SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
28
28
Jul 31, 2014
07/14
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SFGTV
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several of you mentioned it is the appearance of conflict, and i worked for -- i taught the university hawaii for years and involved with consulting at office of hawaiian affairs and so forth and one of the things that you realize with that work you become privy to information that is in conflict of the rules, and the simple fact that we rely sometimes on people just being honest is a nice thing to do in a purely theoretical sense. am i saying he's not an honest person? no. i'm absolutely not saying that but i'm saying that a person in a position where they get information which is beneficial to themselves or to their company or whatever has a real temptation and we know that temptation has violated consistently in all forms of government, non government, so forth, that unless there is a clear reason why he is the only person who can be on this commission i think -- i agree with you that this waiver should be denied. also the fact that when he took the position i would assume being a very intelligent person he sat down and thought about all of the conflict and i am surprised after that many y
several of you mentioned it is the appearance of conflict, and i worked for -- i taught the university hawaii for years and involved with consulting at office of hawaiian affairs and so forth and one of the things that you realize with that work you become privy to information that is in conflict of the rules, and the simple fact that we rely sometimes on people just being honest is a nice thing to do in a purely theoretical sense. am i saying he's not an honest person? no. i'm absolutely not...
101
101
Jul 11, 2014
07/14
by
WHYY
tv
eye 101
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and i was -- i transferred from ucla to the university of hawaii.nd was kind of phasing out my college education in the surf. i got into surfing. and then i had some opportunities to work in some shows. not with my father. and i tried them and i really loved it. and i've enjoyed it ever since. and now my kids, they're all involved. my daughter, emily, who's getting her masters in arts and leadership at the university of minnesota, she does -- just completed an independent film. we wrote a play together quauca "acting the first six lessons" which french, and my son is regular, my son casey is a documentary film maker but he's in south africa building youth centers in soweto, you know, outside of jo-berg. i don't want to leave anyone out. my youngest son zeke is going to italy to study italian film and some italian classics. he's going to chatman university. they're all touching film and being involved in it. it's telling the story. it's continuing on that old tradition of sittinground the campfire talking about what's going on in the next village. >>
and i was -- i transferred from ucla to the university of hawaii.nd was kind of phasing out my college education in the surf. i got into surfing. and then i had some opportunities to work in some shows. not with my father. and i tried them and i really loved it. and i've enjoyed it ever since. and now my kids, they're all involved. my daughter, emily, who's getting her masters in arts and leadership at the university of minnesota, she does -- just completed an independent film. we wrote a play...
82
82
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 82
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a scientist at the university of hawaii says, once an invasive species like the lion fish gets a foot ecosystem it's almost impossible to wipeout. natasha, al jazerra, miami. >>> this week lauren action work is being questioned by scientist zach judd. he used to work with arrington's father and judd says her project is based on his research which he published three years ago. arrington's father told a washington post that he and his daughter have mentioned judd's contributions often, he says he's shocked by his former colleague's complaints. >>> coming up later tonight, 11:00 eastern on our newscast, balance ago awareness and self-esteem. we'll take a closer look ato bees at this and what it means for america's youngest generation and plus they are known as china's little emperors how families are trying to bring discipline to the one-child generation, those stories and much more tonight 11:00 eastern and 8:00 pacific. we end tonight with a royal version of the selfie. it's tonight's freeze frame. a member of the australias women's national field hockey team tweeted this selfie. look
a scientist at the university of hawaii says, once an invasive species like the lion fish gets a foot ecosystem it's almost impossible to wipeout. natasha, al jazerra, miami. >>> this week lauren action work is being questioned by scientist zach judd. he used to work with arrington's father and judd says her project is based on his research which he published three years ago. arrington's father told a washington post that he and his daughter have mentioned judd's contributions often,...
40
40
Jul 8, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN
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eye 40
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this is a project at harvard university, lict laboratory, hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna in puerto reigno 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakets. we haven't tried that. most astronomers would be lucky to use this a day or two a year. we fig beyond a reasonable doubt out a way to use -- figured out a way at the same time so we can collect data all year round. we're collecting data as we talk to you. now, that is actually a problem. so even though we get the world's largest telescope all year round it creates an enormous amount of data. to analyze that data we ask volunteers for help. you can help us by running a program on your home computer or your laptop or desktop computer. you install a program called seti at home a screen savor program. and the way we take the data and we break it up into little pieceses. everybody gets a little piece and you install this program it pops up when you go out and the computer goes through the data looking through all the
this is a project at harvard university, lict laboratory, hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna in puerto reigno 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakets. we haven't tried that. most astronomers would be lucky to use this a day or two a year. we fig beyond a reasonable doubt out a way to use -- figured out a way at the same time so we can collect data all year round. we're collecting...
137
137
Jul 4, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 137
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university of very clever project. this is a project at lick observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and moan astronomers would be lucky to use this telescope a day or two a year. we figured out a way to use the telescope at the same time other scientists are using it deloket data all year around and we're checking data all year around as i talk to you. that is a problem. even though we get the world's largest telescope all year around it creates enormous amount of data. to analyze that data we asked volunteers for help. you can help us by running a program on your home computer or laptop or desktop computer. you install a program called seti at home. screensaver program. the way we take the data from the world's largest telescope and break it up into litt
university of very clever project. this is a project at lick observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and moan astronomers would be lucky to use this...
213
213
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 213
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university. number four, new town, pennsylvania, all about the sweets. "travel and leisure" says it has the best ice cream in the country. >> number three mahina, hawaii.barbecue and gore yus weather. number two, bend, oregon. first, flagstaff, arizona, the centerpiece of its july 4th celebration, a huge parade downtown. >> five minutes till the top of the hour. the accident that will make you flip out. >> a texas tech cheerleader under fire for these photos. she is calling foul but is that fair? your responses next. and now telcos using hp big data solutions are feeling the love, too. by offering things like on-the-spot data upgrades -- an idea that reduced overcharge complaints by 98%. no matter how fast your business needs to adapt, if hp big data solutions can keep wireless customers smiling, imagine what they can do for yours. make it matter. because you can't beat zero heartburn. woo hoo! [ male announcer ] prilosec otc is the number one doctor recommended frequent heartburn medicine for 8 straight years. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. >>> before you leave the house here's what's happening today. severe storms packing high winds
university. number four, new town, pennsylvania, all about the sweets. "travel and leisure" says it has the best ice cream in the country. >> number three mahina, hawaii.barbecue and gore yus weather. number two, bend, oregon. first, flagstaff, arizona, the centerpiece of its july 4th celebration, a huge parade downtown. >> five minutes till the top of the hour. the accident that will make you flip out. >> a texas tech cheerleader under fire for these photos. she is...
87
87
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 87
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didn't annoy hawaii the celebration of yosemite's 150 years is that the majestic forest is not off limits. >> i'm from the philippines and i was here to go to school at santa clara university and came out here with a bunch of international students and i was in a. awe. it's a place that seems to get better with age. >> i can't get tired of it because it's just so beautiful out here and i think every time we go somewhere different. >> reporter: in 1857 an explorer discovered the grove. the tree over here is named after her. the first challenge for these early conservationists was convincing people on the east coast that these trees really did exist. >> really no one believed it so they started actually cutting down these old sequoias to send them and ship them back east and around the world. what was significant about this is we got out of the extraction business and got into the preservation business. >> reporter: the yosemite grant act changed america. a few years later yellowstone was named the first national park. yosemite later followed. so while many of us live keeping up in a modern world, visitors know they can come to yosemite to see an older untouched america. tod
didn't annoy hawaii the celebration of yosemite's 150 years is that the majestic forest is not off limits. >> i'm from the philippines and i was here to go to school at santa clara university and came out here with a bunch of international students and i was in a. awe. it's a place that seems to get better with age. >> i can't get tired of it because it's just so beautiful out here and i think every time we go somewhere different. >> reporter: in 1857 an explorer discovered...
39
39
Jul 7, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 39
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university of very clever project. this is a project at link observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii at the telescope, looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and most astronomers would be lucky to use this telescope a day or two a year. we figured out a way to use the telescope at the same time other scientists are using it to actually collect data all year around and we're checking data all year around as i talk to you. that is a problem. even though we get the world's largest telescope all year around it creates enormous amount of data. to analyze that data we asked volunteers for help. you can help us by running a program on your home computer or laptop or desktop computer. you install a program called seti at home. it's a screensaver program. the way we take the data from the world's larges
university of very clever project. this is a project at link observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii at the telescope, looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and most astronomers would be lucky to...
44
44
Jul 6, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
university of very clever project. this is a project at link observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and most astronomers would be lucky to use this telescope a day or two a year. we figured out a way to use the telescope at the same time other scientists are using it to detect data all year around and we're checking data all year around as i talk to you. that is a problem. even though we get the world's largest telescope all year around it creates enormous amount of data. to analyze that data we asked volunteers for help. you can help us by running a program on your home computer or laptop or desktop computer. you install a program called seti at home. screensaver program. the way we take the data from the world's largest telescope and break it up into li
university of very clever project. this is a project at link observatory. also a project at the -- in hawaii looking for laser signals. people are also looking for radio signals. our group uses the world's largest radio antenna, we call it radio telescope. this is in puerto rico and it's 1,000 feet in diameter. it holds 10 billion bowls of corn flakes. we haven't actually tried that. [laughter] it's operated by national science foundation and most astronomers would be lucky to use this...