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when he returned to stanford. he went back to the engineering school. he became provost in 1957. in the next decade he transformed with the help of wally sterling who was very important to the president of stanford at the time -- he transformed this from a sleepy college, a good sleepy college and good university into a world class institution. and he envisioned the future the way in which very few academic leaders did. and i'll contrast him for a moment with one of our own. what did he see? for example, he saw the opening up -- the enormous potential of biological sciences. so just a few years earlier it was discovered of the double dna structure. and the basic biological science with medicine was going to be the future. and he and sterling against a great deal of resistance brought the medical school, which was located in san francisco, down to the stanford campus. began to link the biological sciences and medicine. began to recruit in clusters some of the great minds like josh letterberg, for example, from wisc
when he returned to stanford. he went back to the engineering school. he became provost in 1957. in the next decade he transformed with the help of wally sterling who was very important to the president of stanford at the time -- he transformed this from a sleepy college, a good sleepy college and good university into a world class institution. and he envisioned the future the way in which very few academic leaders did. and i'll contrast him for a moment with one of our own. what did he see?...
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Feb 28, 2010
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he was a lifer at stanford. but he had worked during the war for vannerover bush if you think networks weren't operating there at the time and they were. he got to not only know vannerover bush but he headed the antisubmarine effort at harvard during the war. he actually ran a group that was numbered in the thousands, larger than the total population of faculty and staff at stanford when he returned to stanford. he went back to the engineering school. he became provost in 1957 in the next decade. he transformed with the help of wally sterling, who was very important to the president of stanford at the time. he transformed this from a rather sleepy college, a good sleepy college and a good university into a world class institution. and he envisioned the future the way in which very few academic leaders did. and i'll contrast him for a moment for one of our own. what did he see? for example, he saw the opening up, the enormous potential of biological sciences. 57. so just a few years earlier watson and crick disco
he was a lifer at stanford. but he had worked during the war for vannerover bush if you think networks weren't operating there at the time and they were. he got to not only know vannerover bush but he headed the antisubmarine effort at harvard during the war. he actually ran a group that was numbered in the thousands, larger than the total population of faculty and staff at stanford when he returned to stanford. he went back to the engineering school. he became provost in 1957 in the next...
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mike montgomery who had that incredible run at stanford.999. now he comes to california with the golden state warriors. the bears haven't won since 1960. and montgomery is now on the brink. the seniors coming out. >> marques: to be picked to win the pac-10 conference, with their seen your laden cal was. another thing to get out there and make it happen on the floor. >> steve: rudd throws it down. a rare bright spot in the last ten minutes. but all the seniors hugging and congratulating each other on a marvelous season as cal will win their 20th of the year. montgomery will be from the first cal coach ever to win 20 games his first two years at berkeley. it's been 50 years, but california can finally say they're conference champions. the bears clinch at least a share of the title on february 27th, 2010. the bear nation finally exhaling. pete newell to a championship in 1960. that team would finish up a runner-up for the national title. they've been waiting five decades to experience the joy. and they're partying in berkeley this afternoon. t
mike montgomery who had that incredible run at stanford.999. now he comes to california with the golden state warriors. the bears haven't won since 1960. and montgomery is now on the brink. the seniors coming out. >> marques: to be picked to win the pac-10 conference, with their seen your laden cal was. another thing to get out there and make it happen on the floor. >> steve: rudd throws it down. a rare bright spot in the last ten minutes. but all the seniors hugging and...
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Feb 12, 2010
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and washington state, doing a job on stanford at stanford. we will see that. >> don: making a late charge here. washington state, beat up on the arizona team we're watching tonight last saturday and now taking care of stanford in palo alto. that will take them to 6-6. >> barry: jacob a guy always around the ball as well. >> don: you give yourself opportunities, and you are shoots from closer, and the advantage to the oregon team to get in there and get extra possessions. >> barry: fogg back up top and lavender. and jones, baseline, and hill, reverdicted by dunigan and into the hands of porter, and tried to give it up on the wing and defensively by lavender. >> don: good job and not a good decision by porter. >> barry: so another time-out on the floor with 3:31 remaining to be played. watch dunigan. keeps it in play. that's the reaunthe wi ♪ new ery led marithened t inne-ond t 5 w ouck20. ♪ >> barry: 26-22 ball game. 3:31 remaining and sunday, first it will be cal and washington in a women's showdown. then the crosstown rivalry continues as uc
and washington state, doing a job on stanford at stanford. we will see that. >> don: making a late charge here. washington state, beat up on the arizona team we're watching tonight last saturday and now taking care of stanford in palo alto. that will take them to 6-6. >> barry: jacob a guy always around the ball as well. >> don: you give yourself opportunities, and you are shoots from closer, and the advantage to the oregon team to get in there and get extra possessions....
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Feb 27, 2010
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arizona and stanford.t was pretty dated, the pac-10, the pac-6, the pac-2, the pac-1. >> steve: played well to help them win. there's another one. and that is patrick christopher with 7 points early. these are two of the top three shoots points team. but arizona state is 0 for 5. now they're 2 for 5. >> marques: jerren shipp, a senior, did a nice job knocking down key shots. by virtue of hard work. putting in hours in the gym. >> steve: there it is. the first three they have made. it ties the game at 11. they're 1 for 6 as a team. >> marques: jerren shipp out of fairfax high school. he's in there like clockwork. he just shoots it till it feels good. it carries over into his on-court game performance. >> steve: gutierrez also in the game. a fine defensive play by jerren shipp who came out of nowhere to knock it do himself. >> marques: also ty abbott, the way he flew in that closeout to randle, got a piece of the basketball. an air ball. that's the kind of defensive intensity, focus and effort you need from
arizona and stanford.t was pretty dated, the pac-10, the pac-6, the pac-2, the pac-1. >> steve: played well to help them win. there's another one. and that is patrick christopher with 7 points early. these are two of the top three shoots points team. but arizona state is 0 for 5. now they're 2 for 5. >> marques: jerren shipp, a senior, did a nice job knocking down key shots. by virtue of hard work. putting in hours in the gym. >> steve: there it is. the first three they have...
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Feb 5, 2010
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stanford up three. landry fields. 15 points in the first half. stanford leads.ckin, lo to be w jackets wa t reo unthe ♪ nefier illes! mad thlledal onekind. a! y 5s bucf 20 ♪ ♪(whi tun n't be h♪ >>> you are watching the halftime report. a dub heoubleheader saturday. catch all of the action beginning at 3:00 p.m. eastern, 12 pacific. georgia beat duke earlier. but this wub was all duke. duke wins 86-67. number 8 purdue. final seconds. indiana down three. this is the fourth overtime! purdue first w bloomington since '99. for a fu f 're tchful ones. we like to kere p a eye t we we s suntouldto a lid ial no youour yout on ore l ofmone you so e to hundred and fiftars. find out more at suntrust.com/solid live solid. bank solid. suntrust. find out more at suntrust.com/solid live solid. bank solid. suntrust. in 1977, in johannesburg, uth , yearoy ed ugamelf hisr. by e oe wa alrutplhim. th of entl ng tior chamips e ag4? fn 16on. dds t sa akino th feurpro-tour fn 7 n. th of e "sy" g opepionnce and the u.s. chship? 780ion. e o rofel goavin a ciagnith ? 1 in erls eges tn ths
stanford up three. landry fields. 15 points in the first half. stanford leads.ckin, lo to be w jackets wa t reo unthe ♪ nefier illes! mad thlledal onekind. a! y 5s bucf 20 ♪ ♪(whi tun n't be h♪ >>> you are watching the halftime report. a dub heoubleheader saturday. catch all of the action beginning at 3:00 p.m. eastern, 12 pacific. georgia beat duke earlier. but this wub was all duke. duke wins 86-67. number 8 purdue. final seconds. indiana down three. this is the fourth...
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Feb 24, 2010
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. >> mi sueño es para yo ser una abogada o maestra y para ir a stanford. >> pero el sueño de concepciónatoria para vecindarios pobres en dónde pocos maestro querían trabajar. >> teníamos que esperar con esta, no que tenía seguridad. los es tenían señoría, la mayoría están buscando en cualquier otro lugar. >> (hablando en inglés) >> estos estudiantes están condenados a un sinfín de sustitutos sin experiencia educativa. >> señaló de la unión de libertades civiles junto con la oficina del defensor público. presentó una demanda del estado de california y el distrito escolar de los angeles a nombre de concepción, hay otros estudiantes de 3 escuelas de bajos recursos de los angeles. >> lo que demandamos es que primero que todo si hay cortes en el futuro en los próximos meses que no ocurran en estas escuelas y están dañadas. >> la idea de libertades civiles que en el estado de california está pasando por serios problemas económicos y recortar a los estudiantes más necesitados del estado es un sitio equivocado para balancear el presupuesto. áánoticiero univisiotyplwhiskp >> un juez estableció
. >> mi sueño es para yo ser una abogada o maestra y para ir a stanford. >> pero el sueño de concepciónatoria para vecindarios pobres en dónde pocos maestro querían trabajar. >> teníamos que esperar con esta, no que tenía seguridad. los es tenían señoría, la mayoría están buscando en cualquier otro lugar. >> (hablando en inglés) >> estos estudiantes están condenados a un sinfín de sustitutos sin experiencia educativa. >> señaló de la unión...
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Feb 3, 2010
02/10
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but what about the kids at mit, and the multitasking experiments at stanford?some point, does the increasing use of technology create diminishing returns? >> i never read books. i'll be honest, i can't remember the last time i read a book. >> dretzin: greg bukata was a senior when we filmed at chatham high school several years ago. >> nowadays, people are so busy that they need to get summaries of it, like sparknotes. you can read the whole book in a matter of pages. so i read all online. i've actually never read, like, "romeo and juliet," so i read it yesterday in five minutes. i mean, if there were 27 hours in a day, i'd read "hamlet," i really would, but it's only 24. >> you will find a lot of english professors saying, "i can't assign a novel more than 200 pages. i used to; i can't anymore." >> dretzin: mark bauerlein, a professor at emory university, wrote a book called the dumbest generation. it's filled with data suggesting that kids aren't as academically capable as they used to be before all these digital distractions. >> what i would like more than an
but what about the kids at mit, and the multitasking experiments at stanford?some point, does the increasing use of technology create diminishing returns? >> i never read books. i'll be honest, i can't remember the last time i read a book. >> dretzin: greg bukata was a senior when we filmed at chatham high school several years ago. >> nowadays, people are so busy that they need to get summaries of it, like sparknotes. you can read the whole book in a matter of pages. so i read...
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Feb 5, 2010
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the new york times," bret stephens of "the wall street joual," jeff goldberg and abbas milani of stanford university. and we conclude this evening with a consideration of apple's new ipad with walt mossberg, michael polemenij of techcrunch and david carr of "the new york times" iran and the political forces at work as well as a look at the new ipad, next. if you've had a coke in the last 20 years, ( screams ) you've had a hand in giving college scholarships... and support to thousands of our nation's... most promising students. ♪ ( coca-cola 5-note mnemonic ) captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: the obama administration is at a critical point in its policy towards iran. although it says the door is still open for negotiation, the administration is increasing pressure on the iranian government. in the state of the union address last week, president obama appeared to take a tougher stance. >> diplomatic efforts have assisted with those nations that are in pursuit the nuclear weapons. north korea faces increased isolati
the new york times," bret stephens of "the wall street joual," jeff goldberg and abbas milani of stanford university. and we conclude this evening with a consideration of apple's new ipad with walt mossberg, michael polemenij of techcrunch and david carr of "the new york times" iran and the political forces at work as well as a look at the new ipad, next. if you've had a coke in the last 20 years, ( screams ) you've had a hand in giving college scholarships... and...
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Feb 13, 2010
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he's been getting more minutes as he comes off a good game against stanford. >> don: washington state looks like they'll pick up full and try and speed this game up a little bit. we were talking about in the first half how if washington state can get out in transition, this is the way to do it. get some steals, try and get numbers going the other way. >> barry: xavier thames in the game once again. the basket over moore. high bank, won't go. here's thompson. three on three. and thompson will back it out, try to work on gutierrez. now moore guarded by the bigger robertson. moore double clutch off the window. won't go. thompson offensive rebound. the right hand, big-time play by klay thompson. >> don: that's what i was going to say, barry. big-time play on the road. team's trying to come back on you. got a missed shot, elevate over that left shoulder, knock it down. he got 26. >> barry: theo robertson. leaves it nicely for boykin. >> don: boykin off to a good start in the second half. he can do that. known primarily as the junkyard dog rebounding and put back. but steps out to that shor
he's been getting more minutes as he comes off a good game against stanford. >> don: washington state looks like they'll pick up full and try and speed this game up a little bit. we were talking about in the first half how if washington state can get out in transition, this is the way to do it. get some steals, try and get numbers going the other way. >> barry: xavier thames in the game once again. the basket over moore. high bank, won't go. here's thompson. three on three. and...
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Feb 6, 2010
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there in 1960, he was at stanford and work california doing teaching so there are some connections at the can casey was separate and a funny thing is there's a chapter in the book if you come to san francisco which is about when these guys from harvard, 1966. they had no idea this was going on. there were still with their little ties and button-down and they came to deliver serious academic papers at a conference. there is a story paul lee who worked with them they had a party before the conference and all these guys from harvard, there was a big mention and foothills and they wanted to have a pre conference party and i thought it would be a cocktail party like harvard. so they went out there and i want to hire semper. >> music for the party and i heard the grateful dead. paul lee tells this great story where he was the main organizer and he was out there and i couldn't believe it. there were little kids and grandmothers running around naked by the pool and everybody, the infamous lsd chemist was there in a powder blue jumpsuits handing out lsd to anyone who wanted it. paul we didn't
there in 1960, he was at stanford and work california doing teaching so there are some connections at the can casey was separate and a funny thing is there's a chapter in the book if you come to san francisco which is about when these guys from harvard, 1966. they had no idea this was going on. there were still with their little ties and button-down and they came to deliver serious academic papers at a conference. there is a story paul lee who worked with them they had a party before the...
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because of the team's defense and steaming for him, his last real big game was 27 against stanford on have a feeling he's going to challenge that 27 today. >> barry: he has 11 right now. we're not at the halfway point of the first half yet. thames across the lane. koprivica, offensive rebound and a putback. >> don: effort play. washington state effort plays on the offensive glass, koprivica, known for his three-point shooting and ability to step out. sneaks in there, gets a good offensive rebound. >> barry: koprivica and knezevic. they were on the national team in serbia. >> don: what a grab on moore. with casto out of the game for washington state, i bet you cal may be settling a little bit too much. they are a great three-point shooting team. without casto in there, now's the time to start attacking that rim. they have the ability to beat people off the dribble. i think to stabilize this game, because washington state has done a pretty good job of getting out in transitions off of missed threes. >> barry: they have motum on the floor right now. he doesn't get a lot of minutes. >> do
because of the team's defense and steaming for him, his last real big game was 27 against stanford on have a feeling he's going to challenge that 27 today. >> barry: he has 11 right now. we're not at the halfway point of the first half yet. thames across the lane. koprivica, offensive rebound and a putback. >> don: effort play. washington state effort plays on the offensive glass, koprivica, known for his three-point shooting and ability to step out. sneaks in there, gets a good...
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Feb 15, 2010
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at age 17, the youngest member of the first class at stanford. there is a testimony from any number of his classmates that this was a man who walked across the campus his head held down and grunting and responses, twirling her coins in his pockets trillion to one shrink into the ground and unable to be personable to get on the easily but other people. but i appreciate your question and allow me to make clear that this isn't a deterministic view of an inevitability of that circumstance for everyone. islamic if i may say obviously george bush was not in northen but it's important to look at the early years of presidency, you can learn a lot about them appear the fact he was shot down in world war ii left him with a deep, deep ambivalence towards the use of force. they knew it had to be done but he was very emotional while he ordered troops into the battle in the gulf war act because he has written because of his own experience losing one of his copilots' that day. >> anything about john tyler's use? >> he lost his mother when he was seven and broug
at age 17, the youngest member of the first class at stanford. there is a testimony from any number of his classmates that this was a man who walked across the campus his head held down and grunting and responses, twirling her coins in his pockets trillion to one shrink into the ground and unable to be personable to get on the easily but other people. but i appreciate your question and allow me to make clear that this isn't a deterministic view of an inevitability of that circumstance for...
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Feb 9, 2010
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strand started designing the first freebord in 1995 while doing a masters degree in product design at stanford university in california. but with a background in high finance at lehman brothers ratherthan building boards, it's fair to say his first efforts didn't quite hit the mark. >>strand: i look back on my early boards and they're just a joke to me right? but you put something out there and you start building some sales and some enthusiasm and you use that momentum to go back in and redesign and keep evolving the product till you get to something that really can become the foundationof an ongoing category. and that can take years because there's so much knowledge and revisioning that has to go on. >>reporter: so he did what my entrepreneurs have done: went to work in the garage to fine tune the product andgoing into debt. by 1999, strand had started freebord manufacturing based in a warehouse in san francisco. and it's not just the board design that changed over the years... >>kendall: the average freeborder has changed a bit over time but i think if you start with a snowboarder, 16 to 24,
strand started designing the first freebord in 1995 while doing a masters degree in product design at stanford university in california. but with a background in high finance at lehman brothers ratherthan building boards, it's fair to say his first efforts didn't quite hit the mark. >>strand: i look back on my early boards and they're just a joke to me right? but you put something out there and you start building some sales and some enthusiasm and you use that momentum to go back in and...
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Feb 14, 2010
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people like gary ackerman at yale and levenson at texas, larry kramer at stanford, jeff rosen at gw,to take the constitution away from the court. how's that going? >> i would not take a constitutional way from the court. -- i would not say to take a constitution away from the court. it is about the argument barry is making, popular constitutionalism, democratic constitutionalism. but if you think that it is wrong, and generally constitutional values have risen from popular mobilization rather than just judicial decisions, there are a lot of interesting differences about how aggressive or restraint courts should be, and the current buzzword among liberal circles in the american constitutional society is democratic constitutionalism, and the point here is not that the court should be completely restrained and let the people do everything, but they should be modestly interventional list, moving away from the public occasionally, like women's rights, pushing back when people get in, but basically engaging in a dialogue with people, and different people come up on different sides about ho
people like gary ackerman at yale and levenson at texas, larry kramer at stanford, jeff rosen at gw,to take the constitution away from the court. how's that going? >> i would not take a constitutional way from the court. -- i would not say to take a constitution away from the court. it is about the argument barry is making, popular constitutionalism, democratic constitutionalism. but if you think that it is wrong, and generally constitutional values have risen from popular mobilization...
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Feb 2, 2010
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researchers at stanford discovered women use more of their brain when processing jokes and lower expectations that a joke will be funny. translation, they rarely laugh when you move them from a moving car. says one researcher, quote, the interpretation of the ind fooing is that women tend to respond more to narrative and word play than slapstick. we'll see about that. roll some tape. >> how about you? you are not into that? >> no, no reaction. that wasn't funny to me. i love these people that rationalize the differences between men and women. i don't care about the neurological explanation for why i didn't laugh at your joke. maybe i was depressed that day because i just found out mtv no longer considers me the target demographic. maybe i was staring at your chest hair that is unfathomable and looking at me in the face. there are so many reasons why i don't find your joke funny. it has nothing to do with my uterus. >> joking, stay out of her uterus. >> you must notice a trend between men and women when performing. >> the trick is, when women don't laugh i tickle them and 8 say coochi-coochie,
researchers at stanford discovered women use more of their brain when processing jokes and lower expectations that a joke will be funny. translation, they rarely laugh when you move them from a moving car. says one researcher, quote, the interpretation of the ind fooing is that women tend to respond more to narrative and word play than slapstick. we'll see about that. roll some tape. >> how about you? you are not into that? >> no, no reaction. that wasn't funny to me. i love these...
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. >> bob: he had better players last year, came in from stanford. had success there as well.in with the new orleans team in the n.b.a., temple with the rockets and chris johnson their center all gone. so mitchell by himself needing a new crew this year for l.s.u. >> eric: warren hits two free-throws. jermaine beal. over to tinsley. open back door. they find ogilvy. poked away by warren. good hands defensively, the sophomore. >> bob: i like the attack by vanderbilt. getting the ball where they need to inside against the zone so far. patience is a virtue if you are a tyingervno carrierringrin difficulty] >> eric: a game of runs 3:30 into it. beal. bass has the ball in the open floor. 1-on-3, didn't like his odds. back up high. mitchell turns around and hands it over to bass. mitchell off the screen. can't get the pass. tinsley in transition. [ applause ] another offensive rebound. taylor. swatted away. but before the shot a foul. they're going to call that foul on chris bass, reaching in. time-out on the floor. chance to catch our breath. uth , yearoy ed ugamelf hisr. by e oe w
. >> bob: he had better players last year, came in from stanford. had success there as well.in with the new orleans team in the n.b.a., temple with the rockets and chris johnson their center all gone. so mitchell by himself needing a new crew this year for l.s.u. >> eric: warren hits two free-throws. jermaine beal. over to tinsley. open back door. they find ogilvy. poked away by warren. good hands defensively, the sophomore. >> bob: i like the attack by vanderbilt. getting the...
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Feb 19, 2010
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they look at the candidate and what they stanford. before, it appears the republican party and candidates are embarrassing the values, where the democrats are trying to fight the tea party and discredit them. >> greta: dean, thank you and good luck. >> thank you very much. >> greta: white house press secretary robert gibbs called congressman eric cantor a hypocrite, coupe! congressman >> from america's news headquarter, i'm marian raberty. tiger woods will talk about the sex scandal, breaking a three-month silence to apologize for marital infidelities, he will deliver a statement to a small group of reporters. some sportswriters are boycotting. reports say he will return to treatment for sex addiction right after the appearance. in the obama administration, changing the name of the war in iraq. operation iraqi freedom becoming operation new dawn, meant to reflect the reduced role u.s. troops will play securing the country n. afghanistan, nato forces meeting stiffer resistance in marjah, the offensive now in its seventh day. now back t
they look at the candidate and what they stanford. before, it appears the republican party and candidates are embarrassing the values, where the democrats are trying to fight the tea party and discredit them. >> greta: dean, thank you and good luck. >> thank you very much. >> greta: white house press secretary robert gibbs called congressman eric cantor a hypocrite, coupe! congressman >> from america's news headquarter, i'm marian raberty. tiger woods will talk about the...
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Feb 28, 2010
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WTTG
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he is the grandson of robert kennedy, the 29-year-old is a graduate of stanford university and harvard law school. he currently works as a prosecutor in massachusetts. >>> premiums will go up and they will also go up because of the government mandates. >> it's not factually accurate. costs for families for the same type of coverage as they're currently receiving would go down 14 to 20%. >> i believe with respect you're wrong. >> there were no big breakthroughs during president obama's health care summit that played out on tv. the president ended talks by promising to move forward. so did the last ditch mting sway any lawmakers or is the partisan divide as strong as ever? chris wallace is the coast of fox news sunday he joins us with a preview of today's program. good morning. >> good morning melanie. >> after a seven hour working session i'd like to believe there would be some areas of agreement were there any? >> yeah, there were some areas of agreement, the possibility of something in terms of malpractice reform, senator co-burn who is a doctor republican suggested having undercover
he is the grandson of robert kennedy, the 29-year-old is a graduate of stanford university and harvard law school. he currently works as a prosecutor in massachusetts. >>> premiums will go up and they will also go up because of the government mandates. >> it's not factually accurate. costs for families for the same type of coverage as they're currently receiving would go down 14 to 20%. >> i believe with respect you're wrong. >> there were no big breakthroughs during...
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Feb 16, 2010
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steve schneider, climate scientist from stanford university.o how could i not ask a climate question which has to do with price? one of the things we expect as climate changes since we can't predict the details, only the general trends, is there could be a further increase in volatility. not just year-to-year but also in the distribution of where it's produced from especially north south. the south being more disadvantaged. one way that can you ensure against that volatility is through food reserves. we've learned that a long time ago. i wrote a book in 1976 called "the genesis strategy." remember joseph in egypt saved the green. it was violently opposed by the midwest because they thought that green reserves were going to drive down prices, yet it also provide a measure of security. so the question i have then is, how do you want to deal with the tradeoff between production incentives and having a safe set of storage and who should have the storage and what should the rules be for its release? >> good question. everybody seems to be thinking a
steve schneider, climate scientist from stanford university.o how could i not ask a climate question which has to do with price? one of the things we expect as climate changes since we can't predict the details, only the general trends, is there could be a further increase in volatility. not just year-to-year but also in the distribution of where it's produced from especially north south. the south being more disadvantaged. one way that can you ensure against that volatility is through food...
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Feb 27, 2010
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it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. >> my style is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be home sunday night or after a big game and maybe there's something you need to crank out on the piano to kind of relieve some emotions or something. i use it as an escape. it's a good way to kind of release frustration or whatever emotions you're feeling at the time. it's something i've done for so long, you know, i've played for so long i don't ever really want to let it go at this point. i enjoy playing and i'm going to keep doing it as long as i can. >> reporter: it's only natural to expect eric's musical endeavors will outlast his football career, but that doesn't necessarily mean he's planning for a future behind the k
it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. >> my style is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be...
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Feb 6, 2010
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by far of the best source for information, however, was the hoover institute at stanford university. my personal theory is that most right wing governments leave their archives to hoover. my experience with hoover goes back to my first book, "the last romantic" a biography of queen marie of romania. this was a long time ago. alan and i were living in southern california. he was directing all the president's men. and i went up to the north to see the son of the romanian prime minister who was working at hoover at the time. at that point in my life, i'd written nothing more than book reviews and pieces on blue jeans and shopping bags. so i was amazed at the welcome welcome we got. we apologize for not giving you the first class tour but governor reagan is here today. now you know how long ago it was. here, let us show you goebles diaries. why were they treating me so well. i worked there for a week or two and got ready to leave. as i was walking out the powers that be stopped me. mrs. pakula, it's been such great pleasure having you here. do you think you could get woodward and bernste
by far of the best source for information, however, was the hoover institute at stanford university. my personal theory is that most right wing governments leave their archives to hoover. my experience with hoover goes back to my first book, "the last romantic" a biography of queen marie of romania. this was a long time ago. alan and i were living in southern california. he was directing all the president's men. and i went up to the north to see the son of the romanian prime minister...
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Feb 15, 2010
02/10
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WJZ
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in the wake of the madoff scandal, ponzi perp walks have become a marathon: texas financier allen stanfordaccused of a $7 billion ponzi scheme; minnesota businessman tom petters, convicted recently of a $3 billion scam; and park avenue lawyer marc dreier, mastermind of a mere $400 million ponzi scheme that landed him first on "60 minutes," and then in federal prison. >> marc dreier: i thought if someone would ever interview me on a program such as yours, it'd be for something good i've done, not something humiliating i've done. >> safer: despite the downfall of the dreiers and the madoffs, ponzi operators large and small are busier than ever, knowing we're all capable of greed, misplaced trust, and something else. >> stephen greenspan: i think it's anxiety. it's anxiety that you're losing out, that other people are doing better than you are. >> safer: stephen greenspan is a university of colorado professor who writes and lectures on gullibility, warning audiences that not reading the fine print or buying something on a tip from your brother-in-law are bad ideas, and that older people are p
in the wake of the madoff scandal, ponzi perp walks have become a marathon: texas financier allen stanfordaccused of a $7 billion ponzi scheme; minnesota businessman tom petters, convicted recently of a $3 billion scam; and park avenue lawyer marc dreier, mastermind of a mere $400 million ponzi scheme that landed him first on "60 minutes," and then in federal prison. >> marc dreier: i thought if someone would ever interview me on a program such as yours, it'd be for something...
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Feb 13, 2010
02/10
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had a lead in this game. 18-point lead at stanford. they have ucla and usc at home. and then they finish at the oregons. they also have to play washington but they do get them in pullman. >> don: what do you do if you're a coach when your team plays two exceptional first halves but comes away empty? i'm sure he addressed it about the other night's game where they played so well and then lost the game. this time, they get flipped around and blown out. gutierrez, we talked about him affecting the game. 14, 6 assists and 4 steals. if you can capture the first half for washington state and try and talk about, you ow, doing the same in the second half, you're going to be all right. >> barry: gutierrez incidentally, 14 points, 6 assists. and randle will leave to a standing "o" from the crowd here at haas pavilion. >> don: incredible career for jerome randle. if they can hang on and win this conference, it will be the first time in 50 years. he'll be a big reason why. he'll climb up the leaders charts. he's already the career three-point leader. what a career for jerome ran
had a lead in this game. 18-point lead at stanford. they have ucla and usc at home. and then they finish at the oregons. they also have to play washington but they do get them in pullman. >> don: what do you do if you're a coach when your team plays two exceptional first halves but comes away empty? i'm sure he addressed it about the other night's game where they played so well and then lost the game. this time, they get flipped around and blown out. gutierrez, we talked about him...
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Feb 3, 2010
02/10
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. >> rose: at stanford and places like that? >> even before.n junior high school. >> rose: that were still part of his.... >> he's kept those loyal... he believes the loyalty was tested when he didn't have anything. the people who've known him since then, it's very hard to pass the test because he just didn't feel like it's as genuine as those who knew him when he didn't have anything. >> rose: if he has a heart to heart with himself, what would he say? >> "kind of person do i want to be? this is what i turned out to be. i'm shocked, probably, that i have this failing. and i'm going to correct it. i'm very good at correcting things in golf and i'm going to apply those same gifts i have that of intelligence and will and find out what's wrong and address it. i mean, even president obama made that point today that he believes people with the right discipline and intention and knowledge can change. so i think the heart to heart is going to be... i didn't know what i was, now i know and i don't want to be that. i want to be something different. and
. >> rose: at stanford and places like that? >> even before.n junior high school. >> rose: that were still part of his.... >> he's kept those loyal... he believes the loyalty was tested when he didn't have anything. the people who've known him since then, it's very hard to pass the test because he just didn't feel like it's as genuine as those who knew him when he didn't have anything. >> rose: if he has a heart to heart with himself, what would he say? >>...
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Feb 11, 2010
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he is chair of psychiatry at stanford university. and dr.llen frances, former chief of psychiatry at the duke university medical center. he led the last effort to revise the manual. gentlemen, thank you both for being with us. dr. schatzberg, to you first. why is this manual so important? >> well, it is useded by, as you pointed out, judy, by practitioners around the world to diagnose potential patients, people who come in for treatment with specific complaints, and to classify them as having within or another disorder. it becomes the common language that mental health practitioners use to describe patients so that we can agree on the diagnosis. very similar to cardiologists talking to an internist saying the patient has had a myocardial infraction, or what we call a heart attack. we need to have agreed upon diagnosis and criteria if we're going to be able to take care of patients. >> woodruff: it's important for doctors, obviously the patients. insurance companies? >> absolutely. because insurance companies will pay for benefits for treatme
he is chair of psychiatry at stanford university. and dr.llen frances, former chief of psychiatry at the duke university medical center. he led the last effort to revise the manual. gentlemen, thank you both for being with us. dr. schatzberg, to you first. why is this manual so important? >> well, it is useded by, as you pointed out, judy, by practitioners around the world to diagnose potential patients, people who come in for treatment with specific complaints, and to classify them as...
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Feb 5, 2010
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. >> reporter: stanford's carolyn hoxby. >> and the psychologist said "you know, i really am trying toand what must be going through this man's mind." and the sociologist says "oh, but you know, think about the interesting social interaction that he's having with other people on the golf course. "and the economist says "this is so inefficient, he should be playing at night." (laughs) >> reporter: so economics isn't exactly a side-splitting discipline. on the other hand, who are we to mock sobriety. as yoram bauman noted, recounting his highlights of 2009, which included an interview with us. >> i got to be on the pbs newshour with jim lehrer. now, i don't know how much you people know about the world of stand-up comedy, but let me tell you this, in the world of standup comedy, people, it does not get any bigger... . (laughter) ... than the pbs newshour. (laughter) with jim lehrer. (applause) i have been getting phone calls nonstop on my rotary dial telephone. >> reporter: mostly economists were the butt of the jokes. >> i have a british knock-knock joke. i have to put on a terrible bri
. >> reporter: stanford's carolyn hoxby. >> and the psychologist said "you know, i really am trying toand what must be going through this man's mind." and the sociologist says "oh, but you know, think about the interesting social interaction that he's having with other people on the golf course. "and the economist says "this is so inefficient, he should be playing at night." (laughs) >> reporter: so economics isn't exactly a side-splitting...
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Feb 6, 2010
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he was previously at stanford, where he founded the center for internet and society.recently, he co-founded organization change congress. to find out why he is passionate about the issue, read his cover story in an upcoming edition of "the nation" magazine: how to get our democracy back." it's already online. welcome to you both. >> thanks. >> thank you. >> moyers: what was your response to the supreme court decision? >> i think it was a victory for free speech, in the end. and if anything, it didn't go far enough. campaign finance regulation is always a suppression of speech. and this law addresses a small aspect of it. that should help the quality and quantity and variety of political speech. >> moyers: and your response? >> i think it's an ominous sign about the future of this court and any kind of reform. because though i support free speech, and even free speech for corporations, what this means is increasingly people are going to believe their government is controlled by the funders and not by the people. and it's only going to get worse after this decision. >>
he was previously at stanford, where he founded the center for internet and society.recently, he co-founded organization change congress. to find out why he is passionate about the issue, read his cover story in an upcoming edition of "the nation" magazine: how to get our democracy back." it's already online. welcome to you both. >> thanks. >> thank you. >> moyers: what was your response to the supreme court decision? >> i think it was a victory for free...
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Feb 15, 2010
02/10
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steve schneider, a climate scientist from stanford university. i not ask a climate question that has to do with price? since we cannot predict the details and only the general trend, there could be a further increase in volatility, not just year to year but also in the distribution of where it's produced, especially north to south, with the south being more disadvantaged. one way to ensure against that volatility is to read through food reserves. i wrote a book -- i read a book in 1976. joseph in egypt say to the grains. it was finally opposviolently oe midwest. it provides a measure of security. how do you deal with production incentives and having a safe set of storage and who should have storage and what should the rules before its release? >> good question. everybody seems to be thinking about this. would you like to answer that? >> i am trying to think of how you could think of various ways of dealing with this. we have an expert on this issue in this audience. i think we should call on him to answer. he is sitting right there. he's done a l
steve schneider, a climate scientist from stanford university. i not ask a climate question that has to do with price? since we cannot predict the details and only the general trend, there could be a further increase in volatility, not just year to year but also in the distribution of where it's produced, especially north to south, with the south being more disadvantaged. one way to ensure against that volatility is to read through food reserves. i wrote a book -- i read a book in 1976. joseph...
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Feb 19, 2010
02/10
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it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. >> my style is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be home sunday night or after a big game and maybe there's something you need to crank out on the piano to kind of relieve some emotions or something. i use it as an escape. it's a good way to kind of release frustration or whatever emotions you're feeling at the time. it's something i've done for so long, you know, i've played for so long i don't ever really want to let it go at this point. i enjoy playing and i'm going to keep doing it as long as i can. >> reporter: it's only natural to expect eric's musical endeavors will outlast his football career, but that doesn't necessarily mean he's planning for a future behind the k
it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. >> my style is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be...
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Feb 5, 2010
02/10
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emanuel minot is a psychiatry professor and director of the center for narcolepsy at stanford universityctor, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> is this a virus that causes this? is that what a lot of people believe? >> we're not so sure. however, we think that some people are genetically predisposed to having an infection that then doesn't clear up and seems to relax regularly, and that gives the symptoms of sleeping all the time for ten days at a time. >> so, if it lasts ten days at a time and then the person wakes up and can function at some normal level, generally speaking, what's the time between episodes? >> that's a big problem. we never know. sometimes it can be two weeks, sometimes it can be months. occasionally, people say that's it, i've grown out of it because i haven't had an episode for a year, then it restarts. >> and even during the episodes, they do wake up for short periods of time, and what are they like during those periods of times? how do they behave? >> that's the important thing. they are not normal. they are in kind of a dream-like state, sounds are muffled
emanuel minot is a psychiatry professor and director of the center for narcolepsy at stanford universityctor, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> is this a virus that causes this? is that what a lot of people believe? >> we're not so sure. however, we think that some people are genetically predisposed to having an infection that then doesn't clear up and seems to relax regularly, and that gives the symptoms of sleeping all the time for ten days at a time. >> so, if...
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Feb 24, 2010
02/10
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it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be home sunday night or after a big game and maybe there's something you need to crank out on the piano to kind of relieve some emotions or something. i use it as an escape. it's a good way to kind of release frustration or whatever emotions you're feeling at the time. it's something i've done for so long, you know, i've played for so long i don't ever really want to let it go at this point. i enjoy playing and i'm going to keep doing it as long as i can. >> reporter: it's only natural to expect eric's musical endeavors will outlast his football career, but that doesn't necessarily mean he's planning for a future behind the keyboard. >>
it is here where the stanford graduate composes his best work in the form of cinematic sound scapes. is more of a movie classical theme sounding stuff i guess i would characterize it. >> so dramatic it plays well essentially. it's dynamic. >> yeah. i'd like to think that. you guys can be the judge. >> reporter: while football is the profession and composition is the passion, it's the music that gives eric an escape from life when he needs it. >> i'll be home sunday night...
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Feb 14, 2010
02/10
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people like gary ackerman at yale and levenson at texas, larry kramer at stanford, jeff rosen at gw,ble energy to take the constitution away from the court. how's that going? >> i would not take a constitutional way from the court. -- i would not say to take a constitution away from the court. it is about the argument barry is making, popular constitutionalism, democratic constitutionalism. but if you think that it is wrong, and generally constitutional values have risen from popular mobilization rather than just judicial decisions, there are a lot of interesting differences about how aggressive or restraint courts should be, and the current buzzword among liberal circles in the american constitutional society is democratic constitutionalism, and the point here is not that the court should be completely restrained and let the people do everything, but they should be modestly interventional list, moving away from the public occasionally, like women's rights, pushing back when people get in, but basically engaging in a dialogue with people, and different people come up on different sid
people like gary ackerman at yale and levenson at texas, larry kramer at stanford, jeff rosen at gw,ble energy to take the constitution away from the court. how's that going? >> i would not take a constitutional way from the court. -- i would not say to take a constitution away from the court. it is about the argument barry is making, popular constitutionalism, democratic constitutionalism. but if you think that it is wrong, and generally constitutional values have risen from popular...
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Feb 17, 2010
02/10
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he is an economist from stanford university that is very good on this issue.if you want to follow up on that, i recommend his book on that. there are a number of other ways that the government effects these markets. the second of which is government expenditure and taxation policy. the enormous deficits that the government is running, which are tiny compared to what social security and medicare's unfounded liabilities are going to be. they are around $85 trillion in unfounded liabilities which are going to be paid for some time are else we're going to have a political meltdown because everybody that's my age or older is going to expect that these programs are going to be there and so we're all going to vote against the constriction of these plans. so you have -- somehow you need 85 trillion in unfounded liabilities. how is the government going to pay for that? it's going to borrow. when it borrows, what's going to happen? it's going to start to drive up interest rates. as it goes to drive up interest rates, what is going to happen? everybody is irritated that
he is an economist from stanford university that is very good on this issue.if you want to follow up on that, i recommend his book on that. there are a number of other ways that the government effects these markets. the second of which is government expenditure and taxation policy. the enormous deficits that the government is running, which are tiny compared to what social security and medicare's unfounded liabilities are going to be. they are around $85 trillion in unfounded liabilities which...