved if they catch this one guy. governments are still looking at every e-mail you've got. and that's not going to go way. the big issue is going to come when people realize government are going to tie this to the tax office and you start claiming your lunch with george was...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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yesterday i was explaining to someone that it was shakespearean.path some day to the white house. that's a tragic flaw that rivals what shakespeare wrote about, rooity? >> yeah. those days, before -- i was a huge supporter of eliot when i was at my hedge fund. these days, of course, i take no position on anything and i think yesterday was fabulous. the guy is great on tv. he's great on tv. >> we had a guy that was already president that had lapses. blue dress lapses and there was no -- well, maybe there was. >> you don't know. i see why they loved him and now i've got to remember exactly why they kicked him out and unless someone has some new information which i don't see. >> it is a business story and people say it's local to just new york. no, wall street could change again. he has subpoena power as a controller, did you know that? >> there was a pay to play issue. there were people who were implicated in previous that kind of came back and maybe he reopens everything. he's not doing the job to sit back and do private equity. >> is he doing it to
yesterday i was explaining to someone that it was shakespearean.path some day to the white house. that's a tragic flaw that rivals what shakespeare wrote about, rooity? >> yeah. those days, before -- i was a huge supporter of eliot when i was at my hedge fund. these days, of course, i take no position on anything and i think yesterday was fabulous. the guy is great on tv. he's great on tv. >> we had a guy that was already president that had lapses. blue dress lapses and there was no...
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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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but i felt like, god, i this guy was great and it's almost like a shakespearean thing. >> i appreciateies across many companies, institutions and individuals. and i think the learning process is one of recognizing that, absorbing that lesson, altering behavior and hopefully moving forward. >> dick parsons is here as our guest host and he has a question for you. >> general, how are you. it's been a while. i always liked that appalachian and that's how i first met you. >> thank you, sir. >> i have sort of a different question as opposed to trust. it goes to motivation. why this officer. there can be one of two answers. because it's there and available or because there is something about this office that particularly you feel you're qualified for, you can make a difference. why this office? >> well, i would gather that the latter answer is probably the better one and in fact is the truthful one. i've been speak building the role comptrollers play for years. this is not merely an issue of opportunity or happen stance. in the book there are several pages dedicated to articulating role contr
but i felt like, god, i this guy was great and it's almost like a shakespearean thing. >> i appreciateies across many companies, institutions and individuals. and i think the learning process is one of recognizing that, absorbing that lesson, altering behavior and hopefully moving forward. >> dick parsons is here as our guest host and he has a question for you. >> general, how are you. it's been a while. i always liked that appalachian and that's how i first met you. >>...
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Jul 1, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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. >> i just think the show has shakespearean overtones. >> we keep talking about a business sense or stock sense, i don't know if that's good or bad. >> not quite clear. we talk about executive pay this morning, and i'm conscious that a lot of these companies that have just had these big runs, their ceos are getting overpaid, but to give you money. number one, larry ellison, that make sense to you? >> he is the founder. >> oh, i get it. >> that's right. oh, you're going to like what i -- what larry ellison is dressed in. i guarantee it. another guy who felt it was a private company. >> however, mr. ellison is still running the company. as whereas, the man who founded men's warehouse. >> he is the ceo. he has created value for himself and for shareholders. >> it's past tense now. >> he does pay himself a great deal. >> i think the viewers are outraged when they read that story in the "new york times" about how much people are making. they're not making that at home. >> no. overall executive comp i think 16%, whereas household income growth is nill, essentially. >> i draw a distinction
. >> i just think the show has shakespearean overtones. >> we keep talking about a business sense or stock sense, i don't know if that's good or bad. >> not quite clear. we talk about executive pay this morning, and i'm conscious that a lot of these companies that have just had these big runs, their ceos are getting overpaid, but to give you money. number one, larry ellison, that make sense to you? >> he is the founder. >> oh, i get it. >> that's right. oh,...