64
64
May 3, 2013
05/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
steward of the tanner's guild is sherrif mohamad alaoui.interpreter: if the king is coming or if someone from america or france is coming, we are asked to go out and show our happiness, our appreciation that they come to see us. we go out, around a hundred of us, and we clap our hands and hit this piece of metal that we have. it is quite a show. you can really appreciate it. if the government needs the guild steward in some cases like that, they call him. that's the role of the guild steward. keach: archaeologists believe that in ancient ostia specialists also organized themselves into craft associations and guilds. the shipwrights, for example, had a large and active guild. these are the ruins of what is believed to have been their clubhouse. it was a magnificent building with a suite of dining rooms arranged around a long, indoor fish pond that would have been lined with imported marble. claridge: the principal feature is this large, central court which provides ample space for all sorts of perhaps alfresco dining as well that they could
steward of the tanner's guild is sherrif mohamad alaoui.interpreter: if the king is coming or if someone from america or france is coming, we are asked to go out and show our happiness, our appreciation that they come to see us. we go out, around a hundred of us, and we clap our hands and hit this piece of metal that we have. it is quite a show. you can really appreciate it. if the government needs the guild steward in some cases like that, they call him. that's the role of the guild steward....
172
172
May 18, 2013
05/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
baby powder. >> sally hassen has a fabulous self-tanner.verybody can do that. >> somebody told me that hansen has the fabulous self-tanner. >> she also has the spray legs. >> sally hansen. >> it's time for our johnson's baby of the week where we celebrate new moms and their new additions to their families. first up, meet little eli james dennisor who popped into the world at six pounds, seven ounces on march 18th in maryland. mom and dad say eli already loves music, animals and bath time. >> of course. >>> the next bundle of joy is aria, who was born in warwick, rhode island, her proud parents want all the other new moms to know patience and staying calm are key to a happy baby. and our third johnson's baby of the week is sweet little sebastian. sebastian made his big debut on march 19th to his proud parents, who are over the moon. so congratulations to all our babies. and if you want a chance for your baby to be considered, go to klgandhoda.com. >> all right. sara. >>> whether it is a family reunion that has you on edge -- or a friend's dr
baby powder. >> sally hassen has a fabulous self-tanner.verybody can do that. >> somebody told me that hansen has the fabulous self-tanner. >> she also has the spray legs. >> sally hansen. >> it's time for our johnson's baby of the week where we celebrate new moms and their new additions to their families. first up, meet little eli james dennisor who popped into the world at six pounds, seven ounces on march 18th in maryland. mom and dad say eli already loves...
57
57
May 23, 2013
05/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
she kept saying tanner, jackson, tanner, jackson. i told her they were okay. to lay real still. she kept saying she wanted to turn over so she could breathe better. >> what did you say to her? >> i told her she had to lay still so she didn't cause any more injuries. >> when did you find out she had passed away? >> the emt guy was over there. she had been holding on to his pant leg. she had her fingers gripped in his pant leg. he kept talking to her and all of a sudden her arm went limp. and he had taken -- some military guy had taken his shirt off and he had that over her chest to keep her warm. and he pulled it up over her face. i kept telling him she wasn't gone, that she was breathing. but she wasn't. >> what do you want people to know about shannon? >> i think that people that know her already know about her. she was so good. there's not a soul that doesn't love her. >> loving mother. >> she loved her kids. still so hard to believe, isn't it? >> uh-huh. >> well, thank you for taking the time to talk to us. i appreciate it. tanner's doing okay. her grandson, shannon's son. bu
she kept saying tanner, jackson, tanner, jackson. i told her they were okay. to lay real still. she kept saying she wanted to turn over so she could breathe better. >> what did you say to her? >> i told her she had to lay still so she didn't cause any more injuries. >> when did you find out she had passed away? >> the emt guy was over there. she had been holding on to his pant leg. she had her fingers gripped in his pant leg. he kept talking to her and all of a sudden...
51
51
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
ounce healthy baby boy. >> tanner is more than a miracle. he really is my physical angel. >> at 3 years old, tanner is still too young to know about the fall he survived inside his mother's womb, but one day, if he sees the video, he'll come to know how lucky he is. >> i remember how important his little tiny heartbeat was to me. hearing that heartbeat gave me a reason to want to get better. it gave me a reason to want to heal and go on and see what else life had to offer. >>> coming up, a young child trapped in a burning car. >> there's a baby in there! >> he was screaming like i've never heard a person scream or child scream ever. >>> and a panic-stricken woman is swept away by dangerous floodwaters. >> it was a pretty fast realization that this could be it. >> when "caught on camera: i'm alive!" continues. you said it. ladies, let's not fight dirty. cascade kitchen counselor. see, over time finish gel can leave hard-water film on your dishes and dishwasher. new cascade platinum's triple-action formula not only cleans your dishes, it helps
ounce healthy baby boy. >> tanner is more than a miracle. he really is my physical angel. >> at 3 years old, tanner is still too young to know about the fall he survived inside his mother's womb, but one day, if he sees the video, he'll come to know how lucky he is. >> i remember how important his little tiny heartbeat was to me. hearing that heartbeat gave me a reason to want to get better. it gave me a reason to want to heal and go on and see what else life had to offer....
122
122
May 22, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 122
favorite 0
quote 0
tanner, thank you very much for being with us tonight. >> you're very welcome, rachel. >> you are anert on these things and you work in this field and i do not. let me first ask you if in terms of explaining safe rooms and how they have functioned in the past and how towns rely on them, is that basically your understanding? >> safe rooms certainly will if they're tested, safe rooms will certainly protect you from these kinds of storms no doubt. >> what kind of wind speeds can structures withstand? how do you test them and what kind of failures are you looking for when you put them through these tests? >> the fema guidelines require wind pressures for the storm come from a 250-mile-per-hour ground speed tornado and that's speed on the ground and that the typical debris generated by that storm would be a wooden 2x4 that's 15 pounds and propelled at 100 miles an hour. >> so you recreate those conditions in a lab using these commercially available buildings. do you feel like people who are marketing these -- obviously this is a public safety issue, also a business. when you are finding p
tanner, thank you very much for being with us tonight. >> you're very welcome, rachel. >> you are anert on these things and you work in this field and i do not. let me first ask you if in terms of explaining safe rooms and how they have functioned in the past and how towns rely on them, is that basically your understanding? >> safe rooms certainly will if they're tested, safe rooms will certainly protect you from these kinds of storms no doubt. >> what kind of wind...
122
122
May 7, 2013
05/13
by
KBCW
tv
eye 122
favorite 0
quote 0
the hope is that the social graph tells detectives, priests, counselors, job tanners, and so on who totact to prevent the next shooting. >> we believe it's a very comprehensive and effective way to address the violence. >> remembers when actual game members saw the research that showed their risk of getting gunned down. >> they know the world they live in. they don't realize how much of a small world it really is. >> technology has been used in public health to reduce the spread of diseases. they are just starting to use it in law enforcement. they roll the technology out as early as this summer. kit doe, kpix5. >> the jail professor is going to hit other hot spots, including oakland, stockton, and selin a. >>> the experiment got a little too real when a card board gun was mistaken for the real thing. this happened this afternoon at santa clara's mission college. the students were dressed up as criminals as part of a class project. one of them carried a card board cutout of a gun, which caused another student to panic. the report, a person with a gun. the college went into lockdown for
the hope is that the social graph tells detectives, priests, counselors, job tanners, and so on who totact to prevent the next shooting. >> we believe it's a very comprehensive and effective way to address the violence. >> remembers when actual game members saw the research that showed their risk of getting gunned down. >> they know the world they live in. they don't realize how much of a small world it really is. >> technology has been used in public health to reduce...
81
81
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> what do you seeing or hearing the as opposed to tanner 20 year-ago -- 10 or 20 years ago? >> it is different from five or 10% of course, there also has been the of hookah pipes from the middle eastern residents. >> host: that comes and goes. >> most do not even know it is tobacco they will save it took a bite isn't bad but what do you think is a net? they say just hookah they don't know if it is tobacco. so that is aquantive book to say you thank you know tobacco you don't know scott. people don't know about radioactivity a lot of they don't know there are six and did eat the ingredients added to tobacco -- 680 ingredients and will get to the freebase tobacco to get the extra kick like crack nicotine to exotics like rows of was akia or bromide which is a bronco dilator order secretion from the a note land of these siberian beaver for flavor. there is a witch's brew that is added that it is a saying cigarettes are no more tobacco wrapped in paper they and "the new york times" is a pine tree is one of the most carefully designed small objects that is tens of billions of doll
. >> what do you seeing or hearing the as opposed to tanner 20 year-ago -- 10 or 20 years ago? >> it is different from five or 10% of course, there also has been the of hookah pipes from the middle eastern residents. >> host: that comes and goes. >> most do not even know it is tobacco they will save it took a bite isn't bad but what do you think is a net? they say just hookah they don't know if it is tobacco. so that is aquantive book to say you thank you know tobacco...
171
171
May 22, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 171
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> larry tanner helps run texas tech's national wind institute.> three, two, one. >> he launches the most common type of debris. a 15 pound piece of wood to see if a shelter can withstand the impact at 100 miles per hour. >> the wood splinters in the blink of an eye. but by slowing it down, you can see the incredible force and destructive power. >> we saw the projectile punch right through. well built safe rooms can withstand flying two by fours and larger debris which is often heavier but slower. and those shelters don't have to be buried in the backyard. some of the experts say the only way to survive that tornado was to get underground. >> that's absolutely false. >> tanner says if the doors don't hold, it doesn't matter where the shelter is. in flying debris projectiles kill a lot of people as they're running outside to get to an underground shelter. so the national wind institute in fema advise installing a safe room inside the home. >> maybe it's your laundry room. maybe it's your master bedroom closet. >> tanner says you need to use the roo
. >> larry tanner helps run texas tech's national wind institute.> three, two, one. >> he launches the most common type of debris. a 15 pound piece of wood to see if a shelter can withstand the impact at 100 miles per hour. >> the wood splinters in the blink of an eye. but by slowing it down, you can see the incredible force and destructive power. >> we saw the projectile punch right through. well built safe rooms can withstand flying two by fours and larger debris...
225
225
tv
eye 225
favorite 0
quote 0
later told his mom to call the cops, which led police to take out the kidnapper and rescue young tannern. and of course there was the campus police officer at the university of california berkeley, who spotted phillip garrido handing out religious literature with his two daughters. >> i just got a weird, uneasy feeling. i was looking at the younger daughter, who was sitting across from me. and she was staring directly at me. it was almost like she was looking into my soul. >> reporter: that hunch led to the discovery of jaycee dugard, kidnapped and held captive for 18 years. today the fbi and advocates for missing children told us they don't want to encourage false accusations, but americans should report things that don't seem right. and if police don't respond aggressive, be persistent. >> we'd rather follow a thousand blind leads for the one occasion that we do find something that may help rescue a child. >> reporter: tonight there are thousands of long-term missing children's cases, cases that can be cracked open by one alert american, seeing something, and saying something. dan har
later told his mom to call the cops, which led police to take out the kidnapper and rescue young tannern. and of course there was the campus police officer at the university of california berkeley, who spotted phillip garrido handing out religious literature with his two daughters. >> i just got a weird, uneasy feeling. i was looking at the younger daughter, who was sitting across from me. and she was staring directly at me. it was almost like she was looking into my soul. >>...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
56
56
May 11, 2013
05/13
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
in particular for this next one i want to join ben tanner. ben joined the facility to work on cardiac care survival. i said, ben, i have a project for you. i'm not sure if he's forgiven me for assigning him yet, but he did a great job. anybody who was out there, saw it, experienced it, we were able to see the shock trauma platoon, see the ng craft coming ashore, we put medical personnel into helicopters provided by the marine corps, flew them down to moffatt where they had an overview perspective how things work from a military perspective, they saw a c130 outfitd for patient transport by the national guard. they got to see the national guard's capabilities down there, the coast guard's capabilities. they got experience of what the marine corps has to offer. it was the smorgasbord of mill capability. as we contemplate the idea of medical surge and how do we deal with a thousand people in a hospital parking lot, we have to be creative. the only way we can do that is we have to know what are the options out there, what are the game pieces, what
in particular for this next one i want to join ben tanner. ben joined the facility to work on cardiac care survival. i said, ben, i have a project for you. i'm not sure if he's forgiven me for assigning him yet, but he did a great job. anybody who was out there, saw it, experienced it, we were able to see the shock trauma platoon, see the ng craft coming ashore, we put medical personnel into helicopters provided by the marine corps, flew them down to moffatt where they had an overview...
240
240
May 22, 2013
05/13
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 240
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> he is way tanner than the tan mom. >> when i heard the story i wasn't surprised about the song,ut i can't believe she is only 45. i thought she was 60. >> does this symbolize the end of america as we know it? >> what is the point? why? what for? i don't understand. it is so shameful. >> which part? all i saw was awesome. >> all of it. the two gay guys -- >> we don't know they are gay just because they are having a great time. >> her little daughter -- first she tries to bake her and now embarrass her forever. i feel very badly for her daughter. >> she looks like she is the funest mom at the pta. her daughter is a lucky girl. >> bill, you only said that because you dated the mother in the late 90s. are you jealous she is more successful and danker than you are? >> i am proud of her. that was no where near the handbagness we saw earlier on when she first got arrested. i am happy for her. she is going to have the last laugh when this single goes as plat nome as her beautiful -- platinum as her beautiful hair. and we hear her. >> how much are you going to pay oi tunes for this? >> i
. >> he is way tanner than the tan mom. >> when i heard the story i wasn't surprised about the song,ut i can't believe she is only 45. i thought she was 60. >> does this symbolize the end of america as we know it? >> what is the point? why? what for? i don't understand. it is so shameful. >> which part? all i saw was awesome. >> all of it. the two gay guys -- >> we don't know they are gay just because they are having a great time. >> her little...
815
815
May 17, 2013
05/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 815
favorite 0
quote 0
a foaming self-tanner, you apply one body part at a time.your back? >> you have to have someone else help, i guess. so one tip i will share, no matter what self-tanner you're going to use, sometimes i use the glove or jerjen's express. after all the pros who have sprayed me. they use baby powder, they sprinkle the baby powder and hair dryer to blast off and dust the baby powder. it absorbs the excess moisture so you don't get the streaking. what causes the streaking is when you perspire. that's a great tip. baby powder. everybody can do that. >> somebody told me that hansen has the fabulous self-tanner. >> she also has the spray legs. >> sally hansen. >> it's time for our johnson's baby of the week where we celebrate new moms and their new additions to their families. first up, meet little eli james dennisor who popped into the world at six pounds, seven ounces on march 18th in maryland. mom and dad say eli already loves music, animals and bath time. >> of course. >>> the next bundle of joy is aria, who was born in warwick, rhode island, her
a foaming self-tanner, you apply one body part at a time.your back? >> you have to have someone else help, i guess. so one tip i will share, no matter what self-tanner you're going to use, sometimes i use the glove or jerjen's express. after all the pros who have sprayed me. they use baby powder, they sprinkle the baby powder and hair dryer to blast off and dust the baby powder. it absorbs the excess moisture so you don't get the streaking. what causes the streaking is when you perspire....
383
383
May 27, 2013
05/13
by
KTVU
tv
eye 383
favorite 0
quote 0
i can make myself use tanner. put the border on. go on my instagram and see my niko. >> anderson: in a horrible costume. >> i'm one of those. >> the nails. >> anderson: i don't know why the people take pictures of food. >> it's gross. >> anderson: who cares? >> it's not like a big whopper. not like the pictures they do on television it's different instagram it looks disgusting. >> anderson: and there was a study that came out in the news one-third of people's time on social media is they are using social media when they are on the toilet inhe bathroom. which puts -- puts really a whole new spin now. like everytime i get a tweet or i think all right. this person is sitting on the toilet. >> i want to know from the doctors what is the rate of hemorrhoids, is it up because of this? do people hangout more on the bowl because they are not done looking through their feed. >> anderson: i did not go there in my mind and now that you have gone there. >> i would like to interview some doctors. >> anderson: no, i try to stay away from that. we
i can make myself use tanner. put the border on. go on my instagram and see my niko. >> anderson: in a horrible costume. >> i'm one of those. >> the nails. >> anderson: i don't know why the people take pictures of food. >> it's gross. >> anderson: who cares? >> it's not like a big whopper. not like the pictures they do on television it's different instagram it looks disgusting. >> anderson: and there was a study that came out in the news one-third...
187
187
May 23, 2013
05/13
by
CNN
tv
eye 187
favorite 0
quote 0
and cnn's chris lawrence met larry tanner at texas tech's national wind institute to just get a look> three, two, one. >> reporter: tanner launches the most common type of debris, a 15-pound piece of wood, to see if a shelter can withstand the impact at 100 miles per hour. the wood splinters in the blink of an eye. but by slowing it down, you can see the incredible force and destructive power. >> look at that. the simulator is designed to test storm shelters, 2 x 4s, flying around in a storm can really do some damage, punching a hole through plywood. plywood, keep in mind, is stronger than the siding on most houses here in moore, oklahoma. coming up, we're going to continue our coverage, looking at the federal response to the deadly tornado here in oklahoma, where some say things need to change. what needs to happen in the days ahead? we're going to look at that. special coverage continues from oklahoma after this quick break. ,á >>> 56 minutes past the hour. time to check our top stories. the search resumes this morning for a fourth grader following a landslide. one child was killed
and cnn's chris lawrence met larry tanner at texas tech's national wind institute to just get a look> three, two, one. >> reporter: tanner launches the most common type of debris, a 15-pound piece of wood, to see if a shelter can withstand the impact at 100 miles per hour. the wood splinters in the blink of an eye. but by slowing it down, you can see the incredible force and destructive power. >> look at that. the simulator is designed to test storm shelters, 2 x 4s, flying...
191
191
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 191
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> and while garry trudeau has tv experience writing the political mock u meantry tanner 8825 yearsgo, his day job is still drawing doonesbury, the comic and characters made him a star and a hero to this once-fledgling cartoonist. >> so this was my character in college. i had a college comic strip. >> he was a college student. >> he was a college student, garry was his name. honestly. i wanted to be a cartoonist. i wanted to be the next garry trudeau. 43 years after its creation, the pulitzer prize winning comic strip is still going strong. why are you also doing this other project? isn't juggling 6,000 characters in doonesbury and doing this incredibly popular comic strip enough? >> this cartooning thing just kind of found me. it wasn't something i s.a.l.t. i was recruited out of college my junior year. >> so like whereas i'm a failed cartoonist who stumbled into journali journalism, you're a failed writer/director/author who stumbled into cartooning. >> right. >> i guess sometime everyone will find where they're actually supposed to be. >> supposed to be, yeah. >> for now, trudeau
. >> and while garry trudeau has tv experience writing the political mock u meantry tanner 8825 yearsgo, his day job is still drawing doonesbury, the comic and characters made him a star and a hero to this once-fledgling cartoonist. >> so this was my character in college. i had a college comic strip. >> he was a college student. >> he was a college student, garry was his name. honestly. i wanted to be a cartoonist. i wanted to be the next garry trudeau. 43 years after...
188
188
May 5, 2013
05/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
in the late '80s, while i did give tanner initially a very solestering speech, i don't doed amirableple -- >> you made that clear. you were on twitter for a while and you were hysterial and you dropped out. >> not so much risky as it was really time consuming. i fell into the black hole. you tweet so you know -- >> it is time consuming. >> you know the danger. >> i miss you on there. >> for me it was work. not just a pastime. i was trying to create comedy and i was trying to actually write good tweets. >> you made it look effortless. >> well, that's the goal. >> the "doonesbury" strip began in 1970. how did you keep it fresh and relevant and keep yourself interested in writing a comic strip? >> i'm a curious guy and i dive into the news, as i'm sure you do every morning and it never ceases to intrigue me and fascinate me and draw me in. so, there's never any danger of fatigue in that sense. also, because i write characters who age in real time, i have a multi-generational viewpoint. and i find myself favoring the younger characters, as you might imagine. because younger characters i
in the late '80s, while i did give tanner initially a very solestering speech, i don't doed amirableple -- >> you made that clear. you were on twitter for a while and you were hysterial and you dropped out. >> not so much risky as it was really time consuming. i fell into the black hole. you tweet so you know -- >> it is time consuming. >> you know the danger. >> i miss you on there. >> for me it was work. not just a pastime. i was trying to create comedy and...
233
233
tv
eye 233
favorite 0
quote 0
matthew later told his mom to call cops, which led police to take out the kidnapper and rescue young tannern. and then, of course, there was that campus police officer at the university of california berkeley who spotted philip garrido handing out religious literature with his two daughters. >> i just got a weird, uneasy feeling. i was looking at the younger daughter who's sitting across from me, and she was staring directly at me. it was almost like she was looking into my soul. >> reporter: that hunch led to the discovery of jaycee dugard, kidnapped and held captive for 18 years. the fbi and advocate for missing children told us they don't want to encourage false accusations, but americans should report things that don't seem right, and if police don't respond aggressively, be persistent. >> we'd rather follow a thousand blind leads for the one occasion that we do find something that may help us find a child. >> reporter: there are thousands of unsolved long-term missing children's cases, cases that can be cracked open by one american seeing something and saying something. dan harris, abc
matthew later told his mom to call cops, which led police to take out the kidnapper and rescue young tannern. and then, of course, there was that campus police officer at the university of california berkeley who spotted philip garrido handing out religious literature with his two daughters. >> i just got a weird, uneasy feeling. i was looking at the younger daughter who's sitting across from me, and she was staring directly at me. it was almost like she was looking into my soul. >>...
168
168
May 13, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 168
favorite 0
quote 0
on the fundamental side, enis tanner. good to see you both, guys. rich, walk us through that chart of this comeback kid for the last year. >> bill, i'll tell you, the gap is like a retail cicada. after doing little or nothing from over a decade it merges from a bullish base of support and starts making a l o noise. when we pull up that long term monthly chart you see what i mean. after it peaking back in 2000 and -- excuse me. a few years back, 2007-2008, we fall from $15 down to $9 a share. we break out from that base of support. we're on a nice run. we think the stock has legs up to $50. we'd be a buyer here. >> enis, you're not buying it fundamentally? >> no. i actually do like the stock in the long term, bill. in the short run i think it might be due for a pause. in the long run courtney laid out an exceptional case. the best part about gap is it's improving on the both the revenue front and cost front. costs are moving lower as they improve their operations. one aspect of that is their ship from store model which has improved their inventory ma
on the fundamental side, enis tanner. good to see you both, guys. rich, walk us through that chart of this comeback kid for the last year. >> bill, i'll tell you, the gap is like a retail cicada. after doing little or nothing from over a decade it merges from a bullish base of support and starts making a l o noise. when we pull up that long term monthly chart you see what i mean. after it peaking back in 2000 and -- excuse me. a few years back, 2007-2008, we fall from $15 down to $9 a...
151
151
May 3, 2013
05/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
>> well, it was a kc 135 refueling tanner, we're told.t had taken off from its base in central asia for a mission over afghanistan. the military has called off a search for tonight for the three missing pilots and crew. there is still no word to the cause of the crash. witnesses say the plane exploded in mid flight and broke into three pieces. >> shannon: all right, jennifer griffin, thank you. >>> the last few south korean employees in north korea left the job today. i"pçy/6 signals the end of an at at cooperation on the korean peninsula. it employed tens of thousands until last month when the north began blocking operations. >>> google is recognizing a state of palestine. the company is dumping its reference to palestinian territory. they say it's following the lead of several international organizations and an israeli official questions why google is getting involved in international politics. >>> blue hair is expecting a black beard turn red with embarrassment. and is the pentagon considering a ban in talk being one's face? the grapev
>> well, it was a kc 135 refueling tanner, we're told.t had taken off from its base in central asia for a mission over afghanistan. the military has called off a search for tonight for the three missing pilots and crew. there is still no word to the cause of the crash. witnesses say the plane exploded in mid flight and broke into three pieces. >> shannon: all right, jennifer griffin, thank you. >>> the last few south korean employees in north korea left the job today....
60
60
May 26, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
whatever you thought about the war with iraq or if ganis tanner any of these places, but that aside. we couldn't have known and prepared for what was going to entail given what we were walking and there's just no excuse for not getting it right. again there is no substitute at times for local knowledge. we forget that at our peril. one of the things that concerns me about the debate about syria is the lack of local knowledge that is being brought to bear. >> one of the things i liked about the book is it's very much not a decline this book. in fact its whole purpose is to fight the possibility of decline. lost in the emotional laden territory between we are number one and we have lost it is a country that matters far more than any other. you know that our gdp is 16 trillion, a fourth of the global economic output compared to 7 trillion for china and 6 trillion for japan and our gdp is nine times that of china. can you talk about the decline and the alternatives and how that book fits into that debate? >> it's funny you sometimes define yourself in terms of what you are not that i fee
whatever you thought about the war with iraq or if ganis tanner any of these places, but that aside. we couldn't have known and prepared for what was going to entail given what we were walking and there's just no excuse for not getting it right. again there is no substitute at times for local knowledge. we forget that at our peril. one of the things that concerns me about the debate about syria is the lack of local knowledge that is being brought to bear. >> one of the things i liked...
145
145
May 12, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
michael tanner, senior fellow at cato institute, where he heads research into a variety of domestic pells, including social welfare and mauricio is a social innovator and appointed by president obama to the white house council for community solutions. thank you all for being here. >> thank you for having us. >> our goal is to get to solutions why are people poor? >> i think the media and legislators have a certain attitude about poverty and about people who are poor, so first of all, we need to change our attitudes and make sure they are at the table, the decision-making table and that they have an opportunity to have a voice in the media as well. >>> so we've got attitudes, we've got or wage structure, and we've got an issue of childhood poverty. mayor, do you have a different way of imagining why are people poor? >> i think people are poor, because we are turning away from making the hard decision, we are no longer treating poverty in the united states of america as a national crisis, and the entire discussion around poverty has moved away. so in my mind, many of our conservative friend
michael tanner, senior fellow at cato institute, where he heads research into a variety of domestic pells, including social welfare and mauricio is a social innovator and appointed by president obama to the white house council for community solutions. thank you all for being here. >> thank you for having us. >> our goal is to get to solutions why are people poor? >> i think the media and legislators have a certain attitude about poverty and about people who are poor, so first...
1,219
1.2K
May 21, 2013
05/13
by
KGO
tv
eye 1,219
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i had a lot of 27 and 28-year-olds especially ex-tanners that spoke that i do consistently everyhe 6.1 million botox type a injections performed in 2012, almost 100,000 of them were patients in their 20s, a 10% increase in that age group from the previous year. >> no problems with that? >> reporter: dermatologist janine downey says her preference is to inject patients over 30 but she admits in many cases the younger you start, the younger looking you'll stay. >> i started doing botox in my early 30s. if you don't crease the envelope you'll never get the line, never have to crack or the crease. >> reporter: "good morning america" tracked the crease obsession back in 2010 when teen philippine that internet singing sensation charisse very vealed she got botox at the age of 18, tens of thousands of teens followed suit. >> like getting my hair cut. it makes me feel better. >> reporter: the phenomenon is called causing some to suffer from frown lines, the president of the british association of plastic surgeons says he won't give botox to women under 30. he thinks it's more important t
. >> i had a lot of 27 and 28-year-olds especially ex-tanners that spoke that i do consistently everyhe 6.1 million botox type a injections performed in 2012, almost 100,000 of them were patients in their 20s, a 10% increase in that age group from the previous year. >> no problems with that? >> reporter: dermatologist janine downey says her preference is to inject patients over 30 but she admits in many cases the younger you start, the younger looking you'll stay. >> i...
92
92
May 7, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
guns that were used to perpetuate that crime on april 20, 1999 they were bought at a gun show, the tanner gun show by friends of the assail antsz who bought the guns at a gun show because she knew if she bought them at a federally licensed dealer she wouldn't have been able to, would not have been able to walk out of that store with a gun so she went into a gun show where she wouldn't have to go through a background check. so perhaps if we had had a stronger background check system on the books on april $29.20, 1999 maybe rachel joy scott would still be with us today. she was an aspiring actress, her father said she was just made for the camera and she wasn't just acting, she was writing plays, she had written one already and was getting ready to write another one. she was a devout christian and kept diaries where she wrote about her hope for living a life that would change the world with small acts of compassion. maybe if we had had a better background check system in 1999 daniel lee r he rohrabacher would still be alive today. he worked in his family's car and home stereo business, he h
guns that were used to perpetuate that crime on april 20, 1999 they were bought at a gun show, the tanner gun show by friends of the assail antsz who bought the guns at a gun show because she knew if she bought them at a federally licensed dealer she wouldn't have been able to, would not have been able to walk out of that store with a gun so she went into a gun show where she wouldn't have to go through a background check. so perhaps if we had had a stronger background check system on the books...