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Mar 23, 2013
03/13
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KQEH
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-- the people who reinstated white supremacy, in the south, in my text book, -- textbooks, they wereredeemers. that is what they were called. we gave it a gloss. it was taught that the klan was a benevolent organizations. we can turn history upside down. we have done it for a century. a lot of people still do not have an accurate view of the civil war and what it was about. i have argued that we have misremembered the 1960's for years. george wallace invented a lot of the terminology we have about big government and pointy headed liberals and a biased media being in cahoots with politicians, trying to centralize all power in washington. an anti-government distemper. it is not a judgment. it is just a hostility to government that we are still living with the that is very dangerous to any sort of balance or any sort of purpose, even a patriotic purpose. the history of american patriotism is figuring out ways we can work together to move forward and me together, knit together the, and government -- knit togetherther, the common government . they think a key to their survival is a gun in
-- the people who reinstated white supremacy, in the south, in my text book, -- textbooks, they wereredeemers. that is what they were called. we gave it a gloss. it was taught that the klan was a benevolent organizations. we can turn history upside down. we have done it for a century. a lot of people still do not have an accurate view of the civil war and what it was about. i have argued that we have misremembered the 1960's for years. george wallace invented a lot of the terminology we have...
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Mar 6, 2013
03/13
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KCSMMHZ
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she has only one textbook at home. she has to study on her own as no one in her family can read or write. >> translator: i loved school. my friends and teacher. i was especially good at language and really wanted to study it more. >> reporter: in a good year, the combined income of family members is about $2,200. that's much less than a household in the city with only one wage earner. furthermore, they have six children. supporting them has kept the family poor. it's a struggle just to have enough money for food. so they value making ends meet more than education. >> translator: i would like to send my daughter to school, but what a burden. life is just too harsh. >> reporter: some volunteers are working to help children. this university student in beijing is one of them. the group looks into living conditions of poor families in china's rural areas. today, in a village in gansu province, she makes a visit. she wanted to find out how this family lived. >> translator: this project has been a life-altering experience for
she has only one textbook at home. she has to study on her own as no one in her family can read or write. >> translator: i loved school. my friends and teacher. i was especially good at language and really wanted to study it more. >> reporter: in a good year, the combined income of family members is about $2,200. that's much less than a household in the city with only one wage earner. furthermore, they have six children. supporting them has kept the family poor. it's a struggle just...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 13, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV
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i am the textbook case of small business. ~ i am a woman-owned enterprise. i am a certified vendor to the city of san francisco. i have doubled my workforce. we have doubled the number of employees that we had 12 months ago. this is not because fishing and crabing have gotten better. this is not because anything on the waterfront has improved. this is 100% because of this event which we are so lucky to be hosting. the team art mist the [speaker not understood] they're all here and all functioning and the city is to be commended for hosting this event. it will be a success. we will meet all of our goals and i am textbook ka to prove that. >> thank you. next speaker, please? >>> good morning. my name is janet again. i am the own r of a women's local catering and this gives you a scope of how [speaker not understood] the america's cup has affected our business on a going forward basis. we hired 16 people [speaker not understood]. was not involved in the cup when the pier releases was issued. since then we have gotten involved with business connect. we have work
i am the textbook case of small business. ~ i am a woman-owned enterprise. i am a certified vendor to the city of san francisco. i have doubled my workforce. we have doubled the number of employees that we had 12 months ago. this is not because fishing and crabing have gotten better. this is not because anything on the waterfront has improved. this is 100% because of this event which we are so lucky to be hosting. the team art mist the [speaker not understood] they're all here and all...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 31, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV
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particularly, textbooks that are very difficult for solo practitioners they are very expensive and have to be renewed every year and i found that the law library has a very nice collection of textbooks that you can also borrow and use them at home and so i know that having a law library has made it possible for me to help a lot of people. and i would not have been able to do it without. so i think that we must consider our citizens and protect them with the right, so that they can defend themselves or represent themselfs in civil cases. thank you, for considering my remarks. >> honorable members of the budget committee, my name is david (inaudible) and i am a volunteer for the coalition of legal professionals and i am a board member of (inaudible) and members of san francisco tomorrow, citizen climate to lobby as well as other social economic and professional organizations i am urging the supervisors to allow fundings to allow at least the library to keep the present minimum spais of 30,000 square feet. i am saying this not from the standpoint of the present city budget but for the futu
particularly, textbooks that are very difficult for solo practitioners they are very expensive and have to be renewed every year and i found that the law library has a very nice collection of textbooks that you can also borrow and use them at home and so i know that having a law library has made it possible for me to help a lot of people. and i would not have been able to do it without. so i think that we must consider our citizens and protect them with the right, so that they can defend...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 28, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV
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eye 85
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particularly, textbooks that are very difficult for solo practitioners they are very expensive and have to be renewed every year and i found that the law library has a very nice collection of textbooks that you can also borrow and use them at home and so i know that having a law library has made it possible for me to help a lot of people. and i would not have been able to do it without. so i think that we must consider our citizens and protect them with the right, so that they can defend themselves or represent themselfs in civil cases. thank you, for considering my remarks.
particularly, textbooks that are very difficult for solo practitioners they are very expensive and have to be renewed every year and i found that the law library has a very nice collection of textbooks that you can also borrow and use them at home and so i know that having a law library has made it possible for me to help a lot of people. and i would not have been able to do it without. so i think that we must consider our citizens and protect them with the right, so that they can defend...
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months ago when backs delusional mind their true facts well at least according to a new series of textbooks used in schools funded by louisiana and indiana's voucher programs as uncovered by recent reporting from mother jones and think progress governor bobby jindal is much wanted plan to provide students with a greater educational choice ends up using taxpayer dollars to support an academic curriculum that would make jerry falwell but wash its share in accuracy and stupidity but this kind of stuff only happens in a crazy cell right. thank you again in february mother jones in the guardian revealed attempt by right wing oligarchy like the koch brothers to disseminate libertarian propaganda to public schools throughout the country the materials financed by the shadowy network known as the donors trust included lessons taught by fox businesses john stossel on the myth of climate change and the evil of the minimum wage all those styles videos are not as religious as louisiana's textbooks are just as crazy here's the truth there is an ongoing attempt by right wing and corporate elements to priv
months ago when backs delusional mind their true facts well at least according to a new series of textbooks used in schools funded by louisiana and indiana's voucher programs as uncovered by recent reporting from mother jones and think progress governor bobby jindal is much wanted plan to provide students with a greater educational choice ends up using taxpayer dollars to support an academic curriculum that would make jerry falwell but wash its share in accuracy and stupidity but this kind of...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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FOXNEWSW
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and that that textbooks would be distributed and parents could see them. they've been approved. have an onslaught of online products by c-scope, which was not involved in this particular lesson. >> megyn: that's the other that has the agenda in texas. >> right, that's the other entity and now you have safari montage with this video and talked to the state board of education. we've had 1300 bids, up dramatically, from textbook publishers for online curriculum because they're making the transition. now, we obviously want to stay up with technology in our schools. it's less expensive to deliver the product this way. students are more engaged in technology than they are in ready heavy textbooks, but we've lost control, megyn, and this really concerns me. now, safari montage, if you look on their website they're funded with government grants primarily from the federal government and what concerns me about common core as well. >> megyn: i want to asked kara, you found it in your child's test. how did you find it? >> i winter through his papers. >> megyn: lots of parents did that, why
and that that textbooks would be distributed and parents could see them. they've been approved. have an onslaught of online products by c-scope, which was not involved in this particular lesson. >> megyn: that's the other that has the agenda in texas. >> right, that's the other entity and now you have safari montage with this video and talked to the state board of education. we've had 1300 bids, up dramatically, from textbook publishers for online curriculum because they're making...
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Mar 20, 2013
03/13
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KOFY
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also selling used textbooks, today's ruling in a case brought by a california student. and... why an increasing number of elephant seal pupts are being treated [ male announcer ] fact: the 100% electric nissaneaf... is more fun than ever. sees better than ever. ♪ charges faster. and will charge. cool. and heat. from your phone. fact: leaf never needs gas. ever. good for the world. built in america. now, leaf's an easier choice than ever. ♪ shop at choosenissan.com. ♪ >> terry: seal puping season is out on the marin coast. wayne freedman says the marine center is already carrying for a dozen pups. >> these are the utterances they make. at the marin mammal center, they have elephant seals this time of the year. >> if charles darwin coined the term of natural selection this would be the variation as give natural selection a chance. >> many cases, it's not a matter of natural selection at all. it's a matter of human interfering with the process of these animals. >> other way, it's puping season 19 seals are on the way and more in distress. >> this morning we picked up six animals.
also selling used textbooks, today's ruling in a case brought by a california student. and... why an increasing number of elephant seal pupts are being treated [ male announcer ] fact: the 100% electric nissaneaf... is more fun than ever. sees better than ever. ♪ charges faster. and will charge. cool. and heat. from your phone. fact: leaf never needs gas. ever. good for the world. built in america. now, leaf's an easier choice than ever. ♪ shop at choosenissan.com. ♪ >> terry: seal...
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Mar 18, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN
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in my public high schools outside of chicago, paul krugman wrote our economic textbooks. the majority textbooks in this country. it is important to reach out and fight back. at makes me excited to ntroduce our next speaker. it is so important that with reach out the young people even using colored illustrations. if they can't read, read to them. if we don't teach them history the liberals will do it for us. m honored to introduce callista gingrich. [applause] ♪ >> thank you. thank you for that warm welcome. it is great to be here at the 40th annual cpac conference. ever since the first conference cpac has been a gathering of ideas, activists, candidates and leaders. this year is bigger, more energetic, and wider ranging than ever. the fact that there are 23 names in the presidential straw poll tells us how dynamic and wide open the current situation is. one year ago, many of us thought that president obama would lose. that the republicans would win the senate. conservatives would be in the middle of big changes for america. for most of us, election night was a very soberi
in my public high schools outside of chicago, paul krugman wrote our economic textbooks. the majority textbooks in this country. it is important to reach out and fight back. at makes me excited to ntroduce our next speaker. it is so important that with reach out the young people even using colored illustrations. if they can't read, read to them. if we don't teach them history the liberals will do it for us. m honored to introduce callista gingrich. [applause] ♪ >> thank you. thank you...
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Mar 23, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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was the mit physicist who headed the american anti-submarine research effort after the war wrote a textbook, actually, where he true on a lot of the experiences from the or war to show how these same ideas could be applied to business and many sort of everyday practical problems. and his favorite example, he cited, he said it was a trivial but very good illustrationing of what operations research could do. one of his scientists was out in the field visiting some base, fairly rough conditions, and he noticed after every meals thrfl a huge line, soldiers waiting to watch their mess kits. so being a good operations researcher, he went up and started timing what was going on. apparently, what was going on, they had four washtubs, they had two for washing and two for rinsing. and there would be this huge back up. so he timed how long it took each operation, and he noticed, well, it took three times as long to wash the mess kit as to rinse it, so he finally said, you know, if you had three tubs for washing and one for rinsing, it will, um, speed things up. and not only did the line shrink, he sai
was the mit physicist who headed the american anti-submarine research effort after the war wrote a textbook, actually, where he true on a lot of the experiences from the or war to show how these same ideas could be applied to business and many sort of everyday practical problems. and his favorite example, he cited, he said it was a trivial but very good illustrationing of what operations research could do. one of his scientists was out in the field visiting some base, fairly rough conditions,...
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Mar 19, 2013
03/13
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FOXNEWSW
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new york city approves war-oriented textbooks for students. you all agree these books are inappropriate for third graders while the librarian in basra recommended in grades two through four, secret school and recommended by the school library association. >> who are they? who is the school library association? >> they are an association of school libraries, greg. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> sounds like a bunch of dorks. >> let's go over there and beat them up. >> hey, do you want to join the library association? you bet i do. >> they sound like dorks. >> we meet on friday nights. of course you do. >> neither of the two books actually about war. the librarian of basra is a true story of a woman who was the chief librarian of basra's library. she smuggled 70% of the books out of the library when saddam's government took over the building. >> there you go. >> that's a bad book because the title is so literal. the lady who did something back in the 80s. >> it is for second graders, jim. >> that's true. >> wasn't the cover like showing very
new york city approves war-oriented textbooks for students. you all agree these books are inappropriate for third graders while the librarian in basra recommended in grades two through four, secret school and recommended by the school library association. >> who are they? who is the school library association? >> they are an association of school libraries, greg. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. >> sounds like a bunch of dorks. >> let's go over there and beat...
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Mar 20, 2013
03/13
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KTLN
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. >> we found out what is in the textbooks. exactly the opposite of what the bible tells us and teaches us. illegal in germany. persecuted, fines, jail or loss of their children. most home schoolers are left alone by the government. against home schooling. in those nations where it is illegal, home schoolers risk losing their children. two of the worst nations are germany and sweden. if you would like to see what it would be like if it was banned in america if it was banned, come to sweden. this family had to take their family to finland in exile. >> we were forced out of our country. that make as stronger impact than i can imagine. this is our country. now we are pushed away from it. >> sweden is the toughest places to home school. michael donnelly of the home school administration. president of the nordic committee for human rights calls it a dictatorship where social workers tell parents what to do. >> they claim to be a democracy, far from it. it is a dictatorship. social workers dictating how you live. children. >> this fa
. >> we found out what is in the textbooks. exactly the opposite of what the bible tells us and teaches us. illegal in germany. persecuted, fines, jail or loss of their children. most home schoolers are left alone by the government. against home schooling. in those nations where it is illegal, home schoolers risk losing their children. two of the worst nations are germany and sweden. if you would like to see what it would be like if it was banned in america if it was banned, come to...
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Mar 13, 2013
03/13
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CURRENT
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or as one textbook put it, the majority of slave owners treated their slaves well. well now the louisiana textbook america, land i love published by beka books is teaching louisiana's e
or as one textbook put it, the majority of slave owners treated their slaves well. well now the louisiana textbook america, land i love published by beka books is teaching louisiana's e
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 14, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV
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with them and they never get access to that academic language that is found in our content area textbooks. another one of the key shifts from the old standards to the new set of standards on the next slide is -- i'm gonna highlight the top one. en/hreurb has a sit of rules to understanding of a meaning making resource based on audience task and purpose. the key here is that it be meaningful and applicable to students' lives and learning in the classroom. now angie will share some things. >> so what you have on this hand out that was given to you is to highlight how language is at the center so keeping in mind that as kevin highlighted the eld standard is there intended to highlight and amplify the language that students need to express their thinking and understanding in all content areas. so this visual captures that. what i'd like to do now is share the work that our department multilingual that kevin referred to has been engaged with humanities. we have been at the table with them to collaborate and really think about -- even before the california eld standards were adopted in november
with them and they never get access to that academic language that is found in our content area textbooks. another one of the key shifts from the old standards to the new set of standards on the next slide is -- i'm gonna highlight the top one. en/hreurb has a sit of rules to understanding of a meaning making resource based on audience task and purpose. the key here is that it be meaningful and applicable to students' lives and learning in the classroom. now angie will share some things....
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Mar 24, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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so if there is anybody that is an academic that doesn't order textbooks through the regulator, then you can see tom for that. so, it means a lot to be here tonight and to start this year. as tom said, the plan will be talking for 35 or 40 minutes at the most and i will do some reading from the book and i look forward to the robust dialogue and questions and answers at the end for the next 20 or 25 minutes after that and then i will sign some books over there. if they can read my chicken scratch writing. so that is the plan. we are going to celebrate the 50th anniversary of a number of civil rights flashpoints. 1963 was a pretty important year in the civil rights movement or would i will call the black freedom struggle for the rest of the talk and none will be more celebrated than the march on washington that happened on august 28, 1963. i think we can imagine that the focus will be -- this is probably what we are going to see a lot of. dr. king, the celebrity of dr. king and the i have a dream speech. maybe there will be some mentioning of the complex of the march on washington, the lab
so if there is anybody that is an academic that doesn't order textbooks through the regulator, then you can see tom for that. so, it means a lot to be here tonight and to start this year. as tom said, the plan will be talking for 35 or 40 minutes at the most and i will do some reading from the book and i look forward to the robust dialogue and questions and answers at the end for the next 20 or 25 minutes after that and then i will sign some books over there. if they can read my chicken scratch...
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Mar 20, 2013
03/13
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KNTV
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. >> the six-year-old is the textbook definition of the word strength. at age three, he was diagnosed with lymph o ma and then three and a half years later, he beat it. but just last month, something was not quite right with her son. she received a phone call that devastate e ed the family. the family was told the leukemia was very aggressive and the only way to survive is through a bone marrow transplant. >> it's nothing that i can do by my house or by myself. >> edward knows what's going on with his body. his mother says he never complains and is amazed at how calm and strong he has been. she admits she's so scared of losing her son. >> i'm afraid. that i'm stuck. he's really a good person. he doesn't complain about nothing. >> the students at river glen school are there every day cheering him on. >> i have to start reading books to him. they're so excited. they make up songs and they sing to him. it's six-year-olds. >> the family knows about how challenge it is to find a bone marrow match. they have been told there are not many of hispanic decent and
. >> the six-year-old is the textbook definition of the word strength. at age three, he was diagnosed with lymph o ma and then three and a half years later, he beat it. but just last month, something was not quite right with her son. she received a phone call that devastate e ed the family. the family was told the leukemia was very aggressive and the only way to survive is through a bone marrow transplant. >> it's nothing that i can do by my house or by myself. >> edward knows...
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Mar 29, 2013
03/13
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CURRENT
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. >> the textbook is the complaint. >> john: are people getting more squeamish?about vaginas? >> about sex in general. >> before sushi nobody cared. >> john: you would think in the age of the internet, we would be getting more european. >> we're talking about idaho. more squeamish in new york, i don't think so. >> the idea a woman could have an orgasm is upsetting. >> they call a vagina a potato. >> do they really? >> has a woman in idaho ever had an orgasm? >> no. she's had a potato. >> john: mitt romney popped up -- >> speaking of vaginas. >> adjacent. >> john: he was on dennis miller's show. >> speaking of vaginas. >> john: he told dennis that he's leading a normal life again. although mitt romney couldn't have a normal life if his dad died and willed him one. what's a normal life for mitt romney who makes $20 million a year for not working. >> i guess the dog is back on the roof. >> that poor dog. i think smaller chandeliers. >> it is all relative, right? for him a normal life is he's riding the elevator to see his car. >> john: how did the g.o.p. wind up nom
. >> the textbook is the complaint. >> john: are people getting more squeamish?about vaginas? >> about sex in general. >> before sushi nobody cared. >> john: you would think in the age of the internet, we would be getting more european. >> we're talking about idaho. more squeamish in new york, i don't think so. >> the idea a woman could have an orgasm is upsetting. >> they call a vagina a potato. >> do they really? >> has a woman in...
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Mar 27, 2013
03/13
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CNBC
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this is textbook, people. it is textbook of what's going to happen before a gigantic move.nd right now, the 50-day marks the low end of the stock's current trading range and fitz thinks any pullback to these levels would be an excellent opportunity and godsend. last week, after trading sideways for about a month and a half, diana roared 20% higher before peaking on thursday. glad we told people to buy it, and it did so, and it did so on, look at this, heavy volume spike. remember, when you're dealing with the charts, volume is like a polygraph, it's telling you that this move is the truth! however, when you see this kind of massive move and the stock runs up against long-term resistance, which is what happened to dinea, fitzpatrick says that usually leads to some selling once traders start taking profits and that's exactly what we're seeing now. stock was down 5.7% today. i'm sure a lot of people gave up on it, because it's like, dow's up 100, diana's down 5%, get me out. that's perfect! this kind of pullback is exactly what fitzpatrick's looking for. this is the buyable pu
this is textbook, people. it is textbook of what's going to happen before a gigantic move.nd right now, the 50-day marks the low end of the stock's current trading range and fitz thinks any pullback to these levels would be an excellent opportunity and godsend. last week, after trading sideways for about a month and a half, diana roared 20% higher before peaking on thursday. glad we told people to buy it, and it did so, and it did so on, look at this, heavy volume spike. remember, when you're...
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Mar 20, 2013
03/13
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KNTV
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. >> reporter: if you look it up in a biology textbook, you'll learn the average human heart pumps ten pints of blood through the body every minute of every day. >> go to the top of the stairs on the bus. >> reporter: which we found out would make paul b. newman by any measure above average. >> by giving one pint of blood you can literally save three lives. >> reporter: his heart is responsible, you see, for a lot more blood than that. >> you can only give blood about six times a year so i just try to encourage a lot of people to come do this. >> reporter: paul's story begins ten years ago along this stretch of highway 85 in the south bay. paul, and his 11-year-old son mitch, were in his truck when they were side-swiped by a driver going more than 100 miles an hour. they both remember only parts of what happened next. >> we both remember me reaching over, putting my hand on his chest,s and screaming, hold on, buddy, hold on! >> reporter: the truck rolled as many as five times. paul and his son were amazingly not seriously hurt. they were well enough, in fact, just a couple of weeks lat
. >> reporter: if you look it up in a biology textbook, you'll learn the average human heart pumps ten pints of blood through the body every minute of every day. >> go to the top of the stairs on the bus. >> reporter: which we found out would make paul b. newman by any measure above average. >> by giving one pint of blood you can literally save three lives. >> reporter: his heart is responsible, you see, for a lot more blood than that. >> you can only give...
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Mar 19, 2013
03/13
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MSNBCW
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pretty soon he had a booming business making over $100,000 selling these ill ported textbooks on ebay supreme court. today supreme court said that first sale applies to things made overseas as well. what that means is that you can now, or you can still sell anything that you buy that has copy righted material in it on ebay. even if it is made overseas. that would include books that are published overseas, but perhaps computers that contain software. even some kind of watches that have trademarks in them. lots of products. your car that you buy, your foreign car, it has probably copy righted material in it. maybe software. if this case had gone the other way, then anybody who is reselling used items. libraries loaning it out. used book stores, churches raflg things off, garage sales, flea markets, ebay, potentially anybody who sold that stuff could have been sued. today by a vote of 6-3, the supreme court said no. once you buy it, it is yours to sell. >> so smiling a bit more today. thank you so much. >>> time for the "news nation" gut check. next week the supreme court will take up th
pretty soon he had a booming business making over $100,000 selling these ill ported textbooks on ebay supreme court. today supreme court said that first sale applies to things made overseas as well. what that means is that you can now, or you can still sell anything that you buy that has copy righted material in it on ebay. even if it is made overseas. that would include books that are published overseas, but perhaps computers that contain software. even some kind of watches that have...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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SFGTV2
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as early as 1908, they had a textbook and they said, you can build as cottage.we will give you the plans. take it away. we think about it later, but they were doing it early. >> this is a placard from one of those cooky cutter homes. we talk about housing today. i have two work days. this is 600927 -- 6927. they put them on the building of that authority could figure out what you were buying. >> you will see these placards. this is 1930. you can see that it was sand, sand, sand. >> there were train tracks that unloaded in front of us development site. -- in front of this development site. >> these three houses, can you see them? they are still there. people were optimistic. they would buy three lots and say, we will build three two- story houses here and eventually it will fill in. it did, but it was three decades. this is sunset boulevard being put in. there were putting in this big boulevard. it is pointing out a goalie in the middle of the sand. -- a gully in the middle of the sand. >> woody was just given this time. >> i have been wanting one of these for ye
as early as 1908, they had a textbook and they said, you can build as cottage.we will give you the plans. take it away. we think about it later, but they were doing it early. >> this is a placard from one of those cooky cutter homes. we talk about housing today. i have two work days. this is 600927 -- 6927. they put them on the building of that authority could figure out what you were buying. >> you will see these placards. this is 1930. you can see that it was sand, sand, sand....
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Mar 3, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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history college textbooks. and i did include books like howard -- people0s history bought it's used as a textbook, as is baker, and sometimes they're used together, and i think is terrific. that's wonderful. so, i found these were common themes on many of this subjects. and so i started kind of making a compilation of what would all these books say about these different things? and that's where he get them. >> host: let's go through some of them and let you comment on the ones you want. number one, the intent of the u.s. to be isolationist, the number two, the mexican-spanish american war were empireol efforts drummed up be corporate interests. number three, fdr knew in advance about the japanese attack on pearl harbor. harry truman ordered the bombing of japan to intimidate the soviets. jfk was killed by lbjs secret team to keep it from getting out of vietnam. six, nixon expanded the vietnam war. seven, the peace movement activists were not dupes of the kgb. eight, reagan knew star wars wouldn't work but want
history college textbooks. and i did include books like howard -- people0s history bought it's used as a textbook, as is baker, and sometimes they're used together, and i think is terrific. that's wonderful. so, i found these were common themes on many of this subjects. and so i started kind of making a compilation of what would all these books say about these different things? and that's where he get them. >> host: let's go through some of them and let you comment on the ones you want....
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Mar 9, 2013
03/13
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history college textbooks. i didn't go below that and i didn't include books like people's history because it is used as a textbook in many college classes as patriot's history of the modern world: from america's exceptional ascent to the atomic bomb: 1898-1945" and sometimes they're used together. i am happy with that. i found these were common themes on many of these subjects, that out his was innocent, things like this, i started kind of making a compilation of what all these books say about these different things and that is where we get the 48 liberal lies. >> host: let's go through some of the mend, and on the ones you want. number one, the first president intended for the u.s. to be isolationist. number 2, the mexican and spanish american wars were imperialists efforts drummed up by corporate interests. number 3, fdr knew in advance about the japanese attack on pearl harbor. 4, harry truman ordered the atomic bombing of japan to intimidate the soviets. 5, jfk was killed by lbj and the secret team to get
history college textbooks. i didn't go below that and i didn't include books like people's history because it is used as a textbook in many college classes as patriot's history of the modern world: from america's exceptional ascent to the atomic bomb: 1898-1945" and sometimes they're used together. i am happy with that. i found these were common themes on many of these subjects, that out his was innocent, things like this, i started kind of making a compilation of what all these books say...
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Mar 30, 2013
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is so new, but it has got to get into the textbooks over time. there was breast cancer and lung cancer and liver cancer, and we all believed it was only based on organs. it was organized because of the way we do surgery. it sort of makes sense. when you think about the disease per se, it is probably a solid genetic factors. it is at the molecular level. that is the first element that has be put in place for the education system, not only -- we don't have to have doctors become computer scientists, but i think the whole notion of this convergence of data, the digitization of data, the quantification of data, and how it relates to outcome has to be something that is better understood. i also have to agree, and you mentioned, both nancy and don, that first and foremost you have to have a doctor listen. that relationship still has to remain. >> a learned skill. we have a twitter question which i think is really -- cuts through a lot of what we're about, that is, can we cut downtime in clinical trials? $2 billion to get a drug from the lab to the mark
is so new, but it has got to get into the textbooks over time. there was breast cancer and lung cancer and liver cancer, and we all believed it was only based on organs. it was organized because of the way we do surgery. it sort of makes sense. when you think about the disease per se, it is probably a solid genetic factors. it is at the molecular level. that is the first element that has be put in place for the education system, not only -- we don't have to have doctors become computer...
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Mar 22, 2013
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. >> it was supposed to be a textbook exercise -- police were carrying out a training operation at berlin's olympic stadium when tragedy struck. two helicopters attentive to land in a snowstorm when there rollerblades click each other. it is believed snow kicked up by the helicopters is obscured the pilots vision, but the precise cause of the accident is still being investigated. it was an accident that proved fatal. >> we are thinking of the relatives of the victims. our thoughts are also with those who are injured. we wish them a speedy recovery. >> winter weather is still hanging over germany, causing misery for motorists, and treacherous conditions for pedestrians. this time last year, berliners were enjoying the onset of spring, something which may well have presented -- prevented this tragic accident. >> in germany, women and men are equal under the law, but in the workplace, equality of pay remains out of reach. >> women have to work 15 months to earn what men make in a year doing the same job. >> the painful reality highlighted across the country thursday during equal pay date. >> r
. >> it was supposed to be a textbook exercise -- police were carrying out a training operation at berlin's olympic stadium when tragedy struck. two helicopters attentive to land in a snowstorm when there rollerblades click each other. it is believed snow kicked up by the helicopters is obscured the pilots vision, but the precise cause of the accident is still being investigated. it was an accident that proved fatal. >> we are thinking of the relatives of the victims. our thoughts...
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Mar 12, 2013
03/13
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LINKTV
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en we stted the clinic in '72, there was no definition, and patients are our textbook my first surpris was having a young, healthy athletic coach of 34 who presented "i'm not interested in sex. "i've got erections. "i've got no problem compleng the act hen we do t together which twice a year. i just he other thingso do." this wasn't even dined at the time. i just called them dds--desire disorders, which means that the whole wavelength of thinking about sex enough to feel sexual was ssing, that there were other priorities in the mind of the individual. what causes a desire disorder? the way jan tells their story, it was mel's snoring, but she knows something more serious was going on.order? i must have been going through some difficult times of my own at that time, because married to somebody for over 2o years, i certainly would have heard m snore at some point those first 19 years. we then had to deal with anger, which is a big wall that builds up like brick-by-brick sentment between couples. there's hot anger in the bedroom if couples say nasty things to each other, and there's anger
en we stted the clinic in '72, there was no definition, and patients are our textbook my first surpris was having a young, healthy athletic coach of 34 who presented "i'm not interested in sex. "i've got erections. "i've got no problem compleng the act hen we do t together which twice a year. i just he other thingso do." this wasn't even dined at the time. i just called them dds--desire disorders, which means that the whole wavelength of thinking about sex enough to feel...
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Mar 2, 2013
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what it can do is it can take all medical information from scientific proceedings, guidelines, textbooks, publications it can have that available. available in a way that's never been available benefit. >> there's a huge opportunity here for ibm, which want wants to generate $20 billion in big data and analytics revenue by tonight 15. with more than $2 trillion at stake, expect health care to keep boosting tech's top line. i'm james rogers, the street, for nbr. >> susie: warren buffett says he's still on the hunt for a big acquisition with his elephant gun at the ready. in his annual letter to shareholders today, he said his one disappointment last year was that he quote, "pursued a couple of elephants, but came up empty- handed." already this year he's launched one big purchase: $27 billion deal for ketchup maker heinz. and monday on "n.b.r.," warren buffett takes your questions! the billionaire investor wants to know what's on your mind. you can submit your questions on facebook. you'll find us under bizrpt. >> tom: tonight marks the end of a chapter and the beginning of a new one in t
what it can do is it can take all medical information from scientific proceedings, guidelines, textbooks, publications it can have that available. available in a way that's never been available benefit. >> there's a huge opportunity here for ibm, which want wants to generate $20 billion in big data and analytics revenue by tonight 15. with more than $2 trillion at stake, expect health care to keep boosting tech's top line. i'm james rogers, the street, for nbr. >> susie: warren...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 7, 2013
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i did not see any in their set and that is basic textbook calculation for a retaining wall. in terms of what looks like graphically, this picture of all three properties have been shown. so, shared walls mean they go right through each of the properties, yet these foundations are across the property boundary lines. they need information and they need assurances to the su family that they won't be impacted. there is resolution. they need to show planning design, construction, they need to guarantee no disruption. and if there is, they need to have a plan to compensate or to ensure that there is no loss or impact. thank you. >> have you had conversations with the architect, the structural engineer for the permit holder? >>> i have not. i have only looked at the plans and calculations what they submited in piecemeal. so, we've gotten incomplete information. >> okay. >>> they have not shared any of their construction planning which would be an assurance. >> thank you. >> i have a question as well, mr. su. so, given the building is three separate buildings attached with the same
i did not see any in their set and that is basic textbook calculation for a retaining wall. in terms of what looks like graphically, this picture of all three properties have been shown. so, shared walls mean they go right through each of the properties, yet these foundations are across the property boundary lines. they need information and they need assurances to the su family that they won't be impacted. there is resolution. they need to show planning design, construction, they need to...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 5, 2013
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we love to move around, use your hands and do things besides just looking at textbooks and memorizing what everyone writes down. if you ask me, the one word that would describe town best would be "community." because we have such a nice community at town school. i feel like we'll respect the space that we are being offered right now. and that is all i have. >> thank you very much. >> next speaker, please. >> thank you andy for giving up one day of your february break to be here. good morning commissioners. like my of my classmates in kenya i was fortunate enough to experience diversity at an early age. this opened a world of new opportunities leading to my coming to school in america, 10,000 miles away item the director of community building and inclusion at town school for boys of the commitment to diversity -- to diversify the student body is at the heart of what we do at town school. our statement on diversity knows that the best education for students requires a diverse experience. recently our students had an opportunity to interact and learn from two african teachers from capeto
we love to move around, use your hands and do things besides just looking at textbooks and memorizing what everyone writes down. if you ask me, the one word that would describe town best would be "community." because we have such a nice community at town school. i feel like we'll respect the space that we are being offered right now. and that is all i have. >> thank you very much. >> next speaker, please. >> thank you andy for giving up one day of your february break...
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Mar 30, 2013
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. >> in some schools, you won't see students carrying textbooks or notebooks or even pens and pencilsou'll see ipads. students are using them for all sorts of subjects. teachers say that test scores have gone up, and the students like the lighter backpack. >> to mark our 10th year on tv, each week, we take a look back at one of the stories we've covered. >> he's frozen himself in a block of ice and buried himself alive. now magician david blaine has risen to his greatest stunt yet. and he might be feeling a little boxed in. on september 5th, david blaine entered this box that is now hanging by the tower bridge in london. he says he'll stay there for 44 days. sound easy? well, he's living there with no food -- just water, a blanket, and his journal. >> he's not doing anything, right? i mean, he's just sitting there. >> other than hunger, blaine is dealing with extreme heat, rain, and some people who think this stunt is foolish. >> i think this is the worst country to do it in, just 'cause of how the british people think of him. >> come down, you [bleep] the africans are starving, eh?!
. >> in some schools, you won't see students carrying textbooks or notebooks or even pens and pencilsou'll see ipads. students are using them for all sorts of subjects. teachers say that test scores have gone up, and the students like the lighter backpack. >> to mark our 10th year on tv, each week, we take a look back at one of the stories we've covered. >> he's frozen himself in a block of ice and buried himself alive. now magician david blaine has risen to his greatest stunt...
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Mar 21, 2013
03/13
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i'm sorry to bother you, i noticed that you have a textbook on tape. may i ask where you got that? reading for the blind. they can get any book on tape. i tell you, i am hooked on these books on tape. oh, tell me about it. these things have ruined me for braille. reading for the blind? i take an eye test i flunk it-- the next thing you know, i am swinging to the sweet sounds of risk management. so, i finally met the mentor. what's she like? impressive? oh, yeah. she's dating bania. bania?! yeah. i had to spend two hours at dinner last night with that specimen. what did you have? chicken. how could she look up to a person who voluntarily spends time with bania? marsala? piccata. if anything, i should be dating a mentor, and bania should be setting pins in a bowling alley. ho-ho! all right. i got a test to fail. hey, good luck with that. thanks. dad. what are you in, an athletic sweat suit? what are you doing here? well, he came by to pick up his check for the banquet hall. you know i got 183 responses. ohh, it's gonna be a rager. how are you gonna cook jewish delicacies for 183 peop
i'm sorry to bother you, i noticed that you have a textbook on tape. may i ask where you got that? reading for the blind. they can get any book on tape. i tell you, i am hooked on these books on tape. oh, tell me about it. these things have ruined me for braille. reading for the blind? i take an eye test i flunk it-- the next thing you know, i am swinging to the sweet sounds of risk management. so, i finally met the mentor. what's she like? impressive? oh, yeah. she's dating bania. bania?!...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 14, 2013
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we'll see less textbooks and more digital learning and with that we are promoting a digital literacy policy which deals with a number of issues and i'm going to go back and look at the draft policy to see how well it deals with the kind of issues rob and your family have dealt with in terms of using the internet safely and being aware of the harm you can do to yourself and to others by the way digital news can get around. >> assemblyman. >> thank you very much. i'm very, very heartened. this was an issue that's been in the closet for too long. i think high profile nationally now as well and we have super stars involved, lady gaga, myself, but you got to reach young people. usually peers are the best, i think, in terms of communicating things and then absolutely the parents. let's keep working, i'm only as good as the information i have and so we want to do the most effective long-lasting legislation. you know what happens sometimes, something is written in law but the attitudes don't change. so that is the human part, that is the part that should have consequences and not be ignored.
we'll see less textbooks and more digital learning and with that we are promoting a digital literacy policy which deals with a number of issues and i'm going to go back and look at the draft policy to see how well it deals with the kind of issues rob and your family have dealt with in terms of using the internet safely and being aware of the harm you can do to yourself and to others by the way digital news can get around. >> assemblyman. >> thank you very much. i'm very, very...
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Mar 23, 2013
03/13
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you would produce the medical textbook article that would be the definitive story of treatment. also perhaps even to deliberate cherry picking if you will a favorite idea about what you thought was right answer. in the 1980s people finally got a grip it wasn't quite right. we invented something called a systemic review. it's a piece of science how you look. you describe exactly how you search for your evidence, so you say what data bases you go. you say exactly what the terms you type in. you say what do you use to randomize trial. randomize control trial. you type in pray see bow or whatever and you get a most systemic and complete summary of all of the evidence that can possibly be drawn together extract all of the numbers from that from the main effect what the treatment did you put in one spread sheet and do something where you add the numbers together. you get a plot. it's collaboration it's a global non-profit collaboration. they produce systemic review gold standard summary used by doctors worldwide to make treatment decisions. now would you like me to explain what it is
you would produce the medical textbook article that would be the definitive story of treatment. also perhaps even to deliberate cherry picking if you will a favorite idea about what you thought was right answer. in the 1980s people finally got a grip it wasn't quite right. we invented something called a systemic review. it's a piece of science how you look. you describe exactly how you search for your evidence, so you say what data bases you go. you say exactly what the terms you type in. you...