SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
53
53
May 6, 2012
05/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
i was not inspired by the jet set. at that time in 1960's, it was like very -- [unintelligible] for example, when i started to work, i am not all in the quatorze address. that is where some young girl -- among the young, i find more creativity, more interesting fashion in paris than in london. the sense of humor makes them to play more with the clothes and everything. in paris, i could see what was chic in what was not. one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was wearing boots. they looked at me and said, [unintelligible] as a reproach. i thought, ha ha, very funny. [laughter] but it was beautiful, which can be true but it can be awful, too, a beige. it is not because it is beige, but it could be the absolute beauty, no. it depends how it is done, how it is made, how it looks like. so i was like, let's say, killing the french fashion. i should say france in general. so absolute. it has to be like that. things that i did not feel like. i think it's time i was going, i felt really in love with london. i felt
i was not inspired by the jet set. at that time in 1960's, it was like very -- [unintelligible] for example, when i started to work, i am not all in the quatorze address. that is where some young girl -- among the young, i find more creativity, more interesting fashion in paris than in london. the sense of humor makes them to play more with the clothes and everything. in paris, i could see what was chic in what was not. one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
65
65
May 14, 2012
05/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
and at the same time, sometimes stronger than men. so that i realized very quickly that women could be more interesting, more clever, because of maybe education or maybe because of the fact that they have not played football, to be quiet, you know, more into things to obtain. to obtain something. they have to be 10 times more clever than the men. they have everything it themselves already at the base. >> that we already know we are 10 times more intelligent. [laughter] >> yes. i mean, like, men did not realize that most of the time. even if the need. the need, you know. so that, you know, truly, i felt the power of the woman. at the time, also like the woman at sleeve and that kind of thing. we admit -- we -- women reacting on taking out the bra and putting it on fire. the fire of the bra. a symbol. showing that we are as much as the men. maybe we first tried to look at men to see that we are equals. after that, it was one that would then it can be as mature, strong or whatever, than a man. but we also see the attribute of imagery, of
and at the same time, sometimes stronger than men. so that i realized very quickly that women could be more interesting, more clever, because of maybe education or maybe because of the fact that they have not played football, to be quiet, you know, more into things to obtain. to obtain something. they have to be 10 times more clever than the men. they have everything it themselves already at the base. >> that we already know we are 10 times more intelligent. [laughter] >> yes. i...
73
73
May 10, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. the gentleman from georgia is recognized. mr. woodall: mr. speaker, i thank my friend from massachusetts for joining me on the floor today. i think he chose exactly the right choice of words when he was trying to make his points. describe your opposition as hating women and children and that's your best chance of winning the argument. if only it were true. that's what i hope the american people take home from debates like these, mr. speaker, is that there are serious challenges here and serious people here trying to solve these challenges, but we get wrapped around the axle in the name-calling, i hear, that i argue does nothing to feed a child, take care of a family. the gentleman says that we are the richest nation in the world. i would tell the gentleman there is no poorer nation on the planet. there is not a nation on the planet that has borrowed more money than this nation has. not one. not one. what do they say about socialism, mr. speaker? it's a great plan until you run out of o
i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. the gentleman from georgia is recognized. mr. woodall: mr. speaker, i thank my friend from massachusetts for joining me on the floor today. i think he chose exactly the right choice of words when he was trying to make his points. describe your opposition as hating women and children and that's your best chance of winning the argument. if only it were true. that's what i hope the american people take...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
99
99
May 17, 2012
05/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
the penalty? >> yes, because i have to pay nine times for the violation. i have to pay nine times. if you can remove the penalty for me. >> y de want us to reduce the penalty? -- why do you want us to reduce the penalty? >> when i bought the house, it had a bathroom downstairs. this is the reason i bought it because we live up and down. this happened because my kids laughed -- left and i rent the apartment downstairs. i do not have any idea. >> you save this worked happen before you bought the house? >> yes. >> anything else? thank you. >> mr. duffy. >> commissioners, the department received a complaint on the 10th of january 2011. mold is on clothing. we issued a notice of violation from housing inspection. then we have the first notice of violation, some correspondence with the owner, then we issued a second notice because we had been asking for a permit to be applied for. that did not happen. eventually we did have a permit application in 2012. that permit got issued and there was a nine times penalty. we are asking that the cat on the permit because of the notice of violation. w
the penalty? >> yes, because i have to pay nine times for the violation. i have to pay nine times. if you can remove the penalty for me. >> y de want us to reduce the penalty? -- why do you want us to reduce the penalty? >> when i bought the house, it had a bathroom downstairs. this is the reason i bought it because we live up and down. this happened because my kids laughed -- left and i rent the apartment downstairs. i do not have any idea. >> you save this worked...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
149
149
May 15, 2012
05/12
by
WHUT
tv
eye 149
favorite 0
quote 0
managing editor of the "financial times" and a columnist in for the "financial times." >> this is not a life-threatening event for j.p. morgan, it's not systemic, it doesn't involve counterparty risk or meltdowns or the other things that are scary. this is like making a bad loan which j.p. morgan and other banks have made many times. >> anybody inside j.p. morgan should have said "hang on a second, do we want to become the entire market? we've become so big we're swamping everything else." it distorts prices and creates risks. you have to ask why did no one spot that. >> rose: we continue with clay christensen. a harvard business school professor and author of a new book called "how will you measure your life." >> what you really need to understand is what causes these things to happen. what causes that company to be successful and if you are in a different situation will the same or different result happen? and so trying to understand what causes happiness just as what causes success in the business world that's what we're about. >> rose: we conclude this evening with charles simonyi
managing editor of the "financial times" and a columnist in for the "financial times." >> this is not a life-threatening event for j.p. morgan, it's not systemic, it doesn't involve counterparty risk or meltdowns or the other things that are scary. this is like making a bad loan which j.p. morgan and other banks have made many times. >> anybody inside j.p. morgan should have said "hang on a second, do we want to become the entire market? we've become so big...
215
215
May 2, 2012
05/12
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 215
favorite 0
quote 1
by the time i left, it was everybody. lers out in the middle of the night. it was older people. it was diverse. the street just kept filling up. it was one of those things you remember being part of. for the first time today we're experiencing the anniversary of the killing of bin laden. this is a day we will mark as a country. this is a new day we will mark every year on our national calendar. we'll mark the anniversary of being attacked, but we will also mark this day when the head of al qaeda was killed by american forces. because this is an election year, republicans have decided this year to say they are outraged by this. you heard senator john mccain a moment ago. mitt romney claimed himself disappointed. he said i think it was disappointing for the president to make this a political item. how dare you commemorate the anniversary of killing bin laden. how dare you seek credit. this afternoon mr. romney spent the afternoon with rudy giuliani who was the mayor of new york city at the time of 9/11. together they visited
by the time i left, it was everybody. lers out in the middle of the night. it was older people. it was diverse. the street just kept filling up. it was one of those things you remember being part of. for the first time today we're experiencing the anniversary of the killing of bin laden. this is a day we will mark as a country. this is a new day we will mark every year on our national calendar. we'll mark the anniversary of being attacked, but we will also mark this day when the head of al...
259
259
May 27, 2012
05/12
by
CNN
tv
eye 259
favorite 0
quote 0
the thing. it was like -- every time my beeper went off and it was the day of the beeper, i should say, just to myself, it was from 1990 to 2000, every time my beeper went off, i just was like what? where am i going? what's going to happen to me? i just felt like it was an imposition on my person. like, oh, my god. oh, hello, you're booked on the next flight to new orleans, hurricane andrew is going to be hitting there late tonight. >> classic example is you were with paula zaun at cbs, and you are trying to finish aingle an interview with oprah. by the way, in this book you describe yourself as a lying, weasle coward. >> in that case i was a lying weasle coward. >> you are not saying you are always -- >> no, in that specific -- yes, yes. >> and you get a call -- no, then you were at another oprah show. you get asked to go to oklahoma city and apparently a bomb went off. >> this is embarrassing, but i am the butt of all of my jokes in the book, and i think that it's more fun to talk about your failures than your successes because you can learn from your failures and also you can laugh at them.
the thing. it was like -- every time my beeper went off and it was the day of the beeper, i should say, just to myself, it was from 1990 to 2000, every time my beeper went off, i just was like what? where am i going? what's going to happen to me? i just felt like it was an imposition on my person. like, oh, my god. oh, hello, you're booked on the next flight to new orleans, hurricane andrew is going to be hitting there late tonight. >> classic example is you were with paula zaun at cbs,...
68
68
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
he was discussing it with the previous hadley us administration when the last time he was president so. clearly there's a maybe some. residual suspicion in distrust going back to some of those negotiations before the obama administration came into office but different topic nato has made a major contribution to the success of the libyan uprising kilby as current government install stability in the country without foreign military well we certainly hope so. it was never. our intention it was never the mandate to. to engage in a long term stability operation in libya the libyans are a proud people who you know want to take control of their their own future they're trying to. prepare for elections this spring. but. you know i think i accept the implicit part of your question that things are a bit confused right now inside libya and there's problems of control over some of the weapons that were. liberated from the from gadhafi arsenals there's a very weak institutions whether one talks about the militias that are still operating or lack of a fully developed judicial sys
he was discussing it with the previous hadley us administration when the last time he was president so. clearly there's a maybe some. residual suspicion in distrust going back to some of those negotiations before the obama administration came into office but different topic nato has made a major contribution to the success of the libyan uprising kilby as current government install stability in the country without foreign military well we certainly hope so. it was never. our intention it was...
276
276
May 30, 2012
05/12
by
WETA
tv
eye 276
favorite 0
quote 0
that is something i deal with all the time. thansks for making me worry. vis: that's why he's a writer. because there is more story, there are more episodes of "mad men." the first four seasons win everything. season six and seven, and here's to your annual visit. i am looking forward to it. i don't know about it but look forward to it. that's our show. keep the faith. >> you can back me or not. >> you did what is best for you. you are impatient and childish, with a tantrum on a full page of the "new york times." >> nobody is happy about this. good to be the reason this place went down anymore. >> visit tavis smiley at pbs.org. >> join me for a conversation with frank langella on his memoir. "droped names." >ped names." >> every community has mlk boulevard. it is not just a street, but a place wal-mart stands with your community. make every day better. >> and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you.
that is something i deal with all the time. thansks for making me worry. vis: that's why he's a writer. because there is more story, there are more episodes of "mad men." the first four seasons win everything. season six and seven, and here's to your annual visit. i am looking forward to it. i don't know about it but look forward to it. that's our show. keep the faith. >> you can back me or not. >> you did what is best for you. you are impatient and childish, with a...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
67
67
May 25, 2012
05/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
we all books at the time we need to write that book. it's hard to be an author because you have an audience and they want you to write particular books. if you don't write the book they want you to write then it's something else. but all the books are different in that way. because samurai's garden gave me the japanese culture and to a large extent samurai's garden taught me how to write. how to write in a way that i don't think i knew as well when i wrote women of the silk. it's processes like that is how i judge each book not so much is, that my best book? is that the best story? but it has to do with, what did i learn from writing that book. i have a friend who is a writer for 3 years trying to finish a novel. sent me an e mail. think when i first started writing we didn't have e mail. it's scary because you think you are getting e mail from a friend saying, i'm done and 2 days later you get another one and it says i'm trashing it. i'm thinking how can you write a book for 2 years and trash it. >> i put it in a box and stied it with a
we all books at the time we need to write that book. it's hard to be an author because you have an audience and they want you to write particular books. if you don't write the book they want you to write then it's something else. but all the books are different in that way. because samurai's garden gave me the japanese culture and to a large extent samurai's garden taught me how to write. how to write in a way that i don't think i knew as well when i wrote women of the silk. it's processes like...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
was exactly three decades after the urgent time cruiser general belgrano was sunk in the first major british attack of the focus war next we sit down with historian and author hugh bichon now to discuss whether the conflict was worth it. it's now thirty years since the war between britain and argentina over the falkland islands but like the islands themselves the accounts of that war and the reasons for it are still hotly disputed to talk more about this i'm joined by hugh britton oh historian and author of races age the unofficial history of that war he thanks for speaking to r.t. during the period known as the dirty war the buildup to the invasion of the falklands you were actually working in argentina as a british intelligence officer how much did the british government know about what was going on in argentina at that time everything mass murder disappearances. corruption. gosh i mean the dirty war you just named them in the. two people who got rubbed out and why they choose to ignore it. well do you want the short answer the answer the. answer is that the british government is n
was exactly three decades after the urgent time cruiser general belgrano was sunk in the first major british attack of the focus war next we sit down with historian and author hugh bichon now to discuss whether the conflict was worth it. it's now thirty years since the war between britain and argentina over the falkland islands but like the islands themselves the accounts of that war and the reasons for it are still hotly disputed to talk more about this i'm joined by hugh britton oh historian...
193
193
May 27, 2012
05/12
by
WUSA
tv
eye 193
favorite 0
quote 0
as governor, the fact is, during his time as governor, the unemploymentrate zero dropped to nearly six percent to 4.7 percent, there was net job creation of about 40,000 jobs, that is more than one state in his one term as governor than president obama has been able to generate in the country during his time in office so that is a pretty good contrast, balance the budget in massachusetts without raising taxes and did that with a democratic legislature, the fact is his record in massachusetts as well as his business experience and as well as the leadership he displayed in staving the olympics for the united states in leading it in the salt lake city olympics when the international olympic committee was threatening to pull it from the united states which would have been a huge embarrassment for our country and turned it around that is one of his successes as well and that's why many americans see him as a strong leader with a positive agenda going forward. >> schieffer: do you think we will ever see him on one of these sunday morning interview shows? i know
as governor, the fact is, during his time as governor, the unemploymentrate zero dropped to nearly six percent to 4.7 percent, there was net job creation of about 40,000 jobs, that is more than one state in his one term as governor than president obama has been able to generate in the country during his time in office so that is a pretty good contrast, balance the budget in massachusetts without raising taxes and did that with a democratic legislature, the fact is his record in massachusetts as...
215
215
May 9, 2012
05/12
by
WMPT
tv
eye 215
favorite 0
quote 0
harold evans was editor of the sunday times. lieves this was a critical moment. >> the seeds of the corrupt relationship which exploded in the phone-hacking scandal were actually there all the time in news corp. >> i don't like this at all. what's the point of this section? >> bergman: to get around the monopoly rules, murdoch had made promises to parliament to stay out of editorial decisions. >> if you don't listen to me, it'll be your fault, not my fault, if it doesn't work. >> bergman: evans says the promises meant little to murdoch. >> what's this about? oh, no! >> the promises to parliament were broken with impunity. and that was the moment when everybody should have realized that the government was so scared of rupert, he could do anything. >> bergman: in 1986, murdoch did something no one else dared to do. in a secret operation, he built a new printing plant. he then fired his union print workers and moved his four papers to the new plant, in london's dock area called wapping. he took on the unions to free himself from old
harold evans was editor of the sunday times. lieves this was a critical moment. >> the seeds of the corrupt relationship which exploded in the phone-hacking scandal were actually there all the time in news corp. >> i don't like this at all. what's the point of this section? >> bergman: to get around the monopoly rules, murdoch had made promises to parliament to stay out of editorial decisions. >> if you don't listen to me, it'll be your fault, not my fault, if it doesn't...
135
135
May 12, 2012
05/12
by
WMAR
tv
eye 135
favorite 0
quote 0
clear, looking skies, boats on the water, people having a good time. it's supposed to be this way most the weekend especially for mom. wyatt and i guess rain is going to fall. >> which he we have the possibility by late day sunday. we can't promise a completely dry sunday but a clear dry night and setting the stage for a very nice clear saturday. you see what's brewing to the south and west. this storm system making good progress across the country's midsection. what that means is by tomorrow don't clouds rolling in and by the day on sunday we could see increation clouds, maybe late day showers. 78 with lots of sun. keep the sun glass handy, more on mother's day coming up. >> new tonight check out this van fire in hartford. it happened on route 24 near i- 95 at around 8:00 tonight. police say nobody was hurt but they don't know what started it. traffic was light at the time and delays weren't to bad. >>> a woman accused of beating her 8-month-old so badly she fractured the baby's skull. she claims she didn't know what happened but in charging documents
clear, looking skies, boats on the water, people having a good time. it's supposed to be this way most the weekend especially for mom. wyatt and i guess rain is going to fall. >> which he we have the possibility by late day sunday. we can't promise a completely dry sunday but a clear dry night and setting the stage for a very nice clear saturday. you see what's brewing to the south and west. this storm system making good progress across the country's midsection. what that means is by...
200
200
May 9, 2012
05/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 200
favorite 0
quote 0
so what time is it on the ship? 120 minutes. two hours. what time is it on the earth? how many flashes have been emitted on the earth during this trip? 25! so, from the earth... 25 x 6 is what, gang? mmm! eee! now, let me ask you a question. you know, when you see these guys, they got the green pea and they got the three jars and they go like this, like that, all right. which one's it under? and you always guess wrong. but you know, there's a catch, because they're pulling-- they're very, very skilled, and they're pulling something over on you, right? and you always-- or a card trick, right? dah-dah-dah-dah-dah, right? where's the catch? i've got a friend that does the card tricks. how do you even suspect? this guy is so good i've even suspected him of really being magic and pretending he has skill. you know what i mean? he's so good, okay. but anyway, there's always a trick. where's the trick here, gang? where did i trick you into thinking that 2 hours on one frame of reference would be seen 2 1/2 hours on-- does that make sense? what did einstein say common sense was
so what time is it on the ship? 120 minutes. two hours. what time is it on the earth? how many flashes have been emitted on the earth during this trip? 25! so, from the earth... 25 x 6 is what, gang? mmm! eee! now, let me ask you a question. you know, when you see these guys, they got the green pea and they got the three jars and they go like this, like that, all right. which one's it under? and you always guess wrong. but you know, there's a catch, because they're pulling-- they're very, very...
31
31
May 25, 2012
05/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
[whistles] now the time it takes to hit is gonna be the same time to hit as if you dropped it. you see that? so it works out neat, doesn't it? i've done this before, i've been on a cliff. you want to know how high it is? throw it straight and count the seconds off. it's the same as if you dropped it. it works. it's nice. you know why it's nice? begins with an f, it's physics, good physics, yeah, yeah. would you like to see what, like, a tough question would look like that has to do with everything we're talking about right now? how many say, not particularly. let me show you what a tough type question is that invokes all the ideas we've been talking about. let me show you. a baseball pitcher at the top of the tower throws a rock, throws a rock straight out. and it turns out the tower is five meters tall. and it turns out the rock thrown as fast as the baseball pitcher can throw it goes 25 meters downrange. your question is this, and usually i would give you a weekend to think about it. what is the speed of the ball to do such a thing? think. hint, we're throwing it sideways now
[whistles] now the time it takes to hit is gonna be the same time to hit as if you dropped it. you see that? so it works out neat, doesn't it? i've done this before, i've been on a cliff. you want to know how high it is? throw it straight and count the seconds off. it's the same as if you dropped it. it works. it's nice. you know why it's nice? begins with an f, it's physics, good physics, yeah, yeah. would you like to see what, like, a tough question would look like that has to do with...
138
138
May 30, 2012
05/12
by
WETA
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
by the time he got to yemen, soufan knew al qaeda as well as anyone in the fbi. and he had a special approach to his interrogations. >> what we did all the time in cases like these is to outsmart that individual. you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. >> smith: you compared interrogations-- interrogating somebody-- as like dating. sometimes, it is. and i tried to basically... ( laughs) ...because it's about building-- it's about building a rapport with an individual. it's about building that chemistry. it's about building a trust, a little bit. because if he's going to tell you something, he needs to have some sense of trust. >> smith: during his interrogation of an al qaeda operative named fahd al quso, a key player in the cole bombing, soufan used his knowledge and skills to get inside his subject's head. >> quso did not believe that anyone from outside the group would know so much about the group, and he was convinced at one point that... he told me, "i saw you in kandahar. now, i remember you." i said, "maybe." >> smith: soufan had never been
by the time he got to yemen, soufan knew al qaeda as well as anyone in the fbi. and he had a special approach to his interrogations. >> what we did all the time in cases like these is to outsmart that individual. you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. >> smith: you compared interrogations-- interrogating somebody-- as like dating. sometimes, it is. and i tried to basically... ( laughs) ...because it's about building-- it's about building a rapport with an individual....
185
185
May 5, 2012
05/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 185
favorite 0
quote 0
plus even with the index fund timing is crucial. if you bought it at the peak in october of 2007 when the s&p was trading 1500s, you got innhilated. came in and bought it in march of 2009, s&p traded below 700 you made out like a bandit. how important is timing? the s and p at the top in 2007. ended up losing half your money in 18 months. you made a decent chunk back, that brutal loss can take ages to recover from. if you bought at the s&p at bottom, you doubled your money. if you bought the dow jones before europe ruled the roost on april 11th and panicked at the twilight of the summer of '11 you saw 20% of your capital erased. these are extreme examples but get the point across, timing is everything. unfortunately, actually timing your buys and sales effectively in many ways may be the most difficult part of managing your money. because it's my mission in life to make you a better investor, i'll teach you how to timing with mistakes i've made and absorbing crucial lessons i picked up. you learn from my mistakes. let me make them an
plus even with the index fund timing is crucial. if you bought it at the peak in october of 2007 when the s&p was trading 1500s, you got innhilated. came in and bought it in march of 2009, s&p traded below 700 you made out like a bandit. how important is timing? the s and p at the top in 2007. ended up losing half your money in 18 months. you made a decent chunk back, that brutal loss can take ages to recover from. if you bought at the s&p at bottom, you doubled your money. if you...
196
196
May 5, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 196
favorite 0
quote 0
at the time this happened, the building shook. the instructor said its net earthquake, everyone jumps on the desk. everyone got under the desk. a couple people. about five seconds later another explosion. a lot of people, experts suggested that there were explosive devices. in the area, can you -- >> sure. i can tell you unequivocally there were not working. tom hunt, the head of the federal protective service drop the physical survey call the security arrangements, two months before the bombing. there in black and white is at the video cameras are now working. as i told you earlier he and a judge were very concerned about this and wanted to do something about this. the answer came back no. i don't want to draw too much on him, but he has sued the government believing that these cameras might exist, there might have benefited from those cameras. and in one of these comedy of errors the people and the records department of the fbi clearly don't know, have not seen the document i have seen. i don't think anyone at the fbi ever saw i
at the time this happened, the building shook. the instructor said its net earthquake, everyone jumps on the desk. everyone got under the desk. a couple people. about five seconds later another explosion. a lot of people, experts suggested that there were explosive devices. in the area, can you -- >> sure. i can tell you unequivocally there were not working. tom hunt, the head of the federal protective service drop the physical survey call the security arrangements, two months before the...
138
138
May 5, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
time to salute the flag.nce out there, peter, what have you done. >> this is 24 fluid ounces. it means for any group of three history guys, have you eight ounces each, and it is an enormous pabst blue ribbon. >> a tall boy. >> a tall boy? wow. we're drinking my century now, is that right? >> it predates your century, the 18th century. >> there is no earlier century. >> this would be an example of a 16th century beer style, a dark, and they were the liquid bread brewed for nutrition during the fasting season of lent on monasteries and there is lots of speculation about the origins of lager yeast, lager yeast differing from ale yeast by being bottom fermenting, and really what you see is a beautiful dark -- >> you can't even see through it. >> it is mahogany. >> describe this to the radio audience. >> it is a deep mahogany. it looks so tasty. i wonder what it tastes like. >> please do. cheers. welcome to the beer portion. >> radio audience, we're now drinking the beer many in small, tasteful -- >> some of us ha
time to salute the flag.nce out there, peter, what have you done. >> this is 24 fluid ounces. it means for any group of three history guys, have you eight ounces each, and it is an enormous pabst blue ribbon. >> a tall boy. >> a tall boy? wow. we're drinking my century now, is that right? >> it predates your century, the 18th century. >> there is no earlier century. >> this would be an example of a 16th century beer style, a dark, and they were the liquid...
112
112
May 20, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> are there british troops in the north american area at the time? >> there were 5,000 troops in canada, and troops in their various colonial positions in the west indies, but there were no british troops actually on the territorial limits of the united states in 1811 and 1812. there had been if a number of years after the revolution that's well-known, but after the pace treaty of 1783, the british did not abandon all the american territory that they said they would do. they continued to occupy a chain of forts along the south bank of lawrence and underneath the great lakes extending out to the midwest which was a violation of both the peace treaty and american sovereignty which annoyed americans considerably. they were banned in and so there's no troops on american soil at the time, but that didn't stop them saying british troops in canada are meeting with the indians in the midwest, well the, the old west, and that becomes another grievance which becomes part of the whole taping l of problems that the americans want to sort out by going to war. >> h
. >> are there british troops in the north american area at the time? >> there were 5,000 troops in canada, and troops in their various colonial positions in the west indies, but there were no british troops actually on the territorial limits of the united states in 1811 and 1812. there had been if a number of years after the revolution that's well-known, but after the pace treaty of 1783, the british did not abandon all the american territory that they said they would do. they...
177
177
May 9, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 177
favorite 0
quote 0
i yield back the balance of my time. the chair: the gentleman yields back his time. the question is on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from tennessee. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair, the noes have it. mrs. blackburn: mr. chairman, i ask for a recorded vote. the chair: pursuant to clause 6 of rule 18, further proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from tennessee, mrs. blackburn, will be postponed. for what purpose does the gentleman from virginia rise? >> i ask unanimous consent that i be permitted to request a recorded vote on the amendment offered by the gentlewoman from tennessee, mrs. black. the chair: is there objection? without objection, recorded vote is requested on the amendment offered by mrs. black of tennessee. pursuant to clause 6 of rule 18, further proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from tennessee will be postponed. for what purpose does the gentleman from georgia rise? >> mr. chairman, i have an amendment at the desk, i think it's number 101. the chair: the clerk will de
i yield back the balance of my time. the chair: the gentleman yields back his time. the question is on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from tennessee. those in favor say aye. those opposed, no. in the opinion of the chair, the noes have it. mrs. blackburn: mr. chairman, i ask for a recorded vote. the chair: pursuant to clause 6 of rule 18, further proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentlelady from tennessee, mrs. blackburn, will be postponed. for what purpose does the gentleman...
198
198
May 14, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 198
favorite 0
quote 0
now, i was chief executive at the time. didn't write the story, but i'm defending their right to write a story like that. >> well, i -- already give provided, actually which have demonstrated is that "the sun" believed, and may be right or wrong, i don't know, that mr. brown's add two and two and two and got 27. what has, in fact, if he took each one of the instances on their own, it may have, he may have been made a mistake, he may be wrong to reach e conclusion. that's all fair enough, entirely proper, but it goes a bit further than that. >> i accept that, that this story does, but if you imagine for "the sun," "the sun," and i know i keep mentioning this, but "the sun" has a trust with its readership, and it's a very important trust, and if that trust is broken, then, and a former prime minister had claimed i think prtially -- harshly, he comes to the misperception we got it from the medical records. whoever brok the story, "the guardian" probably, that that was false. and there was a correction, subsequently published in
now, i was chief executive at the time. didn't write the story, but i'm defending their right to write a story like that. >> well, i -- already give provided, actually which have demonstrated is that "the sun" believed, and may be right or wrong, i don't know, that mr. brown's add two and two and two and got 27. what has, in fact, if he took each one of the instances on their own, it may have, he may have been made a mistake, he may be wrong to reach e conclusion. that's all...
237
237
May 3, 2012
05/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 237
favorite 0
quote 0
oh, my gosh the time is ticking there is a lot of tile. still less than 50% this approval rating possibly problematic for this president?. >> yes its harris. i advised bill clinton when he was in the white house. i worked to enhance the approval rating and i understand when a approval rating is below 50% as the president's is now how problematic that is. at the same time, what "the times" pointed out is that the president benefits from likeability and the fact that large numbers of people still blame george bush for getting us into this recession which we're still not out of. tough economic times weigh heavily on a president's approval rating but this president is buffered by feelings that george w. bush is at least partially responsible. >> and the reason why, doug, because this president still blames bush and the strategy with a messaging of this administration and obama camp, distract, divide and deflect. this president is about rhetoric and not reality. the rich versus the poor. your kids, they're educated in poor schools and their kids
oh, my gosh the time is ticking there is a lot of tile. still less than 50% this approval rating possibly problematic for this president?. >> yes its harris. i advised bill clinton when he was in the white house. i worked to enhance the approval rating and i understand when a approval rating is below 50% as the president's is now how problematic that is. at the same time, what "the times" pointed out is that the president benefits from likeability and the fact that large numbers...
103
103
May 18, 2012
05/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
facebook will begin trading for the first time ever tomorrow morning. so it priced tonight at $38 for a single share. when you add it altogether, it is the biggest ipo in american history. the facebook obsession in this country reminding us of the 1983 classic movie "trading places." >> i remember ipos like that. all right. there are a few trading floors left. computers have replaced the conventional pit mostly, but when trading begins tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. for facebook, and it's going to happen at 11:00, about an hour and a half after the market opens, because computers aren't like people. it's going to take them longer to figure out the right price. there will be a frenzy of trading going on. the stock, $38 for a single share. it is the biggest ipo in this country's history. twice in size of the second biggest of the it will open with a value of $104 billion. facebook founder mark zuckerberg is sort of the justin bieber of the internet. this is for a tech guy doing an ipo. see why we think justin bieber. a few weeks ago he was mobbed in his hoodie as
facebook will begin trading for the first time ever tomorrow morning. so it priced tonight at $38 for a single share. when you add it altogether, it is the biggest ipo in american history. the facebook obsession in this country reminding us of the 1983 classic movie "trading places." >> i remember ipos like that. all right. there are a few trading floors left. computers have replaced the conventional pit mostly, but when trading begins tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. for facebook, and...
224
224
May 1, 2012
05/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 224
favorite 0
quote 0
when you look at joe biden's criticism at the time. so i think that is the way the romney campaign feels. whether it is adequate or not will be up to the voters watching. this it does go to this larger narrative which is you do have a republican party that is trying desperately to make barack obama look like jimmy carter. bad economy, bad on national security. except they don't have both here. there is a big national security success in president obama's portfolio. that is the killing of osama bin laden. jimmy carter had a bad economy. >> let me go quickly to peter alexander. he is standing by. he is with the romney campaign. we know he talked about an array of things. what is next? i think we lost -- >> reporter: the world trade tower stood. he was here with the firefighters in the fire house. 11 firefighters were killed on 9/11, standing beside the man often referred to as america's mayor. rudolph giuliani. to pay tribute to the lives that were lost on american soil on the day of 9/11. and as they were articulating, he did return to t
when you look at joe biden's criticism at the time. so i think that is the way the romney campaign feels. whether it is adequate or not will be up to the voters watching. this it does go to this larger narrative which is you do have a republican party that is trying desperately to make barack obama look like jimmy carter. bad economy, bad on national security. except they don't have both here. there is a big national security success in president obama's portfolio. that is the killing of osama...
112
112
May 5, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
we see this all the time, but stop and think what is the technology. basically back in the 1890s when they were introduced, they were explained as a railroad bridge on its end.
we see this all the time, but stop and think what is the technology. basically back in the 1890s when they were introduced, they were explained as a railroad bridge on its end.
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
87
87
May 3, 2012
05/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
that's not the time to think about the recovery. the time to think about recovery is now. one of the things we have thought about is the national disaster's recovery frame work. we work ackry thems. ackry nelms. with the ndrf. it lays out forward how we need to recover from disasters. we are going to be going around the country. we went around initially. now we're going to go around again laying it out. still i want to get feedback from folks how to best do that. it's not going to take just government but the exact same people it takes us in a response. all the people that i mentioned. they are the same people and more that's going to be necessary it's going to be absolutely essential for us to bring all parties together to help recover, because it's important for us to remember why we're there. for the survivor. a lot of times people, a couple of years ago, myself included. used to call people victims. they were victims of a car crash. victims of a flood. victims of an earthquake. victims of having a heart attack. but when you think about it, and you change that around a b
that's not the time to think about the recovery. the time to think about recovery is now. one of the things we have thought about is the national disaster's recovery frame work. we work ackry thems. ackry nelms. with the ndrf. it lays out forward how we need to recover from disasters. we are going to be going around the country. we went around initially. now we're going to go around again laying it out. still i want to get feedback from folks how to best do that. it's not going to take just...
112
112
May 30, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
the discussion. >> great. well, thanks to both 6 you. we now have time for clarifying questions that people want to the ask questions specifically of ken or joe to draw them out on points they made. we don't want to get into a lot of deep analysis of what they said at this point, or debate, but 1yu69 again, clarifying questioned. if do you have a question, introduce your name by name and affiliation and be sure to switch on your mike. if not, let me ask, the moderatorses to ask one to you, joe. if i look at your slide labeled high cost of advancing technology, the one you label x-ray machine, et cetera. >> right. >> and i look at current technology, i see two items mentioned there. surpgry robot, and treated stent. both of which recent stupdies have shown do not materially produce better outcomes for patients. and, in fact, with respect to the treated stents i think johnson & johnson's unit stopped making them, because they were so clearly not just ineffective lut problematic for patients. that underscores that we have a lot of technology out there that
the discussion. >> great. well, thanks to both 6 you. we now have time for clarifying questions that people want to the ask questions specifically of ken or joe to draw them out on points they made. we don't want to get into a lot of deep analysis of what they said at this point, or debate, but 1yu69 again, clarifying questioned. if do you have a question, introduce your name by name and affiliation and be sure to switch on your mike. if not, let me ask, the moderatorses to ask one to...
81
81
May 8, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. the gentleman from georgia is recognized. mr. woodall: thank you, mr. speaker. i yield myself such time as i may consume to say, i actually had this conversation with some school children in my district over the break. i'm sure everybody in this body did. they call it the break, mr. speaker. truth is it's a district work period. you're working every bit as hard in your home state as you are here, probably harder back home. i'm talking to young people and i said, does anybody here have a parent that just lets them eat anything they want to? drink all the soda they want? eat all the candy they want? there wasn't a single hand that went up. apparently parents had some discipline incorporated in the lives of each one of these children. i asked, who thinks their parents love them? and the answer was every child in that room felt loved by their parents. there was -- they didn't get everything they wanted all the time, there were limits to it, but they felt loved. mr. speaker, we're in the bu
i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman's time has expired. the gentleman from georgia is recognized. mr. woodall: thank you, mr. speaker. i yield myself such time as i may consume to say, i actually had this conversation with some school children in my district over the break. i'm sure everybody in this body did. they call it the break, mr. speaker. truth is it's a district work period. you're working every bit as hard in your home state as you are here,...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
to the rights. it's time for the guys to prepare for the changing of the guard but i couldn't miss a chance to take a look at their uniform wardrobe. when it is cold we wear ceremonial overcoats the overcoats are very warm with color of. course you can when the temperatures twenty degrees below zero we were warmer uniform cold the because. it is made of plus it has very warm fur it feels halted even when it's minus twenty. four hour journey into the heart of kremlin is coming to an end time for me to move behind the kremlin walls so i can make it for the changing of the parts. so the guards are changing every hour daily from eight am to eight pm these guys any weather minus thirty winter or torrential rain outrages hits in the summer but the most hard part of course is to stand there motionless no matter what but hey that's the price you pay to leave rent free inside the kremlin. the official t. obligation to on the phone i pod touch from the. lights on the go. video on demand. and omissions feeds now with th
to the rights. it's time for the guys to prepare for the changing of the guard but i couldn't miss a chance to take a look at their uniform wardrobe. when it is cold we wear ceremonial overcoats the overcoats are very warm with color of. course you can when the temperatures twenty degrees below zero we were warmer uniform cold the because. it is made of plus it has very warm fur it feels halted even when it's minus twenty. four hour journey into the heart of kremlin is coming to an end time for...
139
139
May 18, 2012
05/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 139
favorite 0
quote 0
he talks about it all the time. rd, too, accusing him of taking america to the brink, of no longer being a society based on free enterprise, which is a fairly significant criticism. record are fair game. if romney wants to say president obama has exaggerated his record, that's reasonable, even correct. if he wants to say the ad is unfair, that's reasonable. if he wants to say private equity has been misrepresented at times, that's probably right. it is not reasonable to call the argument romney's business record doesn't prepare him for the presidency or doesn't show level of concerns for livelihoods of american men and women character assassination. if we can't talk about romney's time at bain and doesn't want us to talk about his health care bill that was his signature achievement as governor but wants to appeal it now that obama passed it nationally, what are we going to talk about now? olympics? joining us, gene robinson a columnist from the "washington post," a colleague of mine. great to see you. >> good to be h
he talks about it all the time. rd, too, accusing him of taking america to the brink, of no longer being a society based on free enterprise, which is a fairly significant criticism. record are fair game. if romney wants to say president obama has exaggerated his record, that's reasonable, even correct. if he wants to say the ad is unfair, that's reasonable. if he wants to say private equity has been misrepresented at times, that's probably right. it is not reasonable to call the argument...
136
136
May 11, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 136
favorite 0
quote 0
now, i was chief executive at the time. didn't write the story, but i'm defending their right to write a story like that. >> well, i -- already give provided, actually which have demonstrated is that "the sun" believed, and may be right or wrong, i don't know, that mr. brown's add two and two and two and got 27. what has, in fact, if he took each one of the instances on their own, it may have, he may have been made a mistake, he may be wrong to reach the conclusion. that's all fair enough, entirely proper, but it goes a bit further than that. >> i accept that, that this story does, but if you imagine for "the sun," "the sun," and i know i keep mentioning this, but "the sun" has a trust with its readership, and it's a very important trust, and if that trust is broken, then, and a former prime minister had claimed i think partially -- harshly, he comes to the misperception we got it from the medical records. whoever broke the story, "the guardian" probably, that that was false. and there was a correction, subsequently publishe
now, i was chief executive at the time. didn't write the story, but i'm defending their right to write a story like that. >> well, i -- already give provided, actually which have demonstrated is that "the sun" believed, and may be right or wrong, i don't know, that mr. brown's add two and two and two and got 27. what has, in fact, if he took each one of the instances on their own, it may have, he may have been made a mistake, he may be wrong to reach the conclusion. that's all...
36
36
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
the. clashes only evolve. little time to enjoy the taste of victory as he needs to get down to business to bring about change leaving the era behind. a previous foreign policy and tackling the new president. with more on those stories in full in less than fifteen minutes from here with this. good to have you with us this is sports today plenty head over the next ten minutes including. getting his skates on just hours after the russian presidential inauguration bloodier putin takes to be ice for a gala sporting event in moscow. let's play comments after a five year by fifo over paid scarf usage and rounds and women footballers finally return to action taking on russia in a. forcing iran early summer silly sports season tix to the real track for the annual moscow run tional. great stuff but let's kick off a football in moscow have edged ahead in their quest for a champions league place next season we all remained where hosting coupon knowing a win would put them three points above closest rivals currently second place spart
the. clashes only evolve. little time to enjoy the taste of victory as he needs to get down to business to bring about change leaving the era behind. a previous foreign policy and tackling the new president. with more on those stories in full in less than fifteen minutes from here with this. good to have you with us this is sports today plenty head over the next ten minutes including. getting his skates on just hours after the russian presidential inauguration bloodier putin takes to be ice for...
98
98
May 11, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
happening all the time. 27 governments have changed in the time i have been here. the french socialists are not strangers for the united states. they shouldn't be strangers. it has been true that it has been 17 years since the socialists were in power at the presidency. of course, they ran the government about a decade ago when spauo was in power. we have always had a very good relationship with any government that is there in france. i am confident we will have a good relationship with this government in france. we do have to see how this government is going to deal with the issues of the day. it's one thing to be campaigning. it is always something different to be governing. it is not me. it is not my job to predict how this will evolve. i will note that francoi francois hollande campaigned to keep france in the military structure. that was a remarkable statement after nicolas sarkozy to come back into the structure. i think france learned in the libya operation that being integrated in the command structure gives you a voice and say over what happens in the inter
happening all the time. 27 governments have changed in the time i have been here. the french socialists are not strangers for the united states. they shouldn't be strangers. it has been true that it has been 17 years since the socialists were in power at the presidency. of course, they ran the government about a decade ago when spauo was in power. we have always had a very good relationship with any government that is there in france. i am confident we will have a good relationship with this...
206
206
May 11, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 206
favorite 0
quote 0
i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from maryland reserves his time. the gentleman from wisconsin, mr. ryan, is recognized. mr. ryan: i yield myself one minute to say, mr. speaker, that the gentleman's substitute raises taxes $85 billion and raises spending $55 billion on the net to achieve simply $30 billion in deficit reducon. this bill achieves $243 billion in deficit reduction without raising taxes. the ratio of spending increases, of tax increases to spending cuts gross 3-1. that's what they think balance is. let's look at food stamps. food stamps are up 270% over the last decade. if this passes it will have gone up 260%. let's talk about medicaid and schip. this program has gonep 50% over the last 10 years. it's probablied to grow 125% over the next 10 years. if this passes, it will grow 123% over the next 10 years. if we can't have a civil debate about how to slow the growth of spendinground here, then we'll never get this under control. medicaid alone made $15.8 billion in o
i reserve the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman from maryland reserves his time. the gentleman from wisconsin, mr. ryan, is recognized. mr. ryan: i yield myself one minute to say, mr. speaker, that the gentleman's substitute raises taxes $85 billion and raises spending $55 billion on the net to achieve simply $30 billion in deficit reducon. this bill achieves $243 billion in deficit reduction without raising taxes. the ratio of spending increases, of tax increases to...
164
164
May 19, 2012
05/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 164
favorite 0
quote 0
it was -- my greater point is that it was highly contested at the time. and it seemed very strange to me to attend the commemorative practices and kind of see a very almost disney-like portrayal of what happened. and i'm really interested in kind of recovering a lot of these voices and really interested in continuing this project and interviewing more of the women who were involved both in the puerto rican student organization and the black student organization. and i told people c-span was recording this, so i'll let you know when i get back about how this goes. >> yes, sir. in the back row. >> quickly, the idea, the same time that was going on at kent, similar was going on in north carolina. at that same time which got little attention, one was civil liberty, one was civil rights. they were combined. the other factor is at this point dr. king becomes very, very vocally anti-vietnam. and there are some of us who feel that his was related because he was being told -- we knew he was against it earlier. but he was being told your role but he was being told y
it was -- my greater point is that it was highly contested at the time. and it seemed very strange to me to attend the commemorative practices and kind of see a very almost disney-like portrayal of what happened. and i'm really interested in kind of recovering a lot of these voices and really interested in continuing this project and interviewing more of the women who were involved both in the puerto rican student organization and the black student organization. and i told people c-span was...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
119
119
May 8, 2012
05/12
by
WHUT
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
there is a famous story i think about at "time" magazine, the time some big event at "time" magazine in which people wanted to come to his table. >> right. >> rose: an talk to him rather than go see some of the people more famous because of politics. >> rightment and it was partly because, the way an athlete can have a grip on people especially when they are young and they have seen him. and also because he was pars mondayuous in what he gave out. he didn't come over and shake a lot of hands. he was pressure. >> rose: if he is going to be broken who would be most likely to break it playing today. >> well, i guess the player i would say is ichiro of the mariners, he is getting older and he had an off year last year but he still gets a ton of hits and he's got a lot of speed. robinson kanno of the yankees, you can see some holes there but he's got a chance. honestly it is hard to pick somebody out. >> rose: did joe think it would stand forever. >> well, his manager joe mccarthy said right then we're never going see anything like that he didn't come right out and say that you about i thi
there is a famous story i think about at "time" magazine, the time some big event at "time" magazine in which people wanted to come to his table. >> right. >> rose: an talk to him rather than go see some of the people more famous because of politics. >> rightment and it was partly because, the way an athlete can have a grip on people especially when they are young and they have seen him. and also because he was pars mondayuous in what he gave out. he didn't...
45
45
May 4, 2012
05/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
these are big components that broke down the testing piece. >> at the same time the past month and the month of april, stocks pretty much stalled out. is this time around different and we have been climbing the wall of worry? >> i think that is absolutely possible. the stock market had come so far from october and november of last year and today we got disappointing jobs news and to the degree that jobs speak to growth in the economy and growth will be tepid. as far as the s&p is concerned, the price action was really troublesome. it was great until about noon on tuesday. last half of the day on tuesday, they had this big rounded top and lower and really ugly today. today there was just nothing good in the price action for that. the last ten minutes and the last half of the day inspires options and all of the big trade o trades say over 5,000 contracts. nothing good going on. they didn't try to get on the deck all day. there was nothing good going on and potential problems in europe. we will let the next show talk about that. people were pessimistic. >> it was very much a brought base.
these are big components that broke down the testing piece. >> at the same time the past month and the month of april, stocks pretty much stalled out. is this time around different and we have been climbing the wall of worry? >> i think that is absolutely possible. the stock market had come so far from october and november of last year and today we got disappointing jobs news and to the degree that jobs speak to growth in the economy and growth will be tepid. as far as the s&p...