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Jan 12, 2019
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concerns as does the university, she wrote. so these are, this is an example, a particularly egregious example, i think, of some of the things that happen when students -- when the universities look at protecting the brand, you know? you get top-level people obsessed with keeping the money flowing, obsessed with keeping their own position and their own big paycheck and basically professional administrators, by the way, who go from one job to another at these universities. and, you know, they induce people below them to break the law, to break ethics rules, to do things that they really ought not to be doing especially as a public servant, as an employee of the state. they indeuce them to do these -- undeuce them to do these things in order to protect the brand. and i imagine, you know, if they do sleep well at night, i imagine they do it under the guise that they're just part of this bigger system and don't have to responsibility for this thing themselves. >> yeah. yeah, that is, that is a remarkable example. especially for some
concerns as does the university, she wrote. so these are, this is an example, a particularly egregious example, i think, of some of the things that happen when students -- when the universities look at protecting the brand, you know? you get top-level people obsessed with keeping the money flowing, obsessed with keeping their own position and their own big paycheck and basically professional administrators, by the way, who go from one job to another at these universities. and, you know, they...
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Jan 20, 2019
01/19
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and there you have the observable universe. and these are scattered throughout the landscape like cities dotting a countryside when viewed from space. the local areas of light. >> host: you've mentioned them a couple times, edmund hubbel. who was he? >> guest: well, so there's the telescope, of course, the telescope was named after him. he was a bit of a pompous kind of snooty astrofizz wrist back in the -- astrophysicist back in the early '20s. he had access to the biggest telescope. so that always leaves open the question would anybody with access to the world's biggest telescope be making the world's greatest discoveries, or does it also require some kind of insight to empower you to even know what question to ask. so for him, the probably a combination of both. but story about him, he wore these tweed suits and smoked a pipe and donned a partly british accent when he's from, like, backwoods america. [laughter] but anyhow, good thing about science, your personality is completelier realm haven't to the quality of the -- comple
and there you have the observable universe. and these are scattered throughout the landscape like cities dotting a countryside when viewed from space. the local areas of light. >> host: you've mentioned them a couple times, edmund hubbel. who was he? >> guest: well, so there's the telescope, of course, the telescope was named after him. he was a bit of a pompous kind of snooty astrofizz wrist back in the -- astrophysicist back in the early '20s. he had access to the biggest...
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Jan 12, 2019
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well, the university of louisville, that basketball program, generates $45 million a year. the scholarships given out to the players are worth about $430,000 a year. so that's a pretty big gap. >> host: i imagine there's a lot of pressure for coaches to win, many schools are state funded schools and their basketball or football coaches are the highest paid state employees. is that correct. >> guest: the basketball and football coaches are paid an enormous amount of money. nick saban in 2017, the coach -- football coach al alabama, made $11 million. that's more than bill belichick, the coach of the new england patriots, made. the top basketball coaches make seven and eight million dollars a year. a lot of people say, well, these sports programs, they're making money, giving back to the academics. well, they're not. maybe they should but they're not. the money is used to pay the coaches, and to build these gilded facilities, locker rooms, practice facilities, weight rooms with hot and cold tubs, so the money that is generated by the program, they spend it. >> host: back to col
well, the university of louisville, that basketball program, generates $45 million a year. the scholarships given out to the players are worth about $430,000 a year. so that's a pretty big gap. >> host: i imagine there's a lot of pressure for coaches to win, many schools are state funded schools and their basketball or football coaches are the highest paid state employees. is that correct. >> guest: the basketball and football coaches are paid an enormous amount of money. nick saban...
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is the only german university where these kinds of human experiments were carried out. with all the other experiments we know about what conducted by as as doctors in concentration camps. but in this case it was university professors who conducted these deadly human experiments mention experimented with few an. anatomical institute was just a stone's throw away from the medical faculty headed by my grandfather. surely he must have known what was going on at this faculty and had been aware of the murders and human experiments it's a question to which our family still has no definitive answers. the most soon from whom i believe that the murder of eighty six jews who helped had ordered from auschwitz for his skeleton collection was kept secret from other people in the university. in addition to being a university professor well it was also a member of the s s ancestral research agency. so he had his own separate institute s s to check in with i could carry out these matters it's institute. in the media these are. if you are taught. so it is possible that my grandfather had
is the only german university where these kinds of human experiments were carried out. with all the other experiments we know about what conducted by as as doctors in concentration camps. but in this case it was university professors who conducted these deadly human experiments mention experimented with few an. anatomical institute was just a stone's throw away from the medical faculty headed by my grandfather. surely he must have known what was going on at this faculty and had been aware of...
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Jan 20, 2019
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and that may be true even for the universe itself. that they could simply be multiple universes. i think that maven two out of three of his questions. you are keeping notes. >> host: he asked, you know, you talk about this in several of your books, in your talks, is there a religious aspect to the big bang theory? and then have you ever considered running for office. >> guest: the thing is when you use the word religion it comes with certain expectation of what it means. here in the west, most places in the world when you say religion, it involves a document of some kind, a holy document, a holy book that prescribes what you should believe even in absence of evidence. and it then tells you about what conduct you should have in the fact of that belief system, okay? insights you can put forth an idea that does it have evidence, but everybody is looking for evidence. and if we cannot generate evidence for it, then it ultimately which is simply be discarded or put on a show. so evidence matters in this. so if you want to call it a religion
and that may be true even for the universe itself. that they could simply be multiple universes. i think that maven two out of three of his questions. you are keeping notes. >> host: he asked, you know, you talk about this in several of your books, in your talks, is there a religious aspect to the big bang theory? and then have you ever considered running for office. >> guest: the thing is when you use the word religion it comes with certain expectation of what it means. here in the...
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Jan 13, 2019
01/19
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we are the fifth oldest university in the english-speaking world. we are considered heretics because we suggested having the first chair of medicine in the english-speaking world, which was considered radical in its time. we have a total student body of around 16,500. what excites me most is it is not just looking back. it is also the future and how we work to move forward in the 21st century. one example is we have opened our first overseas campus in qatar and we will be opening a medical school next year. in 2019. it is a multifaceted approach. we are proud of our history. we are looking forward into the future and the next century. as an update to the university, particularly to the many alumni in this room, it has been an exciting year. we bid farewell to our last principal and welcomed the return of our new principal, who is a double alum. he has come back to aberdeen. it is a great pleasure working with him. it is a pleasure because he is part of the city. he is a great believer in aberdeen football. [laughter] the winner of those european cha
we are the fifth oldest university in the english-speaking world. we are considered heretics because we suggested having the first chair of medicine in the english-speaking world, which was considered radical in its time. we have a total student body of around 16,500. what excites me most is it is not just looking back. it is also the future and how we work to move forward in the 21st century. one example is we have opened our first overseas campus in qatar and we will be opening a medical...
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Jan 12, 2019
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without the best players all the time, a master motivator, but the recruitment of brian bowen to the university of louisville became the central thread, one of the central threads in the federal case that sort of lifted the lid on a big basketball scandal that broke about a year ago. and pitino lost his job over this scandal. wasn't the first scandal he was involved in, pretty much the last straw. >> host: is your athletic and ncaa people more and more talk about how the players are being used by the universities, making money for the university, and then when they accept a 1700 gift card to a restaurant,
without the best players all the time, a master motivator, but the recruitment of brian bowen to the university of louisville became the central thread, one of the central threads in the federal case that sort of lifted the lid on a big basketball scandal that broke about a year ago. and pitino lost his job over this scandal. wasn't the first scandal he was involved in, pretty much the last straw. >> host: is your athletic and ncaa people more and more talk about how the players are being...
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Jan 23, 2019
01/19
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at the university of miami, we started the launchpad. this gives an opportunity for any student not just business and engineering to start a business. we have the serial freshman entrepreneurs. we want every student at the university to think about creating a job, not just about taking a job. that requires a different kind of thinking. you walk into the launchpad which is in the student center and you present your idea and they will help you put together a business plan. it's the largest activity at the university of miami. the vast majority of the students who walk in their and start businesses come from the arts and sciences. and not just engineering or business. but they are english majors, theater majors, they just have a good idea. and we've created hundreds of businesses over the years because of that. but it's a different way of educating students and its understanding that is not just the classroom activity. lots of people have entrepreneurship in their business call. but it's a different way of getting the kids to think. in a fr
at the university of miami, we started the launchpad. this gives an opportunity for any student not just business and engineering to start a business. we have the serial freshman entrepreneurs. we want every student at the university to think about creating a job, not just about taking a job. that requires a different kind of thinking. you walk into the launchpad which is in the student center and you present your idea and they will help you put together a business plan. it's the largest...
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Jan 31, 2019
01/19
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at the university imposed sanctions. 0ne the university imposed sanctions.red and they have had the sanction reduced to a year. it shocked the student community. stu d e nts shocked the student community. students are questioning how you can reduce the sentence by that much and what are the grounds and what was said in the first place to have banned them 1a years. said in the first place to have banned them 14 years. many students we re banned them 14 years. many students were reluctant to go on camera saying they are concerned the internal processes has not been open enough. many say they are now questioning their future at the university because they are concerned about who they are sitting next to. those words her and i feel that the university... they should not come back. i think if! that the university... they should not come back. i think if i went around yelling stuff like this in person, it would be dealt with very seriously. i would person, it would be dealt with very seriously. iwould hope person, it would be dealt with very seriously. i would hop
at the university imposed sanctions. 0ne the university imposed sanctions.red and they have had the sanction reduced to a year. it shocked the student community. stu d e nts shocked the student community. students are questioning how you can reduce the sentence by that much and what are the grounds and what was said in the first place to have banned them 1a years. said in the first place to have banned them 14 years. many students we re banned them 14 years. many students were reluctant to go...
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Jan 12, 2019
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a lot of the experience in world class medical care, both in wisconsin and the university of miami. people are concerned about pocketbook issues, the cost of prescription drugs, the out of pocket cost for insurance. that is my area of expertise. that is what i hope to focus on here. it will not only help the people of south florida. in my district there are 100,000 people registered for obamacare, the largest number in any congressional district in this country. they expect me to make certain that we do everything we can to make health care affordable, but particularly the focus on prescription drug costs. >> describe your district and why did you choose the south for -- the south florida district to run her congress from? rep. shalala: i have been living in that district for 20 years. my grandparents lived in the district, and my aunts, and uncles, and cousins. i have strong family ties. i have cuban cousins that came over from cuba. when the lebanese left lebanon, they went all over the world. i have relatives all over latin america, but particularly my cuban cousins are in miami.
a lot of the experience in world class medical care, both in wisconsin and the university of miami. people are concerned about pocketbook issues, the cost of prescription drugs, the out of pocket cost for insurance. that is my area of expertise. that is what i hope to focus on here. it will not only help the people of south florida. in my district there are 100,000 people registered for obamacare, the largest number in any congressional district in this country. they expect me to make certain...
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today we believe the universe formed fourteen billion years ago in what's called the big bang since then says the theory the universe has been expanding at an ever increasing rate. here on earth we can see just one small sliver of the universe many stars are so far away that their light hasn't arrived here yet after all it takes two and a half million years for light to make the journey from our nearest galactic neighbor andromeda to the earth. and because the universe is expanding radiation from distant galaxies is also stretched into wavelengths that are no longer visible to the human eye but they are visible to the hubble telescope it can also observe radiation and those parts of the spectrum and even reveal stars hidden behind clouds of cosmic dust that block radiation in the visible spectrum the light. and that's why at least to our eyes the night sky is dark. if our love is red right up but only a few. do you have a science question that you've always wanted answered it we're happy to help out send it to us as a video text over a smell if we answer it on the show we'll send you a l
today we believe the universe formed fourteen billion years ago in what's called the big bang since then says the theory the universe has been expanding at an ever increasing rate. here on earth we can see just one small sliver of the universe many stars are so far away that their light hasn't arrived here yet after all it takes two and a half million years for light to make the journey from our nearest galactic neighbor andromeda to the earth. and because the universe is expanding radiation...
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but the universe around. us one final question what do you think is our purpose then in terms of if we are really this consciousness is costly playing tricks on itself sensual our purpose i think is to give meaning to exists and once we give meaning to existence and once we agree and it becomes a reality and till such time that somebody comes along and says you know that meaning was not quite accurate. this is a bigger me and it goes on because consciousness is infinite we never get to the fundamental meaning of exists between. decades after the war a nazi don't tell was still active rich in the nineteen seventies crittle had as the chair of its board a man convicted of mass murder and slavery. the german company developed from the demise a drug that was promoted as completely safe even during pregnancy it turned out to have terrible side effects what has happened to my baby anything paul. she said is just. minutes a little mind victims have to this day received no compensation they never apologized for the s
but the universe around. us one final question what do you think is our purpose then in terms of if we are really this consciousness is costly playing tricks on itself sensual our purpose i think is to give meaning to exists and once we give meaning to existence and once we agree and it becomes a reality and till such time that somebody comes along and says you know that meaning was not quite accurate. this is a bigger me and it goes on because consciousness is infinite we never get to the...
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research is that the university hospital of zurich want to give our brains a priest so christian wolf and his team have wired up their test subjects. and the experiment begins now. over the subjects don't actually feel a thing transcranial brain stimulation involves a point electric current to a specific region of the organ in this case one of these known to influence mathematical reasoning. for ten minutes the subjects at about solving tricky subtraction and multiplication exercises with startling results the house before us when we've discovered that when this region is stimulated the test subjects get more subtraction problems right. so in other words it makes subtraction easier for them interestingly we found no effect on multiplication so it appears that this region is responsible for subtraction. found for he was. transcranial brain stimulation in general is said to hold great potential. as an ironing student in some studies test subjects were given working memory exercises they had to remember sequences of numbers and if you do that over the course of a week using stimulation f
research is that the university hospital of zurich want to give our brains a priest so christian wolf and his team have wired up their test subjects. and the experiment begins now. over the subjects don't actually feel a thing transcranial brain stimulation involves a point electric current to a specific region of the organ in this case one of these known to influence mathematical reasoning. for ten minutes the subjects at about solving tricky subtraction and multiplication exercises with...
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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thes -- the world would be university. when it comes to democratization of education, the idea was the world would be an open door. we need to differentiate between the student who can't get any education at all, and i first noticed i was teaching a course on cold war history, and distance options made it possible for students in the former soviet bloc to join my class. couldn't come to the united states, but someone says i live in poland, that is great. it made the class better and for that student there is no other way to get there. the problem with distance options is it puts a huge amount of response ability on the student to be incredibly disciplined and organized and students are not incredibly disciplined and organized. i'm here to give you breaking news about students. they are not incredibly disciplined and organized. we approach with the diligence that, as though you were under the guidance of a professor. one of the problems with distance courses is students say it is online. i was going to go to class but i get
thes -- the world would be university. when it comes to democratization of education, the idea was the world would be an open door. we need to differentiate between the student who can't get any education at all, and i first noticed i was teaching a course on cold war history, and distance options made it possible for students in the former soviet bloc to join my class. couldn't come to the united states, but someone says i live in poland, that is great. it made the class better and for that...
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Jan 18, 2019
01/19
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i say that because the university is founded on a different idea. to educate the whole person you have to create an equivalent. if you look at how we typically treat experiential learning in the united states. in a way that is subordinate to the classroom experience. you had this university or program, and to add an experiential component to it. we were going to take this on and send it. the kettering model is the opposite. these two things are equal in importance. one is not subordinate to the other. each informed the other. students spend as much time there as an application of the knowledge and support. that creates a virtuous circle that is bidirectional. the students experience in their cooperative place or experiential activities informs the classroom. how many universities, where a faculty member is teaching abstract, talking about both theories it turns around and faces the students and says you are working in a wind tunnel lab. do you use this in this way or do you have a way you have adapted this formalism to that particular occupation? we
i say that because the university is founded on a different idea. to educate the whole person you have to create an equivalent. if you look at how we typically treat experiential learning in the united states. in a way that is subordinate to the classroom experience. you had this university or program, and to add an experiential component to it. we were going to take this on and send it. the kettering model is the opposite. these two things are equal in importance. one is not subordinate to the...
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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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. >> joining us from san antonio, texas got a professor of history at the university of texas at austin and your paper, your presentation is titled as follows, droughts, dams, and the attempt to stave off the disaster on the colorado plateau. explain your research, what have you learned? prof. bsumek: my research started with the dam on the utah eurozone of order completed in the 1960's. i became interested in how society was attempting to mitigate extreme water shortages in the american southwest. >> how did they do that? prof. bsumek: there were a number of different ways americans who settled in the region actually attempted to deal with a water shortage. they first tried barrier dams and canals and then they began to scale up their attempts. they tried smaller mitigation projects and by the time we get to the 1940's and 1950's, people become acutely aware that order for society to grow, they need to really begin to stockpile water. after the construction of hoover dam is followed by the second largest dam in the united states. they turned infrastructure to do that. >> when was the g
. >> joining us from san antonio, texas got a professor of history at the university of texas at austin and your paper, your presentation is titled as follows, droughts, dams, and the attempt to stave off the disaster on the colorado plateau. explain your research, what have you learned? prof. bsumek: my research started with the dam on the utah eurozone of order completed in the 1960's. i became interested in how society was attempting to mitigate extreme water shortages in the american...
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of the universe around. so i can ask one final question what do you think is our purpose then in terms of if we are really this consciousness is closely playing tricks on itself central our purpose i think is to give meaning to existence and once we give meaning to existence and once we agree and it becomes. and till such time that somebody comes along and says you know that meaning was not quite accurate. this is a bigger me. because. we never get to the fundamental meaning of exists. it's hard to imagine. germany's divided as ministers demand deportation and tougher asylum laws after a shocking attack by migrants. should be honored to be able to be here and to commit a crime and if they do so they have to go back they they deserve a second chance when we have our laws we don't have to change the laws. such a rescue operation comes to the tower block collapse in the russian city of might be that after the body of the final victim was recovered in the tragedy that killed thirteen. plus looking back at last y
of the universe around. so i can ask one final question what do you think is our purpose then in terms of if we are really this consciousness is closely playing tricks on itself central our purpose i think is to give meaning to existence and once we give meaning to existence and once we agree and it becomes. and till such time that somebody comes along and says you know that meaning was not quite accurate. this is a bigger me. because. we never get to the fundamental meaning of exists. it's...
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Jan 31, 2019
01/19
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daniel reuben is the editor of the university's student newspaper the boar who broke the story.olved in this behaviour? just speaking to students around campus, it has gone down very negatively. speaking to female students who will be here next year, a lot of them are very scared, they don't know whether they will be in seminars with the stu d e nts they will be in seminars with the students or whether they will be safe, and i don't think that anybody is happy with the decision. why do you think that the university has taken this course of action, given the outcry that this case has provoked? of course, i cannot say because the university has been so quiet about what has gone on during this appeals process, and that's one of the major issues here, the lack of the major issues here, the lack of transparency. in june, of the major issues here, the lack of transparency. injune, when the original rulings were made, saying a student would be banned for life and tomb more than ten years, the university came up with a statement, saying, this is what would happen. this appeals process t
daniel reuben is the editor of the university's student newspaper the boar who broke the story.olved in this behaviour? just speaking to students around campus, it has gone down very negatively. speaking to female students who will be here next year, a lot of them are very scared, they don't know whether they will be in seminars with the stu d e nts they will be in seminars with the students or whether they will be safe, and i don't think that anybody is happy with the decision. why do you...
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Jan 16, 2019
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protesters say the reason the university cleared them was to make room for new student dorms. almost 50 years ago, this was the sight of an infamous bloody thursday riots between students and police. >> they are trying to kill the magic of 1969. >> reporter: today a much smaller showdown at the park. >> this park is more than a park. it is a symbol of the people's power and historical mark of the free speech movement. >> reporter: five trees that the university says were in poor conditioned. >> it is hard to understand how removing the trees violates the history of the park. >> reporter: you can see the line of uc berkeley officers and chp officers blocking protesters from entering the park. arrested six people who were camping in the park including a 24-year-old university student. >> they are trying to get as many trees as possible because they have plans to develop in the future. >> this has nothing to do with the plans for the future. >> reporter: including an area where several trees still stand. >> sad doesn't quite coffer ver. it is more like devastation. >> reporter: th
protesters say the reason the university cleared them was to make room for new student dorms. almost 50 years ago, this was the sight of an infamous bloody thursday riots between students and police. >> they are trying to kill the magic of 1969. >> reporter: today a much smaller showdown at the park. >> this park is more than a park. it is a symbol of the people's power and historical mark of the free speech movement. >> reporter: five trees that the university says were...
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Jan 25, 2019
01/19
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the university of new mexico hospital in albuquerque. that young man with his decision, donating his organs. his family wanted to share this deeply personal moment with the country, hoping their son's gift, saving other lives, would inspire others to think about organ donation, too. their unspeakable loss, and corey's unimaginable gift. >> so, we >>> breaking news is in seattle. you can see the flames shooting out of a bus there. on the bus was the stanford track team on interstate 5. seattle fire department officials say the fire broke out around 2:00 in the afternoon. fire crews were able to douse the blaze. the bus as you can see totally destroyed. no reports of injury. that's the important thing. the track team was on the way to the meet at the university of washington. 31 people ob board. there's the team. and we emphasize no injuries. >> good news there. good afternoon. thanks for joining us. >> to today's top story the end of government shutdown. >> we have reached a deal. to end the shut down. and reopen the federal government. >
the university of new mexico hospital in albuquerque. that young man with his decision, donating his organs. his family wanted to share this deeply personal moment with the country, hoping their son's gift, saving other lives, would inspire others to think about organ donation, too. their unspeakable loss, and corey's unimaginable gift. >> so, we >>> breaking news is in seattle. you can see the flames shooting out of a bus there. on the bus was the stanford track team on...
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Jan 20, 2019
01/19
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that all of a sudden pieces of the universe come available to us that transcend our senses. the fact9 that lieu wan hoping would look inside of a drop of pond water and see microorganisms just doing the backstroke, right? your eye/brain sensory system could not have detected were it not for the microscope. and you can say does that make sense that you'd have entire living creatures inside of a drop of water, well, today we know that because we learned it in childhood, but back in the day, it made no sense at all. >> guest: one eyewitness testimony about one result is not a scientific discovery. you need verification of it to confirm that it's real. and especially in modern times, the 20th century and onward, we have particle accelerators. we've discovered quantum physics which has rules of how matter behaves that fall completely outside of not only your senses, but our expectations for how life -- how anything should work. particles popping in and out of existence, matter turning into energy and back and forth. so then we discover, like, black holes and the expanding universe
that all of a sudden pieces of the universe come available to us that transcend our senses. the fact9 that lieu wan hoping would look inside of a drop of pond water and see microorganisms just doing the backstroke, right? your eye/brain sensory system could not have detected were it not for the microscope. and you can say does that make sense that you'd have entire living creatures inside of a drop of water, well, today we know that because we learned it in childhood, but back in the day, it...
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Jan 31, 2019
01/19
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there has been no official word by the university that this has happened. to know why the university is keeping quiet, and they really need to say something to relay those fears. so what more could you as a student union do to try to address this, perhaps to get the ban extended ain? so i should make clear that i am a current student and as an editor of the paper, we are independent of the student union, but i think people from the student union has said that they are unhappy with how the process has been carried out. there is also the issue that two student officers did say on that process. so i think a lot of people are kind of looking for answers from the student union and the university on why this has happened and how they are going to help protect students next year. the number of assaults in prisons in england and wales has reached a record high. according to figures released by the ministry ofjustice, there were more than thirty—three thousand attacks by prisoners between september 2017 and the following year. the charity — prison reform trust — desc
there has been no official word by the university that this has happened. to know why the university is keeping quiet, and they really need to say something to relay those fears. so what more could you as a student union do to try to address this, perhaps to get the ban extended ain? so i should make clear that i am a current student and as an editor of the paper, we are independent of the student union, but i think people from the student union has said that they are unhappy with how the...
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at the dawn of the twenty first century we might know more about the universe than previous generations but to quote donald rumsfeld in one of his more lucid moments there are known unknowns but they're also unknown and the ones we don't know we don't know if quantum theory is leading us toward ideas about multiverse is in dimensions affecting our reality beyond the four there may be no limits to our multi dimensional consciousness will take us. but there are others who would argue the rules of the universe can be completely you know starting with the brain. in twenty four cheney might have caught the guy that film transcendence which popularized an idea held by futurists like ray kurzweil that one day humans will be able to upload their brains to a computer chips their idea. their memory. their identity. at the two hundred million or so year history of our brains through mammalian history we see there's a lot in the design and the fundamental flaw of the brain that has no back the most precious in from a. and then we have is not backed up to this computer system we have is something we
at the dawn of the twenty first century we might know more about the universe than previous generations but to quote donald rumsfeld in one of his more lucid moments there are known unknowns but they're also unknown and the ones we don't know we don't know if quantum theory is leading us toward ideas about multiverse is in dimensions affecting our reality beyond the four there may be no limits to our multi dimensional consciousness will take us. but there are others who would argue the rules of...
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the country's long way university of agriculture absent in the. german scientists for help. despite the gravity of the situation the government is reluctant to impose a fishing limit in lake malawi due to fears of famine in the. depth of oktar through the fishermen have reduced the mesh size of their nets over the years because of the pressure they're under this is counterproductive as elsewhere in the world making the mesh smaller is madness because they'll catch fish that aren't yet sexually mature forty five percent. of the legal lower mesh limit is two centimeters. when they are using mosquito nets this jesse and he got a. but malawi's government turns a blind eye dr dollar cost son has known about the dwindling fish stocks for years it was he who asked mclean a gay vet for help as things stand the lakes fish stocks can only be replenished efficient is affectively suspended or it comes to a program over fishing i think it's just unfortunate that people fishermen themselves may not accept to go or like new york he did but was what is supposed to have been in that leg firs
the country's long way university of agriculture absent in the. german scientists for help. despite the gravity of the situation the government is reluctant to impose a fishing limit in lake malawi due to fears of famine in the. depth of oktar through the fishermen have reduced the mesh size of their nets over the years because of the pressure they're under this is counterproductive as elsewhere in the world making the mesh smaller is madness because they'll catch fish that aren't yet sexually...
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Jan 16, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN3
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also believe that we should support the university of wyoming's effort to obtain staff and faculty. they are responding to the time and proving to be innovative in their own right. i applaud president nichols for launching that management degree program that aligns the university of wyoming with the second largest industry in the state and give graduates an opportunity for work while and fulfilling work right here in wyoming. i also know that they did this by raising private money, not asking for new state dollars. thank you president nichols.[ applause ]one of our universities fundamental missions is to support another cornerstone of our economy, agricultural. in this supplemental budget, there is a call for further innovation agriculture and a ranch in through an enhanced ag program. wyoming that many western states is struggling to contend with the spread of invasive species like cheap grass, leafy spurge, and medusa head wild right. the species are degrading arrange, threatening agricultural viability, and impacting big game, and raising fire risk across the west. in our quest to
also believe that we should support the university of wyoming's effort to obtain staff and faculty. they are responding to the time and proving to be innovative in their own right. i applaud president nichols for launching that management degree program that aligns the university of wyoming with the second largest industry in the state and give graduates an opportunity for work while and fulfilling work right here in wyoming. i also know that they did this by raising private money, not asking...
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Jan 9, 2019
01/19
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and at the university hospital where the most seriously wounded were taken. thanks to the quick actions of members of the public who rushed by the the wounded and first responders lives were saved that morning. this mental health of everyone in attendance was adversely affected. and many of the survivors still endure the physical and mental impact the shooting had on their lives. the families of the six people killed grieve the loss of their loved ones to this day. i am so honored that our colleague, gabbie giffords, is with us tonight. she served with great distinction in this house and despite her nearly fatal injuries has gone on to encourage and inspire us to take action to reduce gun violence in our country. today, a bipartisan group of our colleagues responded to gabbie's call by introducing and co-sponsoring house resolution 8. this bill, which i support, will keep guns out of the hands of people who are currently prohibited by law from purchasing guns. it will eliminate loopholes in the current background check system. the bill will not prevent respon
and at the university hospital where the most seriously wounded were taken. thanks to the quick actions of members of the public who rushed by the the wounded and first responders lives were saved that morning. this mental health of everyone in attendance was adversely affected. and many of the survivors still endure the physical and mental impact the shooting had on their lives. the families of the six people killed grieve the loss of their loved ones to this day. i am so honored that our...
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Jan 11, 2019
01/19
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a lot of people already getting in touch about the universal credit. en some people out of the net. another anonymous text message says i agree with the two child on benefits. it is about time those on benefits. it is about time those on benefit realise it isn't a bottomless pot of money. an employee cannot go to their employer to us for a wage rise every time a child is born into theirfamily. this is an option that should be considered if you choose to have more children. bagnis on facebook says it is time to scrap universal credit and start again. people are being driven to despair trying to navigate the department for work and pensions website, not being able to speak to somebody who knows what they are doing is a joke. somebody who knows what they are doing is ajoke. if somebody who knows what they are doing is a joke. if you have more band two children born before april 2017 and it means you are going to get more money for those other children, get in touch this morning. it will be interesting to hear your thoughts on those and hear what difference
a lot of people already getting in touch about the universal credit. en some people out of the net. another anonymous text message says i agree with the two child on benefits. it is about time those on benefits. it is about time those on benefit realise it isn't a bottomless pot of money. an employee cannot go to their employer to us for a wage rise every time a child is born into theirfamily. this is an option that should be considered if you choose to have more children. bagnis on facebook...
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Jan 5, 2019
01/19
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the university has protected it with mesh. is is the last remaining parent navel orange tree which created the vast citrus industry of california. now,e on mission m avenue originally 7th street. this is an historic district in two ways, it is a national registered district and it overlaps with the mission inn historic district that spreads out away from 7th. of course now we are going fast the historic landmark mission inn, frank miller's own contribution to the city of riverside. it is the largest mission revival structure in california, maybe the united states. the mission inn has been visited by several presidents who stayed there. ronald and nancy reagan spent their honeymoon night there. theodore roosevelt spent the night in the so-called presidential suite one the mission inn opened. thenext date presided over replanting of one of the two navel orange trees in front of the new glenwood mission inn. it has been the scene of early peace conferences before world war i. international visitors from all over, including asia an
the university has protected it with mesh. is is the last remaining parent navel orange tree which created the vast citrus industry of california. now,e on mission m avenue originally 7th street. this is an historic district in two ways, it is a national registered district and it overlaps with the mission inn historic district that spreads out away from 7th. of course now we are going fast the historic landmark mission inn, frank miller's own contribution to the city of riverside. it is the...
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Jan 21, 2019
01/19
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KGO
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like an eclipse or super-man those all help us to stop for a minute and connect with the rest of the universe. >> now we'll actually be streaming the super-blood full moon tonight on our facebook page. and if you miss it tonight you have to wait another ten years. that's the next time we can see it here in the bay area. >> okay. ten years. set on my watch. facebook is rolling out a new feature tomorrow designed to promote community activism. users can post and sign online petitions that appear in the news feed. the feature will be called community action. been going through testing the past several weeks. elected officials and agencies tagged will receive a notification and can respond. >> it's called a fog design in art festival. it's not what you think. >> the unique items on display this weekend in. >> meteorologist is coming at you next with the forecast. >> the bay area will be well represented in super-bowl 53. the 57 yard play in over time that sent goff and the your but as you get older,hing. it naturally begins to change, causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. than
like an eclipse or super-man those all help us to stop for a minute and connect with the rest of the universe. >> now we'll actually be streaming the super-blood full moon tonight on our facebook page. and if you miss it tonight you have to wait another ten years. that's the next time we can see it here in the bay area. >> okay. ten years. set on my watch. facebook is rolling out a new feature tomorrow designed to promote community activism. users can post and sign online petitions...
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Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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KGO
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. >>> we turn next tonight to the deadly rampage near penn state university. the 21-year-old gunman shooting and wounding a woman, then apparently randomly killing a father and son, then broke into a home nearby where he shot an 83-year-old while that man's wife was hiding in the bathroom. the suspect then took his own life. the authorities are still searching for a motive tonight. >>> and next to the arctic blast slamming into the east tonight. millions of americans will feel into the weekend. and the driving still hazardous in many places across the country. a mail truck catching fire after spinning its wheels on the ice. fortunately missing homes there. near troy new york, ice floes ripping this boat from its moorings. slamming it right into the foot of a bridge. the bitter cold from minnesota to new york. windchills in some places. we couldn't believe this -- 50 below zero. here's rob marciano. >> reporter: it's a one-two punch of bitter cold with some snow to boot. snow from chicago to st. louis, the first wave of cold. so, it's sticking. lake effect snows
. >>> we turn next tonight to the deadly rampage near penn state university. the 21-year-old gunman shooting and wounding a woman, then apparently randomly killing a father and son, then broke into a home nearby where he shot an 83-year-old while that man's wife was hiding in the bathroom. the suspect then took his own life. the authorities are still searching for a motive tonight. >>> and next to the arctic blast slamming into the east tonight. millions of americans will feel...
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Jan 27, 2019
01/19
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the back. >> hello. david, princeton university. spier made,what building on your comments now, but domestic politics and vietnam war protesters, what he made of joseph mccarthy -- mccarthy and the second round scare after world war ii and the united states to mystic a. it leads me to a broader question. i understand he was a social democrat and a marxist. it was highlighted very well in the talk to the distinction between fascism and, as in, which i think is common among intellectuals at the time, collapsed into totalitarianism, peopler, did he or other , make decisions between the right and the left in the united states? , butunds perhaps he didn't i do not know if you could talk more about that. >> absolutely appeared in relation to mccarthy, he is unmentioned in the early documents from the 1950's. they refer to him as a reactionary essentially doing things outside traditions of democratic norms. they all wanted to avoid it because they were foreign-born and were socialist and communist. something they do not talk about except to
the back. >> hello. david, princeton university. spier made,what building on your comments now, but domestic politics and vietnam war protesters, what he made of joseph mccarthy -- mccarthy and the second round scare after world war ii and the united states to mystic a. it leads me to a broader question. i understand he was a social democrat and a marxist. it was highlighted very well in the talk to the distinction between fascism and, as in, which i think is common among intellectuals at...
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Jan 3, 2019
01/19
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CSPAN2
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>> i was president of the university of miami and give her the chancellor of the university of wisconsin, president of hunter college so i had a lot of experience with young people and issues they care about and obviously a lot of experience in world-class medical care both at wisconsin and at the university of miami we had a big health system. people are concerned about pocketbook issues and the cost of prescription drugs, out-of-pocket cost for insurance. that's my area of expertise and what i hope to focus on. it will not only help people in south florida. in my district has 100,000 people registered for obamacare. that's the largest number in any congressional district in the country. so, they expect me to make certain that we do everything we can to make healthcare more affordable particularly to focus on the prescription drug costs. >> descriptive district and why you chose the south florida district to run for congress. >> first of all, i've been living in that district for 20 years. my grandparents with the district, my cousins. i have strong family ties. i have cuban cousins who
>> i was president of the university of miami and give her the chancellor of the university of wisconsin, president of hunter college so i had a lot of experience with young people and issues they care about and obviously a lot of experience in world-class medical care both at wisconsin and at the university of miami we had a big health system. people are concerned about pocketbook issues and the cost of prescription drugs, out-of-pocket cost for insurance. that's my area of expertise and...
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Jan 15, 2019
01/19
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KPIX
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the university made no apologies. >> we absolutely had a large number of officers here, the reason for that, it is the best way to deter and prevent violence. >> the five tree were cut down by sunrise, ground up and hauled away. the university says they hired ann arborist who determined the trees were rotten and dying. >> they had weakened limbs, they were leaning, and tilting. >> doesn't believe the arborist hired by the university. >> i believe the arborist was handed a paycheck and told to tell them this many trees are sick and need to go. >> planning to build housing for homeless, that project is unfortunately rerelated to today's tree removal. it's hard to understand why anybody would be opposed to tree maintenance necessary to provide for public safety. >> diet do. >>> broadway is saying good-bye to a beloved star of the stage. >>> a look back at the life a theatrical legend with root willing in thbay area. >>> gill let releases a new ad but not about shaving, why company is being praised and criticized for taking on the "me too movement." cvs pharmacy. ed gets copays as low as z
the university made no apologies. >> we absolutely had a large number of officers here, the reason for that, it is the best way to deter and prevent violence. >> the five tree were cut down by sunrise, ground up and hauled away. the university says they hired ann arborist who determined the trees were rotten and dying. >> they had weakened limbs, they were leaning, and tilting. >> doesn't believe the arborist hired by the university. >> i believe the arborist was...
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Jan 26, 2019
01/19
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KGO
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the uchb the university of utah now on the defensive. >> reporter: was lauren's death preventible? >> absolutely. >> yes. >> reporter: when you walk into her room at her home in pullman, washington, you see instantly the kind of things she loved and the kind of girl she was. her talents b recognized even before her 10th birthday. look at these medals, quite a few of the. >> so she started competing nationally as a 9 year old. >> reporter: coming in here is still hard. >> it's nice, though, to look at the things, you know. she did a lot in her life. >> lauren didn't care what you looked like. she didn't care where you came from. sort of fearless, you know. every parent says this, but she was a very kind, very kind person. >> i had noticed that she was very athletic from, from when she was an infant. >> reporter: it was on the track where lauren really shined, where she and her good friend regina snider first became close. >> we really bounded through our workouts, and then like we became really great friends. one of my best friends. >> reporter: colleen hindman first met lauren over
the uchb the university of utah now on the defensive. >> reporter: was lauren's death preventible? >> absolutely. >> yes. >> reporter: when you walk into her room at her home in pullman, washington, you see instantly the kind of things she loved and the kind of girl she was. her talents b recognized even before her 10th birthday. look at these medals, quite a few of the. >> so she started competing nationally as a 9 year old. >> reporter: coming in here is...