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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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we thought peer is the center of the universe and then it is not the center of the universe but pretty close to that and then we thought okay, the galaxy, the milky way, still pretty great but now the galaxy is one of billions of galaxies out there and not only is that true but most of the stuff out there is not even the stuff we are made of. we are not even the center of the universe in terms of what makes it. and conceptually that is a pretty big deal. most of the universe is something else. we are a rare saying in a number of ways in the universe. peoples a difference between dark matter and dark energy, dark matter is the much more pedestrian of the two. it acts with vaguely like ordinary matter, close together in bad it -- in galaxies, more dark matter in the milky way than outside the milky whereas there kennedy appears to be completely uniform throughout the universe, totally the same. stock energy appears to be energy of space, empty space itself actually has a certain amount of energy said that affects the dynamic of the rest differently in that causes it to expand more rapidl
we thought peer is the center of the universe and then it is not the center of the universe but pretty close to that and then we thought okay, the galaxy, the milky way, still pretty great but now the galaxy is one of billions of galaxies out there and not only is that true but most of the stuff out there is not even the stuff we are made of. we are not even the center of the universe in terms of what makes it. and conceptually that is a pretty big deal. most of the universe is something else....
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Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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did the universe have a beginning? i'm robert lawrence kuhn and closer to truth is my journey to find out. traditionally, in both science and theology, the cosmos was from everlasting - without beginning - until, in the mid 20th century, big bang cosmology became accepted. beginnings bring meaning - and i start with the science. when we want to understand something - anything we often ask, "where did it come from?" "how did it start?" but some say the universe is different. because the universe is not "some thing" - it's the whole thing! that's why - first - we must ask, whether the universe had a beginning? i begin with a cosmologist who focuses on the early universe, the associate scientific director of the foundational questions institute, fqxi anthony aguirre. i am attending an fxqi conference on time, at sea in more ways then one, on a ship cruising between norway and denmark. anthony, what i thought was an easy question was did the universe begin? now i hear it's not such an easy question. help me. so it used to b
did the universe have a beginning? i'm robert lawrence kuhn and closer to truth is my journey to find out. traditionally, in both science and theology, the cosmos was from everlasting - without beginning - until, in the mid 20th century, big bang cosmology became accepted. beginnings bring meaning - and i start with the science. when we want to understand something - anything we often ask, "where did it come from?" "how did it start?" but some say the universe is different....
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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at the university of houston, it's all in the tradition. washington state, a public university has a jacuzzi that holds 50 student thought he saw the lead to a -- student bodies. a nice little college in ohio, this is a $70 million athletic emporium that has a 20 allain a swimming pool -- 20-lane a swimming pool. what is paying for this? that's why to mission is going up. >> i want to get to the reform proposals in the second but i believe to if you can address this question on higher education which is why is it the institutions which aren't answerable to the shareholders do not have a bottom line in the corporate cents behave in such a rapacious fashion as you described they are exploiting their adjunct professors it's very much a sweat shop environment in a number of schools and as you just described they are up selling their consumers and there's a tremendous even among the faculty tremendous inequality system like you might find in the private sector so i'm wondering what are the dynamics that turn the nonprofit institutions into instit
at the university of houston, it's all in the tradition. washington state, a public university has a jacuzzi that holds 50 student thought he saw the lead to a -- student bodies. a nice little college in ohio, this is a $70 million athletic emporium that has a 20 allain a swimming pool -- 20-lane a swimming pool. what is paying for this? that's why to mission is going up. >> i want to get to the reform proposals in the second but i believe to if you can address this question on higher...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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of ways in the universe. what is the difference between dark matter a and dart energy? dark matter is much more pedestrian in tax vaguely like ordinary matter and clusters together so there is a more inside the milky way that outside but dark energy appears to be completely uniform throughout the universe and dark energy is the energy of space, and the space has a certain amount of energy so that affects the dynamics differently which causes it to expand more rapidly. dark matter has been around as long as we can tell part of the building blocks of galaxies but the energies space at this point in the history of the universe starting to push the universe apart faster and faster and faster. there are a lot of things that we don't know. like why they have the densities' they have or there is as much dark matter as there is there what it is made out of we are good at calculating energy you can ask how much is there a dark energy and the answer is infinity. [laughter] that is wrong. it is 120 times larger. and then
of ways in the universe. what is the difference between dark matter a and dart energy? dark matter is much more pedestrian in tax vaguely like ordinary matter and clusters together so there is a more inside the milky way that outside but dark energy appears to be completely uniform throughout the universe and dark energy is the energy of space, and the space has a certain amount of energy so that affects the dynamics differently which causes it to expand more rapidly. dark matter has been...
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Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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that's why - first - we must ask, whether the universe had a beginning? i begin with a cosmologist who focuses on the early universe, the associate scientific director of the foundational questions institute, fqxi anthony aguirre. i am attending an fxqi conference on time, at sea in more ways then one, on a ship cruising between
that's why - first - we must ask, whether the universe had a beginning? i begin with a cosmologist who focuses on the early universe, the associate scientific director of the foundational questions institute, fqxi anthony aguirre. i am attending an fxqi conference on time, at sea in more ways then one, on a ship cruising between
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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ALJAZAM
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some critics say that the tuition may fall if university presidents were not paid so much. but as reported, the pay of college pst have to do with raise. >> kayla smith waits tables at night after working in a downtown columbus office for a non-profit group. >> if you need anything -- >> it is the only way she can payoff the 40,000 dollars in student loans that came with her degree. the recent ohio state university grad is one of a growing number of people outraged, salaries of rising. >> it does make me very angry. >> the median pay for a public university president reached 440,000 last academic year up 4.7%. the highest paid was former penn state president who pocketed nearly $3 million after leaving them in a scandal. ohio state university, retired with a final pay of nearly 2 million. >> i don't think that they're necessarily worth that much. >> overall, roughly 35 public and private college presidents earned more than a million dollars last year. these academic leaders typically run very complex r prices with major research teams and sport teams like the ohio state buck
some critics say that the tuition may fall if university presidents were not paid so much. but as reported, the pay of college pst have to do with raise. >> kayla smith waits tables at night after working in a downtown columbus office for a non-profit group. >> if you need anything -- >> it is the only way she can payoff the 40,000 dollars in student loans that came with her degree. the recent ohio state university grad is one of a growing number of people outraged, salaries...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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[applause] mary berry at the university of pennsylvania. [applause] barbara ransby is the author of a tiger free of ella baker of eslanda robeson and jeanne theoharis the author of the new biography on rosa parks. [applause] we want to start the conversation by talking about rosa parks.
[applause] mary berry at the university of pennsylvania. [applause] barbara ransby is the author of a tiger free of ella baker of eslanda robeson and jeanne theoharis the author of the new biography on rosa parks. [applause] we want to start the conversation by talking about rosa parks.
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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MSNBCW
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the same thing. you've got central missouri university. t there and they've partnered with local high schools and community colleges so that their students can show up at college and graduate in half the time because they're already starting to get college credits while they're in high school or while they're in a two-year college so by the time they get to a four-year college they're saving money. universities like carnegie mellon, arizona state, they're starting to show that online learning can help students master the same material in less time and often at lower costs. georgia tech which is a national leader in computer science, just announced it will begin offering an online masters degree in computer science at a fraction of the cost of a traditional class. but is just as rigorous and it's producing engineers who are just as good. so a lot of other schools are experimenting with these ideas to keep tuition down. they've got other ways to help students graduate in less time at less costs while still maintaining high quality. the point
the same thing. you've got central missouri university. t there and they've partnered with local high schools and community colleges so that their students can show up at college and graduate in half the time because they're already starting to get college credits while they're in high school or while they're in a two-year college so by the time they get to a four-year college they're saving money. universities like carnegie mellon, arizona state, they're starting to show that online learning...
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Aug 9, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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-- at the national tsing hua university. lcome to the program, father jean-pascal. >> thank you. it's a pleasure to be here. i'm happy to have the opportunity to share what we are doing with the taiwanese students. it is the 60 year i'm going to take a team to sierra leone -- sixth year i'm going to take the team to sierra leone. there will be two other teams going to tanzania and one from tsing hua university in july to mid-august. i look forward to sharing that with you. >> let's backtrack. tell us about yourself. you were born in france. why did you decide to come to taiwan in 1998? >> i belonged to an international group of priests. during the course of my formation, i went to tanzania for two years as an experiment to discover if that is the kind of life that i want to live. then i went along with my studies and towards the end, when i was about to be a priest, i was invited to apply for the country to serve. i had three countries in mind. tanzania was number one because i knew the language. taiwan was number two. it was
-- at the national tsing hua university. lcome to the program, father jean-pascal. >> thank you. it's a pleasure to be here. i'm happy to have the opportunity to share what we are doing with the taiwanese students. it is the 60 year i'm going to take a team to sierra leone -- sixth year i'm going to take the team to sierra leone. there will be two other teams going to tanzania and one from tsing hua university in july to mid-august. i look forward to sharing that with you. >> let's...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV2
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>> [applause] >> i have been around the university for a long time. too long. what has been too long but it's been a long time. i can of course number the events of the civil rights movement. i was actually on this campus the day dr. king died and we all cried. you know, in those days all was on university were trying to do our thing. if we wanted to do we could do the big things we did our little things. on this campus i was the first chair of the psu. in many ways oh well. >> [applause] >> we must have some dsu members. now you know who started this whole thing. in those days we were trying to do what we could to be part of the movement. the movement that was all the adults and then there was a whole bunch of youth were involved. last sunday on a radio show i had a use spoken word artists that came on. [inaudible] all these adults in the program it's a use for such a big part. you've seen those old videos. when dr. king finally said, look, we need young people out here to oppose move this thing forward. so representing all the youths were involved in movement
>> [applause] >> i have been around the university for a long time. too long. what has been too long but it's been a long time. i can of course number the events of the civil rights movement. i was actually on this campus the day dr. king died and we all cried. you know, in those days all was on university were trying to do our thing. if we wanted to do we could do the big things we did our little things. on this campus i was the first chair of the psu. in many ways oh well....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV
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the university of san francisco of today looks like tomorrow's california. the school of law more than 55%
the university of san francisco of today looks like tomorrow's california. the school of law more than 55%
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV2
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the university of san francisco of today looks like tomorrow's california. the school of law more than 55% of our students are women. over 52% of our incoming class of students of color. we are preparing all of you to be successful contributors to your future employers, and communities, and strong and caring leaders. ethical professionals. you are preparing each other. we all change the world from here. in the year 2029 children who are starting kindergarten this week will be your age now. will they have benefited from integrated quality schools and be ready in the science and technology or other fields of that era? will they be able to interact, appreciate and love and more diverse setting than we've ever seen before? our job today is for the answer and 2029 to be not just, yes we can, but yes, we did. it is now my honor to introduce the mayor of our great city and county of san francisco, and lee. i've known him and admired him since his days as a civil rights attorney at the asian law caucus. mayor lee has worked hard to keep the economy and economic recov
the university of san francisco of today looks like tomorrow's california. the school of law more than 55% of our students are women. over 52% of our incoming class of students of color. we are preparing all of you to be successful contributors to your future employers, and communities, and strong and caring leaders. ethical professionals. you are preparing each other. we all change the world from here. in the year 2029 children who are starting kindergarten this week will be your age now. will...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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the rest of the three doctorate degrees are all from korean universities. , you know, it is happy to know that she has, the president, she has some things in mind for the university. during the ceremony she invited the board chairman of the university to attend. this is a barry special relationship. during the five terms of assembly in korea, she has several times been invited by mr. -- minister. if she has any special thoughts in her mind, it would help to look over to the international political constance. it is quite different, you know. >> china and south korea both have new leaders. how good you think relationship will be between the countries? >> preferring to call us free china instead of tie 1. korean newspapers, they still say this. saying that she prefers to call us free china. exit -- >> is it until today? >> it is different. >> how is it different? how will the relationship be different? >> i think at least we have -- we can tell koreans what happened, we have a big change. i think the correa still worries about political issues. if you want to t
the rest of the three doctorate degrees are all from korean universities. , you know, it is happy to know that she has, the president, she has some things in mind for the university. during the ceremony she invited the board chairman of the university to attend. this is a barry special relationship. during the five terms of assembly in korea, she has several times been invited by mr. -- minister. if she has any special thoughts in her mind, it would help to look over to the international...
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Aug 12, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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. >> i'm from the university of missouri columbia and right now i am working to advocate against and hoping to stop common core. what is the detriment facing the common core? >> first i think it involves a dumbing down. common core advocates say we are actually raising the standards for a certain number of states. that is true that the idea is to find a kind of middle ground that you can pull the lowest performers up to but also effectively lowers the standards for the rest of the country. it sounds crazy when you tell people this. why would anyone want to lower standards and the reason, again i think it is a misplaced idea of equity and fairness that there is some sense that too many people who have a certain amount of money were litany certain place are getting into swap more and how we change that? if anybody gets a less quality education of people tell the difference and if people start getting randomly distributed at the universities this is a crazy idea of equity whereas if you look at massachusetts, which has the best curriculum in the country, they were middle performers and a
. >> i'm from the university of missouri columbia and right now i am working to advocate against and hoping to stop common core. what is the detriment facing the common core? >> first i think it involves a dumbing down. common core advocates say we are actually raising the standards for a certain number of states. that is true that the idea is to find a kind of middle ground that you can pull the lowest performers up to but also effectively lowers the standards for the rest of the...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the event of the university press in the back of the room, sue, thank you, and she and her colleagues took time to do their good work, and i'd like to also recognize richard mcharty who linked me up with the vanderbilt press, and it took a while for the press to do their work, but the better answer is the research, all the interviews, you know, that took me -- it was fun to do taking me back to the reporter days, and in some ways, the book is as much about journalists as it is politicians, and that took awhile. we started interviews five years ago, people were patient with me. >> i'll ask the last question. i'll ask the senator. i know these were six tough unforgettable hours. as only you said, the worst day of our life. what about today's following? how did what happened that day impact your administration over the next four years? >> well, it's tough for the country, but if every united states senator serving today had a six hour boot camp like i had how to get along with the opposite party in the country, we'd be better off. [applause] you know, this did not occur to me until we ta
the event of the university press in the back of the room, sue, thank you, and she and her colleagues took time to do their good work, and i'd like to also recognize richard mcharty who linked me up with the vanderbilt press, and it took a while for the press to do their work, but the better answer is the research, all the interviews, you know, that took me -- it was fun to do taking me back to the reporter days, and in some ways, the book is as much about journalists as it is politicians, and...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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it's the best part of teaching when i teach at university. the only two parts i like are giving the lectures and interacting with the students. i'm not too keen on all the other stuff. [laughter] which is why i probably mostly write books. in any case, before i launch into an overview of the project, i want to tell you a little bit about the history of this particular book. as you probably gathered from that very kind and detailed introduction, this is a new direction for me and it would be fair for you to be wondering where that direction came from. i'll tell you this much, that direction came from a footnote. i'm one of those readers, and i'm sure some of you are as well, who really like to read footnotes. not those footnotes that have citations and page number on the volume, but where an author really contributes something, recognizes that a fact or a point of discussion is worthy of inclusion but it somehow doesn't fit into their narrative. well, that's really rich material more me because i can come along and say, well, that's pretty cool
it's the best part of teaching when i teach at university. the only two parts i like are giving the lectures and interacting with the students. i'm not too keen on all the other stuff. [laughter] which is why i probably mostly write books. in any case, before i launch into an overview of the project, i want to tell you a little bit about the history of this particular book. as you probably gathered from that very kind and detailed introduction, this is a new direction for me and it would be...
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Aug 2, 2013
08/13
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CNNW
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the university is happy with him.ved 45 years plus of his life without any kind of blemish on his record, i think it's time everybody move on past this despite what horrifically occurred four or five decades ago. >> jeff, brian brings up a good point there. there's no ae's no proof this p lied. sometimes they ask us questions like have you ever been convicted of a crime? i guess he hasn't been convicted. jeff, should he have told the university of his past at the time he was hired? >> that's a really good question. i see these types of questions being asked by clients all the time and i ask them to read me the exact question they're being asked because they're all phrased differently. some say arrested, some say convicted, some say even if you were adjudged not guilty. does a university have a right to inquire as to the facts? for example, let's say you were going to be a police officer instead of a teacher? wouldn't they want to know these kinds of things regardless whether you're convicted. the only reason not to hi
the university is happy with him.ved 45 years plus of his life without any kind of blemish on his record, i think it's time everybody move on past this despite what horrifically occurred four or five decades ago. >> jeff, brian brings up a good point there. there's no ae's no proof this p lied. sometimes they ask us questions like have you ever been convicted of a crime? i guess he hasn't been convicted. jeff, should he have told the university of his past at the time he was hired?...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 13, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV
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two of the teams submitted formal proposals for the universities i understand that the creation and the submission of the proposal is not something taken lightly. both proposals were considered excellent and we chose this one on the basis of its more fleshed out plan for their data collection and investigation. >> and what was the criteria used to evaluate each of the proposals and who saturday on this body? >> we had three staff members are the authority on the body including lee. and we had advisory participants from arep who did some of the initial analysis of whether a p 3 made sense in this case. also a member of cal-trans as an advisory panel member. we hooked at the comprehensiveness of the proposal, how clearly it related to our objectives and that's in order to make sure that the deliverables that we think will be of use to
two of the teams submitted formal proposals for the universities i understand that the creation and the submission of the proposal is not something taken lightly. both proposals were considered excellent and we chose this one on the basis of its more fleshed out plan for their data collection and investigation. >> and what was the criteria used to evaluate each of the proposals and who saturday on this body? >> we had three staff members are the authority on the body including lee....
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that's why we haven't carried his lecture from the university of the america university of washington d.c. he says response from the e.u. is vital to avoid violence spilling over even. some voices within the international community who are raising the alarm about what's going on there they are trying to get the united nations security council to take a stand i think that would be significant and i think it's important to have an investigation to find out really what has happened and then also it's all follows any kind of ethnic tax or massacres there is especially as a situation could be easily deteriorate you could see kurdish out up fighting also in this area and you could see this conflict spilling into the other side and turkey kurdish derrick smite start pouring also across the border throughout their compatriots. and still more in syria while the obama administration remains undecided about whether to send weapons to the rebels the cia second in command is now warning that the spread of extremism in the country is posing an even greater threat to u.s. national security these day
that's why we haven't carried his lecture from the university of the america university of washington d.c. he says response from the e.u. is vital to avoid violence spilling over even. some voices within the international community who are raising the alarm about what's going on there they are trying to get the united nations security council to take a stand i think that would be significant and i think it's important to have an investigation to find out really what has happened and then also...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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CNN
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the interesting thing at the mesa university hospital that i visited earlier today, they told us that yesterday around the morning time they got mass casualties and it was clear there was massive fighting going on in those areas where that alleged chemical weapon as tack took place. they said there was lots of bodies in and the loads had severe wounds and none of them showed any signs of being subjected to any sort of chemical agent. it was something i found very interesting. also, we managed to speak to a couple of people that live in neighborhoods adjacent to the ones where the attacks allegedly took place and also said, yes, there was a lot going on yesterday and war planes over head and artillery raining down on the areas. they said they did not feel any chemicals in the air and did not have any trouble breathe and didn't feel strain. they say they don't believe any chemicals were used. of course that doesn't disprove the images we're seeing, the horrible images that you were talking about before. we are of course reporting from the government controlled side of damascus and there
the interesting thing at the mesa university hospital that i visited earlier today, they told us that yesterday around the morning time they got mass casualties and it was clear there was massive fighting going on in those areas where that alleged chemical weapon as tack took place. they said there was lots of bodies in and the loads had severe wounds and none of them showed any signs of being subjected to any sort of chemical agent. it was something i found very interesting. also, we managed...