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May 14, 2021
05/21
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needless to say any member of the family is welcome here at the ucla law school. it gives me an additional pleasure to welcome secretary alejandro mayorkas thank you for being with us today. >> thank you.it's an honor to sh everyone and to frankly participate with the wonderful center here at ucla. it is my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. >> mister secretary before we begin i want to thank you again it's unusual and an important state about transparency to be able to come here and have this conversation with me. we greatly greatly appreciate that. i want to say that it's early in the morning but we did have a discussion with your staff and shared some of the talking points in advance. and also setting a's we want to have set up questions before but you said no you want the conversation to be very organic and natural. so let me jump in. here >> i look forward to thank. you >> so upon your nomination, november 23rd 2020, when i was very young united states provided my family and i place of refuge. and we want to look at the issues o
needless to say any member of the family is welcome here at the ucla law school. it gives me an additional pleasure to welcome secretary alejandro mayorkas thank you for being with us today. >> thank you.it's an honor to sh everyone and to frankly participate with the wonderful center here at ucla. it is my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. >> mister secretary before we begin i want to thank you again it's unusual and an important state about...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN3
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any member of the mayorkas family is welcome here at the ucla law school. so it gives me an additional >> pleasure to welcome secretary alejandro mayorkas. thank you for being with us today. >> thank you. i am -- it's an honor to speak with everyone and to frankly participate with the wonderful center here at ucla. it's my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. so thank you so much. >> mr. secretary, before we begin, i want to thank you again. it's truly unusual and important statement about transparency in government that you're willing to have this conversation with me. so we greatly appreciate that. we did have a discussion with reur staff and shared some of theje topics in advance. i suggested sharing some of the setup questions and you rejected those, saying you wanted the conversation for free flowing ar thd kaorganic. so let me jump in, if that's okay with that. >> i look forward to it. >> thank you. so upon your nomination november 23rd, 2020 you tweeted, when i was very young, thee united stateses provided my family and m
any member of the mayorkas family is welcome here at the ucla law school. so it gives me an additional >> pleasure to welcome secretary alejandro mayorkas. thank you for being with us today. >> thank you. i am -- it's an honor to speak with everyone and to frankly participate with the wonderful center here at ucla. it's my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. so thank you so much. >> mr. secretary, before we begin, i want to thank you again. it's...
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May 19, 2021
05/21
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KGO
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. >> reporter: carrie and rory ended up at ucla with dr. perry shay who confirmed the diagnosis. come it's so tricky to diagnose? >> typically, when they're born they look normal. >> these babies are bright eyed, engaging. they smile at you. they look at you like they know something that you don't. >> reporter: reese not only had sma, she had one of the most severe forms. >> when we first got the diagnosis and we weren't sure if she was going to be alive, i'd almost come to the fact this will destroy us. no couple can survive the lost of their first kid. >> every now and then we'll go for walks and i'll see kids running around or on their scooters and it hits me hard because i know she'll probably never do that. >> are you going to go back to sleep for mama? >> reporter: luckily, there are new treatments, but they're incredibly expensive. o once you got the diagnosis, what was the race against the clock like? >> she was declining pretty quickly. >> reporter: the first thing they tried was a drug called spin rosa, the first drug everle for sma. >> it sent a lightning rod through t
. >> reporter: carrie and rory ended up at ucla with dr. perry shay who confirmed the diagnosis. come it's so tricky to diagnose? >> typically, when they're born they look normal. >> these babies are bright eyed, engaging. they smile at you. they look at you like they know something that you don't. >> reporter: reese not only had sma, she had one of the most severe forms. >> when we first got the diagnosis and we weren't sure if she was going to be alive, i'd...
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May 1, 2021
05/21
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it is an honor to speak with everyone and to participate here at ucla. it is my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. so thank you so much. >> mr. secretary, before we begin, i want to thank you again. it is truly unusual and an important statement about transparency that you are willing to come here and have this conversation with me. we greatly appreciate that. we did have a discussion with your staff and shared some of the topics in advance. i suggested may be even sharing some of the questions, and you rejected those, saying you wanted the conversation to be free-flowing and organic. let me jump in if that's ok with , you. sec. mayorkas: i look forward to it. thank you. >> upon your nomination, i tweeted -- you tweeted "the united states provided me and my family refuge. now i'm going to be the dhs secretary to protect americans and those who flee prosecution and search for a better life for themselves and their loved ones." i was almost brought to tears when i read that. i was born here, but i'm also from a refugee commun
it is an honor to speak with everyone and to participate here at ucla. it is my pride to follow in the shadow of the one and only kathy mayorkas. so thank you so much. >> mr. secretary, before we begin, i want to thank you again. it is truly unusual and an important statement about transparency that you are willing to come here and have this conversation with me. we greatly appreciate that. we did have a discussion with your staff and shared some of the topics in advance. i suggested may...
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May 23, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN2
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you're citing people from elsewhere, university of michigan, ucla, or whatnot. you're kind of engaging with scholars across the board. so one way that diversity could ngbe achieved is if you had -- yale's sociology department leans that way, ucla is out there somewhere, that could be a healthy situation. there's not diversity within an institution but there is across. actually, i think you find that within my own field of philosophy and fields that i think are working well, so things like the more theoretical parts of ethics. you have harvard who is known to be contient, kind of in the tradition of emmanuel cont, you have princeton which is known to be more consequentialist. they engage with eacheq other. one worry i have is that is not true when it comes to politically polarized topics. there you see harvard, yale, ucla, berkley, university of florida, they all lean in one way. and so that's really the problem. >> i wonder -- >> in my view you. >> earlier in your career you were pursuing a phd in engineering, before you decided to embrace philosophy as your dis
you're citing people from elsewhere, university of michigan, ucla, or whatnot. you're kind of engaging with scholars across the board. so one way that diversity could ngbe achieved is if you had -- yale's sociology department leans that way, ucla is out there somewhere, that could be a healthy situation. there's not diversity within an institution but there is across. actually, i think you find that within my own field of philosophy and fields that i think are working well, so things like the...
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May 18, 2021
05/21
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KPIX
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reporter: what followed were degrees from berkley and mechanical engineering and meteorologist from ucla, roal a tuskegee airmen. >> his greatest accomplishment was being a high school teacher and getting to those kids. he was a black man and they loved him. >> reporter: he died at the age of 78. and may have gone overlooked except someone voted to change it. you 79 names out there. archie williams comes to the top. >> it was an amazingly fortunate situation for us to have a local hero, somebody who impacted so many people across such a long period of time. >> reporter: and for students they will have the opportunity to learn about a man who achieved theeengly impossible and know what i takes to succeed. for cbs news, vergne glen, san francisco. >> and archie williams would be proud to know that the high school that bears his name has a graduation rate of 99%. you >>> through thick and thin, a couple of musicians in nashville have managed to maintain a unique friendship. >> every week andy goes for a walk. and every ever week, about a mile and a half away, his friend gabe scott does the
reporter: what followed were degrees from berkley and mechanical engineering and meteorologist from ucla, roal a tuskegee airmen. >> his greatest accomplishment was being a high school teacher and getting to those kids. he was a black man and they loved him. >> reporter: he died at the age of 78. and may have gone overlooked except someone voted to change it. you 79 names out there. archie williams comes to the top. >> it was an amazingly fortunate situation for us to have a...
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May 6, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN2
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ucla, university of michigan. engaging with scholars across the board. . . . . the more i see a radical parts of ethics you have carver who is known to be content and addition of immanuel kant and more consequentialist and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting engineering before he decided to embrace the philosophy as your discipline and you know you do offer relative optimism about the state of the hard scientist yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific questions that are increasingly leather sized or also it goes beyond what its position and i'm pleading guilty about something i was talking about earlier on. when you think about the amount of public funding that goes into some domain it does seem as though it might shape the incentive than it might shape scientific discourse as well. when you're talking about t
ucla, university of michigan. engaging with scholars across the board. . . . . the more i see a radical parts of ethics you have carver who is known to be content and addition of immanuel kant and more consequentialist and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting...
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May 24, 2021
05/21
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MSNBCW
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professor chair of the gilbert foundation for israel studies at ucla.come. >> thanks for having me on. >> what do you make of the use of the word "equal" in terms of u.s. government wanting israelis and palestinians living, as opposed to two-state solution or practical looking, what do you make of it? >> clearly a dramatic shift in tone from the trump administration which only talked about the rights of israel and hardly mentioned palestinian rights. it's a shift in that respect and something of a shift from prior democratic administrations to focus on equal needs of both sides. one thing still missing is equal rights. once u.s. officials start talking about palestinian rights, not just needs but rights, there will be a significant shift. but perhaps the mere mention of equality in any context talking about the israeli/palestinian conflict is beginning of a shift in how u.s. policy makers view this conflict. >> how likely do you think we are to hear a conversation from the u.s. about palestinian rights? seems like beginning of a sentence the palestinian
professor chair of the gilbert foundation for israel studies at ucla.come. >> thanks for having me on. >> what do you make of the use of the word "equal" in terms of u.s. government wanting israelis and palestinians living, as opposed to two-state solution or practical looking, what do you make of it? >> clearly a dramatic shift in tone from the trump administration which only talked about the rights of israel and hardly mentioned palestinian rights. it's a shift in...
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May 24, 2021
05/21
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MSNBCW
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joining us now is professor, the chair of the gilbert foundation of israel studies at ucla. professor, welcome. >> thank you for having me on the program. >> what do you make of that? the use of the word equal in terms of the way that the u.s. government wants israelis and palestinians to end up living as opposed to a two state solution or what that might look like practically. that use of the word equal. what do you make of that? >> for one thing, it's clearly a dramatic shift in tone from trump administration and it's really only talked about the right of israel and hardly palestinian rights or palestinian leaders so it's a shift in that respect and i think it's something of a shift in prior democratic administrations to focus on the equal needs of both sides but it think one thing that still missing in this language is equal rights. once u.s. officials start talking about palestinian rights, not just needs but writes, then i think that really will be a significant shift. but i think perhaps the mere mention of equality in any context when talking about the israeli palesti
joining us now is professor, the chair of the gilbert foundation of israel studies at ucla. professor, welcome. >> thank you for having me on the program. >> what do you make of that? the use of the word equal in terms of the way that the u.s. government wants israelis and palestinians to end up living as opposed to a two state solution or what that might look like practically. that use of the word equal. what do you make of that? >> for one thing, it's clearly a dramatic...
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May 15, 2021
05/21
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CNNW
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. >> ucla did a study that said i am extremely attractive. >> well, it's ucla. >> please. >> i got something i am going to say at the end of the show, and i want everybody to tune in. >> so tonight, you are saying something at the end of the show? >> end of the show. and there will be more to come. i'll tell ya, over the weekend. >> and there's more to come over the weekend. >> but it involves us, too. it involves -- it involves you but we'll see. >> and it's not bad news? >> i'm not -- no. i mean, come on. >> well, if it's bad news, i think you should give people a little bit of a -- >> it's not bad news. >> did you know that, in texas, it is an equal violation to play loud music in your home, as it is to own a tiger? can you believe that? think about that. hey, man, will you get over here right away? this don lemon. he won't stop playing the doobie brothers. versus, hey, man, will you get over here? there's a tiger in my yard, man. >> all right, chris baskin. >> they are both class c violations. i just talked to this lawyer. can you believe that, in texas, it's the same wrong? >> yeah, but
. >> ucla did a study that said i am extremely attractive. >> well, it's ucla. >> please. >> i got something i am going to say at the end of the show, and i want everybody to tune in. >> so tonight, you are saying something at the end of the show? >> end of the show. and there will be more to come. i'll tell ya, over the weekend. >> and there's more to come over the weekend. >> but it involves us, too. it involves -- it involves you but we'll see....
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May 5, 2021
05/21
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KSTS
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bomberos de ucla lograron controlar un incendio esta maÑana complejo de apartamentos en el que tuve queencadenó otro pero de maleza. los bomberos apagaron el fuego y consumieron los importes no se reportaron heridos. desde que susana torres una joven madre de dos niÑos fue presuntamente secuestrada por su ex marido punta de pistola este martes como nos dice alejandro quesada su familia se manifestó afuera de las oficinas de las autoridades exigiendo respuesta. armados con pancartas piden justicia. necesita estar con sus hijos. ellas demasiado tiempo lo que ha pasado. para que regrese. y la familia esos en otro joven madre secuestrado. ni del alguacil del condado a pedir más atención al caso. nuestra historia sería. >>> el racismo en otro esfuerzo. >>> no se aseguraron que están acerca se invitaron a la familia entrar a hablar con ellos en privado una vez terminada la reunión la prima de susana quien se encargaba de más dijo que se siente un poco más tranquila al ver si lo recibirán y hablaron con todos los familiares que aún sin respuestas concretas. >>> va a ser lo mismo de siempre con
bomberos de ucla lograron controlar un incendio esta maÑana complejo de apartamentos en el que tuve queencadenó otro pero de maleza. los bomberos apagaron el fuego y consumieron los importes no se reportaron heridos. desde que susana torres una joven madre de dos niÑos fue presuntamente secuestrada por su ex marido punta de pistola este martes como nos dice alejandro quesada su familia se manifestó afuera de las oficinas de las autoridades exigiendo respuesta. armados con pancartas piden...
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May 4, 2021
05/21
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: ucla former economist leo feller said gas prices fell so low last year it put some oilout of business. demand for groceries is up 11% because people hunkered down at home and that put pressure on suppliers which drove up food prices. >> this will start changing as people shop less at grocery stores and as they go out to restaurants. >> reporter: you seem confident this is not the beginning of an inflationary period. >> this is different than the 1970s and the consumers have more these days. >> reporter: procter & gamble, kimberly clarke and coca-cola announced they, too, are increasing prices because they're paying more for raw materials in short supply. >> it's bad for the pocketbook but good in terms of how we were before. >> reporter: consumer prices are expected to stabilize in the coming months. one exception may be lumber. lumber prices have skyrocketed 300% in the last year as people forced to isolate try to improv. dre's no sig construction s down. news, los geles. >>we "cbthis morning," home covid tests are hitting the market. dr. jon lapook shows us how they w
. >> reporter: ucla former economist leo feller said gas prices fell so low last year it put some oilout of business. demand for groceries is up 11% because people hunkered down at home and that put pressure on suppliers which drove up food prices. >> this will start changing as people shop less at grocery stores and as they go out to restaurants. >> reporter: you seem confident this is not the beginning of an inflationary period. >> this is different than the 1970s and...
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May 12, 2021
05/21
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KGO
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i think my first film when i was in graduate school at ucla screened at caamfest and it has been a long journey making films over the years. it is an honor to be showcasing a story about the west, a story about the environment, so much about identity and issues about the really highlights we have shared histories with other communities as well, especially in this moment where social justice issues are so important. >> great point, one of the films is try harder by debbie lahm, also local ties here because it's about the experiences of students that lowell high school in san francisco. i got to see it up the sundance premiere, talk about that and the events. >> absolutely, a majority of our festival is virtual, we will have on-demand programs, live events, we will have 39 set for mason center. tomorrow is our opening night, this is a wonderful documentary. also, they are films that caamfest is so proud to have funded and supported. it looks that this students of lowell high school as they apply for colleges and you see the pressure, but through the pressure, the anxiety of the students h
i think my first film when i was in graduate school at ucla screened at caamfest and it has been a long journey making films over the years. it is an honor to be showcasing a story about the west, a story about the environment, so much about identity and issues about the really highlights we have shared histories with other communities as well, especially in this moment where social justice issues are so important. >> great point, one of the films is try harder by debbie lahm, also local...
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May 17, 2021
05/21
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KNTV
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one of themost powerful incentives ma be the ability to go without a mask that's what they found at uclahere 63% of respondents say that would make it more likely for them to get the vaccination, including 63% of the public. back to you. >>> new allegations of misconduct surfacing against bill gates as he grapples with his hi-profile divorce according to "the wall street journal" gates resigned from microsoft in 2020. members of the board hired a law firm to conduct a probe in late 2019 after the employee alleged in the letter that she had a sexual relationship with gates over the years a spokeswoman for gates said to the journal will was an affair over 20 years ago ended amicably >>> after stalls lawmakers will vote on a bill to set up a 9/11-style probe on the january 6th insurrection the commission will be made up of ten members, five democrats, and five republicans they'll investigate the circumstances of the attack as well as what led to it the group will have subpoena power and issue a report at the end of the probe >>> a criminal case of sex trafficking into congressman matt gaetz
one of themost powerful incentives ma be the ability to go without a mask that's what they found at uclahere 63% of respondents say that would make it more likely for them to get the vaccination, including 63% of the public. back to you. >>> new allegations of misconduct surfacing against bill gates as he grapples with his hi-profile divorce according to "the wall street journal" gates resigned from microsoft in 2020. members of the board hired a law firm to conduct a probe...
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May 30, 2021
05/21
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CSPAN2
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with brandeis and ucla and cornell. and then to join the hoover institution and that is where he has been ever since so with the mainstream university have hired him? >> he could ever do any college that he wanted to. and the university of wisconsin. and then to get tenure and to work and was quite talented. and then talking about racial controversies then to surpass most people in the field. then with the faculty around and those who want to interfere with the teaching style that this was the 19 sixties and then to have women's rights movement and all these things were coming together through this sort of thing in time was of a different generation intended to teach that way. and that is very difficult to do. and then to be much more indulgent so he just would not bend. so then at cornell in the late sixties and was on faculty at the time and he stuck it out through the seventies and to be put in the think tank world already but then decided to leave teaching altogether. but not even research he wanted to be a teacher.
with brandeis and ucla and cornell. and then to join the hoover institution and that is where he has been ever since so with the mainstream university have hired him? >> he could ever do any college that he wanted to. and the university of wisconsin. and then to get tenure and to work and was quite talented. and then talking about racial controversies then to surpass most people in the field. then with the faculty around and those who want to interfere with the teaching style that this...
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May 10, 2021
05/21
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KNTV
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savings bonds to young people who get vaccinated for covid but an ongoing study by researchers at uclasuggesting that cash incentives like that might pay off. over 7000 unvaccinated americans were asked if they would be more willing to get vaccinated if they were offered $100 34% said yes but 15% said the cash offer would make them less likely to get the shot >> can we do it retroactively? i'd do that. >>> still to come, "saturday night live" hits the mother load with a heartfelt tribute to all the moms who make the show possible >>> and the reunion for deported military wife sparking calls for change this morning. windshield.♪ uh - uh, lisa, maybe less heartbroken? geico lets you file a claim online, over the phone or with their app. ♪ that makes me wanna say... ♪ ♪ stay... ♪ (sniffles) are...are you crying? uhh, there's pollen... geico. great service without all the drama. - oh. - what's going on? - oh, darn! - let me help. here we go. lift and push and push! there... it's up there. oh, boy. hey joshie... wrinkles send the wrong message. help prevent them before they start with downy
savings bonds to young people who get vaccinated for covid but an ongoing study by researchers at uclasuggesting that cash incentives like that might pay off. over 7000 unvaccinated americans were asked if they would be more willing to get vaccinated if they were offered $100 34% said yes but 15% said the cash offer would make them less likely to get the shot >> can we do it retroactively? i'd do that. >>> still to come, "saturday night live" hits the mother load with a...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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KPIX
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in neuroscience from ucla.me place as the late host alex trebek. >> this is such an iconic and unbelievable piece of our collective culture. to be considered to be part of it really in any way is just -- it's an immense honor. >> she hopes to be a role model for young girls as a woman of science. >>> and brazil's helio castroneves made hour at the -- made history at the indianapolis 500. >> look at the crowd. they know history's on the line. welcome to the club! that is awesome. >> the 46-year-old driver captured his fourth career victory at the indy 500 tying him with three others for the most wins. he finished less than half a second after his closest competitor. after the race he scaled the fence and waved to the crowd. 135,000 fans were there. the most of any sports event in the world since the pandemic began. last year's race was run without any fans. >>> coming up on "cbs this morning" now, we will talk with actor cillian murphy from "a quiet place part 2" and the netflix series "paeky blinders." i'm anne
in neuroscience from ucla.me place as the late host alex trebek. >> this is such an iconic and unbelievable piece of our collective culture. to be considered to be part of it really in any way is just -- it's an immense honor. >> she hopes to be a role model for young girls as a woman of science. >>> and brazil's helio castroneves made hour at the -- made history at the indianapolis 500. >> look at the crowd. they know history's on the line. welcome to the club! that...
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May 25, 2021
05/21
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KNTV
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. >>> new details, authorities in southern california have taken a former ucla gynecologist into custodyn criminal sexual assault and conduct charges. it comes in the wake of a 21-count criminal indictment issued by grand jurors against james heaps. uc reached a $73 million deal civil settlement tied to nearly 7,000 cases involving heaps over three can he cades. he was arrested in 2019 and had been free on bond. >>> experts are optimistic about the worst of the pandemic being behind us, as covid cases trend down across the country. we haven't seen numbers this low in nearly a year. look at this graphic, you can see here. look at this, may 20th, 2020, look how many cases we had in one day, 25,146. those are new cases that day. and then may 20th, 2021, less than 28,000 cases. another big plus is that nearly half of the population here in the united states has received one dose of the vaccination as we head into what many say will be a normal summer. "today in the bay's" jean elle has more on what our future with covid will look like. >> normal life will really resume this summer for everyw
. >>> new details, authorities in southern california have taken a former ucla gynecologist into custodyn criminal sexual assault and conduct charges. it comes in the wake of a 21-count criminal indictment issued by grand jurors against james heaps. uc reached a $73 million deal civil settlement tied to nearly 7,000 cases involving heaps over three can he cades. he was arrested in 2019 and had been free on bond. >>> experts are optimistic about the worst of the pandemic being...
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May 16, 2021
05/21
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KGO
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she plans to study premed and has been accepted to a number of colleges , including ucla and brown university i'm trying to find a school that best suits me right now. throughout my time in college, i plan on focusing on the under served community and seeing what their needs are. and how to take a step in health care to help with that. >> i can't wait to hear what you're doing later m you're going to keep me posted, right? so proud of you. >> using my interests in health care to help the under served community. >> we are so impressed. congratulations to lana. all right. transferring the duties right now to drew tuma joins us live from home with more on the weather. hi drew. >> hi deon. it was a cool start to the weekend. we were stuck in the 50s. and 60s. thanks to that pretty stubborn marine layer slow to clear back to the coast today. live doppler 7 giving you the active sweep m we're tracking a couple showers. we have a thunderstorm pop up over the past hour. thankfully, that storm is moving off the coast. and any lightning we did see also came with the added benefit of rainfall. this is n
she plans to study premed and has been accepted to a number of colleges , including ucla and brown university i'm trying to find a school that best suits me right now. throughout my time in college, i plan on focusing on the under served community and seeing what their needs are. and how to take a step in health care to help with that. >> i can't wait to hear what you're doing later m you're going to keep me posted, right? so proud of you. >> using my interests in health care to...
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they're graduating first and second in their class and chose ucla to study math and science.finally something we've never seen before. >> a skunk in florida doing a handstand. you heard that right and here it is, the camera set up. i can't say that that handstand right there, it doesn't stink. >> it has great form. t of my zo but lowering my a1c with once-weekly ozempic® helped me get back in it. ♪ oh, oh, oh, ozempic® ♪ my zone? lowering my a1c and losing some weight. now, back to the show. ozempic® is proven to lower a1c. most people who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. and you may lose weight. adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. demonstrators. or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision
they're graduating first and second in their class and chose ucla to study math and science.finally something we've never seen before. >> a skunk in florida doing a handstand. you heard that right and here it is, the camera set up. i can't say that that handstand right there, it doesn't stink. >> it has great form. t of my zo but lowering my a1c with once-weekly ozempic® helped me get back in it. ♪ oh, oh, oh, ozempic® ♪ my zone? lowering my a1c and losing some weight. now,...
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May 22, 2021
05/21
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state can't educate people you've got to give people tools to learn earn dignity you and i went to uclae that what you are saying about school i think we need more school choice i don't think state is the best at providing education, but i do like that you want to in terms of homelessness pluld 500,000 unities not 80,000 over next five years fast-track permits even for remodels, yes. me -- >> california government in way of everything i was talking to a business today they are losing workers to arizona because easier an cheaper to love, or working in california i am talking blue collar not elon musk, i am talking people working 35, 40 dollars an hour they go to idaho can apply a house arizona can apply a house start a business have a job. >> by if way one of our rules, all one of your rules it is which is go to a state doesn't have income tax then you can take that money, savings create your wealthy what people in california want to do the optimists there ples hearts if in a two bedroom apartment arizona can be in four bedroom house with a pool easy choice why california is losing peopl
state can't educate people you've got to give people tools to learn earn dignity you and i went to uclae that what you are saying about school i think we need more school choice i don't think state is the best at providing education, but i do like that you want to in terms of homelessness pluld 500,000 unities not 80,000 over next five years fast-track permits even for remodels, yes. me -- >> california government in way of everything i was talking to a business today they are losing...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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i was teaching history at ucla and had a choice of authoring a seminar of my own. i had as reading a compendium of lincoln's words, and when it came to the second inaugural was very much struck by it but a wanted to know what was the antecedent of this? i learned there was a document at brown university, lincoln's young secretary have titled it, lincoln didn't type entities, called the meditation on the divine will. so i traveled from southern california to brown university to hold a solo piece of blue lined paper in my hands. i had no idea at the time that there were so many, many, many notes and i've came to the conclusion that most people didn't know those. some of these are familiar, some are in the biographies of lincoln but i thought we need to see lincoln hall, and when i contacted daniel worthington who is the editor of the lincoln papers that are in springfield he said we believe there's 111 of these notes that have survived. i'm sure lincoln wrote hundreds of them are 111 have survived. i wanted a sense to put before people the private lincoln behind the
i was teaching history at ucla and had a choice of authoring a seminar of my own. i had as reading a compendium of lincoln's words, and when it came to the second inaugural was very much struck by it but a wanted to know what was the antecedent of this? i learned there was a document at brown university, lincoln's young secretary have titled it, lincoln didn't type entities, called the meditation on the divine will. so i traveled from southern california to brown university to hold a solo piece...
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May 15, 2021
05/21
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CNNW
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. >> you see ucla did a story that i am dattractive. >> i i something to say at the d of the show. >> tonight you will see something at the end of the show. >> there is more to come, i will tell you over the weekend. >> it involves you, we'll see. >> it is not bad news. >> well -- come on. >> well, it is bad news -- >> no, it is not bad news. >> going into the weenkend, people like it. did you know in texas it is an equal violation to play loud music in your home as it is to own a tiger? can you believe that? >> will you get over here right away. it is don lemon, he won't stop playing the dubo brothers, verses hey, there is a tiger in my yard. >> all right, chris. >> they're both violations. i just talked to this lawyer. can you believe in texas is the same wrong? >> texas is becoming florida. it is weird. >> florida is like i love you. >> a tiger. >> listen, i went to lsu. >> that does not mean you want one in your yard? >> in a cage. >> d. lemon, i love you. i feel relaxed and candid. good-bye, i love you, too. >>> this is "cnn tonight," i am don lemon. we are seeing two different a
. >> you see ucla did a story that i am dattractive. >> i i something to say at the d of the show. >> tonight you will see something at the end of the show. >> there is more to come, i will tell you over the weekend. >> it involves you, we'll see. >> it is not bad news. >> well -- come on. >> well, it is bad news -- >> no, it is not bad news. >> going into the weenkend, people like it. did you know in texas it is an equal violation to...
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May 30, 2021
05/21
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FOXNEWSW
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champion is not only one in family bringing team to glory, his niece, mya brady hit a home run for ucla last night, that is our "fox report" tonight. [♪♪♪] judge jeanine: hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. thanks for joining us tonight. let's get right to my open. monday is memorial day and the kickoff to summer 2001. sum -- summer 2021. it's time to walk outside and start having a good time again. but when you do, be warned, you will be walking into a very different america than the last time you openly celebrated with your family and friends. she is sadly different. she has been trashed by those who want to rewrite her story, change her image and change her past. she suffered insults. she mass lost the determined patriots who fought to defend her. her borders are flush with those who violate her laws to enter, then demand to partake of her hard earned generosity. fentanyl and heroin with the drug cartels come through that same border. an a crane lawlessness is pervasive. it's nothing short astounding. demand for justice, calls for action, actually outside the rea
champion is not only one in family bringing team to glory, his niece, mya brady hit a home run for ucla last night, that is our "fox report" tonight. [♪♪♪] judge jeanine: hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. thanks for joining us tonight. let's get right to my open. monday is memorial day and the kickoff to summer 2001. sum -- summer 2021. it's time to walk outside and start having a good time again. but when you do, be warned, you will be walking...
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May 6, 2021
05/21
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i have that's not true when it comes to the polarized topics and there we see harvard, yale of the ucla, berkeley, university of florida, they all lead in one way so that is the problem. earlier in>> your career you wee pursuing engineering before you decided to embrace philosophy as ouyour discipline. you do offer relative optimism about the state of the sciences yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific questions that are increasingly politicized or even let's say it goes beyond of politicization and i'm going to be guilty of something i talked about early on when you talk about the amount of public funding. it might shape scientific discourse as well when we talk about the standpoint of the victim analogy and the imperative operational diversity there is a sense that it's not just the humanities but it's a pervasive problem in the realm of knowledge production that you see reproduced in the sciences as well. do you see something similar to that or am i being overly pessimistic? and maybe that's getting closer to the heart and science but when it comes to engine
i have that's not true when it comes to the polarized topics and there we see harvard, yale of the ucla, berkeley, university of florida, they all lead in one way so that is the problem. earlier in>> your career you wee pursuing engineering before you decided to embrace philosophy as ouyour discipline. you do offer relative optimism about the state of the sciences yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific questions that are increasingly politicized or even let's say...
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May 16, 2021
05/21
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FBC
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i know you probably don't like public schools but i did go to ucla, zero student loan debt because iemic scholarship at 30 years old. i'm sorry, i don't know why i keep doing that it not okay. make sense of this. >> i'm glad these two are among the 40% who are not upset they went to school or took out loans but let's talk about the 53% who are. that is not surprising. 40% of students who take out loans end up dropping out and that student debt is still stuck on them because of the different set of standards applied to that debt than any other debt taking me nearly impossible to get out of it with bankruptcy but that's beyond the whole root cause of why we are here to begin with, they used to be at price equilibrium in higher education. schools could only charge what students could afford. if they charge more, they wouldn't get students. the federal government came in and saved the day by andrea loan programs which allowed them to charge more because the student paying, at least not upfront, it's through loans and grants and that's why the price is skyrocketing. now the reason more em
i know you probably don't like public schools but i did go to ucla, zero student loan debt because iemic scholarship at 30 years old. i'm sorry, i don't know why i keep doing that it not okay. make sense of this. >> i'm glad these two are among the 40% who are not upset they went to school or took out loans but let's talk about the 53% who are. that is not surprising. 40% of students who take out loans end up dropping out and that student debt is still stuck on them because of the...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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BLOOMBERG
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but other research from ucla found that a $100 incentive would encourage people to get vaccinated, andpecially true among democrats. again, it's a bit of a mixed bag for now, but especially for those people you are mentioning who may be are like, i am young, i am healthy, i might not need to do this asap, i don't want to go out of my way, having a tangible perk might encourage them to take the extra leap and go for it. emily: what about for the folks who aren't getting it for other reasons? i wonder if in that case there are any incentives or strategies that will work? sarah: yeah. i think broadly, another strategy that is being deployed by the federal government is meeting people where they are at. physically with mobile vaccination sites going to people's homes, if they are homebound. putting locations in hard-hit communities and hard-to-reach communities. engaging with trusted messengers in specific communities. and it's really talking to people through these, and maybe that is more effective in some cases than a free beer. but it really depends on who you're talking to. emily: i co
but other research from ucla found that a $100 incentive would encourage people to get vaccinated, andpecially true among democrats. again, it's a bit of a mixed bag for now, but especially for those people you are mentioning who may be are like, i am young, i am healthy, i might not need to do this asap, i don't want to go out of my way, having a tangible perk might encourage them to take the extra leap and go for it. emily: what about for the folks who aren't getting it for other reasons? i...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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. >>> joining me now is professor of epidemiology at the ucla fielding of public health. >> great to be here. >> wonderful. we are now seeing the u.s. returning to some level of normalcy with so many americans now vaccinated, but still around 20% or so hesitant about getting their shot. how concerned are you that those refusing to get their shots and the impact that that may have? >> well, rosemary, i think that it's important to pause for a minute and see -- think about how far we have come, which is really terrific. we are now at a position where we have more than 50% of the population with at least one shot. that's really fantastic news, and we have still 50% of the population not vaccinated. now we got through the easy part and everybody was rushing to get their vaccine and now we are having a lot of people on the fence, and now we have to work hard to get to the other side. there was an interesting analysis in the washington post the other day that suggested even in a place like washington where you have high rates in vaccinations, in unvaccinated areas this virus is still sprea
. >>> joining me now is professor of epidemiology at the ucla fielding of public health. >> great to be here. >> wonderful. we are now seeing the u.s. returning to some level of normalcy with so many americans now vaccinated, but still around 20% or so hesitant about getting their shot. how concerned are you that those refusing to get their shots and the impact that that may have? >> well, rosemary, i think that it's important to pause for a minute and see -- think...
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May 23, 2021
05/21
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kennedy: you and i both went to ucla which is the greatest public institution in the u.s.ike that, i like what you're saying about schools, i think we need more school choice, i don't think the state is the best at providing education but i do like that you want to, in terms of homelessness, filled 500,000 units, not 80000 over the next five years, fast-track permits even for remodels to which i say yes. >> here's the thing from the california government is in the way of everything. i was talking to a business today, they are working losing workers to arizona because it's easier and cheaper for people to leave but they are working in california. i'm talking blue-collar workers, not elon musk, people working 35 to $45 an hour, they could go to arizona or idaho have a business in a job. kennedy: other rules, which is go to a state that doesn't have income taxes and then you can take that money you're saving and create your own wealth which is what people in california want to do. the optimist still there, bless their hearts but if you're in a two bedroom apartment and look a
kennedy: you and i both went to ucla which is the greatest public institution in the u.s.ike that, i like what you're saying about schools, i think we need more school choice, i don't think the state is the best at providing education but i do like that you want to, in terms of homelessness, filled 500,000 units, not 80000 over the next five years, fast-track permits even for remodels to which i say yes. >> here's the thing from the california government is in the way of everything. i was...
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May 31, 2021
05/21
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university of chicago where he received his phd and spend much of the 60s and 70s teaching at brandeis, ucla and cornell and then 1980 he joined the hoover institution and that's where he has been ever since. >> if there were no hoover institutions, would the university have hired him? [laughter] >> tom could have worked at any university he wanted to. he was offered places like dartmouth, the university of wisconsin. he could have gotten ten year and worked at any department it is quite clear he was a talented scholar in his discipline before he ever began writing about racial controversies and so forth, just a number of publications and so forth the college administrators with his teaching style and so forth and i think part of the problem was this was the 1960s tom was of a different generation. i think that he intended to teach the way that he was taught and that was hard starting in the 1960s that became very difficult to do. the professors and administrators were much more indulgent and he just would not bend. i think that it reached ahead. he was on the faculty at the time and i think
university of chicago where he received his phd and spend much of the 60s and 70s teaching at brandeis, ucla and cornell and then 1980 he joined the hoover institution and that's where he has been ever since. >> if there were no hoover institutions, would the university have hired him? [laughter] >> tom could have worked at any university he wanted to. he was offered places like dartmouth, the university of wisconsin. he could have gotten ten year and worked at any department it is...
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May 12, 2021
05/21
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KPIX
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berkeley and ucla was 36th.assachusetts institute of technology ranked the best. >>> and college students face a lot of stress and now new research shows therapy dogs may be the best medicine. washington state university researchers found petting therapy dogs improves student's thinking and planning skills more than aditional stress management . >>> we are celebrating our bay area grads. first up a big congratulations to kinsey. she is graduating in oakland anda ending uc riverside in the fall and will play d1 women's volleyball. >>> joshua lang is graduating in san ramone. josha plans to prodon wa mir in business. you can send a photograph of your graduate to 2021 grads. no professional photographs and be sure to include their name, city, and a little bit about them and you may see them on tv. fun to see them. >>> a bay area high school cutting tie was a controversial figure. in the next half hour, and streaming on cbsn bay area the vote to rename the school after a former teacher. >>> and youngsters 12 to 15 c
berkeley and ucla was 36th.assachusetts institute of technology ranked the best. >>> and college students face a lot of stress and now new research shows therapy dogs may be the best medicine. washington state university researchers found petting therapy dogs improves student's thinking and planning skills more than aditional stress management . >>> we are celebrating our bay area grads. first up a big congratulations to kinsey. she is graduating in oakland anda ending uc...
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May 30, 2021
05/21
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champion is not only one in family bringing team to glory, his niece, mya brady hit a home run for ucla: hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. thanks for joining us tonight. let's get right to my open. monday is memorial day and the kickoff to summer 2001. sum -- summer 2021. it's time to walk outside and start having a good time again. but when you do, be warned, you will be walking into a very different ameri
champion is not only one in family bringing team to glory, his niece, mya brady hit a home run for ucla: hello and welcome to "justice." i'm judge jeanine pirro. thanks for joining us tonight. let's get right to my open. monday is memorial day and the kickoff to summer 2001. sum -- summer 2021. it's time to walk outside and start having a good time again. but when you do, be warned, you will be walking into a very different ameri
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May 3, 2021
05/21
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and eric's ucla paperwork were on the coffee table. the television set was on.no indication of a break in, but something did send out to detective zoeller. >> we didn't see any shotgun shells. >> what did that say to you? >> someone collected the shotgun shells. >> but who does a thing like that, if they've got a messy crime scene of that sort? >> somebody that didn't want fingerprints on the shotgun shells, is the only thing i could think of. >> while investigators examine the crime scene, lyle menendez, then 21, and eric, 18, went to the station to speak to police. >> the brother said they were in and out throughout the day and then as evening approached, they decided that they wanted to go to the movies. they wanted to see a james bond movie. but it was sold out, so they saw a batman movie which they had both seen before. so they decided to see that again. >> curious. >> after the movie, they told the detectives that they plan to meet a friend for a drink at the key cheesecake factory, but they had to go back to the house to pick up eric's fake i.d.. and when
and eric's ucla paperwork were on the coffee table. the television set was on.no indication of a break in, but something did send out to detective zoeller. >> we didn't see any shotgun shells. >> what did that say to you? >> someone collected the shotgun shells. >> but who does a thing like that, if they've got a messy crime scene of that sort? >> somebody that didn't want fingerprints on the shotgun shells, is the only thing i could think of. >> while...
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May 23, 2021
05/21
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andrea, professor of ucla, department of epidemiology.ld mask? >> well, hi, arthel, so nice to be here. thanks for having me. so that's the big question of the day. who needs to mask, who doesn't need to mask? well the cdc guidelines were clear in that case, those people who are unvaccinated really can get back to life almost as it was previously. they can take off their masks indoors and outdoors. outdoors in all settings, indoors in most settings except in travel situations, doctors' offices, hospitals, certain places where it is still mandated. but the big question is, who -- why should unvaccinated people not be able to take their masks off when vaccinated people can, well, that's about the science. science is clear. listen, if you have vaccinated, then you are unlikely to get the virus but you're also unlikely to transmit to other people and that's the key. that's why we have the mandates. that's why we are still talking about this. arthel: is focusing on masking too much of a distraction from the vaccines? as a epidemiologist, how c
andrea, professor of ucla, department of epidemiology.ld mask? >> well, hi, arthel, so nice to be here. thanks for having me. so that's the big question of the day. who needs to mask, who doesn't need to mask? well the cdc guidelines were clear in that case, those people who are unvaccinated really can get back to life almost as it was previously. they can take off their masks indoors and outdoors. outdoors in all settings, indoors in most settings except in travel situations, doctors'...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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. >>> ucla center for immigration law and policy h
. >>> ucla center for immigration law and policy h
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May 6, 2021
05/21
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meanwhile, researchers at oxford and ucla have begun tracking coronavirus vaccine side effects across eight separate countries, what they have found, amonghe other things, women aged 18 to 34 years old had a higher rate of deep vein thrombosis than men on the same age.34 they also found that heart attacks were "common in people 85 years and older" who had taken the vaccine. they found some serious potential side effects in some children. "anaphylaxis and appendicitis were more common in young people." now, vaccines are complicated, and as with any drug, it can take them on time to get exactly right, the dosage, for example, and this is not the first time people have been hurt during a vaccination campaign. that ise, bound to happen. what is different this time and so striking is the reaction to these numbers. here's a contrast for you. in 1976, u.s. government vaccinated 45 million people for the swine flu. a total of 53 people reportedly died after getting that shot, and the u.s. government immediately halted the vaccination program. why? because authorities decided it was too risky.
meanwhile, researchers at oxford and ucla have begun tracking coronavirus vaccine side effects across eight separate countries, what they have found, amonghe other things, women aged 18 to 34 years old had a higher rate of deep vein thrombosis than men on the same age.34 they also found that heart attacks were "common in people 85 years and older" who had taken the vaccine. they found some serious potential side effects in some children. "anaphylaxis and appendicitis were more...
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May 19, 2021
05/21
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KGO
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. >> ucla gastroenterologist and her colleagues authored an editorial to accompany the new recommendationsf average risk to start getting screamed at 45 rather than 50. the move meansmove meansmove mes million younger americans can get checked without cost. >> this will cover service with individuals who are between 45- 49. >> researchers aren't sure why cases are rising year after year but they suspect the causes environmental. >> diet, obesity, diabetes and physical inactivity. >> colon cancer is a silent killer. symptoms such as abdominal pain, weakness and weight loss usually don't disease has progressed. >> it was most obviously manifested in blood in my stool. >> cameron had no family history. he was 35 when doctors discovered a large tumor. surgeons removed it and today is a husband and new dad. >> you savor those moments and realize how lucky you are. >> because many people delayed the cancer screening because of the pandemic doctors expect to see in the higher number of cases in the next 5-10 years. she encourages everyone 35 in order to schedule a colonoscopy. >> the key is to ge
. >> ucla gastroenterologist and her colleagues authored an editorial to accompany the new recommendationsf average risk to start getting screamed at 45 rather than 50. the move meansmove meansmove mes million younger americans can get checked without cost. >> this will cover service with individuals who are between 45- 49. >> researchers aren't sure why cases are rising year after year but they suspect the causes environmental. >> diet, obesity, diabetes and physical...
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May 5, 2021
05/21
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it wasn't until walking on at ucla that her game really began to flourish. won six tournaments as a bruin and was a two-time all american. she won back-to-back u.s. women's amateur championships. after college, it was on to the lpga tour for nine years before joining the golf channel as an on-course reporter and analyst. >> if i didn't play golf, there's no way that i would be doing what i'm doing now and experience all that i have traveling worldwide and really following and still involved with the game that i love so much already. >> reporter: raised in los gatos, she now lives in san francisco and she's always on the go. this summer it's off to japan to cover golf at the olympics for the golf channel and nbc sports. >> i'm so excited to head over to noek. >> reporter: she'll be reporting on both the men's and women's tournaments. >> i think it's really an honor for all the players to be there. normally you finish top ten in a tournament, you've played well. well, this is only about win, place, or show. >> reporter: this will be her second round at the sum
it wasn't until walking on at ucla that her game really began to flourish. won six tournaments as a bruin and was a two-time all american. she won back-to-back u.s. women's amateur championships. after college, it was on to the lpga tour for nine years before joining the golf channel as an on-course reporter and analyst. >> if i didn't play golf, there's no way that i would be doing what i'm doing now and experience all that i have traveling worldwide and really following and still...
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May 13, 2021
05/21
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FBC
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spike and i probably do not like public schools print to go to ucla.hip at 30 years old. sorry i don't know why i keep wooing tonight. that's not okay. spike, make sense of all this please? select i am glad these two are among the 47% that are apparently not upset they went to school or took out loans. but, let's talk what the 53% that are. that is not surprising. nearly 40% of students it take out student loans end up dropping albert that albatross of student debt is still stuck around them because of a different set of standards applied to that debt than any other debt make it nearly impossible to get out from under it with bankruptcy. that goes be on the whole root cause of why we are even here to begin with. they used to be a price equal is the in higher education. schools could only charge what students could afford for it if they charge more they were not going to get students. then they came in and save the day with pell grants and loan programs allowed colleges to charge more because now it's out the student paying the end price or at least tho
spike and i probably do not like public schools print to go to ucla.hip at 30 years old. sorry i don't know why i keep wooing tonight. that's not okay. spike, make sense of all this please? select i am glad these two are among the 47% that are apparently not upset they went to school or took out loans. but, let's talk what the 53% that are. that is not surprising. nearly 40% of students it take out student loans end up dropping albert that albatross of student debt is still stuck around them...
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May 29, 2021
05/21
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CNNW
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. >>> joining me now from los angeles is anne, professor of epidemiology at the ucla fielding schoolic health. thanks so much for joining us. so, heading into the memorial day weekend here, in the u.s., on one hand, as we just saw, cases are going down. and it's the first holiday in which millions of americans, about half of them, have been fully vaccinated. on the other hand, now, there are, you know, few restrictions. and we are already seeing so many people acting like the pandemic is basically over. and now, some -- some 37 million people are expect today travel over the holidays. it feels like a big test for the country. how are you looking at it? what -- what are you expecting? >> well, you know, i think that we have come so far from where we were, just several months ago. and we're starting to reap the benefits of seeing so many people vaccinated. 50% of the population has had a vaccine. at least one vaccine. that's fantastic news. but -- and for those -- and i would say for those who are vaccinated, it's time to really start to enjoy so many of these benefits. but for people
. >>> joining me now from los angeles is anne, professor of epidemiology at the ucla fielding schoolic health. thanks so much for joining us. so, heading into the memorial day weekend here, in the u.s., on one hand, as we just saw, cases are going down. and it's the first holiday in which millions of americans, about half of them, have been fully vaccinated. on the other hand, now, there are, you know, few restrictions. and we are already seeing so many people acting like the pandemic...
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May 4, 2021
05/21
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CNBC
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create this red state/blue state divide where we stop trance mission in some states and not others ucla study says rough liz 34% said a $100 payment would get them to get the shot do we need to consider incentives started to certain groups >> yeah, we might. you know, the optics to the rest of the world is terrible, of course, when people are clamors for vaccine in india and in brazil it just makes us look like a nation of sulky as lessants, so i'm not thrilled, but if that's where we have to go, we do it. if it's absolutely necessary, sure, along it's tough to swallow. >> in fact, west virginia is doing it doctor, as i mentioned, pfizer expect to ask the fda for the okay to vaccinate kids 2 to 11 that's in september. would you see that as a big breakthrough and if so, why >> it doesn't a few things one, it does help us vaccinate the country and haul transmission, eye specially in the elementary school, so by the fall we should already have a lot of the 12 to 15-year-olds vaccinated that will makes middle schools and high schools very, very safe as transmission slows, the elementary sch
create this red state/blue state divide where we stop trance mission in some states and not others ucla study says rough liz 34% said a $100 payment would get them to get the shot do we need to consider incentives started to certain groups >> yeah, we might. you know, the optics to the rest of the world is terrible, of course, when people are clamors for vaccine in india and in brazil it just makes us look like a nation of sulky as lessants, so i'm not thrilled, but if that's where we...